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Show VIII. VOLUME NUMBER OG-- 4. uta h: m isr, D the crime of which the hitter was con victed, proved a complete alibi. CUBAN APOSTLE GRANT Conclusive evidence of Horn's guilt was submitted to the governor, who will decide Horn's fate this afternoon. CHICAGO IN OR IS IS SAFE AWAY The trains dropped down a thirty-foembankment. Gunpowder which was in the cars repeatedly exploded as it was reached by the Are and the of the City's Street victims were burned to a Introduced by Chairman Payne of He Cannot Be Found by Local crisp. Car Lines Are Officers Nor Be Ways and Means COLUMBIANS ARE WARLIKE Tied Up. Committee. Extradited. GREAT STRIKE IS BILL ot Twenty-on-e Thousand Troops HOBS ARE MAKING Make Attempt to Leave for the PROVISIONS Isthiflus. TROUBLE OF THE MEASURE HIS COLON, Nov. 12. The steamer Orinoco, which conveyed the Coloin-bio- n to Run Rule Will Be Granted Company Fail in Ita Attempt troops to Curtagena. has returnn Amendments Cars. With ed and reports that the populace of Men. tirely. Is furious against the Baranquilla Non-Unio- to Prohibit En- Americana. A thousand troops sought to embark Nov. 12. RepreWASHINGTON, CHICAGO, Nov. 12. Promptly at 4 for the Isthmus but were refused New sentative of transportation. car York,, chairPayne the greatest o'clock this morning man commeans of the commitand ways of Chicago the in history trike tee, today Introduced a bill currying QUEEN DRAGA'S PROPERTY lines are tied menced. Twenty-on- e Into effect the convention between up, comprising all of the Chicago City Her Sisters Reeeiva $100,000 From tha Cuba and the United States, which Railway company's system. was signed last December. The Payne Servian GovernThe strike order was formally lobill last provides that whenever the presiment. ratification meeting wed by the dent of the United States shall receive 8 oclock before was It nearly night BELGRADE. Nov. 12. The Servian satisfactory evidence that Cuba has any attempt was made to run the cars, while the South Side elevated and the government has this day paid out of made provision to give full effect to minnis Central were overtaxed with the general treasury the sum of 0 the treaty he is authorised to Issue to to workers belated the of sisters the late Queen a proclamation declaring that he has their efforts bring town. men was who down in the received such evidence. On the 10th assassinated Draga, and business of the first month thereafter the bill 8 barn the o'clock with before the big palace royal king. Shortly inThis money is claimed to be the becomes effective. Under it, all articles doors swung back and six trains, now admitted free from Cuba will no cluding a mail train sandwiched in, entire proceeds of her property, which and ail others to be admitted remain, was sold new help. started out with by the government The a rate at of 20 per cent less than the to the was of made relatives the are late stop Xo effort queen greatly levied tariffs against any other foreign outside the dissatisfied because of the smallness until trains they passed Also no Cuban sugar shall country. of amount. when the the at detail they barns, police be admitted at less than 20 per cent were greeted with astorm of missiles. differential and no reductions from weato Three of the trains managed PORTLAND HOLD-U- P the regular tariffs shall be allowed to three ther the storm, but the other any foreign country on sugar. The bill crews abandoned the cars and fled Robbed a Saloon and Then Escaped provides further that nothing therein back to the barns bleeding from nuOn Horses That Were contained shall be considered as an admerous wounds. One man was so Stolen. mission on the part of the house of badly hurt that it was necessary that that customs duties representatives he be taken to the hospital. PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 12. A saloon can be changed otherwise than by an was not molested, The mall train was held up after midnight th& morn- act of Congress originating In the but could not be moved because of in this city. .Two masked men en- house. Consular fees on ing importations trains ahead and behind being aban- tered and , lined lip against the wall from Cuba must remain the same as doned. . fourteen denlsens of the place. They with all other countries. The first cars to reach down town on robbed the cash register, but did not The ways and means committee will the Wentworth line had an unevent- search any of the people present They meet tomorrow morning to consider ful trip until they reached Clark and rode away on horseback and left their this bill. The expectation !s that It Van Buren, where, following the usuhorses ten blocks distant Later U will be reported favorably to the house who are al custom, the teamsters, was discovered that the horses had In the afternoon. in sympathy with the been stolen. thoroughly The committee on rules is expected strikers, blockaded the tracks and the to grant a rule prohibiting all amendcars became hopelessly entan.ied. ments to the Payne bill, so as to preFrom all sides came a furious bomvent a rider abolishing the differentials bardment of miscellaneous, missiles ENGINEMEN on refined sugar. and the car windows were riddled, holes tom through the sides