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Show THE DAILY STATE JOURNAL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 190& PAGE FOUR. Daily Staff Journal ISamttel Lewis Accused By Wife OGDEN, UTAH Journal Publishing Co . ...PuBliahere of Murder May Be Porter who Worked at Hotel' in Ogden (Incosporated) Published every evening except Sunday - Telephones Bell, 1(41 ring ((4 1 ring , Ind EJltorlal Booms' l...Bell, 4S4 X rings Business Office 6(41 Ind rings Pennsylvania City Has Internal Convulsions TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION lowing Startling Revelations Regarding Unbelievable Conditions Made by State 14.00 By Mall On Year By Mail Six Months By Mail Three Months By Mall One Month By Carrier One Month Pay No Money to Carriers 1J0 ......... ( AO second-clas- Act of Congress of March 2, 1(70. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Tou should receive your paper not later than 7:00 p. m. Ir not received at that hour call Phone (44 and It rill be aent you by special messenger. No paper delivered after 7 p.m. Pay a money, to aarrier ar ether eollectere unless they present credentials from the'.underaigned. Under s circumstances will aarriara ar eel lectors be allewed to taka stops. All notieaa af this kind mutt ba givan to tnis office direct or by letter, or in person, or phono 664, one ring. JOURNAL PUBLISH.Na CO, B. A. BOWMAN.. Business Manager THE DIFFERENCE The civic op improvement OGDEN will hold a so-cell- meeting nt the Weber club rooms tonight for the purpose of discussing the Ar coterie of dealers, moat of whom Dee Moines and Galveston plans of city the government. The sending of an Ogden live In South Philadelphia, are and In the middlemen nauseating representative to Dee Moines with Balt These tranactlons. Lake's committee will stag ba consid- hsalthwrscking men buy eggs that are rejected by the ered. big packing houses, the Water street Without endorsing either plan, we commission stores, and the companies 'hat run chains of retail stores. In print the following letter to John 8. turn, the coterie sells to bakeries and Lewis, of Ogden, In which Dee Moines to soma restaurants. out to point mayor does, not hesitate that a, great difference between the MILLIONS plan, of government of his city and of WILL COST FIFTY-TWMORE TO MAINTAIN U. S. ARMY the Galveston commission exists: DEAR SIR: I regret to Inform you Continued from Pag J.) that our supply of copies of the Des Moines plan Is exhausted. Tour name Its in case of physihas been placed upon our mailing Hat, cal purpose except disability. and you ahall ba supplied aa soon as The report shows that the army Is the new pamphlets leave the printer, now only 4,221 enlisted men short of the authorized strength, due to great which will be In October, in recruiting. During the our to In your letter you refer "adop- improvement there has been aa increase past tion of the Galveston plan. Tou are In in theyear actual strength Of the army of error. Dea Moines did not adopt the 19,164. making tha present strength Galveston plan. Des Moines adopted a 4.116 officers and 68,612 enlisted men, a total of 72.628. Of this number 61,102 plan of Its own. Quits revised, and. In are In the United Btatea, 12.101 numerous respects more advanced and ,n serving th( phllP,,nMi 4m in Cuba. 1,102 of a more democratic nature than thatin Alaska, (11 In Porto Rico, 266 In system used In Galveston. We claim, Hawaii, with 651 troops en routs jnd to have the moet advanced form of officers at other foreign atationa Tha total number of enlistments In municipal government In the world. the army during the fiscal year ended Kindly, therefore, with all respect to June 10, 1006, exclusive of the Galveston, bear In mind that wa did corps and Philippine scouts, was not take the Galveston Idea. We Im- 41,462. Of this number 11,742 were re ' enlistments and 20.720 were original proved It. ma-e-ia- L hoe-pita-! - sysst s: sssnsrs: form of government are Cedar Rapids, Iowa and Leavenworth, Kansas. I believe there are others. Perhaps five hundred cities are giving the matter serious attention, and bills similar ta oura are being urged In a dosen states.! will be a pleasure to furnish you! Information of thla nature that any i original enlistments waa 88: of the total number of enlistments, 15,415 were native torn, 5.868 were of foreign wr ,rn An,anu In the Philippine