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Show o COALVILLE TIMES. imizq sms, nxu HPiRES rcBi rsHiso eft - COALVILLE, PRESIDENT SNOWS FUNERAL ATTENDED BY THRONGS. the SUDDEILI FROM ERDSCHITIS, ElUSED Bl I ft TtMtu give UoaM-TslwrM- Cntke, th 81 1 Lk toy Georg who waa last week j accidentally shot a youthful companion, 4 dead from "the Injuries receive!. Ax toon m cougress meet tbe Ued for o approwill be priation of t 00,009 to be used to the rebuilding of Fort Douglaa. It Lek City Alt the saloon In of 'were Jsnndsy, by or-lr-r the city 'hulhoritie. and the citizens experienced a dry" 8unday. - Greses a. the fastest peeing: bore in the world, will visit SsItLake CHy In tli near fotura where lie will tva a From there be will be taken to California where be will gor-Srnms- ot eljiUtt reniamall winter, P.J. McKenna, held at Provo on a charge of attempting to wreck a Rio Gran da WtHiern train, ba been die charged from custody on tb ground that the Information did not net forth facta au tllcicnt to constitute an offense. The old Walker House, Salt Lake's pioneer botel,,l doomed a a hotel. It owner haring dedided that tha old etructnre shall undergo radical repair nd emerge from the band of tb con tractor a remodeled boalnes struo-tore- . Tbe state board of health baa sen I out circular to the different achool and eounty authorities relative to leaning up and taking proper pr In most antion agalnet smallpox. mads are being case tha suggestion adopted. state le the Utah aa a grape-growinobject of 'bulletin under preparation by the cute board of horticulture, lo which it will be urged that local conditions promise Utah greater possibilities as a wine producing section then California. William Erdman, one of Spring-ville- 's leading eitisena, died last week after a lingering itioeec of several months lie sustained a auustroke while working at Brigham City last summer, from tbe effects of which he never recovered. The machinery Is being Installed la Beckers new flouring mill at MantL The mill has a capacity of fifty barrels per day. The machinery is the latest Improved. Water la the motive power. It it expected the mill will he la per g Death of Venerable President Came as a Great Surprise, 3 He Attended Conference Sunday-- Serious Illness Began "" Brief History of His Busy Life. Wednesday V Lorenzo Snow, the venerable head of the Mormon church, died suddenly Thursday afternoon, October 10, et bis residence, the Bee Hive House, in Balt Lake, HU death was directly dne to bronchitis can sed by a cold, and was a gryat anrprlse'to the general public, who wera hot aware of the iilnena I the president, aeriona or otherwise, until be wie on the threshold of death For some time the president had been In feeble health, swing to advancing years, and those near him realized bis growing feebleness, bat they did not realize that tbe end wee so near. They insisted, however, tbst the best possible ear of hie health be takea, and for this reason be did not apper at lha late conference at the bnoday afternoon session, when Apostle Cleweon Wee elevated to the first presidency, Tbe exertion caused by this, to him, great effort, bad a depressing effect, and Monday ha was not so well, bnt rallied Tuesday and seemed no worse than ha had been for some time. , The Illness which terminated fatally began about a month ago, when President Snow attended a social function A where he cenght a severe cold. and followed the eold, backing cough although everything known to science, eon pled with the beat of ears, was done, no relief we! afforded. It was not until Wednesday morning that ruy thing like a serious derangement was even suspected by those around him, when he was attacked by vomiting apcll, which kept up almost incessantly for some time, and ba was ar was appointed counselor to Parley Pratt, president of the British mission la 1841 he published a pamphlet, Th Only Way to be Saved," which h been translated into German, F retch and Italian. In B43 be returned lo America at the bead of 250 converts an specially fl1jirof(d'yesseL'lQ IS H he conducted a vigorous campaign fa Ohio for Joseph Smith for President ef tbe United States. In 1845, turning to education, ha was placed at the head