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Show fCUASSCCUIES PiESS DTAK WEATHER EORECAST V1 SERVICE. lELEGKAPIIIC FAIR VOL. I. NO. 284. I OGDEN FUNERAL OF HENRY C PAYNE 1 ACCEPTS EMPTY HONOR Remains Laid to Root In Milwaukee Thousand Cemetery Twenty-fivTaka Last View ef Remains. e Milwaukee. Postmaster-Gener- In Doing So He Speaks of Roosevelt as Straight Republican Who Boldly Defends Republican Principles, and of Parker, as Foxy and Indefinite. Alabama, Oct. 10. Birmingham, Thomas Wataoa, Populist, candidate for President baa aent the following let ter of acceptance: To Honorable Samuel W. Williams, Chairman Committee of Notification. When two great political partiea bare, In turn, governed a country, and hare between them, brought about un-a- tl it la but a condition!, factory natural fact that a third part abould rice. Citizens who have looked in vain to the two great partiea for remedial logialatlon loae oonOdence in both after a while, and adopt one of tvo course: thejr either aubmlt to the ,rili of bad government, or protest by organizing a third party. . To (he atudent of hiatory, tliere la tithing more saddening than the tendency of the people to aubmlt. . Aa a rule, political education never reaches State-craf- t, like priestthe masses. craft, Jealously guards its secrets Thera la alwaya the inner sanctuary which the people are taught to believe would be profaned by the touch of their unholy feet. Again, In organised government there la a mysterious reverence for au- thority. Whatever la, la right" to the unthinking multitude; and the votaries of power never ceaae to deepen that Thus, partly from ignorimpreeaion. ance and partly from reverence for established authority, the people. In every age,, have shown more inclination to submit to bad government The crimes which have than to nalat been committed under forma of law by ruling classes against subject masses almost stagger belief. They have been no deliberately cruel, no relentleesly self- it ish, so shamefully unjuat, that the blood of the atudent bolls within him ha reads the record. What was the in forming purpose of tha law-mak- er such hcartleaa legislation T The motive waa to reader permanent the rale of Sew, the privilege of the Few the power and the wealth of the Few. Alwaya and everywhere tha reeult of u lit this amt of legislation baa been the same It defeated itaelf; and the aristocracy fall with tha state which it misgoverned. Those who rale by corruption, being corrupt themaalvea, nap the very foundation of aoclal and political order; and when there la nothing la the maaaea of the people but tame submission to tyranny, therp la no robust strength left to meet the enemy, within or without A handful of Englishman are able to hold Egypt down, and plunder its people in the interest of the Roth-chil- d, and other holder of bonds signed by s decadent and helpless Khedive, Why? because the life had bees taken out of those poor creatures by centuries of misrule. The common man. la Egypt hsa been dirt under the feet of masters so long that he baa tome to believe that he la dirt and nothing more.' See how the two hundred mlllkma of Hlndooa are held down hr one hundred thousand British! See ho they submit to be ao closely shorn hr English plunderers that at the least hrsak of famine they perish by mll-ta- u How waa that horrible sltua-ih- s made possible? Cmturiea of misrule did It Soulless oxocracy, thinking of Its own only, killed the spirit of the Nple by aatrocioua laws. When the st JU hour came and India needed manhood to defend the empire, no robust manhood waa there. The mlsswereelflmlnate, weakened by their o in-to- tal ro-ho- wealth, their own their own monopiy of power, privilege (nnd opportunity. The subject classes, the other hand, had submitted ao hag been slaves ao long, that lha waa lacking; long, instinct of patriotism ad to the new of the British the yoke tobtnt ox submitted. To be an ox ad wear a yoke had become second nnture tothe wretched, lower class Hindoo But. those things happened ao long they happened to people of anotb- nee; in modem times and among vMte races such nilagovernment wld be impossible. IRonare of the present day takes kind of comfort to Itaelf, and congratulates Itaelf upon the jJlytkit jet legislative systems of around hia wife, wring the cry of orphanage from the lips of his child, and feed the buzzards with hia rotting flesh, in order that unscrupulous marauders may get their clutches upon more gold. In Germany, .see how the War-Lor- d struts