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Show STARVATION COALVILLE TIMES Wvlw UTAH. UTAH NEWS. Jo Walcott and George Dixon, the two noted colored pugilists, havebeen In Utah the past week, on their war to the coast where they are matched for a fight which will take place very oob- - ' i S:l J I ; j STARVING am tikis rmuxnw oo. COALVILLE, Oar Abuhsa Troops. Washington, Nov. FIGURES. . United States Senator Cannon haa delivered four lectures on hi. observe tlona in the Orient since his return two weeks since, ilia observations show the inhabitants to be a quaint people. John Dent, the eolord man who was shot at a bait I .site City dance on Thanksgiving night, died Saturday night at St. Mark's hospital. The ball from Shaver's revolver entered the back, piercing Dent 'a kidneys, the lower part of one long, and lodged under one of hia riba The code commission expects to receive the first 100 volumes of the revised statutes of Utah from the Nebraska publishing house by the end of th is week. The contracting printers will forward the balance of the law law books ta'Targer Installmeuta at intervals of about once a week until thes full number is reached." ( Utah's Congressional delegstlou i this week for Washington. jut, time to be present at the opening of r Congress on Decemder 6th. Senator d Rawlina and familv left on on Tbursbay Senator and Mrs. tanoou, together with Congressman King, who willbe joined by hie family Tuea-dav.an- Eeepoeslble for Rrorif Uaa Dwtlu, -- The Worlds New" York, Nov,-timfigures of Cubas starvation were death the showed moderate. They idly Of only 200,000. But every painful fact underneath tends to prove them nearly double that number. When the grim returns are all In it is now almost certain that this Cohan massacre of the innocents will reach And this awful taumber due 400,000. not include those killed in battle or the thousands and thousands of women and children whobave died of exposure, disease and massacre in the swamps. It now seems certain that more than half a million people, for the most part loyal subjects of Spain, hsva been killed by Spanish war la Luba. A Weeks trip through the province of Havana, Mstanxas and Santa Clara has tended to make moderate this tremendous extreme figures. The figures of Spanish official reports show but S part of tbs mortality. They only give the number, buried in consecreted ground they do not give that fully. And yet, these official, reports of burial permits issued admit that in the province of Santa Clara tber have died and been buried since Weylers fiat, 71,67 persona The, nnmberof people for whose iv Ixtrnce Weyler la directly responsible la 155,133 in SanU Clara province, and of these he bss killed 66,216, or over one-haof them. , Santa Clara baa so far been by far the least destitute bf tne provinctf "'Tt has many cattle and not A very thick Between Its 53 per eent population. dead to Dinar del Rio, admitted, are tba provinces of Matanzaa and Havana, within 60 and 70 per cent mortality, respectively, These percentages are established now by the actual figures in some thirty cities and towns Applied to the denser population of their respective provinces the total destha since Weylers "Bando" will foot up nearly a million. ultra-Spanis- h lf later. A alight bitch haa occurred between the Salt Lake A Los Angeles people and the Oregon Short Line regarding the consolidation and transfer that was to hare been made as a preliminary to tba building of the Deep Creek road. It Involves the validity of some DEMAND INVESTIGATION. Outstanding bonds, but it is not thought it wilt stand in the way of Statf Mt of the Indians Involved In tho Reveal Colorado Buckskin Haa eonsnmmathig'the transfer. Washington, Novamber 30. Captain Mary Hepworth ia suing the Lamand Lieutenant Cavanaugh, Wright bert Paper eompauv and the Jennings Ivestmeut company of Salt.Lake for Ninth cavalry, whd commanded the In the recent disturbance in (20,000 for tbs 4sth of; her husband, troops Thomas Hepworth, who died from in- Colorado, base demanded an investigation of the affair by the interior dejuries resulting from a fall Into an elevator abaft In the place of buslnese partment Captain Wright secured a of the Lambert Paper company on statement from the Indian of ,th afWest First South street, on January IS fair, the sum of which ia that "a small 1895," The building was owned by party of them were captured on Snaka the' Jennings, Brothers Investment hill, hunting deer, the majority of them lA the Wills sad, bah lout books were In, camp, when a party of .armed The plan of locating a community of white men came into camp, They reChristian people in the Payette valley mained there some time, the Indian in Idaho waa formed a year ago, by not understanding them. Finally one Rev. 11. F. Clay, pastor of tba First opened his coat and showed a star, Christian church of Salt Lake City. saying they .were buckskin police and So successful have been his efforts to the Indians must go with them; the ppt his idea into affect, that on Janus loditas refused, upon which the whites is will give up lie pastouU Ju covered them With their pistols sod ary Salt Lake and remove to hie Idaho several grasping ths two bucks by tha farm. Several Salt Lake families and a j struggle commenced. 