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Show "Smmt IITM E OGDEN CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING. NEVADA SALOONS ARE OPEN Sparks Has Signed Measure Repealing 12 O'clock Law and Liquor Dealers Rejoice. Governor r Great Artillery Duel Fought On the Banks of Hun River Outcome Seems to Be In Doubt mi of A1 Karopatkln In ,he. wing. van bombarded by tha jlnaneM for an hour early In the day. Buwta artillery replying vigorously. seem 0 be Tb outcume at thin point of hurriin doubt. A wind storm the cane furr mi In progreaa during commander-inhle- f No "report, from the have later tlian Wednesday riven out at 8t. Petersburg. Preaa dispatches from AModated ttukdrn Indicate that conaldcrable are well north of the city of Mukden and that the railroad upon htch dependa no much for tlie Rnaaian erav. la seriously threatened If Indeed, It baa not already been cut. rlTt. M JP-,neerc- ca ir Reno, Nev., March 9. Every saloon in Nevada in wide open tonight and will remain open for the next two year, at leant, for Governor Spark voday j2 eigned the measure repealing the o'clock law. The bill pawed both houses a few daya ago after a hard fight. The reform element of the mate bitterly opposed the measure. The art will result to the adding of saloonkeepers of Tonoimh, Goldfield and other mining cam its aa well aa Reno. STANFORD DIES NATURAL PI1ATH. UN- MARCH - Honolulu. March The coroner' jury tonight irlirinil a vciiliil that Mrs. Stanford died an uanat- ur death. The verdict that was due to strychnine poifoniiig. the poison having been introduced into a bottle of bicarbonate of soda with felonious intrnt ly peicun or persons to the juiy unknown. i SECRETARY HAY MAKES STATEMENT Aa important measure vetoed by the wan one taxing national bank governor miles of battle line are constantly ex- in Arvada. The national banks even posed, but at an enormous coat In before the bill was introduced refused Wants to Set at Rest the Confuted, Misleading and Harmful Reports divIJuals and amnll parties have taxes. The governor action toConcerning Domingo reached tbe railway, cut the telegraph to pay day practically relieves them from taxwires and dislodged a few rails, but the ation. Washington. March 8. The Secretary damage were quickly repaired and the of State la ronvereiiig with the press pepetrators killed or wounded. Around nient. Near the station, la over-filletoday made a statethe village of Pachlatxu there raged representatives are heard low groans- - The ment aa to tbe farts regarding the fierce ntruggle. A veteran regiment hoapitaln, wounded arrive In a never ceasing Ho of the imperial rifle distinguished him- stream of carts, and another stream vf negotatious with 8an Domiugo, self especially among members, earning ambulances move northward for the raid: 1 should if po,ible to set al St. George crosses time and again must be cleared for the day's real the con fulike, wed, misleading and harmin supporting and rescuing raw regi- place The eteraal pines whisper ful victims. ments. reports concerning the uegotiations above the tombs of tha Chinese emnot of the San Domingo protocol Colonel Suapectxkoy, a brilliant and In the fields watch Area are now only under consideration by the senate beloved officer, one of tbe heroes of peror. Tbe sky la lighted with glare of the United States, but also the inLdao Yang, who clio-- e to din rather burning. of burning stores and evaruated vil- strument signed at Santo Domingo city than surrender, was killed at Pachlatxu. lages. of Jan. SI, whlrh Is sometimes referred Just behind Puchiatxu, under the The forces are gathering for todny'a lo a the Dilliugbomanchex agreeshadow of a clump of pines in the park fight. ment. of the imperial tombs, tbia the "It has assrcr.ed aud pcrsinteuily reof another division. Colonel March 10. Military writer peated that the department of elate had Berlin, on the attack Lauultz, directing here discussing General Kuropatkln's knowledge of the cxistanre of the Sannltxe and the defense of Vshuntun. admit Ita extreme serious- agreement of Jan. SSI. prior to the pubWith a swish like that of the silken situation, that such an Inness, but do not believe a new sedan lic announcement aklrla of a w ell dressed dame, Sbimoae will follow, arguing that the Japan, strument had been signed at Santo bulshells hurtle past and occasionally i not heavy enough in num- Domingo city. rae lets whistle by. FJver y few minutes the bersarmy "It has been further swelled that to oomiiel a surrender. Unstinted bells of the telephone at bin feet jingle In given Field Marshal Oyama's there was an Intent ion and pttriiose on praise and he reports to the commander of militarr achievement In the present the part-othe president and the the army. Now a Cossack orderly galmaut of stale, which