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Show . TIIE MOIIXIXG EXAMINER: OfiDEX, UTAII, THURSDAY MORXIXG, APRIL a- - NKWCUT-OF- F Gin 18 N01 SENSATION FATAL FIRE ON SANTA FE (Vill Bs Made by Santa Ft at Coat of $10,000,000. IN Ft. arc encountered in irantcuntinen-ta- l travel. Orders have been given for the purchase of all the material necessary, and work will bo begun wliiiin thirty days. The work will be pushed to completion rapidly, and the new transcontinental low grade line will lie fifready for opening within a year or RAPIDS has Church. teen months. f sill The western' end of the miles Boston, April IS. A statement was lie at Helen. N. M.. twenty-seveEl Paso Biade public today by the Prudential south ot Albuquerque on the and the eastern end will bs at line, rommlrtce of the American board of T.xico, 230 rolls. away, on the Pecos commissioners for foreign mixaiona, Valley lines of the Santa Ke. The new road will cross the Bierra which yeaterday voted to accept SDK),-(0Nevada mountains at Alio Pass at an offered to the board by John elevation of 9.491 feet, but at a maxiTjvo seeks ago the Pru mum grade east bound of one and of dential committ ee adopted the report per cent uud west Imund the of a recommending of one per cent. The lino view in but. of the money, will cross the Santa Ke Central near acceptance Conmade the at of the rang pretext by Willard and the Kl Paso and North gregational clergy, final action waa de- western at Mano, X. M. aupple-mratarwhen until a ferred yeaterday report waa made by the aule GIRL BASEBALL TEAM. Tbfii tee. commit report, together with s wts-kwaa two ago, that of adopted. 12. A baseball New The aupplememary report, which waa team York, April of girls la in process composed the objecmade public leaky lakea up formation among the students of tions of the proteaiania and aaaerts of Hull High school in Flmimnh, sufficient to that they are ara prevent Erasmus Brooklyn. the board frbm anrepting the money. Tbe fair athlelea of this Insillullon One of the principal points raised . In the report ia the claim of the com- claim lo have been the first to wear divided skirt, while playing basket mittee that the American board can the not bow legally return Mr. Rockefe- ball and later introduced the rational ller money because the derisions of gynmanlum costume, bloomers and all. they assort themselves as the the bighorn court e are to the effort Now first to still further invade the realm that trustees who have once accepted of masculine sport b gift and Msumtal remain utilisations A ball somewhat lighter than the have bo power to return the gift and to absolve themselves from those obli regulation, and bats of much lighter be employed. The girls will gations. The committee holds that, weight will by returning the gift as suggested by practice three times a week and are the protesting clergymen, tbe Ameri- hoping for a challenge in the near fucan board would lie made responsible ture. The idea ia heartily approved not only to those fur whose benefit the by the faculty. presgift waa designed, but aim to tbe aisle-meet ent officera' auciwsaora. This s refers to the fact that the board has used onehalf of Mr. Rockefeller's gift, which had been actually accepted on February if. Tbe committee holds that the action proposed by the prates-taninamely thq return of the gift, wouid have been wrong, for It would have expressed disapprobation and condemnation of a man when ho was doing an net of benevolence.' " The committee says: This would have been to confuse the Issue and to get contrary tn the Christian spirit. To prevent any man front doing good la B wrong way in which to condemn him for evil. It ia as wrong in condemn him when he is doing a good deed as to commend him when be la doing a had dead." Tea committee also contends that Use board la not organised to decide questions of temperance, economy nr aociallsm. It la held that the returns of the money would be the passing of Judgment upon tbe chararter of the donor and tbe business methods he Is alleged to have used, and that this would be a wrong to the church of which ha Is a member. The committee Child Burned to Death and Other Persons Injured. KILLED . . BY MOB He Refused to Turn Over a Prisoner to Lynchers. Kenaiolila, Mis.. April 