'A, Wrists, ib addition a number living la Fast-er- a squaw ran to their assistance.' when States have declared their inten- the polio literally riddled her with tion to follow him into the. neighbor- bullets, , A warden on the outside of ing stale. ths party ahotths squaw la the back William Cheney of Carbon county, of her bead, and another in the arm. s canThe surviving bucks saw their chance who has a sawmill in yon, Beaver valley. Carbon county to run for horses, which they had' in found tba skeleton of a man about two tha bruanh and did so, maklug their miles from the head waters of the escape. The Indian insisted that creek, a short time ago. The skeleton neither at that time, nor since, have was burled ia a shallow grava covered they fired a shot at a white man. by leaves and brush. The aknll waa 8TORM 8WEPT ENGLAND, crashed in above the ear, and from the condition of the body the man had eviKnows for Many Tears, Resulting dently been dead for over a year. Dr. Worst la Terrible Leas of Ufo aad Boots. O, K. Hansen, a dentist of Fsirvlsw London, Nov, 30. Tho latest reports said that the man waa about 30 years of age, judging from the condition of from various points along the coast the teeth. Re was about five feet ten show that the gale which swept Eninches tall, had black hair and waa glish waters yesterday end last night, dressed in winter clothing, wore a aavy and which had not abated its fury np bine shirt, a knlft scabbard and a cart- to midday, waa one ofv the worst storms of recent years In many places ridge belt. . it was almost cyclonic io It yiolencc, Slowly but surely and satisfactorily and the long list of disasters includes the Utah silk commission la founding a lost of large many wrecks of jth nucleus of a moat important and large vessels sndlife, the lose of scores if adi Th work profitable industry. not hundreds of smaller craft, with vancing on lines that assure the serious damage to property ashore at ulof measure the beat results largest towns many Important or Individual household timately,. In the north the Wind was accompan. efforts count for the most, and it will led by blinding snow and hail that hid not be many years before the nation awakes lo a realisation of the feet that the light and immensely Increased the difficult! of Utah, With its favorable climate and are known to navigation. Many ships have foundered, in most other conditions, ia capable of rivaling cose it is feared, with all on board . ' the old world in allk production, not Scarcely a town on the coast has esonly aa to quality, but in quantity. without more or less injury, caped The commission has caused to be plantrnlls and flying debris adding filing ed 5,000 "mulberry tree snd Abwgath - li j.Hrnuu ioo - Nine-Mil- Wealth aa fit Us4 el Fakoloe la Eaupla, tha .superintendent of the government reindeer herds In Alaska,' has arrived in Washington and called at the war department to advise Score lay Alger as to the state of affairs In the ter ritory when he left ' Mr. Akjellman sailed from 8L ML charls October 0. Before hit departure, the little force of United States regular soldiers, under Lieutenant-Colone- l Randall, had arrived and had taken up their quarters at&L. Michaels, Moreover, they had made th first arrest, in the person of a mutineer, the cook of a little schooner, who with a couple of revolvers, had cowed the other members of the crew completely and assumed command of the craft. The officers boarded the boat and overpowered him. - toi Faaslsh-- r , ' men Seattle, Nov. 39. Twenty-fiv- e arrived here today on the City of Seattle direct from Dawson City. They were divided into two parties, the last one of which left Dawson City October 6. Among the party were Thomas Magee. sr., Thomas Magee, jr., of San Francisco; Swiftwqter Bill Gates, Joe Boyle, William Ilokkina.J', Eckert, 11. Robertson, M, Raymond, Bert Nelson, John W. Brauer, W, II. Chambers, K. W. Pond, E. Ash and others. They have (50,000 in drafts and gold dust All