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Show raerahwi wns I other the gSSTor standard ha, - brger pam subscnp-tk- Utah Weather Forecast m other papers list Unn combined in Weber county, (RECEIVES FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES) poet forget H. VOL NO. 298 OGDEN QTY. UTAH. WEDNESDAY MORNING. TURN DOWN FARfWELL DEMANDS OP OPERATIVES POLICY OF Fall River. Mas.. Oct. 24. The reManufacturer' association denying tha request of the Tsar.ile union for n complete restoration of the 12t, per rent cut in wages of July. IPfU. instead of the part increase and part plan proposed bv the manufacturers, was made public today. Among other thing the loner Last Stop at Birmingham Is Marked hy Drunken Man Enthusiastic Reception With Revolver Is Arrested. - On. 24. Tml Birmingham. a airenuous Ai Roosevelt concluded hours visit two a by Alatawa in uma where his reception, u, Birmingham, st with those given hi is ksepin wras hearty yontgoniery end Tuskegee. 7 sad soul stirring. His day begaa at xleft o'clock, when the special traip Viaiis U jlontguairry for Tuskegee. t the to and normal iks Tuikeg.-female college er crowded Into sa thas two hours, and the t r had kour just arrived when the execti-tir-. In Montgom-rfycar his stepped from Hers be spoke iq a great throng wder the shadow of the Confederacy's Irsr cspitol, and wns pn his way again A few minutes before a i ! o'clock. o'clock the president wan the guest of Birmingham, suit until his train loft it i:ii p. m.. on the night run to Utile Rock, (ke president was cheered The day was unmarked i riery turn. hr an special incident save at Here a drunken man in dropped n pistol from bis esciiemmi l The his pocket on the pavement. sow the incident and called the ai lent ion of the ofllcers to tbs man. sho as arrested. Mayor Ward made the formal address of welcome at the union here, and Immediately after-irthe party entered carriages ami be ta the march to Capitol park, eight of quire distant. The entire line nsrrk wns packed with people. The oration wa nonilnuous and the presl-in- t stood In hi onrriage the entire linear. acknowledging the outburst el enthusiasm. Capitol park was brilliantly lighted. The party entered the ipnkrrs' stand aud grant applause irared the president as he aroae to a ipNk. He began by apeak I ng of wonderful recovery from tha Assist in of the war and referred ' tke state's great natural resources. ha continued, "Bus. my friends," "there Is something that In ahead of say kind of.natuml resources, and that Is tbs eitinenehip of the man of the soil. I want now to say that proud fheHgh I am of your astraordinary rial prosperity, 1 am prouder of the men who hare achieved It. Think what It means for our nation lo have the president of the I'nited States greeted as he has been greeted today on his right and tin hta left, as the pie. is of honor, the veterans of the mil war. the men who wore the blue, the men shn wore the gray, united Math-sdis- e ni. five o'rtocjc this arc to be spout says : Two kosrs that industrial cen- tal'. AT .TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. Tuakcgco Iusiilute. Ala., Oct. 24. President Roosevelt reached the ground of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, after a brief atop in the town of Tuskegee. whera he was received by tke mayor and other distinguished eitiaeus of Alabama. The President's train was brought directly into the grounds of the Institute over ft private tracks. From midnight until thia morning great erowds of country people, white and black, were arriving front all sections surrounding Tuskegee. A motley assortment of vehicles brought hundreds of persona and were allowed to come imo the Institute grounds where the President saw the collection and seemed amused by tha sight. The President was received hy Principal Booker T. Washington and mrm-berof ibe faculty and the Institute board of trustees. He then entered a carriage mads by the students of the school and drawn hy horses raised s the school and driven hy a student In toe school uniform. Fuur other carriages, also made by the students. In which were seated ether members of the President's party, followed. The party proceeded immediately to an elaborately decorated stand In front of tha office building, surmounted by the Presidents flag. From thia point he viewed