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Show THE sSgDont - forgoVVmPWu M- fryIMA tho Examiner a. circulation to. tho 2Tlw ST, a paper wholo CGDEN IH NO. 90 VOLo PEET INTERRUPTS SPEECH OF SEN. DUBOIS Lake Man Rose in Audience in Philadil-phiand Scored Idaho Senstor for Refer- Salt ence Rato, ami colder Sunday and Men. (RECEIVES FULL ASSOCIATED PRESSDISPATCHES) la aok precinct Ii Utah Weather Forecast a to Mormonism in Regard to Interference in Politics CITY. SUNDAY UTAH. alike. Tb plain tiffs secured an injunction restraining the firm from using certain quality lay-- ', which were claimed to be a copy of tho label of the United Hatters of North America. A against tha injunction filed by the firm was overruled In the lower courts and the case heard upon its merits in the superior court. Lawler winning on all paints except that of equity. The firm appealed from the decision, which overruled tho demur-re- r to tha supreme court and this appeal has gu sustained. That court holda that the lower court erred lu not allowing the demurrer which act forth, among other things, that the plaintiffs, not being manutaetnrers, did not, themselves, have a legal right lu the labels and that the labels did not comply with the statutes. The decision throws the case out of court and sweeps sway the injunction. OFF ON A FISHING TRIF. A MARCH MORN1NC II, day. 1906. PRICE trt button to political campaign. Hughe stated ia a letter to night Geo. B. Cox Tried to Hundreds Trying to Influence a Reaeh Entombed ' Miners. Court. JIIDCES ON STAND who always Injurious. In dosing his address President for hit reformer Senator Duboia' sub-jsr- t Eliot declared that on n previous oct. jionnoniam. was the Philippine problem, but casion he had said that the business taring the eourae of hie speech he community certainly wanted peace between capital and labor, but that tt qim of the Mormon church and its At should be peace with liberty. alleged interference In politics. "I remain of that opinion," he said, this point Pact arose from hie teat, and, after announcing his name, said "believing that liberty with troubled peace la better for both capital and ' to Senator Duboia: labor than untroubled peace, without Dam Him to Prove Statement. I am the authorised representative liberty. There is only ons way to secf the responsible business men of cure this condition, and that la in the hit Lake City and the entire state. righteousness of dealings between man I am here for the specific purpose of and man. staring you a reward of $1,000 for e tech and every case of Mormon CALLED ON GENERAL GRANT, in politic, that you can prove. e guar-ntsadd with am backed $500,000 I Prince Tsai Tse Visits Headquarters that my offer la made in good of Departmsnt of East, CL B. bith. I refer you to Loose, state Retutor, and Utahs member of the New York, March 10. Prince Tsai May I Tse of the Chinese imperial commispublican national committee. wall to your mind, senator, the fact sion, today visited Gen. F. D. Grant at that in 189$ you said, in direct contrad- Governor island for an inspection of iction of your statement tonight, that the headquarters of the army of the lonnonlam did not interfere in poll-tic- east With the prince here four members of his party whose purpose la o Dubois' Reply. the institutions of thla and other study "You ought to ho in jail, replied countries. Morare Duboia. You a Jack (tutor and inter-fceno- ir mon , or worse." T represent honest bualenas men," I am a native of raorted Poet. Pnuylvanla, was bun ia Bradford eonty, and am a member of the Methodist church, continued Mr. Peet. I npmest men who are tired of being kiferci by woh men as you. 1 also Ini $1,000 to give you for every, case at phial marriage you can prove since Iks nulfosto of 1890. lMa ended thp Incident end Senator Dubois finished bis' speech with the a Miration that Secretary Tafts policy was not practicable. The otatlou of the problem, he asld, was ii the annesation of tho Philippines to PRESIDENT PRAISES Phil-Ippta- T Jams. trip. OF MANAGING THE LARGE CORPORATIONS. of Harvard Speaks President Eliot In Chicago, Chicago, March 10. President Eliot f Harvard university was the guest at honor tonight at the banquet of the Merchant!' club of this city. He delivered an extended address upon the athlci of managing large corporations, Tba