of the Nauvoo grammar sehooL He left Nenvoo in the exodoe of 1849 for Salt Late but on account of sickness, did not reach tbera until 1848. In October, 1349, be was sent on a mission to Italy where he remained for three years and translated the Book of Mormon. In 1858 be was elected a member of the Utah House of Representatives, la accordance with tbe lew of 1850, He was returned to every ss-loo until 1882 three times to the to the counOonae and twenty-thre- e cil. In 1855, with fifty families, he founded and named Brigham City, which was his borne until he became president of tba chorch. In 1864 ha went on a mission to the Sandwich Islands and labored diligently for a time ia that" part of the Pacific, In 1873 be accompanied George A. Smith and other Uteb people on a tour of the countries of Europe and Palestine. In 1877 be was released as president of Boxelder Stake after baring pre sided OTer it since Ite organ lzatl-jPfla 1838 ha was convicted of onlaiyfuJ cohabitation and sentenced to three i ' y oar. The Gras Valley Indians held council recently and decided that they would not send their children tn the Indian school to be eetabliabed at nniesa compelled, bat ety they are willing to send their children to Kooaharem, nearer at borne. , A. W. McCune, of Salt Lake, and have purchased tbe famous Slerre de Pasco group of mines In Pern, the price paid being 110,000,000, This mice baa been In operation I 71 years, sad daring that time $1,000,000, 0001a sliver baa bee produced from ft.,." Clement Ilereechel. the expert consulting engineer from New York, bee reported on tbe project of construct tog a dam in Ogden which will ini' pound 15,000,000.000 gallons of weter saved at flood time for use later, placing the cost at $.'50,000. The executive committee of the State Society of Christian baa chosen Rev. John E. Carver, pastor of tbe First Presbyterian Church of Ogden, president to succeed Ben L. Coram, who has removed from tha State. Pan-fultc- b, United lUUfi WiU CM a Delicti Birder of Halers lubficriplitMUL -- pall-bearer- en-tnn- ee ex-pre- ss nn-ihea- rd. e. Dass Fifth President of the Church of Jeans' Christ of April S, 1814; ' LORENZO SNOW. Died October unable to retain any food on his stomach. Evan tba slightest morsel of food This added to hla was not retained. condition. weakened already When Dra- - Wilcox and Richards were summoned Wednesday evening they pronounced hla condition aa betog very serious indeed. It wee not until that Urn that tha family fnUy realized lha extreme gravity of the situation-Frequevisit were made at intervals the during night At 4 o'clock Thursday morning there was a decided change for the worse, and at 9.30 the auditions werw a little wore than aver, and tb and cam at the hour Latter-Da-y Salnta. Born 10, 1901, terms of elx months each, bnt later re-leased on a writ of habeas corpna On April 6, 1339, he became tbe President of the qnornm of tho Twelve Apoetlee, which position he retained until Sep-- r tember 13, 1898, wbeiThe became the president of the Church and chose a 1 1 ar-ye- la counselors George Q. Cannon and . Joseph F. Smith. President 6now. dqripg hi lif, wu the husband of nine wives, whom he married la the following order: Char-- I lotte Squires. Mary A. Goddard, Sarah Ana Prichard, Harriet Amelia Squires, Eleanor Hoots, Carolina Horton, Mary Elizabeth Hoots, Phoebe Amelia .SOW Woodruff, Minnie Jensen. Tbe three stated. Bsqmtred Is IJwt SqsstUrs From last named survive him. He married eope 1 lad Isa I arena. HIS EVENTFUL CAREER. Charlotte Squire and Mary A. GodThe Interior department has Lorenzo Bnow, fifth president of the dard on the seme day In the Nauvoo . to the war department a re-eMormon church, was born at Mantas, temple under tbe plural marriage aye--1 for troop to assist Lieutenant-- I on el BsndleU, agent of the Kiowa Portage Co., Ohio, April 3, 1814. At tern. He marrld Sarah Ana 'Prichard he entered Oberlln College and Harriet A. Squire at Nanvoo also, twenty-ondtane In Oklahoma, la ejecting a to sec are a classical education. Ia 1836 and hla fifth wife at Winter Quarters, jmber of people who have squatted ha became a convert to Mormon tarn previous to the march across the a land belonging to The Indiana, Hie