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Show TIIE MORXIXn All HOPE ABANDONED r Night of Heartbreaking Suspense towed by Morning of Deep- est Pituburg, Jan. Fol-- f Cleom. K.J a. a m.-Af- anil uuceriatniy night of auspi-aa- o made heartbreaking ly the contradictory report coming from around the pit mouth of the Haraick mine, a here the direful' txplusUm occurred yesterday. the relatives ot the ISO uinera acre turret! to the that all hope ul life remaining in thoae below would have to be abandoned. Hr ports rarly in the night tod the sorrowful watcher to believe that utne pf the men a mild bn eared, and when about 3 o'clock word aaa passed around that Relay n Taylor had been found alive and that an investigation of tiie heading heyoudu to acventy-fivhad shown that from minern were atlil alive, there waa much rejoicing, but there rumuro were ton-elusi- hy boon rontradicted-A- t 2:36 there wa a rail to hoist above,' and in a tow minutes kind hands were taking the dead body of tha mining engineer from the bucket to tho and strong men bore him school house where a place had been prepared for him. lie waa dead when found, killed by the afterdamp. In lies than thirty minutes Dr. W. 1. McCullough of Gheswlck. who had been In the mtuc for over two hours, rame up for g little warmth and a bite lo eat. down Are there auy men alive there now, doctor T was asked. I dont believe there's a mau alive outside the rescue party in that mine Bow, wma the mournbd answer. Ho far only one of the miners who went down to work yesterday morning has been brought out alive, ttulwya Taylor, at the head rf the first rescue party to reach the bottom, la . strange longues, would turn away. There Were stalwart fellows there, black and white both, who went down to do the work of brattylng up the mine or auy other work that came to them to do, sad then about II o'clock some of the best miners in the district a started down the shaft, two at time. Peter Wise, a former member of the district executive committee, gut luto the bucket and disappeared. Ho did M. J. Mct'uaid. the veteran wine foreman, and two of his meu. Ho did Y. J. lu ll, llob North and half a noire of other meu and the first real rxplorafioa of the tutus was bogus. There was no hurry or handclap or cheer, but with tha heartfelt aud silent God bless you of every man, woman and child, about the pit their mouth, the meu went down to grim work. At 3 p. a. the working force iu the mine bad made an air passage through the end of the south entry pruara-tor- y ta an attempt at rescue. down tha Twenty men started mine. At 3:30 Mike McQuuid, ona of Uia leaders of the rescuers, eaine up from Die shuR aud said it would be late tonifeht before they would he Shin to get out any of the bodies. Wa have seen at tiie bottom of tha shaft. said be, a pile of legs and ai ms, and trunks that resemble anything hut the remains of human beluga. It is the must gruesome sight 1 ever witnessed. When do you expect to reach the place where tho most of tho men are? he was asked. There la no such place," replied he, They are scattered all over tha mine, aorno of them, poor fellows. In frag menu. You can have but a faint conception of tha awful fore of this explosion. It torn men to pieces. It did not leavu enough of some of them to tell what they were." Mil FIFTEEN MET WST0RA1 MEET DEATH Cage Unmanageable Accommodation Becomes t A Cage an Bccomea Unmanageable Drops ta the Bottom of the Shaft. . . Collision in a Snowstorm 36 Victor, Colo, Jan. 26. As a result of an which occurred about 3 o'clock this morning at the Stratton Independence mine fifteen men are dead aud one other severely Injured. The list f dead and Injured is as follows: act-blen- t DtSAlX W. K. Frazier. John Sobeck. Joe Hmilbt-rmn- . Edward Twiggetb L. A. Waguncr. H- - A. Yeoman. Edward Smith. Jut Overy. il. F. Brown. W. B. Collins. J. L. Steward. Frank Cochran L. P. Jackson. Harry Cogene C. C. Staten. , m for-tor- 00-fo- 00 - and-sho- ut 1- -3 4. x ld ed n .. .. The 3836 Accommodation Train Crashes Into IJar End ef Denver Express. INJI'RKD. James Builbeck, body bruised C1H Train Dashes Into Denver Express. and Drops. JANUARY, 27, 1004. and the party went to Judge Walker s court, where bonds of 815, OuO were furnished. The mayor then left for hia office in the city balL Fireman Marshal Musham was served with