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Show i t 1 4 COALVILLE TIMES. sues C. Editor and A JOflES, Satce-- S - M Fw)M lb. roUl Si MoaUi. Thru. Koaite., to. la CoMIla CaA , - or IlMCUniOA TkBMI Cm lwar. kdMU .- ! - AOiMa .... i'll... . M . COW UTAH STATE NEWS. PEABODY FOR DAMAGES President of Portland Mine After Colorado's Chief Exeeutlvo. Papers in (the 100 000 damage suit if the Portland Gold Mining company against Goverbqr. Janies H. "Peabody of Colorado, Adjutant General Sherman M. Bell, C C. Hamlin, secretary of the Mine Owners association, and others connected with that body, tq well as Sheriff Kdward Bell of Teller county and his deputies who assisted In the closing down of the Portland mine, were served on Governor Peabody on Friday Janies F Burns, present of tbs Portland company, refuses to discuss kls plans for publication, but it is reported he has de lured to friends his purpose to defray ali expenses of suits that may be in gun in the federal court against Governor Pealsidy and others by Portland miners who were deport-from Cripple Creek. Former Governor Charles S Thomas, Mr. Burns eounsei, was busily engaged with Mr. in Burns In drawing complaints suit, but the Portland companys bs denied all knowledge of suits to be brought by deported miners. .According to the complaint the number of persons employed in the mine was over 600 and these were taken Into custody by the authorities and certain ones of them picked out and placed In the bull pen to be de ported to the states of Kansas and Alma Johnson of Mantl was palufut-lInjured by being thrown from a horse ore day last week. The citizens of American Fork have decided to have a rousing Fourth of July celebration. The real estate men of Ogden are to have an association similar to that of the reel estate men of Salt Lake. Edwin Frost, a pioneer blacksmith ef Salt Lake City, dropped dead white shoeing a horse, death being due to apoplexy. The regular summer school at the University of Utah opened Monday morning and continues for a period of six weeks. Arthur MlUlkln of West Jordan, has disappeared, as has also the 14 year-olsister of his wife, and It Is said New Mexico. Is made that the govThe charge the couple have eloped. ernor gave tacit consent to this meae Fire destroyed the Rio Grande sta- are when be did not countermand eftion St Green River, the loss being any order given and carried Into General Bell and outside the fect by in the about $2,000. Nothing of value authority of the governor to carry Into station or office was destroyed. effect The complaint further alleges that James M. Shockley, sentenced to be , property Is decreashot on Jane 24, will not be executed the oomplalnants ing In value from lying Idle and asks sn that date, his attorneys hsvlng damages against the defendant in ths , taken an appeal to the supreme court am of $100,000.' Ore and bullion settlement In the CAPTIVES IN DANGER. Salt Lake market during the past .week reached a total of $424,100, or But United State Will Not Psy Ran$7,100 more than during the week som, Fearing to Establish Precedent . ' previous. In a cablegram to the state departbe be fitting- ment Consul Gummere, at Tangier, In. . Independence day-wi- ll ly celebrated in Mantl, the city coun- dicated that the bandit, Ralsull, owcil having appointed the committees ing to the subserviency of the Moor, who will make arrangements for s ish officials, had exaggerated his demands to a point where they have begood programme. The Kaysville city council has re- come ridiculous. It la quite certain fused the Independent Telephone that this government will not comply town un- with any of the demands that relate In a franchise that company til they agree to certain conditions to Itself and cannot consistently require the sultan to do as Ralaull stipulated by the council It la admitted that If the banasks. ; Miss Ethele Seely of ML Pleasant, means to carry out his chief who has been attending the Chicago dit the threats captives, Perdlcaris and Musical college the past season, reIn are great peril Even their Varley, ceived the gold medal for her pro-- , lives, however, are not regarded as a n In class 200 of fldency pupils. sufficient, stake to warrant thin govi Mrs. W. U Stoddard, a waitress in ernment in establishing the dangerous & an Ogden restaurant, last week re- Jirecedent that would follow the demands of Rslsult, for, ceived the Information that ahe had with the strong temptation thna ofwon the $10,000 cash prize recently fered to ths Iswlesa tribesmen of Mo offered by the San Francisco Week rocco, no foreigners there would be safe against kidnaping. ly Examiner, Ogden wants the next encampment Nearly Eight Million In Philippines. let the Utah National Guard. A petiThe revised figures of tbs Philiption la now In circulation among the pine census have been published by business men and has been freely the census buresu and a population signed, asking the Guard to come to of 1, 635, 426 is given to the archipelOgden this summer. ago. Of this number 6,987,686 are ' The report of contagions