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Show i THE SPANISH ANDREW JENSEN, SPANISH FORK UTAH Nebraskan Calls Upon the Chief Executive, But Refuses to Give Do- -' tails of the Interview. Cashiers chocks In denominations Reports Show Business in General of $1 and $2 are now being Issued by in a More Satisfactory State fialt Lake banks. in Commercial Centers. The ninth annual exhibition of the TJtah Art Institute will be held at t Ephraim, beginning December 16, Railroad Line ShortThe Oregon Increase in the Currency Supply Encompany will begin the erection of the able the Northwest to Resume the viaduct in Ogden In Purchase of Grain and Will the near future. Prevent Closing Down of of stockholders of the At a meeting Many Industries. the Salt Lake Route, held in Salt old directors the Lake City last week, - much-discusse- d A daughter of John Jn lander of Monroe was annoyed by a hunch of young hoodlums recently un til she fell and broke her leg. George O. Noble of Salt Lake Is su for $10,000 Jng Edward Butterfield damages for a beating up" he says Butterfield administered to him In the capital city. .A Salt Laker has attacked the con 8tItutlonallty of the act passed by the last legislature creating the state board of veterinary examiners and defining Its powers. Roosevelt Washington. President nd William Jennings Bryan were In conference for half an hour In his private office on Saturday, I was not Invited to call, Mr. Bryan said on leaving, but I called up on the telephone and asked If the president 'would receive callers. On he would, I came being informed simply to pay my respects to the president. Mr. Bryan was not willing to discuss tho details of his Interview, but was free to add details to the financial plan which he proposed a few days ago. In reviewing every measure of relief which had come to his notice, Mr. Bryan raid that nothing seemed to be Intended to meet the situation as effectively, and at the same time as simply as the plau he suggested. This plan, he said, was simply to have the government Insure depositors In national banks against loss by reason of the failure of the banks. It was not Intended, he said, to have the government collect a fund for this purpose, to be kept on hand. Whenever a national bank should be , required to pay its depositors, It would to be the duty of the government make an assessment on all national banks to meet the amount of loss by reason of the failure. This assessment, Mr. Bryan said, would be infinitesimal. Opposition to this plan, Mr. Bryan conceded, might be made by state banks, which would be left out of the plan. The answer to this, he said, was that the states should Individually take up the same scheme and stand as a guarantee agalnBt loss by depositors in state banka. 1 were , NEYS SUM5Ug CO, CONFERENCE Jl HOLD UTAH STATE NEWS , COAL Cl Publisher -- -- PflK UNION FORK PRESS ImproveNew York. Considerable ment in financial, Industrial, commercial and manufacturing conditions Is Indicated In reports from various centers In the United States which have been received by R. G. Dun & Co. Some of the cities where the financial stringency was most severely felt a week ago have a steadily increasing supply of currency, and as a result business In general Is In a more satis-lartorstate. The Increase In currency supply at Minneapolis has made It possible for the large elevator conM. C. Gardner, a fireman running on cerns to resume the purchase of grain ( an extra freight, in some Inexplicable and as a result trade U assuming normanner fell under the wheels of his mal proportions. Collections are movdeath ing more - freely and the disturbance engine and was crushed to In money- matters apparently has near Fromontory Point The restriction governing depassed. The State Board of Land Commls posits in Cleveland savings banks is sloners has under consideration the to be lifted. At Boston commercial sinking of two experimental wcIIb, one and industrial conditions are hbpeful. In Cedar valley, Utah county, and In There Is a noticeable retrenchment in Dog valley, Juab county. all directions, however; a tendency toMax Gold and Oscar Rumstead were ward curtailment of production and a etruck by a passenger train while slowing down of manufacturing plants crossing the track In a delivery wagon Boston, Cincinnati, Baltimore, CleveIn Salt Lake, but neither of the young land and some other cities report good men were dangerously injured. retail business. Although the' curOgden is soon to have a new $200,-00- rency supply is much larger than a PLANS FOR FINANCIAL AID. general