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Show tun PRESS fUUMBin) IDBnn MB' flffi OGDEN CITY, UTAH. SATURDAY MORNING. SOCIAL Prominent Men Talk on the States as a World Baron Suyematsu Writes Significant Article for Outlook Outlining Japan's. Course . CRITICISE KORSOKOFFS inThe whole trend of the article is will carry that show Japan to tended Hus-ia- n consent, to on the war until Baron aaya: "A The indemnity. jy i "one ramm of the Japanese lutshido un-- u tiuuld not nnsheath the a word one ia totally overcome or lias satisfaction for secured equitable This ia our ideal in one'a cause." international intercourse. The aword of Japsn i, drawn, and the aim Tor hsl it was unsheated haa scarcely We want a peace been attained. which will secure tranquility In the far vast for at leact a generation or DISMISSAL IVnu-sylvanl- Peiei-Klmi-g- IVO. . The world should know that in tlie Breni war Japan staked her whole Miatence. whereat with the enemy. It Why, was a mere war of caprice. Ru-a- ia thru, in case of defeat should not be made responsible in equitable rcordance with the nature of the afthat in fair? I believe, therefore, eaae of the adversary asking for peace the aatisfaction which she will have should include to make to Japan making good the material loss of JapBaron an: In other word., indemnity. ter Suremutsu says further: Japan ha, not formulated definite of iiesce, because she might term n he accused of skinning the bear It ia shot. We have, however, The article aroutlined our idea. gon out the right eousnens of Japan', putiiiim in demanding indemnity as a bade condition and controverts tire am whirli he says, he find, prcval-ea- t outside of Jupau, that Japan la ROADMA8TER KILLED. Vancouver, B. C.. April 7. Alexander McDonald. Canadian Pacific Railway roadniasler, was killed this afternoon by an east Isnind freight train near Yale, U. C. McDonald was riding eastward on a railway velocipede when he was overtaken by a train and cut to pieces. Officials are at a loss to undersiauil how he failed to EARTH MOVED A MILLIMETRE. wlifiag humanity'a sake an armis-tc- c with a view of peace. It la all very well to talk of humanity Tiut no injustice must In- - perpetrated in the name of humanity. If a proportion arilng nut of the question of humanity givoa more advantage to one than another ef the contending parlies iL cannot be fait fur should be concluded Baron Siiyematau treuts sarcasticallthe .pecial plea that Russia should le allowed to save her face," and deem an inconsistency arising psychological instabilit- nut of some y." Baron Siiyematau refers to nouncement of St. Petersburg the anearly In the war that an pnormoiia indemnity would lie demanded and terms would lw dictated that' the Tokio. nch an sMiiiide," the writer says, but we hebeve that justice should be done us." In conclusion Baron Siiyematau are far from We say: "Some say in that Japan might be to forego a claim for indemnity provided England and America gave Mid assurance for future peace. We appreciate, of course, the general sentiment of England and America. e are anxious to maintain the boat friendship with 1hee two countries, more particularly than other coun-trieWc should therefore he very Wry ff we are to lie told that we should forego (.n account or the friendship any claim to whdt we deem s. jiiid," This article is followed by one Jl,e h,'aflinc- - . by Archiliaid snilMir of Creator tiavrll.-i- i "Riisi's Ross Aim-ric- iVn-,- !r alferna-,lv- c. Colqulinn, and who extensively in and writ-'p- n voluminously regarding the far J"- 'if remit. the possibility Of and says that the only jswm.iillty of peare is in direct nego-- ' ",0 of an imlcm-- , iilv,nl or ' Ica- -t I"!'"''' of $rsHi,iliHi,iMK) either or in kind ""(I deseribca "halm and Viadivosiok a, of email """7,ry Vi,l"e ' Japan. Tl.ia article - "Try Iflln-si- a will not relire from the wl,irh ahr has striven to hold and not atwle to a proposi-- : ! ! w.iich Jn there ia nothing degrad- time- mer?ly follow LiJi" ti I1 0,,'im. the fl'ly alternative continuance of the war. DUNSMUIR JJT"- CHURCH AND a giant, and aya: The public at large seems to hnve guageil the relative value of Rtlasia and Japan. They are glad fast the large bubble which had been causing a nightmare to so many