and tafeo-jttou- s civilized or partly so, while 647,740 diseases 'to the state board of are wild and uncivilized, although nol health tor the month of May recelvM Without some knowledge of the do local health officers mestle arts. from seventy-fivIn regard to the public land of the In twenty counties, shows 140 cases the report Philippine archipelago deaths. ' tad seventy-onf aye: Earl Gardner, Salt Lake youth, Setting aside the intermediate to 717,94 last week saved man from drowning water apace, amounting ths In Jordan river. The man lumped In, square miles, and considering land alone, the area la estimated te when with suicidal Intent, evidently he 115, 026 square miles, or 73,616.644 the young man promptly plunged tn acres. Of this about 13,000,000 are after him and fished him out rivets lands and over 61,000,000 pub S The preliminary hearing of Harry c landn. Of the latter 4.000,000 oi about mam more are forest lands, leaving Mobs charged with voluntary for agricnlturei 1,000,000 available slaughter In the killing of William E. Under existing lawn a homestead .Stone, In Ogden canyon, was held of 39.64 acres may be acquired by last week and resulted In Moes being any cltlsen of the Philippine islands, . while a corporation can acquire 3,630 hound over In bonds of $1,000. acres." Peter Johnson, aged 23, a native of Richfield, met death In a horrible East River Giving Up Its Dead. manner while working In the Chilian Sundays harvest of dead from the mills at Oe Lamar, Nevada While at- steamer General Slocum numbered tending to the' feed he fell Into the forty-ninbringing the total number mill, bla body being torn and muti- of bodies so far recovered up to G32 lated In a horrible manner. Of these, 669 have been Identified, Albert .poxey, the young man who while about thirty of the victims now attempted sulcide nesr Willard, proh-."abl- lying at the morgue have not been will recover. It 1 said that the claimed by friends or relatives. Durtrouble arose over a gtrl, Doxey had ing the day tbtrty-al- x bodies were redriven to the place to see the young covered, and it was not until after woman, but she declined to go out dark, when the great majority of the searchers bad ceaped to work, that with him. the others were found. Mack McCullow shipped two carloads, sixty head, of horses from Moyer in Cripple Creek Jail. Lehl last week, to points east of the , A Denver News special from CripMississippi. The horses were paid ple Creek says: Charles II Moyer, for at the rate of $7 per head. They president of the Western Federation were mavericks, wild from the Rush of Miners, arrived In the district Sunvalley ranges, day, a prisoner, in charge of two A dispatch Jfrom Berlin, under date deputies. Mr. Moyer was brought Of June 17, says: In the second sec- from Tellurlde on a warrant changing tion of the Womens congress today him with being Implicated In the university study for women was dis- explosion in the Vindicator mine last cussed. Mrs. Alice Horne of the Utah November which caused the death of legislatufe described the "Art Work two men. There were no demonstraof Women In Utah Schools." tions here or along the route from Tellurlde. servnow mho are Reese and Bass, ing forty and thirty years respectiveFather Kills His Son. ly tn the penitentiary for the murder son for a hfs Mistaking of Fred McCabe at Ogden, are makWalter Reiniek of highwayman," ing a vigorous search, by advertiseRiverside, N. J., drew an open penments, fpr two witnesses, who, they from his pocket and plunged it knife say, can prove their innocence. Into the boy's heart, killing him inA heavily loaded gravel car on the stantly. Reiniek, while out walking, Salt Lake street railway got away carried an open knife lit his hand, Some one from the crew and crashed Into fearing highwaymen. street ear, canning the serious Sprang toward him, when fie struck. injury cf Mrs. Mary E. Chlpman, a Reiniek bent over to see who his asAft the other widow. passengers sailant was and dseovered It was and the crew Jumped in time to save his own son, Frank. The boy had themselves from injury. planned to play a Joke on his father and met bis death. y d d BATTLE IN PROGRESS ARM,E JAPANESE AND RUSS AGAIN qlAS'4- - f'"1 Crylng General Engagement New Kia Chu. "Tr. Wounded Having Through Liao fa P1 According to advice !m ' Ja0 I1111 Tang, a general Japanese and Rumiao troW ' pr reeding at New Kia C1- Although been re details of the battle hate celved. Trains bearing wcanded men have been passing throtifl hlso Yang, going northward. It Is rrparied Osat the fighting Is fierce, ml at loesee are heavy. It Is reported at ToW lhat Vice Admiral Kamlmura Is lading the odron Russian Vladivostok Oshlma. The navy depzrtment no confirmation of tbfPrt-hopeIt may be true. The war office at SL Fdrburg expects news of s fight lth General Gneral Kuroki. It Is believed Oku Is pursuing Generil Stakelberg. 