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Show m VOL H. Fair and Friday. OGDEN CITY, UTAH. THURSDAY MORNING; MAY 4, 1905. NO. J24 FRENCH AND AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP Ambassador McCormick's Remarks to Loubot Indicative of Strong Alliance of Powera. The Temps, la a leadPeris, May ing article today discussed Ambassador McCormick's remarks to President Loubet yesterday on the presenSafe tation of the former's credentials as being timely assurances of the strong Call relations uniting the two countries. The paper aaya: 'The ambassador referred to the alliance aa being stronger than If Inscribed in treaties and then, by an initiative which la worthy of emphasis, he experts satisprogress. The delivery wagon faction with tho tt ther driven Into an alley and It la not habitual for end was then the driver. Jumped and ran third powera to be mentioned in cereChambers, X. In Main Streets and For Protection Business Men By State Militia. Is Now No One May Olca vii - Frrnch-America- n Anglo-Frenc- prolonged h JtJflwee a character that many of- for his life. have conHe dashed Into a saloon on Polk ItafcedS street, followed by a howling mob. He was refused shelter la the saloon and driven out Into the street He then comran to a small shed on the bank of SS7oot to restore order. A memben of the Employers the river, where he attempted to hide. Mt for Springfield today Ha was soon dlacoered and beaten Confer with Governor Dmeen and into Insensibility. He waa dragged 2 SSt him to give order, to the to the roof of the shed, and the mob There hae beenan attempted to throw him into the monies of this kind, nnd this makes allusion to Anglo-Frencthe ambassador's friendship more significant." The Temps adds that the friendship thus Indicated between France and Rnaala nnd Great Britain la susceptible to developing into n triple understanding for the benefit of the participants nnd tho peace of the world. Tha Journal des do Bata also devoted a leading a "tide aproopos of Mr. at the etate capital and river. They were unable, however, to McCormack's speech. that It will aim pitch him far enough and ho fell on a expected token pile of coal on the river's edge. The . heard before any action la Police mob surged after him and again began w governor. Chief of he hae to beat him. He was kicked In a savffXell oya be la confident that of the altuatlon and can keep age manner, pelted at short range with Stela the city. Deaplto the order. pieces of coal, and three heavy shovel, over bla head. Hia nose jjj.vot Dunne and the prohibition were broken v the city council many of the wa sbroken; hia head waa cut In many of the concerna agalnat whom placet, and hia clothing waa a mass have been declared, were of blood when the police, who had Paris. May S. A dispatch to the to the not call, reached today by men armed with responded him. He was taken to the county hos- Tempi from St Petersburg aaya that din ud ihot guna. the pital where It waa said that he will dispatches received there through The lint rifle ehot fired during Russian channels confirm the previon a die. trike wri fired by a guard ous reports that the Rusalan cruisers who Officer and Statee Express United Kelly, the of Sharkey vuob have had their headquarter at comour, while It wai paailng through were cut and bruised in many places, which since the outbreak of the Vladivostok the at were to the also taken itrllte of hoepltal. aympathlaere crowd a On the other hand, the strikers and war with Japan have left that port. tateneetlon of State and Randolph Military circle at BL Petersburg, It treeta In driving paat the corner their friends were equally IndiscrimiThere were la added, expect General Oyama will the driver of the wagon reined hia nate in assaulting people. investment of Vladivostok hmaa suddenly. A guard within the a number of Instances where mobs hasten the from hoarded street cars and wantonly at for the purpose of cutting off Admiral nnn poked hia head inatantly car tacked those riding In them, giving as Rojeatvenaky'a squadron from the th, wagon, and Bering a atreet though to a reason later that tney were strike Russian naval base. The official do eanducior atopplng ai noth-thlnnot expect n Junction of the Russian throw a miiiile, pulled the trigger breakers, when. In fact, they had whatever to