apuk er found much to commend Is the manner, some Institutions are conducted, but condemned strongly the practice of using dummy dire-io- n or paying huge salaries to offl-cla- li iff corporations, and decried the practice of Issuing stock dividends by President Eliot part as follows: impossible to imagine that tbs ethics of corporation management Rjwld be different In kind from the athics which govern a partnership or as individual acting by himself. It is tone that ethical questions arise in corporation management which do not w clearly or no often arise In individual ptrtnernhlp management, and It la too true that directors and managers corporations need to be convinced that corporations have souls which Ry be lost by just such conduct ae voold cause the lose of one man's soul, uf that the question what does it Ptnlt a man to gain the whole world ha lose his own soul? applies to corporations. In Pa it is corporations. A,1" fliccnaslng the capitalisations V Poraiiona President Eliot said: DOLAN WILL HAVE STRONG INJUNCTION DISMISSED, Decision of Interest to Labor Unions and Manufacturers. of ,,PKlliou of a large American industries man-ra- 4 br corporations is one of the ala causes of the existing Industrial annat This Inevitable state of feel-Iis a fact which ia to be taken into account in dealing with the whole VKstlon of expedient and righteous rapiuilzatlon because it intensifies the wandence between labor and capital. ill? OTer J Hartford. Conn., March 10. The decision of the supreme court of Con-- i necticut favorable to the defendants In (he case of Msrtln Lawler and others against the hat making firm of Charles H. Merritt and sons, of Danbury, In which the plaintiffs sought to prevent the firm from uing certain labels, ends a case which was of special Interest to labor unions and manufacturers SCHEME FOR ALL RAIL ROUTE U. S. TO EUROPE MAY BE SELAIZED till Erfrtmrg, vorahle March 10. A more attitude la being taken here erfi the dueling scheme for a Behring straits and an all-r- a route from the United States to P. Baron Licq de Lobel. repre-h.Jii)Ura American TransAlaskan-irany- . Is again pressing vloruly. and has made wutersble progress toward securing wncesslon from Russia. A Si.u wt,i7.cl. Iffty of the government. toe sympathy of Premier earasstly favors closer com-- . T?'"lon between the United Russia and this project ap-- i not on,T method for wtpHshing this end, but for devel- th resources of Siberia. ." copn' bich believes tbe In oM AUik!? 2 tbe offer to construct the ttMai LtnLbulld a rood $.000 miles GeiifAJT00 Ea,t P" to Kansk In it wmTF?1 of Yrnict.k. where the Siberian railway, on tt iJv ,b ,t alternate concessions 'l,her "We of lh SjkHrBwttu .? the mining conces tun-trad- er 8 The remain- boatswain lost hla life. sions covered be granted the eom-psn- y. Reporta concerning the engineering difficulties and the financial rrsponsi btllty of the promoter, rtc., have been submitted and were generally favorably received by the ministers. Emperor Nicholas has crested a mixed commission before which Baron de Lobel will make a final argument March 15th slid ask for eighteen months la which to complete arrangements and ten years to finish tho road, Should Russia, for strategic reasons, ask that the road, Instead of following the Lena river, go directly eastward from Kansk to the point whence connection will be made with Involving a detour iff 1,200 t miles, the company Is willing-tthis in condition that American materials he admitted free. . Generally spesking, the activity cf Americana, 'la seeking to secure concession, has aionsed the Ire of the radical papers, wmch see therein an attempt on tne part of old beaucracy to sell Russia to foreigners on the eve of tho convocation of the Douma." Kba-barosk- a. ao-cep- circuit court had been subpoenaed as tbe general understanding der of the crew saved themselves witnearos, were to appear with personal that they after a desperate struggle. The Bains Hawkins was built In 1881 Interest In one or another of the turn- at Blythe and was owned by John C. pikes. The examination, however, turn. Judge Peters of Sydney. Her tonnage was took an entirely different Ferdinand Jelke, Jr., of the circuit 485 gross. court waa the first witness. Attorney Roetling called atienlton to the suit NEGROES AND WHITES FIGHT. Match 