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Show COALVILLE TIMES 1NG-T- N. JACOB PETERSON, AFTER Editor and Manager. Intr4 dab. Mattar. at the May TEKMS On Taar Or lilt, aa In flue MTS FORTY-S- IX liiax. I...... II ."5 J II The total school population of the BUto la 98,660. John Clark haa been appointed at Clarkaton. Cache county The annual exhibit of the Utah State Poultry association waa held In Balt Lake City last week. A atate anti saloon league is being organized, prominent prohibitionists of 6alt I.ake being behind the movement Jim Savage waa badly Injured at Park City last week by encountering missed shot In the mine In which he was working. W. G. Goodfellow, a brakeman. was seriously Injured near Ogden, a caboose In which he was riding being derailed, owing to a misplaced switch. Juab county will uphold the name of the banner arid farming county of the state by sending a full delegation to the Dry Farming Congress in Balt Lake. The value of all the sheep In Utah la placed at 17,600,000 in the annual report 'of 'the atate board of sheep commissioners, filed with the governor last week. A bill has passed the senate and now goes to the house, providing for a fish culture sUtion in Utah, in which Is to be grown carp and other food fish. Howard Coray, for many years secretary to Joseph Smith, and bin close friend UU the time of his death, died In Salt Lake City on January 16. at the age of $L Lest The lid I on at Eureka. Sunday all the aaloona were closed from midnight Saturday until Mon-- . day morning, tand gambllngjias been practically atopped. The Salt Lake Charity association has established a free employment bureau. The first day the bureau waa In operation, 89 applicants for post- tions had registered. The Socialists of Salt Lake last week presented a petition to the city council, asking that some provision be made, If possible, to provide work lor those persons now out of employment. r ' , poet-tnast- The 'smallpox scare at Hoopei, which threw the residents Into wildest excitement a few days ego bar about collapsed. Most of the cases thought to be smallpox have proven to be chick- - Miners Who Wera Held by Mina Accident Little Wrs for Experience. self-defens-e, Former Preiident of CLicifs tional Convicted on Fifty-fo- r' After having been en-- ' Ely. Nev Counts of Indictment. tombed fort six days In me Alpha National Wool Growers in Earnest About Opposing tbe Policies of Washington. The establishment ot the United States National Bank of tbe Administration. America is provided for in a bill inD Bailey, shaft of the Giroux troduced In the house by Mr Fornes Y J. Brown and Fred McDonald have (Dem.) of New York. The bank as been rescued Is ImpHsonmsnt For Not Penalty conceived is to be located In Wash3U o'clock Sunday night Bailey At 8' Than Five Years Nor More Tklg ington and Is to have a capital stock was brought out. Fourteen minutes of $100,000,000, divided Tan Year For Each Count-- H nto 100,000 later McDonald came to the surface, shares of the par value of $1,000. New Trial Asked For while ten minutes after aids Brown Three-fifth- s of these shares are to be was brought up. Whistles all over purchased by the United States treascrowds while the district blew loudly, urer at par. the purchase money to be John R. Walsh, cheered in the streets of Ely and every for Chicago. raised by the sale of $60,000,000 bonds, was bell In the town ringing president of the Chicago Natk :J payable In fifty years and bearing 3 On the morning of December 4 Mc- bank, which closed its doors in per cent interest, the same to be desDonald, Brown and Bailey and two cember, 1905. was found guilty on U. S. currency bonds s ignated counts of thk it Greek jwtre working In the bottom unlay on fifty-fou- r of the shares are to be offered shaft, him third dtetments the of compartment against charging i y at not less than par to the national feet below the pump sta- application of the bank's funds. eighty-fivy banks of the country, to be paid for tion and 1,085 feet below the surface verdict waa returned by a Jury In 4 in gold coin federal district court here. Walsh 4 The cave In occurred at 9 o'clock. The United States National Bank The cable used to haul tne cage permitted to remain at liberty ua 4 of America is to open for business from the third compartment to the the bonds furnished by hlut after t a SeDt ember I 19o8, and to cease to shaft snapped and thousands of tons indictments bad been returned agafc 4 exist 1, 1958, unless its life September one him fell down timbers and . debris the ha of rook, year ago. pending be extended by congress. Branches Into the shaft. From the bottom of lng of arguments