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Show COALVILLE TIMES FIFTY MINERS ARE ENTOMBED " n. j AtwwryirrnffRrvvr SCOFltS LOSE LIVES Editor, and Manager. Workings Filled With Deadly Gas FolTerrific Explosion, the lowing Men Being Caught 'n Trap. UTAH COALVILLE UTAH STATE NEWS Utah baa leg than 2 000 miles 'of railroad wtthla ita borders, one of the smallest atate totals club ol The Commercial-Booster'- s Logan, through the committee on ad vertlslng and promotion, baa Issued a folder setting forth the advantages ol Cache county and Logan City. According to the records kept by the Southern Pacific Railroad company of the rise and fall of the Great Salt Lake, there has been no percept lble rise In the water lately Without recovering sufficiently tc explain under what circumstance hit throst was cut at Kemmerer, Wyo , J. E. Smith died In a Salt Lake hoapl tal. The belief is entertained that he met with foul play When a big machine drill cut Into an old charge of dynamite on the Western Pacific, fifteen miles beyond Tlmple, half a dozen laborers were hurled in the air, three ot them serious Injuries. Decisive steps looking to the com pletlon of the silver service to be con trlbuted by the s'ate of Utah for the new battleship Utah were taken at a meeting of. the sliver, service com mlttee In 8alt Lake City. Payson Is preparing to celebrate on October 29 and 21. the sixtieth snnl veraary of the settlement of Peteet-coo- t Creek" on a scale perhaps never before attempted by the people of any city of its slxe In the west Having failed to connect him with the Oregon Short Line train robbery of last June, the authorities have re leased Thomas Wilson from the coun ty Jail at Ogden, where be has been n prisoner for two months The Utah State Retail Merchants association held Ita annual convention In 8alt Lake City on Wednesday and Thursday. One of the results ot the convention, It Is expected, will be the establishment ot a state Journal for the retail trade. After a two days session, characterised by leadings physicians ns one of the most Instructive and Interest Ing meetings held in years, the Utah State Medical association concluded Its sixteenth annual meeting, in Salt Lake City, on Tuesday. The city council of Provo has granted a hundred year franchise to Evans, Chlpmaa and others, to build and op orate aa electric ralway line through that city. The line must be completed and la Tunning order through the city within three years. Paul Gorskt, wealthy Russian cattle owner, with 85 000 acres of range In Nevada and Utah, has left for n four months visit with relatives In Russia l Mr. Oorske la one of the largest cattle owners of the west, ranging close to 12,000 head. . ' That Sanford K. Marsh, who Is said to have swindled the Windsor hote out ot f 110 by means of a bogui check, and was arrested at Oranti Pass, Ora, and brought back to Sail Lake, for trial has a long careei as a had' check man Is claimed by the g indl-yldna- Pinkertons Catching n burglar in the act of robbing bunks and dressers in her apartments in Salt Lake City, Mrs Ray Peterson dashed upon him and leveling n revolver at his "bead, dis charged two shots almost point blank. Neither shot took effect, and the burglar escaped. . After plying the 'heavy waters ol Great Salt lake since 1901, the Steamer Promontory, the largest craft ever launched on the Inland sea, bar been dismantled by the Southern P clfle company and now lies n barre. JV prey to the first storm to sweep the beach near Lakeside. To satisfy a Judgment of $13,317.70 against the Ogden A Northwestern railroad, the property of the company operated under the name of the Ogden Rapid Transit company from Ogden City to ths Utah Hot Springs, has been sold at public- auction. Refusing to testify In police court la Salt Lake City against her bus hand, Melvin Karth, who five months ago attempted her life by shooting Mrs. Eva Karth was successful in se but In curing the release of the man, she wax - granted 1 ter to the diy divorce in the district court. Colonel George B. Squires, commis slonefof Insurance for Utah, promt nent member of the Grand Army ot the Republic and prominent In bust boss and politics, died Friday at his home in Salt Lke City, death being caused hr a combination of several aliments. The farmers of Rich valley are happy, having closed a successful yssrof farming, - Crops are better than T ex pec ted. considering the dry ? season Oats are as good quality, ' weighing to forty-eigh- t from thirty-eigh- t pounds to the bushel, while the wheat goes vs high as seventy pounds. J. W. Sparks, arrested at Ogden soon after the robbery of the Oregon Short lines passenger train, June 15 on suspicion of having been connected with the holdup, will be arraigned on CONSTITUTION OF NEW GOVERN MENT INDICATES APPRECIATION OF RIGHTS OF MEN. e Grants the People e Greater Degree