merchandise house, which week ago In Philadelphia, the financial will be known as the Flngree Bros, stringency restrains activity In the No Lack of Theoretical Remedies SugArticles of Incorporation wool market Cloak and suit manufaccompany. turers and jobbers of woolen and were filed with the county clerk last wholesale gested to Secretary Cortelyou. dry goods houses note a deweek. crease In demand. In some of the Washington. Details of many new Petitions Bigned by all the arid farm lighter lines condltona ore nearer nor projects for Improving the currency ' owners on the Levan ridge were sent mal. are being submitted to the president At Portland, Ore., the reaction tn to the state land board last week reand Secretary Cortelyou and are requesting the boring of , an artesian the wholesale and retail trade as a re- ceiving such attention as the other exof sult the financial flurry, which well on the lands of this big arid caused the suspension of two Port- igencies for the financial situation farming belt land banks, was not so great as was permit Secretary Cortelyou is a good Thomas Colgan was found dead In feared. The stringency In the money listener, and usually digest quickly his room In Park City, death being market, however, stopped business in essential parts of the various plans due to pneumonia or congestion of the grain and hops, and has checked real which are submitted to him. Measlungs, caused from powder smoke and estate buying and Important building ures relating to the currency which but wheat buying la now nre discussed among bankers gas.whlch he Inhaled while at work In operations, resumed on a moderate scale and la and being the Daly-Judg- e mine. Incoming members of congress to attain large proportions Mrs. Dorothea Lynberg, aged 76, expected as soon as more cash Is available, as may be roughly grouped under four heads, a central bank issue, a cenwalked into a rapidly moving D. ft It there has been, a heavy tonnage en- tral organization of the existing naG. train near the outskirts of Mt gaged, for which cargoes must be pro- tional banks, the issue of additloocl Pleasant, Buffering instant death, Mrs. vided. against various classes of Oats are going into consumption circulation Lynberg waa one of the oldest resibonds other than United States bonds, and rapidly, dents of Mt Pleasant. only a trifling proportion and the Issue of circulation upon genAt a cost of several thousands of of the barley crop remains unsold. eral assets with the security, of a guaranty fund. dollars, the Utah Light & Railway WOULD RELIEVE STRINGENCY. The project of a central bank based company and the Southern Pacific upon the general outlines of the Bank company have Just completed the in Government Should Purchase Silver, of France or the Imperial Bank of stallatlon of a breakwater at the head Says Solomon Guggenheim. Germany has apparently been attractof Fremont canal oa Weber river. Lake City, Solomon R. Gug- ing more attention of late than any Salt While engaged at picking up pieces on Thursday made the sig- previous time in recent years. of coal that had fallen from a car to genheim nificant statement that he did not beEDITOR USES GUN. the ground, S. Call of Lewiston was lieve the country waa nearly as prejustruck on the forehead and badly cut diced against silver at the present Shoots Partners Because He Thought by a shovel In the hands of a work time as it had been In years gone by. He Waa Being Robbed. man who was concealed In the car. Since coming west I have found a As Caddie, the Kansas Richard daughter strong sentiment In favor of the govCity. General of William Brown of Logan, waa driv- ernments helping out the real money Horne, editorial writer on the Kansas ing a horse out of a lane, the animal stringency by the purchase of liberal City Post, on Saturday shot and serieither kicked or strucy her on the quantities of the white metal and coin- ously wounded O. D. Woodward, preshead, cutting a severe gash In her ing It Into dollars. It is believed that ident of the company that publishes scalp and breaking her Jawbone in 150,000.000 worth of It might be bought the paper, and then Bhot II. J. Groves, two places. Her condition is serious. and so used to the best interests of managing editor. Woodward was shot the entire country. Around present three Charles II. Candland, formerly emtimes, twice In the right arm, prices that would provide nearly one bullet as claim for Short the shattering a rib and falling ployed adjuster of the new, real money, and Line, with headquarters at Ogden, is the government would hardly miss the out