people for so king a lime has been pricked. They hare seen that It was no u-- e to suppress Japan's aspirations by the combined force of western powers. Yet there seems floating In the air snmd sort of coinpa-sio- n for our adversary I I)'in.nV.f Salt Lake, Utah. April 7. An injunction suit waa filed in the Third court today asking Judicial the court to restrain the rhurch of Jesua Christ of Latter-daBainta, and Joseph F. Smith, it president and truateea in trnat, from investing the tithing of the rhurch for any other than church purposes. The petition-er- a are Clms. A. Hmiirthwaiie of Ogden, who rucenily wa excommunicated from the church, and Don C. W. Muaaer, a memlier of the church, who yesterday voted against sustaining the twelve apostle-- . The petllioai. after set Ijig forth that the tithing paid by members of the church amounts to one million dollars a year, and that Joseph F. Smith, as trustee in tiu-- t for the church, has inch year since hiH elevation to the presidency invested fully half a million dollars in sugar factories. woolen mills, banks ami other secular enterprises, and also "to cstale lixli estates an.l residences for Ihe church leaders and tiiclr. fuvoritps. which action, the plaintiffs over is in violation of his trust, prsys the court to declare the legal dutic-- . of Presidi-ntSmitwith respect to the tithing and other funds entrusted to his care, and the purpose for which they may lie used. A temporary infor to restrain the junction is church and its president from investing the itthing funds and other church .money ill any luisine-- s enterprise for profit, to lie followed by a pcimanenl injunction of final hearing. Thu Mormori church is incorporated under the laws of ITah. Di-lri- et NEVADA AND CALIFORNIA RAILROAD ir rjl Ins HI,1,ts !h maid ,hat and weak min.led m,,Kpd aa a child, with Sacra nienio. Cal.. April 7. The Neft California railroad company "r filed articles oi Incorporation with the They had i" menisl contl secret O' oi stale loday. The new T"p evidence of bici- - road is capitalized at $13.lNto.0ou of T10 I"''1 Bnnsmillr had which amount $137.,M)d haa been sub1lHrcain't with thrift In vr- - scribed. , r Mr- Li,,,e The directors are: Wm. F. llorrln, fold If inm crossing the Trout Rlv--I- I Vm. Hop. Peter F. Dunne. Nicholas T. AVilcntl. 'He a ronipan- - Smith and Jo. 1. ,u 'f Mr. Thu main line of tin new rood will Lnre Vi ,,'M ,,f Bunsinuir'a fishing begin at Ilaxen Station, Churchill ' ! "mP,f,,l river in 1S:m; wlp-cHiimiv. Nevada, on the line of the Con Iv, raughi more fish th..s any trai Pacific, and will rim In a general a i lZ-'rva"- mn' who knew vada "- in.-,- ! T: ?' Jury Inside Tips. philosophy and too little scripiure lu the tudy of itocirini'. lie tuld them id gite the man with the hypothesis alHiut the bible I lie right of way if he ha-- the proper spiiit, hut not lo accept all they liesni. "1 limd 'Above all.' a.ilil the preach il unless ymi know what you are talking alum I. Tile MclhudM church due aud is cxisvted lo furnish the gospel or all u'lu-- r chim-hm- . in recommending to ill- - caniiidaiiH, the adniiiiiition for fasting the bishaels of op intimated iliai prize fighter might lie obsened and emulated with good results. Out where 1 lire, said lie, "men who aland up and strike one another's faccg for $;:3.otKi of gale receipts go and lukc care away for weeks withol their bodies o tltey can stand the strain of ihe conteat. New York. April 7. Fresh from his triumph in ihe rccciii municipal election. Edward K. Dunne, mayor rtcci of Chicago, lonighi addressed a large I nioii under ihic iiicciiuK in t'iNiH-auspices of ihe Municipal Ownership league ol New York lily. He told how he expected lo ca ny out hi pledges made in his mvut citnipuign iu t 'h leu go to attain lminleipnl owneras he conceived ship. of I lie eoulrol of public utilities them, of and closed with congratulatlona to the local league on being piuueers In the movement In New York, Hia speech was enthusiastically received. Rcci-n- i agitation In New Y'ork for municipal ownership added tut erst to Judge Dunne's iiiterani-es- . Judge Graham i'helpa Blokes, of the league presided. Judge Dunne said In part: We bring you "Men of ihi' East: tidings of grout- joy from the men of tlie