Islands (enlisted or 1Bf- - for band muiriana. ,2, were bom In Porto Rico. Of the total number 16.852 were white; 1,141 were .d It colv- - The number of desertions from the army fell off to 4.6 per rent of the whole number of enlisted men In the service during the fiscal year 1(06, as compared with 5.6 per cent during the fiscal year 1808, aa compared with 6.6 per cent during the preceding fiscal with year. The secretary sjwaka IR8T figures of United Btatea for- gratification upon the marked decrease "'y est Inventory were given to tha n h? nmbr of dw?,0"i " the past year, during the national conaevatlon congress at Wash- during past two years. The number of deington by Senator Reed Sinoot of Utah sertions was less In 1808 than during today. The report shjwj. in detail, any fiscal year since 1801. He accounts the enormous losses of forest pro- for this Improvement by the fart that convicts are now ducts and th attendant Injury to wa- confined Inmilitary the military prison at Fort fer courses and irrigation. Leavenworth, Kans., instead of at The report shows that since 1670, the mlllta-'posts; more strenuous efforts ! n,a sPProhend and punish loss fires forest lias yearly through and th method of making i been fifty million dollar. nd fifty hu- - deserters, nHlltmenti h been changed. man lives. For 88 years this waste.) Very satisfactory results he states and many others, have been working are shown In the target practice of coast artillery. In 1806 about toward the deforestation of the United tern times as many hits were made ns States, just a. simitar wastes have ac, ( and under th, ,ame coinplished the drying up of Chiiuse the results fo-- the years 1807 and 1808 streams and made that Celestial cm- - show marked Improvement over 1806. I The recretary submits an estimate plre barren. 1500.000 to enable the signal corps to of , The United States .on-sservice las up mmtary aeronautics in a more been organised to put a stop to these effective way than It has done In the same evils. That la what tn seven- - post. He reviews the progress of e employes of the fourth district serial navigation during the pastaeyea- a it 'and great Importance gives headquarters. Just locate! at Ogden. mmtary MlUtafr. - are and efforts their to; time devoting congress In asked for a considerable - that Is In the appropriations for why they are here. Every of the great open west should read ' Vestment in permanent military plants. such as gun and mortar batteries, fire that report from Washington a( forti flea t Ions, electrical In- fortifications. appeara In the State Journal today; ptallatlons at every man should digest its contents, searchlights for harbor defense, and A realisation of these things Is certain other accessories of coast defense, of fortlflcaand tron relutl0n' lrem e'e7 preservation and repair brln of defenses tionn, repair protection man who knows, to, support and all In at Fla.', and New Orleans. all possible ways, the work of the Uni La., defenses of Galveston. Tex., armet (rent for fortifications, fortifications In ted Stales forest service. insular possessions, and additional land These various for military- posts. Items In connection with permanent NEW YORK, Dec. 10. Bar silver, military posts, call for Increased approwhich priations of $18,8(1.827, of 491-- 4 j amount about 80 per cent Is asked for coast defense works, for which about rsmisztztT teeadVnd 18.500.000 Is required for the United tartTUtonatod a" toad States and 85.400.000 for the Insular toll possessions. editorial column. - long-ter- I . ( . ty-fiv- In-a-en till-.Increa- se . sea-coa- - Th stuffs, with the poison of putrefaction unchanged by the cooking, la then made Into the product enumerated and placed for sale In bakeries, grocery stores and other places. But the eggs lu the shell make only a small portion of the business. The bulk of the decayed output la sold soon after they have been opened. In great palls to tha bakeries. There Is a daily delivery to these establishments of 606 pound cans and. Invariably,' It is before 6 o'clock In the morning. The stuff in the cans has also been analysed by Professor La Wall and pronounced polaonoualy putrefactive and unfit for food. The bakeries pay an average of 12 cents a pound for it One pound is about equivalent to a dosen eggs. Nor Is this all. Quantities of the decayed eggs are dried and sold In barrels. The