12. Sheriff M. Pong, of Tate county, waa shot Any accusation against him could and instantly killed today by a mob hot la Christian courtesy be acted of masked men who entered the Jsil upon unless he had first been tried by Air the purpose of liberating I Jame to be tue church which endorses him as a Whit, a white prisoner, who member in good and regular stand- plared on trial Monday on change of murder. ing." Tbe moh, which consisted only of lx or eight men, gained an entrance INDICTMENT SET ASIDE. to the Jeil before Sheriff Puag waa t Des Moines, Iowa, April 12. Judge aware of it. The sheriff's order to Bylngton today set aside an Indict- leave waa met with a refusal, wherement charging Eric Kutslebea with upon the officer fired, wounding one train wrerkfeg and first degree mur- man. The moh then fired on the sherder. Tbe penel larked one man, It be- iff. two bullets taking effect. The ing at the end of the term and one masked men then left, taking their Juror was 111. Kutgleben confessed to wounded roiqpanion with them. Whit Mountain flyer remains la jail. wrecking the na the Rock Island railroad. In which WEALTHY MEXICAN DEAD. Engineer Hotchkiss waa killed and adds: J. . Ri-k- y several persona Injnaed. Albuquerque, N. M., April 12. Felipe Chavea, grandson of Francisco Xavier Chaves, first governor of New Mexico,, under the Mexican regime, and eon of Jose Chaves, one of the early territorial governora under the United Plates, is dead at hla home In Helen, a village south of there, aged 71 years. Death waa due to cerebral hemorrhage. Chavea waa probably the wealthiest Mexican cltlsen of this territory, hia fortune being eatlmated at from one to two million dollars. One son and two daughters survive him. Jose Chaves, the eon. Is a stock broker In New York. He rame across the continent In a special train, arriving a few hours too late to see hla father alive. Left a Notice on the Door Proclaiming Active Its Wrong. Kansas City. Mo.. April 12. The American Mercantile association, alconleged to lie a cern, with offices in a down-towoffice building, has . been closed and this otire posted oh tbe door: Good bye. Suckers, good bye.' The whereabouts of the offlreis of tbe association is not known. The company's head office was al 8t. Joseph. Mo., and from there a notice had been ent out to Its subscriliers announcing the suspension in the following words: The officers of the American Mercantile association take this mean to announce lu you that the business of said corporation has been suspended and that it will lie unable to complete or carry out its contract with you. When this notice was received by the Kansas City subscriliers. the majority of whom aie laboring people, they flocked to the concern's office. Many pitiable scenes were enacted. The aubscribei haJ agreed to pay one dollar a week for eighty weeks on the promise that they were to receive 1100 nt tbe end of that peiiml. Many working girls and laborers hail lieen making payments for months past, lire woman had paid 7.60 a week for sixty-si- x weeks and expected soon to realise 720. Tbe American Mercantile nocia-!obegan business in May, 1904. and books, left behind by its officers. : that many subscribers, stationery, gave the officers .ml treas-ftei- : W. 1. (Hamper. secretaiy: I 11. Miles and N. M. K oi dean, field nrsniaors. Ilmen mbit U esid to twin the saloon buMm.-at tit. Joseph. n d pre-Mo- nt s IRRIGATION a; PROJECT. Work to Commence on 8L Mary'a and Milk River. 2-- SWALLOWED for a constitution, and the limilar stand taken at a meeting of cieated a college professor-- , have n. All the efforts of gieai the government to preier.1 Pie meetings being held by prohibiting the ielegates from assembling in public were The newspapers unavailing were then oruldden to mention the and fur disobedience in remeeting ferring tu the attorneys' meeting this morning' issue of the Son of the Fatherland was confirmed. The Ruaa also boldly defied the authorities by printing the resolutions adopted by the professor. Th action of these influential bodies served to empha-iz- e the growing outcry against the Houligu campaign which is proceeding with it work without any press oi the people, thus furnishing the liliersis with justification for the charge that execution of