West. Tie- exploitation of public properly by private caplin!, with its greed, extort Ion umi, corruption, has had it day f:i American cities, but ihat day is about to end. Next Monday (.'lilcago starts upon her iiitsvlon of dislodging private capital of our aire-- t car from the control She bus succeeded tn the system. operation of her water worka system for (is $3ii,niMi,iiuu lu paying some B5.tMMi.thni from equipment ; lias lent that department to the sewer department and is today giving cheaper in Amerwater than nny city a rash surplus haa ica aud has Khe II.IUmi.imhi, of nearlv so managed her electric light plaid that she has reduced ths cost of are lumps from $125 1 ubout $54 for arc lamps per annum. She Is opera tin, lKiih departments as well as her polii-ofire and educational department .without scandal, graft or rurriipllnn. the cost of utilities cheapening furnished tn the piildlr. She will have the same record of sureebs In relation lo her street car system. Tlie rlilzens Of lltlcago have been p. Chicago, April 7. Ilcndn'r of the federal grand jury whirli is investigating the beef trust, were placed in possession of "inside inforiiiHtiou today by Myron C. linker, auditor for the Boston Elevated railruud and for two yea ra private secretary to Edward C. of Swift ft Co, 8 wifi, Mr. Baker waa on the stand for nearly two liotira, and is said to have furnished a great deal of infonuaiion concerning the inner workings of the big meat packing firm. In answer to quest ions after leaving ihe jury room, Mr. Baker declared lm had told the irtnli and that from the action of the jurors it waa apparent to him that they had already ilveiiied on what would be taken against the packers. It was persistently n toiled about (lie federal offlres. where the jury is sluing that preparation are making to ret urn indioiniems within a short lime, but whether the indirtnients will t laws, charge violation of the lierjiirv or interference wlih witnesses could not be ascertained. 1 that the Juror hare made up their minds In this matter," said Mr. Baker. "They seem to understand the situation and we gel along well together. 1 was not askisl if any one had approached ms or anything along that line, so suppose they know what 1 havta liecn doing since I came to Chlcagol "Did you tell anything that might In Jure the rause of the packers?" MV.' Baker asked. "Yea 1 think I did. I told everything I knew, and I will toll the truth, testified for almost two hours." "Did you present any doriimentary evidence?" was asked. "No. I did not, wa ihe reply, sc cniupanicd by a significant motion toward his forehead. The Jury adjoined tonight until n 1 Monday. TOO MUCH FOR TERRY 8t. latil. April 7. Terry McGovern, former feather-weigh- t I'hainpiuli of the world, wlui is now playing a then! rival engagement, here, is said to lie on the verge of a nervous liivuk-dnwhh a result of overwork, excitement and constant tiaielliug in connection with present engagement. n 1 hut he ha decided to follow Ihe advice of ills physician tu take a rest. Hugh McGovern, brother of the former champion, and himself a fighter, will take Terry's place In the play and Terry will go to a health report to recuperate. well-know- n FELL 150 es r STARRING It Is umleraliHNl v'llueated up to the fact that a inuniclii alitv eun operate uny of the public miliiioK with much greater saisfaci!oti Hi tin Mnplc than ran the same util-lillie operated by private capitalists. They have learned wherever a city lu any portion of the tivilixed world hits taken over the operation of Its water or Mroei railway works, gas light. system ihm In every case, whim fairly tried the fort of this utility to tho public has been reduced, the wages of ihe men who operate them Increased, the day reduced and more efficient service rendered. The only iwo serious ohjeriionn raised during the ivei-u- l struggle In Chicago against public ownership of ilu public utilities are: 'First Ihat it would tend lo build up :t great N'oiu of the friends niaelilne. of iiiiinlelial ownevslilji in (Tileago or HdviH-ateelscwlien the nwneirhlp nnd opera Imi f any utility bv FEET TO DEATH. Wallace, Idaho. April 7. Lee Marsh was insiHiiily killed last night by failing lull feet down a timber shaft at Moruing mine near Mullen. He wa