on Jauuary 28 ot t are to be In New York. established men new a 1, the In his motion which trt for counsel by the compartment New Orleans, Boston, DenThe penalty fixed by the statutes I t Chicago, were working to tne pumping station, St. ver, San Francisco, CinLouis, feel, a series the offense of which the aged finand r cinnati and a distance of elghty-ilv- e Ore The bank Portland, was convicted t is of rickety ladders offered the only I imprisonment for t less than five years nor more than If i shall be governed by a board of twenty-fmeans of escape. ive directors, elected by the stockWith falling rocks , and timbers for each count upon which hla gg t and the secretary of the treasholders, five waa established. streaming down upon them the The district attorney estimated tfc ury shall be the chairman. The bank struggled up these ladders. Half way Issue additional notes of the up falling timbers knocked the two .Jhe trial had cost the United Stab may Greeks from the ladder, killing them government $100,000. The district p United States National Bank of America In amounts not exceeding 840 000,-00-0 Bailey, McDonald and Brown managed torneya office was engaged nearly and such notes shall be available to reach the pump station. Its well in preparing the case. timbered roof had withstood the rock year for general national bank circulation and timber that came down the shaft ENOCH ARDEN. ! upon deposit of proper security. A MODERN and offered them shelter and safety. Four per cent dividends may be n cave-ithe after first Here for the day Missouri Farmer Returns Homs Aft to on stockholders bank paid the Interthe men crouched, while at Absence of Fourteen Years. earnings. vals they could hear the rocks and timbers crashing above them. Fairfax, Mo. Jacob A. Funk, a At first It was thought that all the mer, who mysteriously disappear! men bad perished, but twenty-fou- r fourteen years ago .from his farm net! Heinzs 8ecures His Debt to the State men the three hours after the cave-lthta county,, and who hat Savings Bank. who occupied the pumping station Skidmore, been mourned aa dead, returned hen managed to make themselves heard Mont Butte, State Bank Examiner water Saturday, alive and welL More that T- - E. Collins, In by tapping upon the charge of. the State a fra Funk after year from disappeared stretched the pumping pipe that to Judge Bour-quilaving bank, reports found ments of Atchlsoi a in station to the surface, ft was this body that F. Augustus Heinz, who pipe that was the means of saving the county, six miles from Skidmore, wai owned 52 cent of the stock of that per lives ot fbe three men. as and his Identified burled apparently When communication was once es- August Ridge, a neighboring farmer, Institution when it suspended a few tablished with the world above and had been arrested at the time on sus months ago, has turned over to him the men bad made known the fact pi cion that he had murdered the dead securille to secure the debt he owez the bank. . that they were still alive, food and hearing On December 27 last. District drink were immediately lowered man. At his an'preliminary Judge rewas and alibi through the pipe, he men were thus Ridge proved Bourqutn, at a hearing Incident to th absence Funk's hit leased. During unfood drink with and kept supplied proceedings growing out of the applictil their rescuers were able to dig wife remarried. Funk declines to state ation of creditors to have a receiver where he has been In the past fourthem out teen years, but he la said to have appointed for the bank, announced hat if by January 16 Mr, Heinze had Government Officials and Dignified lived In Iowa. e posited $250,000 In cash or market Professors Squabble. We securities to the credit of the Lumbermen Win Out. Berlin. Dispatches received here ask.' and M. S. Largey, president ol Minneapolis. Demurrers to Indictgive details ot a stormy session In bank, bad deposited $75,000, h the general meeting of the Navy league ments against nineteen,' promlnentJjMld give Urn hank until March 1 held at CasteL at- - which nobtemen snd tHTnBerfflenbhargIng conspiracy to de necessary, to reopen. If by that time a not prepared to reopen, liquid government officials, retired admir- fraud were upheld In the federal difthe court said, must follow. Lartion, on court trict here Saturday by Judge als and dignified professors lost conThe - Indictments ger has deposited the $75,000, all lq trol of themselves, shouting insults William Lochran. cash. and recriminations at one another. 