looked to ike battle, 'but it is believed that the terlops up and reporta that the Russian over which the fighting has hasty carrying into effect of seme imtroop are leaving Pachiatxn; that the ritory been going on Is too enormous to exportant arrangements with the DomJapanese have seized the village and pect the Japanese to seriously plan to inican government without delay subwith It the bodies of Sapotakl and half surround the Russians, mitting lo the senate for Its advice and his regiment. Another of the dead Is consent any Instrument in tbe nature Prince Markeff, commander of the Neither tha London. March 10. According to the of a treaty or proocol. name regiment. The middle of the afnor any uf the officials of president the of SL correspondent Petersburg ternoon. in n cloud of dust and surVice state department never had such Inrounded by his staff and escorts, Gen, Dally Telegraph a telegram from tention or purpose. Nothing was known not pubAdmiral yet Rojeetvensky eral Kanlbara canters up, sits quietly of the agreement of Jan. 21 until it waj hia of four that wanlilpn state lished n few minutes under fire inspecting tha learned through the medium of the because for they firing are position and then continues his are incapacitated public pro that auch an instrument tha and that too armed, heavily rounds. in Santo Domingo had been algned difao become has Errant bullets now and then strike problem ofliecoaling It was then decided that as would be unable city. he feared ficult that cloud of plaster village huts raising a many representatives and rumors conproceed to the Far KaMt. or little aputtera of dust In the mar.lar-I- n toNo tbe agreement were reselling cerning London further new a has reached road. the papers (some of which indicated squadron, Rejest.venaky's concerning Now thn fight slackens. The Rusnegotiation for the annexation of at Dover that that sians appear to be gaining ground; but reports are current tne island was proposed) it would be have Baltic fleet the of the all ships but in an instant of comparative stilltq make a statement concerning to the Englidh wiae matter ness Is heard the muffled thud and been ordered to return to the public, to allay any the Instruction. further channel pending shuffle of the feet of Japanese reapprehnealon concerning the purpose of serves advancing on the run to restore the adminictratlon. Berlin. March 8. Emperor William, "When this statement was made on the balance. Uneasily sleeps Muk.len Jan 22, only a briaf abstract of the tonight. In the main street lamps addressing the naval recruits at today, held up the Japan agreement which had been signed at burn dimly. Along dark roads In heavy Santo Domingo City had been comduat are marching columns. The cool municated officially to the department. (Continued on Page Three.) night la full of the low rustle of move- The broad facts were Inrtleatrd in the Interview, together with the probable attitude f the administration while all the troops on nearly ninety d in transmission) now being directed from the vicinity the ancient northern tombs against the Japanese forcea which are crowdadditional ing to the railway, where thin conttmops are assembled to meet ingency. uf rie-va-it Berlin. March 10. Hamburg epeclnla mv tbe Hamburg Steamship company In', again begun to employ crews for chartered by t be fourteen steamers Ruiiia and it loading coal. The Lokal correspondent Hamburg Atueigers wye the vessels were sold to Russia, but other correspondent say they were chartered. One dispatch says the Palatla and Armenia will return to Hamburg Immediately after going to Lithe n. m.'i.!wa .A Mid Mukden, March 0. 4 a. night closed the tenth day of the Titanic struggle for the possession of Mukden end the moalery of a great empire; the tenth day of unceasing conflict under exploding shrapnel, the road of cannon and tha whistling of bullets; the tenth day without sleep end without food. The combat la fast reach, lag a point where It la a question not ao much of turning columns, of tactics, of strategy, but one of whose strength, energy, and cartridges will last the longest. ' Russians, patient, unof soul, clung complaining. strong to positions against an doggedly enemy whose nttarks go to the very point of insanity and desperation. Fur 48 hours the Japanese have not enteu. They are starving and exhausted, but Field Marshal Orama baa told them the they will take the city and slaughter stop on Friday and their confidence in their leader Increased their strength On Wednesday when tha Rueelana took Uslinnlun, a few doxen Japanese d clung to the temple and refused all overtures to surrender. Can. sons were brought up and brearhed the walla, but tbe dare devil courage of Hie defenders continued unoer the Are, and finally, when defense was hopeleee, they