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Show I The Spanish Fork yQh T NO. 23. (CITY SPANISH FORK, UTAH, THURSDAY. .TITNK DRUG JNO. J. THE MEAT BILL BANKS, Prop. mu AND DRUGS MEDICINES COMPOUNDED BY EXPERIENCED PHARMACISTS. Speaker Cannon Talked the Matter Over With President Roosevelt. i nrns Salt Lake Hal's tbe matter Route Time Card in errscT mari h. IDAHO Thousands of acre of land bare beeu reclaimed to cultivation by Irrigation in that State during the past 10 years. Thousands more will be reclaimed within the next 10 years. This means for many thousands in opening of homes. IDAHO? jin Too Investigated truthfully termed a It has been Land 'A of Land Opportunities For Payton. Santaquin and Lo NO. OS-- For No. S3 Angrlcs .11:13 pm Pavaon, Santaquln and Nephl . . . " .. S:4Spm For Payson, Nepal "and Mantl ,. . 9 M am NORTH-BOUN- D No. 88 For Provo, Pl.Grove. Amer-- U an Fork. Leht, Mercur, pt No. SS LttkB For Provo, Sait 'Lake 'and" intermediate ..11.30em No. SI For Provo, Suitpoint I.ake and intermediate point 3 ;i pm now running daily be- ,r . oen Salt Lake and the Pactttc Coast. TAH COUNTY U In direct touch with two great cities. Beat local train service. 1. L. Moors, District Paxsenger Agent. N. P&TBH8KM, Depot Ticket Agent. of Homes (Xht Oregon Short Line Railroad Co. pleased to send descriptive mat. 'wrerarding Idahos resources. Write L). B. Burley, G. P. A or D. 8. Speu Ht. A. 6. P. At Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTARY Money alrlpted PiriM jDENVERJJJJfM falDtWESlil1 CORNABY SAMUEL TIME' TABLE PUBLIC Arrival and departure of tralna from Depot! Loaned low No. 7 For SpringvlUe, Provo Salt Lake interest speolal st rseldeaoe, on block east ot SPANISH FORK. UTAH. end all points eastand went.. ..8:06am No. 29 For Sprlnvvllle Provo.Salt Lake and all points east and west.. ,.3:ttpm No. Eureka, Mammoth and fill- verCity 6:40pm No. 88 For Eureka, Mammoth and Sll- S:lSam verClty Connections made In Ogden Union depot with all tralna ot Southern Pacific and Oregon Short Line. OFFERS CHOICE OF opt- ions of partial payments. Office iooe. SOUTH-BOUN- No. St Co-o- p. For The Measure is a Compromise, Nel-thSide Getting All They Wanted The Court Review Provision Eliminated From ' the Measure. er Washington. The basis of a complete agreement on the meat inspection legislation between President Roosevelt and the house committee oa agriculture was arrived at Monday at the White House. Speaker Cannon represented the committee In this instance and subsequently spent some time explaining the situation to the committee in Its form at the capital. The bill was practically completed when the committee adjourned. It will authorize an annual appropriation of $3,000,000 to pay the cost of inspection and will contain no provision for the levy of an assessment to make up aay deficiency in the mount available for this work aa suggested by Mr, Cowan, representing the Texas cattle growers, and later urged by the president. Tbe court review provision will not be contained In the measure. This action meets the suggestion of the president.' The words "In the judgment of the secretary of agriculture" will not be contained in the measure. This action meets the suggestion of the president also. The section waiving the civil service law for one year In the selection ot inspectors will go out of the provision, also one of the presidents recommendations. There is to be no date on the label ot the packing of meat food products. In this the president yields to the committee. The language which gives Inspectors the right to the packing plants at all times Is amplified by the words "whether the same be In operation or not. With these changes made, tbe president has Indicated bis entire satisfaction with the measure which was reported from the committee as a substitute for the Beveridge amendment, and was recommitted to the committee that the changes might be made. Entered Feb. V. 1902, aa aeeond-olaa- e matte. Poet oSKoe Spanish Fork, Utah. Aet of congress March ft am IlKMi. at RUSSIA TRUST