80 were based upon the Issuance and op In the far from bringing harmony Into the oration of the plan Cost a Million. Dollars to Carry Coal It was designed to Black Book. affalra of the Navy league, the meeting for Fleet Voyage, seems only to have intensified the dif- badger catalogue house competitors Rear Admiral Cowea, Washington. ferences between the factions; has re- and to pile up on them useless and chief of the bureau of equipment, apLochsulted In the secession of the Bavarian costly correspondence. Judge on Wednesday before the house and South German delegates, and ran heard counsel tor but one of the peared seems likely to eventuate in the exist- Indicted lumbermen, and upheld the committee on naval affairs In the hearing incident to consideration of the ence of two leagues, one for the north demurrers. bill. naval appropriation Admiral and one for the south of Germany. Cowles informed the committee that Death Caused by Beavers. New York. In an attempt to avoid the cost of transportation of coal for Emptror Nicholas Mst Hay Pleasant Memories. death in a pit of bears, Joseph Maher, the fleet now sailing to San Francisco Without making $1,000,000. St Petersburg. The annual cere-tnoa-y a gardner at the Bronx too, leaped will be he of blessing the waters, during from a failing tree Into a beaver pond any corrective recommendations, called attention to the fact that, with was and killed. The roots In the 1905, Instantly emperor narrowly which, a single exception, the colliers charescaped assassination by means of the of the tree had been eaten away by tered to accompany the fleet are for. when Maher and the reached beavers, took Tsarko-at place saluting cannon, American owners havbottoms, eign It his with gave way Belo on Sunday, instead of at the wat- the top weight ing declined to give charters even at ers of the Neva. The Imperial bless- The falling trunk swayed toward the the 50 per cent advance over foreign ing was bestowed upon the waters of bear pit and the gardener tried to (ootationa which the government ofthe lake In the palace park amid the swing himself clear of the branches fered. The reason for their refusal salute of guns. After the ceremony into the pond adjoining, but h4a head was that American vessels could make the emperor, accompanied by bis struck the edge of the tank, break- more money by plying in the coast-vis- e trade. mother, reviewed the guard regiments. ing his neck. j Two-fifth- e i , : n 4 six-inc- n . . o one-thir- fifty-sevent- h - tor. DEATH MEET IN Introduces Measure ta Establish Central Government Institution With Capital of $100,000,000. s Pria-oner- The state superintendent of pub Instruction last week apportioned the state school fund among the various cltlps and counties according to their school population. The fund amounts to $305,170.36. ' Walter Simms, who has been arrested in Balt Lake City, charged with faiurder Committed in Alabama, admits killing his roan, but Insists the killing was in Simms will be taken back to Alabama tor trial. The right of a stockholder In a Corporation to make an Inspection of the corporate books at reasonable times Is a& absolute and not a qualified right, according to a decision handed down . by the supreme court last week. Products representing four years . development of Utahs dry farms at the six experimental stations authorized by the state government were on exhibit In Salt Lake during the - session of the Dry' Farming congress. Governor Cutler has been asked by the war department lo nominate one candidate from the Utah militia to enter a competitive examination, to be Cruiser Meets all Requirements, keld In July, 1908, for appointments as second lieutenants in the regular San Francisco. The United States army. cruiser California, which sailed from ' rabbit hunt this port Friday for her final trial off Boya returning from created a panic la Santaqutn by firing Cape Blanco, returned Sunday. It a fusillade la the center of the town, waa announced that the cruise had No ofscaring the women and children so safely met all requirements. durmade time of statement the hid ficial underneath the badly that many beds. Several a arrests have been ing the trial runs has been given out made. here, but it is said that the new warson of Emella Garff ship maintained an average speed of The knots, and that in a twelve-hou- r of Lehl had the thumb end first finger twenty-twher time was 20.4 knots an run of his left hand blown off and his which exceeds the requirements hour, right hand fra badly lacerated by an by a good margin. exptoalon of three giant powder caps with which he was playing Saturday Cant Sidetrack Bryan. afternoon. , Washington. Wlllla J. Abbott, of Mrs. Joe Conley, wife of a Nevada the publicity bureau In this - saloon man, whom she had deserted city, Bryan