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Show "y COALVILLE TIMES Blah rtoMMl Aro HwwH 7 times rcBUfcHuia Co. UTAH. COALVILLE, TELLER AT THE OOLD CELEBRATION. Hit- by IJM OvMea T r Basil RESOLUTION. XU.sv Is Dtssuassg BsasSs. - i it did la tbs Washington, Jsn M. The Teller San Francisco, Jen. IS. Regarding to pay government bond resolution, the Utah pioneers who were with Marwas discussed In the silver with coin, Calishall when he discovered gold in senate, Allison, Tillman, Berry, fornia, in 1X48, the Chronicle eaye: Hoar. Lodge, Fairbanks and Vest There ere but four survivors of the Th two leading admen employed at Marsh 11 mill at participating. dresses were made by Allison sod Tel- senator. Colomn, to whom he showed the gold ler. Mr. Allison reviewed the story of Mr, Hosr dissented from Mr. Telbe had found on the mlllrsce on JanuThis la not e quesler's proposition. Matthew the mainStanley resolution, ary 24,4148. These four pioneer ar- taining that Its purpose at tion of law, " said he, it is n question time thst on rived in the city yesterday morning waa not in oppo!tioanapuMic interest of violation of public faith. 8hylock the overland train from Ogden, c or in derogation of the rights of the had the law on his side for a good guests of the Association of California public creditor,-!! held th situation while, but nobody aaid that Shylock, Pioneer. Thry are 1L W. Bigler, was different now. He insisted that without derogatlon of the rights of William J. Johnston, Atariah Smith the resolution present gave the secre- Antonio, could take the pound of and James L Brown. They were of the treasury no more authority flesh. tary red by a committee consisting of than ha had now. Tbs I am getting tired," shouted Mr secretary may of J. 11. Jewett, president of the as- now pay th government obligations in Teller, of the position assumed by sociation; General W. H. Pratt, John coin. He held that there was no dis- certain senators berebecanae they live 8. Uitteli and Almaria B. Paul. The position on the pert of the administra- in the eastern part of th country visitors are installed at the Ruse house tion to evade th law and added that They are not more honest, they are no II. W. Bigler U suffering from a bad the Republican party maintained that more strenuous in upholding the pubcold and blsodngh waa so distressing it ought to be the purpose of the gov- lic honor than I am. I want to say that he was able to talk very little. ernment to maintain the gold and sil- here and now that ! believe In paying He la dver 83 years of age, but is still ver money of the country at a parity. the debts of tbs government in silver In response to a question f Mr Tel- even if it is the cheaper metal. The apparently eound and healthy. Before starting for San Francisco he had a ler, Mr. Allison said he'tboujit it government haa a right to the differstage ride of 130 miles to Milford, the would be proper for the secretary of ence according to its contract The nearest railroad station to hit home at the treasury to pay the obligations of silver dollar which the gentleman from 6L George, Ltah. Ills miud la still thb govern men teither la silver or gold. Iowa (Allison) says is not as good active and hie memory excellent, while But. declared Mr. Allison, the the gold dollar. Is paid to the mechanhie hearing ie unimpaired. of th tresaury. If he Is an honest ic the ertisan and the laborer in liquiJames L. Brown, who la about 70 man, in reaching his decision to action dation of obligation Incurred with years of age, lives at Salt Lake City. upon that point, must take Into con. them, and 1 hold that the bond pur He la the author of a book In which he sideratiou existing conditions, one of chaser is no bettor than tha man with telle the story of the discovery of gold which is that the government is pledged blistered hands, and ought to Be paid and eome interesting Incidents In eon, to maintain the gold and silver in the same money. The secretary of nectlon with the Important event of the country at a parity." the treasury Is now bound by law to Axariah Smith earns ell the way Mr. Teller epoke ia favor of thereso regard the interests of th people, but from Manti, Sanpete eounty, Utah, to lotion, that department has been making the He declared it waa a question