10. Sheriff Posers has received a telegram stat; ing that there is a race war ia progress In Quiliner, a small lumber town twenty-fou- r Julies west of Mobile, on the Mobiier Jackson A Kansas City railway, and that several whites and blacks bsva been killed. The message waa received at 1 o'clock this morning. It asks for Immediate help and a special train la being made up to carry a force of deputies to the scene of trouble. Ala., Mobile, SERVE SENTENCES. Imboden, Bank Wrecks re, ta Prison. Must Ge Denver, March 10. The supreme court this afternoon denied the super- sedes proceedings in favor of James A. Hill and Leonard Imboden, convicted of conspiracy to wreck the Denver Savings bank, and the two bankers will be taken to Canon City at once to begin serving their sentence. KILLED BY 8EYYER FOLLOWING Pittsburg, March 10. That President Patrick Dolan of District No. 6, United Mine Workers of .America, will go to the international convention with a strong support from hla own district ia shown in the returns of the election of candidates by the local unions. Disaster. Evidence. Chicago, March 10. In tha Ivens murder case Police Inspector latrine Cincinnati, March 10. Two Judges denied any compulsion was ued to secure a confession from the defendant. of the circuit court, in testimony bePolice Lieutenant Schlau testified fore the Drake Investigating commiof the state, charged that George that he overheard Ivens while in the ttee R. Cox, formerly Republican leader in police station say to his father that Hamilton county, had tried to Influhe killed Mrs. Hollister, and that noence tho Judgment of that court in a body else had anything to do with the suit Involving a $200,000 bond, while crime. a third Judge testified that Cox had simply asked that the case be givea a FOUNDERED IN STORM. fair and Impartial hearing when it North Csney, C. B., March 10. Tho came up on an appeal Thu testimony British bark Hawkins, bound from came at tha cloae iff a day devoted to Port Merlon to Mirigreve, ia tho strait testimony regarding ths purchase of of Canno, with a cargo of coal, foun- turnpikes, much of it of comparativsly dered in a terrific storm today and the minor importance. The Judges of the Hill and Manila, March 11. All of the men who were wounded In the recent fight with the Moron at Mount Dsjo are reported to be In favorable condition. Six of the organizations of the troops which came from Mindanao are either en route home or have been ordered to return to their headquarters. Jolo is quet and the sultaa and native reported that general teadmea have is being expressed over the extermination of the outlaws. Major General Wood hsa received the following cablegrdm from President Roosevelt: "I congratulate you and the officers and men of your command upon your brilliant feat of arms wherein you and they so well upheld the honor of the American flag. Drake Committee Se- All France Shocked By Horrible Mine curing Damaging ' INSPECTOR ON THE STAND. MUST ETHICS Public Cleveland and party left for Stuart, where he will enjoy his annual fishing GAS San Francisco, March 19. Michael Haley, who was sent from a plumber's establishment today to clean out a blind sewer on Rausch street, wai killed by the fumes of gas, and several men who attempted to tv sen e him narrowly eacaped a similar fate. After Haley had remained In the sewer for half an hour, John J. Crook, who hsd employed him, was notified that something waa wrong. Crook entered the sewer, found Haley's body 200 feet from the entrance and attempted to drag It to a m inbole. When near the open air he became unconscious. ' Frank Vivian, a plumbers helper, who was at the opening, sprang to Crook's rescue and foil senseless as he Inhaled the gas. Fred Elke dragged both men from the pit and then fainted from the poisonous gas he Inhaled. After two hours and a half of effort, the body of Haley was taken from the ewer by Jirnee Flouts and James Dunn, who entered tbs sewer with ropes attached to their bodies. They gave a prearranged signal and were drawn to the surface by many volunteers. Thousands of people were attracted to the scene of the underground tragedy. TOWBOAT HIT ROCK. One Woman Was Drowned; the tain Injured. Cap- SUICIDE. brought In 1890 by the city against Bodley company and the American Bonding company for 5tK),- 000 for an alleged default as contractor la building the dty waterworks, In whirk the lower court had given Judgment for $2S8,TU, and asked: "1 want to ask you if an effort was made to influence the Judgment of your oocrt la tha Baal dlspssRion-w- r this carer Judge dslke on Btand. 