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Show 7 THE J EXAMINER: MORNING (jnDUN, TTAH, MOKNITt?. SrATUitflAT in-ime reason, which he did not make crop suggest th.tt the farmers will be I to the domestic sugar and tobacco admlt-uia- y be well as dustr.es ut might they not position ui purchase freely very clear In hi meMagr. the Freak a fra. at one as la I1. i the necessaries, but the luxurit s tedThere favor the pending and are three clashes of popl to Life . As the grain crops began he would .be sure jo approve it if U of who wid be th principal beneficiaries kbould paM bulb Imum. No greater move, here aa- - a return to the lib- of the proposed tariff reduction. the present large Spanish plantation political calamity could befall Arizona eral export t bat had been missing owuera; aecuud, the speculator who when ihia the two in years, than u have thin njeaitiue become a previous will buy low priced government land nation bad liuhj surplus for customers and exploit them with railroads that law. abroad, and lb..- - closing months of he can build wLh government credit; There arc overwhelming rraaolt third, the monopolies who will estabagainr-- t tho jointure of Arizona and JSt5 recorded a total vaiOe of bread lish ue augar plantation. The naIn stiifis abroad than sent any tive Filipino will not b in it. He greater New Mexico into aa unwilling union, will simply have a chance to work but hce reaaon have been so often mouth for over two years. on the planisima and get a bar livt forth in columns tW it i no more than he has PHILIPPINE TARIFF BILL. ing. which run ncccasary to them now. been getting iu the past. The mere fact Uu.t the proposed uuiou The principal sufferer will be the K. C. Wagntr of Milwaukee maxes Is so obnoxious (o one of the Terri-lorie- s Lulled Btatea farmers of the northern he foilowiug defense of the sugar and western states aho. during the which It is proposed iu coerce of ibe country, iu refutation past ten year,, have devoted much the right to be sufficient to d, at the of the arguments advanced iu bet a if time to learn tbe advantage pendingx bill Iu cither lio- n- of Coninvetuive cultivation required by the hill no of the Itiilippine tariff gress. sugar beet rro,) nd are only just now congress. or Arisons The propued coale beginning to rmir the benefits of their labor. and New Mexico, if consummated, Sugar i tuauufariurt-i- l iu the tailThere u.iuy tropical products would be so distasteful tbs' it would ed Statu fioiu cane grown iu the which canair be grown in the Philippine southrru from beets and grown stales in name only. There be a union islands that can never be produced in the northern and western in tin- - United S'atea. If the adminiswould In- continuous political discord The iuiraimmi ia the factories manudewns It deair tration at among 'fie people thus brought to- facturing sugar Is over able that the i'ltMippine Island shall The in factories the south that extinct gether an willingly. The temperament from cane do not aa a rule refine be favored commercially, such prodthe aims and the general characteris- augur the sugar :i ady fur consumption, but ucts could be admitted duty free to Uiia country wntle a trail! against tics of the people of these two Terri- sell it as raw sugar ro the refine-- . them from o;h- r countries could be tories are so disHliuilsr that concord The bft sugar factories of the northThis ould help the Philipenforced. ern not and wehieru states, however, would be virtually imjiossible. Some Island without interfering with doubl as to the validity of the union only extract the supir rrurn the beets pine the promising domestic sugar indusbtiL refill. It to finished product, usualwould exist at the outset. The try. ly in t ho form of granulated sugar. b some hat like that or a Furthermore, as there U an overThe laige sugar refineries located of sugar in the world the marriage to which one of the princi at various porta of the Lulled production encouragement of an Increased proState do but not mamirarture obmost sugai entertaiued the violent pal