a mittimus at his office. A similar course was pursued with City Building Commissioner Williams and City Building Inspector Loughlin. In custody of two detectives, Messrs. Musham, Williams and Loughlin walked to the criminal court and gave bend to answer any action by the grand jury. The stage firemen, William Sillers. was the last uf the accused to be taken into custody. COLLISION IN and 11TAKEI scalp wounds. At o'clock this morning, (toorge Iu the main Fluft of the mine sixllawateh. also of the rescue party, was Dies Just an Hour After Receiving teen men were being hoisted In the brought lo the surface, lie Is now atSentence. and cage from the sixth, seventh the aeboul house and Is etiU uueoneighth levels. When the cage got to bClMU. London, Jan. 86. The trial of WhitAt thla hour tt to thought It will aker Wright ended iu a tragedy today. the surface in the shaft bouse the enhe several hours before the Itodica Within an hour of being found guilty gineer for some reason unexplained the engine aud are brought from the mine. and nenteuced to seveu years' penal waa unable to stop of human with Its load The last hope Jan. 2d.' Pittsburg, servitude, the most severe sentence the the ragewas drawn up into the galiowi lor the lives of any of the HU men law allows for the fraud of which ho freight tementombed In the llarwick was given was convicted, life financier whose col- frame, where tt became lodged ' the cable up today when lluorge W. ttoheetx. ossal dealings have crested a sensa- porarily. The strain on manager of tho mine, admitted that he tion on both sides of tha Atlantic, lay caused it to part, releasing the cage, believed that not one of them would dead la the ante-rooof the court. which went down the abaft wi:h terbe brought up ulive. Now the cry is Whether Wrights death was due 'u rific momentum. Two of the occufor morn men to come to the work of heart disease, following the excite- pants, however, bud become entangled Volunteers are needed to ment of the trial as announced by tha with the timber rods near the top of rescue. debris to doctor or by poison, as grimly hinted the gallowe frame and one of them, work buck through the crushed to death when the miners are imprisoned, and by hia friends, is still undecided and L. P. Jarkeon, waa falling upon where possibly aome may have man- poaslbly will not be ascertained until by the sheave wheel him. The other, James Builbeck. had the coroners verdict aged lo survive but Already four men are known to be Ills solicitor aald: Wright seemed a marvelous escape from death, waa He dead, among them Belwyn M. Taylor, to he atunned by the sentence, hut ha received painful Injuries. of thla city, who waa the first of the did not give the slightest indication rescued from bis perilous position by rescuers to roach the bottom of the either before or after hia sentence ot men In the shaft house. The shaft boss and n number of nhsfL Ua body was brought to the any Intention to take his own life. Ot mine top this morning. Taylor, who was course, added Mr. Lewis, no one can miners went down Into the one of the best known mining engi- really tell the cause of death until the through another compartment of tha shaft and found that all the fifteen neers to western Pennsylvania, lost poai mortem examination." with the cage on its his life In an effort to save the lives The general opinion tonight is that mpn who started wild flight of 1.500 feet to the bottom of tiie entombed men. while Wright fully deserved the verof the abaft, were dead, their bodies He had planned the mine and waa dict of guilty, the Judge's whole conrailed by the Allegheny Coal company duct of the case waa must partial. ami lining scattered at the stations at different isilnts. Their arms and bodies wa aa the man beat fitted to toad the that while none of hie crushed hope,, lie went town Into the punished. Wright alone had to bear were mangled, their heads from mine bravely and with him went four the entire punishment. Mrs. Wright, and their clothing stripped levtheir bodies. From the V ether men. One of them, George liar-vat- the widow, is to London. el to the bottom the Bhaft is spatwaa brought from the pit short time before Taylor's lifeless body London, Jan. 38. Whitaker Wright tered with blood, with here and there rame to the surface ' Another of the was arrested In New