of lsw laws to suit Itself for 20 f attend ths jubilee. He considers Mr. years. Teller held tha there could be no degquite a young man still though hie which he would discuss,' Well," inquired Mr. Foraker. loes radation fn paying the bills of the hair la whit with the frost of 70 winthat resolution tneaa the same now as government to silver. ters. William J. Johnston, the fourth member of this remarkable party, la tall new attorney-genera- l. and of stalwart appearance, carrying himself erect and with something of a military air. He resides St Raymond, Aid-ric- UTAn NEWS. an epidemic of xll children nod the nearly aid people being effected. The Provo woolen mill ere working ' oa e Seattle order for 9000 pelre of ixtra heavy blanket intended for the Klondike trade. The will be reed toon. Mrs, Knight, vile of the clt merit el of Provo, wee found perelzed b her hatband when he returned front hie petrol one night laet week. She wae unable to either more or apeak. C. V. Steven of Spring Clt he trained elx doge to harneee end me be aeen an da driving them about town. He expect to leave eooo for Klondike, and will go well equipped. Joseph Foie, who held up the Arl- - Ington ealoon at Ogden recentl, securing about 1300, and who waa later ar retted at the home of hie mother in Missouri, ha been sentenced to aeven earn In the penitentiary. . William Fawcett, of SL George, aged 0, haa been oommltted to the elate asylum. He drove the Aral wagon Into that place In the earl positions of , dae anl bee held men trust and reeponflblUt. . - Attorney-Genera- l BUhdp he rendered an opinion In reeponaa to AS from Piute eounty, that the debt limit can pot be evaded by refusing to act upon bills presented, laying them over nntU next year. About 100 bonaea have been built In Thistle - imuIm, lx suffering e -- lfereur during the pest ninety dae. yet there are no vacant house there. Rente are good and bonaea la demand. Business blocks a wallas residence are be Ing erected. Joeeph . Stegg of Richmond, Cache county, wae kicked in the stomach by a horn he was hitching to n alelghr He died n few boon afterward, leaving a large family, five of whom were bedfast at the time the accident occurred Monb's single and married men engaged in a rabbit bant laet week, the losing side to pay for n dance and tapper. The married men conceded their defeat by three rabbits and footed the hills. The single men, however, claim the cor reel score waa 403 to 100. A shed la which the seed beets were being kept at tha Leht sugar factory eaught fire last week and about 123 fet of the shed wae consumed. The loss to the sugareompany will approximate and i , rained home of th beets saved for seed. The Utah Central railway last week passed Into tha bends of th . Rio Grande Western, being deeded to them by MessraGarff end Dittmar, tha purchasers at the receiver sale. It ia the intention to extend the road eastward, to afford an outlet for the wealth of eastern Utah and western Colorado. A Are broke out In the roof of Grant school at Salt Lake last week. The gong waa sounded for dismissal, and one minute afterward, the building was entirely vacated. Th pupils marched out In perfect order, eight abreast, making a record that can hardly be beaten, as there were sev eral hundred of them. The Are was insignificant A fight against the confirmation of Harvey N. McGrew as register of th Salt Lake land office ia being made. Utah's congressional representatives are taking no part, but merely refer remonstrances to the president without comment McGrew waa a candidate for governor of Arisons, and bea residence ing defeated, in Utah and secured the appointment Opposition ia based on th allegation that he la not a bona Ad resident of the state. Henry W. Bigler and wlfa of SL George and James I. Brown of Salt Lake nr guests of California at tha ol celebration of tha tha discovery of gold atSu tier's milt, January 24, 1848. Some question has arisen as to th exact date, bat Mr, Bigler's diary settles the question, and be It corroborated by Mr. Brown. Both were members of the Mormon battalion. Axariah Smith of Manti was another member of the battalion who was present. William W. John son is la New Mexico and Alexandet cur-ren- him-sel- the N.M. The four rode In the p roes salon in a position of honor especially reserved for them. They are all Mormons by tha way, as were most of the men who worked at Butter's mill at tha time of . the discovery of gold Gold Hist UmwwwI by a Bey, Boise, Ida., Jan, 35.