raw sugar (brown duction In ibt- Philippine Islands must simply jection. and in which the other con- sugar;, which they purchase mostly necessarily mean a ditcuntlnunce of tracting party would be at Iraki an from the trupic.il couutrle. into white tbe industry now existing in some and may therefore locality unwilling accomplice. Such a union augur. About CD r rent of this raw other sugar coiui-- from the Island of Cuba. cause international complications. could not. In the nature of things, Thi a ia due to the fact that sugar from of happiness. PUBLIC OPINION. Cuba pays 2u per cent less duty than Mexico New should sugar coming from If Arisons and other foreign couth (From Our Echangra be married now. against their will, tries. The total consumption of sugar in their domestic relations would be Tbe year just dotting has witnehed the I'nlied States la about 2AU0.OUU Price, but it has been a stormj, and the inevitable outcome ions annually. Of this amount the no bourn in More Improvements of a good year. would ba a divorce later cu. with per- cane and beet factories sugar produce permanent character have been made insome of domestic revelations 100,000 tuns. There is Imported, duly , than in any other year of her history. haps Price enter upon the new year enfelicity which bolb would seriously free from the Hawaiian Islands tons, and from Porto Rico 200.0(M) and with more to offer tirely aolvt-ni- . regret. 1 tons. Cuba send ua about ,200,000 the prospective homeseeker nnd the bins, or prucilcslly all that ia exportman for n bunlnase MELTER'FOR OGDEN.' ed from the Islands. The rmaliilng than lookingany town in Utah.opening Price nearly f iMl.otHi tun arc Imported from foreign Advocate. David Eccles and associates, when countries. moMlly from Java, PhilipSouth pine Islands and Dt'UH-rars-, There fa, mure joy daring Christmas they decidud to creel a smeller near America. and more poverty in January than durOgden, laid the foundation for a GreatThe tiuO.OOO tou of sugar grown and er Ogden. For years Balt Lake ha manufactured by the cane and beet ing nil the rest at the year. The man home with a cartload of stuff who held Its supremacy In Utah in groat sugar factories in the Called States undergoes his arms during Christmas has workan the to farmer, in his part by vimiKdf thd brifeint at money require andoutlay for auppliea of not lens nothing n few pockets during January ingman drawn to if by the smelting toothpicks and n than i;o per ton or filC.uOo.OOO, while except that looksstray like an elephant had purse of the v alloy,' Mining men' went to the 2.2110.(100 tons 1 imthat stepped on it. Tet we get much joy Salt Lake to market thi-l- r ores and ported aa raw sugar and only refined out at our Christmas giving, and don't in thi to country requires an outlay em to mind the panic that follows. eventually nude that city their home. Ihe workingmen and (or supplies of Price Advocate. Some of thU "money Is now to be dinot more than $10 per ton, or $22,000.-00verted and nude to build up our city In other words each ton of sugar Congress iu Its present session a place of more natural attractiveness. grown and manufactured in the Unitshoulj not only pass the bill now beOgden and Salt Lak. are common ed Bute distributes six times as fore it for the adoption of the metric immuch money as each ton of points in tha making of railroad rates, ported into the United Btatea.sugar t.ytem in all government departments, should fix n dateor the universal ia tie no to and, therefor, advantage This clearly show the enormous ad- tuit use of the system throughout' the a gained In transiiortatlon charges, but vantages the United Btatea would if more sugar were grown and Vnlied States. With the inctvaalng la he time of delivery of ore shipand wealth of the country manufactured at home and less Import- population ments from Nevada, Idaho, Montana ed. the growth of foreign commerce beor Wyoming, the Ogden int!hr will The Philippine Islands have more comes more imperatively necessary, every obstacle to Its expansion have a decided advantage. An