of Liberty Then They Have Ever Before Enjoy! end Lessens of Dictatorship. Poa-sibl'l- ty f A ropy of tbe constllu New York lion promulgated by the provisional government of Nicaragua has Just been received In New York A irans lation of the instrument shows that It differs several important respects from the const'im on In effect dining the thirteen years of the Zola v a tub-I- t grants to the people a greater ele gree of liberty than (toy eve- - tu fore v ol enjoyed und h n ns the a repetition of th dictatorship under which the republic suffired during tht- -j , 7elaya regime Article 6, divided into sixteen pur agraphs, gives to the Nic.ii aguans tor tain rights which heretofore they have never known The flist grants to all liberty, ind'vldua! secur The right to exer ity and equality else the writ of habeas corpus Is a'so estabThe new constitution given lishes the right of defense and Jury trial and of the publicity of bearings and guarantees the privacy of letter and telegraphic communication There will be no death penalty or punishment by the lash or other torture Article 9 alms to do away with the Zelaya practice of arbitrarily exiling persons fr6m the territory for per sonal reasons and for Indefinite p In pos-iliil- SPANIARDS 8paln PLAN UPRISING. Government. Premier Caneljas warning to parliament that the agitation of the clericals and among the workingmen Is liable to plunge Spain Into a civil war, has not served to ease the mind of the public, which dally Is debating the possibility that the flame of the revolution will overlap the frontier and engulf their own coutnry. The reported message of Alejandro Lerroux, chief ot the republicans at President Barcelona, to Provisional Braga of Portugal: "Start your revolution. We will take care of ours." la widely printed In the radical press and Indlcatea republican plana for an Madrid i right i,;i 1910.1' the Landscape With Feather Bads Be in 1892. WILL OEVELOPMENt AWAIT . - FOREIGNERS A atate of Increasing excitement reigns in Barcelona. The success of the revolution In Portugal appeara to have fanned the fire of rebellion that has smoldered since the furious oub break a year ago. f . - Moral Effect of Woman Suffrage. United States Has Not Replied t English and American Residents of New York Announcement of the Formal Note Announcing New Rt Honduran City Subjected to Out1 of a canvass among clergymen, result public in Portugal. rages at Hand of Comschool superintendents and Sunday - I mandant. editors to determine the moral effect k of woman suffrage in Colorado, Idaho, A circular note m Washington Utah and Wyoming Is made Dy Ida to all the powers by Provisional P alGuatemala City, Guatemala For Husted Harper, Chairman of the Naldent Braga announcing that he fc i sign resident! of Honduras, tional Woman Suffrage press comn.lt been proclaimed president of Poiti have fled from that to escape lee The canvass shows that Episcocltj gal, that the revolution has been af outrage at the hands of the command-ant- , pal clergymen favor votes for women cessful and that he has appotnteA who has given orders that all in the ratio of more than two to one cabinet, was received by the state A Americans and English In the place Among the Baptists the proportion Is The Unljp are to be Jailed and their property seven partment on Friday. to one. Congregatlonallsts, States has not replied to the note.; confiscated. The order of Imprisoneight to one. Methodists ten to one, The state department will not ca ment was equivalent to execution. and Presbyterians eleven to one mlt itself by any form of communh The greater part ot the American tlon until proof of the stability of f) property has beCn seized by the com- Sheriff and Missionary Locked in Jail. new government la forthcoming. mandant. The British consul at'Ama-palSanta Ana, Cal. Taken unawares There are evidences of censorsBb has escaped to San Salvador. Im- at the c'ose of religious services in In the news given out from Portut, mediately upon his arrival he cabled tbe jail here Sunday, Sheriff Lacey according to officials here, who sat his government Jor a cruiser to pro- and Miss Christian Kerl, a missiongest that It la too early tcTjudge tect British property. When the Ama-pal- a ary, wert thrown into a cell by prls curately the status of affairs from fc; commandant heard of this he de- oners, an alleged murderer and a partisan pronouncements of the Bri i clared he would burn the town the forger, and held for nearly an hour, regime. moment a British vessel armed with while their captors' escaped. The fugiThe protected cruiser Des Moles guns appeared on the horizon. tives. Rosario Sianz and Alejo Nairas, has been sent to Lisbon. It is Before their flight, several of the are being pursued by several posses. Ileved the warship wT.l not have ll English and American families were Both are armed with rifles