the educational and industrial parade, upon the preparation of which the students and faculty have been at work for several weeks. This parade wn beaded by the institute band, led hy bandmaster Elbert B. William, of th Ninth United States Cavalry who had been detailed to Tuskegee by the war department. Then came l.lOfl aiudente of the school in two divisions. The young men uniformed in blue suits, with brasa buttons, white glove and cadet cape,, the young women weering blue greases trimmed with red braid and blue straw braid hata, each bearing a slick of sugar cans topped a cotton lll, all raised in the agricultural experiment si j j I : j "It is impossible to gram your re-quest for the full rrsioi atioo of the schedule in force prior to July, 1Si4. for the reason that the margin exist- ing between raw material and finished product will not allow it. In making an advance of S per cent based on a margin of 75 centa. the manufacturers were governed, first of all. by their ability to pay. and. aecondly. to conform to the spirit of an agreement made hy your organisation and with the governor of the wealth to pay this additional aum based upon a margin which he should ascertain by an investigation of their aceoums. "The governor found ihi margin to he 744 cent, on which a dividend of 5 per cent should be paid after it had been la existence for a period approximating three months. "The profit sharing offer is desired to give the operative automatically and without agitation such advance from month to month aa the margin will warrant." aft am non In ! profit-sharin- thein-aeive- a noni-mo- u AU-taas- ' For Future. ; ; rrx L ' Consulting Engineer Recognizes Hardness of Task However. ' I 1 pre-wit- h crlt-em- y i 'r'l ' "'I' e - li 'TLr pls "1.12V, c11". ; b,n"fd one-tblr- S h - V-JS- m''h' 1 .',,rriT' twm1 well-cooke- e in''f 2 S.-- "' bm ttolto 11 J""0 rrh Effort to Make Russ Railroad Srike a Universal One ! 1 t.r"n 1- . New York, Oct, 24.-- ft a Bne. but it was paid to (he bureau. A voucher dated Ortober 2Jih (to. morrow) covering despatches up i m . 24th. for ih pay mem or .l.bl-'i- . Smith said, waa for despatches ha had sent out, but he could not deeerihw them. An entry af 11.561 paid re tbe Telegraphic News liurcaa waa abowa him. lie aaid he could not tell what it the aesston At -2 received waa for. Smith aaid it was hla idea to aeml out the testimony that tha A asocial el Pi c neglected to send out. Under date of October 4th, a of ltf.252. paid to this bureau,charge was shown witness. Smith slated that np 1 warda of 9 .000 had been paid by ihe Mutual Life Insurance company aince the investigation began for dispatches reporting Ihe proceedings, and that it . expected lo pay more. 1 The w lines stated that h wax proprietor of the Insurance Record end .bad been connected wlih the Mutual s press deiuirtmcni for iIkmii a month, Prior to that time his duties were 100 paper, hut Mr. Rtnith did not and included the publishing n( hnnw whether ilia paper were paid varied "The Statement, a paper by the com. for inserting them. In one dispatch pan. Mr. Rrnltii wrot that Mr. MrTnrdv'a Mr. Smith wa aked if h waa interatiimrie on the stand marie a distinctested with Allan Foreman In the Tel. ly favorable Impression, and fur thia he had lo pay 2 a Hue. This, he aaid, 'graphic News Bureau, tie replied that he waa not. except that he sent news aa worth it. to him. He said the Telegraphic News Following Mr. Smith. Waller SulliBureau waa owned solely hy Nr. (fore, van. who ha charge of the magxalne man. advertising department, waa railed. Mr, Bmith uid that aoma of the pa. II said ibe Mutual advertised In had refused lo prim th distwelve magaiine Iasi year at a cost per patches ha had sent out without mark. of .12.hnu. Advertising In insurance tng them aa advertlnenmnia. paiicr cost about f:;ti,ono more, hut Witness hr could mil tell where the remainder five or six aaid that h bad Mml out different dispatches during of the account of 932R.0IMI, the amount he Investigation, dispatch going rliargcd up io advertising Inst year, to 1,50V different newspapers. was urul. dated October II, gtvlug Ear tier la the day Emery McClln-lock- . a Dispatches of the testimony of President the artnary nf the Mutual IJfc. R. pari A. were recognised by Mr, waa on the atand. Mr. MrillnLork Bmith.McCurdy He aaid he