ore coiw than double the in of the Island of and should be removed. The statistic for The near a producnelghlmr. algunent from tha Jonopah country Java, In Java has atcwdlly the year just ended; indicating a tomust paaa through Ogden to reach the tion of sugar tal import and Bxpdit movement of now ia about 1,000,000 urns grown and Murray smeltura. The time consumed annually. With a stable government merchandise now approximating In in switching In the Ogden yards and and with the jargo population in the value two and threwquarter billions of dollars, show what has been accommaking up tonnage for a new train Philippine Inlands to supply labor and plished through the natural resources law with governthe giving existing necesLake often south hound to Salt ment wld to new construction at the country and the enterprise of American people despite tariff barsitates a delay of such duration thst the production ofrailway sngur In these is- the riers and the use of an archaic and Nevada mining men could gala n day lands will surely grow. if Java can manufacture augur and cumbrous system or rather systems of ffihre' by having their ores conto this and pay a duty of weights and measures Jong ago uhip signed to the Utah SmdUng company, equal to the country by nearly all the peoples with full rates, the whom we IMngley the- - name of the Ogden plant. Instead trade. New York Herald. find will Islands prosugar Philippine n( to the. smelters couth of Salt Lsika duction more profitable where they ore Hi Express has always had faith In element will be a only paying 75 per cent of the DingThis, the building of the Moffat road through no ran be There rate. question factor in drawing to Ogden the pro- le; If that the duty on sugar from the. Phil- this country, nnd we do yet. But there ducts 'of hoi only Nevada camps, but ippine I aland i further reduced, the is one feature la connection with the also of Idaho; Montana and Wyoming devekipinent ' of augar production In letting of the grading contract that does not look good to ns. A grading mining districts, for tba same railroad the Islands Nvlll be so marvcloualy contract ha been let thruogh the Gore rapid that it will soon exceed that, of conditions exist In relation to all. canyon end aa far a (he state bridge Java and Culm. With the ore shipments will come on Grand river on the Hne of the stage Owing chiefly to the fact that farm mining men and It will not be king be- and factory labor In the Islands costa road between Walcott and 8teamhoat as much aa In the Unit- Spring. From there, in order to get fore they, will begin to see the beauonly one-flft-b Btatea and ed that the cost of ocean onto Beer or Tamp river the Moffat adits ties of this place and superior to United States Is no roed will hve to make a sharp turn the freight vantages aa a city of homes and more than rail freight from to and go almost due north about seventy eventually they will become a part of Omaha, Philippine sugar can Ire de- miles to reach Steamboat Springs. It saserted that one the community, adding to its wealth livered In thin country at a very much has always been groat object of this road waa to get lower coat than It ran be produced and population. e the most direct and shortest route here and naturally augar production Tba electrification of ibr Ogden A in tbe Philippine to Balt Lake City, and we fail to Islands will become Northwestern, or better still, the build- a highly lucrative busineH. With a see the necessity of following down Grand river in direcing of a new line through Warren and further reduction or the tariff It will tion for over a southwesterly fifty miles from Krcm-linPlain City, to the smelter, will add become so immensely profitable that it is not very far, say forty to It will tempt capitalists to monopollza the smelter employes to the popula- the fifty mile, or down Grand river from Industry. tion of Ogik-n- , and build up tin- north The effect In the Philippine Islands the state bridge to Douero, on the D. ft R. G. This "short line" Is bearing will be the establishment