York. Man-U, pieces of flesh dinging to projections. reset! a party. Tom Wood, tried des- 103. A warrant for his arrest had At the bottom of tha Bhaft stands 25 perately to save his companions, but been issued In Loudon, five days pre- feet of water, and into this the cage felt the deadly nnuseu coming on and viously, but Wright hud already hit plunged. Home of the miners were carwas forced to leave them to tholr fata. for the I'nlted Btatee. lie was accused ried with the cage Into thla sunP. Manager Thomas Cornish wan prosThe others took up the work, two at a of absconding with funds ot the Lontime. All night they went up and don Globe Finance corporation, by trated by the news of the accident down in the temporarily rigged bucket which the stockholders lost more than and la unable as yet to offer any explanation of the affair. A squad of The main holaU were both blown 111 million dollars. out by the force of the explosion, but Whitaker Wright formerly wsa I militia baa taken charge of the propthere were no living ones to save. broker In Philadelphia and In New erty uud citlxens will not he allowed unAdnlph Cunts, the only one of the York. He waa one o,f the blggust to enter the mine or abaft house miners in the pit when the explosion plungers on tha exchange. He also til after a thorough examination of the occurred to be brought to the aitrfaea Invented heavily ta Weet Australian machinery has been made by competent engineers. alive, waa rescued by Belwyn Taylor. mins. After making more than Frank Gellese, the engineer In dollars out of them. Iih "went But It there were no livea to save Then he went to Loudon, charge of the machinery when the there were dead to be found and nil broke. occurred, surrendered himself night long the volunteers toiled, gain- where he floated the London and Globe to and waa locked up to ing bendway here and there until Finance corporation. The financial the the military He would not express floated to bullpen. exhaustion were of the forced rraeb by company by quit they their labors. Wright came In December, 1900. There any opinion as to how the cage got is a new V. G. Hutch, of Cleveland, one of were eleven of theee, including tiie beyond control. Gellese the principal owners of the mine, to- parent company, entitled the London comer In the district but Iu aald to been strongly recommended aa gether with a number of other Cleve- and Gktlm Finance const ration, with a have of f80.8T5.v0C. a competent engineer. Most of the land men arrived this morning. Mr. total capitalisation victims were strangers In the district, Hatch said he could not talk about Wright was managing director. having come from the Coeur d'Alene, the terrible disaster until he lesrned the Lake Buperlor mines aud other the facts on the ground, lie said he COLONEL WADDELL DEAD. districts to take the places of strikers believed they bad us safe a mine aa In Cripple Creek. any to which gas is found. They bad New York, Jan. 28. Colonel D.Wad The bottles buried under the cage taken every precaution known to min- dell, wlsi entered the Vnion service at ing engineering but, be said, some- Hie first call for volunteers In April, at the bottom of the aump have not yet been recovered. thing unforeseen fired the gas and 1861. as caidaln of company B. Nearly all of the men killed leave the lives of tho men wero snuffed Ktcventh Illinois infantry, and waa adand children. Harry Geugcn out." vanced to ho colonel of that regiment, widows On reaching the mine, Mr. Hatrh is dead at hia home hero from heart had a wife aud three cKJren who are in Michigan. NV. It. Collins was a added to the urgent appeals for the failure. Baptist minister and preuched ou Sunaid of skilled meu to penetrate the Colonel Waddell served with days at Goldfield. He was 38 years mine to rescue the living and to reiu many actions, Including old and came from Cornwall, Kng-lancover the dead bodies. That ta, in- Fort Henry, Hhllub, Corinth and Vicksa few months ago. deed, the crying need of the hour. Doc- burg. At Vicksburg, at which he waa Edward Twiggs and Frank Cochtors and oxygen are on the ground later provost marshal, ho was presentreaily for the fanning to a flame any ed with a gold medal for gallant ser- rane were from tho Coeur d'Alencs. lerble spark of life that may be found vice performed during tho aiego and SUFFERING IN ST. LOUIS. in