8 Russian A detailed report losses at the battle Vafangow, given out At SL' Pateetorg, places the total at 3,000 killed std wounded, mostly men who bekO4 to t he troops forming the tasinn right flank. An explanation of tbeJWnf cam-ent-aip-s- e - paign on the IJao Tung peninsula, especially with reference to Port Arthur, la contained In an advice that baa reached Washington from a source believed to be absolutely reliable. The Japanese , tactics which have so puzzled the Russians are Intended to iso.ate Port Arthur, but do net contemplate an attack on the place by General Okus army Tbe actual work of reducing Port Arthur will be confided to another Japanese army under command of General .Nogi, which will be landed on the peninsula (and, Indeed, may even now be landed), at a point south of General Okus position and considerably nearer Port Arthur. On tbe 1st of June no less than twenty-sitransports had been gathered at one of the Japanese ports to embark this army, and it Is probable that the vessels attacked by tbe Vladivostok squadron were of this number. x RUSSIAN LOSSES. a g i General Oku Figures That He Killed 2,000 of the Enemy. Further reports received at Toklo show that the blow Inflicted by General Oku on the Russians In the fighting at Tellssu (Vafangow) on June 15 was more severe than at first was believed. The number of Russians killed in this battle probably will exceed 2.000, and their total losses. Including prisoners, are estimated at 10,000. The Japanese losses are less than of the Rus1.000, or about sian totaL Chinese who witnessed the fighting from tbe Russian side report that the Russians removed many dead men from the trains with their wounded, snd that they burled or cremated many corpses In the village of Huasungkou before they retreated. one-tent- SECRETARY C0ITELYOU. WILL NOMINATE FAIRBANKS. . cmrifli'zw Secretary Cortelyoi, had of ths department of eommertand labor. Is Presi aid to have been dent Roosevejt forjutydrmaa of the mal action by elecfcg Mr. Cortelyou Is recognis- ed, however, as hag quite es well settled now as It on he In advance oratorical ability. EXCURSION ro. Mxcurf Former Senator El O. Woloott baa accepted an Invitation to nominate Senator Fairbanks for vice president at the Republican national convention In Chicago. He Is now preparing his speech. Mr. Woloott is noted for his oratorical ability STEAMER GENERAL SLOCUM. d - t t (Vessel Bums Til Hell Cste, East Rlver ONTARIO Park H0I8T DESTROYED. City Mins Suffers - e, by Fir. 8evere Lou - - hoisting works of ths Ontario company, south of Park City, were destroyed by fire early Monday morning. The alarm was first heard At 2:45 Oclock, and while there were four men about ths works at the time, none of them snev where the fire hose was kept, and u t result the flames were beyond control before a stream of water could be turned oq. Inside of sn hour the main building, carpenter and blacksmith shops were reduced to a pile of smoking ruins, though the Immense gallows frame continued to bum for several hours longer. The origin of ths fire will probably never be known to a certainty. The blaze was discovered In the carpenter shop by William Benney. Electric wires and a hot boa on the engine which ran the blower at the mine are glvei as the psubaWe cause. The plant Manager 750, 000. originally cost Rood says it wlj be rebuilt kt once. The No. y , 8 With Great Loss of Ufa.) Child Plays With Its 8ku1t Fractured. With her skull fractured, pox. Annie Kerr of Chester. Pa., has ono of the Abraham Owen Woodruff, twelve apostles of the Church of Jesus been, romping and playing two weeka. and unconcerned as any of Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, died at El as happy On Tuesday little her playmates. Tex& on Monday, death being Paso, to was called her home, when due to smallpox. Mrs. Woodruff died surgeon of smallpox at the City of Mexico the lass complained of feeling ilL He about two weeks ago, Her. husband saw at once that her skull was fracbad hurried to the Mexican capital and sent her to a hospital, when Informed of hts wifes Illness, tured, where trephlntng was fonnd necesBelievand was with her to tbe end. sary. ing full precautions had been taken The fracture was sustained by a fall to prevent his contracting the disease, to which the girl paid little attention. be started for bis home In Salt Lake. He was 111 when he arrived at El Paso China May Get into Trouble. about ten days ago, and stopped there Minister A Conger has cabled tbe state to recuperate physician pronounced his case one of typhoid and department that Consul Miller, after he was given treatment for typhoid, a thorough investigation of the facts when it developed that he had smallwith the killing of the connected to the was removed at . He oce pox. war Etzel American case His Paso. at Ei correspondent, Isolation hospital did not appear to be a severe one and by Chinese soldiers on a junk off New there was every indication that he Chuang, has made a report stating would soon recover. He ate a hearty breakfast Monday morning and was that the killing was unwarranted and thought to have reach ed the 'eon vales-- ! without provocation Mr. Conger will cent stage, when be suddenly became forward the details by mail, and In