do with the trouble. warships before May 9th, as Admiral without the illfiheat healutlon. No one must take o ncoal before wu hit, and It developed later that Edward Jamison and Edward Boswell, Nebogatoff to the Island of Hal Nen. the conductor who narrowly eacaped the latter a colored medical student, proceeding direction. in on hie this two were sufferer Intent waa legitimate death, The re-- The mob that boarded a State atreet work of "throwing a switch." made today car on which they were riding, dragged of the etnployera mt frt the police be allowed to ride on them off and beat them unmercifully. fair wagoni wai declined by the chief Walter Norton, another colored man, while passing Van Buren and Market dyoUce. Positive order, were under no circumstances treeta, waa proclaimed to be a wt Ike ofleera mount the wagoni, trike breaker and waa beaten almost ut dry will march abreiat the to death. nm. The order. Chief of Police Up to 7 o'clock tonight a seora of OTIHI explain. waa simply intended m had been token to the hospitals. ti ward o criticism. One of these, & Carlson, a superintenOae hundred end fifty wagons of dent employed by Ward ft Co., may the aevea express companies went to die. Carlson waa In charge of the and fro tcrora the city, today, In auto trucks of Montgomery Ward A Busy tutincea completely unguarded, Ca and waa riding on the first of a aad at no time under the supervision caravan of alx machines which waa of nun than one or two policemen. passing the teamsters' headquarters at-at Every wagon carried n guard, some of 304 Madison atreet While hia whoa were armed with riflee and oth tention waa occupied by some of the en carrying heavy double barreled machinery on one aide of the auto dot guna The guna were In plain truck, ha waa struck by a brick hurled view throughout the day and no from the window of too teamsters' wai made to Interfere with headquarters. A gash wr cut In tha uy of the express wagons. side of his head and he sustained a The trucks of the Scotten company concussion of tho brain. It la rolent were guarded In the istne manner. that hia Injuries will prove expected Goardi carrying rifles were on every fataL The Injured are: vagon and around their waists were W. Jamleon, attacked by strikers Wti loaded with cartridge. Th'a cone while riding on a street car, and badPortland, Ore., May 8. A a pedal to Ita traniacted as business yuy though tha Oregonian from Woodburn, Ore, there had been no strike. An aecee-rio- a ly beaten. Edward Boswell, attacked and beat- totes that armed possea have surto the ranks of the tea maters waa same time as Jamlaou. rounded two robbers near here who anda when S strike wia declared en at the beaten by wagon thle afternoon In a daring manner Walter Schults, plait the coal firm of Carer-Clinc- h Franknt Harrison nnd robbed the bank of Woodburn of ad company. This concern employes guards In fight cut. 12.000. erenl hundred men and dellvera lin streets; head aeriThe robbers qn entering the bank Walter Martin, shot In leg; not ml to a large number of the most covered Cashier Tracy Poorman nnd prominent of the buildings In the city. out, Oae of their George Wright; ear torn off by Mias Gertruda jEddy, the assistant employes was discharged tons, eaahier, with revolvers and demanded hr refusing to make deliveries and Simeon Johnson, beaten by strikers; the funds of the bank. Aa the dette reit walked out at once. The gain mand was being complied with one of nr the Employers' association waa head badly cut. n mu; the robbers stood guard, the other D. Scott, colored, the Grain Dealers association which hot In shoulder. emptying the money Into bla pockets pkqri 300 teams, and which head aa fast as it waa handed over. Patrick Officer Doyle, Police that deliveries would be made brick. Having secured all the money on th ay place In the city irrespective cut with a Samuel Spriggs, colored waiter, tab tobies, which amounted to about $2,000 strike conditions If drivers refuse,' eu from a n barber shop ud the robbers then backed out of the they will he discharged. door, still keeping tbe cashier and hli beaten. The mobs that filled the badly streets la Isaac Foster, standing In a mob assistant under cover. the businesi section w today era larger gathering near Majestic hotel, badly From the bank they ran to the ad uglier than