- - Ia connection Francisco with th eelebratlon in of the discovery of gold ia California, the story told by Nathan Smith of this tote ia Interesting. Before his death. Smith often told the story, and expressed a desire that the true history of the discovery should be published. 8mith claimed to here been with Marshall. lie said whan they were deepening the tell race to the mill, the llt-,Ue son of one of the men wae playln W the water. This iLao'Vasiiawe Nimmer. His boy bothered him, showing oebbles that he picked from the water. Finally the boy picked up something bright and went to show it to his father, Th latter Impatiently ordered him to go away, and tha boy sat down on tha bank and cried. Marshall sought to comfort him, asking to sen whnt hn had. It proved to bn the Bugget that made Marshall and Call torn in famous. 8a O Metal LanesvUle, eto., and Wednesday morn- Washington, Jan. 27.Lrhn sen to has confirmed ths nominSkra of J. W. Griggs of New Jersey to ;ti attorney-generot tha United State, succeeding McKenna, elevated td he supreme court justiceship made vaunt by the retirement of Stephen J. Jfeld, elected governor of New Jersey in 1893 by a plurality of 127,000, overcora lng an adverse majority of 13,000. He was opposed by the politicians of his party prior to the nominating eonven tion, but won a decisive victory over them. He wnreonsidered for the vn cancy in the supreme court to which Jnation Jackson waa appointed by i not the reJohn W. Griggs was bo h, few President Harrison.have Had had a majority publicans already Jersey forty-eigyeara eg, the last of two on the bench he would have of which he hs been twenty-si-r received the honor.. Mr. Griggs doe prominent state character He was not look to be more than 30. al ht THE UBER LYNCJERS. uer I., d, ralst r 'wall Jwtu Ogden, Utah, Jan. 23. General Nathan Kimball is dead. He passed swsy last evening at 9;30 o'clock st his borne, 2344 Madison avenue. Ihe end earns peacefully and was Bot unexpected, for of late tbe infirmities of old age bsv been gradually pressing down upon ths old warrior and he haa been confined to hi bed for several weeks. Hi daughter was the only person present when he breathed hi The nndlvlded portion of th aetata ot Andrew J. Davis is appraised at 1289,000- .- y The new big tie company on Bush creek, Wya, has a private mail route. r The bnisDesa of the Fort Steel station has improved wonderfuUy" in the past year Horae are bringing a better price now nd about a thouaand head will be shipped to Texas from ranges ia last - His death ha taken nwy a man Eureka county, Nev. The C a per refinery is now putting who played an important part In th an removes especial value on oil that is above of this history country snd from the irllst of a wide circle of fire test, thus excelling all other value friend a character loved andytrusted oils in commercial use. The Carsou, Nev., dry goods men by people of all ages, ranks, creeds and conditions. Hn has five surviving are now attracting custom bv giving children, James N. Kimball and Miss promenade concerto in their stores, a Mae Kimball of Ogden, William A. brass band furnishing the music. Kimball of tbe United States army, It la rumored that W. E. Chaplin, stationed at Portland, Ore.; John editor of the Laramie Republican, will Kimball, of San Francisco; and Mrs. F. T. Gorman of Evanston, Wyo General Nathan Kimball was born ia Fredericksburg, Washington county, Ind., Nov. 32, X822. His father was a native of Massachusetts. His ancestors came from England ie tlie eld colonial day snd fought with Continental army in revolutionary days. Nathan Kimball's mother died when he was but 3 years of age, and his father passed away three years later. He was given a common school education by hie grandfather, James Ferguson. In 1841 he taught school at Independence. Mo. Later he was admitted to the bar and practiced law, bnt abandoned this profession for that of medicine. In 1845 he married Miss Martha Ann McPheetus. About this time war was declared against Mexico and be became a soldier. He recruited a company and was