taken from land men to protect American Intt subjected to cruelty at the hands of the sheriffs office, and a battle is exeats, but the vessel will report on ct petty officials. The escape of the pected before they are recaptured. dltlons there. English consul was effected under a Sianz Is said to have a record of five storm of bullets fired by a squad of men killed. CALM AFTER STORM. soldiers, who wept to arrest him on n Cholera in New York Port. Portugal Again Quiet After Rscsnt charge offomentlng revolution. New York. A case of cholera deBloody Warfare. STANDARD CUTS OIL PRICES. veloped on Sunday In the steerage of The only evidence of the recent perliner Moltke. the Hamburg-Americaturbation are amall bodies of troops Reductions Made In Europe and the which has been detained at quarantine stationed In the principal open spaces Far East in Campaign to Inas a possible cholera carrier since Ocof the city, and the 'passage now aid crease Use of Kerosene.' tober 3 last Dr. A. H. Doty, health ' then of red cross ambulances. of the port, reported the case, offeer I. C. J. New York Clarke, through The noticeable outward signs of the whom Standard Oil company with the additional Information that the new regime are the presence everymakes its official announcements to another cholera patient from me where of the green and red flag of tie the public, has Issued a statement to Moltke Is under treatment at Swinrepublic and the complete disappear- the effect that the company has en- burne islands. This makes three ance of King Manuel's portrait from tered. on a thoroughly mapped out cases of cholera that have actually public exhibition, in fact, not a tes campaign to increase the consumption reached this port. tlge is now seen of the picture pos- ot kerosene in European countries and Driving Monks from Portugal. tcard portraits of the kLng,orof say the lands ot the Orient. The first tbe Lisbon The other member of the royal family. move in this expulsion of campaign Is the reduc- monks from . No These have given wty to pictures! tion of the has begun. Portugal prices of oil in those counmembers of the new government tad tries. Mr. Clarke's announcement says time will be lost in driving them across the frontier. Several hundred the photographic records of the In part: in the shape of groups of armed "The Standard Oil company has in- BUBS JtaveJbeen assembled and will be out of the country. Cardinal leaders ami companies of Insurgent augurated a campaign to increase the deported of Lisbon, the troops, not In action, but posing tor worlds- - consumption of refined oil. Nto, of Beja and other prominent the camera. t bibhop oil of for refined level The prices The damage done to the city by the United States is lower than eccleslasts have already been expellbombardment was surprisingly slight. at ed. It is estimated that between 5.000 any time during rechnt years, and Tbe total number killed has not been ex-- , aa a direct result of these prices the and 6,000 monks and nuns will be ascertained, but It probably does not consumption of reaped .oil In this polled. exceed 300 The same polcountry Is Increasing PLOT TO ASSASSINATE TAFT.'1 icy is now being actively pursued ' abroad." Strange Man Tells Wild Story to Aunt As indicated b) this siaement, the of Preaidant. Standard company began trying out the An policy of lower prices In the Mass. Mllbury, alleged scheme States, though without anUnited for the assassination of President Taft was unfolded to Msa JYella C. nouncing that It had in view a camthe world. In Torrey, aunt of the president, by a paign that would cover oil in atranger who called at her home here August the pnee of refined on Saturday. The man, who refused tanks was reduced from 6Y4 to 5 to give hts name, declared he over- cents s gallon, and tbe price of reheard the plotters while in Boston. fined oil In barrela at the refinery was cenU a As he departed he threatened- to re- cut 1 cent, 'from 944 to S , turn and kill Mias Torrey If the mat- gallon. ter ,101. into the uewspapeis Colons! Roosevelt Goes South. 'The man went away f:om Mlllbary New York fkilnnel RooseelLJefL arsuademrand ag he afternoon on his south had come and there is no c'.ew to fcU town Thursday Is to exttnd over nine which ern trip, whereabouts although Miss Torrey and cover 3,294 miles. He la to Immediately reported the facs to the days westgo directly to Atlanta, then turn Mlllbury authoilttes , ward to Hot Springs, Ark. From there be will go north into Illinois and InTrolley Wreck in Zlorf. back to New York, Salt lake Cit. At least fifteen diana, thence Is due Friday night of next he where persons were Injured and a great week. t many more badly shaken up as the re' Nevadan Stole a Fortune. sult of two open street rajs. fair bound, colliding with a heavily loaded Goldfield. Nev. Harold B. Faxton lumber wagon at Eirt &iuth aqj