auy of the bodies. But they art capture of that city. almost hopeless. They sayyhe death St. Isniis, Jau. 26. The thermomeof Mr. Taylor, who waa overcome be- MINISTERS ARE THREATENED. ter dropped to two fore he reached the main body of men degrees below xero before sunrise today and a fine proved that tt will be almost imposNew York, Jan. 28. The Rev. John sifting auow. driven by u heavy wind, sible for tho imprisoned men to keep J. Crons, assistant rector of HI. Pel-er- a hud beeu falling for a alive. Borne of the older miners say day and a night ' church Port at Chester, with iNisslbly three hours' there Is only ona chance la a thous- and Kplscopal cessation tho Rev. Vtnccnl Clgliano. who during that time. Iu four and that there Is a Ilfs in the mine, days over an condurts Italian mission connected inches snow ten of has fallen heyoud that in the rescuing party, the First Presbyterian church hud of that amount six turtles here, i-to lt o'rtork no further attempt with fell have' to over turned the chief there, 34 the hours had been made to cuter tho mine aud of during preceding dawn two letlcra them police received by The winds drove it in drifts no bodies have been recovered since (slay. 1 heir tlvta are threatened. car traffic was at times aud that of Taylor was brought up lust The ministers are warned to leave almoststreet blocked. Cars left the true night Port Chester Within fifteen days r and crews were There were this morning only kepi wurking (11 he ftulhlcrcd. Tho missive they toxen experienced men who might do night to keep the owl cars running uem of work tha the evidently seine even very irregularly. rclii-- f work and they were exhausted. can Trains arrived from one to fiva The cull for aid In rlcuring the haud. Nrtthra.uf .the clergymen . their lives .remsiu .wly: a&ian,auyfhrcali-ticd- . hours late Unlay. this slioiild wreckage of the mine issued The be so police Much suffering f reported over the muniing bore results. But at 1 oclock no word had been received from far hare lioen .'unable to procure any city, and missions have been thrown hh to the t writer rlui aftake the open and every effort Is being made to any one of the men entombed. Vol fair seriously because of the recent num- succor distress and want. nnteera pressed about the ropes from erous-esses of threatening letters in mining towns to the neighborhood New York. and aa fast as the little bucket could ANOTHER SLUMP IN WHEAT. take them down they went with willPASSION PLAY PRRESENTED. all In of ing and determined fares. Chicago. Jan. 28. A break over 2 the gronp of experienced miners who cents occurred today In the price ot 26. Boston. Jan. "The Star of Beth- wheat. Heavy kales, auptioeed to be gathered there today, not one could be fcrind who would say he believed one lehem. a , miracle play, reproduced for account of the Armour interests more living mmn would be brought from the old English cycles by Frof. were responsible for the -- fall. The from the darkness beyond the bottom Charles Mills Cayley of the I'nlverstty price of the Hay delivery went from of California, has been presented at M of the abaft. XT to Later 'there was ' There is little apparent excitement Chirkering hall here for the first time a recovery of over a cent. The slump to the hamlet about tha mine although on nny stage hr the Ben Greet com- today caused much excitement follownearly every husband and father In pany. ing the sensational decline yesterday, tb plare has not been heard from Founded upon thirty old plays such due to a similar cause. for thirty-sihours. But to tha men as were presented to the religious who heard the wailing to the early houses In the streets of England six YOUNG HEIR ABDUCTED. hourx Juki before dawn when the hundred years ago. Professor Gavley wives and mothers believed that some has written a now story of the naChicago. Jan. 26. Eugene Germanne sew would come, the grief that has tivity, the passion aud the resurrec- heir to a l.M)u.Xi0 fruit, ranch in now become more Intense, is better tion. The simplicity of the gospel Southern California, has disappeared understood. Now and then a group narrative was followed largely. from his home in Chicago and today of women ith shawls about their his mother appeared before the grand beads would gather silently at the EMPEROR'S NEW BOAT. jury and. demanded the