commissioned captain. After receiving hit honorable discharge he went back to medl cine. Four days after ths surrender of Fort 8umter young Kimball was st the head of a company which he had re eruited and waa soon commissioned soon be appointed receiver of publio money at the Cheyenne land office. It is entirely within the range of possobilitiea that the present, year will witness the construction of a railroad through Fergus county, Wyo. Last week the Wagner (Wyo.) mining district was organized. The ora ia rich in copper as well as gold, whil the district also includes excellent placer. James McNeills, an inmate of the eounty jsil at Butte has refused food-fthree days, and proposes to starve himself to death. He is supposed to or -- - be insane. Samuel Martin, a Butte miner, placed handcuffs upon his wife with her hands behind her, and left her la this litustlon for 24 hours, when she was accidently discovered. H. Magee of Rawlins will put in an electric light p(ant' at Casper. Ths plant will have 750 lights, 13 of which will be arc. Th plant will be in operation in five months. Gold placer developments in Albany oounty Wya, this year will be active eolonelofthn Fourteenth Indians in- and effective. The gravel or is exfantry. For his service in different tensive, while the latest washing engagements, Nathan Kimball was machinery and gold saving methods will be used. commissioned brevet major general. N. J. Bielenberg of Deer The crowning event of his military Lodge found a skeleton under the snow, eareer was that he is the only man who ever defeated Stonewall Jackson which proved to be the remaims of General Kimball was twice elected William an early Hardenbrook, state treasurer of Indiana, and In 1873 ettler, who dissapeared two yean was appointed surveyor-generof ?o. Utah. He was afterward appointed A mass meeting was held at Douglas, postmaster at Ogden and served two Wyo , last week and a committee apterms. pointed to solicit funds and seeure an ixhibit from Converse county to the RIOTING IN FRANCE. exposition at Omaha. The plan formulated by the mass Bvolvenan4 Freely Crad Baton meeting of Cheyenne citizens was Mob Could be Dispersed. adopted. h Algiers, Jan. 24. riots, Three days have been consumed in growing largely out oftbs excitement the selection of a jury in the' case of over the Dreyfus agitation, have oc- Kenneth McRae, at CsipovTh pyii-ancurred in the larger cities of France has ast unconcerned, except when almost daily for a week. Most lawless a question was raised capisets have been committed and many tal punishment, whenregarding he flushed in lives have been lost and much proper- the face and grew nervous. ty destroyed. The most serious of It is very probable that Thomas J. these outbreaks occurred here today, and at 11 o'clock ia raging unabated, Riley, the slayer of P. A. Largey, will be tried out side of Silver How county. and the torch is being applied to lootThere is so much feeling in the case ed store. The. mob invaded ths Jew that attorneys say it will be difficult ish quarters and pillaged the shops, to secure a A good many who driving the Jewish merchants out in- would makejury. acceptable jurors will j to the streets. A squadron of chasnot aerve, and others will not be acseurs were ordered to the scene, and either side on account of cepted charged with drawn sounds,' but the their by relations with either the murmob reformed further on, cheering for dered man or his slayer. the army. A contest has begun in the United Revolvers and daggers were freely States land offioa at Missoula in whieh used. One man who was stabbed in the Northern Pacific Railway comback. in and ehot th head, died, the, and many were seriously wounded, one pany attacks the elaastficatioa of lands man named Cayol dying from his made by the mineral land eommlssion wounds at 4 o'clock this afternoon. in the district between Thompson Tbs crowd, hearing of this, became Falls snd the Idaho line. The land Involved in the centest amounts to dangerously excited, shouting: They am murderlng-u- s. Death to the Jews, nearly a million acres, and thus far and resumed pillaging. The fronts ot there has been no appearance made by the settlers in this district or any one . big shops were destroyed. Tha police repeatedly charged the Interested. If