Sfc. has been arrested here, charged with ond West street at u o'clock Friday the embezxleuient of $73,000 ln l903have afight for esisteftwhen-co' J evctal, of the- - lnjn-e- d are from the Boston National bank. It Is morning the crime confessed in a most serious condition. Both said that Faxton trolley cars one of them a trailer saying that he had spent the stolen were wrecked. money In stock gambling. ' Death Comet from "Unloaded" Gun. Leaves Millions to Son,. Strychnlrin .Hi. Whiky A of Oakland, CaL Taking careTuT aim Wls. hequest Solomon. Kan Chippewa Falls, Harvey Bannon a with a "gun that waa not loaded," Jas to securities and bonds In merchant 000 here, died from $2,000 leading B. Lawson, a concessionaire at a local strychnine poisoning at his home here, her son, Frank B. Gregg of Spokane. amusement park, pulled the trigger and lent a b uT ef T hfougETf h e brain ol troublnf of widow the for of drink whisky Mrs. Edward 'Rutledge, stoipach Harry Coogan, aq attendant at a It is" nof known how the poison sot lumber magnate. neighboring concession. Into the vfhtsky. Farmers Congress. Narrow Escape of Orphana. Pierce to Investigate Qij ReBi0Bfc' Lincoln, Neb. Two thousand deleSan Francisco. Four hundred Assistant "Secretary gates to the thirtieth annual session Washington Pierce .of the interior- department of the Farmers National congress ar- children escaped in their night clothes tbe fire which destroyed the left here Saturday for southern rived in Lincoln for the opening ses- from to Investigate conditions In the sion on Thursday. Thirty states were Mount St Joseph Orphan as; him at 4 oclock Sunday morning. J oil regions. represented by delegates. n HUGHES TAKES OATH. Former Governor ef New York Now on Supremo Bench. session Washington. The of the Supreme court of the United States opened on Monday with the ad ministration of oath of office as associate justice to Charles E. Hughes of 1 New York, The court then adjourned untjl Tuesday, out of respect to the mem cry of Ihe.Jate Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller. The court was In session only eight minutes. rero-lutio- n . Democrats Win In Arizona. Phoenix. Art The convention of fifty-twdelegates which Is to draft the constitution of Arizona, the last state to be admitted to the unionwas called to order at noon Monday by A. E. Baker of Phoenix, former chief Justice of the supreme court of the territory under President Cleveland who wa chosen temporary president The Democrats have an overwhelming their majority of the delegatea strength being 41 to It for the Republicans. o Sagebrush Publisher Dead. Douglas, Wyo N. C. ("Bill") Bar low, editor of "Sagebrush Philosophy and apostle of the red corpuscle push, died here 8unday night follow lng a sudden attack of heart disease Parlow, hgwsi OyesrspUL jwa- city editor of the Istranvie (Wyo ) Boomerang when that sheet was famous under BUI Nye. When Nye left the Boomerang Barlow succeeded him as editor. - YiiysTr-rtousTyT- Population of Vermont. The population of the Washington state of Vermont, as enumerated for the thirteenth census and made public by the census bureau on Mondav showed an Increase of 12,315 or 3.S per cent; Yhe total number of Inhabt-tant- a being 355,938, aa compared In 1900. In the previous decide, from 1890 to 1900.Vermont, Increased Its population It. 129, or 3 4 per cent. with-313.64- 1 m " Boy Drowned in Aqueduct. New York. After having drawn off ninety million, gallons of water in the Croton aqueduct mains near the High nine-year-ol-d , Fol-lett- The mine is the property of the Santa Fe railroad, but is operated by the Colorado Fuel & Iron company FORGED TO FLEE a anti-clerica- ers found the body of Joseph Planty, hating been dropped. a boy who fell Into the ir frofif-wear. to cut With his throat aqueduct. J. E. Smith Is In a Salt Lake hospital and may die. Smith was found la a LaFollstto Able to Sit Up. hut sear Kemmerer, Wyo, la a pool Rochester, Minn. Senator La e of blood, and has since been unable contlpjieilo make rapid proto explain whether hs was attacked gress toward recovery from his operaby some one, or the wounds wars tion for gallstones.. Monday he was self indicted. allowed to alt propped up In bed. i i News Item In France They A Going to Mark Large Signs for the Convenience of riatora. More Practical? 1 May Follow Lead of Portugal and Try Republican Form of 1910-191- cnn-!.ste- d lt rlods. - , Colo. Fifty-onTrinidad, turners were entombed In the Starkvl le mine, eight miles from here, the results of an explosion which occurred about 10.30 oclock Saturday night The explosion practically destroyed the old slope of the mine, and the new slope is so thoroughly filled vith gas and black damp that entrance of rescue parties by this route was lmpos slble. It is feared that none of the men will be rescued alive Tbe Starkvi le mine has not been working a -- night shift until recently, when the demand for its ouiput became 0 heavy lhat the day could not meet it Then a night shift, wlmh ol bout lttO men usually was put to work While prai tica!