on There beaten by wagon guards Southern Pacific railroad close by nnd a fighting In all yesterday. sections of the Poorman Samuel Foster, brother of Isaac disappeared up tho track. wwatown districts throughout the foster,, badly beaten. as aoon aa the robber left the hank and over a dosen times the Michael Smith, bystander, atruck on sounded an alarm and in a brief time "re compelled to use their clubpolice and the bend by a Hying bottle, almost the entire population of the guards who were armed term nnd turned out. Possea were hurthe for worked driver, Unknown canes swung them when-wa- r with rifles Peabody Coal company, attacked by a riedly formed and armed they were attacked or to tbe local militia company, thought mob and rendered unconscious. belonging i atault was about to be made. In George Baker, struck on bend by a they started In nil directions In search JWwes the guards were not care- detec-tlvof the robbers. Inalde of an hour they billy in the hands of n private 'a numwVhey hlt and ther were a had the two bandits located In who were knocked clubbed by wagon Swamp, Just outside the city limEdward Olsen, p y bectue bTu.? -happened to its. Hurried calls were sent for posaes man to a stalwart guards; head cut. in other direction! tuart T. C. Carlson, may be fatally Injured which had gon hickory club. This ,v'tlT'lr6 on bead by n missile. anl the swamp was quickly surroundstruck being by !i! S!!? Iofilcularly In a light ' David Love, colored n man, ed on four sides by large numbers of armed men. Escape teems Impossible. head cut and stabbed In left arm. Besides the names given above there on by twice a many who were inCapture Now Doubtful. " uo wer m charge were folly of . In fight of the day nnd various jured Ore., May 3. Later A Portland, Coal hat uj badly whose names could not bo learned. In to the Oregonian from Woodpedal at Harrison street ud Michi- burn. Ore., states that two masked 'Static In hli one fight avenue, four men were knocked robbers held up the bank of Woodburn thlt ta will not gan down by wagon guards nnd carried off about two o'clock this afternoon end caH tor outside are n friends. Similar occurrences by onJer. and lntlmat- - weretheir rule whenever the police compelled Assistant Cashier.., Tracey the to deliver to the monta? Vtore PP0M of Poorman on the tablesthem of the bank, charged Into n mob, ud the number lying ey to "W closer la probably amounting to about $2,000. The robBmU of reSe re,ched tha Injured tonight than to twenty. bers did not attempt to secure any of e Mayor declared seventy-fiv- e tonight. T. C. Carlson, who has charge of the money contained In the Tahiti. Afthe operation of th auto trucks for ter committing the robbery, the rob10 caU on 'vary Ward A Co., where the bers left town In an easterly directhe Montgomery age of IS rre wu probably fatal- tion, pursued by a large posse. Their 1 started, first strike Lhp rrikrCnrrtC f,Vld not cal1 oa on the head start, was, however, sufficiently great struck injured, being ly their nvnmitw,?6 Vrke breaker or waa seated on an to enable them to get under the cover to dreWL1""- - b,,t 1 wuld have with n brick as he of the heavy timber along Pudding ready to lead off a cara.Lh 5itl,.na oI ood auto truck Just from 'hincter the seat and wa river, nnd their capture la doubtful. fell He van. DrlveeV11! enCral PuWlc-chief Picked up unconscious. Hia t Death furiSV RECORD STORM RAGING. la concuasalon of the Mila In .which resulted In lnjurie1 Suita for 125.000 each were filed a.t took driver court here today Montana keep Man Will Suffer Heavy Intersection the Superior Shea, president of J HirrUoa P. Losses. Cornelius A street PPllnea he Fair, a large International Teamsters union, LnP for attorneys filed by Red Lodge, ffilontana. May 3. The suits were attacked by nr State Senator platlL aJdIt on present storm la the worst for May hhrl-bricka, ed :.t V,-- i This company. In the history iof this section, more The rain of mis the express ' or the express companies Is than thirty Inches of snow ou that In a lew mln- the part a having lii unionlsts the of fallen In the last three days. Sheep loon7Ta due to the action or whlchThT4 ,n a men to Join tha ranks men will suffer henry losses, the as Inducing this TwnhL:tROn paw. were la the lambing season. . For the first iconic ,he Vho were of the strikers. n In the time year lines stage from h'lr revol- ,B4. flrinll,!n' James here have been compelled to abandon the crowd Victoria. B. C.. MBy J.