blew themselves skyward with tbe ruins of the temple. One survivor, rather than surrender, threw himself Into a stone rimmed well and perished. And yet the rank and file and inferior leaders, .tern in their sense of duty, are an unsparing of themselves as of the men whom they led to death. Stern Oyama driven and drives his troops northward to encircle the city. With every fresh flanking movement the Iron band doses nearer the railroad and under this menace the first and third armies were forced, last night, to abandon the mighty fortifications on the 81mkhe river, giye up the impregnable Poutilolf hill and retire to the line of the Hun river. Today the Japanese are pushing their column north and north east bombard- ing villages which are keys of the dctmse and hurling men, some of them veterans of years' compnign and others middle aged reserves fresh from Japan, againil Russian positions. Often they are repulsed and some time master they the advanced line, but at enormous Gray-coate- d he proposition. ten-fol- thick-walle- 81. Petersburg, March 8, 11:55 p. m. Russia is ateadlly reinforcing her military strength, both in men and guns. In the direction of Indian fron- tier. 1 x ih d Kras-novods- re al-J!- ! NO HOME RULE FOR IRELAND ed Anglo-Japancs- Aden-Hinterla- 1905. PRICE FIVE CENTS T THE RETURN Tq NATURE THE RAILWAY STRIKE Negre Missionary Took Rouasaaua Advice and Now Worship Devils in Nude Simplicity. Indianapolis. March 8. A dispatch New from liuntiugton, Iud., to tha says: The exec-mircommittee of the Missionary Hoard of tho United In Christ Brethren has dropped from the rolls uf church Daniel Flirkiager Wtlberioree, a nativo African. who waa brought to this country aa a child and after being educated was returned by the board to his old tribe, aa a missionary. It la charged bjr the board that after a service of - years a a missionary, ihe negro nil n later had been lured back to beatbeulsm, has liecome chief of his old tribe of and has roulrarted plural marriage in the wild of Africa. Nearly fit) years ago Dr. Kumbler Flirkinger. then secretary of the missionary board, was in Weal Africa on Mission work. While via (ting a village one day ihe announcement waa made that a male child hail been born in the negro village. The hoat of Flirkinger christened the baby Daniel Flickinger Wilber force. Twelve year inter the boy had been brought to America by a missionary and Dr. FUeklnger accidentally discovered him at work at the missionary house in New York. He took Ihe lail tn Dayton, O., and he waa sent to school, then through high school, andl later to a medical al Cleveland. lie murrleil a negro woman at Dayton and the two went to Africa to do missionary work among the old tribe from which Wilber force came. Luter the family returned to this country and Fillier-forc- e lectured throughout ihe central at a tea. HU four children attendiMl Central college here. Two sous are atill In this country one at Otter-bercollege nnd he other In the Day-to- n high school. WHberforcc returned to Africa and the board has been Informed of hla return to heathenism and its accompanying plural niarriageB.ugathcr with his becoming chief of the tribe. The venerable Dr. Flickinger in much depressed ever tbe backsliding of his protege, but sanctions the action of col-leg- o n the E board. Cripple Creek, March 8. The Jury in the rase uf Jamus If. Warfnrd, the deputy sheriff who shot and klllod Christopher Miller and lssaco Loho at the polls in Goldfield on election day, was discharged today, having failed tn agree after deliberating orer 70 hours. . Indianapolis, March 8. Falrbnnk will come to Indianapolis the letter part of thin month to take Intervening degrees In masonry between the Blue latdge and the 22nd degree. He was Initiated into the masonic order December 27. Vice-Preside- - National Labor Leaders Repudiate Action of Local Leaders Who Ordered and Conduct the Strike. New York, March 9. Tlie moat in- teresting development In the subway and elevated railway strike in New York was the sland taken by noma of the national labor leaden In repudiating the action of the labor lenders who ordered and are conducting the strike. The first intimation the public had that the strike was not endorsed by ths national unions rame In a statrmeut from Grand Chief Warren 8. tSone, of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. to which the mutormen belong. Mr. 8toue insUted that ihe strike was a violation of the laws of ths national union, the men having broken their contracts with tlie Interborough company. Hr ordered the men to report fur duly, falling which expulsion from the organization is threatened. Ilniry Johnson, secretary of ths local union of Railway Loromotiye Engineers, In an Interview, supported Mr. Jencks, raying the men would