of Immense md of the city. on off eouih too far to salt the Express. There arc other Improvements to plantation,. The labor employed more Vernsl Rxpi is of necessity of plnnlallon folkiw In the wake of these enterpriser, or less slave ns turn Them will be DOES A COMBINATION EXIST? for all of which David Eccles and no Independent farmers having their no good cithis associates are to be given own home and (hen-forWashington. Jan. 5. credit. Thicy are inventing their money izenship. The production of sugar will Reedrr of Kansas. Introduced a resoluof nf ,M exploited to ihe disadvantage lxand making possible s new tion today requesting the sttornev genall other produrls poculisr to the for Ogden. eral to investigate and report to th-- ) land. Since the I'hlbppiite Mand r house whether there exists or has ex WHEN THE FARMER PROSPERS. have to compete in all otln-- foreign isted a combination or agreement becount rice under like tariff conditions. tween the Pennsylvania system. Hie Dunn's Kevlew note, tbe g'eal a reduction in the tariff will bring all Norfolk and Western Railway comof It sugar to this country. As the pany. the Baltimore and Ohio Railway growth of the li'dnstriiil ini crests of sugar ran be profitably sold here, for company, the Baltimore and Southern Ihe United Bute, anil says it is no less i ban it run he produced by the Railway company and the Chesapeake of this coundomestic tanories. these factories will and Ohio Railway company or any two longer possible to spt-uhav- to submit to any tcmiw dictated or three of these companies In violal iigrtcul-turans a nation, us farming try law. by the monopolies. The consumer In tion of the Bntl-tmproducts now scarcely provide the I'nliul States will then pay more f the liilin- - of ex- han evor for his sugai. more thun OUTRAGEOUS MURDER OF CHILD. was of the Philippine The iidmisskiii ports. wbrieas lie oi at onlj 25 per Honolulu. Jan. Wharton, formerlj overwhelming; nevertheless, sugarof ft re of duty rate will sound the the son of Henry Wharthe Pingb-til'u-rx i of the ilic for roy proepi ton. who had bocii missing has been iluii i h km II of both the pane and hrrt brings sitrrees io nil. Hence, ibe sugar industries of the United States. found, dead. In a cane field si Waialua. year's results on the I arms m.- wa idl- Withiu a tew years the $riu.inwt,imft nu this f Oahu i island. The child had and special been murdered in uti atrocious manner. ed with unxh-iby the niunnf.icturer luresicd in factoryItr buildings a total io- - ns will The logs, arms and head had been Sevmachinery will and the financier quite as nr.irh a- by also the large stuns which Ihe 2U0.bO ered from the body, the tongue cut off the agriculturist. Business b.gins to fanners eng aired in growing sugar and the eve gouged out. The internal feel tbe impetus or the retarding in have invested in special farming im- organ were found sevcml t spurt. The murdered child W:is hurled a boil plements. fitiencc as soon as It is possible to dAll of the continental six feet under the Muface of the European siof nud etermine closely the quality coiinirii-their own sugar and ground. produce the proost the industry with u pus .he crofi. Invest ot- - purchase A l.iboier. in nnd Bt:-urJohnson, stocks long before tin roads hibilivc tariff igulur! ihe sugar pro- who bad Wntcd with the p.uvnls of Grangi-countries by duced in the child, was arrested on the tropical begin to move the grain, and dry goods seur, slave IhIwm. The jirmliic-tlomd when coufrorti-- wi-- strong evi- feel the broadening demand cheapof -Jobber m-In of comiTles all these n of guilt, nude a ug.ir to as dealers In rural districts increase has added material'' to their welfare. Sheriff Hrown. Ue said that the e the from And further rediiciun tor :hc crime wms thir stocks, without waiting f'r the against 11! i 7r per rein. Pingb-rate In' hoi's mother. l.cau-- c she had presi-nis artual harvest If the to get him I'euor. stop further There still exists some i of he Miu.ir ind istry hi this country. Th.