mass in which are Included both whites and yolks brings as high as 56 cents a pound, delivered to the bakeries. Thla compound Is mixed with a gallon of warm water to tho pound, and soaked twelve hours before being used In pastries and Is used by the bakers as the equivalent of seven dosen eggs. This brings the cost per down down to eight cents. The dried yolks bring This dried ma4816 cents a pound. terial la subjected to tho same process before use and Its ultimate cost 1s about the same aa the dried whole egg. Another process to which the spots" snd rots" sro subjected to freexing. The whites and yolks sr mixed and the maw placed In cold storage In s temperature that makes It hard and odorless. It to sold In cans to bakers at the rate of 16 cents a pound.. MEDICINES THAT ARE HARMFUL. Combinations of Drugs Dangtrouo If Not Uiod at Ones. Just on year from tha tlmo tho medicine was lost It showed up again at tho drug store. A woman brought U in. Thin bottle was left nt ourhouae ' ' .... by mistake, she said. Tho clerk read tho name on tho wrapper and tho date on tha label, then he called to a man who sat leaning against tha cigar counter with hto head propped up in his hands. Captain," hn said, here is that medicine we had such a time about I don't see, he added, turning to the woman, why you didnt bring It back sooner. I didn't think of It she explained. The maid took ft In one day when ws were nil out She thought It belonged to somebody in our house. It has lain around then In n cupboard an this while. It never occurred to us to return It until Just this morning, and then It struck ms you might be able to use It The man by tha counter lifted hto head out of hto hands. Uae itf he said. Of course we cun. I had the grip last year whea It was put up and Fv got tha grip now. I can take that medicine as well aa a new bottle fulL" No, you can't" said the clerk. Some druggists might permit you to, but we wont It might upset you for a month. Some medicines never lose their healing power, while others not only fall to produce the desired effect hut become positively harmful utter standing a few months The length of time a medicine retains Its efficacy depends upon the ingredients. Some combinations of drugs keep mi good forms with each other Indefinitely, while ethers get Into n row after being mixed together for a while, and the man who swallows a dose of the tuff Is apt to feel a good deal worse than before he took It Aa u rule medicines that are quite aweet keep their curative virtues longer than those that or bitter. Most any medicine can be taken la safety lx months after compounding, and hiepy will he nil right six years hence. Those that are not good generally take on a curdled, milky appearance; but that la by no meana an Infallible teat and the person who wishes to save hto system uncomfortable compllcatlona would do well to let old medicines are-ad- d strictly alone. The man looked at the bottle regretfully. And that was aa expensive prescription, too," he said. It seems a shame to waste It Never mind said the clerk, We are willing to atand the loan We would rather do that than to take chances on losing a good customer Ilka you." OEIGiOR Woman Who Occupied Same House Lewis and Woman Who Gives Name in Chicago as Addie McDonald, Charging der; Tells of Happenings.Here. Startling developments In the mystery which was printed In a special dispatch from the Chicago correspondent of the State Journal Miss yesterday were made today. McDonald, who is supposedly Mrs. Samuel Lewis, wife of a who worked last summer at the Union depot hotel, has a sister residing at Uintah, a few miles from Ogden, besides a sister In Scranton, Mo for which point aha was bound tost May, when her child became 111 at Kansas City, requiring the presence of Sammy, her husband, at the astern rity. Mrs. Lewis was formerly Miss Addie McDonald, and worked at th Union depot hotel as a pantry maid, at th time aha met Lewis. They were supposedly married at some point outside of Ogden. Early last spring, the child, whom lira. Lewis accuses her husband and a friend, Jacob Savitsky, of murdering In a corn field In Kansas, was born. In May Mrs. Lewis departed on a pleasure trip to Soranton, Mo., to visit relatives, and at Kansas City, the child was taken 111. Mrs. Lewis wired her husband, who was still working at tha Union depot hotel snd he to said by employes at the