MAGNATES INDICTED PURE ASCRIPTIONS TOBACCO !. Bf GRAND Ths Accused Art Charged With In Conspiracy for Restriction of Trade and Commerce, En-gagi- Ntw York. The federal grand Jury on Monday handed down an Indictment charging the MucAndrewa ft Forbes company, the John S. Young company ot Baltimore and the presidents of the two companies, Karl Jung-blut- h and Howard E. Young, with violation of the Sherman anti-trus- t law. Tbe Indictment Is the result of an Intobacco vestigation Into the trust commenced by the federal grand . jury In May, 1906. The indictment chargea that the accused knowingly engaged and conspired In a combination in the restriction of trade and commerce, destroying competition and maintaining arbisale In the trary and tale of the licorice paste. The Indictment contains a long series of correspondence signed by the Accused, both aa corporations and individuals, all showing a control of the licorice paste market and a constantly 'ncreaslng price to be chnrged to the independent manufacturers. OHIOS GOVERNOR DEAD. Psttiaon is Called to the Great Beyond. Cincinnati. John M. Pattlaon, gov-irnof Ohio, died of Brights disease it 4:20 Monday afternoon at hla home n Milford, fifteen miles east of this John M. or city. John Pattlson, boy soldier, lawyer, itate legislator, member of congress md governor of Ohio, was born in Clermont county, O., June 13, 1847. He enlisted as a volunteer In the United ATTORNEY-AT-LAFAST THROUGH TRAINS DAILY States army when but 16 years of age, In 1864. and entered college Immedi-PBOVO HiU BolMlof Tslspboae H Z AND THREE DISTINCT SCENIC ROUTES ately after being mustered out, graduating at the Ohio Wesleyan univerPulman Palace and ordinary Sleeping can to Denver, Omaha, Kansaa City, St. Loula and sity, Delaware, O., with the class of L SAXEY, Chicago without chinge. 1869, having been a college mate ot Free Reclining Chair Can; Penonally United States Senator Jamas B. ATTORNET-AT-UExcuraiona; a perfect Dining Car He was admitted to the bar in Pnhlla. and Conreysncer Notary 1872 and elected to the lower house For rates, folder, etc , Inquire of Offloe Over Bank ot CLAUD BROWN. Ticket Agent, ' of the Ohio legislature In 1873. From or write L A. BENTON. Bpanlsb Fork. 1874 to 1876 he was the attorney for O. A. . J Salt Lake City. Utah. Ipamlah Fork, the committee of safety at Cincinnati. He became a member of the Ohio senate In 1890 and waa elected to tbe d congress. DR. C. T. KENDALL. For the past fifteen years he had been president of the Inlon Central Life Insurance company. He waa a Office at TIOMAS KARTELL RESIDBNCB Democrat and one of the leaders In -the state senate in support of legislaCHICAGO MEAT UNDER BAN. tion for a more stringent observance flU tails answered Spanish Fork of Sunday. freTiomu Kartell residence. Utah. Andrew LIntner Harris, lieutenant No Meats Used in House of Commons governor, who under the constitution Come From Stock Yards City. becomes governor during the balance DR. W. 'fbokk Not It. meat London. Chicago again of tbe term for which rattlson was Utah formed the Iputih fork, subject of several ques- elected, la a Republican. ' OFFICE AND RESIDENCE In the house of commons Montions JUST SOUTH OF CITY SQUARE MUST PLAY FAIR. Conservative, day. Mr. Hicks-Beacon of the former chancellor of the Insurance Companies Must Do Right exchequer, asked War Secretary HalSPANISH FORK, UTAH Thing by 8an Francisco People. dane wbat the quantity of Chicago to was meat canned the supplied San Francisco. State Insurance Co-Operat: ive troops In South Africa during the late Commissioner Wolf declares that he R. M. JEX-FLORI- ST war, and what proportion of enterle Fresh Flowers deaths ought more properly to have will eject between twenty and thirty all for supplied been described as due to ptomaine poi- (Ire Insurance companies from the designs kept on hand kd filled to order. The secretary replied that state unless they comply with tbe law soning. rather more than .half the canned requiring them to furnish him with ill kinds of Furniture