and swaggers and See him clap men, women and children into filthy dungeona for the high crime of speaking disrespectfully of their Imperial master. See how the soldier rides on the bark of hia producer. See how the common people are ground down under the wheela of a splendid, extravagant, insolvent militarism. See the millions wasted yearly on tha personal vanities of the Emperor. ,4ee how the smart young officers cut down with their swords the private soldier, or the private citizen and escape punishment. See how Emthe proud to penal servitude for peror sends seven yearn a poor devil of a private soldier who has expressed a wish that the swift train which bore the Kaiser might have been slowed up, ao that hia hlajeay'a loyal subject could have gotten a glimpse of the royal fare. See how Italy la harrowed by the tax gatherer who squeezes out every possible penny from the common people in order that there shall be maintained an idle aristocracy, and an exaggerated militarism. In that unhappy land, so richly blessed by nature, misrule, has been no flagrant that half of the people never have enough to eat. GREAT BRITAIN SCORED. with ita lands Bee Great Britain, few hundred lords. monopolised by Its legislation controlled by property interests and Its hordes of homeless poor crying for bread along the streets of the richest cities In the world. Consider these legions of the homeless. Look into those tenements, packed, like sardines in a box, with hungry men, women and children. Think of the ffiorals Inseparable from such conditions. Think what passions must rage under the ragged shirt of the workman who stops in the street to pick up remnants of food which are foul enough to turn the atomacb of a well-ke- pt dog. Think of the mulltudea who sprawl about the parka, skulk under bridges, prffWl through slums not by tens, hut by thousands; not In me city, bdt In all cities Millions of men and human beings. women, fashioned out of the clay aa ourselves, la all essential respects the same sort of folks we are; yet they suffer, they starve, within light of the within earshot of the synagogue, preacher, who la holding forth to hia hearer upon the lovllness of the creed of Christ the Christ who never owned a home, and never carried a purse, and who unddr some of our statutes might have fared hard as a vagrant. How la it In our own land? God never made a grander home for his children than that which uie Cavalier In Virginia, the Dutchman in New York, and the Puritan In Massachusetts sought as a refuge from the system of the old world. In natural advantages this earth holds no region superior to ours. Once It belonged to the people. With won It mill gli gun, the common man the Frenchby mile from the Indian, man, the Saxon, and the Spaniard. What the common man did not win with hia gun, he bought with hia monis ey. From sen to tea, the land which ours became ours because the common man waa ready to pay for it with hia tax money or his blood. What has become of It? With bewildering rapidity. It has been taken from Uie common people and given to the corporations. It belonged to the s. God-crest- ed Continued on Page 8.) Oct 9. al The remains of Henry Clay Payne were laid to rest in Forest Home Cemetery in this city this afternoon. It is estimated lhat 28.000 persons viewed the remains at the city hall before they were removed to All Saints' Cathedral this afternoon. Mrs. Payne and members of the funeral parly view of a took farewell the departed at noon. At three o'clock the casket waa placed in a hearse and under an escort of 900 letter rarriers of the Milwaukee poet office, the procession moved to the churrh, The active pall bearers were eight letter carriers from the Milwaukee postofflee, who were employes at the time Mr. Payne was postmaster of Milwaukee. The honorary pail bearers Included Secretaries Paul Morton, Victor B. Metcalf and James Wilson; United Btates Senators 'Quarles and Spooner, Elmer Dover and Harry 8. New. A large delegation from tha Chicago postofflee headed by Postmaster Coyne was at the Cathedral aa ware delegations from various Milwaukee organisations with whom Mr. Payne waa connected. The funeral party waa met at tha churrh entranre by Blahop Nicholson, hia assistants, and a surpllcsd choir of forty voices, who preceded them to the chancel. The full Episcopal service The was read by Bishop Nicholson. services at the church over, the remains were replaced in the hearse and the funeral party, consisting of ihe family. Bishop Nicholson and the clergy, the honorary pall bearers and a few Intimate friends proceeded to Forest Home Cemetery. The services at the grave were private. Milwaukee, Oct. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw arrived here this morning and left on an early train for Oswego, N. Y where he has an engagement to deliver a speech Monday. Mr. Bhaw'a engagement would not permit of hia remaining for the funeral of Poatmaster-GenerPayne. He accompanied Mrs. Payne and other members of the funeral party to the City Hall at noon. Secretaries Morton, Metcalf and Wilson and other members of the Washington party left for the east tonight. al ARENTS' CONDITION IMPROVING of the crime to said bus for several month endeavored u for, e his attentions upon the young woman. Every effort is being made ;n this man both by tha sheriff of Lewis county, in which the outrage was committed, and by Kelley s friends. The whole town to intensely excited and it is generally thought if the fellow to taken be will be lynched. Kelley has lived lu the community for more than a year and is well thought of. 10, EXPEDITION IS SAFE Returning Whaler Reports Captain Amundsenfe , Expedition are Equipped for Four Yoara Stay In tho Arctic Regions. d, 16T7-18- i, WAS A DAY OF SERMONS FINEST ' CARRIAGES J3URNED Fire In Washington Livery Destroys Many of tho Handoomoot Equip-ago- a Owned at the Capital. ng .: General Kuropatkin Will Assume the Offen- -. sive Exhorts Soldiers to be Brave and Drive the Enemy Before Them. Will-laiula- mast-rigge- semi-conscio- Washington, Oct. 9. F. and B. F. Downeys L. street, Northwest, loss of about 1100AM). est carriages owned Fire In William livery stable In today, caused a Some of the fin- In Washington were stored in the building and were burned. The French embassy lost n handsome carriage and othera who lost vehicles are Senators Wetmore, Dryden and Fairbanks; Representatives Hitt and Mrs. Westlnghouse. Two hundred rarrlsges on the top floor were badly damaged. Waddell, the Philadelphia baseball pitcher, turned volunteer fireman nnd with n handkerchief tied across his mouth, entered the building with tbs firemen. FLOOD SITUATION LITTLE IMPROVED. El Paso, Tex., Oct. 9. The railroad washout situation la little improved In this section, ilihouglfho rain has fallen for 16 hours. The Sonthern Pacific and Santa Fe west of El Paso are still badly crippled, but aro able to get delayed trains through over the El Pam and Southwestern track. The Rock Island succeeded in repairing its washouts in New Mexico yesterday but the train leaving here Saturday night had to turn back today and go eaat over the Tefu Pacific tracks. The Mexican Central had a washout today at (he Concho river and to again tied P- - The Texas and Pacific and the Southern Pacific eaat of here are open. Mukden, Oct 9. The Russian forward movement has begun and a has been captured with small loss. In order to gain n clear undent andlng of the shnation it may be stated that two days ago tha Japanese divisions confronted the Russians north of the Talfae rlvsr. Their left flank, constating of two divisions, was on the railway at Sandlapu, thirty miles southwest of Mukden and close to the Hun river. Their center, comprised of four divisions, occupied the railway between Liao Yang and Chan-- d Input xe 3 miles north. Two more divisions occupied the extreme Japanese right along the road between Hentsla-putz- a nnd Renslhu. I'hrir trout extended about 3 miles. Tha position at Renlsiavmlse was strongly fortified and Intended to withstand attack, it to reported that General Kurokl waa there In person. The Japanese bad omitted lo fortify one hill which waa the key to tha position. The Russians, awere of this omission, made a wide detour eastward and seined the hill with little opposition. The bill once occupied, exposed the whole Japanese position to n heavy flanking fire. The Russians aim turned the Japanese right and the fortified positions thus becoming untenable, the Japanese were forced to withdraw hurriedly from Uentsiapulze. fighting a rear guard action In which they suffered heavily. The Ruse lan losses were small, although throughout severe opiioeitlon had been expected. General Mlnlchenlco'e Cossacks had been harrasring the Japanese outpost for several daya and were entirely successful In a number of engagements. The Russian southern advance on October 4th with the occupaliufr of Bhakhe, a railway station. The next day tha station, which had been dismantled by the Japanese, waa restored by the railway brigade following Immediately