1 can only Judge Jeiko replied: speak for myself. 1 cqnaot speak for1 my colleagues. I do not know what a sent for. but I called on Mr. Cox in hia office. Mr. Cox said to me: Bodley esse is Judge, that Lane coming up for hearing in your court. 1 wish you would find some way of reMr. Cox, that versing It.' I said: caae will be tried on Its record, Juat like any other case. "What did Mr. Oox say in reply?" "There wu very little wid. He said he had been one of my associates on the bench. My Impression was that he was not glassed." Judge Jelke said that (be rare had finally been derided; that he voted to affirm the lower court. Attorney HoetHnger asked: "Was an entry presented by Judge Miller Outsail of tbe bonding case?" Judge Giffen Followed. I believe be did. Of course, the matter was psiding for some time, sud I cannot tell the date of our conclusion. One day Judge Outcall wid he believed that the case waa settled, but that the waterworks commissioners were so timorous and afraid that they did not want to aettle without the court. Judge Outcall after presented an entry reversing tbe esse. He said The that counsel tad agreed on lOcounnext day I sav Judge Robertson, sel for the waterworks, and asked him If he knew shout It. Ha wid that he did not. I told Outcall of this and that no entry of nrerasl would be made with my consent, and that I would make an entrf myaelf." Judge Giffai of the circuit court followed Judo Mke and testified: d wid: I "Mr. Cox sal for m wish you could see your way clear to Lane reversing this care, because the Bodley coapany is a large concern and unless a compromise is effected Into they may be compelled to go case bankruptcy.' I told Mr. Cox the would go on trial. Cox did nit tell me to find some know way to reverst it. He wanted I torememIf I couid find my way clear. ber the case waa settled about the I day I rttnnJ from the south, but took no part h it and don't know now what the amomt was. Want Impartial Trial. of the circuit Judge Peter F. Swing the court testified tbst hs rememberedcomBodley case against tbe Lane company and the American Bonding mil: He pany. I don't reiwmber where it occurred, but I hsd a wuvers at ton with Mr. Cox about the cs-- a At any rote Mr. Cox sold to me three woo oome talk of a our court compromise, tad he wanted to give it ful and fair consideration. He said nothing to me about having a desire that the cose be reversed. submitted I exAfter the ca 1 there pressed my ilea that thought was an error to the cue. Some time after that Judge Jeike said there was did something abort the case that he was not like. I tdd him that if there anything wroig he ought not to decide the care. He did not make It that strong. I never made any investigation of the natter- - The care terminated In our mart by Judge Jelke sayopposed ing that he tas unalterably to reversing It end that I was unalterAfter that ably opposed to affirming. I had nothin at all to do with the case. Mr. Cor did not intimate in any T Interest in the way that he I'd Bodlef company. Lane the Lane INCHINA Inhalglng filmninating gaa ia hla room in a Howard street lodging house. The odor of escaping gaa waa noticed this morning by James Barnes, the proprietor of the house, sad C. F. Brooke, who tried to dlseover its souros, one of them carrying a lighted of Unrest Has Entirely Disappeared Feeling eaadle. When they opened Schmidt's ram an explusto n occurred, mangling tba dead body and painfully injuring both Bsrnca and Brooke. The house was set on fire but the flames were quickly extinguished by a chemical engine ATTEMPT TO ROB MESSENGER. 