Repaired, meat supplied to the British troops lists of all their Sun Francisco policies kldencs two blocks North of Foundry Dealers in In South Africa during the late war or give eztenslons of time for tbe filing Spanish Fork, Utah He of losses. Not only will the compacame from tbe United States. could not say how much of this came nies Ignoring the commissioners defrom Chicago. mand have their certificates of authorReplying to a question based on the ity revoked, but their bonds of $2,000 10RENZO "discovery In the dining room of the will be declared forfeited. house of commons of a box marked But that will be merely tbe begin-nln- g FASHIONABLE of tbe punishment of the recalci'Armours (St. Loula, Chicago and Mr. Kansas City), chickens,' trant companies, according to Comk4 chairman of the kitchen com- missioner Wolf. He aaya that the fact f Imbtraw nf mittee, assured the house that no food of the companies' actions In this state Koch North of of any kind used In the house of com- will be placed before every chamber Bank, Spanish Fork, Utah y Mr. mons comes from Chicago. of commerce In the United States, beaddsd that he was making an in- fore every prominent organisation ot More you build see or write vestigation aa to how the box came on bnatneai men and in tbe handa of tbe Bd American' press. the premises. JAMESON & CALDERWOOD Pamsn pork, otai IN BOHEMIA. CLOUDBURST Alleged Anarchist Plot for all kinds of JOHN JONES, Supt. Portland. Ore. Tbe statements of Seven and Demolished Utah Houses Sixty Walter Sealaesklwe. formerly presl-den- t Spanish Fork People Are Misting. of the Polish National society, They worltoplease. disastrous seem to confirm a recent Item stating Prague, Bohemia. A Sons cloudburst occurred Monday over the that this city harbors an anarchtitio Peterson w. S. communes of Selean, Smychow and society which contemplates the ' has a full stock of a of President Roosevelt and Konoplscht, in the valley of the Saza-vriver. 8lzty houses were demol- which lauds the act ot Csolgoss. dentist boros Our roads. and dams, bridges and roads Bealaszklwes'a statements were made home ished imported and made. Our were swept away by the flood, field to the police while he waa securing made Caskets are the finest were uprooted warrants for several members of bis trees Uwts' Store, . . waste, laid lowest. were the are Spanish Fork prices and much live atock perished. 8even society, whom be alleges attacked and beat him. persons are missing. (I, B. MORGAN, a -- ed Ser-fle- e. B. H. BROWN, Uivory Hack E. WARNER Pood Stoblo. Meets all Trains For-Ake- r, al Institution, THOMAS TAILOR Harness, Ja-eob- G Boots Shoes. masonry HOLDAWAY & s, Coffins and Caskets COMMERCIAL BANK OF SPANISH, FORK $25,000.00 Capital, Smith, A. B. Rockhilt, Cashier. : Henry Gardner, President : ; respectfully dividual,. jj, Apla aolloU ' John Y. the aooountt o! banks, Vice-Preside- nt j uaercanUle firm treatments luperlor uuuuuuuuiiuutuuuiuumiummiuiuimuuuuu Woman Claims Bhs Was Hpynotlgod by Murdtrtr of Hsr Husband. Los Angeles. Mrs. Arllla flcheck, Is who, with Ernest O. Stackpole, husof her murder the with charged band. Joel Scheck, has made a statement concerning the crime, In which she assert that she Is a vlcttm of She is hypnotism by Stackpole. T tell you I was quoted as aaylng: a hypnotized. I did not realise what reVrible tragedy waa being enacted un1 nevet til I awoke In the morning. con have would will free own of my sented to my husbands death. Serious Disturbance Reported in Various Parts of the Hermit Kingdom. Insurgents at Hongju Lost Heavily, the Gates of the City Being Blown Up by the Japanese and ths Koreans Slaughtered, Many Influential Citizens Falling. Victoria, B. C. The steamer Empress of China, which arrived here on Tuesday, brought further advices of tbe revolution In Korea, which was spreading. Tbe Insurgents lost heavily at Hongju. When the Japanese blew up gates protracted street fighting took place, but the Koreans were helpless with their obsolete arms gainst tbe modern weapons of the the-cit- y