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Show s .1 v little likelihood thaUthe pro; gramma will be changed., Mr. Hobart's family, friends and 11 tical associate bav since been p! re to tbe signed Inevitable, although there were time tfi th Ust day of the vice president's illness that he waa brighter and appeared tote growing . , stronger. Tbe new announcing the death of Vic President Hobart was sent to the White House in a private message from Paterson at 8:50 o'clock tbl' morning. The president wa deeply affected by the telegram announcing hi oolleague a death, and at once dispatched a telegram conveying the sympathy end condolence of himself and Mrs. McKinley to Mrs. Hobart. The preaident' e.oac and Intimate relation with his colleague made him feel the vice preaident'a death a a personal bereavement. Mr. McKinley wa greatl affected. She gave- - way completely to her grief aod hobbed convulsively, Mra. McKinley h hut few intimate here, and among her moat cherished. friend ware. lh sic preaident and Mr, llobart Preaident McKinley did All he could to eomfort hi wife and did not return 'to his office until th members of the cabinet began to arrive. A toon a the sad message waa received the flag over the exeeutlve mansion was hauled down Immediately and the mansion closed to to half-matbe public. Attorney General Grlgga was dia- there CO ALVILLE TIMES. DEATH OP I10BART. BATTLE FOR LIFE IS ENDED. WM.IWW UTAH. ALVILLE. hi Had Hew Expert for Ttae, oa HI remit Waa Uetkanl el Hie BedeMe - aorrew brnwH bf All Leedle The UTAH NEWS. Hea .1 rertlea CmTuoiu B. II.' Robert will not return to Utah before tbo holiday, New York, Nov. 21. Garret A. HoTh trial of John H. Besbruhe, aley-e- r bart, vice preeident of the United of Barton C. Morria, .wilt begin Is States, died at hie home in Paterson, NVJ.,- at 8.Jd o'clock this morning. At Salt Lak December tt. ' new wholesale groeery bonne, with bln bedside were Mr. Hubert, and hi a capital of (300,000, will begin iualnea on. Garret A, Hobart, Jr., together a boat tbo flrvt of tbo year In Salt Lak a with Dr. William K. Newton and his wife and Private Secretary Evans. Tbo atato board of pardooa laat week Mr. Hobart's death had becucx preted pardoned Edward II. Webb, Thorn ai for som bourn. Tbe of the - beginning tnd cam yesterday afternoon when there waa a sudden failure of tbe heart tnd from this attack Mr. llobart never allied. He bad been kick for n long time and bad suffered frequently from heart failure and hts strength had been andermlned. Gradually the failure of the heart's action became more appar-m- t, and aoou after midnight last night Mr. Hobart became unconscious. He remained in that condition nntil hi and William Teagoe from tbo penitentiary. Tbo timUarhy of the name of Mora and Morria ia likely to lead to a eoo teat of the reanlt of th 8alt Lake flection on attorney. - President George Q. Connon returned to Salt Lak from New York laat week where be suffered an attack of pneumonia, lie ia quite feeble yet. Frank Wood and Al Mace were laat week arrested charged with breaking Into the granary of Fred Palmer at Weat Jordan and ateallng fifty buahell f wheat. Tba level of 0 mat Salt Labe, aa taken an tba 15th Inal., on th official acata at Garfield, waaone foot and fivalncbea above the aero mark th aam reading a on the aam day laat year. . David Newman and Emmet By water, the Salt Lake boy arretted at the of a Chinaman who alleged they bad robbed Kim of fiat, wer discharged at tba preliminary bearing. Mary Fergnaon of Lilt! Cotton wood, Salt Lake county, la suing laaac Fer-- g naon for divorce. They were married la Salt Laka In IMS, and bav thirteen children ranging la age from 29 to 4. with Dewey Cooper, who no the Olympia at Manila, arrived in Balt Lake laat week, and waa accorded a great welcome. Tba newsboys, who Balm Blah a an gave him l banquet. An alleged plot of hoboe to murder Detective Sheet of Halt Laka waa given to tbe police by an excited man bo overheard th boboea talking. .'One of the gang waa caught and jailed for vagrancy, llngh J. Roper, n Snlt Lak boy who an away from' home. number of year ago and took to a life oa the ocean, waa oa the .United State cruiser Charleston when she waa wrecked In ' the Philippine. An Incandescent electric light globe, becoming looceoed from Ita socket, Iroppcdtntoa vnt of benalnc nt the