unloading limber when he slipped upon a plank and fell into the shoot. pol-itie- nl s i to pnldie to adcerisln iheir fliiier to pcyfiiini tlie work cntail-- d We have such l lnw in PfKill llie'ii. ihe cliy of Cliicugo, under widcli. for sevcrnl years mst it was nlmo:;tiin IMiKsilile fur any man lo place a friend iijm iii the iKilice. tire or water depart-liieiil- s. Tlie only oilier serious urged lu Cliicugo was tbul the niiinicipnliiy had no money, Tliero Is no force whutever in die olijcdion. The operiillon of llii'se iiltlliiirs eillier by public nr private, pcvioa is n valuWe propose to able private ausei. raise all the money ncccssaiy to purk;i"-j- : car y,siem chase au which are. siierial upm the eenlfie-.iu'.'-- . or liiuileil promises to pay out or tho income from ihe system, "The opcniiion of public utilities by miinlcliiuiities is no untried tiusiry. Whereever a iniinicipaliiy bus cil.en over a public inility, as to ill! (iiillry, rorrpplion silt I bribery pease.' Thera is no nioilve fur the coriuplioa of an alderman In case of a utility oMiiited by the public. "If roimI rexiilts have beqn secured in tlie cities of Europe and Australia, why raiinul they- lie aecuml in Ilia cities of New York and Chicago and the oilier cities of A morion? The men or parties who charge Ihe rlllzens of Chicago or oT New York with being so hieffirieui, iucapuhlc or dishonest ns to be nnitbh: to own and operate their own utilities, frame an Indictment against the citizens of tbe which our people will ens-wat Ihe ixills with a verdict of Not Guilty.' The movement In favor of municipal .ownership of all public utilities Iihh taken deep root nmong the IntelliIl ia no gent Moplu or this country. iwsslng sentiment, it I here to slay. Alunlciwl ownership and operation of these utilities and governitiental ownership of railways, telegraphic and is a practical trumiiortiiilou question upon which the iieople iimst psss within a very rlion tilin', and tho IHiiitlrans and the panics whs ignore for this sentiment musi lie the Kopie. a slum livid career We in Chiesgo have no fears as tt the residls of municipal ownership. We are confident that the will of tho people can lie carried Into effect and ihm loo without the imposition of a single dollar's worth of taxes; and wo say to ' men of New Y'ork that yon cun by the exercise of the same bring slsyui municipal ownership in your city of any public utility that you may desire furnish'd by tlie people of your city without an increase of taxation upon your citizens "I cjngrtituhiio the Municipal ownership Asxorialhm of New York aud tho men who now surround me tiism thts being stage and In this audience, upon in the city pioneers in this movement of New York and I hoH hx greet a success will attend your efforts aa have attended the efforts of the people ho-sld-e . . lo the imllelinenis BODY AS HIS BROTHERS southerly direction through Chtirchlii, Lynn and Esnicrahle counties, in Nevada, and through Mono, Inyo and Kern counties in California, terminating at Mojave. The main line will lie 4:;o miles in length and will tap the Southern gold fields. A branch line Is to be constructed from Churchill station, Ivon county, Xev.. aa the ifnc of the Carson A Colorado raflrnnd, ninning in a general westerly direction to Mound House Tnickee Station, on the Virginia railroad, a distance of 27 miles. The building of this road Is said to be a movement, on the part of the Southern Pacific fo offset the Santa Fe and Senator Clark's road, the SHn Pedro. 1,oft Angeles and Salt Lake, both of which contemplate building In that territory. VICIOUS ATTACK ON JEWS Newspaper Cviet Accuses Them of ing at Bottom of Revolutionary Be- Movement. st. Petersburg, April 7. The Cvlut. today made, a vicious assault on the Jews, whom the paper charged with lielng ai the bottom of the revolutionary propaganda in Russia. The liberal declares are newspapers the Cviet either in the hands of Jews or are secretly owned or subsidised by them. Pour members oT the nobility, M. Raehiiaroff, Balkoff and Xagorskl. Korniloff, who were arrested on the charge of belonging to the fighting organization qf the revolutionists will tic tried May 8 onthe charge of Officers ef Gaa and Electric Companies Are Examined by Committee of Legislature. N'ew