believed they weto practically advocated no law far the all paid for at the rat of II a line. lusuranne Mniniaa exrept a rertaln Wiineaa said tbe money had hern supervision to give the repona pub- paid to the news bureau. licity. He thought the public rould The last line telegraphic of this read that take rare of themiadrea and then pub- President Meftirdy dispatch tostimony eventlicity waa thr heat law. Adkeif how ed a favorable Impression. Mr. Ilugli'o far this new wa shared in official inquired wuhthar It cost blm a higher circh-a- , he thought lit- - wa somewhat price io got a dispatch at Chicago inof a missionary along thnt line. Mr. serted lo the newspapers than If It bad Mrl'llntock was to bare becu on th heen la an Impartial way hr aland gain In the afteraoon suasion, thoxe acquired who furnished tha news to iho but during the recces was prised with a xllglii attack of vertigo, io which be paper. Mr. Smith that the mailer ho ia ruhjeri. He will lie called lunutr-ruw- . bad hirniahivl replied waa ths truth, and eurti matter aa th policy bold) would tio John R. liegeman, president of the pleased to read. It was important t Metropolitan Life Inaurancr company, let them know what the company had waa examined. When the adjournment done for ihem. was taken this afternoon hla testimony And Is it important also for them was unfinished. to know fhar Mr. MrCurdy t alimony While larking the 'a riling features made a distinctly favorable Impresof the testimony of some of th other sion?" asked Mr. Hugh. s life insurance president. Mr. "It made a favorable impression o ai-- i n Thousands of Dollars Spent In Telegraphic News Metropolitan Loaned Money to McCall at Per Cent e e bri-W- -- L LIFE TELLS g a S Io:k. Oct. 24- .- Au Anwricsa believed to be the noted Joseph Kitlorwn is undue arrest si Vienna charged with bring leader of a gang that recently eto.e fi.OiMi from a Vienne bank. The rohuery was entirely is keeping with Ktllorsn's t coord for daring ex--t P loiis iu tin Th American, it was said tolx. eirercd the hank during liiikincsN hour and engaged In convcn-ailosun a dcposi ur who bad just takeu alioii ft. "MU to ibe CM tiler window. During iliis oonversa'iou ihe money disappeared. I'll1 Vieuna pq- lie say i hat the American h.ul dxifej-eiate- . in the room who took .he money while he occupied its owner' s. wtirnliou. The man gate the name of Jam.-- How- pat-Ti- .S 1905." of th legislative committee itmaiigat-inard. Joseph Kilioran. on Jui 4 i!Mi.. tothe insurance com panic, the aft'lrv Hand. Ohio Oct 24 KkiHioki. gether with the otbrr prisoners in the fair of the Mutual were tinder laidlow first secretary of the Jsiamcae embassy street jail of New York, with: other weapons than p.w-r- of liras' ""leralion and It waa brought out that si. Wssliington. delivered an address of the Cleveland thia company waa paying for the lo tbs member pipe, which they made iwlleve Chamber of Commerce this evening, revolver, cowed the guard aud walked throughout the count ry of liis subject being. "Japan. America and out of jail. of thia invent igat ion that were repona ike Orient." In vie of tbe faet that favorable to the company. Charles J. Mr. Iliuko's address wa practically ROBBERS WRECK SAFE. ilie first official utterance from a Japdnilth, a newspaper man, waa the write anese nourre concerning the situation Ridgrviile. lud.. Oct. 24. Robbers, nee. He Is employed by tbe Mutual aini-in the far eat the close of the last night wrecked the safe in the io do a number of thins, bui a war, it was considvivd a significant Rlrigevill state hank and escaped with m'ii th largewaa placed la rbarge of much lid attracted attention. Mr. about. $15,000. The explosion atimeed Mending ago out these reports. Mr. Bnilth Hioki said in par' : C'axhfer Nranaon. who hurried to the had vised a number of voucher for 'Seeing that certain questions ate bank in rime to receive a lmllct in the the payment of"thla wVk and thiiii receiving more nr less attention of ankle. Before entering the bank the aggregated 111,000, with mure bill lo of people in thia the thinking cl rolilwru met the town watchman, over- rums in. and other countries, it may not be powered, bound and gagged him. Mr. Smith wrote these report nod without value to express si tin opsubmitted them to Allen Foreman, portunity my humble views oa them. who own Ihe telegraphic new bureau, "First The Yellow Peril, ill spit and $1 a line wa paid by tha Mutual of the influence it once gained, the IJfe for lb service. to doctrine of the yellow peril These dlspatche ware to about have lost It hold on men's mlnns, at ! 