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Show DAILY 8 UTAH UTAH STATE JOURNAL HORN MUST DIE Bueineee Manager Horace 8. Foctor SATURDAY, NOVEMBER JOURNAL, 14, 1003. TRUSTEES FILE W. C; T. 0. NEWLY DISCOVERED OGDEN, UTAH. Founded by E. A. Littlefield, A. D. 1896. E. A. Littlefield STATE THEIR ANSWER SAYINGS OF SAVIOR City Circulator I entry at the Post-offi- REFUSE8 TO COMMUTE HIS SENApplication for Becond-claaa matter. at Ogden aa TENCE. ce MOST IMPORTANT ARCHAELOGI-CADISCOVERY. L Jail Officials Taking Evsry Precaution Papyri Exhumed in Egypt Containing Hitherto Unknown Cayings to Prcvsnt His Cheating of Christ. the Gallows. :t Local and Personal t Albert Seoweroft leavea for a busl-ne- a trip in the east tomorrow morning. Er&stus Young, general auditor of the Harriman line, was In the city yesterday. Rev. Ora C. Wright will preach tomorrow night at the Baptist church on "The Rights of Citlsenship. Rev. E. I. Goshen will conduct services at the Congregational church at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow night T. W. Collins, traveling passenger agent of the Union Pacific, went north yesterday on the Oregon Short Line. Gov. John Sparks, who has been spending a week in the city, leaves for his home in Reno, Nevada, tonight F. C. Smith, trainmaster for the Southern Pacific at Tacoma, Wash., who has been east was in town yesterday. H. J. Lorentsen, a prominent stock-ma- n of Wlnnemucca, NevM is in the city for a few days transacting business. Mrs. Darlymple, who has been visiting her son. Dr. W. G. Dalrymple, returns to her home in Menominee, Wls., today. ' G. K Maguire, claim agent of the Southern Pacific company at San Francisco, is in the city today looking after the company's business. D. Fltspatrick, formerly special officer of the Southern Pacific in Ogden, is in the city on his way east He will spend some time in traveling , to recruit his health. The members of the A. O. U. W. held a most enjoyable stag party at their hall on Thursday evning. The evening was spent with cards and other games, and an excellent supper was served. A cablegram was received today from Joseph Seoweroft saying that he sails from Liverpool today for home on the steamship Lucania. Mr. Seoweroft has had a very pleasant visit with friends in Britain. W. CL Higgins, A. W. Chappell and E. J. Mangum, Ogden boys, apprentices in the United States navy, have been transferred from the receiving ship Hancock at' the Brooklyn navy yard to the battleship Indiana. D. McPhle, also an Ogden boy, has been assigned for service on the president's yacht, the Mayflower, which sailed for Panama last Sunday. ELECTION CONTEST Driver Contests Emmett's Election to the Council in the Fifth i Ward. CHEYENNE, Nov. 14. The Governor thie afternoon gave hie decision on the application for commutation of the sentence of murderer Tom Horn, who le sentenced to die next Friday. The governor refused to commute Horns sentence. A special dispatch to the Salt Lake Herald from Cheyenne, Wyo., under yesterday's date, says: Tom Horn, the condemned murderer of Willie Nlckell only has seven days to live, but he is as chipper as can be and apparently has no fear of bis approaching doom. Indeed, he la more cheerful now than at any time since his arrest, and his keepers take this as a sure sign that there will be something doing in the Jail delivery line. The other day a young man named Tillotaon, being held aa a witness in the case of Jim McCloud, charged with robbing the Buffalo postofflee, gave hie testimony before tbe grand Jury and was released. To a friend he expressed the belief that Horn would never hang. 'When asked for his reason for so thinking; Tillotaon repeated a conversation he had in Jail with Horn, during which Horn, when advised that in all probability tbe governor would not commute his sentence to life imprisonment, said: "I dont care If he does decide against me, for I'll not bang. All of the governors in the United States, and not even Teddy Roosevelt, himself, can hang me." Whether Horn is relying on the success of an attempt to deliver him, or whether his attorneys have a winning card to play is not known, but certain it is that Horn's actions and certain developments of the past few days have caused a feeling of anxiety in and about the county JalL Those who know of the strength of the defenses and the completeness of the arrangements to prevent the dellevery of Horn cannot believe that hie frienda stand any show of getting the prisoner out alive, and these people are confident that if he is to be saved from the gallows it will be by some other method. Did Horn mean that he will commit suicide when he said that all of the governors in the United States and not even the president himself could hang him? This is the question that Is now being asked. Some say Horn Is desperate and proud of his reputation of never betraying a friend, and will not tell what he knows. He has always said that he would never hang, and this can mean only one thing in case his frends do not deliever him, and that Is suicide. But Horn will be watched closely, and In the event he attempts to sever a artery or take his life by any of the well know methods adopted by desperate men facing the gallows, he will be prevented if AGAINST REPEAL OF LAW. SUIT AGAINST STRATTON