there is to be any de-f- e made of the classification rerioters, but were stubbornly resisted, and were powerless to restore order turned by the commission, now Is the until tha troops arrived, JSeveral po- time for those who ere interested to licemen were severely maltreated! make it Two of the three Johnson brothers Many arrest for theft have been made. at Agusta, who were recently examined as at Helena,' -sanity CIVIL service' INQUIRY, became erazy again and are ' being watched by their neighbors, two or Th laefllrlsaey ot the. System Glaringly three of whom are with them most of Manifest. , the time. The Anaconda Standard inWashington, Jan. 23. When the in formant says that the little town to veetigntien ef the elvllservio - by-t- h thoroughly aroused over the matter, -senate committee was resumed, Chief Many violence from the JohnClerk Ed Bailey, of tbe chief examin- son a fearing insanity, are making threats to er's office, civil service commission, lynch them unless the authorities ' advised a general reclassification of step iu and take card of the men they officer. The present deem government dangerous The, Johnsons are grouping he decribed as accidental, well-to-d- o cattlemen, and have always based on salaries, while he believed It held a prominent place in Teuton should be based on the kind of work connty. It ia likely that another done, which would be of great advantwill be made against them and age in preparing examinations for ap- another investigation had as to their plicants. pi f 3P er J. vil-fW- NORTHWEST NOTES ISusS- - Anti-Jewis- KING'S PUBLIC LAND BILL. Pleat at Evktoave. Bat th Wcmld hry Adrorao Report as I'tefe Meararo Fin Rat Indirt. I ' Lsod Ci 28. Jan. Oenon, Nev., of Tl, Dirwtoref Mist Easlgas. report th grand jury in the L'bet lynching Washington, Jan. 2 ft. Commission ex Washington, Jan. 23, The resignaease Hermann of the general land office ha wae very , tion of R. K. Preston a director of the unsatisfactory. When mint haa been tendered to th presi- the court had assembled $h foreman made an adverse report on ths bill in Aid: troduced Hby Representative King, dent, to take effect upon the appointand eeding to the state of it th May please granting court, have e ment and qualification of hie sucexamined into the cessor. lyndiug case, Utah, the pnblie lands within its borThe commissioner advances and have listened to the ders. , M r. Preston has been connected with tesUouy of th treasury department for more than seventy witnesses, We ha discov- many reasons for his belief that the ered who th ffuilty parties session would be foreign tc forty-tw- o b6t knd proposed years. During the lest four have of the people. beet the interests sufficient evidence to ser their years he has been director ot the mini eoavletion, in every case. Sotwlth-standin- g Th president has sent to the senate this fact, the jury Klondike Fever Cost BOt the name of Georg EL Roberts of Fort find indictment and further deliberaConn., Jan. 2d Fifteen Stamford, D xlge, for the vacancy crested by tion will be a useless waste o time. hundred people gathered about the the resignation of Mr. Preston. .When. Interrogated the railway station last evening to witness Rew HiiskUI Mssssr. against the sheriff. Foreign Cook the departure of e party of sixty-tw- o Washington, Jan. 33. Senator 1 said: Absolutely nothing a, been men, bound for the Alaskan gold fields kins has Introduced a new financial done, and I consider It a use! waste Tbe memparty Included thirty-fou- r bill. It restricts th denomination of of time to place any more outers for bers of the Alaskan Mining A Trading greenbacks and treasury notes to bills consideration before this Jury, association. All came from this and of 35 and upwards; provides that naUpon this statement Judge Isek ad- surrounding cities and have given up tional banks may Issue currency up to journed ths jury antil Februty good situations or business interests. the par value ot bonds depheitedf reJudge Mack is but it They will go direct to Seattle by rail duces the tax on circulation to one-ha- lt is generally supposed that w;u and will make their final start Februof 1 per cent, and qjtows national grant the motion made by Ytyjn anj ary 4, in the .specially chartered banka to be established with 125,000 impanel