of the wound. Groves sustained to be tried for forgery. Calland dis- amount of gold It would need to pay a flesh wound In the right hip. At the police station Horne justified appeared from Ogden last August, but out for this metal." his action, saying his whole fortune was captured and brought back for Important Scrap of Paper Introduced was Invested In the paper and he contrial. sidered that he waa being robbed. In Bradley Caee. A mass meeting of cltlzena was Horne Is being held at the jail, held In Monroe last week to consider Washington. The story of former with no charge filed against city him. the proposed road through Main can- United States Senator Browns acof the paternity of A road through knowledgement Tired of Life's Struggle. yon to Koosharem. from Monroe to Koosharem would the two youngest of Mrs. Bradleys New York. A special cable from greatly benefit the people of both children was told on Thursday in London to the Times says: Another towns.' Judge Stafford court by other lips tory reflecting the bitter struggle for I acknowledge Arthur existence of a section of the literary According to the confession of Y7. L. than her. Brown Martin sod who was arrested In Ogden Montgomery as my and artistic life here came to light Hughes, last week on the charge of passing children by Annie M. Bradley." Such Saturday with the discovery in the was Mr. Browns own method of exspurious checks, he has passed somehimself on the subject and Thames of the bodies of Alexander pressing thing like 400 forged instruments of the was Inscribed on a soiled Good and hfe wife. Both were authors legend and Mrs. Good was also a painter of writing In Salt Lake City la small and blotted piece of writing paper. It amounts. was dated February 10, 1905, and waa considerable talent. The couple tied Clever piano crooks operating un- brought to light by Colonel Maurice themselves together and Jumped Into der the names of Worthington and M. Kalghn, an attorney of 8alt Lake the river, after losing hope In a battle big odda. Mr. Goqd was the Wilson have Becured form Salt Lake City, the present receiver of the Unit-- d against of author several books. land 8tates office In that city and people something like $300 on nefarious piano manipulations within the a friend of 8euator Brown of thfrty Would Make Chicago a Dry Town. last week or so, and decamped with years standing. Chicago. Some 200 volunteer dethe money. Officers and Crew Exonerated. tectives from the subsidiary organizaWork on the 120,000 building for tions of the Chicago Law and Order Cairo, 111. United States Inspector girls at the Industrial school at Ogden WalU and visited saloons In Chicago on league of In Hodge Memphis, has been stopped, under orders of In an endeavor to obtain eviSunday of the cue of the officer and Governor Cutler. Work will not be charge law of crew of the steamer Dick Fowler, dence that the Sunday-closinresumed until the contest over the Illinois waa violated. The ao being with reckless charged navigation on constitutionality of the corporation tax the occasion of tlon la In furtherance of a campaign President Roosevelt's is settled. trip down the Mississippi river on Oc- Inaugurated by the league after the . Toni Built, who was severely tober 3, have returned a verdict of not successful election struggles for local burned at BInghan Junction last Auwaged In seventeen counties of guilty. The charge was by option the state earlier In the month. The gust, as the result of George John Captain Yanduzcr of the preferred government pouring oil over his clothes and Ignit- steamer Lily, one of the boats which evidence collected will be presentod to been has escorted them, the awarded ing $450 dampresident down the river. th grand Jury. ages as the result of a suit he brought Crime ef Insane Man. Failure In Hamburg. against John. A double tragedy, wife New York. Skana Sarlfeno, an Italian coal minHamburg. The firm of J. P, C. er, suicided' In a shed in the rear of a Moellor, operating a big lleachery at murder and aulclde, waa discovered saloon In Balt Lake City, almost blow- Altona, suspended on Thursday, The early Saturday by firemen, who bad ing his head off with a shotgun. Burl-fen- liabilities are reported to be from $!. been called out to subdue a blaze In had been suffering from erysipe- 750,000 to $2,000,000. The most Im- the bouse of Nick Smith, a wealthy of New Rochelle. las, and despaired of getting relief portant Hamburg and other German manufacturer from his sufferings. banks, as well as a number of English When the firemen burst In to the As John Ryan, an