1arl7rtiSb5 25, n First Official Message of Mikados Plans ; i least In America. "Second Japan has no designs oil the Philippines. If a buna fide statement of responsible parties fall to ronvince. let na try a brief argument. aside entirely for the moment, for the asks of argument, the consid-- j erst ion of the motive of Japan regard-- ' tng the present subject, let me ask ou a question. Can you believe that people, who gkiry , this great American ; in their national aplrit, In ihelr gigau-- i tic strengih, in their boundless wealth. in their marvelous drvr torment snd who look forth with proud and confl-- : dent anticipation to the time when they shall be the first In the race civil-- j ixation has set for man lo ran. would allow her flag to he lowered, be it In j the Philippine or any other place which legitimately belongs to her by any hands but her. No, most em-- , phatirally no. That is the spirit withWashington, Oct. 24. The isthmian whieh you cling lo your arw pnasawi renal commission today aiade public tdona In the Pacific snd that ought letter written by laham Randolph, a ' more to he the spirit of tbe Americana than the Japanese. Therefore, if j airmher of the board of consulting au- Rlneers of the Panama canal, to Zlno' n harbored anch a sinister design A- attributed to her, she mui b Carter, president of the sanitary; district of Chicago, which embodies pared to plunge la a war far more the view of Mr. Randolph oonremlng gantlc than the one just ended, against i canal mutter.. He baa recently rs- - nation to which shewowes much thnr thin. h foday and to whose people she Immediately behind the students j turned from a rlali io Tenants with owes that moral end financial snpport body came dl floats, representing ihe other members of the board, and bis umvaerveiPy given at the most various phases of work of the scad- - opinion are Interesting, and in view, the publication of this latter by the period in her history. No: the department and the ihirtv-aevearc not worth the valuable industrial departments of the school. committee, may lie considered aenti-- ' Philippine of that of America and the Aftar the parada had paaacd and o (Uriel. In hla latter Mr. Randolph! Mend-hi- p knurs In men and money such a war the students, faculty and viaitora were aya: Following the president's speech onld necessarily entail 'What we do know la that it can he Gorernnr Johnson spoke in behalf of repairing to the chapel, the presiThird The open door policy In Americana can do it, and the I'nton Confederate Veterans, and dential party waa driven hurriadly done; that that in a short a time aa no stupen- China: The increased prestige of Japseveral about the grounds and waa shows tbe dous presented lo the president of the work being undertaking can be put through. an turned ihe eyes of tbe world foiing ladies, descendants of Confeder- extent and scope the problem of what. Influence we may reasonably look for ihe al soldiers and sponsor and maids of carried on by the institution. Than to Hence will wield over China. Without hosor. who presented to fbe president tbe chapel the party was taken whera passage of the great ocean freighters Japan of the principles the students, led by the Institute rhojr from the Caribbean lo the Pacific he-- questioning the value badge from Camp Harde. contained in the --recalled Monroe dor "We rn this to enpreaa to you our of ISO voices, sang a number of pian- - fore our calendars are headed Ifilt. Booker T. Washing- - How much before this deponent syeM trine or Ha applicability to the western ion melodies. tespect for the president of the I'nited tat ton then presented tbe President In not. Thia U no easy triumph, for th i homlaphere. at present. I can simply diatee." said the governor, our not entered " 'I builders who muat. contend with nndMF t1 the following words: In the courage, unaectionsl Thia is a great day for tbe Tuake-ge- e overcome difficulties not. enooualerod i Into Japanese minds. ism and generous impulses of Thao-darIn Influences Fourth Japanese Normal and Industrial Institute: In our