-CrPWd' drore work Merrbanls their are trips. unablo to .At nnd Polk Sutherland, mlnitr of public a tol goods oa account iff the depth drove his for Canada, died today at Woodstock. deliver snow. croi. ,h? of the and blocked fu- - Ont. h SgStrAVSurs CRUISERS HAVE LEFT VLADIVOSTOK i 1 pub-Urith- at N0TE8CAPE . Men Who Held Up Bank for $2,000 Surrounded, non-unio- de-dar- non-unio- e. Lon-ney- non-unio- fcSiTe(Jrig . aW.r tolrtSJT"4 w s non-unio- n &: f"l 1 Hon- mini! mui WELCOME TELLS WHAT AILS RELIGIOUS FREEDOM OLD Fomcm wanner Thursday and PRICE FIVE CENTS JURY FAILS TO CLEAR OR St. Petersburg, May S. After three days' holiday the newspapers, except organa, which to commend In the actions of the autocracy, were filled with praise at the grautlng iff freedom of religion, gem-rallexpressing the opinion that liberty of conscence must be the precursor of political liberty. The Novoe Yreyma aaya: "For decade we have lived under tbe reign of tha chancellories and the government officials generally, of Self who had the right to close churches and ail.. the moat sacred Ideals of man. Until April 30, th names of men were inscribed In the official papers aa orthodox who never perhaps had been Inalde an orthodox church. n Let ua hope that the old believers who London, May 8. The Earl of bauLhed abroad may now return has written a remarkable pam- were to Rusal to enjoy here tha same Crlala In Ireland, phlet entitled, "Th, , liberty they possessed abroad.' an Account of tho Present Condition, It la generally believed that tbe old With Suggestions ter Reform," la believers will signalise their appreciawhich he exhaustively reviews the ex- tion of the emperors favor by a magnificent gift to the war cheat. isting situation. The earl say a: "Ireland la nt a crlala In her history. Year by year the coutnry has been Inking deeper and deeper In misfortune nnd has now readied a point nt which must bo decided whether the dominant tendencies shall continue to the Inexorable melancholy end or whether a supreme effort shall be made to lift th country out of the bankruptcy In manpower, intelligence, St Petersburg, May 8. The Social nnd material prosperity, which ao Im- Democrats of Poland, having retaliatmediately threatens It ed for the violence of May Day, by Lord Dunraven aaya the land art proclaiming n general strike throughmade a good beginning, but that it la out Poland and n renewal of the vionot eufflctrnt to aave the country. lence la anticipated. The newspapers "Aa a matter of fact" he adds, in have been forbidden to publish acthe period at watching tbe Internecine counts of the rioting In Poland. political strife In England, tbe world Reports from Warsaw, Sosonnwlce. overlooked the cause at the diatreaa-fulf- Kalisss and other towns In Poland condition and baa seen merely Indicate that the strike has became the quarrels of political parties." He almost general. Newspapers are not discusses at length the existing alt appearing. Agitators are constantly uation and Insists that the Britlah attacking policemen wherever they government If It desires to maintain are found nnd It la perilous for tha tho union must provide money for the latter to go about except In groups. educaton of the people nnd give the country a measure of Caracas, May 8. meat which will afford the people an Gomes, who la acting president dure opportunity to appreciate their own ing tbe absence of President Castro, good qualities. He appeals to the has released twenty-fou- r political moderates In Ireland to lay aside their prisoners. differences and do something for the alvatkm of the country. He says that Irelands best are continually drifting out, whlls Its worst are drifting in toward lunatic asylum and the remainder will remain In Ireland only by necessity.' Lord Dunraven aarnll with the utmost bittern the prerent system iff government la Ireumd. ae a gross anachronism whletr untUfles ao a Ho contends that the Irish are now devoid of Intelligence and potato out that they do good work nnd become lenders of men In every quarter iff tha globe. Their need nt home, he aaya, la that teaching, which the responsibility. of their own affaire alone can give. Lord Dunraven