tell stories of, a food shortage la Dawson that is almost a famine. The last person to leave Dawson was Jack Dalton. When Dalton left the steamers Alice and Bella had reached there Enmity of Lupw. loaded lightly. It Is said that tbe Vienna, Nov. 30. It ia stated that as Bella's cargo con sis tad of whisltj and soon as the new cabinet ia formed that billiard balls. She brought no proBaron Von Gutscb Von Frankenthnrn, visions. . , ; , p v the former minister of public instrucTbe Canadian mounted police chartion snd ecclesiastical affairs, who has tered the Bella and gave all who wishbeen entrusted with the task of form- ed free transportation, to Fort Y ukon. ing a ministry to succeed that of Count The Bella is reported to .have left ' Casimir Badini, whieh resigned yester- about Oct, 12 with 200 men. day, will enter into negotiations with According to .statements made by the leaders of the Germans and the members of the Dalton party there la Czechs with the view of bringing about liable to be trouble of the most serious a modification of the ordinances mak- kin dthis winter in Dawson. Men were ing the Czech language gathered in groups and cursing with with the German. It is this ordinance might snd main th new comers that that caused the riotous scenes in the were constantly coming into the Klonlower house of the relchsrath, which, dike, loaded 'with scarcely any proin turn, produced among the populace visions a ferment bordering on revolution, in The mounted police were offering consequence of which the Badenl min- free transportation to the grub piles ' further down the Ynkon, but to countistry resigned. less hundreds who had labored bard format ef tier Mass Naval BUL all through the summer accumulating foreBerlin, Nov. 30, A a grnbstuke, tbe prospect was unincast of the government naval bill has viting to say tha leasL These men been issued. It endeavors to make it figured that it would take all their appear that the scheme give scope to savings in gold to pay tbeir living exthe Reichstag's judgment and provide penses at Fort Yukon daring the winirona total fleet of nineteen ter and that in the spring they would clads eight coast defense iron clads not have enough gold left to pay their and forty-tw- o cruisers an increase of passage money back to Dawson, to say iran-clad- s g five and nine nothing of purchasing enough food to Cruisers. subsist until they could get started The additional expense involved is again. To these poor fellows tbe offer (65,000,000 marks, the s mount to cover qf the mounted police waa no better seven years when thd warships are to than tha prospect at Dawson of being be completed, the Reichstag to decide compelled to winter on half rations yearly the number Of vessels to be until the supply boats could reach the commenced end the amount of the na- diggings in the soring. val budget. This Increases the budJohn W. Brauer, the United State get from 118,600,000 marks to 150,000,-00- 0 mall carrier who left Dawson, Septemmarks, but, according to the fore- ber 27, skid: , cast, the additional expense 'will ' not "There is only &ne salvation for , the necessitate the levying of any special miners who sre now at Dawson City, taxes t, , j snd that ia for them to 'undertake 'the Me Delay t the Darrant Casa, apfuF winter trip from Dawson to Xbrt Yukon, a distance of 400 miles San Franclsoo, Nov, 30. AtTW-jr- e is food at Fort Yukon, there is torney General Carle ban- iecciab at Dawson, end just aa sure as word from Attorney General Fitzgerald to tha effect that he will tdvfsc the stars sliiue, terrible Suffering will Warden Hale to carry out the exec- be th fete of the Dawson miner unless he leaves there before spring. I will ution of Theodore Durrsnt, regardless make my statement conservative, and of any legal proceeding that may be instltated by Durrant's attorneys, say that when I left Dawson the men after the present legal quibble has had on an average fonr months food supply- - Some bad supplies for only , been decided. Durrant will be re sentenced umou one month, while others had enough . as thd controversy now pending Is set- for four or five. closed the restaurant last "The which the attorney gessral tled, after pf the state believe no legal step can plght I left. It bad been selling nothaccomplish further delay in tha pro- ing but beefsteak, for which the hungry paid $2.50. posed exeention of Durrant "When the people realized that tbe boats-woulFtngiwe I Break the CeaiMaa ' not be np tbe river, they Detroit, Mich., 'Nor. 80, Governor knew that starvation threatened them, Piogrees object in getting possession and the great stampede began. The