Japanese. Two Japanese were killed Inand two wounded and eighty-fiv- e were killed 176 and made surgents prisoners, including the wounded. A number of influential and wealthy Koreans were among the prisoners, who were dealt with according to military law. The rebels number over a thousand, under Ming Chyongslk, before report-- , ed killed, but it transpired that he' escaped to Tokusan, where the rehela were in strength. Some tragic occur rences took place at Hongju. A Japanese gendarme and aome police taken by tbe rebels were executed upon the city wall In eight of the Japanese who were investing tbe place. Sergeant Hijltaka, who waa wounded during the assault, committed suicide because of his chagrin at not being able to take part in the entry to the' city after the gates were blown up. In Kongwando the rebels are post. Ing proclamations that they will kill all Koreans wbo have cut off their top ; knots or wear their hair in foreign; style. Unrest is general throughout' Korea, and fugitives are flocking to defensible centers. PACKING HOUSE INSPECTION. Fifty-secon- Spanish Fork General Merchandises Flour, Grain O Produces NOW JURY Bunker Hill Day. Boston. Accompanied by the roar bf guns, the mapping of firecracker tnd the ringing ot bells, the celebration of the one hundred and thirty-firs- t anniversary of the battle of Bunker Illll. always a local holiday, At began at midnight on the 17th. that hour Mayor Fitzgerald lighted an Immense bonfire on the Charlestown playground. At 7 oclock city officials hnd invited guests sailed down Boston tiarbor to meet the king of the carol Wat and escort him to hta landing place at the navy yard. Meat Bill Called Up In the House and 8ent to Conference. Washington. With practical unanimity the house on Tuesday adopted the eubstitute amendment for the Beveridge amendment to the agricultural appropriation bill relating to meat inspection, the objectionable features of former amendmemta being per-- , eliminated and the amendment focted to meet the wishes of the president. An effort was made to extend the time of debate, but Mr. Wadsworth,' chairman of the committee on agriculture. desiring to get the bill into conference as soon as possible, obf jected. After the adoption of the) amendment the bill wae sent to conference, . the confereea being Mr. Wadswortb. Mr. Scott of Kansas and Mr. Lamb of Virginia. SEEMS CERTAIN Social Democrats and 8ocial Revolutionists Pushing Their Campaign for an Armed Uprising. St. Petersburg. The gravity of the general situation grows hourly. The bourses cf St. Petersburg and Moscow are in a pnnleky condition and the Social Democrats and Social Revolutionists, considering parliament to be a negligible quantity, are pushing their campaign for an armed uprising with increased vigor. Demonstrations are dally occurring In the atreets of Moscow in favor of a general strike with which the proletariat leaders are trying to pVedpitate a conflict. The agltatlou among the workmen here has reuched a boiling point and patrols are again In heavy force In the Industrial quarters. In the country the rural guards are throwing in their lot with the peasants, refusing to protect the landlords. Tho progress ot the revolutionary propaganda In the army Is seriously alarming the government, and to add to the popular excitement corneB the massacre ot Jewa at Blalystok. While the reports conflict as to the Immediate responsibility for the outbreak, the authorities here cannot escape the responsibility tor the provocative black hundred telegrams which they caused to be printed throughout Russia, appealing to the worst passions ot the mob against the Jews as the enemies Ot the country. WANT8 RIGID INSPECTION. That Insist Packing Houses Should ba Closely Watched. President Roosevelt Washington. baa added another chapter to tbe literature of the ment Inspection controversy. It was not through any deBlre beof hla that the correspondence and tween himself Representative Wadsworth, chairman of the commit? tee on agriculture, wan published In Its