- - all the mint rs working in tbe Starkville mine are of foreign b!nh, many have been in thU to tuonvfiv country lor twenty years, and a large ponton of them have been woihing in the St.irkvillt mine ever blnce u began operations T - Call-forn'- IN FOREST FIRES UNCKECKEO RAGE RICH LUMBER REGION OF IN FLAMES MINNESOTA. Three Towns Destroyed, While Fleeing Settlers Are Caught in Literal Fire'Thousands Furnace of Settlers of Made Homeleta. Warroad, Minn The greatest ca tastrophe that Minnesota has expert enced in fifteen years took place Frida night and Saturday when the whole, Mlnnesota-Manltobboundary 'ountry was swept by fire. The death list is a long one, and constantly growing, while thousands are home ess, end the monetary loss is heavy '1 lie number of deaths Is estimated from 100 to 200, almost entirely among settlers around the towns ot Be..udetie, Pitt, Roosevelt and Grace ton This ebtimate may be too small The flames still rage unchecked and stenes of noiror are reported from every point. (row us of able bodied men, mostly wniktuen with no one to care for, ran pelltmtl to board the waiting train at Beaudette to the exclusion ol women and chlldien and refused pos ltively to abi8t in saving property. An east bound freight train went through a burned culvert near Pitt and block ed the line. The towns of Pitt. Spooner (W B) and Beaudette were burned Fi!ay Tbe fire was heralded by s night shower of sparks and burning brands which swept across the Beaudette river, and the Inhabitants had barely time to reach the special train that was waiting before both towns were on fire at all places. The property loss In Rainy River, Beaudette and Spooner alone, includ ng the Rat Portage Lumber com panys plant and yard at Rainy River and the yard of the Slievlm Mathieu Lumber company at Spooner, will to tal about one and a half million dollars. It will be some time berore the loss of life Is known even approxi mately. Wagon loads of human bodies are being brought into the railway station at Beaudette. It is reported that many settlers, erased with grief at the loss of families and property, are roaming the woods and searching parties are looking for the injured, the dead and the demented. One family of nine, one of Beven and one of five perished on Friday night. At 8:30 p. m. Saturday a tornado of and Spooner fire struck Beaudette and within three minutes after the first alarm, every building was ablaze. Within half an hour they were heaps of ashes. The people of these two towns had just enough time to get out of their homes with what they had on their backs. They were loaded on a passenger tram .that was the depot and taken to standing Rainy River, Ont. It is feared that many settlers in Isolated districts were caught in the No news can be flames and perished had of many settlers, and It is probable that on'y the charred bodies ol hundreds will be found a Robbers Loot Railroad Safe. Ogden. Looting the safe of the uptown ticket office of the Oregon Short Line, Union Pacific and Southern Pa cific Railroad companies, burglars early Sunday morning got away with-casand negotiable paper the value of which Is variously estimated at from $660 to $1,400. Apparently the robbery was planned by some one familiar with the interior of the builtF h Ing. Gigantic Volcano in Action. Wash. The' steamship Seattle, Mackinaw, from Bering sea, reports that Mount Shisbaldln, on Unimak Island, close to which all ships pass in entering Bering sea.Hs in more vigorous eruption now than at any time since it began Its activity five months Flames reach 1,000 feet above, ago-- . the crater, whoj lim Is 9.000 feet above sea level, and the great beacon ran be seen 110 miles In clear weather. Mount UhIghokrTeak1902 anf other Aleutian volcanoes have been active during the summer. Big Force on Panama Canal. Washington: The Isthmian canal commission reports that on August 13 35,867 employees actually there at work on the canal and the Panama rallrord, and of this number 29,95X were canal employees. e Frivea Off Night Raiders. LexlngtnnrKyJoFhuariteesr MasOtt County, repulsed a who attacked bl band of n'ght-rldei- s home Saturday night. A number of shots were exchanged, but it is not known that any raiders were hurt. farmer of f Hindaes FJeckLng toAmerica. - San Francisco. At the present rate of increase of Hindoo Immigration it has been predlctedthat more than rive In the United States In the pom-ln- g year. Funeral of Dynamite Victims. Los Angeles, Cal. Seventeen of the twenty or more "men who Jost their Uvea in the explosion which wrecked the Times newspaper plant were laid to rest on Sunday in gravea side by side In Hollywood cemetery . |