hotel to have broken down and cried. Lewis started for Kansas City the next day, and upon his returp with hto wife to Ogden, he took up his position as bellboy at tbe Union depot hotel, hto wife later going to work as a waitress at the Healy house. Left in September. Upon his return Lewis told hto of the physicians expenses he paid when the baby was sick. Mra. Lewis, when questioned as te the cause of the childs death by Mra. Coats, at whose house the couple roomed, 2515 Lincoln avenpe, merely said, "Oh, the weather was so hot, as If afraid to say anything further. After trouble which the Lewis's had at the rooming house, where they stayed eight weeks, the couple. departed for Chicago, September 2. In company with the friend, Jacob Savitsky Mos. Lewis tells Chicago police that the three were together when the murder was committed. From what can be learned at Ogden, Mrs. Lewis left here alone. Local authorities believe the story of the woman to a falsehood. Jacob Savitsky does not enter the story until after the return of the couple from the east. Then he visited child-murd- er well-know- about to sink for the third time. In Grimsby, England, Yorks dock, tha other dajr, a trimmer, named Taylor, got two men to lower him by the feet over the dock side. He grabbed tha mans cost and held him for several minutes while hoopa and ropes were obtained and the- rescue completed. - n bell-bo- y - . her husband accused her of murdering Dont bo eerloua, Jack. Let's change the baby. Mrs. Lewis Is only a child herself, the subject What to that bright about nlnteen years old. At one time Barf That's Sirius, too, dear. a roomer In the house paid a month's M EMMdlfidDinis ON BEAM SKIN COATS FOR CHILDREN Bear 8 kin Costs In all alses and shades red, brown, light blue, navy, grey white.- - tan, green, champaigns. Copenhagen, mole skin, etc. These coats are mode of the plain striped or' curly beer skin from 4 to 16 years. 205 . 115.00 Fine Striped Bear Skin Coats, sixes 10 to to.. ...99-5- 0 years, reduced years, reduced to... 16 Curly Bear Skin Coats, sixes from 10 to 16 26.00 Curly Bear Skin Coats, sixes from 4 to ( years, reduced to $2.50 Plain Bear Skin Coata. sixes from 4 to 8 years, reduced to 910.00 .... . , . , 9-- 7 5 - 2.85 Ws have only mentioned few of the reductions in our extremely large line of Childrens Bear Skin Coats. Ws are always pleated to show our goods. 27.50 Silk Shirts, now being sold at 85-0-0 We sell Bear Skin by the yard red, dork tar and white, $2.60 grade, at per yard .....91.98 very large line of Silk Waists which have been greatly reduced In price. They are' good ones and you don't have to pay much for them."" t SEE WINDOW. ; A Our assortment of Dross Goods is one of the largest hnd beat in the eity snd tho prices an all Jdndsof drosa never ae low. ' - While you are in the store the city, Made Brava Rescue. Seeing an Italian named Costs Igllonl him. Many times Mra. Lewis pompUim-to me snd to the neighbors, saying thatl her husband constantly choked her into submission. She said many time he could not stand It much longer Mra. Lewis has a sister In Uinta and also one In Scranton, Mo which sue With told me several times. Women Heard of Murder. Mra. Ola Keyes, Montello, New. while she was on a visit here to my house, told me that she had heard the Lewises had killed the baby. Child MurLewis Threats Murder of Wife. One night when my husband was working for the Ogden canyon Automobile company, Mra. Lewis, having had a quarrel with her husoand, said the would never live with him again, and with me to the canfrequently with the pair at the room- went that evening yon. where we met Mr. Coata When ing house, 2515 Lincoln avenue. we came back, rather late, we went Do meat ie Difficulties. The domestic peace of Lewis and to the Banquet restaurant and got hto wife was none too sweet. Mra. something to cat and while taking reCoats, who occupied the house at freshments, Mr.