employee of the firms, are Involved In the failure. The house after the flames had been conSouthorn Pacific round house in Og- assets are reported to be 3500,000. It trolled, they found Smith and hi dead, each with a bullet den,. alighted from a moving engine In la supposed that speculation In atocka young wife In thn body. Mr. Smith had wound caused the failure. Tho firm the railroad yards, he was struck by a enjoyed high reputation and did a large bust-nes- s been shot In the breast and apparan Incoming passenger train on the in shellac, cvraslne and carnaubs ently Instantly killed. Smith had beDenver ft Rio Grande tracks and lad-(- y wax. come Insane nd committed the crime. Injured, but will recover. y Refused to Deliver Coal to a Salt Lake Dealer and Thus Forced Him to Retire From Business. Conference Held at White House Said to Have Been Devoted to Financial Situation. o SK The Switchmens union has . The Union Paclflo drawn tbe demand on th Federal the indicted by was Coal Go., railroads for an increase of for viogrand Jury here Wednesday amounting to six cents an hour anti-trulaw and Two men were killed and lating the Sherman for conspiracy In restraint of trade. , blown to atoms when an a w, dePossible The indictment alleges that the Mr. Morgan Saya Everything to occurred at the E. I. Dumorg case attempted the this In Money to Relieve Done fendants la Being company's plant near Pin0e c.? Sitrestrain the trade of D. F. Sharp by Miss Louisa Williams, a Stringency, and That the even jm. refusing to deliver coal to him, uation la Satisfactory. gress, has confessed that h, 7-h- CHAPl contracts cancel to as going so far babe from a r ,r resen with him, because Sharp refused to Fe train two miles je term west of which and withdraw his advertisements, P- vftl passed. J. Morgan estabWashington. offered coal at a decrease in the The strike of the St. Louis u I George F. Baker, the latte president lished market price. New do wa1 of bank workers has National been First the of officially called for .aid up on Friday, CONGRESS. by the Joint executive board of York City, arrived here I 1 Independen Boot and Shoe work ;rilrlt. a conference with Secretary Cortelyou 10 me ns ' At union. of the treasury department. Session at Muskogee Ended and Next The Famine conditions are threat, oclock Friday night Messrs. Morgan Will be Held In Frisco. Congress an Assistant ike and Baker, accompanied by the Vesternorrland and Vesterban Okla. The .eighteenth state the ,nt!y. o of Muskogee, Bacon Robert of districts Secretary Lapland, where de!u annual session of the Trans-Missi- s rains have had disastrous effect, iff, and department, went to the White House ted a congress adjourned Commercial to see the president by appointment. slppl the crops. San meet , In to dito a he afternoon not was visit of Friday their The object Homer S. King, president of next November. 'A resolu'.at Is in Francisco be to believed was It hut vulged, House association 0t su Is tion increasing the parcels post was Clearing relation to the financial situation. Francisco, says that the local fluaul as o amid at applause. great voted down, Upon leaving the White House situation is gradually returning tc the It's were favoring passed Resolutions the with president 11:25, after being healthy condition. os bin an hour and a half, Mr. Morgan, on be- - establishment of a postal savings Governor George I. Sheldon of The bankf system by tbe national governbraska declares that he will use all now. hi Interstate of the ment; for an increase Influence toward securing ike fron i tariff rates, not to become effective his national convention for K there publican could be made; until change of protest sas City next year. bouse! for an appropriation by the governTwelfth The lit Wl Ward of n bank, the for approment for better roads; one of the Institutions n. rude pa York, less not of the government priation by than 3300,000,000 for the improve- suspended payment during the eat to long a bunc ment of rivers and harbors, and for days of the financial crisis, has lock ol for business. opened for the the establishment of a bureau Five men were killed, one fan t of adi Improvement of river and harbors. Fawere: Injured and a number seriously u gate Other resolutions adopted In Jured by the explosion of a boiler 3 fount dock a of construction dry voring a planing mill at the John L. Ho; the ea estabPearl harbor, Hawaii; favoring use thi lumber mils, Gelmerton, Va. lishment of agricultural experiment disFive children were cremated s regulai stations in every congressional Salt Lake City. st er