aaya Ireland cannot be anglicised, that she understands her own affaire beat nnd ohould manage her own affairs..,: The pamphlet concludes: of If the union la to be maintained, an active, loving, democratic, progressive policy must be applied to the causes of decay. the extreme never radical find anything After Appeal by Goff Try Vainly to Agree and are Dischanged Action May Mean Girl's Freedom. Earl Dunravcn Appeals For Measure Government, Dun-rave- New York, May 8. Having failed Intention of resigning there la no to reach a verdict, and declaring that body iff men having authority to ofthey were hopek-aaldisagreed, the fer the presidency to anybody. CauJury In the Nan Fattoreon case wu tion should be exercised in accepting y formally discharged at 3:20 this morning. At 1:30 o'clock this morning the Jury wu called Into tbe court room by Recorder Goff. When the twelve men were la their places ud th court offllcal had all arrived, tha recorder asked why the defendant had not been brought In court. A deputy sheriff replied that she had barn fsrllng ill ud had retired, but waa then being dressed. After a wait of twelve minutes Mlu Patterson appeared, looking pale nnd In a highly nervous at ate. Gentlemen, have you been able to reach an agreement," asked the recorder, of tha Jury? "No, air, replied the foreman. "la there any qiiet!on at law or evidence In which I can Instruct you? Ia there any way In which the court can help you?" The foreman looked for an Inatut at hia fellow members of the Jury, then turned, to the recorder nnd uld: "No air; I don't believe you can help ua. Then you will retire to reconsider the matter?" The Jury filed out and the court room wu cleared. Recorder Goff remained In bla chamber, ready to receive a verdict. If rendered or to further Instruct the Jury. Mlu Patterson collapsed on hearing the Jury'a announcement nnd fainted dead away. 8ba waa assisted from the court room by one of hor counsel nnd revived In an ante-rooOn the second return of the jury. Recorder Goff made a personal appeal to the foreman to. endeavor again to reach n verdict. Tho foreman entered the Jury box ud polled the Jurors on the open court, but they were not able to agree. Tfie recorder then .asked them again if there wu not some point in law or some thing he could do by which they might be able to reach's verdict, but tha Jurors remained steadfast ud finally declared declared their verdict a disagreement Recorder Goff, before dismissing the jury cautioned them not to tell how they stood. It Is thought that a majority of the jury were for acquittal, but In what proportion they stood cannot, be ascertained. Future proceedure In the case la uncertain. It bu beep Intimated by the district attorney's office that the people probably would not attempt another trial. Should this be the case, Mlsa Patterson would be released, either on nominal ball, or under her Omaha, Neb., May 3. Three per- own recognisance and the Indictment sona were killed and alx persons In- eventually be quashed. jured. none fatally, by the collapse of a threw. tory building nt 13th 'and Grace streets late today. The build ing waa occupied by the Omaha Casket company nnd the killed nnd Injured, with one exception were employes of the concern. The Dead: Jacob Klrachner. 'aged 43, assistant shipping clerk. Ziegler Back Expedition to Find AnL. Mon Martin, n collector, aged 22. thony ft win Who le Starching for Henry Dletl, aged 40, foreman. North Pole, Tha Injured: John A. Simmons, manager of the New York, May 3. Another attempt company, head cat nnd internal Infind to the Flala, Anthony juries. backed Miaa Lulu Hinton, bookkeeper, badly Brooklyn, explorer, by bruised. by Wm, Zeigler, began today when William Council H. sailed Liverfur Bluffs, leg Tony Liebig, Champ cut, body bruised. pool on the at earner Teutonic to head W. A. Smith, shipping clerk, scalp a relief expedition on the ship Terra Nova which la a walling him in Ixm-duwounda, not serious Mr. Champ's Instructions from William A. 8tewnrt, left side gnd Mr. Zeigler are said to be to remain pine Injured, serious William Klrachner, apprentice, head In th north until he has found Fiala or hia party. Flala went in search of cut, bruised. The collapse of the casket factory the north pole on the ship America wu due to a heavy wind storm, which in 1903 