of the WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE. cars and roofs, crushed In. Plate glass WERE KILLED WASHINGTON, Nov. 1!. In the windows of nearby stores suffered house today Speaker Cannon announgreat damage and several persons in the crowd were hurt ced the new ways and means commitThe police finally dispersed the mob tee, which will at once begin considerFATAL KENTUCKY TRAIN COLand the cars proceeded. ation of the Cuban bill. The new ReLISION. At Thirty-eight- h and Cottage Grove publican members are Watson of Inthe first car returning was again blocked by teamsters and a mob of diana, who succeeds Steele of the Dead Number Three Engineers and five hundred. A squad of police chargsame state, tha latter having failed Three Firemen Orders Were ed the crowd, but was met so deterBoutelle of Illinois, of Misunderstood. minedly that the officers were almost succeeding Hopkins, who has gone to overpowered. The grlpman announced succeedthat he had enough and would step NEW HOPE. Ky.P Nov. 12. Six the senate; Curtis of Kansas, off the train as soon as the car re- men were kljled and two injured in a ing' Long of .the same state, who has turned to the barn. The crowd cheer- wreck on the Louisville and Nashville been elected to the senate. The new ed wildly and speedily opened a way railroad this morning due to a collisDemocratic members of this commitfor the car. ion of freights, head on, at Telford's tee are the floor leader Williams, who The gripmen of three succeeding switch. succeeds and Champ Richardson, trains also resigned. The dead are Engineers Mark Can- Clark of Missouri, succeeding New-lanA mob at and Cottage non, Ed. Sturgis and Moreland Graves; of Nevada. The place on this Grove stopped a car, took the crew firemen John Reyolds, John Leach and committee of George & McClellan, oft and severely beat the men. The William Lyden. , Just elected Democratic xnsvor of New closed coaches were then tipped over Reid Humes, brake-maFatally Injured, York, but who doee not take his mu' and the grip apparatus smashed. and seriously Injured, John nicipal position until the first of the From 10 until 2 no trains were sent Winkler. year, was endangered. However, the out, the strike breakers refusing to was under full A double-headNew York delegation made a strong work unless given greater police prospeed when the trains struck. The ight end succeeded in having him retection. collision was due to a misunderstandtained. There will be a vacancy In Mayor Harrison has issued a proclaing of orders. this place on the first of the year. mation against the formation of Three locomotives were demolished The senate committee on military crowds of curiosity seekers. He ex- and cars were piled on top of the enaffairs today decided to hold a public onerates the strikers from blame for gines and the wreckage took fire. meeting Thursday to hear any objecviolence and lays the blame on symtions to the confirmation of General pathisers and Idlers. l. Rathbone Wood to be The management of the road says Senaand of one witnesses the be will It may make TRIAL no further attempts to AIRSHIP tors Teller and Hanna will be pres$100,-00- non-uni- on - ALL . ds Forty-seven- th n, er major-genera- nin today. ent The total list of Injured Is nine. The committee this morning reportMany arrests were made and the enA ed favorably the nomination of Gentire police force of the city is out on eral Oliver to be assistant secretary of strike duty along the affected lines and war. at the car barns with the exception The senate adjourned until Monday. "f nearly six hundred mobilised and Regarded by Scientists as a Triumph ,leW in reserve of Aerial Naviat the nearest staCRACKSMEN ARRESTED tions. gation. WAS SUCCESS PARIS, Nov. 12. The Labaudy hour hope brothers today sailed a dirigible balloon from Moisson to Paris, a disState Demolished Grounds on Which miles, In one hour tance of forty-foDofonoo Asked for a fend a half, and landed in the heart of Reprieve. the city. It is a distinct triumph in CHEYENNE. Wyo., Nov. 12. Ooun-f- aerial navigation and the feat has the Mate argued today agalnat aroused great enthusiasm among aer" com,nutation Tom Horn's pf onauts and scientific men generally. The grounds on which the e Upon their landing safe and unhurt, asked for a reprieve were y with their machine intact, the Lebaudy shattered. brothers were received with demonMiller, who Is charged by Horn with strations o' wildest Joy. LITTLE eor Wars Experimenting With Dynamite and Explosion Gave Them Away. ur or sen-enc- de-s- com-W- e. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 12. A dynamite explosion this morning led the police to a room where six men were arrested. They are believed to be professional cracksmen who were experimenting with the explosive. All the men were more or less shaken up by the explosion and Cue had jo hettaken to the city hospital. MISSION WILL NOVEMBER THURSDAY, fore. As it ts, I fear he has prejudiced the case of Senator Smoot to some degree." The Herald also says that Apostle Helicr J, Grant.' remarks before the young men uml young women of the 1'nlversity of I'tah last week doubtless caused the Owen prosecution to be instituted, but .1 similar action might have been based on a s eech he made at the last quur-terl- y conference of the V'tah county stake. Oil this occasion Mr. Grant rambled from a discourse on the gospel into a talk almut the Kuroieiin mission to which he has now de- GO ON parted. In this connection he said that it hud long been one of his ambit inns to preside over the Kuroiean liiiasion. The Informer Wee Too Late With the lie had been set apart for it. he deComplaint and tha Apoetlo Re clared, u number of years ago. hut at ceived a Tip, the last moment (lie authorities deemed it advisable to make n ehange in the assignment. The reason for this All along the lines of the railways was explained by Apoidle Grant, lie stretching eastward from Utah Inquir- said that at that time prosecutions act were ies are being made fur Apostle Heber under the Kdmunda-TuckJ. Grant. Up to this writing no def- being conducted with great vigor and, in effect, continued: inite Information of his whereabout "The brother who tisk iny place has been made public, and probably It because he was about to lie took none has been received by the officers for living his religion. The prosecuted charged with serving a warrant for his arrest on the chiirge of unlawful officers thought I wus not a isiiygamist cohabitation. Aa wus freely stated so they were not molesting me. llut yesterday, the distinguished gentleman at last an Indictment was found received Information of the issuance of against me. I learned of It through the warrant and was enabled to evade a prominent uuin whom I owed $15,000. lie cHine to me nnd told me he could the process of law. The announcement . that his first have proceedings held up until I had wife, Mrs. Augusta Winter Grant, was puld him the money. In u little while I paid the debt und on the same day expected to acromjmny him woe Incorrect, probably 'having been bused that I paid it I hud a conversation with upon the fact that It whs Mrs. Augus- this man. "'Would you believe me if I told ta Winter Grant who went to JuMin with the apostle and upon the suppo- you a thing was true on my word of sition that he would not take one wife honor?' 1 naked him. 'I certainly would. Mr. Grant, he to Japan to preside over a mission there and another to Europe to pre- said, for I believe you to be an honside over a mission there.ln view of the orable man.' Well, I said, 'I tell you on iny word international antagonism to the former of honor that the lady who lives at polygamou etenets of hie chuch. It is now known that Mrs. Emily Wells a certain numlier on a certain street, Grant, who was married to the apostle and who is said to be my second wife, in Manassa, Colorado, in 1887, is to Is not my second wife at all. I believe you.' said my former be his companion In Europe, that escreditor. Then he went down to the timable lady having left Balt lake last er courthouse and had the indictment against me quashed. It was manifestly impossible for the lady to be my second wife, said the apostle, smiling broadly, "because she departure, the Herald declaring that was my third wife. And the audience he received a straight tip that the tittered and all but applauded his utterance. complaint had been made. On the previous evening he had notified the newspaper officers that he would not leave until yesterday. The HATS FOR THREE Herald was Informed last evening that on Tuesday evening Apostle Grant got on the Rio Grande train from the west NEW CARDINALS side of the yards, catching the smoking car as the train pulled out The train was an hour late out of Balt Lake. He was with a Balt Iake man. They took berths In the FIRST PUBLIC CONSISTORY OF Colorado Midland I'Yom sleeper. PIUS X. Grand Junction Apostle Grant went east over the Midland. It was not known lust evening whether he left Ceremonies Carried Out With Great Pomp Archbishop Ryan the train at Colorado Springe, Pueblo Not Named. or Denver. At all three places he could take trains for the enst. The information was given to ROME, Nov. 12. The first public Apostle Grant between 6 and 8 o'since the elevation of Pius consistory clock Tuesday evening, as near as to X of SL Peter was held the chair can be learned. Charles Mostyn Owen, who swore to the complaint, said he today, the ceremonies being carried did not make up his mind to do so out with great pomp and witnessed by until a short while before he accom- a crushing multitude. The procession was beaded by the plished the act at 8 o'clock. County Attorney George Westervelt knew of guards, next came the cardinals and it only at the time the complaint was then the pope, borne by eight at lend issued, and Judge Chris Diehl, who ands, a great throng of priests folissued the warrant, had no advance lowing. information on the subject The warHats were conferred on three carrant was given to Deputy Sheriff Axe! dinals created by the pope, the new Steele. He took it to Sheriff Emery. cardinals being Monslgnor Tnllani of The sheriff himself, after some time Vienna, Monsignor Aluti Lisbon took the warrant up to Apostle Grants Sulsberg Merry del Val. the house. During that time the apostle papal secretary of state, and Monslgdisappeared. The sheriff did not or- nor Cailegarlu, archbishop of Padua. der the night trains 4 watched. The After the consistory the pope conferred the pallium on Archbishop apostle escaped. I had