of a Venesuclan asphalt lake is sow first to leave went to Fort Ynkon. I asserted to be to break the asphalt guess there were about ten in the combine so that munUdpa! ownership party that left tbe first day. One boat of asphalt paving planU tusy be tour- came np from Fort Ynkon with several ed and to permit laying asphalt pav- newspaper men aboard, among them ements by local contractor instead of being Correspondent Sam Wall and a combine to the Mr. McGilvra. They brought tbe news monopolize allowing the business. The governor dues not that tbe Hamilton bed unloaded all of admit hia connection with the, asphalt cargo and tried to get over the bar business, but in an in ter Tie w b de- light and failed in her efforts, though clared that within seven year nothing she drew but two feet of water. This but asphalt will be used for paving la new increased the excltement snd the United States. all made the rush toward serai-offici- aea-goin- g sea-goin- . , Ang nie , food-cente- SottlUr NulrtUe ftt the greater." DoImw Jtolse, Ida., Nov. 30 Oliver llunkitv, commissary sergeant at Boise barracks, committed suicide by hanging himself. He went into the second story of the commissary department, adjusted the noose aronnd hia neck snd leaped through a trap door. He leaves a wife and two children here. Plunkitt recently came here from Walla Wall la his position he handled considerable money, and his accounts are being!-amtned- . He left a note stating that despondency, induced by drink, was the cause of the suicide. SeataUoa la Wlseea-tl- a Srhoo a Sheboygan, Wia, Nov. 30. Quite a sensation haa developed in pnblle school circles in this city through one of its professors who had been prac ticlng hypnotism on school children. Professor George M. Ferguson, Instructor of drawing Ixa the public schools, is charged with taking eight or ten pupils from one of the ward schools and using them aa subjects for us exhibition, M r. Ferguson does not deny the charge, but asserts in his defense that ho injury was done to the children and that he did not imagine Fe robber got ever "The Santa so the sheriff say-- , ' there would be any objection on. tha A dispatch. from ..Jacksonville sayi part of the parenta t ife. Arad The achool board bas been asked to the Dauntlea landed a large exthat pluirof tTiThhe been" rocket and boat dismiss tbe professor, and a special in Cuba Sunday night sviof tn'qsnt ecasowThc' number pedition waa held to hear the case. commission's annual report will dem- signals almost without The cruiser Brooklyn has been meeting Stories of thrilling escapes come from inonstrate that the Profeasor Ferguson has been ,in 11 sections At Norfolk, Bacton aed safelydcy docked, in th timber dck Sheboygan several year. lie is an dustry needs only to be properly fosst 'thii Now York- havyird in five vessels, as yet unidentered snd encouraged to be a grand Happisburg, artist of unusual talent, ahd studied tified, went down, and all perished. success in Utah. a Paris in pursuing his Vrt studies'1 The state normal school of Racine, Missouri Hitsuia Ostrich. Judge Riles of Salt Lake haa enterBelts e fas Deiraa. rJii'ArtdMu Wia, was burned. Loss (75,000. ; ed an order recommitting Eqierv S. Libert v, NJo., Nov. 30 William mew Nov. 3& Jndgs Ithck Ark.i toSe JlJetfiTifr;Cfr the The Eepublicaq convention at Bos- J5.Little nri.ioiph;sgcd iy M Herrfrasn of this city, who in, ton unanimously .nominated EJwin If. u The ymvng .ralAXwXAAf "b,AhU0. V Ca Wall1893 detruded" J. E. Blanther when he released On bond Nov. 3, this year, but owed a- - quantity of glass with the Curtis for mayor. ' ' Was charged with swindling a Chicago he aooa became violent again and hia intention of taking his life, appear to HTh, Kansk City Stock Yards out coneera, and who afterwards had aa recommitment was necessitated. be all right The physicians say, how- jiany has reduced the price of feeding extensive business acquaintance with The Salt Lake police would tike to ever, that a day or two may pass be- Cattle at the' yards 'while awaiting the murderer, say he can positively meet a smooth swindler who operat- fore the effect of. the glass may be sale and ehipnirat; ,t Identify Blantbera handwriting. H noticed.. Unless Carr Is a human ing srouDd the city. He is a slight-of- In answer to an indictment chargipy believes Dorranf is entirely innocent 4 ong hudg performer and makes way 'with trlch" hi effort to take his life may them with keeping bucket shops, of the, charge which desuccessful. The officer , la. anuencr-prove the that ecmfessioq ia a New York broker appeared iu genera over h111 bpge astaztlLag tway aad; aadthorne bchurhWranoui I "4ed to chain tar t to the wail auJTl he will and oaa not sessions and help to prove 'guilty, pleaded genuine " don today. earns ranging from (10 downward. itso. $90,-00- Brock-lyu- . 