- crime to he the but o'heruisc tbe cotton crop, The b.ll now pending before the ; wn-i- i in the hltnry of ihe island. for an oar.1 j livid1-the final offlcl.il report ba been isvd oli.uvo Mr f i he Iii.pos-iMton c in forcs-- c .in :k 'ident. sued, and, if tho lea,! favorable cot 111' r o ihe Pingh-o l' l r.ites Nut iinju--iilil- e in lie tor It s'.i-ton estimates ure nild'sl. ibf-riuiruii-Mot'id so; uti, r Ites.i. The Pr Thonuis l,'-ctrlOil. Monarch ' the lies; fran-- ; know li.u ii uv.-- iu;a. appears on the ,t In- - t.!iil . fiom ov. io, it Jiiip :.i ever made in any year on record In j t" ' in 'he p ', u;ir:ir KILLED HIMSELF IN PRISON. - -- e- j addition ui 'the litiei.,1 in- L.l prni-nii per cured,' tbe famu r have been whai-vi.!' offeied :.-- m an liem-fi- i P.i::nstadt. '.rain Piichv of Hesse. in Dhtaleieg tr.oe- - prop-abl- e .Iu 5. Prof. TV thelitis, head of the m.oUti.h-lias ahtni! tn until f'nrn a prices, ipn? phen just dqrtmert of the technical record of 2,Tij7.!iia.04'; wiih build railrouds ilid open up new lands university, hanged himself in prison itii-to sugar tivlji The decca-tn- i was convicted of git n'u iutiti.in n l ai'J OI A in lure- - quantities far as the cr'.ininal Improprieties and sentenced TV"1.11 Kinrte tint tbe tariff utlm-lo- n will do iu two year- fmp"bvnmen!. He had .TAXrXBT n THE EXAMINER Published Ev.ry Day in tht Year by Tha Standard Puklih tag Ca. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by Carrier la Ogdea City, iacludiag Buaday lioraiag Ex Amaar, par mouth.... 75 eta. Btagla oopkat I ew. Pr year $$-- ,, FEARLESS AND tW INDEPEND- Tha Eiamtaar is a strictly newspaper. It gives all sides aa equal ehow. The Examiner has aa favorites, aad bo enemies to pnalsh. It will give tho news unbiased and unprejudiced. OommaBieaUons will ba revived aa all sabjaeta pros an ted ia respectful laagusce from hnowa Individuals, but the true name must be published ia full. AU letters and communication signed by non da plumes, or assumed names, will ba thrown ia tha waste basket. The brave never hides behind sa assumed aame. Don't ask ihe Editor to be responsible for what you are ashamed of. .1 ua Subscribers will confer a favor by Informing this office of failure to receive The Examiner before their breakfast. Tha Morning Examiner can be found on sale by tha Independent Nawa Co Salt Lake City. On all through trains leaving Ogdaa oa Tha South era Pacific Railway. I Tha Union Pacific Railway i. - s ! it aad Tha Oregon Short Una Railway. Eiamlaar patrons will confer a fhvor oa the management by reporting to this ofllra whenever they fail to find the papers at the designated places. ! ' ! i STREETS WEAR A GOOD BALE AT A GOOD TIME. SNOW AND RAIN AND BLUSHV OUT SHOES AS NOTHING ELSE CAN. MANY PEOPLE, WHO EXPECTED TO GET THROUGH THE WINTER WITH THEIR OLD SHOES, HAVE FOUND THAT THEY CANT DO IT. THEY WILL WELCOME THIS SALE. OUR SHOE SALES HAVE NEVER YET FAILED TO ATTRACT BUYERS. PEOPLE KNOW THAT, WHEN WE ANNOUNCE A BARGAIN, IT WILL BE A BAR. GAIN JOBBECAUSE IT IS NEARING THE END OP THE SEASON MANUFACTURERS AND BERS ARE CLEARING UP, AND WE BOUGHT SHOES AT OUR OWN PRICES. WE ARE ALSO CLOSING OUT OUR OWN STOCK AT EVEN LOWER PRICES THAN EVER BEFORE. BRING THE COME TODAY OR TOMORROW, BUT COME SOON. BRING THE CHILDREN; FAMILY. . . r w i Lot No. at'. - JOINT STATEHOOD. U la quite probable' (hat I be House of Representatives, before the close of the preeent week, tuys the Los Times, will pass the Joint Statehood dll, providing for the Jointure of Alisons and New Mexico into one state, aad of Oklahoma and Indian Territory into a noth or. Plans have trees well matured for carrying out this programme in the House. The Statehood bill is still In committee, but U can be called up at any time, and those who favor It are In a large majority In that body. Then la a disposition to push the measure through with all possible baste. It la expected that a majority of the conuultiee on Rules will bring in a rule making tba Joint Statehood measure s special on der. The bill, as It now stands, Rives ihe name of Oklahoma to the proponed