and attempted to penetrate the at a point near the factory assumed Arctic regions by the way of Franz tbe proportions and action of a small Josef land. An attempt to relieve him tornado. The building wu a aubston was made lust aummer hut It failed. Mr. Champ will sail from Tromsoe, tlal one. of brick, three stories high. The collapse came without warning. Norway, on the Terra Nora about June T. A. Smith, the shipping clerk, who 1st and attempt to find a way waa the first to extricate hlmaelf, uld through the ice to Krana Joarf land. he saw a storm coming and went to a If the Ice ia impasaable they will go to door to clou It. Just a he reached Nova Zembla for dog ud make an the door tbe whirling storm struck the attempt to proceed over the Ice, allowbuilding. The roof waa raised Into ing the Terre Nova to be frozen Into the air and dropped, causing the the ice until next season. Mr. Cbamp wae accompanied on the heavy brick walla to collapse. Thou inalde the building were carried down, Teutonic today by Dr. Oliver L. Fusty, of John's Hopkins University, a while they were at work. geographer, who will ull on an independent exploring expedition on the NO WIRELESS STATION. lielglca to the east cnat of Greenland where at Hhtuinon Inland caches of Amoy, China, May 3 The provincial food will lie established for Fiala In and military officials have finished an the belief that he may return from the examination of this vicinity under or- Aretic by that route. ders from Pekin to see If the charge Another passenger on the Teutonic of the Husslan consul at Koo Chow wu former Unite.! Mates Senator a have wireless Frank J. Cannon of Utah. that the Japanese station here to communicate with officials The true. say Formosa tha they have found nothing to show In this there la a wireless station neighborhood. It la considered favorable however, that a secret station may have been established on an outlying Island. The Japanese claim that the Russian charge waa made to secure privileges here for vessels of AdSays Nobody la Authorized to Mention miral Rojeatvenaky'a squadron. Any Successor for Equitable Presidency, PRETEND THEY ARE MEXICANS. STRIKES BECOME GENERAL ul eelf-gover- n Vice-Preside- unauthorized rumors, many of which are circulated for n purpose. H. K. Prewitt of Kentucky nnd H. K. Folk of Tennessee, members of the executive committee of insurance committees expect to call on James H. Hyde of the Equitable today. Speaking of the purpose of their visit to yila city, Mr. Prewitt uld: "Wa are here, in answer to the demands of policy holders In our respective states that our Insurance department should make an Investigation of Equitable affaire We expect to see Mr. Hyde today and later we will talk with Mr. Hornblower and go over with him the Utlgailon that has been begun against the Equitable. Aa yet we have made no demands for an examination of tha books of the society and we have not decided whether such an examination ahall be made. Our organisation has tbe power to subpoena witnesses and toks testimony. Other members of the executive committee of our national association will arrive In town this afternoon and on Thursday we expect to bold a meeting and decide cm some definite plan of action. lollcy holders In the Equitable throughout the country ere Insistent that some outside Independent Investigation be made iff the companys, affairs." aaked to be president of tbe Equitable are obviously false. I have been elected president by the board and have no colIMof Three Killed and Six Hurt In Fall Casket Factory TO FIND EXPLORER ' INARTICS T T Holbrook, Arizona, May 8. The big dam nt 8L Johns, Arisons, seventy miles south rest of this place, broke yesterday and n great flood la rushing down toward Holbrook. Much damage la being done to the rich farming valley through which the flood Is The flood is expected to raging. reach Holbrook within a few hours nnd a portion of the. town will undoubtedly be submerged. The business portion of Holbrook la on low ground and will undoubtedly be inundated by tbe flood. At o'clock this afternoon n special train over the Santa Fe arrived with forty-fivempty box cars In which la being loaded great quantities of merchandise nnd other movable property. The train when loaded will be run to Aztec, the next station on the Santo Fe, where It will be safe