temperate aone. First, there' Rooeeveli, and In appreciation of beneficial to the whole world: nnr many kindnesses to Confederate too great to be described by words. Wa are climatic difficulties) which mv in- - Cbln matter for congratulation for hnve gathered ie hear but one veiee; vestigstion force me to believe haveiTt 1(1 teteraas. mell is Jor all other nations, been magnified. The question of prop- - j Jnpnn "We present this to you, air. be- to see hut one face. InIn prenenting our guest to the stu- er housing has been a problem, bnttIl- there is fair prospect of th muse we holier rou .ram- - nearer of Jpanee influence in China dent. teacher and citizens. 1 muot ks solution is progressing, and it has ' acrease Minding fur th ideals that have a result of her Increased prestige. had to wait upon lumber which must vmr live than any president not omit to sxpraaa gratitude felt by Fifth Industrial and commercial come from the state. The French left 'bit have had since the war. Had the people of the Tuskegee Inafltete hehtnd some 2.500 of Japan: The Isvt war development both races in thin which aro building of and the people by been born north and i V When lha with Russia has Increased the national tbo honor being made habitable. nnotion of Alabama for Ihwm line. Mr. Pnwldroimany of" ill is on hand and the organi- debt of Japan to the amount of !" He war between she statM might That the chief hl equipment sation perfected, at least 24.000 mei 000.000, which interest alone require maglatiate iwi. will be required Jn tbe varkiua de- neerly fifty million dollars annually. of '.0.000 W,B part meat a of industry. The sou roe of It la Indeed a lieiry. an enormous burhlt had m bm born ,0 ,l rl: Tuakegee Institui in bis trip through supply for labor so far haa been Jar den and every dollar of It. Inleresr "tfisr snd in Georgia. where yon males. Th efficiency of thin labor la and principal inu- -t be paid. Rlxth Japane-- e Immigration into as low ns 2fi per cent, taking an aver MV here, brings tbe heen a gallant leader of a ing tha unit the United Eiatei.: It is seen frequentin the bean of every man and woman age laborer In our latitude under Forest dr St nan." in this country a degree Thia is due in pari to the fact that tha ly printed in newspapers that when the of 'n.iT?" park the parly went io nf our race war with Ruai is over and tbe army and inpfryTion supply ia not now equal to the demand-anencouragement ,Tm,f ""fl Twentieth ntreet, which it is impossible for any an Independence la thereby la of 700,000 men In Manchuria Is disAmer-..J hoard rd a special electric "f 0,,r race- - f,,n7 tB dimed which tends to worth leanness. banded, the Pacific coast, will be floodproceeded to' Vbc state "fair! )wn If a foreman undertake to make them ed with Japan'' immigrants. Such a srmttMs. The crosd nt the fair wsst do a fair days work they quit and statement, cannot b regard'd a an "" and Krrritd ilie serious opinion, bemove on to the next camp, where they expression of "iB'- - 1 hB" ,hr deliver1 MihnaipMiro Ylv , a he know that a job await them. The cause, unless that enormous army of ,b i thtTfabr " !" From groiiad of the eight-hou- r ths system Japanese had at once descended from of the I'nited Stales. Hon. introduction president returned to the city and! of the isthmus seetns a lamentable he sky fur the purpo of war, there f'T Memphis at 7: 3n. Theodore Roosevelt." one which adds about 25 can he no reason why its disbandment The President waa given an ovation I mle.tako and labor coat of the work. should cause any immigration to the Wlt Pr said: He a h me to sneak Mon la cluttered np with I'nited State or anywhere else. There tanmrry. A1.. Oct. 24. When To the white population as well ! .The "bole line French machinery the cost la every reason to believe that Japani im-- 1 Prvirteni left hare thin irofrbeiitmot h to black as the morning la aa.d to reach 30.lH0.n(W. ese immigration to the United Btates 'r hi tour o the ate of portMce that the negro be encou This machinery la valueleas and out of will considerably decrease. the of a citizen himself busy him. confronted day make to aged Mil Seventh The future of the Orien1: date.' progra,,1 for the day included a higheat type of usefnlncs. It la to the "1 cast no reflections upon the work The Orient, with more than half of the this lhat u,,, white