York, April 7. Figures giving the actual cost of producing illuminating gaa and elerirlc lighting current were brought out today during the ex aniination of oiCiccre of Gaa and Electric Companies by the committee of the legislature which ia rnvesfigating the llgliiing conditions In New York cjly. It was testified by President George W. Don ne, of the New Amsterdam company that ills concern produced gas at an aeiual cost of 32.5 cents thoimand cuhic feet, selling one half .... the plants production to the Commit dated Gas company at 22.K8 rents and distributing the rest to consumers fl per l .4HIII feel. According to John W. Licb Jr., of the Edison companv, the average srmal cost of illuminating current for ihe laat. four years was 4.30 cents a kilowatt hour, the net returns from riistomers being 9.017 cents the net profit for last year being A surplus of more than IH.iiOO.OoO and fund of more than $4,000, non set aside for depreciation had, Mr. l.leh aald, been put into the plant. Mr. Ueb testified that the net profit of making electricity per kilowatt hour is 1.713 cent a. Auditor Henry N. Edwards, of the Edison romps ny testified that the company had a cash balance on December 31xt, ICof, of $881,8011, but ihal all ot flic greaier part of It had gone The toial reback Into the plant. ceipts of the minjMtny for last yer he said were. $37,417.. BURTON IN ST. LOUIS. s, er Mysterious Story Is Told of Disappearance of Victim and Strong Clew Is Given to Murderer. ss San Francisco. Calif., April 7. Posi- enmity against my brother to have him." tive identification was made loday or murdered Concello and Licqrl were hi ill brWediie-ulafoun-I the remains night ing quesiiiniRil hy the ixilicr at a late at Vallfjo and Powell streets yester- hour tonight. when day afternoon off Mcigg's wharf, Conr-llAntonio Crespsnn Peter railed at the morgue tonight ami declared the mutilated body to Is that of hi hair lirolhi-r- , Blaggo Vllardo, an Italian laUirer. Concello tell a iliaps-ar-ancmysterious story of tin of his lu other whom he saw tor the last time three weeks ago. lie e also give Information which the beliei will lead to ihe speedy Six Thousand Assemble at Funeral Waving Red Flag and are Disapprehension of the murderer. led persed by Pslice. to information that first .The the identity of the murdered man waa given to Captain of Detectives Burnet work-mc81. Pet erelong, April by a memlHT of the curious throng or the village of Fmolemxk made Tlie ihe alxiiii crowded morgue. that t ranger said be believed a brother a demonstration the occasion bring was deceased employed as an t.ie burial of aa employe of the Dahl of the by policemen a Harrison fartory.wbo was killed oiler at Sixteenth and asiwr-oiSix tliou-an- d siiei'tH. With this Infoimalion a- - a few days ago. in the morning in a oon located sembled early Graham clew -nn-awaiied the took him with a heavy snow form and Concello There were red friend iiani'M Giacomo Lirursi lo Urn funeral proce-sioatid a wrest h demorgue. The moment lip' men rested (lag everywhere on the coffin wa Sorialisis by posited of the the fwn their eye on Lived ami Died a Martyr they' at once identified nim. for the Canv. After (lie interment Then hown i in- blanket In which the were proclnmatlona been revolutionary had bulk of the remain- and a it to belong to scattered nmong the people wrapped they ilerlared . formeil liesiled by a pnieeHjon the murdered man. The blue coast korialist rairying a lia.incr inscriiM'd: found in the sack with the body uml to the Cxht, Ihe Asssin." head of the nmrdcrel ms.i was alo At this Juncture a la re- - force of icoogliized as hclonziiig to ilardo. dis-- i InJorfen-d- . The detective found that Vllardo niitary and police ,l, ,nB I"'1 Siciliy w ho was a native of lalenno. ami lijinner-t- ' The woikmcn and 28 ycHiR old. had licu living in a ; ,li, not attempt serious opposition and room at 7P' Montgomery avenue. The ' .nine was injured. lie to descried was found apartment a .id ihe few taings inund there did FOUR HUNDRED WERE KILLED. An not turnish tin sligbii- -t clew. effort Is now oeing made to find ihe Collapsed During Re-- 1 last lodging place of the murdered Stona Barracks cent Indian Earthquake. man for it Is there the detectives the crime was committed, In telling the sry of the event now appears Cahill. a. April 7.