behind thy fighting line, and the same brigade aim restored the On bridge across the Bhakhe river. October 6th 'General Miatehenko advanced almost to tha Yental mines, driving in the Japanese outposts with heavy loss at an expense of only one killed and five wounded. The Russian forward movement being made in the heaviest marching whole order, one sees everywhere companies of which every man carries a large knapsack on hia back, a rifle on his shoulder and a large kettle or tea pot aiung to his waist, while hanging from the belt is the cartridge case in front and a big wooden water bottle on and an axe, pick axe or simile cither aide. Altogether, with over coals, the .equipment weighs 100 The soldiers move steadily pounds. and cheerfully, though the column looks more like a pack train than an army. First aid stations of the Red Cross are being organized and the nurses are working untiringly everywhere. Doctors and Sisters of Charity are going to the front in Chinese carte at the rate of two miiea aa hour over heavy roads, but are cheerful and devoted as ever, In spite of the Imminent prospect of more of the difficult and dangerous work under fire wklrb won 'hem the undying gratitude of tho arm hi Liao Yang. Chinese reports of the Japanese movement state that Lieutenant . General Kushlml with two divisions to moving to flank the Russians. Ilia force to already on the IJao river within 28 miles of Blnmlulln. A simultaneous movement, it to understood. Is being carried out by Genera Kurokl to the eastward with tha object of atrlalng the railway and flanking the Russians out of Mukden aa was done at Liao Yang, but the conditions are now rather different St. Petersburg, Oct 9. Following to tha text of an order of the day Issued by General Kuropatkin and dated October 2nd: More then seven months ago the Bent-aiaput- se 4t,s SIX ARE SUFFOCATED TO HIS- DEATH BV COAL OAS worst freight To Prevent His Rival From Marrying The Rejected Suitor Ties Him to a Tree has given in intervals of ronadouraeas It would appear that last Monday he started from the home of a friend to go to Kelson en route to K slams, Washington, the county seat to procure a marriage license. On the way h was seized, hound and blindfolded By two persona, one of whom was disas a woman. He waa ttta guised -trapped to the hack of a horse and taken to the woods where he was bound o the tree and compelled to suffer un. mentionable cruelties. Thursday a note was found on the door post of one of Kelley's Meads, stating the mans predicament and whereabouts and his Mend at once proceeded to the plate and released . him , - CLARK BOUGHT RACE HORSE. Lexington. Ky.. Oct. Voyage, the winner of the division of the Kentucky Futurity 85.000 has been add to V. A. Clark, Jr., of Hiitte. son of United States Senator W. A. Clark. The price pa'd was 8in,000. d treacherously fell upon ns at Port Arthur before war had been de- -i dared. Since then, by land and sea, Russian troops have performed many heroic deeds of which tha Fatherland may Justly he proud. The enemy, however, is not only overthrown but in his arrogance continues to dream of complete victory. The troops of the Manchurian army. In unvarying good spirits, hitherto have not been numerically strong enough to defeat the Japanese army. Much time la net senary for overcoming all the difficulties of strengthening the active army ao aa to enable it to accomplish with complete anooesa the arduous hut honorable task imposed upon It. It to for this reason that, In aplta of ihe rejieated repulse of Japanese attacks upon our poult km Tatche-klaLtondlanslan and Liao Yang I did not consider that the time had arrived to take advantage of these and to begin a forward movement, and 1 therefore gave the order to retreat. Yon left the position you had ao with heroically defended, covered plica of the enemy's dead and without allowing yourselves to be disturbed by the foe and In full preparedness for a fresh flglit. After a fire days' bank at Liao Yang you retired on ntw positions which had been previously prepared. After defending all advanced, and main positions, you withdrew to Mukden under most difficult conditions. Attacked by General Kurokl's army yon marched through almost Impassable mud, fighting throughout the day and extricating guns and carta with your hands at night and rqturned to Mukden without abandoning a single gun, prisoner or wounded man, and with the baggage train entirely Intact. 