from the flood, Los Angeles, May 8. On account of condition of 8L Johns, Aria where the dam broke that la now flooding the lower valley of the Zunl riverM no Information concerning the disaster has been obtained, aside from a brief Item this afternoon from Hollbrook, Ariz. A dispatch to the local Santa Fe headquarters from Hollbrook dated 7:19 tonight stated that the waters were rising rapidly, but bad not reached height sufficient to Inundate the town. It la believed, however, that no flood water from the storm waters have, a yet, reached here. Superintewt Gibson of tbe Albuquerque division of the Santo Fe at Holbrook and la superintending the work of making the company's property safe from the floods. Hoi brook 1 practically deserted tonight, tha Inhabitant having fled this afternoon to the higher ground surround lng the town. Tbe Western Union announced tonlgbt that the town had been abandoned, and that the operator at this station had left bla post Later, however, communication was restored, but no news of condition above Holbrook from which direction the floods are coming have been received. Holbrook baa a population of about 300. and la on tbe main line of tbe Santo Fe railroad, about 100 miles west of the New Mexican boundary. the Isolated . 1 ALEXANDER WILL NOT STEP DOWN El Paso, Tex.. May 3. A Chinese, tbe arrested last night while enteringMext-GxUnited States, Impersonating a aaya many of bla countrymen are successfully working this rnae. Acthem cording to bla story hundreds of fill the Mexican border dies and are President Alexander, of the Equitable Life Assurance society today gave out n statement in which he makes a denial of all reports to the effect that any one has been asked to succeed him a president of the society. Tbe president said:. "AH reports that anybody hay been New Tork. May 3. Will Devote Attention to Grizzleys Which Have Eluded Him..! Glen wood Springs, Colo., May 8. For three days the presidents hunting party has been stormbound in the mountains. Rain and snow have fallen continuously and tonight there la no sign of e break. The roods ere muddy and the trails exceedingly dangerous for horsemen. ' The hunters Intended to move to the East Divide ereck on Monday, but as the party will break up on Saturday, camp will likely be moved to tbe head of Garfield creek, aa soon as horn-and men can get through. Mountain it reams are raging torrent 'and mot t of them cannot be crossed. Grixsley bears are tlm only kind of game that will bu hunted for from now on. Thus far the king of tho Rocky mountain beasts lias .eluded the president and lie Is very anxious to get one. Ten brown beara have fallen to the party, and some were of s : slse. President Roosoevlt Is expected hero Saturday night, instead of Sunday morning. If camp 1 located on Garfield creek the party will ride to Glen-woSprings, crossing the Rio Grande river at South Canyon. The presidential special will leave Glcen wood Springs at five a, m, on Monday morning and reach Denver at flvo p. m. that day. Tills ia more than an hour faster than the fastest passenger schedule. The train will be made up of the private car "Rocket," a Union Pacific railroad library car and n baggage car. A pilot carrying officials of the Denver and Rio Grande railroad and Denver newspaper men will be run ahead of the special aa far as Denver. od LOST IN ICE FLOE. Four Men Probably Drowned in Bchr ing Sea. Stillwater, Minn., May 3. George H, Sullivan, city engineer, has received a telegram from his brother Joseph, who I at Nome, Alaska, stating that their brother Harvey had been lost In an Ire floe In Behring Sea off the coast-o- f Alaska. There were three men with Harvey 8ull1van in a launch and they have not been heard from since last Wednesday. Attorney 8ulllvan also received word from Washington, staling that the treasury department bad ordered three tug in the vicinity of Nome to do everything possible to rescue the party. There are four of the 8ullivan brothers in Alaska, where they spent several ' years prospecting; WANT DEFINITE COMPLAINT. Topeka. Kans., May 3. Attorneys for the Standard Oil company today filed a motion In the Supreme court, asking that the estate be compelled to make Its suit against the Rtandard more definite and certain. It waa by Attorney General Coleman. The decision waa reserved. |