- -U Cnni ilpreceding his brorati dcaih, that, i'lti of the 8'veuih Giirkghas won : tili-- J a: the Dhsrinaala cantonment week sine,- - I "It has liecn three . I him b. the collapse if a stone Imrraek missed bin'ie-rsaw last iny fid building during tint recent earthquake, (rom hi customary Msing lu addition, twenty niPinliers of the was and nwveil. he ud that l learne-first, batraliuii aud iirty members of the Oaklami. in ialaner a as day working second liattalion of the first Gurkhas of murder uuisrpp the "Just after cousin of were killed, while It Is rottglil.v calcn Brogardo on January 21. that from twenty te thirty per lf.'nc- - i Ihv v.riitta liam the dead man, ndtive ivopulalioii of the 0 rf,nl ! .eta sad my village were killed. In surrounding ! and made J'1' addition to" the European already rein i money to several j lllorlfMl killed at Ditarmasla ; eral expenses oi-f.iildren of European are said to have o and ) do refnseti to j ' J also rw-i- . Put y ' 7. I'nited St IjOiiIs. Mo.. April Slate Senator Burton of Kansas arrived here todnv but declined to discus the purpose of his visit or the rcort that he had come to see District Attorney Dyer, relative to . his retrial, which ponies up in the May term of treason. the Vnirnd State District court. Grand Duke Ditrlme, son of Grand of the United The supreme court Duke Constanfine. who expressed Slates reversed and remanded the case to accompany he which was found guilty the gards' of Burton in cavalry brigade, oT which TiiTwas com- of having received fees from the Rialto to Securities the far mander east, has' been re- Grain and company of 8L lived of bis command by Imperial iiouis for alleged work with the post in order. behalf of the comoffice department pany. SNOW IN EUROPE. ENGINEER IB KILLED. Is-fi- SOCIALISTS BURY A COMRADE po-llr- 7.-- .i of Chictmn." n. GOLD IN WYOMING. Kendall, Uintah County Will be Beene of Next Ruah. - Wyo., April 7. V J. of tho Culled Brutes Geological Survey, who arrived fieri today, the i i'ort of tlie discovery of rteli golil deposits near Kendall. ChiThis country la mb county, Wyo. to Tonopah, Nev. similar hi nature gaiherlng at lKiinta Prospectors are near the new mineral field and a rush lor lucatlurs w ill be made aa soon an trails are clear of snow. ('Iicyi-nnc- -- s n,' Car-sbii- ll, , cou-llrni- in-at- ! Visit la Probably in Connection With His New Trial. s, unless in emineciiou there-wiil- i there I a civil service lnw under which all applicants for imhlikm. Irrespective of iillilrr. will lie I re lied exncily nlike and nniier which Just nnd reMMinntdi- - lexis will Is I'p'illed LIGHT IN ed to Run From E' P' D"vI' K- - C- - New Road Incorporates Hazon, Churchill County, to of Mamie ,ilp evidence , Mojave. iai". ' to ary HEAD COST OF Joseph Smith Restrained From Investing Tithing in Worldly Enterprises. 37- - ttimr IIS A. C. Smurthwaite and Don C: Musser Want will case. Hopper-lhin-mti- E C. Swift Gives Grand Ex-Secret- NEW YORK C" A''rI1 17. Counsel pari with the evU of Alexander K"ni,!r he - Chicago's Mayor Speaks at Enthusiastic Meeting at Cooper Union on Subject Being Agitated in New York, e The demurrer y Ihts ' against. T. J. Connors, Armour ft Co.'s general superintendent, on charges of interfering with witnesses, will he railed tomorrow morning and argued before Judge Dandis. The argument will be on the demurrer for ihe quashing of the Indiet intuit. justice." compare, Japan to a dwarf fighting I Hit. hup HamilNew York rn.ifi-rcnrton of Ban Fiuiiriaco presiding officer of the conicntion said the succeslul pivaclier must lie a man of the world, lie wa Hied them mil to bother uIhiiii heresy or become heresy hauler.