denies the published statement for a life of shame, waa found dead that he had received a letter from Mr. In her room in Salt Lake, death being Bryan to the effect that he would stand due to gas asphyxiation. It la sup- aside should it develop that d posed that the gas was accidentally of the delegates to the Denver conleft fumed on. 1 vention opposed his nomination. January J5 being the have never received a letter from Mr. anniversary of Ue settlement of ro- Bryan making the statements attribwan, that town enjoj ed holiday. A uted to bim in this interview." said banquet was given In the opera house, Mr. Abbott, and I have not beard ato which were invited all persons from him on political matters for at more than $0 years of age. A dance least three weeks." ended the celebration. Terrible Macedonian Tragedy. Perry Neal wag severely burned at Sofia, Bulgaria. News bas reached Kimberly, as the result of coming in a terrible tragedy which ocof here with electric wires. The only contact at the village of Dragoah, near curred thing which saved his life la the fact of his standing on dry boards, and Monastlr, a town In Macedonia, sevthe force of the shock threw him eral days ago. While a festival was In progress and the villagers were dancaway from the high tension line. upon the lawn in the public park, After having an anaesthetic' admin- ing a large band of Greeks suddenly istered to her by a dentist who was swooped down upon them, and after - treating her teeth Mrs. Frank Earl, driving them Info their houses, set of Brigham City, was overcome by the firs to the buildings and burned them powerful drag and died la a few min- to death. The victims included women utes. She had recently recovered and children and numbered twentyfrom a violent attack of typhoid te- - ( five. II o GIRLS TO FIGHT TEDDY1 Three UTAH STATE NEWS ' IK a mlm-- , - GOVERNMENT CoalvlH. Sacond-Claa- SIBSCRIFTIOM. rayablo la Montha Thraa Montha Sw(la Coplaa 81 Foatofflc T, I 8tedmn, Banker-Poet- , SEVERE QUAKE IN HAYTI. Dead. New York. Edmund Clarence Sted-mathe banker and poet, died suddenly at hts home In this city January Mr. fitrdman, who was 75 year 18. old, was bora at Hartford, Conn., and while a student at Yale earned distinction In English and Greek composition. After a brief editorial experience In Norwich and Wlnsted. Conn Mr. Stedman took up his residence in New York City, where he was connected with several of the dally papers and with Putnam's and Harpers magazines. It was while doing newspaper work that he first gained distinction as a poet n, k Few Homes Destroyed But No Lives r War Lott. Port Au Prince, Ilayti. A serlouq tarthquake has occurred at Gonaives, miles northwest of this city. ilxty-flv- e 1 few house have been destroyed and ethers were damaged. No lose of life Communication las been reported. vith the town Is broken. The shocks The first was followed by continue. I tidal wave. Among the buildings lestroyed are the commercial house if Herrmann, Addor & Jolibert. president of Brazil Entertain Officers of American Fleet. Russian Admiral Kept Busy Following The president of'the Janeiro. io American Fleet Dr. Penna, entertained the public. St. Petersburg. The importance at- Idfriirals and some of the higher otached by the Russian admiralty to tba ffers of the American fleet at a lesson to be learned from the voy-ag- e kreakf&st on Wednesday-arTetropoITof the Ameriran battleship fleet Later In the day there was a garden under Rear Admiral Evans is shown jajty gt the American embassy In the rep-by the fact that the naval officer. Com- Bie suburb. The fleet was wellpresi-lont seated- The break! st of the mander Alexas Diatchoff, Is following waa given at the palace, which the fleet around the Horn, traveling from port to port by any mean he can taJ beautifully decorated with flowers and obtain. He adopted this course only and greens, and the Brazilian after repeated requests for permission American flags. There was a warm to Join the. ships had been refused. teierchaage of fraternal greetings. - Slave Rescued From Chinese. Pittsburg. Florence Livingston, sixteen year of ago. who was captured In n raid on n house in the Chinese quarter of this city, says she was kid. naped from her parents in Cincinnati when nine years old and had since been held bychiaese aa a slave, fre. quently passing from one Chinaman ta another in different parts of the conn-try..