TRANS-MISSISSIPP- , . i ' road. country; their parents and two other vote favoring separation of surface lands were seriously burned when the ho: on of Thomas W. Zuver, near Pleas: from the underground minerals public lands and sale to actual set- ville. Pa., was destroyed by Are. Russia wiped out tbe balance of tlers; favoring federal appropriation to prevent fever among cattle because Indebtedness to Japan, arising b: of fever ticks. the war, last week, the Russian t An executive committee was appointbassy handing over to tbe embas ed with Thomas F. Walsh of Colorado of Japan a check for $24102,200. as chairman. The following congresChancellor Stout has rendered i sional committee was apointed: Fred clston revoking tbe license of t Fleming, Kansas City; H. P. Wood, Standard Oil company to do busier trict In the Honolulu; Theodore P. Wilcox, Portland, Ore.; Alva Adams, Pueblo; R. C. Kerens, St Louis; EJ. F. IlarrlB, Galveston; J. D. Phelan, San Francisco. e I Who Originated "Brainstorm Theory to Appear In Bradley Cate. the second Washington. When week of the Bradley trial closed on Friday, the defense had put on all the witnesses it expects to call except tbe alienists. But even with such progress the case bids fair to run on for another week. The evidence to be given by the alienists wll be Important In view of the insanity plea. The defense will call three Dr. B. B. Evans. who originated the brainstorm In the Thaw case; Dr. Charles G. Hill, In charge of Mount Hope asylum at Baltimore, a widely celebrated institution, and Dr. Barton, a professor In George Washington university, Washington. All three experts volunteered to come to Washington and testify for the defense without compensation. They are expected to fully offset the testimony of the two expert alienists called by the government, who have been In attendance on the trial each day, taking notes. The examination of the experts will take two or three days. Then will come the Introduction of rebuttal testimony by the govMan MORGAN. lng asked in regard to the developments, replied that conditions in New York were reassuring. He said that everything possible was being done to relieve the money stringency, and that the situation was satisfactory. Mr. Morgan also said that his object In coming to Washington waa to see Secretary Cortelyou in furtherance of the conference he had with the secretary In New York last week, at which time means were discussed for the further relelef of the situation. He saw Secretary Cortelyou before going to pay hla respects to the presl-dnt- . WANT SHORTER WORK DAY. Federation of Labor Will Inaugurate Campaign for Eight-Hou- r Day. Norfolk, Va. The American Federation of Labor has declared a universal eight-hou- r day paramount to all questions even to an Increase In wages except In such trades and callings where the earnings are so meager as to make It difficult to maintain a fair standard of living," and called for a campaign of education and organization to that end among all affiliated organizations. The federation, determining that It would he Impossible to secure a universal eight-hou- r day by any sudden or radical concerted step. Issued a call for the accumulation by all tradesmen of a sufficient fund to make them fully prepared for the fight, when opoprtunlty will favor the most Immediate success, with the least degree of suffering and privation. Former Bank President Now Confined In Jail. New York. Howard Maxwell, the Indicted former president of the Borough Bank of Brooklyn, unable to procure a bondsman to act as surety for him In the sum of 350.000 on three Indictment charging him with grand larceny and forgery, is compelled to remain In jail. Seventy stockholder of the Borough bank mot on Friday and voted unanimously to pledge themselves to meet any personal notes which the bank might hold In their names, at the earliest possible moment. National Grang Session at Hartford. . Hartford, Conn. The National Grange ended Its forty-firs- t annual session on Friday, Resolutions wore adopted in favor of the bill before congress appropriating 10 cents per cap-It- s to cities for mechanical art high schools, and 10 cents per capita In rural districts for agricultural schools. The report on railroads demanded of the government some sort of over-sigh- t powerful enough . to compel obedienre. Resolutions were adopted advocating the preservation of foresti all time. ' ture manufacturer at Duluth. Walter Wellman, leader of elrhor the w Veil, C I chee h m ed The: . a sin ;ilace. ieros and and O single ;lit in I 3. W aboi candle o be i dark t Is contlnj voiced befc, This was the prophecy the Twentieth Century club last week In CW ly by Mrs. Margaret DeltA I Boston. Before leaving Windsor castls Hlghcllff castle, Kaiser Wilhelm.! ll0-stated, left no less a sum thantbs K to be divided as Ups among vants at the castle. trip to Windsor, In a ed ly r ent system of divorce On hl PV 1838, It wu to-ig-ht lies li Id sot officer tbe tx 'his u lag m s lovl stmenl 32.500 was left. 8, IS A dispatch received from Sal !e lint British the that Chili, says t lncri Hazel Branch, bound to Englw drew full with carg0'lllJ d. Antofogasta, I the In been totally wrecked saw rep" nation was Nothing Magellan. 