first wife died In the and waa baptised by Elder John S. plain txrlj ha request came several , days ago Boynton. In 1837 h began the active day of tha settlement of Salt Lak th aa announcement that two deputy ministerial career continued through- valley. The other have been srabala had squatted oa lands which out hte busy life. In Mey, 1840, he known in Utah In tba days that 1T, itj claimed had been illegally aettlad ki by Indiana and bad refused to took hie fret mission to Europe ami line iapfd, eve when ordered by RaidletL' A toe Psare Assevtcaot. txprssssa I osar saw Kepulse AoarebM Moexto IsdletoW. Ut, A detachmed of the Twenty-firs- t Antonio Maggio, the anarchist who With reference to tbe announce,... enCompany of W ecabebes Thursday that tha Turkish and Bulgarian treona as arrested et Silver City because of countered a large force of insurgents ar surrounding th abductor of g ,; alleged predlcIone of the easaaeina-.to- n near Lips, province of Bataog. Stone, London Globe mji U eonids of President McKinley, has been that nniesa1 tha movement is uir-J- .,1 for conspiracy to kill tha Lieutenant Bean of tha Macebebea w adicted safe out of tba until ah killed and on of the force wae wound- brigand there will be a hendW. -- reaideaL repetlu ed. Tbe enemy wae etrongly In tbe tragedy In Greece daring ib ittass OAeera KUM Bp Oatlswfe, w M Lord hen 1870, nocaster and trenched. After two hoars' fighting, Deputy Sheriff William Maxwell ol were captured. Lord MuncasU. y the Americana retreated to await re- released Arizona, and another officer M Holbrook, la order to nryollals . Th insurgent num- - ran some of 25,000. Then inforcements. were killed in a recent Trefolla, timed as nnm be red over 300, were armed with Rem- - attempt waa mads to Surround' tiT Ifettl with outlaw near Springerville. brigand, with th result that Ington and Mauser rifles, and appar - J1 8nUemea It la thought tbe outlaws belong to of lh Prtj war nanrds utly had plenty of ammunition. gang. Y nt T MSS for-ird- at e, ,) v. Fabtpblnx Editorial Advaeatlax Iks Which Appeared Mas Shat. Artec McKinley lay tbe anarchist, waa Johann Most, sentenced to one year In tbe peniten" tiary Tuesday in the Court cf Special for York publishNew Sessions, city, aling ia his paper, the Freibeit, an folon the article seditious day leged lowing the shooting of the late President McKinley. The article in question was entitled Murder Against Murder," and is follows: We know our enemies; we know them all and everywhere personally. There can be absolutely no excuse if" Whatever they sre agslo spared. fre . PRESIDENT ANARCHIST MOST SENTENCED TO ONE YEAR IN PRISON UUt llit Trkjr Nnk m4 BUa4 The United State Government will infeist that Tni key immediately make good any deficit in the subscriptions for tbe ransom of Miss Stone," says the Constantinople correspondent of the London Daily Telegrapa, and also rePst fund the fall amount subscribed." The London Daily New, la at edi-to- ri si open, the case of Mist Stone, while sympathizing with the effort in ebalo of disappointed ones, a fsw her behalf, expresses the opinion that of whom, by earnest pleading, were the payment of each a large ransom is edaitted to tbe presence of the dead. a very questionable proceeding. It t-- President Joseph F. Smith Turkey could easily stamp ont brigeaJ Apostle Young left tbe Bee Hive andage, says the Daily News, but o h ' President Knows- - resides. long as benevolent foreigners wllj fay followed by other church dignitaries, high ranKonis why should tbe Turks be spmtlea bearing the casket, tha son troubled?" It suggests that Miss of Um president, tbs aereo presidents Stones letter is just sucha document ofieventlea, presiding bisboprio and aa a clever brigand chief would drop members of tba family. at the The floral jnto the American letter-bo- x oferinga wera carried by representatpresent moment," and conclude by ive of tha cbnreh drganizatiooa. An army of brigands enremarking. Bund reds of people followed tbe dowed by American subscriptions will cortege from the house. The progree not add to the tranquillity of eastern m slow because of the weight of tbe Europe." , Cid-t- t, nod tbe frequency of tbe enTbe Russian Government ba reforced