-She says she finally forgot even the name ot the street on which she lived. She could tell the police nothShe t now ing about her parents. speaks Chinese fluently. Whlt Democrats Pay Tribute to Bryan. Neb. Nearly 1.300 polltl-H- l friends and personal admirers of William J. Bryan attended In the at the capacity of diners and speakers Lin-tnu dollar Democratic dinner at the Wednesday night auditorium Rill a many more occupied seats as tpectators, and heartily applauded good things said about Democracy It was the and Mr. Bryan hlmselL successful most of one the and largest hinettona of the kind held In Lincoln since Mr. Bryan became an Influents factor In the polities of Nebraska. Lincoln. Flames Drove Panic stricken Girl to the Window, Many of Them Jumping From the Third Floor. Pa Four girls were Scranton. Injured and a ten seriously killed, score or more slightly hurt In a fire companys In the Imperial Knitting in the central part Dix in court, mill At Meeting at Helena Provision Waa on Friday. Made for Publicity Bureau to Wage of the city, ou Eighty-fivgirls .were at work Fight Against Federal Reguwhen fire broke out on the third lation of Public Range. the ground" floor, where some men furniture in a warewere varun-htnfire The house quickly ascended the Helena, Mont After the most elevator Bhaft and drove the girls l.en to the window opening meeting in the history of its panlc-strannual on the flic escape. brganizatlon, the forty-fourtWool of the National convention The girls on the upper part of the Growers association on Thursday fire escape crowded those In front night adjourned to meet next year in With the flames enveloping them half Pocatello, Ida. Before adjournment of them jumped from the third floor a fund of $10,000 waa subscribed by before the firemen arrived. tbe various state delegations for the There was only one exit, a narrow establishment qf a publicity bureau hallway, besides the fire escape, and to wage a flghtagalnst the admini- this hallway was cut off by fire and strations policy for federal regulation smoke. Tbe fact that many of the girls fainted further blocked the "narof the public range. row fire t scape and added to the difDespite the fact that he was electof rescue. ficulty ed president of the National association by a unanimous vote, Dr. J. M. OUTBREAK IN HAYTI. Wilson of Douglas, Wyo., declined to Towna accept the honor, because of hla per- Revolutionists Capture Two sonal and political friendship for and Are Driven Away From One. United States Senator FYancls E. The state department Washington reWarren, whom the convention has received advices concerning the befused to consider for attempt In revolutionary cause of the fact that the Wyoming recent in the shape ol two cablegrams Hayti. senator has gone on record as favorfrom American Minister Furniss, at ing the forestry and range policies of Port Au Prince In the first dispatch President Roosevelt. After Dr. Mr. Furniss stated that the towns of declination of the presidency, Gonaives and St. Marc were In the Fred W. Gooding of Idaho was chosen ol hands the revolutionists; that there xs Senator Warrens successor. was a battle, and that the revolution-- ' Pocatello, Ida., has been chosen as were repulsed. Telegraphic com- -' the place for holding the next annual Ists munication had been intercepted. The convention in January, 1909. second dispatch stated that Mr. Furniss had had an Interview with PresiHARRIMAN MUST ANSWER. dent Nord of Hayti, who had Insisted Railroad King Commanded by Court upon bombarding St. Marc. Commander Marva had protested against to Reply to Question. the bombardment until a reasonable New York. Judgb Hough of the time had been allowed in which to United States circuit court handed move the women and children and down on Thursday an opinion directof the port. of the An election for members ing Otto B. Kuhn, a member of the banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb A Co to house of representatives is in proganswer all questions propounded to ress, and to the excitement incident to him by the Interstate commerce com- the election is ascribed in some qur-ter- g the trouble which has culminatmission. E H. Hardman as directed in the outbreak. ed to answer all questions except those relative to the purchase of WANT 3MELTER8. Union and Southern Pacific stocks In connection with the dividend of Au- Independent Plant to be. Erected at gust. 1996. Helena Thla Year. While the exceptions were regardHelena, Mont That an Independed as Important question by the ent smelter is to be erected In Helena government lawyers who were Invesowner "or tbe tate of bjr the-mttigating the Chicago A Altoa J$tlroad Montana seems an assured fact After organization, they constituted only a perfecting, a temporary organization small proportion of those that Harrl-ma- n on Friday, to be known as the Monrefused to answer. tana Mine Owner association, twelve leadin'" mine