tbe refoinia outlined in the imperial rescript is completely in the hand of the bureaucracy againat which all classes of society are fight ing. The bishop of Nizhni Novgorod has written a letter advl-in- g the boycott of the Moscow Gazette which he aaya Is stirring tip war between the ignorant and the intelligent chase. The commia-iowhich has been dealing with the newspaper censor-shi- p under the presidency of Private to Councillor Kobeko, has decided abolish tlie censorship of special telegrams (o daily newspapers. n, BATTLESHIPS IN SQUADRON. Singapore, St rails Settlement, April The British cruiser Sutlej has arrived here from Hongkong. She reports having passed the Russian second Pacific squadron, including seven battleships, steaming north at daylight, April 11. 12. Had to be Ueed to Locate Them. Near York, April 1 II. Nlehaus, the sculptor, la recovering from an operation for the removal of two falae teeth attached to a rubber swallowed while plate which he laughing in Cincinnati six weeks ago. The obstruction waa found cmliedded In the (NWiijihagtii., far down behind the breast Imne. Sustained solely on artificial and constantly In pain, the sculptor suffered greatly before tho operation was decided on. When he waa brought to thla city late last week the apncialUt turned to the and located the plate, which a wa of hard rubber. Nothing hut the shadow of the rlra showed upper also a the breast bone. The surgeons made a long inrlalqn, rnl the oesophagus, carrying It away down to the breast lame. The rubber plate was as tightly Jammed between the walla of the gullet a though Coffryville, Kan., April 12. A race hammered In. while two sharp teeth were deeply embedded. It was, how- war ha narrowly been averted here ever, easily removed snd Mr. Niebaua as (he result of the assault by a negro la now rapidly recovering. upon Mrs. John Griffith, white, the wife of a machinist, and serious trouJAP EXCLUSION. ble I still likely. Negroes of the worut dans have been ordered lo Consul General of Japan In Canada Op leave town before.' night. In anticipation of a rlah between posed to tho Action. the two races, the mayor today iaatied Ottawa, Ont., April 12. Consul Gen- a proclamation ordering that all citieral Nosse of Japan ha had an In- zens disarm and at the same time terview with Sir Wil'rld Laurirr ask- many special officers were sworn in. ing for the disallowance of Since the negro's attack upon Mrs. legislation passed by the Griffith, fellow negroes have been British Columbia legislature a few arming tn prevent the lynching of any day ago. The premier Informed the innocent negro, as seemed likely, and consul that it the hill were as rep- early today an attempt to disarm a resented they probably will he disal- number of blacks resulted in a dozen lowed. The official copies have not revolvers lieing levelled at Chief of been received as yet by the Dominion police Smith's head. Other negroes government. rushed to tbe scene when a body of whilea stopped them with levelled rifles. The leader among the negroes wa choked into insensibility and the others were subdued, trouble being averted for the lime at least. Many arrest a were made. The negro who a mulled Mrs. Griffith Is still at laige. iiour-lahme- Assault on White Woman Started the Excitement. antl-Jspane- VANITY A Great Trees Uprooted and Ships Sent to the Bottom.- Papeete, Tahiti, March 91, via San Francisco April 12. On the evening of the twenty-fourt- h instant a south-vagale developed into a hurricane near Tahiti. On tho following morning tho gasoline schooner Orlfena rebeen ported that her ship boat had 130 damaged on a reef at Mahatea, mile north of TahltL On the twenty-fift- h instant the storm broke over Papeete. Great trees came crashing down, breaking fences and la some instances tearing houaea in two. In the harbor the schooner Roberta, owned by C. Coppenarth. formerly known aa the Herman of Ban Francisco of treasure fame, struck the quay near the Oceanic steamship wharf and had a narrow escape. J. P. Martin's steam launch had Its back broken, being washed ashore against some docks, following dose upon a' government cutter, which was completely smashed. The schooner Marian dragged her anchors, but sustained little damage. Other sections of this country