not go back to work until lliev had won their point, the local union having sufficient money to rarry on the strike without aid from the nil tonal union. So far, he said, none of the ntrikers had deserted while dozens of the atriks breakers had quit mid had been went home by the local union. The Amalgamated association uf Street and Electric Railway employes and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers have issued n Joint statement at strike headquarters In which they declare Warren S. Stone did not Issue any statement to them this afternoon ordering them to return to work, and declared the national body not in sympathy with their atriks. The ntalement continues that thn strike has Just begun that the men will fight to the bitter end snd they are confident of winning. Notwithstanding the efforts of the local leaders, there were Indications around strike headquarter that at least some of iiie men were reedy to give up tbe fight against Hi. company. Those who from the start were opposed to the strike find the '.action of the national leaders an excellent virus to return to work. Early tonight several of the old subway mutormen wers found in charge of their regular trains end aJmltted that they had taken Mr. Stone's advire. The service In tho waa never for a munent contemplated that there would not be submitted the tbe United Sates at the proper time for ita consideration a protocol or treaty embodying tbe essential f nature of the agreement signed on the 21st of Jan. at Santo Domingo City which agreement waa signed at that time for the purpose of meeting the requirements of certain to avert further political conditions disorder and bloodshed. The action of our representative in this respect was approved. "When the full text or the agreement of Jan. 21st. reached Washington tbe department draft which is the protocol now before the senate was promptly aud cabled to considered, prepared it was signed Santo Domingo where some days later. "No purpose of putting either tha agreement of Jan. 221st or ihe protocol now before the senate, into practical without submitting to tht operaion explanation of ihe renewal of Russian senate for approval waa never never enactivity In that it probably in a demon- tertained, considered or discussed. Tbq stration to imprera Afghanistan. administration was proceeding in the The Associated Press Is unable here usual way. that is It waa negotiating to obtain here any official admission the treaty through the acknowledged that any unusual military move is In ways and when that Instrument was progress, the statement being made if hought to be in proper form it waa duly guns were going south It was simply submitted to the senate. an ordinary' operation in the way of shifting troops : but a Russian of nigh position made the following statement: Russia has not any designs on India. as England in ho fond of alleging, if Great Britain would only let us alone we would not trouble her; but we are not blind to the manner tn which Great Britain has selxed the occasion of the present war to buttress all her Interests as she can; nor can we Rus- Lord Reseberry Telia London Liberal Club That Equal Government sians get over the idea, that aooner or fa Cause. later, a conflict, with our traditional enemy is Inevitable and we realize that our only path to victory Ilea in the The question of London, March direction of India. Without going back bom rule for Ireland was the. prinbombast te to Lord Curzon's proclamaof tlie speech of lxrL tions or anything prior to the war, and cipal feature tbe City of London out of consideration for the manner in Roaeberry before which she sought to embarrass and dis- Libera club tonight. Ilia lordship said that while the credit us In Its preaecutlon, we recall party sympathised with Ireland wbst Great Britain has done In Asia Liberal since tbe outbreak of hostilities and and was willing to proceed along the ask whether Russia would not be Jus- lines of reform, there is one thing to tified in making a counter move to which no wine statesman eyer will exexpedition to Thibet, pose the country, namely, the curse Youngliusband'a which wan in direct violation of Great of an equal government We have sufBritain's solemn assurance to us. ficient wsrnlngs la the examplean--of l 8weilro and Austria will you Youngliusband, remember, ne- Norway and avoid the peril of having to n which Hungary so treaty gotiated closely apour very proached a protectorate over Thibet tbe vulture gnawing at British that the government was oblig- vitals. Lord RoSebriry said that after Brited (o administer a public rebuke to him. Then Lord Kitchener's scheme ish ships had been ordered from Port for the organization of the army blos- Arthur by Russia snd seal tn Venesomed. and a commercial ex- zuela at the behest