indlnm.nt of mouth of the abaft and the al Irani abductor of her watrh the work there. It waa always men goBristol. R. I.. Jan. 36. An automo(HIM. Meanwhile the iiolice of ing down and their eyes were look- bile boat for the German omix-rnr- . New York are watching at the gangdefor ing the upward load of the dread signed by Chartes F. Herrealinff. win way of a European liner carded to sail 1 backet Two or three trips seem- be built by a company here. Several tomorrow, when the alulu. for Is ed to satisfy them the time had not boats now under const ran ion have to flee wish ihr tljild for reftipr yet come and With word to lus-examine! by the in a foreign cornu iv, dead. UTAH, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OGDEN, EXAMINER, WORKER. Tlrih.Lc.oa Binsr That Suitbu Fart mt Maaaalar- - M as a at higher pres sure than that at Macaulay, fls wu No life was ever lived not only 'like a book In breeches, Sydney Smith said of him; be was si like sn iut llectual steam engine. for knowledge was oulj equate, by hia amazing csimrtty for aud by his pessienate Ini est in all the aspects of life. I wi I knew aa much of anything as M caulay knows sf everything," said Me bourne, aud, though the epigram urn. have been intended as a gibe. It m proxlinated to the truth. To the arc. age dullard of the world it must hav seemed that this tempestuous man wa literally omniscient lie plunged lnt Italian like a boy rejoicing In a new toy; he took np Spanish with an appetite growing by what it fed on, suit then he returned to Greek with a Joy lie which he found . ludeecribuble. mused himself to going to India by St Louis, Jan. 36. During a blindaccommodation ing snowstorm an train on the main line of the Burlingof ton road crashed into the rear-en-d the limited through train known ns Ht. the Denver express, hound for Louts, which had stopped last night to take water from a tank at Gardeene Creek, forty miles north of thla city. Three dead bodies were taken from the wreck and with four injured, brought to Ht. Louis over the Missouri, Kansas A Texas on a relief train. Seven others are reported to have been injured, one missing, and It ta believed that bodies will be found under the debris. THE DEAD. W. William Conover, Denver, Colo., 45 years old, en route to llot Springs. Elmer English, Macon, Mo. Benjamin Bennett, negro porter, 8t Louis INJURED. George Beeberger, Quincy, 111. J. M. Barbee, addres not known, bruised and Internally injured. W. M. Davis, Cincinnati, internal injuries. Doctor Edward B. Clements, Macon, Mo., ankle fractured, and internal injuries. W. O. Meudige, SL Paul, contusion head and knees. p. Hughes, Pullman conductor, 8L Louis, scalp wound. retsinii-knowledg- learning German and mitigated the dls tress of a voyage across to Ireland by committing Paradise Lost to memory, claiming, doubtless with truth, that if by any Inconceivable mlschanci the great epic were ta be utterly do etroyed he rould from the tablets of hi memory give it back to the world. Loudon News. MarrlaaM la Buraia, Bnrma is unique among the coun tries of the east in the position accord ed to women. There la no punlal there, aud. gentle ns she looks, woman is the heed of lie house. The girls before their, ears ar pierced, whk-- la equivalent to a com Ing out reccotlon. are allowed to roau about the streets playing boyish game with their brothers and their frleudi-anafterward there are many oppor tunlties for young men and women timed at festivals, boat races and otliei gayeties. Marriages In Burma there fore are usually love matches, and tin unmarried woman Is In no hurry n change her state. Burmese women ar charming, generally slender, dainty and demurely coquettish. .They gayly colored garments, Which mak them look like, flower beds, sad thel. hair, which is shining and smooth, uncovered and decked wit! t MISSING. Engineer John Nunns, of the accommodation, Hannibal, Mo. of the Denver expresa The rear-ene was standing on the bridge over Creek when the crash came. The bridge and accommodation train took fire from the demolished locomotive nnd burned, the loss of the bridge temporarily blockading traffic. The rear car of the Denver express waa the Denver Bleeper. It ia aald that most of those killed and seriously injured werd in this car. Dr. Edward B. Clements waa taken by bis friend, Mr. John W. Moore, of thla