rest of the s. peated its expression . of a desire to - Ik the Tabernacle ground a mnltb assist tbe J?nlted States Government bfe of people were in waiting. - From by all practical means in rescuing Mis ; ti north gate a rope wee stretched Stone. tl the east end of tha'Tabernacle, The other powera are equally solicoperating the pnblie from tbe proces-eon- , itous, bnt Rnsala la the best able to which proceeded to the north bring the necessary pressor to bear. de and entered the edifice at the Clue to Hastsss Train Robbsrs Foand. nearest the altars. When the Annie Rogers, alias Mande Williams, fiseral party arrived, all excepting 1 in the custody of the police tit eeate reserved were occupied, the aged 39, at Nashville, Tenn., and General Sufdlery and choir neat ware filled, and of the Pinkerton perintendent Taylor isle and knvery entranceway there who Is in Nashville, at Chicago, we a crush of people. Outside were agency tiousanda more vainly striving for a believes her arrest will lead to the apie whera a glimpse of the Interior prehension of the gang which, on Jnly 3rd last, held np a Great Northern aid be had, or a word or note of train near Wagner, Mont, securTemEvery conveyance et square seemed filled with people ing over $40,000 in bank notea He Of the hopes also to recover mnch of the stolen fling to tba common point. A large portion of the hank ones appointed many departed early money. were bills bile more lingered in tho gronnd nnsigned by officials of the bank at Helena, to which they were Util the service were at an end. ' Tba Tabaraacle was decorated with consigned, . The woman came under suspicion by ihlte, entwined with aotuma leaves. her action! at the Fourth National h the organ front life-ais- a a and hung like portrait of President Snow, hank Monday afternoon, when she aeath the portrait was a miniature presented a large roll of new bill of rod notion of the temple In Ivy and small denomination, asking for large hill In return. Noting the bills closemortelee. The services were ly, the teller became suspicious, and and tha singing of tha Tempi A Tabernacle choirs exceptionaL wbllaahe waa engaged in conversation fol13:40, when the services wets oon-le- d, th police were notified and arrest the casket was born to the lowed. When arrested tbe woman rt Line depot, where it was put refused to make any explanation of where tha $550 In her possession came Vrd a special train for Brigham where Interment took place, from. , The bills were on the Helena bank, ut 350 people accompanied tba re-on the train, composed largely and, though signed, the serial nnmbers Vb church official and relative. coincide with those given In the Pinspeakers at tha Tabernacle were kerton circular advertisement of the A warrant was sworn ont Brigham Young. John Henry robbery. the woman, charging her with against John W, Taylor, Rudger and President Joseph F. attempting to pas forged bank-notSmith, who paid glowing tribute to She declined to tell of herself further the departed leader. ..President Smith than to assert that she was born in recalled tbe fact that President Snow Texas, and that she arrived in Nashwae the last of the apostles who were ville 8nndsy night, from where she ttlmately acquainted with the proph-t- , will not say. Joseph Smith. ? Floo4 la Klondike Does Great Uitaiy petsloawr escapes Goards .So be Passengers from Dawson state that I IXlrand bp a Shark. News has reached San Francisco on September 36 lest a sudden flood list Thoms Brennan, a private sol- -. cleaned out Hanker ereek from end to ad. It bad been raining considerably ler, under sentence of life Imprison-le- nt for killing a anperior officer, ea- -i on tbe creek, bnt noli sufficiently to acaped from tbe transport Kilpatrick count for the great rush of water which while ah was lying in the harbor of occurred. The creek had risen slowly Hollo. Brennan waa being brought to on tba day in question and was still country to nerve hla sentence and rising when at $ o'clock a wall of water confined on the vessel. He cat three feet high was seen coming down b rough the here of bis cell, eluded the the creek, r Cabins were washed away, nerds, jumped overboard and swam shafts filled and tailing piles leveled. 