oi Germany, Briton The wm had little furtheffiomllltatlon to.axpeot pedition was sent to Persia. of the Ameer of Afghanistan was next at the hands of a liberal government called upbrought to Bombay. Then presure was If a liberal government was c alon to renew the put upon Turkey to set lie' the question, and now there Is liance he had lictl doubt that It would a project, to autonomiec Arabia. Great sign gladly. Britain has been making hay while the 8. The ballot for snn shone. But Russia cannot hold her Dover, Del., hands and see Thibet and Afghanistan United States r resulted as folconverted into Blmtati or Nepal nor lows today: Addlcks 13; Suulabury Persia placed completely under British 13; Henry A. Dupont 9; Richardson Influence. I have no knowledge i.f 6; Hughes 4: total vote 44; necessary what. If any steps have been taken In to a choice 22. Turkestan, but Great Britain will find Russia Is not so engrossed or March 8- - Three hundred as to he obliged to andBerlin, helpless west Indian contract eighty-eigh- t border states relinquish to her laborers arrived this week to work on - . marc, without a slruuja. Aha canaL ' ) Indian Frontiers Are Being Strengthened and Slav In Interview Says Conflict Is Some Day Inevitable Sensational rumors of the dispatch of reinforcement for Russian Turkestan were current two months ago, but they were then denied. The Associated Press In now In a position to affirm their truth on the authority of a traveler of nnlmpcacable veracity who has Jut. arrived from Tashkend and who wan a personal witness of the military activity on the recently completed and oiher strategic cost. railroads through Merv to Krasno-vodsThe narrow strip west of the railway Troops, guns and munitions of literally covered with soldiers and mllltsrv accoutrements. The entire war have been moving southward for two months. Between the middle of with front In now" retiring in con- January and the middle of February formity with a plan formulated upon fifty-similitary trains, mostly carrythe consequences of the days flght-- ? arrived at Tasbkend. and the Japanese, apprehending ing' artillery, were The guns mostly sent from he movements, are themselves Merv, whence a purely military Una around the Russian right. to Kursk. Tbe traveler In quesPreceding the retirement last night, goes was informed although he had no tion the heayy firing which extended along on the point, that he entire south front wan for the first personal knowledge bad crossed the Pamiri 'me audible at Mukden throughout the Russian troops Terek pass and garrisoned through eatlre night and railincreasing with the Kashgar. The Orenburg-Taabken7 it approached the west and road was so crowded that the traveler "rth. It ought to be Impossible now was forced to return by way of for the Japanese to turn tbe Rus- Mi from the Hun river positions, Associated Press Informant The ftut the issue appears to entirely detates that the greatest secrecy is obpend upon the extension of tne battle served. Travelers, who are rare, must line northward and np the railway. from The evacuation of the Shakhe posl-- , be provided with special permits of war aud kept under the Evolved several hundred miles of the minister closest surveillance, ihe baggage of and overland railways and teletraveler was twice nemrrhed, algraphs. mormons defensive works, this It though his papers were regular.officials "d Cross supplies, towns, fuel in-most significant that local wage stores, the latter of which it hare been ordered not to' permit Engnecessary to burn. The military lishmen to travel in Russian Turkestan, Tn'la covered 500 square miles. Tbe and raptains on the Caspian have been nwke of battle and fire are every-"hcforMdaen to allow Englishmen to land obscuring thn linea. and It la on the pastern shore. At Krssnovodsk impossible to longer distinguish tbe informant of the Associated Press conflagrations. wan told that two English offleera who . here are now crowded, had been traveling in disguise are lanj",hopltls rr,vjo continues adequate. guishing In prison. t"uv sun light and the milHneas A worn led of the Speaking generally, the scnihT prevents Indiscribable sufTcr-!- " Pres Informant raid that Ihe greatest among the wounded and the sup-o-li Turkestan tranquility prevailed in the were an1 llle rv'evrs, who are obliged only At Bokhara there region. J't'P n the wide shelterless rumors that a war was in pro" and lie widely extended In order vague and absolutely nothing wan ems i escfp, the shrapnel which la eown known regarding polities! developdeist for fifteen miles on tha wc-- t, ments la European Russia. The oniy rush-tagnor- It 10, EXEMPLIFIED 9- - coni-manr- er Mukden. March 8. 