a new jury. schooner Moonlight capital In cities of 3t),"bO0 population. Pram ( Urrat Hoot President's Westers Trip, lUtnSvvv Aro Pour Sailors, Cincinnati, Jan 2d All pe, 0f Washington, Jan. 2d Should pubNew York, Jao. 25. Seventeen rein- the falling of the river tody were lic business permit and them be no deer were exerted by banging on the lashed when at 3.50 rain begs to fail. complication which demands his presthe Britlsb At 8 o'clock there wae thunkr and ence hers, President McKinley will . voyage froullsmburg on steamer Jlfantoo, just arrived here. ightning. with a heavy flovv 0f probably visit the Pacific coast during the coming summer. It is understood Tbe rolling ship was their executioner,. tleeinhd hail of short duration the president will, after visiting that Flfteen'othera survived the trip, but ther quit heavy fall of JD snd It la eertaia that all triloUrles th Yellowstone, one yjf them hue a broken kneecap. go to Butte and thence to Washington, visiting in turn fifteen are all that ar left of a 111 be pouring into the Ohk, ybe e iver had been stationary at atom So Spokane, Seattle and Tacoma. herd of forty started from a small in Finland on a journey of 10,000 lent S inchea all night, hut St dock gQuiet has been restored in Havana. miles to the Klondike region, and t reached 30 feet 1 inches aid 'Biota still continue in Franc and were e speculation of an old Klondi-- a ber. Theykra to be need ns beasts of itill rising. many Jewish stores have been looted. Je ths Mu Whs Osfssts4 rrsns-Mississip- GOV. JOHN W. GRIGGS, ing they will pasa through th historic battlefield oouatry along th Cumberland river between the Cumberland and Washington. law a al Part. Bnlti-mor- tj i fcecre-tar- y Chicago, Jan. S3. President Dole e and party left Chicago via tha A Ohio railway at 3:03 a. m. and will arrive In Washington tomorrow. Th party will oecapy on of tbe official's cars and be under care of Third Assistant Secretary 'of Btoto Cridler. Dnrtbg the journey th party will pass through the thickly settled portion of Ohta, inakiog brief stops s such points as Defiance, Tiffin, Mansfield, Newark, Stephens and William V. Berger am 1 dead, , Articles of Incorporation for ths Spanish Fork and Lake Shore Creamer and Dsirj company have been filed Is tbe secretary of' state's office. The capital stock Is to be 35,000, divided into 500 shares of II each. The principal place of business will be Spanish Fork. Lincoln Day, February 12, will be observed in Salt Lake by the Womans Republican club. Chief Justice Zsu will be the principal speaker, who will describe incidents in tbe life of .Lin- coin at Springfield, 11 L. that same an; der his personal observation. Chris Anderson of Price recently had a narrow escape from drowning. While crossing Price river th ice gsw way. 11a broke tbe ice for fifty feet ia an attempt to get but. Finally the ice bore him op, when he made his way cabin In an exhausted condition. ( re-c- el A aemi-centenni- al GENERAL KIMBALL DEAD. 20 years ago?1 Being a question of law," replied Mr. Teller, It can mean nothing else." But wasn't the resolution of 20 years' ago," persisted Mr. Foraker, passed to meet a state of affairs existing then that does not exist now?, Not at all,, replied the Colorado to-the- 4 tr . com-plai- nt sanity. Minima for Bis Mens. Tekea, Wash.', Jan. 23. Dan Galland, an aged bachelor, was murdered in hit house and the body thrown into tha hog pen. The inside of the house presented a horrible light Snd thore were evidences of a terrible struggle. was the motive, as ths house had been thoroughly ransacked. Galland was wealthy. He had three yean crop of wheat, t3,000 ia the bank, and was supposed to have- - money in hU house. He lived alone la an isolated r place. Bob-berr- y Tine Plunkett of Tnscarora slaughtered a hog recently that dressed over s' 'r " 500 pounds. Considering that it was slop fed animal and never had a " pound of grain, the weight irremark-abland causes one to wonder what it would have been if fed corn. Order have been received at Rays-- i lins from the postoffice department to discontinue the mall route between that city and Saratoga after Jan. 2L After that date mail for Platt valley and the Grand Encampment raining 1 district will he carried from Saratoga. n, I J' ? I I S |