- Coata waa called on Sammy Lewis waa at which th Lewises stayed the latter thg telephone. to my eight weeks of their residence In Og- the othertoend and threatened kill hto wife. After ttiat den, and several citlsens of that vi- husband cinity claim that Lewis frequently, mis- we hurriedly left for home. Thla Jacob Savitsky, who Is said treated hto wife, the day before they to he connected and to wanted in Chihe for Chicago, departed having blackened her eyes and disfigured her cago for complicity,' called many face by cruel treatment At the time times during. their stay at our place Mrs. Lewis became a mother. It to and played cards with them until late also claimed that he refused to furnish at night The day before they left our house, clothes for the child. At another time Lewis when beat- Lewto beat hto wife about the face ao the next day her eyes were ing his wife, it to alleged, draw a re- hard, that and blue and her face waa ao black when on J. volver J. Coats, the latter that she could hardly see, attempted to Interfere. The beating disfigured was taking plac In front of ssvsral snd she was compelled to remain from roomers of the house and the Coats work at the Healy house that day. family. As Lewis drew the gun, be Th next day they ueparted for told Coats not to Interfere with family business, and Coats went out and procured a policeman, who came and Had Chips to Eat would have arrested Lewis, but that th wife said she didnt see anything I had aa amualag experience reof the kind and that her husband had cently while traveling over road never beaten her. This the witnesses la the Far West," remarkedmy a New believe, to evidence enough that Mrs York railroad man lu tha club tha Lewis was fearful of vengeance from other day. I had aome friends with her husband. Lewis was once last summer admon- me la my car, allowing them, tha ished by local detectives not to beat alghta of tha country, when It waa proposed that -- a have a gama of hto wife, when he denied It' Mrs. Coats says: My husband, J. pokar. la aome unaccountable way I J. Coats, was at the time the Lewises found that my poker paraphernalia stayed at this house, a driver of one had been left behind. However,1 we of the automobiles which run to Og- had canto, ao I wired ahead to tho den canyon. He to now an engineer of station agent at tbe next town to havo the Rio Grand railroad at Salt Lake aome chlpa ready for me on tha arCity. The Lewises stayed here for rival of our train. v. eight weeks, ws having to put them wo .When reached the destination out on advices from the police departof that telegram a good-alse- d box waa ment Furniture Thrown Out put aboard and we went on onr way The police advised me to throw rejoicing, but wondering just why the their property out Into the street, which agent had thought wa needed ao many I did. I put them out at 11 o'clock In chlpa. The laugh was on me, when, the night Next day they departed on opening the box, the contents ware from Ogden. The thing had gone so found to be chips but not the red, far there was no peace In the house. blue and white variety. They were poTh roomers complained, the pair keeptato chips. ing us all awake at night with their quarrels. Mr. Lewis was beaten many times. At one time she told me that Under the Stars. TOLD BY CRUELTY s Phil PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 16.-- All adelphta is in an inward ferment these days, following the revelations made by the state dairy and food commission in regard to the use of rotten eggs In the manufacture of bakery products. Staid citlsens now hold one hand on tummy and the other over the nose when passing a bake' shop. Even Father Penn, on the lofty perch, wears a look of pain and disgust. According to the Investigators, the business of supplying rotten eggs to bakeshops Is so extenslvs that thers are more than twenty dealers engaged in the disgusting trade. Thousands of downs of rots and spots, the refuse of the big storage warehouses and sold wholesale egg dealers, are weekly to be converted Into food for the public. The commissioner's special agant has collected evidence to show that decayed eggs, known to the trade as spots and rots, are used In making plea and cakes of all klnda. In Icing that la put upon fancy cakes and bread to meringues and In coating make it glossy. Cheap- - Ice cream and cream Ice cream rones, the that goes Into cream puffa and eclairs are also made with the decayed rent for Mra. Lwto when her huabac would not pay. They were both badj In my opinion, aw she was constantly in company-- with other men. and I have heard that he went around with other women, although 1 did not see STORIES OF BRUTALITY HID Pure Food Commission. master at the Fostoffioe at Ogden. Utah, under Entered ns Fol- go 4 visit the Toy Department and notice our prices as compared with ether place in y |