leath. Owing to th prostration of Mrs. llobart tbe funeral arrangements have sot been completed. Tbe only step lecided upon ia that the service shall he held ia the church of the Redeemer it Fateraon and the interment in the 1 ' st FIUPIFOS STlLl RUNNING DEMOCRATS .CONFER. All Efforts I NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETS AT CHICAGO. fftaas far TrasMsaUal Caspsla Are Caia Haney's Hew Bares Brysi WUl k Uta Si Chieago, Nor. 22. The Democratic national executive committee, with National Chairman James K. Jones in the chair. Spent moat of the dayio a room in the Hherman bouse, discussing matter pertaining "to organization, way and means and the administrative affairs of the organization. A considerable part of tbe committee sitting waa devoted to discussing the probable effect of high prices on the campaign of 1900. It is the purpose of some of the committeemen to organize a bureau of information and education, whose duty it shall le to gather accurate and definite information relating to trusts, cost of manufacturing, belling prices to jobbers and middlemen, selling prices to containers, wages paid and cost of raw material. They believe that they will be able to show that the present high pricei are the result of trusts and combinations, and that workingmen have been given but a small proportion of the lucrease in selling values Tbit idea has assumed such tangible form that it is predicted W. 11. (Coin) Harvey will be placed at tbe head of the bureau. 1 1 ia proposed to employ a large staff of wen to gather information which can be used in an anti-tru- Manila. Find aa Armd Tore BOERS REPULSED AT ESTCOURT la-J- - Hrltlali I arsills. General Nov. 22, MaeAr-thnr'- a Eetcourt, J any time, opened fire by volley it lung range upon the advancing enemy, w tjo were crossing he railway from the north west of the town. A loud report and a whizzing overhead told tbe tale of the bine jackets watchfulness. A big puff of smoke indicated that their aim was good, the shell bursting in the midst of the Boers, several of whose horses were The observed galloping, riderless On Boers doubled back, helter-skelte- r. advantageous points of the surrounding hills the Boers' guns were posted, getting ready to eover the advance of their firing line, but one shot caused them to withdraw out of sight. g, Man-gataro- m n. Thirty insurgents, under a major, escaped from Havambang yesterday about ten minutes before the Americana entered. Others, it ia said, threw their guns Into the river, and now play the role of amigos. Many Spanish prisoners escaped from the Filipino, remain at liayambang, among them the former governors of the province of Tarlae and Zambalea. There is also quite a large colony of former insurgent officers collected at that point, including Major Ortiz, who acted aa interpreter for the Filipino Commission, headed by General Alejandrino, which Ortiz visited Manila in September. and has donned the clothing, amigo Campaign. Hen a tor Jones, shortly after hia ar- - announces that he ha abandoned the insurrection.. The Spaniard say that the new in- - PRESIDENT KRUGER'S METHODS Basset a Request 1ft. At the reWashington, of the British government tbe quest state department cabled to Consul Mac- rum at Pretoria, asking if the Transvaal government would permit him to take charge of money sent by England to procure comforts for the British prisoners of war. Upon transmitting the request to President Kruger, Mac- -, rum waa refused curtly and told that prisoners arrangements respecting must be made through the general in the field. Although anxious for news from Houth Africa, this government has heard nothing from Consul Macrum for six days. It is believed here that tbe Transvaal government will not permit him to send news in an open dispatch, nor allow him to use a cipher. Woman Indicted Louis. Nov. 18. 1. r lug an eiploalou and fire, which did coualderable damage. Social Uall, Salt Lake's first theatre, around which cluster many pleasant memorlea of early pioneers, la to be torn down, to widen the alley between State and Second East, which 1 In an condition.- arjsnttsry " Th remain of Elder Gottfried Alder, who died In Switzerland, while on a Bitasion, arrived In Mantl laat week ander th ears of Elder Conrad KUer, who left Mantl with him, and wer Interred. Apoatl Teaadale delivered the address. Elder Alder died on the 18th of laal March. 