entirety. Inasmuch, however, as Chairman Wadsworth deemed it desirable that the loiters should be published and gave them to the public, the president regards It as proper to complote the correspondence thus far exchanged by the publication of his reply to Mr. Wadsworths letter. in hla reply the president, while admitting his error in stating that the bouse substitute contained no provision for the making of inspections of packing houses at all hours of the day or night, says the substitute still Is Inadequate to meet the requirement! of the situation. The president-aay- a that after a conference with Representative Adams of Wisconsin, a member of the agricultural committee, be Is convinced Mr. Adams will accept the suggestion made to him regarding the bill. He aaya that Mr. Adams In each case "stated that be personally would accept the alterations These changes Include the proposed. elimination of the court review proposed and a dozen other alterations. In the opinion ot the president, the suggested changes would make tke house committee substitute as good as the Beveridge amendment Tbe president adds that be is not about tbe language of the amendment but with tbe accomplishment ot the object in view, a "thorough and rigid and not a Sham Inspection. President con-cerne- d Lawlessness In Caucasus Is Growing, Despite Efforts of Poltco. Jews Taka Revenge. Tlflls, Caucasia. The lawlessness ln Blalystok, via Warsaw. In order to the Caucasue la growing. In spite of avenge the victims of massacre, Jewthe patrols of soldiers and police, mur- ish revolutionists, hidden on the roofs der and robbery are unchecked In thla( of houses, behind fences and the draSatcity. At noon Tuesday fifteen bri- peries of windows, fired all day with revolvers and rifle at the urday boarded to the armed teeth, gands, government buildings and workmen car In the center of the city and held and peasants passing In tbe atreets, up and searched the passengers, tak- snd one band ambushed In a factory ing their purses and Jewelry. No ar- fired on the station and approaching rest were made. The Interrace feel- trains. At least a hundred persona ing between tbe Armenians and Tim were killed during the day. tara la spreading. WILL NOT ACCEPT. Twenty Year for Kidnapping Arizona la Expected t$ Reject Joint Philadelphia. Twenty years of bardj Statehood. labor In solitary confinement In tbs; Phoenix, Aris. Tbe signing of the eastern penitentiary waa ths sentencs bill has created no especial statehood abon tbe Kean, Joseph pronounced excitement here, aa It was an expect ductor of little Freddie Muth. Much' ed There la, however, a happening. Is expressed for ths wlfs sympathy and three children Kesn leaves with-- , feeling of relief that the ausponse la and the situation has been clariout means of support Mrs. Kean U over, In this fied by definite conditions. shock and disgrace; section seems to be one general Idea, prostrated by ths that the abduction haa brought upon and that la at the November election the family. She will break up ber( tbe proposition ef Joint statehood wtll borne here and remove to New York,: be emphatically defeated. I where she baa relatives. PRECIOUS STONE OUTPUT. Respite for Condemned Woman. Jefferson City, Mo. Tbe supreme Value of United State Production In 1909 Wee $326,350. court has overruled a motion for a reBtatee Tbe United hearing In the case of Mrs. Aggie Washington. Myera, sentenced to be banged on geological survey, In s bulletin on the June 29 for the murder of her hus- production snd Importation of precloud band In Kansas City two years ago. tones In the United States In 190S ays the value of the output of preGovernor Folk says that be will grant stones in 1905 reached $326,350, the condemned woman s respite of cious which the yield from sapphire either thirty or sixty days In order to of In lt time for Investigation Into the mines amounted to $125,000. Next was tbe turquoise outpuL quoted facta of tbe case and determine value t $65,000. whether or not to commute her sentence to life Imprisonment |