1 ordered the retreat with a sorrow, ful heart, but with unshaken confidence that It waa necessary in order to gain complete and decisive victory over the enemy when tha time came. The Emperor has assigned for the eocflict with Japan for. sufficient to assure us' victory. 'AU difficulties in transporting these forces over n distance of 10,000 vents are being overcome in a spirit of and with Indomitable energy and skill by Russian men In every branch and rank of the service and every aoclal position to whom has been entrusted this work which for difficulty Is unprecedented In tha history of warfere. In the course of seven months hundred! of thousands of men and tens of thousands of horses and carte and millions of pounds of stores have been coming uninterruptedly by rail from European Russia and Siberia to Manchuria. If the regiments which alraady have been sent out prove insufficient, fresh troops will arrive, tor it la the wlah of the Emperor that we should vanquish the Japanese. Heretofore the enemy, in operating, has relied on bis great forces and disposing hia armies ao as to surround us, has chosen aa he deemed fit hia time for attacking; but now the moment to go to meet the enemy, for which the whole army has bees longing, haa come, and the time has arrived for ua to compel the Japanese to do our will, for the Emperor's army la strong enough to begin a forward movement. Nevertheless. you must he unceasingly mindful of the victory to be gained over our strong aud gallant foe.-- In addition lo numerical strength In an commands, from the lowest to the highest, the firm determination must be to prevail, to gain victory. Whatever be the sacrifice necessary to this end. bear In mind tbs Importance of victory to Russia; and above all remember how necessary virtory Is, the more ajieed-ll- y lo relieve our brothers at Port Arthur who for seven months have heroically maintained the defense of the fortzms for the Kuaslsn . army. Our army, strong .in Ita union with the Emperor and all Russia, performed great deeds of heroism for the Fatherland in all our wars and gained for Itself well merited renown amongst all nations. Think at every hour of the defense of Russia's dignity and rights In the East which have been entrusted to you by the Emperor's wish. Think at every hour that to you the dermse of the honor and feme of tha whole Russian army has been eonQded. The fllnstrlous head of the Russian Fatherland, together with the whiiis of Russia, prays for you, blesses yon for your heroic deeds. Strengthened by this prayer and the small conscious-nos- e of the Importance of the task that has fallen to us, we must go forward fearlessly with a firm determination to do onr duty to the end1 without sparing our lives. The will of God be with us all. Mukden. Oct. 6. (Delayed in Transmission 1 Nemirovltch Danchenko, in a dispatch to the Associated Preta ays: "General Kuropatkln'a order to advance which was rend to the troops after a church service October 3, evoked wild enthusiasm. It was a beautiful day. Offlrera and soldiers were packed around General kin's train, the atepe of which were need for a pulpit from which Father Golubeff preached to a multitude that stretched farther than his voice could carry. Father Golubeff uttered a fervent prayer for victory and. raising a aloft and turning to tne general, aa'd: The ancients commanded their sons to return with their shield or on it. I say to you go forward with the i enemy I u, auc-cess- es - Man-rhurl- an Fr TORY OF ROAD. Missoula, Mont., Oct. 9 One of the wrecks which has occurred on the Rocky Mountain division of the Northern Pacific In many yean took place early today about five miles east of Garrison, Montana. An extra esstbound freight had orders to meet three sections of a westbound train at Big Bend, but owing to the misconstruction of hie orders the engineer of the extra pulled out ahead of time and met the second section of the westbound train in a deep cut while both trains ware running at a high rate of speed. Fireman Bowman of the extra was killed and two other trainmen slightly Injured. Freight cars, loaded with export freight for the Orient, were piiod fifty feet high and the wreckage of both trains was scattered along the track for a con siderable distance, it was impossible to bnlld a track around the wreck on account of a deep cut and traffic was delayed for 18 hour. Trail THE ARCTIC WAS FREE FROM ALL CORRUPTION Different Boston Churches Crowded to Hear Episcopal Divines AM PRICE FIVE CENTS 1904. Dundee. Scotland, Oct. 9. A whaler returned from Davis Strait brlngsnewa of tho safety of