'chlng ing the fate of the crew. Jo spirit and Newton Montague it me Americans Fisher, the two convicted in London, chBrge, . v conspiracy to cheat and drna. been sentenced to twenty monm prlsonment at bard labor Ml months imprisonment respre can .((i In consequence of the of large orders for cigars f York, Chicago and Mcr, m of gether with the ahortage L(,oO over tobacco crop, were laid off last week W t the largo cigar factories of 11a. In full view of 300 "ortmrii, American Car company P'nk Hrazlel, a discharged tmp' Foreman William Schrauc n with at 8L Louis, and then, nv his and wall a against ed, defied arrest until he o win, i ,1ete fi I C! order. Free love will he the sM', fate of the United States, if the After Trial Lattlng Fifteen Days the Jury Fails to Agree. St. Louis. After having been in session over twenty-twhours, the Jury la the case of Edward C. Lewis, charged with misusing the malls In W,th th0 PooPIc'a United States bank, reported to Garland, In the United StateJudge district court, shortly after 3 oclock on Friday, that the members were unable to 6 then dli,chrged tbe rlhe andflZ?1 8,00,,,Beven Lor conviction S wmSi ahead light i stum t tree, outlin f arren Over 1,000 delegates were pra tslek at Muskogee, Oklahoma, on tbe lk to re when David IL Francis, former F, 'lease !e I m ernor of Missouri, called the 0 mov the of teenth anual meeting Commercial congress, perfi .rl0 J .rW th a and ; :ng, the j j killed Wj tht ; 1 nlvo her ei riMim o fre froi i in' Denver After Big Convention. ' Ind. At s conference ttnii? n,,'mhrr L the Democratic ns- committee here Friday, it was mPet,n mitteeVt i? tha com Washington, December 12. PU,?0B ot 0,pctlng a time and 5eutlofnnPIfavUUoiml con- F. Wilson, s?nmfi y!r Cbar D?vor' Ba,d city 10 B,,t 15,000 sndd Po- pie D,nv,'r would bring to , the " 1100,000 In gold ae lml,lct'Diont to do-- 1 fray tho of the convention. a )nly tlonal. na-tu- re si ttjgr1- as aed d Tie String to 8ubecrlptions. Chicago. Eight Chicago banks have arranged conditionally for subscriptions to 32,500,000 of the new 3 per cent treasury certificates. President Forgnn of the First National bank, chairman of the clearing house committee, said the subscriptions were subject to certain conditons, the of which he would not discuss, ine subscriptions are reported to have "lth th understanding that banks be slowed to hold 75 per cent of the purchase price of the certificates as part of their government deposits. Tbe follow dlfficu rrilderni polar eipeditw cago Record-Heralwho is returning from his first nttra to reach the north pole by balloon, i rived In New York last week fro Cherbourg on the steamer Majestic. The court of appeals ban deci that the act passed at the last of the New York legislature provli for a recount of the votes cast it dj Ci mayoralty election In New York In November, 1905, Is unconst.'. ernment - mi unde In Tennessee. Illegal discriminate iere ' was alleged against the company. 3, stan The Alabama legislature ban pass .lowed a bill to prohibit the sale or (bh l fron away or possession of liquors In elul tup shi It prohibits exactly what tbe Gcorf mass!' law allows. The act will become ( wltbo I to a fectlve Jan. 1, 1909. ;y by c sltasft: financial Worry over the n the caused Oscar Nelson, a wealthy bat hope coma: to ness man of Rockford, Ills, Mr. suicide by Inhaling illuminating p ae ot i fun He was formerly a prominent EXPERTS TESTIFY. J. P. 1 Trans-Mississip- h flOO.-000,0- g meet In San Speaker Joseph Cannon railroad wreck at Bismarck m week, but escaped Injury. President Castro of again In 111 health at LoaS1 confined much of the ' arm d a cr the ho ch "d wl tied "i pai d. Mr. Q "ght; hs. an often usunil Mrs. William T. iiulrtv elf and her two aons, W"B M "Olf eleven, and Butler T.. d tho m Vi phyxlatlon, at her ko"1 jng had q t,m0 vllle, Mass., some tk itsi it fur. I night All tho crack In been Had po'M wlndowa gaa was turned on. |