worse and passed away during the due course the state department wii night, the direct cause ot death being bring the subject to the attention of the Chinese government. heart failure. Apostle Woodruff Succumbs to Small- Town Destroyed by Fire. Secretary Moody Successor. a of The big Word has been received Washington Post says Presifire at Hop and, Mendocino county, dent Roosevelt has formally Invited the Paul Morton to become a member of California in which, practically entire buMiifss portion4 ot the town hts official famLy as secretary of the trte was wiped out. The fir navy. Mr. Morton has the matter un- swept north. was the hotel block E,ab,e left standing. When l!very was burned twenty horses perished and several large stag coaches were destroyed. Hopiaod is the starting point of the North Coast stage line to the Lake country summer resorts. the Thatcher Not s store hotel and In and has not yet given any intimation of acceptance or He Is a delegate to the decllnattcn. Republican national convention. If he accepts Mr. Morton will be accredited to Nebraska, where he lived for many years, although now a business resident of Chicago. der consideration - Heavy Russian Losses. The Japanese are continuing to ad vanee from the Siu Yen atid there are continuous skirmishes between outposts. but no further advance of Genhas been reported, eral Okus The Russian losses at the battle of Vafangow are turning out to be heavier as the reports of the various regiments come in Tfcev are now placed by a conscrvaitve estimate at 4.000 but a usually well informed authority expects the total to be no less than ny 6,500 Marked for Exile. One hundred and forty-fou- r union miners and their sympathizers have been deported from the Cripple Creek district since Monday, June, 6, and about three score, more are booked for exiling. There remain as prisoners in the bull pens and Jails at Cripple Creek and Victor seventy-tw- o men, the majority of whom will probably be ordered out cf capip within the next These figures are official fortnight. andjjvere complied by Secretary Gael S. Hoag of the Victor Citlxens Alliance. Moyer Doesnt Confederate Veterans Parade. The remnants of the souths once great army on Thursday honored the people of NashTille, Tenm, and their thousands of guests by a parade through the principal streets. It was the feature of the closing day cf the fourteenth annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans. A band of the United States army led the parade and several United States mail car were at points along the line of rlers I march dealing out ice water to th 9 b y ft Pi re at Pi a pr q u ae fie mi foi coi - ai Uf ' Pa I tin I put f aen ? fori I age fun of you trsi his of I (phui and horn fier wart cult! men Mem fired ufi til a ) thirsty veterans V Know. President Moyer was asked whs' er present conditions throughout the strike districts of the state would not make It advisable for the Western Federation of Miners to call off the strike. I have no opinion to express upon that or any other question concerning the Colorado strike and labor troubles was his reply. I have not been in touch with the federation affairs since my detention here, and do not know what the sentiment Is among the membership. 5 ' A sixty-year-ol- d e an-oth- er Dead and Village Destroyed, Forty-fiv- e Scores Missing. Advices from Santiago de Cuba, under date of June 16, state that the worst storm of a decade began Friday and culminated Monday night In fourteen inches of rain, which fell In flve the Inquest tn New York City, Tues- hours, accompanied by a hurricane. day Terhaps the mobt unexpected The lower tillage of El Cobre has Incident was the continued refusal to been destroyed. Forty five persons answer questions of Henry Lundberg. are known to be dead, and scores are a United States steamboat inspector, mlsbing Bodies are floating In tho who was supposed to have Inspected Ccbre river. Twenty bodies hsve been the and the hull of the recovered by boats patrolling tbe bay. Id fated steamer His refusal was All tbe bridges on the Cobre railbased on the ground that an answer way aie out and many bridges have might tend to incriminate him, snd he been lost on the Cuban railway. acted on the adtue of his counsel. A train which left Havana Saturday The coroner comcritted Lundberg to is held between washouts, forty mile the bouse of detention, hut later ac- Inland. A relief train bringing mail cepted bail for his appearance at ths and passengers was wrecked at Mohearing ron. The fireman and mail agent war Daniel ONeill, who, according to his killed and two of the employee were sworn statement, bad never worked Injured. The passengers are safe. on a boat until he was hired on the The mines at DAquirl are crippled Slocum a short time ago, admitted and six emp.oyes have been drowned. that he had jumped into a rowboat The pier has been damaged. The citys property loss is enormous filled with people from the Slocum, capsizing it. Referring to the efforts THOUSAND LIVES L08T. to throw water on the fire when it was first discovered, O