Captain Amundsen's Arctic expedition which loft Chritl-ani- a, June 17, DM3. Captain Amundsen's expedition had been described as having for ita purpose a task of the highest importance in the domain of t arrest lal magnet ism. The plan was to go first to King on the east coast of GreenDomestic for Expenditure Exploitation land and thence proceed for Bering at Worlds Fair by Different States Strait. If the plan should be carried la All Accounted for Not a out it would take the expedition almost directly arms the North Pole. Penny for Boodle. The vessel In which the expedition St Ixxils, Oct 9. Charles M. sailed was the GJna, forty-si- x tons, Reeves, chief of the department of doand having an auxiliary mestic exploitation, has completed his petroleum engine and she was equipreport of the legislative work of the ped for four years' stay In the Anile World's Fair, It shows that tha regions. Captain Amundsen was exBtatee of the American I'd Ion have experienced in pnhr explorations having pended about 86,000,000 on their build- accompanied Oerlacb'a Antarctic expeas first officer of ings and exhibits at the exposition. dition la Mr. Reeve, aays: the Belglca. After hia return Amundsen consulted with Professor Neumay-e- r Not me penny of the money obtained was corruptly egjiendod in the acof Hamburg, a leading authority on complishment of their splendid re- terrestial magnetism, who infonned, sults. Every cent that waa paid out to him that exiicrt determination of tha accounted for. earth's magnetic North Pole would be Davie-StratIn only one State out of the forty-fiv- e of great value lo science. from whence romes the report atatea, territories and poseeMlons having buildings and exhibits on the of the safety of Captain Amundsen, exposition grounds were we approach- connects Raffing Ray with tha Atlantic ed with a corrupt proposition and that and forma the Western boundary of was not made to me direct. A clique Greenland. of about seven men declared they controlled the legislature of the state la FOLD EXPEquestion and they demanded coin for ANOTHER NORTH DITION. passing a bill appropriating money for the atate'a participation in (he fair New York. Oct . W. 8. Champ, This was not entertained for a moment and tbs bill waa defeated. WA at once secretary of William Zriglcr, and who of the unuurrfMfiil Frlthjof arranged a private subscription plan, had charge whlrh worked well, hut the people party, cent to aearrh for the America without a hint from St. Louis surmised exploring party In tha Arctic regions, lie the reasons for tha failure of the hill has just returned from Europe, and I have been told that every one of says: The next expedition will atari next the seven was defeated for it Is Just possible that the or at the subsequent June, but will release herself this primaries and elections The next leg. America month, although 1 do not think anytolature made a rather liberal approthing will be beard from her until uext priation. Few promises were made. Neither year. There la no causa for anxiety patronage nor passes were held out to about her fate. legislators as inducements to them to Lima, Fera, Oct 9. Sunjimlyao, a support our bills pedal envoy of Japan, has arrived here. WORST FREIGHT WRECK IN t gold-hunti- OCTOBER The perpretntor to he a man who mass-meeti- Where He Remains for ' Four Days, i 'o MORNING. THE OTHER FELLOW nations to ruin but, that wg ago. Class legislation is the old tree, hut the fruit la not the muL Th.u" nnyeth the subsidized n vim0 sage know that all i. well with our 1 purrs with sst1sfsctlonf and tt . 'rtly of the editor, . Out of hplte. tmw.and?"willrpml,y wishes to know the Portland. Ore., O hnt look around him. he It to thought and evidently In order to alwmptoma which have put M. Kelley of Keleo, Washington, the diseased nation out as r.,r,er,ea of the way so aa to prevent hia nnlirted by a young woman who had remarrying RITSSIAN-JA- P WAR. fused the attentions of a less successf Huneia demand war ful suitor, Kelley was seised, gagged vxkw ther ronanlteil? 