OkUhoma-IndlaTerritory elate, .and, the name of Arisons to the proposed A ri sons New Mexico state. There Is no 'objection to the coupling of Oklahoma and Indian Terri lory. But there Is decided objection o the Jointure of Arisons and New Maim While this opposition comes mostly from Arizona, there is decided objection to the arrangement on the part of many residents of New Mexico. The opposition in Arizona Is practically unanimous. It will make Ueelf heed end felt on all suitable occasions. Though H may not be able to defeat this Iniquitous force-bill- , it will strike come telling blows la that An-grl- es n lUrseUon, The consummation of this Iniquity !u the House of Representatives will sot Insure its enactment Into lew. fTbe Senate has yet 10 be reckoned (with. Some influential venal or s have keen enlisted on the aide at the opposition, and If the Joint Statehood Rill win not pa ha should pass that body, 11. without powerful opposition. The hopes of Arisons, at the prrecni Moment, lie chiefly in the Senate. For this season's styles, including; all the latest leathers, Patent Colt, Vid Kid, Box Calf, Gnu Kid. Latest lasts, any size your choice for up-to-d- ate cum-woul- $4.25 a-- - K-- Lot No. 2 s 500 pairs of Ladies' $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 Shoes, all this season's styles, including; Patent Calf, Vici Kid and Dull Calf lace, button and college boots, for o o o 4u0,-OH- O $235 o o We have something good for the girls and boys who skate. First they must have a good pair of skates we sell them. ; 1 Second, a good pair of skating shoes with high tops is almost as essential as a pair of skates. The high top shoes are better than the low ones for skaters because they protect the ankles and hold them stiff. It is surprising the great progress you will make in learning to skate and the ease you will a pair of our by Geh topwearing skating shoes. For girls we sell the "Lit tle Giant' and for boys the "Holland Shoes." Both are solid in every respect. Don't forget the 10th of January. CLARK'S STORES e a o o our Utz & Dunn and Williams & Hoyt's Misses Shoes former prices $2.00, $225 and $2.50you may take your pick for AU $1 .65 de-riv- dls-rard- el 0 Lot No. 3 0. h o o time-savin- Shoe Company r Dee-Stanfo- rd n poe-sHtl- - pm-peri- fy SKA TING SHOES 1 Our entire stock of Stetson's $5.09 and $o.00 Shoes, lnU-reet- s FORCING ?S SHOE CLEARANCE SALE Inn-r- ENT. ;a ih-a- IOC Oc Tr i- BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. Tha Examiner is sent hy mail outside of Ogdon,' ' At least quarterly, ia , dt-n- 10ML , r . - st previously a distinguished social mad profeaxloiial reputation. Hls death is the tragical end of a groat actuation (n Germany. Tbe trial at which he wan convicted was held in private. where the board of Dade recently declared a renewal et the boycott ot American goods. POPE GIVES AUDIENCE. Nrw York, Jan. S. The after effect of a sickness was the unusual cause for a sentence of deportation which the immigration authorities imposed today. Mrs. Lydia M. Thompson, a woman of means, wife of an English countryman and cabin passenger on k the steamer Minneapolis, was the ferer from this sentence. She was deathly sick in the grant Christmas storm on the Atlantic during the Min-ncs polls, subject to this country and this illness left her mind temporarily deranged. She is now held In her stit te room on the Minneapolis which will start for England tomorrow. Mrs. Thompson arrived here last Tuesday on her way to visit her cousin st OvAn attempt erbrook, Pennsylvania. Is being made to arrange to have Mrs. Thompson nursed back ro health In this country. DEPORTED Rome, Job. (.The pope today re-celved in special private audience the Countess Debssxa, who was Miss Cora Slocum of New Orleans, and Mrs. Bar- nett of Ban Francisco, who have Just returned to Rome after establishing refuge, for women In Calabria earthquake district. The pontiff was itioM interested and conversed with visitors for an unusually long time, He said the Calabrians could only be redeemed by work, and .gave his pe- l blessing to both ladles in the task they had undertaken. - s MADE A VISCOUNT. Jn. 5. Sir Alfred Harms-wxirtthe newspaper proprietor, who, as announced December 8. was crested z Tlnrount in the list of honors conferred a customary on the retirement of a government take the title of Viscount Northdiffe. from North- Rife, isle of Thanef, where the new viscount has on estate. Lon. loti r n 1 c ennf-ssio- mo-riv- jtiM-Pi'cl- 1 iiurm-iiiaii- i i.