1,219 MEN ARENGW MISSING a Utah, by Paris, March 10. A dispatch from from liens, timed at 1:20 o'clock thlo morning says that tha number of men entombed Is now gtvaa as 1,219 and that the crowd around tbs pita totals 25,000. Eacitemsnt Intense. Ports, March 10 A mine catastrophe inooulculable in horror and magnitude, has stricken the great coal center of northern 1 Vance. An explosion at firs damp at T o'clock this morning carried death and destruction throughout the net work of coal mines centered at Courrieres, and fire followed tbe explosion, making rescue difficult and almost impossible. excitement and conTho inu-usfusion In the vicinity prevented early estimates of :he exact kiss of Ufa, but a dispatch received at 4:85 a. m. gave 1,404 miners entombed and probably lost. At 8:45 o'clock this evening a brief dispatch from I Jills announced tho total of 1,193 dead. All Prance has bsea profoundly shocked by ths magnitude of ths disaster, which is Mid to bo tho greatest in the history of coctinantal mining. President Fhlllrrea sent his secretary. accompanied by mlnitacr of public works, Gautier and Mlnlaler of ths Interior Dublef, on a special train to the scene of ths dlauler. Tha min- talertal.ci-tslwas lemnnr.fHv for. gotten senator and dtutio Joining In the universal public nianlfoalallona of Borrow. la a Mountainous Country, The arena of the ralastrophe la tho mountainous mining region near Lena, in the department of Pas de Calais. small hamlets of Here are tbs mine workers who operate the most productive cotl miner In France. The subterranean chambers form a cries at tunnels. Six of the out Ida are near Lena and others are at Courrieres, Verdun and other points. Tho output at at these mines la particularly combustible and I largely used in tbe manufacture of gaa and in smelting. About 2.AU0 miners work the group of mines and with their families, make a population of from 1,000 to 8,000 souls. The explosion took plans shortly alter 1,795 men had descended into the mine this morning. Thera was a deafening explosion, which was followed by the cages and mining apparatus being hurled from the mouth cf the Courrieres mine. Men and horses near the outside by the mine were either stunned or killed. The of the mine office was tore off. Immediately following the explosion flames burst from the mouth of the pit. driving back those without who sought to enter and dooming those within. Pitiful Scenes at Mines. Tbe work of attempling to rescue the Imprisoned miners wss hastily begun by officials, engineers and miners from the surrounding mines, who formed parties end made heroic efforts to penetrate the smoke and foul gasi-and bring out the imprisoned men. The famllla sof the entombed miners crowded about the shaft seeking fathers or husbands and threatening, in their efforts to obtain details, to force back the gendarmes, who kept them from the mouth of the pit. The populare of the district Is appalled by the disaster, which aftecta very household. Those persons who were rescued were tcrrltily burned. The latest estimates place those taken out at e a a 591. Throughout the afternoon the efforts at nwcue were continued, butthenighten- fall brought conviction that tombed men had been suffocated and the dispatch from Lille at 8:45 p. m announcing tbe number of dead at 1,164, appears to remove the list hope that others may he brought to the surface alive. BE NO WILL Ban Francisco, March 10. George C. Schmidt, an elevator hoy, l years old. committed suicide same time last - V. 8, Peat of tu .cored tho opeaker e of West Virginia, chairman of the committee, that he cannot throw any wore light oa the subject than la conrataed la copies of tha proceedings at the Insurance Gain BOY COMMITS 10.- While St Augustine, Fla., March JO. ForThe speaker declared in positive March mer President Grower Cleveland, acof terms Duboto K. L. secret in Senator against management Stain ralted CIRCUIT by Dr. Joseph Bryant of here companied address an It that declaring tempts corporatolna, delivering via McLsna-haCon-tNew 'and Mr. Howard York directors of to excites malfeasance and the the j under euapioee Maliht of Princeton, arrived hers this afhe was interrupted in (he public mind suspicions, some- - j of Mother After taking dinner Mr. Sr man in the audience, who said he times Just and sometimes unjust, but ternoon. Philadelphia. Mr. Repre-stniailv- SERIOUS RESCURERS FIVE CENTS BIOTS Struck en Head; $9,000 Scattered on tho Street. Ban Francisco. March 10. tempt to rob Joha Wllsoo, Aa CANNOT Talks aa aged messenger cf tha Seaboard bank, was made today oa Market street He carried a bag containing $8,000 in.goM, which ho was conveying from the Western National bank. Aa he alightd ed from a street car opposite rg bank he claim to have been struck on the head hy someone who