Neill told of the Vladivostok Sunk Squadron bursting ofriie hose. He ran and got Japanese Transports. the rubber washing hose, but the All doubts as to the sinking of the coupling would not fit the standpipe. transports Hitachi and Sado by the This was some of the sensational tes- Russians has been removed, according timony brought out. to advices received from Tokla Three By the use of dynamite and heavy hundred and ninety-seve- n survivors ot guns fired by men from the Second the Hitachi arrived at Moji and 15S battery, scores of bodies were brought survivors ot the Sado have arrived np from tbe bottom around the shores at Kokura. near North Brother island Tuesday. Details of the destruction of the two From sunrise to sunset the searchers along the beach and in the boats transports and the full exetent of the gathered in 112 bodies, bringing up casualties are not obtainable. the number cf the recovered to date Details obtained from the survivors to the appalling total of 845. of the Japanese transports show that ths Hitachi and the Sado LEFT IN 8URNING BUILDING. met three Russian warships near Iki RobberV Bind Woman to Chair and Island at 10 oclock Wednesday mornLeAv'41e4- to Burn to Death. ing. The Russians fired oa the Jajf Heedless of entreaties for mercy, anese ships and stopped them and Mrs. Barbara Young was bound to a soon afterward they torpedoed and chair and left to burn to death by two sank the helpless transports. Tho robbers, who ransaded her house at transport Sado and several men were Over one hundred men escaptured Altoona, Pa . and, in their anger at caped m tho boat? and landed at Kofinding no booty, set fires in the upper kura. It Is repented that the transports Hitachi and Sado carried only floors of the structure Mrs. Young's plight was discovered 1,400 men If this is true, the loss In lives probab y Is less than 1,000. by a man whose attention was attracted by the smoke which peured BANDITS HOLD UP TRAIN. from the windows Among the firemen who responded to the alarm was Kill Engineer and Dynamite Exprese Car Near Bearmouth, Mont her son, who aided in carrying his A special from Butter MonL, conmother from the house. The robbers tains the Information that the North escaped. d Two young men called Coast limited, the finest train on tho at the Young home, which Is In the Northern Pacific, was held center of the city, and asked for lodg- op onq mile east of Bearmouth, tho ings Suddenly they attacked Mrs. Scene ot last year's hold-u- p ths uub Young. When she told them she had train, when Engineer ONeill was no money they tied her to a chair and killed. Three explosions of dynamito searched the house. Before they deon the express car completely demoi-Ishe- d parted the men started fires in several the car as far as reports are obbeds. The housq was saved. Little of value was taken by the robbers. tainable. The engineer was killed In the fight with the robbers. Tho rear BOTH CANT BE GUILTY. end brakeman was sent back to Bear-moutconveying word of the hold up. Two Men Confess to Murdering a The plunder of the robbers Is believed to have been large. The bandits, two Brakeman In Montana. in number, have escaped and are hidGovernor Toole of Montana will not ing In the mountains. demand of the governor of Missouri SLOCUM HORROR GROWS. the extradition of William Miles, the man who, a few days List ef Dead Grows and May Now E ago, at Kansas City, confessed that he ceed 700. had killed a brakeman on the Montana With unceasing effort, search ! go Union railroad, north of Deer Lodge, In 1885, for which crime a man named tog on for the bodies of thoee who Waltham is now serving a life sen- perished on the General Slocum, says New York dispatch. What the list at Deer tence at the penitentiary of victims will total scarce any one Lodge. The governor said that because ot dares venture a guess, but whatever the mental condition of the convict the number may be, there is hardly a who is now paying the penalty for parallel to the history of disaster what may have been the crime of an- where death came to so many to w other, he is disposed to pardon Wal- brief a period of time. Police and health department oftham. The case Is a most unusual one, for ficials have placed the number at a the reason that In both Instances the figure as high as 1,000 and more, but men hsve confessed that they were it would seem that the maximum fatalthe slayers of the brakeman. ity will not largely exceed 700, tt e ' Startling Evidence Brought Out in the . Slocum Inquest Evidence of a startling nature, which doubtless alii have an import ant bearing on tbe ultimate result of the coroners Inquiry into the General Slocum disaster was forthcoming at east-boun- Republican natlonglcotninlttes. t - No has bsen made, as chairman. The tter CUBA SWEPT BY, HURRICANE. well-dresse- Official announcemet and It la quite like at present that none will hs mads tn til ths new national committee Mill have taken formal action that shd have taken for- BLAME WILL BE PLACED. A i town tat t ill 01 id b ifflna mily wit Itor Ice i ged d pu |