TATE. ES- - Telegrams Wars Sant to President Plaintiffs Had Ample Opportunity to Roossvolt and Evsry Fully Investigate Mining Congressman. Property. ; ! LONDON, Nov. 14. Archaeolgoists CINCINNATI, Nov. 14. Amid wild who have been exhuming papyri from excitement in the Womans Christian the ruins south of Cairo, at a point Temperance Union convention today about a hundred miles distant, have the president, Mrs. Stevens, said that made tha most wonderful discovery congress Intended to railroad a bill of this kind yet given to the world.1 through nullifying the They have found unquestionably many law. The bill, she stated, was to be of the sayings of the Saviour hitherto introduced by Congressman Bartholdi These to unknown. are recorded of Missouri. A telegram of vigorous protest was upon papyri and are in a good state of preservation. Startling as is' the immediately rushed to President statement of this discovery it is so Roosevelt. Mrs. Stevens instructed the states authenticated that 'it Is accepted by scientific men, and the utmost inter- presidents within the next hour to est has been aroused. The papyri will send every congressman of their reprobably beb rought to the British mu- spective states telegrams of protest seum at an early time. The telegram sent to President Greenfelt, who has been excavating Roosevelt signed by Mrs. Stevens, since 1894, at a general meeting of the reads: The Woman's Christian TemperEgyptian exploration fund here, gave the details as follows: ance Union, representing 800,000 woHe says that in company with Doc- men of the United States, mothers; tor Hunt he discovered rolls contain- wives and sisters of the boys in blue, ing apparently all of the sayings ad- in convention assembled, believe that dressed to Saint Thomas. One of the the law to protect our boys In the most reliable and hitherto unknown army from the sale of intoxicating liis: "Let not him that seeketh cease quors should stand. from his search until he finds, and As commander-in-chiof the army when he finds he shall wonder. Won- we ask you to see to this." dering he shall reach the kingdom of A similar telegram was sent to heaven, and when he reaches the king- Chairman Hull of the military dom he shall have rest. Greenflt, in his lecture, said that TEN THOU8AND STRUCK. enormous interest would be aroused on account of variations disclosed from PITTSBURG, Nov. 14. Ten thousaccepted text One variation of mystical saying in St Luke, "The kingdom and union builders struck this morning. of God is within you," was of great Every craft except masons, carpenters value as the saying in the papyrus ap- and painters are affected and all building is at a standstill pears quite different. The sayings formed a new gospel Attention! which is traditionally associated with anti-cante- en ef Thomaa Another fragment contains a discourse of Christ with the disciples closely related to the sermon on the mount in which He answers the question as to mhen the kingdom would be realised by saying: "When ye return to the state of Innocence existing before the fall. Much new light is thrown on the history of the world and the hitherto lost classical literature of Egypt, also on the business methods of the second century. IN ANTI-CANTEE- The drugs we use in our prescription work are the freshest, purest and highest quality that can be obtained. If you want the best results have your prescriptions prepared by us. Do this and your doctor will worry less about your WALLACE recovery. DRUG CO., Prescription Druggists, 2349 Washington Ave.; phone 24 X. dependence mine in the Cripple Creek district in connection with the sale to British investors. General denial Is made of theallegatlons of salting or other fraudulent acts on the part of Stratton or his agents and further defense is made that in making over the shares of the company to Mr. Stratton the plaintiff company parted with nothing of value except aa such shares had value by reason of the ownership by said company of the property acquired." It is further set up that plaintiffs had full opportunity to examine the mine, the mill, the premises, the books, showing smelter returns and all things pertaining to the property, and that they did, in fact, so examine them. It la asserted that the property was not conveyed to the plaintiff for any sum whatever, but that there was simply the formation of a company to comply with the law and to avoid putting up any actual money at alL It is shown that Stratton entered into the plan as did the other incorporators whose interests were merely nominal to have something to put on the market, and that Straton owned and, for a long time, held the stock of the com pany, so that if anybody was defrauded it was he. as it was upon the value of the property that the advantageous sale of the stock depended. As a final ground of defense the answer sets up that the cause of action, "accrued, if it ever accrued at all, during the lifetime of Winfield Scott Stratton and the same did not survive his death and did not, and does not constitute any basis for a claim against the executors of the estate.' The bulky document of twenty-nin- e typewritten pages closes with a petition to the court for discharge from the suit and Judgment for the full costs of the same. Twenty-Fift- h St, 2344jWashington Ave. Never