suffered much from the fury of the gale. The French Protestant nilselonery n Tera-vaschooner Letox du Bud put into Bay, losing nearly all her anils. The steamer Mariposa of San Francisco encountered the outer edge of the hurricane, two days out from Papeete, and was delayed about six hours, being compelled to avoid the usual passage through ihe Tuaniotu islands, in favor of the new westerly one around Mutu-hlvwhich la longer by a hundred Mra.VaaStlcaau'i Recovery by st Phhm f Mrs. REMOVAL After Are dayi mae I fait ae much bettor that I decided Is coatimie m uae mod by tbe time I had takee itx bottlta, I wea la perfect keeltk, and bad ae more keadechaa, la tact, my health ta bow all that I could wish, Parana is certainly aa estimable medicine end well worthy of praiae." INDIGESTION is Made to Yield to a Swindler. lie tion before the assembly judiciary committee and presented to the committee in an argument today by for mer Deputy Attorney General Henry B. Coman, counsel for the committee of inquiry. Mr. Toman read hia conclusions of fact, embracing six different postoffices, those of Frank P. Ball, Maurice Hooker. Ora Caldwell, Thomas O'Neill. Minerva Jeffrey and e Katherine Clark, the Dunkirk leases and the judgment againat the City of Dunkirk. In each of thpse cases Air. roman declared that the conduct of Justice Hooker was immoral and tended to euhmit the administration of justice by Judge Hooker on the Iwnch to contempt and disgrace. post-offic- AFTER ROOSEVELT. of tbs heart. con tin ns any to allowed If this la length of time, the spinal cord becomes Irritated and anemic. This gives rise to backache, headache and a most aggravated form of aervoue- - tin'll produced a package of enaw I on, O. T., April 12. Governor and doclaied each envelope Ferguson and Dennis Flynn passed contained money. The envelopes he through today on their way to sold at pi ice ranging from $l to $13 Frederick. O. T.. io participate in a each, wi lt the stipulation that they banquet at that .lr.ce tonight. An should nut lie oiiened until he had will he made to persuade Presibeen gone half an hour. The enveldent Boose vci' tu leave his camp and attend the hanuiiet. A hundred peropes contained only blank paper. sons will be present, including several 1 -- velope ef-lo- rt It's the little colds that grow Into prominent Oklahoma politicians. big colds; the Idg cold that end In DEATH DUE TO HEART DISEASE. consumption and death. Watch the little colds. Dr. Wood's Norway One Chicago. Aprq 12. George C. Syrup. to join ihe Russian army in Manchuria as a representative of the HIS SUPPER NOT READY. Ban Francicn, Cal, April 13. When the matter of distribution of tha estate of the late Jesse D. Carr came up for final action. Mrs. Jesse D. Beale, daughter of tha deceased, filed suit againat Stirling D. and Larkin W. Carr, in which she prays for Judgment and a decree to have certain lands, etc., laft by the deceased ascertained and determined, so that an equitable division can be made. . The plaintiff contends that certain property waa net aside to her by her father. Papers alleged to bo confirmatory of thla statement, and referring to the Carr ranch tn Modoc county, are said to have disappeared from a box In which they were declared to have been at the time of Mr. Carr'a death. As no clew has been obtained to their whereabouts. tho present stilt has been brought. 1ft EXEMPTED. Albany. N. Y.. April 12. Vnder the provisions of a hill Just signed hv Gov. JHggIns, .wages or total income from ad sources of any head or a fitnillv In excess of 9)3 a week.' may be levied upon hereaf'er in this state for bills Tor gmreriea or other necessaries, or for the wages of a domestic servin'. Hitherto the minimum limit has been 924. New York. April 12. Because bis dinner was not ready when he, returned final business', John Elrand, a Hungarian shopkeeper, hat -- hot and probably fatally wounded hi wife and then -- ent three hullei inio hla own body. !! a!o will die. The son. who w"iu cd tragedy, summoned the couple'-Ovmi-o- M t':e relhor. 