not the slightest idea he Dourne of West Minister. would try to escape, said Sheriff EmINTEREST AT WASHINGTON. Nov. 12. There WASHINGTON, ery last evening. I supposed he would submit to a warant without question. was great interest In Roman CathoExtradition papers cannot be Issued lic circles here in the public consistory for the apostle, sa unlawful cohab- In Rome today. Some disappointment itation is a misdemeanor not extra- was felt that Archbishop Ryan was not among the new cardinals named, ditable. Several men of prominence in the but there Is every reason to believe Mormon church yesterday deplored that his elevation will not he long dethe fact that the apostle had not re- layed. It Is said that soon after his mained to face the charges preferred election Pope Pius had an extended audience with Cardinal Gibbons. In against him. "He took the worst possible course the course of which he asked the Carin running, said one of them. "He dinal If he could not advise the apshould have remained, accepted service pointment of another cardinal in the and pleaded guilty to the charge or United States. Cardinal Gibbons Imelse have secured a postponement of mediately brought to the pope's atthe trial until after the Smoot esse tention the name of Archbishop Ryan, was decided. The whole object of and the pope then decided. It Is said, this prosecution Is to affect Senator to raise the archb'shop to the sacred Smoot's seat The case is injured more college. by this flight than if Apostle Grant had Good solicitors wanted for the Dally taken any other course. If he had pleaded guilty he would jirobably have I.'tah State Journal. Apply to Horace been fined about 8100, as he was be- - S. Foster, city circulator. night, presumubly to follow her husband. The Salt Lake Herald and the Tribune make some startling statements In connection with At mis tie GrantM busi-Ine- 12, 1903. ss -- Kat-schtal- er LEADING CITIZENS STRONGLY PROTEST Against Continuance of the Slot Machine Evil in This City. ASK IMMEDIATE SUPPRESSION Tenor of Exproeaod Opinion la That ths Law Should Bo Enforced. A great ninny protests f.re being uttered against the continuance of the gambling slot machines in Ogden. Following arc the expressions of some of our leuding cltlsens: diaries A. Smiirthwulle, wholesale commission merchant: "Quote me as saying that the gambling slot machines constitute the most fruitful source of evil In Ogden. They should be suppressed st once. Willard Scawcroft, vice-preside- nt adn noting manager of the great Scow-cro- ft wholesale house: The gambling machines should he discontinued. R. E. Hoag, cashier of the Utah National bunk: "Peraonuly I am vio lently opposed to slot machines or any kind of gambling. President N. C. Flygnre: Yes, I want the slot machines discontinued. John IMiigree, assistant cashier of the First National bank: "It would keep a whole lut of money in the proper circulation if they were discontinued. I think it would be a good thing. J. G. Rend, of Read Bros: Slot machines are no worse than the rest of the gambling. It would be a whole lot better for the young people if they were taken out Willard Snow, manager of the Ogden Furniture company: "If It Is a 'violation of the law It ought to be stopped. H. C. Wurdlelgh: Emphatically yes. I think the slot inuchln is the worst nuisance we have In Ogden City." F. C. Parkinson, malinger Utah Knitting works: "I am willing to hold up both hands at once Hgalnst them. I am de Bishop E. T. Wooley: cidedly in favor of the abolition of the slot machines. Thomas D. Dee, of the First National bank: "I have no earthly use for them. If 'it Is against the law the law should be enforced. J. O. Payne, of Payne A Hurst: I urn strongly opposed to gambling slot machines and should like to see them I don't favor gambling discontinued. in any way. George E. Browning, of Browning Bros Co.: Iersonally I nin strongly opposed to them and think they should be done away with entirely." John A. Boyle, of the Boyle Hardware Co.: I was mayor of the city six years ago and we had them all taken out. I don't think they are le- gitimute and am In favor of their removal again. I Ain't recollect how long they were out. If I remember. It was the unanimous opinion of the council that they should be taken out. I believe that the mayor of the city should see to their rinoval. J. S. Lewis, jeweler: Personally I have no use for gambling slot machines. I think they are a detriment to the city." Charles J. Ross, successor to the Cannon Book Store: I have no sympathy with such things and think the law should be enforced. II. M. Barraws of the Barrows Grocery Co.: Yes, I think It would be a to discontinue them. good plan A. Jackson, grocer, Madison Avenue: Yes, I would like them discontinued." Peter Anderson, Democratic candidate at the last election for mayor.: The slot machines should be abolished. Rev. Samuel Blair of the Methodist I think the slot machines church: ought to go. Rev. Ora C. Wright of the Baptist vice-preside- nt church: The slot machines certainly ought to be abolished. CHIEF WAS REMOVED Result of Grsnd Jury's Investigation of Topoks Dives. TOPEKA, Has., Nov. 12. As a re- sult of the grand Jury Investigation into the dives here, the chief of police was today removed from office. ' |