Undersold OGDEN UTAH Removal Sale! - A Remarkable Case. One of the most remarkable cases of a cold, deep-seaton the lungs, causing pneumonia, is that of Mrs. Gertrude E. Fenner, Marion, Ind., who was entirely cured by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. She says: The WILL NOT FILIBUSTER. coughing and straining so weakened me that I ran down in weight from WASHINGTON, Nov. 14. It is un- 148 to 93 pounds. I tried a number of remedies to no avail I used One derstood today that the Democrats Minute Cough Cure. until Four bottles of KAISER CAN SPEAK. have abandoned the Idea of filibuster- this wonderful remedy cured me entirely of the cough, strengthened my on bilL Cuban the so If the spec- lungs and restored me to my normal ing BERLIN, Nov. 14. The Kaiser talkSold by ed ial session will be adjourned by No- weight, health and strength. audibly today for the first time Geo. F. Cave, Wallace Drug Co., and vember 25th. Wm. Giddlngs. since the recent operation. ed 141 Nov. IS Answer DENVER, Colo was filed yesterday in the United States district court by Tyson S. Dines, Carl S. Chamberlain and D. H. Rice us executors, D. H. Rice, Tyson S. Dines and Moses Hallet as trustees and L Harry Stratton as sole heir of the W. S. Stratton estate to the suit of Stratton's Independence, limited, company of London for $6,000,000 damages for alleged fraudulent misrepresentations as to the value of the In- 2 2 Our fins lins of CHINA and GLASSWARE must bs cloisd out at grsat sacrifices. E. A. OLSEN BURTS CLOAKS AND SUITS! suit or cloak from Burt's means a grsat deal. It means s the and finished product of skilled specialists from a SPECIAL DEPARTMENT who spare neither time nor material to attain perfect fitting and sty-- s lish garments. New cloaks and suitings am arriving almost every day. Why not taka advantage of our facilities? Corns in and let us talk it over with you. Wi arc making pleased customers every day, and can ploaso you. A high-clas- nt Save jruur Blue trading Bumps. They are valuable. We give sway ten with every dollar cash purchase. You can soon save enough to secure a hamlsnme and valuable premium. Ask for Catalogue of Presents. ' S. J. BURT & BROS. - possible. Late this afternoon William Driver, .the defeated councilman in the Fifth ward, made his petition for filing In the district court contesting the election of W. Rollo Emmett, the Democratic candidate, whom the ballots show In all the counts, Including the official one made by the city council, to be elected by two votea Judge RolHpp is now called upon to to open the ballot give permission boxes, examine the ballots and pass upon the question. B0D0LERS ALARMED Conviction of Three Members of the St. Louis Ring. GOMPERS TURNED DOWN Predicted That Mitchell Will Succeed to Preeidency of the Federation. John Mitchell's this afternoon when a decisive vote was cast carrying his amendment appropriating 0 for the benefit of the western strik lng miners and expressing sympathy. President Gofpers had siioken strongly against it. It is now freely predicted that when the time comes for a new election of president, Mitchell can have the honor. Delegate Lavln of Wllkesbarre, Pa., offered a resolution calling upon the unions to Ignore Injunctions. The committee had reported his resolution unfavorably and Lavln called the committee cowards. La vln after the resolution had been voted down left the hall vowing ven- BOSTON, Nov. 14 strength was shown $100,-00- ST. LOl IS, Nov. 14. The Jury In the case of Barrett, Dolan and Garrett tried jointly for naturalisation frauds, brought In a verdict of guilty this afternoon. The Jury had beer out since yesterday afternoon. This verdict of guilty adds to the alarm of the ring which deepnded upon election frauds and hoodie for the main- geance. tenance of its power. MATTERS REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. The following real estate transfers were made yesterday: The Aetna Real Estate and Investment company to Francis S. Simmer-sopart of lots 4 and 5 In block 6, Woodmansee's main addition; $1,200. Thomas J. Stratton and wife to L 0. Thayer, lots 6, 6 and 7 in Nob Hill addition; $175. Alpharetta Buehmlller to LcRoy Buchmlller, lots 1, 3, 3 and 4. In block 1, and lots 1 and 2 in block 2, in Park Place addition, $1.00. Elisa J. Badger to Orson P. Badger, part of northeast quarter section 21, township 8, range 1 west; $200. n, Long and Short Coats in every Color and Size are Cut in order to Reduce Stock IN PROBATE. Judge Rolapp made the following order In the probate division of the district court yesterday. In the matter of the estate of C. W. Cross, deceased, the court granted permission to the administratrix to expend $1,200 on a building which was in course of construction at the time of Mr. Cross' death. In the matter of the estate of Clarence McCann, R. C. Lundy, the administrator, wus authorised to compromise an action against the Union Pacific railroad company for $200. Judge Rolapp will hold the regular December term of court at Morgnn beginning December 1st. See These Coats for Girls At $6.50: Not more than once in a year do we meet with such a chance as this, and when we do were right glad to share the good fortune. Two stvles of Coats for Girls, all sizes in the best styles of the year, At $6.50 Worth $8.00 to $9.50 |