attempted to secure the coin. The bag tei sad it contents were scattered on tbe street. The money waa recovered and Wilson waa taken to a hospital. JiU assailant escaped. STOPPED Minister Chinese at- BE of The Conditions. New York, March It. Sir Ck A Tung Liang Cheng, the Chinas min later to this country, who la In tbe rity with th Imperial Chines con. mission, beaded by Prince Tsai received today, through the legating at Washington, a serin of dispatch! from the Pekin government confirming the preea dispatches of last night to the effect that airaotata quite prevails throughout the Chines empire. It i asserted that any feeling of unrest which may have ealstad, baa entirely disappeared; that China ia got oa thg verge of revolution, aor la there tha remotest possibility of aa uprising auoh aa occurred In 1900, Peaco WiM ka Preserved. In tho dispatches received from the foreign office, Blr Chen Taag waa re quested Uo inform Pribee Tsai of tho tranquil ends, aa tt la realised that hia potation nt present and during hla fwThooailng visit to Europe will snablo hia to d lata pate much of what tha Cblaeae data has bran misrepresent a. lion regarding Internal conditions In tha empire. The reports circulated abroad that trouble la China waa feared, having reached the people of that, empire, Blr. Chen Tung staled today lhai the gov erumeat had Issued a prodaaatton calling upon the people, to prewerv tha pane atsay oust 1 brder that Ohlan mlgb be aaaared of bar position In " the capitals of the world. "It Is hard for our government to understand where these alarmlak import came from and why they are ministry drculaUd, aaid tha today, acting aa spokesman far tbs commission. In an interview given to tbe Asaoeated Press. "To thoao at us who are conversant with tho situation tba reports that hava got abroad are Inexplicable. Will Be na Outbreak. U 1 rather discouraging to 'bare to deny them so often, but I must say wltht alt the emphasis at my command that there wilt be no general Vbreak'TW'milJ 11 upriatogs ta of 1900 will never rbn The ae-' China recognised her repeated. obl)Cllf,onB 1o the treaty power and h o ho. he obligation mllnty. To the t'ni'ed Rtates China OWp Ustlng debt of graUtuide fo f ot the late Secretary y ,h Sea-hoar- T, AT ALGECIRAS anti-foreig- T Algeclraa, March 10. The spirit of conciliation waa moat marked at today's a 1 on of the conference on Moroccan reform aud prod need n general Impression that n settlement of the Issues It only a matter of time and the adjustmeat of details. Guram ny has materially modified the condition on which she conceded a police force, but France still hesitates to accept these conditions. The indications are, how-ov- r, that an acceptable proposal will be fouad. Tho day's debate was covered hy the questions of police and ths batik. Concerning the bank, Germany duels red her willingness to ronreda three shares to Fraare, whereas France claimed four, hut this difference promise to be readily adjusted. Concerning the police, h German, Frenrtt and Austrian delegate made apeechea. Heir vcm Radowita, bead of tbe German delegates, aaid that he Austrian proposition. BMrpled th Count Wclahersbermo, the Austrian delegate, explained his project aa of- foring a fair middle around. The statement of Horr mi Radowita and Count Wrlehshnimb produced a most , favorable Imprefwlon, ibe delegates say-i- n Ig;rIn aut-a vast empire aa China gibs l a great step had been made we are bound to have murders and toward accord. rioting nst as any large country has M. Revoil, the French delegate, mainthem. No nail'll la the world has here the tained that the porta ought, to hare hie to wipe the crime of mrader rom administration, and therefore. It Its records. Nothing the government ubi 1 divide them accord- could have dose could have stopped waa inadvisable ing to tile Austrian plan. M. Devon's the murder of IJen Chan and lien remark indicated that he expected a Chang. The reports of ths missionaries speedy adjustment of the police quea- mogt fair ga ln rarh Instance which waa then aubmltted to a c)grtl that (he local Chinese official view a of with reconciling rrnrirred every possible aid at thole committee, the tew remaining difficulties. Tbe conference adourued until Tuesday, when it ia hoped tne work of tho com- - F0 EARTHQUAKE SUFFERERS, , mlUc will h