of the people home of the Interest jMfoTnakege, of '""I tie for negroes, a return policy be conscientiously pursued, and of the French. They left behind them population and more than of engineering skill and suc- the land of the entire world, and with r .Mnn,Pmery and a vlelt to to the Interest of the colored people evidences a commerce amounting only to three gingham, at all of which places that, they clearly realise 'bat they cessful battles with difficulties which snnually. that Is only 2TTT r" 10 be made. The prl-- have opportuaiiie for economic de- convince me that if the honest workers abillion dollar Utile over ' of the total had been sustained and the vast sums now not bleh South, the in at arrived here hero ,I,nvelopment which were diverted Into robber chan- trade of the world, offer almost unlimlast the Within bad B,',, ordered offered elsewhere. been i"! for future nels had been legitimately applied it ited poshibilitir B 1h nntry near thia twenty year the industrial operations "I'v irn.ii bo the mission of the "clock, when the start of the South have in crossed so tre- might today m,: for Tuskegee. The mendously that there scarcity ot United States only to enlarge the ARRESTED FOR COUNTERFEITING so that it la Panama canal. unia-b- r an btnln ,0 everywhere: labor almost '"rrimi.j "On my last day In Panama, after who all "i for wisdom of Thlrh him freshened the part the - 01TP hour of tramping in the rain and Francisco. 24. John 8an Oct. b"'!- - Hin train is the prosperity of the South to help th vb"duii the mud of the Culebra jcut. Rooney, a Canadian, was arrested todethrough Ihe In higheat become. ti,1f m Tuskegee at negro to and. therefore, and laborious niimblng up the blllk. I day on suspicion of being one of tha occk. There two gree, useful to himself which he bveC arrived, with two others of our party, gang of counterfeiters lately indicted in ,1ld community to III ,h Pre"WMt the mike and at a government hash houae. We went In Honolulu. depended, ha one always In Booth town The ad the nih.- In unannonnoed and ordered dinner. native It ia alleged that he waa implicated her upon chiefly now Intitf.ls Tuskegee depend, tn There wa no delay in serving and by John Shea, who with John Duffy. ( d Therefore, work. f Tor her k, foioker population ,wv' Principal comthere waa a reasonable variety of In now in the custody of the United ,T ;'ih,nr,on- - of the instl-,P- J view of the scarcity not ooly of It fo'e wholesome food. States marshal, swatting the arrival labor. skilled of hut President Rooaemon labor, The "The hospitals are a source of of a certified copy of the Indictment. doubly important to utmet use to our people. You will no doubt pride 'h-- n trmTde.riP have Rooney came to Baa Francisco as a available man to he of the seen statements which purport to have stowaway on (be transport Sherman. " .h hi ! ,a nchedoled hy developing ,frai" come from our board of consulting en- Tbe specific charge against him I that he skill and hia capacity for of nD"- - W'bcn gineers foreshadowing our report. All he had In hi possession at Honolulu work 'b the Premdent Hence will be effort. ;u eurb statements you can set down as bogus 10 note. industrial " and Normal " in he .PrnmeH K1?1 wh'f kegee manufactured. Our report, or our repractical the of high's k is the mayor mattr both the white man d ports. should we fail to agree. w 'rd groermnr , denied at Washington, Oct. 24. It " sn audeJ rihM"rh hF wiU mtKirtauca to he embody our convictions aa to the best the department of Justice tha1 the and man. Elabor-bsve black 5 people. the cost and the voluntary testimony of the beef pacb Pvpsm.i tjpe of canal, its probable for hi entertainment support of both races reasonable time within which we be-- ker. given in the department of comSouth and in the North I merce and labor Inquiry a to the cause wot only being Here that the waterway caa be ar. students "Pent j p1nir1a(i here, after 7bkh nm i'ptil we are readr to of tbo high prire of beer, haa been used d? T'11 00,11 lane hla edueated in head aad heart, oKeM .ta.m,nl, la the Injunctimi suit brought agalnwi eTTnr see M Rirnitngham. whlrk J. ,rii ' ebed.H. Vhe Two.) Pace nn packer!. s pres-Idea- OCTOBER Fair Wadnaadav and Thursday, AMERICAN MADE BLUFF IN VIENNA KE OUTLINES ply of th At- VI j Rt. Peterrhnrg. Od. 24.' The government