1 & Salt Lake R. R, Heston, April Clarenre 12. Daily Through Passenger Service With Pullman Buffet Sleepers Between Salt Lake and Las Vegas, Nev. Shortest and Quickest Route M. Merriam, an Investment broker, havcommiting offices In this city, ted suicide et a hotel Hia father is a broker in Chicsgtt- No cause for .. - the enldde la known. Bull Frog and Goldfield Mining Districts F 4 Direct Stage Connections at to These Famous Camps Las Vegas For Further Information Apply E District Passenger Agent General Passenger Agent 17 West Second South Street Salt Lake Joseph Chamberlain is in Favor of Pro-Japane- 12. " se n:Why Use Coal Oil? 30C Chamannual meet- Joseph berlain, presiding at the club, held ing of the Liberal-Unionis- t in Loudon today, strongly supported the suggestion of an AngloJapsnese defensive alliance. He referred to the alliance aa one present of the greatest diplomatic achievements of the last quarter century and said the treaty had already justified itself by limiting; the area of the terrible con flirt which was htlll going on. The he added, e would support Foreign Secretary in hla determination to carry out the treaty in its spirit as well as in Its letter and. he might say, they would he very glad to follow Lord Iinsdowne further if the foreign secretary thought the policy he had initiated could be extended. Mr. Chamberlain believed lhat any mutual defensive understanding between Japan and Great Britain wouid secure for an indefinite period peace In the Far East and give Japan and Great Britain a security In their possession a Anglo-Japanes- Gty ' Policy, Iiondon, April to J. L MOORE, or E. W. GILLETT. DC OC2 e When you can have electric lights for $1.50 per month for the first light and $1.00 each for additional lights COURT MARTIAL Save all the trouble of filling lamps with oil and make it easy for the women at home by using electric light . GRANTED. Si. Petersburg. April 12. The demand of Rear Admiral Prince y for court martial has been I'nlted State government. Recently Tbe court will consist of Col. Harvey representing the medical granted. four admirals. Admiral Dikoff presidicorps was caj rod near Mukdca and ngis tumble to join the Russians again. Prince Ouktomsky succeeded Rear Col.. Doff wa with the China relief Admiral Witbnrft in command of the expedition as chii.f surgeon snd chief Port Arthur squadron wlmn the latsunreon In 100 Rico In ter was killed in the naval buttle of Captain Paul F Ktrsuh, medical August loth. It has hen clsime-- l that ri orders tod.iv to the prince .!id not mips, also rei carry nut the ord- pmcmd to Funaiud with the canal itf Admiral t Y..pT10U'ly ithucli. Wak-procce- d ONLY the Mechanic! Savings bank of this city, committed suicide today by shoot lng. Tha cause of hla act ia said to have been ill health. OVER AN ESTATE. iJtna-down- a Tbkcreeteagaa, which caatat gy, tatioaof the stomach, enKtettaas at gee, palphatioa of the heart, eat auh locating teallaga. A frugal diet abouU be adopted aet 1 eornne ot Parana ebeald he tehee. This will remove the catarrh. This the indigestion will disappear. Tha fluttering and palpitation of th heart will also be corrected. JadlgeaUoa wee tbe begiaaing ot H Tbe spinal cord will Its niutl a alight catarrhal deraageeaeat et tbe tone end vitality, when regain the nervousness, backache and headache will be iinP Tbe mneoua membranes of the stom- of the pest. Such caree rtmala permanent ach become inflamed, congested, and tha digestive Jniees are changed. they ore rational. Liberal-Unionist- President to Be Urged to Attond Banquet. soon leads to San Pedro, Los Angeles Jit-il- ce Womans Weakness - trial. OF A JUSTICE Albany, X. Y., April 12. The reB. of moval Warren from Hooker the auprrme of court bench the state of New York by a concurrent resolution of the senate and assembly was the conclusion drawn from the Investiga- writes : A friend advised me to try Parana. X had little faith lu any mdtlt u I had triad ao much without getting any rellaf, but to please her X gave it a It is feared in Tahiti that the schooner Telle, owned by some natives, went down In the storm. It also Is feared that the Famoler More, which waa being repaired at Here Henlla, KILLED HIMSELF. a reef two where she had struck months ago, waa caught in the gale. Rochester, N. Y., April 12. Arthur The greatest damage done by the Lutchflcld, secretary and treasurer of deia ilea in the storm, it believed, struction of cocoanut groves. In the Tuamntu section unquestionably the copra Industry has been