1 Mt -- 'tKT s -- ! 1 oe-,ha- NORTHWEST NOTES. THOUSANDS, RESUME WORK. INKLONDlKt. n, ef the Dml Strike In HllaoWTIrtery fee tbe Mlerro. 29. The coal mining Nov. Chicago, stiike in the northern Illinois district la ended. Twelve thousand have gone back to work in tbe Coal City, Braid-wooCarbon Hill, bpring Valley, Lodi, Seatonville,' Lasalle and Oglesby fields One thousand men remain out at Streator, the only point where miner and operators have not agreed. A settlement Is expected within ja t) week. Victory is with the miners, although they have not won all they asked. Their chief demand was for mine ran" price, that is, a rate per ton, as the coal comes from the mine, unscreened Thl ha been conceded in some places Where the rate remaind fixed in price per net ton of screenes soal, a substantial advance has been won. The increase in wages all through tbe district approximately, is 10 cents S ton over the schedule made last May, The strike" has been oo-- since July I. It started aa a part of liie general itrike ordered by tbe United Mioe Workers of America, The Pennsyl-rani- a and Ohio inlners 'settled their The" differences early in September. Indiana work was resamed about the tame time. Tbe 3- -, 000 miner of Illinois refused to ratify the terms of the agreement made at Columbus, O. , and d, f 1 (on tinned tbe strike. BURNED AT THE Rear Morderer STAKE. C re mated Mob. rieted Southport, N. C., Nov..- 29. A whit brutally murdered by a negro man, and the murderer burned to leatb by an infuriated mob of white farmers near here last Thursday. Daring the fall a party of farmers have been fishing on Cherry Grove beach near Little river. One of the boys, by the name of Stevens, left for hi home on the Waccamaw river, with an ox cart, carrying a package of money. The father of Stevens went home, but found nothing had been heard of bis son since he had left the beach. It was learned that a negro man named Nathan Willis had borrowed a gun and left the beach shortly after Stevens son had departed for hia home. A party was organized by the sheriff, and Willis was fouud at Town Creek, N. C., having in hia possession Stevens ox, cart end a cloth hat full f shot holes. He was carried by the sheriff and posse back into South Car-- si ' in a.' Reports say that Willi was taken from the sheriff by a mob of infuriated farmers and carried off into the woods, where he was chained between two d pine trees. Light wood was piled around him and he was burned . , to death. - boy was box-face- . . AXkletie LnWersltj Roles Amended. 4 Tort Ilalleck, Xev.. i to be sold t public auction in February. Ed Smith, bartender at Wadsworth, Xev., committed suieide dy shooting bimslef in the head. E. W. Kiplinger, of Cheyenne. Wyo., man of 67 years, bas been adjudged insane. A1 Ford, a negro, was acquitted of the charge of complicty in tbe murder of John Haa kinaat Butte. A telephone war is on at Great Falls, Mont., between the Rocky Mountain Bell company and the Electric City. The value of the live stock and agricultural product of Flathead county, Mont., this year was 81,300,000. Miss Susan B. Anthony will make a number of woman suffrage speeches in Nevada during the campaign next year. W. G. Whitney proprietor of the Payette, Ida., nursery, was arrested at Butte for selling fruit wdthout a license. e, Castings are being shipped to C. & C. to over the Nev., daily equip the companys cars with the new a gray-haire- d U Usw-tborn- s. In Ravallr county, Montana, this year, the Anaconda Copper Mining company will pay 89,699 taxes, and Marcus Daly will pay 85,504. About a dozen young men have been laid off at the De La Mar (Nevada) works for being under age, as a precautionary measure to conform to the law. Mayor Miller and Attorney Arnold state in the most positive manner that the ordinance against gambling in Cheyenne would be enforced without favor. Bobert Riddle of Belgrade, MonL says the snow in Gallatin valley is disappearing and that farmers are now ploughing and getting ready for another crop. District Attorney McGowan at Carson Nev., says he will bring the Jones murder case before eacb session of court, and Insist upon the rearrest of young Guinan. Andy King, an Anaconda pugilist, has been arrested for engaging in a prize fight at Deer Lodge Montana, He knocked out Ed Santry, of Chicago, in three rounds. There is a curiosity along the Stillwater in Montana, in tbe shape of an albino wolf whose coat