3 r the shore, two miles and a half All open works were flilled and alnicc r way. A cs reful search On shore wee boxes carried for miles. Theik were ithont result, and it la thought that uo fatalities. . rennaa might have been killed by a ,srk. Bl ttssswre Collide at SaatUa. , ut Grey bauds - Dm Wireless Tele. ' The Oriental liner Kaga Mara and vapby. Jhs Canard liner Lucanfe, which d tbe German steamship Elba collided at New York Saturday from off Five Mile Point, Seattle, in a dense t verpool, reports that on October 8th, fog. ' The Elba tore a hole in the Kaga i 11:05 ia tha evening, the Marconi Maras hall seven feet In width, bnt ' StmmenU got in communication above the water line. The injured i 5th tbe companys ateamer Campania, vessel succeeded in reaching port In nhd from New-Yor- k to Liverpool, safety, Both vessels bad lookouts t d maintained tha connection for six owing: tort he fog neither urn and ten minutes, exchanging could sec the approaching steamer soy messages about tbe weather and until they were too dose together to s her necessary shipping intelligence, avert a collision. Tbe Kaga Mam nar d also a number , of private mea-ye- s. sent to tbe bottom The vessels passed in latitude rowly escaped being and J with her cargo. passengers 59, longitude 50:40, (I e. Lake-railroa- rp. ' cold-blood- eoro-rJlte- cla 1m-sal- ve January lit. Joseph Westwood,' an associate of Brigham Young In the early days, e member of the first party that cam sn.t tiea of the went to Halt Ira la l.ttglat'd, died eaiiM.it it at Independent, Mo., tl the 7th lust,. In his ninetieth year. Sixty years to the penitentiary la tbs term Uifird out to young Iluut, alia Baker, who was arrested In Salt Lak murder a year ogo for the of a young man la Kansas City. Haul - was employ ad aa a waiter la alt Lake I the time of hi arrest. The fanners of Aurora hart com. Den cod digging their sugar beets for lilpment to LehL This la lha third year tha farmers of that vicinity have directed their attention to tha beet raiiting industry, and lha yield Is better than previous crops, Patrick Phelan, for many years well Itnowa la mining 'circle throughout the stale, died Id bait Lake last week, leaving bis entire estate, estimated at '100,000, to tha Kearna tL Ana Phelan was a bachelor with NLanown relative In this country. William Lubeck, a resident of Park d City for the past seven teen years, suicide by banging hlmalf in hi stable on the evening of the 10th, hi body being discovered by hie wife. There is known cause for tbe dted, he being a aober, industrious mao. The Ban Pedro, Lo Angelas A Salt baa recently added to lie equipment 100 fiat ear and fifty ballast ears, while orders have been placed for a comber of box care and flat ears, to gether with baggage cars, combination ears, coaches, chair care and parlor TUHKEY MUST RANSOM - AMERICAN MISSIONARY. a Ww K.imIm a Bw Cwld Not Hot bmawsl et llrlg hats city. ( The funeral of President Know of tbe Mormon church occurred Kuo y. Tbe remain lay in tat from 7 until 9:45 at the Bee Hire bouse, where they were viewed byt about 6,000 people who In a double row. There file seemed to be no end to those desiring a last look at the well known features of tb venerable president, end when tbe doors were closed there seemed an end-ir-e CGL1, i UTAH. UTAH STATU NEWS1 Uou by if Firry presideit stands ea th other, sided the line which divides the camp of the raling possessors of power from that of the people has come uodet the ban. Let the people carry out the sentence. The road of humanity leads over the peak of barbarity. That la ones for all a law df necessity dictated by the reaction. We cannot get around it, since we will not give np the future. If we wish to attain the end we must wish for tbe means, also; if eve wish the life of peoples, we must wist: the death of their enemies. If we wish for humanity, we are obliged lo wish for murder. We say, Murder tbe murderers. Save humanity by blood and ateel, poison and dynfimlte. " In his defense Herr Most claimed that the paper containing the article waa printed and ready for distribution before the president was shot. Also that it was a quotation from aa article published fifty years ago and republished by