10 n. m. (Delayed An artillery fire In FORECAST FAIR TODAY AND TOMORROW VOL. n. NO. 69 still Mukden at noun yesterday Fu pas areupied by the Russian. on lve mile to the eMtw.nl .ndGen-ml vital point for tke Hun river, WIKI almost perfect. subway tonight wn the local trains bring run during the rush hours on schedule time, while tha e express trains maintained s headway. At no time wan there anything resembling n congestion, ths usual home going crowd being handled without a single nreldenl. On the elevated linen tlie seqvlce wan nut so good; thin, however, living due to ths tact that the company had decided to flret perfect the running of trains 11 the subway. Tomorrow they expect to bring the elevated service up to ths tegular standard. three-minut- Messrs. Slone and W. B. Hurley, left for Cleveland tonight. A a they were leaving Mr. Stone raid: The strike is virtually over. We have accomplished our niinalon and arejolng bums well satisfied." The executive commit lea of the joint bodies of the Amalgamated and the Brotherhood, after n inerting tonight issued a statement denying tha t Mr. Stone had ordered the men to return to work, and milling that ths strikers would fight until they won. - President Jenrka ami MadIepjier and Mes-r- a. den, the latter neerelary of tlie engi neers, supplemented the committee's statement with attacks on Mr. Stone, declaring that the local unions were of the national quite Independent uuion In thin matter. W. I). Mahon, pnsldenl of the Amalgamated asnoela- tlon supplemented hia earlier Mate-mewith n longer letter In which he took practically the aame stand an Mr. Stone. : In conclusion he "Nothing now remain to do. but to declare that tlie present strike la neither authorised, nor approved by tha Amalgamated Asaoelstlon of Street ant! Electric Btreet Employes of America and I therefore advise all our lnyal mem tiers ta report for duty at om-e.At ths offices of the company it was said tonight that 350 of the olj employes had applied for reinstatement. They were given application blanks and were told they would have tu pass through tbe name routine as the new employes had. The Inter bo rough company also lent; oul letters advising their employes tu appeal to the imllce when molested, guaranteeing protection and also saying that all competent men would he retained, no matter what the outcome of the strike and thoe who had worked during the trouble would have preference of seniority of nil other employes to date from March (, 1905. Timothy Ilealy. president of the International Brotherhood of Stationary he Firemen, when naked whether would rail out the members of bin organisation, replied: "No, I am not going to call them ont." "Have you been naked by Mr. Pepper or hr. Jencks or anybody else to tall them out? wan asked. "If Mr. Pepper asked me fo rail our. the firemen," replied Mr. Itenly, "1 would not do so. I would not recognise Mr. Pepper's power to make any such Before I would call out tha request. men I would have to be asked to do so by President Malum. Mr. Mahon hw not asked me to do so. President W. D. Mahon, of the National association of electric and street railway employe said when naked what effect the attitude of Warren E. Stone, president of tbe National organization or foromofiv engineers would have upon the strike situation . "A for as I am conrerned. Mr. Stone's altitude wi'l make no difference Mr. Btone'n organization whatever. and mine are entirely distinct nnd separate, nnd what he may see fit to do will not affect my conduct in the least.Mr. Mahon said that he had received telephone, communication from the executive committee of the focal organization of electric nnd street railway employes in regard to the strike situation. nnd he bad advised them to seelc a with 'ment. "Ibe local organization." he rain, has noi violated the rule of our I a ; : 1 t ! 4 i nt - . i . II She Is Acquitted at Present Hearing the Steel King Might Appear at a Subsequent Trial , Cleveland, O.. Manh 9. Andrew Carnegie ig now definitely out of the presIf she ent I rial of Mrs. Chadwick. should be acquitted this time Mr. Carnegie might appear at n subsequent trial, but as far as the existing ease is concerned his pay is waiting for him nnd ha Is at liberty to go home. United States Marshal Chandler today made out a check for (44.50 to order, and It la held in tb marshal's office pending Mr. Carnegie's rail for It. If he does nut rail It will be mailed to him. Tbe defense today made a desperate effort to have the ease taken from Ihe Jurv and n verdict- of acquittal rendered bv the court. After arguments lasting throughout the greater part of the day afternoon Judge Tsyler Just prior lo ths adjournment overruled the move. The defense also attneked two counts uf the Indirt ment and naked that certain part of the testimony offered by the government be stricken out. An admission from Ihe Judge that he did not regard