is as white as snow. He stops with a band of 16 of his gray brothers. R. Stall haa instituted a man, W, damus suit against the city of Cheyenne to compel lit to issue a liquor license. The city authorities claim that his saloon is a disreputable resort Because the single word "felonious was omitted from the judge's charge to jury, the Montana supreme court has ordered a new trial of the case against C. M. Oliver, sentenced to three years for ro berry. The work of allotting land to the Indians on the Wind River, reservation, Wyoming, has been going on quite rapidly; but it is reported that thera-wil- l be a cessation in tbe work Chicago, Nor. 29. Representatives a number of the leading colleges met here today snd decided to amend the athletlo rules in several particulars. Tbe meeting waa preliminary in Its nature, but there is no doubt th change suggested will be carried out. through the winter months' They are as follows: James Newlands who has charge of four-year A limit for college athletes. the Newlands ranch at Fort Church-hil- l, to be students barred Preparatory Nev., has lately completed the purfrom college athletics. Games at colof 1,100 head of beef cattle from chase lege to be regarded aa "practice Fred uangbergof Carson valley. The garnet." "Summer baseball nines to be dia- cattle will be taken to the borne ranch and fattened for San Francisco and eon raged. markets. eastern t Farther elimination of rough foot-bal- L A train oF twenty-tw- o car of Wes. The colleges which are party to the ton (Wyoming) cattle was shipped to Sonth Omaha recently. Most of the agreement are Northwestern universtock was very fine, but one car shipped of Perdue university, University sity, Winchell and Manaugh, was said Chicago, University of Illinois, Uni- by men to be probably by versity of Michigan, University of the experienced finest car of beef cattle ever Minnesota and the University of Wis- shipped from northern Wyoming, consin. They brought on an average 859.67 per head. Cant Get WooL.. James Westfall who has been ip Washington, Utah,' Nov. 29.- - Thom Grand Encampment for a year past, aa Judd, lessee of tbe Rio Virgea mill eloped with Mrs. Julia Tennel formbe will termihas given notice erly of Denver. The couple drove nate hia leas of the mills next Octo- to Rawlins, Wy., arriving there fn the ber. The chief reason assigned is the evening, and took the afternoon uiest-bouodifficulty of obtaining wool to run ths train. That they expected tbe factory, that product being jnfinenced Injured husband to foUow them was greatly by the cash market. Mr. Judd evident! from Westfall's nervous acof his time tions. He told several also desires to devote-morparties that he to his ranch near Toquervllle; and was anxious to out of town get the fruit industry, this line, being a they could be overtaken, as he specialty with him. Tennell to do some shooting, expected The factory is runnfng up to its full he caught sight of them. Westfall (lf 1 capacity now, and doing it u&nal fall cut the telegraph wire. trade in the farious, products .of, the ' GiTt. Hobth. of Concord, N. H.,Tu country. Though it is not likely to god ii Nine Mile, Missoula county, run longer than June next, owing to a Montana, after his (wife, who ran . V lack of material. ! He. says her h?aJ awayrlaaFst. Lessee Judd Intend, settling every- waa turned by fsjry tales concernius thing vp prior tq hia ,traqafpr back tq the . opportunities for women to gel the companys property. And will VicS n7rfontafiA,IJt si j no? leave few accounts unpaid. He la Mr.!R XT, Beetlsn of EvanstAn.WyoJ to" thli effect--- ' : tifying (Creditors v shipped to .San ,t.Frangieoj recently "V"11 -T-M .Sum Gsbberta Majority. jpaloud of wheat, for export trade. II bSfclat was raised by Randolph farmers Snd Denver, Colo.. Nov. 29.-l1canvass of th vote tor juatieedf the feoighi by th "Herman Cash in eoi waa supreme court, at the regent jate RatqaaUty.,og ion nas been made. The result was wheat ever aeea in any country.: ,' n as follows: W. Iit ClabbfcAj pipnB&t a Walter i Rv, Roeghtom , who U and democrat, 68,888; Uharie IX Hoyt, in the qounty Jail at Cheyonns adciinistostion and silver, reQubHayu, for stealing a 815,000 package from th 64,947, The vote for Bryan for presi- railway postoffice fs studying ' dent in 1896 was 148.880; Mcftialejq He lays h6 has always wan ted to study 25,979. No proper comparikaMu, IsR't but ndvwr had, tbs SpporJluulty however, tje mde as the,, sole, fpr uutil now.v x , Bjyan Included that of the democratic, !.VH i M populist and silver republican parties! tilt of l tht d Tie-fo- re , 1 1 -- jmy.It the-fine- st ls. -- - |