-- , and that i hern waa too much anil-trus- Reno, Xev., April 7. As a result of the abduction ot Deputy Sheriff Jennings pi Coldfield this week ihe people of that place, or at least sonic of them, have preiiareil an appeal, first to Cor. Sparks, and that failing ihcni, to President Roosevelt, fur protection against a recurrence of the oulrage. Jennings, It la said, waa In charge of a bull pen at Cripple Creek, Coin., some months ago. It is alleged, though not proven, that the four men who him are members of the miners' union. Coot ( ingen, Prussia, April 7. The Indian earthquake was registered with remarkable precision by ihe seismohear the train. lie had been in the graph Ht the Ccophysical institute railway employ since the opening of here. The earth oscillated one millimetre. the road 21 years ago; to make peace at any price, the Huron continues, gnat say, ' TschHihowisky. His dismissal was given by the business management of the conservatory committee, without consulting the advisory committee of the academy or imperial music society, the members of which are resigning in protest. It la computed that the stoppage of work in the university has cost the of tuition foes, government $75i.(HM) which otherwise would go toward paying the salaries ot the faculties. MINERS ABBUCT ENEMY PRICE FIVE CENTS New York, April T.In an uJdrt' today to the candidate for admission into ilic Methodist imnLiiy slid ihe men aron TOftlNV Dreamer end Hereey Hunter Ate Not Wanted in Methodist Ecclesiastical Ranks. Power. In Regard to Peace, AND THE WORLD United I'liiladelphia. la., April 7. .Many prominent in the held of and iHiiitii-H- l economy are attending the nimli annual inerting of Dm American academy of political and a social science w.iich today. The general theme under discussion is "The I'niled State, a, a world pow. or. The variuu- - aspoeia of this main question were taken up today and will tie further discussed tomorrow. The animal address was made lunighi by Set It Low, formerly mayor of New member of the party, was read, eon York who look for hia subject, The tradicting the evidence of Mamie position of tho Lulled Stale, among Howe, and Mr. Hopper. ihe nation-- . The president 'a by lJrof. Leo. 8. Rowe of the rnivi-rxiiof Pennsylvania also delivered tonight. At the afternoon session the aids Joel under iliscus,kiu was "The push lion of the t'nited States on the Tlio-- e American cninlnem." who poke on tills phase of the general theme under discussion were Francis B. Loomis, first assistant secretary University ia Closed as Result of of state; Julio Larringa. Porto Rican Action and Government Loses commissioner at Washington. Prof. K. Fees. R. Johnson of the Cniver-ii- y of Prof. lJmlley Miller Keas-be, -: ST 1 a. St. in. April 8, Bryn Mawr College iiini Talcoit The dfsiuisKal of Rimsky Koreofotf Williams and Henry J. Hancock of from the staff of the conservatory oil Philadelphia. account of his attitude during the student's strike is evoking a storm of adverse critirism, the press and all circles of society commenting on the one of fh course adopted toward greatest musters of Hussion music af- APRIL 8, 1905. MINISTERS MUST BE OF SCIENCE DISCUSSED Suyemat-puApril of the minister formerly Japanese an interest mS interior, ha, writteu the Outlook and .igniflcaar aniele for Indemnity-under the heading "War and Claim.1' Jaiance Tv M FiUS VOL. II. NO. 98 Loadon, hhtb roRECisi . KAISER Naples. NAPLES. LEAVES April 7. - Emperor YViiliara yacht left on txianl the imp-ri- al lift hen tonlgut forHohen-xolicr- i.n Leaving tlie harbor Ihe - preceded by the German cnii-e- r H"i hn and escorted liy the r rn Alea-siiii- German emitter Sleipned add Friede-riKari. Ail the ships in the harbor incluilSng th Italian lleei, were illiimiiia-- d iu the em.neror's honor and gave him farewell saiiitca. i c-- MEYER ARRIVES. - Snow which fell InApril termittently over Central Kurope yesterday. continued to fall loday. It Ilea deep in the mountains of Silesia ami fleecing tempera lores a re reported frosn many plages in Germany, Austria and Hungary, some of them being 7. close to z-- ro. 7. westbound nor Si. Paul. April Pacific passenger train struck the rear end of 8 atfreight which was Station, going on a siding vst rushing of Si. 1uul toubout- - Uu luib'H Robert Murray, or the day. Engineer was killed. None of pa'sengcr train, the oilier on the train were burl. them A '.'vvmuhed' 7., with It." "I have not tin slightest - idea why enough bornauylsvly should have CI,-- v snow brew storm prevailed throughout nor O.. them Ohio today. April . ! : : 7.- -A ! . new Aniericnn ainlssador to Uiih- , Mrriwi, be re today from Pi.rU. Vlt- Mover evpeet ... be received U audience by tire emp-r- or days for Die pnrimse of preui In lily letters ol credence. ti1H . i i |