resumed railroad arnrirs on a few road today but under great difficulty. The decision of tbe railroad men at a meeting horn tonight to declare a general strike ha lmmenely Train left complicated the problem. for Moscow today over lha Nicolai road, but the paaaengera were nori-fl'lhat communication waa guaranteed only na far ax Tver. Several attempts were made today to interrupt communication hy telegraph and telephone out of Moscow and the telegraph office had lo be guarded by Cossack. Persons wishing to send messages had to fight their way through crowd of atrlkrr and in many esses were severely handled. The strike has taken a violent turn in a nnmber nf cities from which report come of ennounters between mobs and the police and troops. Agrarian disorders have broken out in the province of Batnarsn. The executive committee of the Ixwguo of League have adopted resolutions saying that th present moment was favorable for a general strike of all the pmfoasions. recommending doctors, lawyers, engineers and all other member of constituent organisations to cease all professional actlv-ill- d I liege-man- remarks and explanation were ms. said th witness. none tha less interesting, especially "You paid 12 a Hue for ihe part hla statemsnt that 9S7M)fl was given which read Mr. MrCnrdy maria a dla. io the industrial policy holders of his tlnrily favorable inqtreaeioo?' " company last year without aoy obliga"Ye, and It was worth it." tion whatever. Mr. Hughes then showed the wltnreu It was brought ottl that while ihe three vouchers for the payment. ( collateral loans 93.4V). 11.559 and 95I2 respective1.-- , company carried throughout the year, none appeared which the wiineaa mid were for teie. In the annual report on December 31. graphic news dispatches, hut lis could Thia waa explained hy the wit ness, not deacrlbe the dlspatche. who said that, all collateral Ioann were of Mr. flnilth stated that upward transferred on the last day of tbe year 911.01)0 had been eapeuded hy thn Mil to Vermily A Company, the bankers, j Life Insurance company aince iho under aa agreement, and were hought insurance Inreatigstlon hegan for St. Petarsburg Involved In Strike. in January. Thia was don ie patch reporting the proceeding, and Bt. Petersburg. Oct. 24. At ilie avoid the horde or application for mil . when the hill ware all In ihcr ! meeting or l.dflu railway mra held In loans from the Well street dltrlcl. would probably amount to 914.000 . the university tonight, U was decided Mr. Hrgeman did not rnroursge the witness had been connect ad wit1! tn declare a strike oa railroads oper- call loan business boraux il entailed Ibis department of th Matual Ufa ating with Si. Petersburg, beginning keeping's ticker in hi office and he company about on month. tomorrow. It also was decided u scud would not have one there. He further Previous lo that hia duties were vs deputations to Prince llilkoff. minis- did not earn to have hlx company tied. ter of railway, and Count Witts, and known as a loaning company. Tbe It aeema to he your general duty a a low Interest aa j attend to all alarms and ascertain tbo present to them addresses demanding large loan at per cent, especially tbe one to j causa thereof." said Senator political refurma. included among iheni McCall of the New York j strong. the convocation of a constituent as"Yea. and find all th blackmailers, sembly elected by direct nnlvereal Life were taken up and Mr. liegeman Tbe meeting remained :n poke strongly of his friendship for j i )k an awful Job, too, replied Mr suffrage. session until the return of the deputa- McCall, who. he Mid. wa closer than Smith. tion. the time being occupied by fur- any other man to him in the insurance ' Mr. Bmith said thrr ware sixty ther discussions of the situation and busine . outside of hi Immediate an- - three insurance newepspera. and that rendered i tbe delivery of speeches of tbe most aud lex. Mr. McCall ha Mutual Life Insurance compear revolutionary character, all of which him valuable service thai wax of bene- - was represented in all of them were loudly applauded. Those present fit. io the company, and he "1 this matter of paving for the included a large number of students. thought the rnmpnny could afford and insertion of new i'ems a new deThe deputation returned toward mid- would have been Justified in paying