'Mrs. William F. Nelson of Halt Lake, on returning to her home from a three lays visit to Ogden laat week, found II died of her hahand dead In rente convulsions, and bad been dead boors when disprobably forty-etgb- t covered. It was a great shock to Mrs. Kelson aa ha had kiasad her good-b- y on the depot platform In good health when. ah e.w u Lon b er r! si t 41 T, Johnson, assistant ta Prof, Mead of Wyoming, la ebarga of MR. HOBARTS CONDITION!. U Gradually Weaker. Patersen, N. J.,'Nov. 19. Hobart passed the greater part of the day aittingat the bedroom window, at time reading the newspapers and having Mrs. Hobart read to him. He took less food than usual. This seems to indicate that his stomach trouble has returned, Mr. Hobart appeared to be as cheerful aa ever and took Alive-l- y interest in the .topics of tbo day as presented by tbe newspaper There is no preceptible change inbia condition, but his friends sre not as hopeful aa they have been. They believe that the is gradually grow log weaker. Vice-President GARRET VICE-PRESIDE- (rXOM BM LAST l IIO TOO BATH, TAKE A. HOBART. OH THE PORCH OF HI RKSIDKSCK AT 4., IX Al Ot'HT I. AST. Garret A. Hobart waa born In Monmouth county, N. J., June 3, 144; entered lh sophomore elaaa of Rutgers college In lsim, and graduated In 1863; thereafter taught acfiool nntil he entered tne lw office of Socrates Tuttle of Pater-N- . J.j was admitted to the bar in lldft, and commenced the practice of law U the office of that gentleman; waa clerk for tbe grand jury In 1885; city coun-i- l of Paterson In 1871; wa elected counsel for the board of chosen In 1872; entered the legislature In 1873, and was elected to the assembly In 174, and waa mad speaker ia 1878; was elected to tbe aeoate In 1879, and in 1881 waa sleeted preaident of that body, and in 1883; waa a delegate at large to the Republican national eonveotkm in 1878, and was again ehosen in waa 1880; sleeted n member of the national committee in 184, and served continuously until 1816, when he waa nominated for by the Republican national convention and waa duly elected, and took the- oath of officer ou r March Hnr" v- PATKRSOX, X. free-holde- nt 4, " " NEW CHAIRMAN OF THE EXECUTIVE OF THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE J. U. JOHNSON, Johnson, of the national executive committee, who has charge of all prelimin. ary work of the campaign. Jbhnson was hot recently selected forth! position, and Is on of tba most able organizers in the country. He hails from Kansas. After tba conference he waa tk4 what he had to aajpfbout candij date and issues for next year." Ha replied; There is no doubt that Mr. Bryan will be the Democratic nominee. The Democratic convention, in my own opinion, will reaffirm the Chicago platform, 1 believe the Democrat will declare against Imperialism and in favor It 1 of legislation regarding trust too toon yet to say what will be the dominant Issue. Conventionsand platforms do not make issues. In some parts of the country the financial part of the question will b most interesting to the voters, in another imperialism, in another trusts, and so it will go.' te Rear-Admir- con-tsgio- , he one-sixt- -- . family plot at Cedar Lawn on Satur- patched to Patterson as a representaday, where th only, daughter of Mr. tive of th government' to make artnd Mr. Hobart waa burled tlx years rangements for the funeral, which will ago. Rev, Dr. Magee will preach the occur on Saturday. sermon. It will be attended by the preaident The church can accommodate not and cabinet, the supreme court, the 1 more than 800 persona, and aa thous- senate in a body, and a large committee and will b eager to attend th ser- from the house of representatives, bevices It waa anggeated "that they be sides many other Washington digniheld In the armory, which will accoiu-noda- taries and representative of foreign 10,000 persona It 1 known. government. The president, cabinet - B. Y. College at Provo, Wedeneeday lowever, that Mra, llobart wishes thjapd supreme court wllloccu py a special afternon, tirelessly Inhaled chlorine funeral to b aa quiet as possible, and train. gas, which resulted ta stopping heart SMALLPOX IN SANPETE COUNTY. 