-u- - l n 'h-l- i - c WANTS $100,000 FOR PUEBLO. BAYING San FYanrisco, Jan. S. Never in the maritime history of the Pacific has aurii an enormous libel been placed on any vessel as the suit filed In Admiralty today against the steamer City of Pueblo hv the owners of the steamer Cbehalis. who claimed $100,noo a for towing titr distressed steamer safely Into port. The Pueblo Is estimated to be worth a licit t $22B.OOO. and It is said tnat ihe contest over salvage just wt,1 be stoutly ccn tested by the Marine Underwriter's association. dc-i-- ii'l-.i-!-- un tetn-iiov- INVESTIGATING - 'nt-na- l - bui-hi-i- - pi-b!c- ei.Iii-.bfi.7ah- - . , . Ssn Francisco, Cal., Jan. 6, C. F. Sweeney, vice president and principal stockholder of the Seattle Brewing and Molting company, who arrived In thlo city today. dicrcdlta the reported merger of northern breweries. He says, however, that just before leaving Seattle he gave an option on hls stock to Andrew Heinrich. . UNDER THE MINERAL LAWS ONLY. WILL LIQUIDATE. Memphis. Tenn., Jan. 5. Chancellor Helkell today Issued a decree per- AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS. I Pekin. Jan. 5. Touan Fang, governor of the province of Konan and special commissioner to the United States with ir.stxnctlnns to investigate its institution. has bern appointed vicroy of the province of Che Klang and Fnklen with a rcsldenc St Poo Chow. ' e r. SWEENEY RESIGNS. - w- I Johanna Lumpkin. About $8,000 of bonds have been restored tc Mr. Lumpkin. Washington, Jan. (.By an order issued December 30 last, by the, secretary of the interior and made public today, more than a million acres of public lands In Arisons and New Mexico were withdrawn from all forms of disposal except under the mineral laws, for Inclusion within forest reSNOWBOUND. serves. The distribution by seres is ns follows: SI.51C: Arizona- - Navajo reserve, Topeka. Kns., Jan. 5.- - The Chicago Ruck Island ft Pacific overland passen- Black Mess reserve, 90,000; Huachuca ger irana are still blockaded in the reserve, 45,000. New snow cuts of the plains around Sants Mexico Magalena reserve, Ross. N. M. Big rotary snow plows 14,000; Baa Mateo reserve, 460.000. and gangs of men have been unable to NO CHANGE IN STRIKE SITcope with the conditions. UATION. Arrangements today were made with the Atchison. Topeka ft Santa Fe officials to run the Golden State limited Los Angeles, Cal, Jan. S.Tbet and other overland train from the has been no clung in the printers at. Teucunear to Doming, strike situation since yesterday. Both junction thence over the Southern Pacific lines side! profesa to be entirely confident to California. of success and both claim small ga!DI in tbe number of men affected. 1 - HEALTH. hi imim s BAD suf-wor- nne-lml- three-yrar-o- FOR tha charge of theft of bonds and other valuables from the residence of Mrs. mitting the Commercial Savings and Trust company to liquidate their of-fairs of Ihe American Saving Bonk and Trust company, which dosed Its doors at the time of the recent failure of the Merchants Trust company. No tier hua been given that all creditors iU he paid In full next Wednesday. ! Mobile. Ala, Jan. 5. Advice fro Pensacola, state that the ateaser Thistlewood, which went ashore off the Florida oaoet on Wednesday dn( tng a gale, boa been floated and wiJ reach New Orleans 8aady morning- - , EMPLOYERS YIELDED. New York, Jon. 6. One hundred of the striking printers of this city have returned to work. A. G. Sherwood and Bridgeport, Conn, Jan. 5. Oeorge Rusiey ft. Co. yielding to the strikers Corn trail w released from custody on CORNWALL j A SHIP ASHORE. t RELEASED. |