parture of the Mutual IJfe wiUitn the night wlihout seeing Prince Hllkoff. Mr. McCall a few hundred dollars last-- six weeks?" asked Mr. Hughe. x; it may have been dona They found Count WlUe, who rerelred which the loxns amounted io. The Wall, them, hut he inslsied that the Inter- name waa true, lie aaid, of Kllaa B. sometimes, but I have br'-- only at 19 view must be of a private character, Dutclier. a direcior of the company, j about a month. he. as president of the committee of who also carried large loans with the ! Witness Mid that some of the at low interest. j had refused to publish tbe din- ministers, having no right to accept an Charles J. Bmith, who said he wa a; plirhe without marking them ae an address. He said, however, he had no agent in lb employ of the Mu- advertisement. objection to th publication of the pres Life Insurance company, i 'Mill'd He pointed out that the tual conversation. Walter B. Sullivan followed Mr. address contained many demands that bis duties were to counter-- ; gmfh. He -- aid he had charge of the which would not be realised in any act the Injury done to the Mu- magazine for the Mutual Life. He country, and also many which were tual Life Inxuranre company by the knew nothing of ibe vouchers for ail- worthy of attention. He aaid that a publication of news stories: He aaid vertislng signed by John E. Ashe, (xmatituent assembly was quite impos- his salary j ftljiun and that lie paid James K. Craig or Edgar VV. Rogers. sible. and contend'd that the suffrage 91 a line for dispaicbea sent by the Tel- He said 444,173 was paid by The Life for msgasine and newspaper and other political demands had noth- egraphic News Bureau. He showed a clipping from the Wilmington, (Del.i advertising last year, of which 9&'e ing to do with the request of the railroad. The count promised that lib- ,Vws of a dispatch which be bad sent 000 was expended in insurance papers. out which he said cost the Mutual ' Mr. Sullivan said th dispatches sent erty of meeting and of theand press Mid Life Insurtiace company 95.0(H) to dis- out by Mr. Bmith were sent out large-- ! would be promptly granted s. lhat tbe continued application of mar- seminata. D dealt with the testimony ly at the request of the papers The sum nf 91.114 was ex-- ( tial law to the railroads was due to a of Frederick Cromwell, the treasurer in 1304 for these relesrspblc misunderstanding and would be rem- of the Mutual Ufe. h'fnre the committee. Mr. Sullivan said that tha notices. edied. He darlsred that he was frienda shown clippings from tbe j coupons dipped from macazine hy ly to demands for liberty and promised Hf.Smii Paul Pioneer Press, Boston Herald, applicants for information about. inur to confer wltb Prince llilkoff as to the i Mr-iibeet manna of dealing with the ques- Toledo Blade. Buffalo Courier, Klor-- nre. a question that President Times Union and Atlanta Const!- Curdy could po answer, were -- en' tn tion. At the same time be advised the deputation to end the strike and tullon, and he aaid that ha believed m manager in whose terrl'ory they tha de- they were all paid for at. the rate of originated. He present'd a statement then to peaceably formula' 91 a line. Thia payment, wa made to showing the burin' done in this mail mands of tha men. order department, which ehowed that Having listened to the report the th Telegraphic New Bureau. Some of tbraa despatches dealt with of 2.174 coupon received tn 1901. 223 meeting derided to pos'pone action until the deputation bad an interview the testimony of President Richard A. were turned over to C. H. Raymond McCurdy before the iavttrigatlng com- A Company, tlic Metropolitan district with Prince Hilkoff. mittee. Smith aaid that President agcnia. Witness said that the Mutual about 25 magasinea for adevidence made a favsrable im- Life Washington. Oct. 24. The secretary on him and that he sent th vertising pur)oe anil the cost for adpression from haa withdrawn interior of tbe waa 25.000 acre of land in the MJI'f d patch out without taking rounwl vertising ia the last two year lld not know that lie wiib anybody, i land dimrlct on Mont.) amuini filv J hr paurw priming time (C)intlnned nn Pag" Two.) . of the Kxalaska I iuI dla-ha- rk J iht : Ann-Pre-ldc- news-compa- pa-w- i Mu-!iii- al ; them-'selve- 11 la I ; 'a u-- rd on-tr- y Irrigation pmer I r. z" J |