8cklT Ordered to Until Atlantic Vai.n aetlon. Dr. Taylor wa called and th Washington, Nov. 22. The Navy defoung man waa takea to the doctor's ont th following offlea for treatment. It waa a aerlona Case Quarantined County Schools Closed to Pre partment givea seutto ease, bat th young man toon recovered! Eighteen Aside from having n badly burned - - vent Spread of Contagion. The orer hat Schley: throat Leetham 1 ait right. Balt Lak City, Nov. attended a public meeting and visited been sent today foe the Chieago to proJohn Harvey more, an old pioneer of ia South Atlantic waters, touch Dr, with a number of friends, so that it is ceed to epidemic in Baa Pete county. Fayaon, died last week at th age of II, r. B. for coal at Rio d Janeiro and such ing state of tbe Beaty. Secretary impossible to conjecture how many II weat to Payton in 1853, where he board of health, has returned from a people have really been exposed to th other porta aa am necessary; to reach ha lived forty-seve- n and raised years, Bueno Ayres as soon aa practicable, a large family, most of whom arc atilt ipecial trip there, and report fourteen d isease. vessels, and give special In Janet ioH "With- - tfrtreon it to attention repairs now under way two at Mantl. health officers, Secretary , Beaty took hia loan. on th Wilmington. CThe disease, ia a mild form, has step to prevent the spread of the Carlone Fougersu, aa . aged Salt been Dr. Morey, county physician, raging la Sterling for three Lak woman, has been awarded week There 1 no physician there has been very active and hopes are eo- of l?r,0 sg sins Salt Lake and the waa treated aa chick- - lertaiued that the spread of the disease Haahata Street Railway company. She wa tn -- pox. epidemic No attempt at Isolation was: can be prevented. The recommends-mad- e Nov, 33. AlfretDutton Kansas City, a ear laat March which waa boarding and members of almost every f tlon has been made by the county bofer, who is at the head of suddenly started, throwing her vio- family In Sterling have been expo-e- d. board of health that schools throughrm with houses at Mannheim 'iad lently to th ground. Young people frotn Sterling have been out the conuty close, which is Wing' Germany 'ha just 'closed Durisburg, Balt Lake City hal brought ault mingling at dances and pnblie gather- followed. Iublic gatherings have local grain firm inseveral with deals Allan G. Latnuon and th Jot ing with the young people of other been prohibited at Mantl. against of several hundred a puchase dan Narrow power company to estab- ywna A young lady achool teacher It 1 te tiered the disease was brought volving of .Southwestworth dollar' thousand to lish title a of tbe flow of from Sterling w ho ha been exposed to to sterling by two young men who water in the Jordan river above th the disease a number of times, last Sat- broke quarantine at Great Fall ern wheat and left Ust night for GalM on L, several weeks will make he where where arrangement ago, the reslos narrows, and to prevent the Jattef urday attended-- n eonnty teachers' disease wa prevalent, and returned --to i or the shipment of the grain to Europe, from appropriating any of the flow, meeting at Mount Pleasant and later their Lome near town. vt dam-ages- Murder. le XVbrWT the irrigation Investigations af th of agriculture, and Arthur P. Stover are completing the work of getting up a bulletin on Irrigation In Utah, the aam having been commenced oow under by Fred Jv Mills, who arrest, charred with the ktlling of Jamce C. O'Melveney of tho Oregon Short Line railroad. Will Leetham, a student, while work log In tbe chemistry departmentof the H fer The Post Dispatch thta afternoon say Mra Henry Bamberger,, a midwife living on Chouteau avenue, has been arrested on a bench warrant sworn out on Information laid before the grand jury, which charges that she has knowledge of the murder of at least three women and destr notion of scores of babies. Tbe story related by the witness is almost inci edible. The tales deal with the disposition of bodies in a revolting manner. If all the allegations be true, the home of the accused ia a veritable ebarnal bouse. FI v indictments wer found against this Afternoon by Mra, Bamberger th grand jury. One charges murder in the first degree, three charge manslaughter in th first and on in the T . second degree. El-wo-od h From the 'American Consul. Nov. 8t bril 1 tkaval Cans Sara th Eress Ihptus Nov. 21. For several days creeping toward Eateonrt, and had boasted that