operators raised $100,000, President Approve Widening Canal and one member, M. L. Hewitt, temLocks. porary preiident of the organization, President Roosevelt agreed to secure an additional $100,-00- 0 Washington has approved the recommendation of within one week for the erection In- of the promised smelter in this city. the isthmian canal commission dorsed by Secretary Taft, Increasing The operators, it is said, are also asthe width ofthe locks of the canal sured that former United States Senfrom one hundred to one hundred and ator William A. Clark will subscribe ten feet. The president simply ap- to a large blqok of stock. proves the recommendation for the inARE COUNTING THE DAYS. crease of the widh in the locks, but no comment In a Entombed Nevada Miner May Be Rethereon. makes memorandum to Secretary Taft the leased by February 1. commission says the cost of all the Nev Foreman Gallagher, who Ely, locks at one hundred feet wide Is estimated at $52,530,011. while & width has charge of the rescue work in the of 110 feet will cost $57,090,850, a dif- Alpha shaft, said Friday that he be1 wdll be the maxiference too small to be considered, lieves February mum of time that will be required to Inassuming the necessity for the men. entombed creased width to be ag stated by the release the three About fourteen feet remains to be made navy. before the Iron intrusion which comes into the shaft at 615 feet is reached, Objects to Land Donation. from where it is believed solid ground Senator Carter of will be found to the 1,000-foo- t Washington. level, Montana on Thursday announced that where the men are. he would object to the passage of all bills looking to the donation of pubBig Canadian Bank Fail. lic land for various purposes. He deToronto, Ont. The Sovereign Bank clared that such donations, if allowed, of Canada has gone into liquidation. would make ft necessary for senators The bank has seventy-sibranches from all states3aviDK public land to In Ontario, Quebec, the northwest and see that they receive as large dona- maritime provinces. The Sovereign tions of land aa other states. Sena- bank was organized in Toronto in tor Carter's objection was made to a 1904, with a capital of $1,500,000, bill granting to the atate of North Da- which was Increased In 1906 to kota 30,000 acres of land to aid In When the Dresden. Bank of the maintenance of & school of, for- Germany took f.ooo.noo of Its stock estry. In June last, the ahole reserve account of $1,250,000 waa wiped out, toOfficer a Poor Shot. gether with $1,000,000 of the capital, New Orleans. Edward S Whita- and the bank was reorganized. ker, Inspector of police, entered the New York. Mrs Herbert M. Sears, World here office of the Morning wife of a retired broker of Boston and two shots Thursday night and fired at Joseph M. Leveque, , the editor. a member of one of the best known Neither shot took effect. The shoot- families of that city, committed suiing ' followed several attacks upon cide by jumping from her rooms on Whitaker tn the editorial and news the thirteenth floor of the Hotel St. columns of the World. The head of Regis, while temporarily Insane. Her the New Orleans police department body fell upon the roof of a four-storwas criticised for "attending the races building adjoining the hotel and waa dally while drawipg a salary of $6,000 terribly crashed. Mrs. Sear was 37 a year from the people, and was re- year old, and prior to the beginning ferred to as a blackguard and a of the mental trouble which resulted In her suicide, occupied a' position of ' bully. social prominence In Boston. Railroad Contractors fall. Fraud la Charged. Denver A petition In bankruptcy has Ida. A sensational suit baa Boise, been filed with the clerk of the Unlt-e- d been filed In the United State circuit A States court by Orman Cook, government railroad contractors, this city. This court by the federal firm had the contract'for the con- against Harry L. Day, one of the ownstruction on part of the Moffat road. ers of the Hercules mine; Edward H. Liabilities given as $741,136, and as- Mofflt, president of the Coeur dAlene company " at Wallace; set as $,283,771. Of the assets, Hardware Charles Morse J. of Chicago, president $549,958 consists of debts still due, and $200,000 of this amount is consid- of the Youngstown Steel company, ered not good." The firm places the and R. K, Nelli of 8pokane. The soft value of Its machinery and tools at la for cancellation of patent for the $172,700. its hordes at $52,650, sad its Leonard mining claim In the Placer itoek and bonds Itl25,000. Center district, a. series of frauds log charged. e tor h h -- Wil-son'- 9 MINE-OWNER- S ne x y , |