complrirtl. , Outlook Favorablo. Rnrne. March in. -P- remier Bonnonl London. Marcn 10. Tbe conciliatory ; tmtmy introduced a MU In tho cham-altituof the Germans at the Alge- of deputies for as appropriation of ciras conference today I favorably ( joo.OtK) for tha sufferer of the commented upon hers by officials, who earthquake In Calabria, thus complete now believe that n settlement of the jng measures looking to regeneration and t (he south which are without preee-Germany questions between France is assured. On Friday it was dent since the kingdom of 8Mly JokiM feared (hat Germany wou'd Insist on united Italy. as mad in parliament her suggestion that an officer of a A petition third power m appointed Inspector of hy women for th ' right cf suffrage. police and have authority over tha This Is the eighth time s like petttlm French and Rpanlsh officer. It hi been presented to parliament, now though Germany will agree to. AGITATING A GENERAL BTRIKE. what will practically be Franco-SpaIsh control .if the gendarmles. Thus Helsingfors. Finland, March 10. far the reaults attained appear to he The Hocialists of Flnttnd are agltsb a victory lor the the concessions made not Ing for a general strike to thow tit the principle for which discontent ot the people at the com affecting dltkms. France Is fighting. . Frenco-BiMaila- h (lna ee rnlse h de-lio- . n Angio-FYenc- a, s . PHILADELPHIA POLICE BTOP MEETING OF ANARCHISTS. Philadelphia. March 10. A squsd of of policemen tonight raided a meeting 200 anarchists while Johann Most of New York was on the platform delivwas ering an address. The meeting held in honor of the anniversary of Most's birth, and he was reciting the enatory of hla life when the police tered. He desisted at the command of the police, who then cleared the hall. Tbe crowd resisted the police, sad In the confusion blow were exchanged. No arrests were made. Pittsburg. March 10. The towboat Thomas UMe was suddenly sunk this evening by striking a rock In the Monogahela river about 150 feet from wharf. Christine the Braddock-(Pa.- ) Dempsey, a chambermaid, aaid to be a HUGHES WONT APPEAR. sister ct Jerk Dempsey, the puglUM, was drowned, and CapL Sim Morgan Writes Latter to Chairman Galnaa of sustained a broken arm whilst endeavHouse Committee. , oring to save the girl, who Jumped overboard Immediately following the Washington, March 10. Charles E. accident. Twelve other members of Hughes, who conducted the Investigathe crew had narrow escapes from tion of insurance companies In New drowning as the towboat sunk In two SENTENCED TO DEATH. York ban declined to appear before minutes after striking the obstruction. the house committee on elections of The towboat Ll-l- e was owned by the vice president and represenThirCoal 10. Consolidated March and Russia. president, Monogahela Pobntlak, concernCoke company, and was valued at teen soldiers 4 the local garrison have tatives In congress to testify con BAA AAA ing the prevention of corporation been sentence to w BIG FIR AGENT CONFESSES THAT SHIPPERS WERE GRANTED REBATES Cincinnati, March 10. Tost the Big that the difference caused s reduction Four railroad had paid cash rebates la earnl Din of from $2 to $9 per car. for a shipment of steel from Pittsburg Being pressed for a specific instance to Kansan City and otherwise favored where any traffic on hla system had other ahlppers was testified to today been carried at less than published aaid: by General Freight Agent G. H. In- rates. Mr. Ingalls "We carried a shipment of steel galls, la the airing before the inter state commerce commission. E. C. from Pittsburg te Xansaa City last Mr. tariff. Connor, general agent of the road ia year at leas thanrebate had beenIngalls paid. this city, after bring promised Immun- declared a cash was unable to give tart ity from prosecution for anything that The witneaa e ho might disclose, aaid that a large ther instances from memory, bnt a willingness to give any number at shippers were permitted no ordered. AClracts ho ship over hla read at thalr own comiuiseiou then Issued n sweep-ment of the weight skipped. order directing Mr. Ingalls te giro Mr. Ingalls then waa called claimed the same immunity granted to all facta la n awora statement showing Mr. Connor. Ingalls said that he all rebates paid within the last two that coal bad been shipped saed ..r , |