they would be in her Saturday morning. They were met upon their arrival with a reception that they little expected. At exactly the Dublin Fnsileera took up their position, and, without waiting er Tty li it bad been known that th Boars war recon noiaance entered Dagopan this afternoon. The American fonud that no insurgents had been there for four day. The Thirty-thir- d infantry waa probably In Dagupan yesterday, leaving last night. No insurgents have been seen anywhere near th railroad. It la believed the only armed force of any size is in the mountains of the alprovince of ambles, to the west, though there are report of insurgent Cm-ilanconcentrating at San Miguel de west of Panique, and at (or Mangalaron), weat of Uayombang. General MacArthur is beprepared for the attack, his force between Durban, province ing disposed of Tarlae and Dagupan. The Twelfth infantry, a battalion of the Seventeenth infantry and two troop of cavalry are with General MacArthur below Dagu-pa- nu let GV a Tva h 1" COMMITTEE surgent capital Is Bengaet, aud that the American prisoners are at Camitln. They report having seen Lieutenant Gilmore and hia party in tbe north. Vice-Preside- nt PROGRAMME FOR CONGRESS. Oatlla '' N?' of aha Work Which BapabUeaa WILL RELEASE PRISONERS- - . Will- Carry .Out, .1. Washington, Nov. 82. Adoption . "fLT - - 'At. - " v.'.ji - j, of Got. Steosmkorg of Idaho Lmtm Foe Cooor d'Aloaoa. the old Reed rules, immediate passage Boise, Ida., Nov. 19. Governor of the caucus committee' financial reand Auditor Sinclair left for form bill, and reorganization of comNorth Idaho tonight It la probable mittees along old line as far aa possithey will release all the prisoners still ble, with the Republican membership of the committee on rates, consisting held there. The men against whom of Messer. Henderson, Dalzrll and the best eases had been prepare esBabcock, ia tbe programme which Hr caped at tbe time of the outbreak, and Henderson, who is to be 'speaker, h those remaining in custody have been marked out for the house of .representatives as a result of bis conferences held on minor charges. It ia probable with the president, the leading memthat they will be released upon tbeir bers of the house, cnd with other own recognizance to appear when prominent Republicans sinde his ar- wanted. rival in Washington. Sten-nenbu- -- Three Men Killed la Making aa ArreeA Antlers, I. T Nov. 20. Near Doakt-vill- e, thirty miles east of here. Deputy United States Marshals James Ennis and Doogeveridge and John Kelly, a Goodland merchant, were killed by two men named Bishop and ' Frey, whom th officers were trying to arrest for Removing mortgaged property. Bishop aome time ago was aent to an insane asylum, and whilu confined thsrs hit Fife nibrtgggsd their cattle and other belongings to Kelly and left ( for Arkansas. ' . ElooUoa Troablae In Koatneky. Lexington, Ky., Nov. 21. Governor Bradley and Adjutant General Collier of th state militia, have had a eonfer ence with Colonel R. TJ. Williams of the" Second Kentucky regiment. "RepublL can leaders professing to be close to the governor say that if tbe vote of Louis-vill- a ia thrown out, Bradley will refuse tn recognize Gobel as his successor and will maintain his position even If forced to use the militia. The governor movements hr beiug very closely watched. Bank Wracknr Hnntnncnd. ' I.laka Farrat Kmarvaa. Kansas City, Nov. 31.4-Pa- rid Reiger, Boise, Ida1., Nov. S3. On the subject former en president of thn Of forest reserveSTwhich baa-best-lional which failed in November, trading so much attention throughout 1896, bank, owing depositors a million and n the natioq and central parts of the half state,! Senator Shonp says be has de-- Uniteddollars, was, Saturday, ia the States district court, found., Jipr,n oppose the cyyalion of any more reserves embracing agricultural guilty of misapplying the bank s funds land.'and will endeavor ta secure the and sentenced by Judge Adams of 8t segregation of such lands within the Louis to six years In tbe penitentiary. limits of reserve already laid ont He A formal motion for a new trial was ssys: 1 will oppose any move tending overruled and the ease will go to th to tie op any of th agricultural land of the state. We want, the land settled United Statesconrt of appeal. Fieger-wareleased oa 120,000 bonds. ' up aud improved." a |