him. After Imposing the sentence, Jnstice Uinsdale read the, opinion of the eonrt, in which ho aid: It la no answer to tbe evil and criminal nature of this article to claim that it waa written for the purpose of 'destroying crowned heads, It inculcates and enforces tbe Idea that murder ia the proper remedy to be applied against rulers. Tbe feet that it waa published fifty years ago and agbln republished about fifteen years ago only emphasizes and gives added point to tbe criminality of the republishing of It at any time. It show deliberate Intent to inculcate and promulgate tbe doctrines of tho Article. This we hold to be a erimiual act. It ia not necea-aa- ry to trace any connection in thi- article with the assassination of the late president The offense here In the eyes of the law 1 precisely the same as if the bloody event had never occurred. The murder of the president only serves to illustrate and illuminate the enormity of the crime of the defendant in teaching his diabolic cal doctrine." , It Katlroad ta Roach Or--x Biers. President P. J. Jennings of the Heler ns Mining company and the Mnslck Mlniog & Milling company, located in the Bohemia mining district in Lane and .Douglas-countie- s, Oregon, . announces that arrangements have bees completed for building a railroad from Cottage Grove, Or., a distance of thirty-fiv- e miles througlx a regiou of .hea.vy. timber, to tbe Bohemia mines. It it expected that construction work will begin (bis fall. Connected with this ia the project of building a smelter either at Portland or in the Bohemia mining district. Tbe smelter enter prise will follow the railroad, and it Is probable that both will be in operation in less than a year Cadahy Withdraws Reward For Crews. Edward A. Cudahy has withdrawn the reward of $25,000 which be offered . ten months ago for the capture of tbe abductors of hie son. Tbe reward la withdrawn nneoriditionally. At tbe suggestion of Mr. Cadahy and at the request of Chief of Police Donahne, the Omaha city council will take np tbe matter at its regular meeting and it is expected they will withdraw the off-- r of the city of Omaha of $25,000 for the arrest of 'the kidnappers. This joDc at the instance of Pat Crowef-wb- o promises to surrender If thia te done and be 4s allowed liberty pending 1 trial! Entire gory ta Try Caleb Fevers or Bias. la Aeeassd st Era-toe- After the jury was completed Monday afternoon In the trial of of State Caleb Powers, charged The court of appeals of New York with being accessory to tbe murder of B. Roland Mollneanx has granted a Governor (iobel, tbe defense challenged new trial. Molioeanx wae convicted of whole the murder of Katherine J. Adame in tba bias jury, charging It with politiand the officers of the coert cal New York City and sentenced to death. with the jury for tbe purpose packing The court grants a new trial on the of Both sides presented conviction. prevailing opinion written by Judge affidavit and argument, after which Werner of Rochester, hie principal Judge Centrill overrated tbe motion ground being that tbe lower court of the defense to disqualify the jury a evidence anerred la admitting to also a demurrer to the Indictment, ad other alleged crime, the death of Barwhich to tbe defense took exceptions. nett, and thus merging two lasuca. Urfanlaatloa ta Erect Baa a meat ta Be Ala-l-- y Xovsatk X.Uoul Boafc ta Bsaysn. Memory Perfected. It was decided Tuesdsy at a meeting Tha general organization of tba Wilof the stockholders of tbe Seventh Na-- liam McKinley National Memorial tionalbackof New York, to resume Arch association waa completed Monbusiness about November 1, and to eon-tinThe officer are: Henry It. Mcday. the name of tbe corporation aa Farland, president! Lyman J. Gage, the Seventh National bank. treasurer; Thomas F. Walsh of Colorado, eeeretary. Clovafasad Elaotod Collet Tnutts President Roosevelt and tha memAt tbe annual fall meeting of th board of trustees of the university at bers of his eabinet were elected honAn Princeton, N. J., Tneaday, Grover orary mem tiers of the association Cleveland waa elected a member of the appeal to tbe public will be issued shortly board, n accepted and wae wora la It York's Coisbrmtsd Harder Trial V ue 1 |