city to the Terminal hotel Dr. Clements, who was badly injured, made the following statement soon after arriving there: "I waa seated with English, and aft ter the crash came 1 knew nothing flowers. until rescuers picked me out of the wreckage. I awoke with a start but waa not conscious of any groat pain. ,Te Avoid PpMIritv. I waa lying over the top of a teat, Young Author (who thinks himself underneath which Englishs dead body famous) I believe I should enjoy my waa found. vacation befter if I could go incognito. : Next but one to the Denver sleeper Friend Good ides! Travel under was a Portland, Ore., sleeper picked your Doiii d plume. New York Weeklup at Cameron Junction. None of y. the passengers In this car waa hurt was The conductor of the express Girls have a way of getting a lot of Henry Walker. on when they wait on Mr. Moore also took charge of Eng- special aretiery lish's body. The other dead were tak- 'able t u church social Atchison en to the morgue. The express train waa running beblixzard hind time because uf the weather. It la staled that because uf so much extra steam being used It was fouud necessary to stop at the Gardeene tank for water. 4 The snow waa falling and the wind, It requires an sxpsrt to fit whirling to sheets around the train, glaeaes "orrectly. Be a careful cut off the signal lights from the view in optician choosing your of the engineer on the local train aa in choosing your physician. which plowed Its way through the I devote my entire time to fitstorm In the rear. and grinding ting glaeaes The seven Injured who were not lenses. Consultation freo, St. not were to Louis, brought hurt, and wero cared for elseJ. T. Rnshmer where. A corps of men and several physicians remained at the wreck all night searching the debris for possible dead or Injured persons. d Car-men- JOHN MITCHELL . , Indianapolis Selected for tho Next Convention. Jan. 26. President Indianapolis, and Lewis Mitchell Secretary Treasurer Wilson of the Miners union, have been reelected without opposition, according to the vote of the convention. The full vote 3 was not cast. Mlu-hel- l received votes; Lewis 91,810, and Wilson i ' standing should bring into national, treasury approxima'ci 1 uou a month. good Vr .GERMANY AT EXPOSITION Beriin, Jan. 26.- -ln foe rei. hw.. day Baron Heyl su HerrtHtn ing the general budget discussion he would be willing to derm JJS the. amount voted to defray pensea of Germany's exhibit ," i Louis, for the expenses ot a . Ion of inquiry into tho conditiou; artisans and workmen. Hecreurv Poscoweki-Wehn- er replied: has already engaged to partkiiaTe Ht. Louis and wa must help ia the exposition a worthy one. Tit,!, part in expositions and longresees and managing the preparation of exhibit are thanklqps asks for mi ui titers . peclally when hey come so freqUemi. aa now. hut other states are iiarth-itIng at Ht. Louis and the Kei. hsug ha accepted in principle the iroiKMitioi that the empire must he represented,-- Vice-Preside- k,,1 92,-63- 61.875. The report of the scale committee was adopted. Indianapolis waa selected for the next national convention. Adjournment waa taken until tomorrow. The United Mine Workers practically completed their work by deciding on the demands to tie made for the central competitive district. The report of the scale committee asks of the operators to resign the run mine mining scale in the four districts; that the absolute run of mine basis be adopted; that the differential of seven cents to Illinois be established in Indiana, where the differential ia 10 to 12 cents, and iu Ohio and western Pennsylvania where It ranges from 12 .to 25 cents. There Is also a demand for uniform wages for all outside laborers and uniform wage for Inside laborers! The mine workers have authorised the collection of 15 cents a month to the support of strikes. This increase addition to the present 10 cents, for CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY. Manila, Jan. 28. General Lukban, formerly of Samar and u instigator of the Balanglu and other atrocities, has been arrested here. He with conspiracy, i is charged company with Gomes Rirorte, whose conduct attracted considerable attention during the Smith-WallY'ii-eu- c er cnai-paig-n. Ogden Knitting Company SWEATERS Men's, Women's and .Childrens All Wool Finest Made AT COST To Make Room for NEW LINE