1)1 it and buckled, bound by wire to a tree hsra tha in a dense wooded forest and abandon?Pnss' No. The Czar didagainstwant not ed to die for a period of four day !i war. did net want it. from Monday until Friday last when thn tomteg he was discovered and released. Satur day the young woman whose prefer ruH" class e meat for Kelley nearly caused bis aeeklng new flelde death, procured a marriage license and of "cc late the same day the couple were mar'b tJ?n,Tokpl the strife; and now ried. must yield up his Is Brnost a physical wreck, i Z!H. J toe weeds of widowhood butKelley from the ecrapa of atory whlrh he n. MONDAY Victim of Saturdays Auto Race Map . Boston, Oct. 9. Great crowds went to Trinity church today to hear the .Live. Archbishop of Canterbury preach, and SMM New York, Oct. 9. George Arents to the Church of the Advent, where a In the Interest of upJr., who waa thrown from hia machine holding the of the marriage race automobile sanctity the during yesterday was addressed by several well for the Vanderbilt cup, waa somewhat brad known leaders la the Episcopal Improved tonight. Mr. Arents is suf- church. fering from a fracture of the Skull Right Rev. William C. Doan, D. D., He had several sinking spalls during chairman of the the night but at four o'clock this Bishop of Albany and committee of morning there waa a alight reaction churches which la endeavoring to seand although tha gain has been alow It cure conformity regarding the baa been steady and Arents was in s who have been dicondition tonight His vorcedof perrons quoted from the marriage ritual uncertain. somewhat still is recovery of the book to show that nothIt waa nearly two o'clock that the ing butprayer death could sever those who Albeit of decision In the protest Club of have been united in holy matrimony Clement in the Automobile and aaid: ' France waa announced. Heath of thl I It to time that the canons but Clemente of thethink ..m. dub finished first,was church agreed with the prayer disfinally The protest book." protested. allowed gnd the followed time ox the Rev. Dr. W. W. Webb, of Neoshita, race was given out: aaid: Wls, Cor. Time. Name' Elap. Tin There bare been 50,000 divorces In 5:26:45 Heath.... the United States during the past year. 6.88.13 6:686:15 Clemente Signs wars not wanting that the peo There waa much speeding over the pie are realising that the divorce evil course today and aa a result a num- must be checked." The Archbishop of Canterburg tober of arrests were made while other chauffeurs were warned to keep with- day preached to tha largest congregation that has attended a regular serin the speed tow- vice at Trinity church since the day OREGON POPULIST ELECTORAL when the eloquence of the late Phillip . TICKET. Brooks was a feature of the Kllgioua world. He aaid: Salem, Ore., Oct 9. A Populist elec You In the United States are fere torsi ticket nominated by petition, to feet with problems bewildering in filed with the Judges Just before midfollow: their greatness and perplexity. A night last night I T. E. Phelps. Malheur county; L F. Christian nation has never before now Dr. J. U in the worlds history bad to deal with SchmlUln, Jackson county; Mcauch a gigantic transfer to Its own Hile, Linn county and Leonard H. shores of people from other lands; Mahon, Marlon County. people of other creeds and beliefs and different races. In different stages of civilisation, who have got to be assimilated and rombined and nationalized and that speedily if harm and confusion are not to ensue. rob-- ? re things of the past jmltorial writers, whose papers are and salaries paid by the pete loae no opportunity H patting the sage on nnd of strengthening hia rwthat all is well with the republic. "delation did, once upon a time, great, CITY, UTAH, KDUf Train Breaks In Two in Tunnel Under St. Clair River and Fumes do Deadly Work. Engineer Dies While Trying to Rescue Comrades Mich., (Vt. 9. Six emGrand Trunk railway the of ployes were suffocated to death by coal gaa today In the St Clair tunnel which runs under the St Clair river from Port Huron to Sarnia, Ont A coal train ' broke in two while passing through the tunnel and three of the train crew were suffocated while part of the train lay stalled la the tunneL The engineer pulled out with Ms engine hut returned and lost hia life In an endeavor to push the stalled cars hs-to safety. Superintendent A. 8. Bcgg and another man perished in at Port Huron. tempts to rescue the othera The dead: A- - S. Bcgg, Port Huron, superintendent of terminals. John Coleman, engineer, Port Huron. Conductor Simpson, Sarnia, Ont. Conductor Stlley, Sarnia, OnL Brakeman McGrath, Sarins. Brakeman Ellis. Sarnia, Ont. Fireman Fred Foster with rare presence of mind. Jumped Into the partly filled water tank of the englua where there waa enough alp to preserve hia life, although he to in a serious condition tonight Foster was In ths tank nearly two hours before he was rescued and hia escape in little abort of miraculous. , crs (Continued on Page 5.) |