the two count ax "good' was the extent f the ratisinctlon secured by the defense. The acquittal of the defendant was naked on the ground that tho indictment charged her with conspiring ta rommit lo an offense against Ihn United States in that she conaplred with Beckwith nnd Sier to certify Illegal checks of the Olierlfn bank. It was claimed ly the attorneys for ibe defense that Mrs. Chadwick, not could not being an officer of Ihe bank, certifv checks, and that she could not g be charged under the law with conpir-into commit an offense In conjunction with other which she had not. ihe power to commit alone. Scott rase. "How do you regard the aBkrd the judge. decision recently This referred to handed down by the United States of the court of appeals with an officiala certain bank to procure the making of of bank designed entry on tbe boohs In the f.mda .f to cover up n shortage hating no although was, the tank, the of making band in the a was the man guilty of conspiracy WJnd1geTng contended that Ihe cases were different. District Attorney ovment. In arguing for the n lhe sioke very briefly. He ''t' ssid ihst ne ce. and Herald on the the nested bis case upon it. 8u-.-v- an. dec.-aio- indictment in the Scott rase ami In Chadwick cnee were similar nnd that- the cnees corresponded in other re- ihe spects. . Attorney Dawley, In closing for tbe defendant, asked that tbe letters submitted yeeterdsy. In w blch Mrs. Chad-wicsought to make arrangements for Ihe rertlflratlon of checks when she had so money in the bank and n result which one check was certified several days before It ws signed by Mrs. Chadwick, be taken from the testimony. He argued that this was a promise that the money would be present at the time ibe rheck would be signed, and not properly speaking, a check at all. He asked that two counts referring to this rheck be ntrlrken from tbe Indictment. In regard to the letters he insisted they were not compel ent although Mrs. Chadwick bad written them, there was no evidence in the ease to show that, she had ever mailed them; nothing to show that they had been received by Beckwith or Spear or had influence! them In any e, way. Judge Tnyler. in deciding the motion aisked the removal of the case from the Jury declared that, ihe court of appeals had In the Scott ease covered the questions raised by the defense and It was therefore overruled. He did not rgnrd the two counts of the indictment ns good, and DiMrict Attorney Stilll Vln gaidtlist he was willing that they should be killed. The letters, Judge Tsyler said, were competent evidnee. Hire was nothing In the case to show that thev had ever been received by Spear or Beckwith, but they were, however, schemes made by the prisoner, and b would allow them to remain, declaring that he would in his charge instruct the Jury concerning them. It is probable that tbe case will be given to the Jurv tomorrow evening. That matter rests with the length of the arguments to be made by the lawyers, and they were nut able to say I hla afternoon Just how much time they would require. If the arguments are not flushed tomorrow Ihe esse will go over until Monday. t ! . i i i i al organization, for they have violated no agreement with tbe Intcrbor-ong- h company. He also said Mr. Stone's statement ns for as he could see would not affect the strike as such. Grand Chief Warren E. Stone of the Locomotive Engineers issued n statement late today, concerning tbe strike, in which lie said : "The strike Is in direct violation f our law. It i noi recognized nor will It be supported by our organization. 'I e contract between the company and the men is binding lodav a it was when signed, and loyal members of t be brotherhood of engineers are Instructed to . Members rereport for duty nt om-ebe will so do wpelled from fusing to membership in our organisation." : ) n i rj GET PAID. LAWYERS t nccrei Washington. March tary of the treasury has issued a warrant for 8750,000 for the Mansfield, McMtirray A Cornish, lawyers, residing in the Indian Territory, as fees for services rendered by them to the Choctaw nod Ceckasha Indiana. The secretary of the Interior declined to approve tho claim on the ground is however, was excessive. Cungrees. directed the payment ou ths showing that, it was regular and In accordance with the rontraet with Ihe ludianx. 9.-- The 4 4 V f a k - . Tim Jefferson City. JIo.. March has passed the bill rojiaaUng liOiidiin. March 9. King Edward to- the breeders lw. The measfcfe hs been passed ia the "limit. day held the first levee of the seasona already The Breeders law was enacted in 87 at Si. James palace. There was hexing ako'dd le large attendance of members nf royal and providedracethat - . tracks. allowed nt Lfamily, diplomats and uflkial. . Renal o 4 4.aura j 4 - 1 iJUXU. E I - JW it- - - - |