generally retarded for thla season. Edward 8. Hall, presiding elder of the Monti on church, has recently purchased a site In the city of Papeete uttahle for the erection of a church mission house. DISPUTE I Pe-rn-- ottemhadtaUa down. Recommended by a Committee of New York Legislature. FIELD M ilwsukee, Wia Tafc I feel it my duty to writs and tell you ho much Rood Parana hu dose I have been a sufferer for year with female trouble, causing backacha bi, , , and at times terrible headaches. f Wake maipilattaii Aw ia heart trouhla, so that 1 a, YAS FERTILE E. Von Btienau, 8S2 5th street, the Her Meads. Baekaohs and Headache Disappeared, After Taking Six Bottles of miles. HIE TEETH. pnr-po-cs- ' TAHITI drnun-cisiio- -- Denver. April 13. Engineer P. C. Bshb, in charge of the St. Mary'a and 1n Milk River Irrigation project. northern Montana, which contemplatApril 12. Woman's vanity es the expenditure of 93.onn.non for the baaChicago, proved a fertile field for George storage of water to irrigate some 200, l.erlne. who. by flattering hi victims 000 acres of arid lands in that country, with the belief were social that has received instructions from the In- leader, im swindled they many women In terior department at Washington to re- Chtrago recently. pleaded move his headquarters from Denver, guilty In Judge TuthlH's court to the where they have been for the past chaigr of operating a confidence game eight months, to the praiMised work- and wus sent to jail pending an inings. Also to proceed with the work vestigation of his operation-- , In ea itof nisklng final surveys and developem cities ments of the project for the considera"1 have been -- cut to ymi because tion of the government board of engi- you arc one of the leading society neers. Mr. Babb will leave at once for women of the city. said to Montana to begin the work. hi vieiiin-- , and you hate hern select'd tu share in the distribution of SEN. PLATT IMPROVED. prizes by my firm for advertising Washington, Conn., April 12. The reptpi regarding the condition or Senator O. II. Platt has been of a more hopeful lone today than at any time within the last week. Hia phislclan aaya there has been a decided improvement sluce Sunday and that while he realises that the danger Is not yet over, he i exceedingly hopeful, er, formerly prominent member of the Chicago hoard ' of trade, is dead at his home in this city. Death was due to heart disease. rad-ic- sen-atio- Grand Rapids, Mich., April 12. One person la dead, one fatally Injured and five seriously as the result of a fire today lu a saloon and hoarding house at the corner of Broadway and Elizabeth street. The deed: May Herrick, aged 8 years. Injured: Mrs. Chsrlcs X. Derrick, the child's mother, fatally Injured. son Charles Herrick, the j car-olof Mrs. Herrick. Thomas Norris. Ada Norris. Charles Anderson. dark Ward. The fire waa discovered by Mrs. Herrick, who aroused Thomas Norria and then began struggling through the moke and flames to rrach the room where her children were asleep. Norris could not find his way through the tire tram his room lo the hall and Jumped from a second story window, breaking hia arm when he struck the pavement. Ignoring the Injury lie raised a ladder to the window and went to tbe rescue of Mrs. Herrick and her children. He brought the woman, who waa badly burned, and her two year old boy, down the ladder but. meanwhile the fire spread so rapidly that Xnrr(s could nut gel Into the room again to rescue the other child. The other persona were Injured by Jumping from the second floor windows. SHERIFF IS a, Pcterbuig, April 12 -- The portion taken by the . which Congrea of Anoinry-been meeting here in its of the bureaucracy and its from NervMsaets Due to Catarrh. demand cut-of- r Thaasaeda of Kisms Suffer STRIKES in Caused by Lawyers and Ptefesaera Thsir Demands for Reforms. GRAND now Accepted by the CATARRHAL NERVOUSNESS CAPITAL Chicago. April 12 The Record Hep aid unlay says: Official announce ment U made that the Kants Ke hat to decided to build a 9lo.u0n.0oft cut-of- f the Pacific coast with a view of getting rid of the mountain grades which Rockefellers Money is HURRICANE IN RUSSIA'S RAILROAD TO BE SENT 13 1005. Ouk-tonik- UTAH HIT Al POWER 1R9R-lP0- R. S. CAMPBELL, Manager . zap cffiBSD crass CO.. |