OF GOODS SEE PRICES IN OUR WINDOWS 'Phone J67-- Z 2274 Washington Avenue, Between 24th and 25th Sts. d ALLEN CO. TRANSFER wr 412 25th Street. Phone 21 FURNITURE VANS, No Damage to Property in Handling. Heavy Machinery and Freight Handled with - Dispatch. , STORAGE HACKS FUNERALS and THEATRE PARTIES. ALL TRAINS MET BY ALLENS CARRIAGES. y ARRESTS JEING MADE Chicago's Negligent Officials Taken Into Custody. Chicago. Jan. 26. Hearing the eight ralttlmi Issued aa the result of the inquiry into the Iroquois theater disaster. Coroner Tracger and a number ot detectives today left the riy hall with authority to arrest Mayor Carter Harrison, Manager Will J- - Davla and nix lesser city officials and the stage employes who were ordered held to await action of the grand Jury. The flret persona taken into custody were William McMullen, operator of the flood light from which the Iroquois fire is said to have tailed,, and James E. Cummings, stage carpenter at the Iroquois, under whose direction It. Is alleged the apparatus was constructed which Interfered with the descent ot the asbestos curtain. The mitttmiA for Mayor Harrison was taken in charge by Coroner Traeger In person. The coroner did not attempt to servo the mittimus at om-- on the city's chief magistrate. The coroner said: Mayor Harrison's minimus will be served some time today. The mayor is til and will not he disturbed unneics-earll- y. The coroner ordered that ax the mittlinl were served tho acriucd should be taken to central police station and held tin'il all had been arrested. The prisoner were then to he taken before a Judge to furnish bonds. Will J. Davis was arrested in tad t hia home. He was allowed to eat breakfast. Meanwhile his attorney arrived and the party left for the business center. Where are you going to lake Mr. Davis?" asked his attorney. To the city hall and then to the county jail." responded the officer. You don't have to do th:t. said the You ixn take him to tea attorney. sheriff's office in the county building. We bare our orders. replied the officer, and ran show favors to nobody. It is planued to. bring all the accused to the city hall, and after thfy are booked take them to the county ail where the question of bonds will he taken up. Stage Carpenter James Cummins wax arrested at his North Oakley avenue home today. Sometime after the arrett of Manager Davis. .Mayor Harrison presented Mmseir at Coroner Tracger a office. The mayor i. accompanied hr his brother and cousin and ly former Mayor Hempstead WasLburne. T'C greeted the mayor and party . WEDDINGS and COUPES furnished for BALLS, Expert ' RATES. AT REASONABLE Hundreds Came and Saw What they all pronounced the greatest showing of Undermvslins ever placed on sale in this city. We announced as much prior to the sale ' and the popular verdict i undoubtedly in our favor since A Be with us during the remaing eight days of this wonderful exhibition. its beginning. Practical estiojn Have you stopped to think how very far a little money will go at this great sale? ' Never were more purse-wis- e bargains offered in the finest undermuslins. 4h Theres Skirts Made of muslin, neatly trimmed with ruffles and tucks at ,, ... ..... 5.ic Muslin skirts, beautifully trim79c med with lace at Muslin skirts trimmed with deep lore flounce and hemstitched 1.10 tuck at Theres Gowns Theres Chemise Muslin gnwns, neck and sleeves trimmed with ruffles at.... 39e Muslin gowns, hemstitched ruffle and embroidery Inscr-- t ion at ..... 5ac trimmed Beautifully made. with very nice lace and em79c broidery at Theres Drawers Made of muslin, trimmed with deep ruffle at.... 19c Muslin drawers, trimmed with raffles and tucks S9C gt lilMi q Muvlln drawers trimmed with Valenciennes lace at m i aeseseeeasa 6llC liistl a 4 ik i itiii Made of muslin, edge and neck trimmed with ruffle at ' 29c Muslin chemise, trimmed with lace and embroidery at.... 55c Muslin chemise, trimmed with guod lace and embroidery at oe 79c niiiiiiiH Theres Corset Covers Made of muslin, trimmed with . embroidery Muslin corset cavers, trimmed with lace at at.. 1216c Muslin corset covers, trimmed with lace and sertion at ...... ........ I6' in- 29c, Figure This Up for Yourself and you'll find a complete outfit of undermuslins can be bought for $1.44. Ever hear of the like before? Be Here Before It Is too Late W. H. WRIGHT & SONS CO. |