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Show lamina Th haa nor, Euii' tha four rural de-ta- i a going out of Ogden than all othar papers IW th,fc 11 "StSS DO"1 n,ree tho Ean,''r 1 P,pr .relati.- - In the who.. I" tack precinct. 2ti DL VOL. (RECEIVES FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES) NO. 60 PRICE United nor shall the agents of th Stats, dlsonarglng functions under this treaty, ha subject to th criminal Jurisdiction or proceases of the oouru of Santo Domingo except with the consent of the president of the United 8tates. A number of other chongoe were made in the treaty. While the treaty was given a place oa the aenate executive oalendar by the report made today, it will not be caHed up until after the railroad rate bill has been disposed of and even when It may go over for some time The action of the Democrats at their recent caucus has made it very doubtful whether the treaty could be ratified this session. In order to keep the committee alive in the event ratification falls it has been suggested that then might ba made a motion to reconsider the vote. If made this would he for the purpose of permitting the continuance of the present modus vlvradl under which the customs era being collected. Several other senators have suggested that the same purpose might be accomplikhed by not bringing the treaty to a vote so long n there is doubt as to its ratification. Briefly the treaty provides for the adjustment of the claims against the Dominican republic unuer the supervision of the United States. This government is to take charge of the custom house and collect the revenues, pay 45 per cent to the Dominican republic and withhold 55 per cent, the latter amount to be used to liquidate the debts of tha republic. BUcTn treaty is Number of AmendSen-at- e ments Made by Committee. treaty Wortlngton. Feb. th. United State, and the 28.--The Do-alic- u under which the to contact and dis-th- e euatoma revenue, of the lat reported to the aenate in expire atou today by Senator kumber of very important amend-m- U treaty were made by the Article I woa entirely and aa reported i. materially ihoiteaed. It read, aa follow. : United Sutea, while this treaty auch atepa to betas executed, may taka deem proper to preserve or-- i u it marfacilitate the accomplishment Ud ofibe purpo.ee thereof." Fbr more theu a year this article koe been the aubject of disputes la the Repuhl d.ns end Demo-crit- i committee. were opposed to it, but on very The Utter by enu-m- t different (rounds. action having determined to og-o-h the treaty in lta entirety, left the Republicans free to agree on some intendment satisfactory to the latter. amendTherefore In rewriting the the ment the committee eliminated authority given to the Dominican government to demand nnd receive aaaleL-ne-t from this government. The article bow provide, the United State may grant, upon it. own Initiative, mrh relief a. it desires. Further amndment of thla article la contemplated end may be drafted by Senator Ppooeer. It la .old it wll follow Inee similar to an amendment propoaed by gKietary Root and wll authorlae the United Slate, to Und troop, for the p rotMl log of Americana engaged in the collection of ce stoma. Two' Sectl.n. Added, to th emnmittee. LARGE Glass Workers Accept a Sliding Scale After Conference. Steubenville, 0., Feb. 28. The glass workers of the United States and Canada today agreed to accept a .lid Ing scale which means a reduction from 20 to 30 per cent in lamp, chimneys, reflectors and globe th. country over. This will, H Is said, enable the Independent manufacturers to fight the trust The agreement means 'that the threatened strike of 100,000 men will be averted. DEFY KANSAS LEGISLATURE. Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 28. Representatives of all the railroads of Kanos met here today and fixed n new schedule of oil freight rates in Kansas in defiance of the maximum .freight law passed by the last Kansas legislature. The schedule agreed upon today amounts to an Increase of fifty per cent of the present schedule, which has been In effect since the passage of the maximum freight rate law. The Standard. Oil company having monopoly on oil tanks, will not suffer from the new schedule off retght rates as will the independent oil men, who ere forced to ship their oil In barrel. . There v.re added to the treaty two Mttooa which are intended to more drilnit.lv protect the United Staten in ' STRIKE AVERTED. ill aBadUrTAesttnSa with the credit on at the Dominican republic. The new ct lor. .re numbered S and 10, and are a. follow.:, The purpose, of thla treaty being rnieh a. are mated in the preamble thereto, th. United States shall not in any event be held liable to the government' or people of Santo Domingo for lay mistake or omission of any of the grate or officer of the United Biatei In ewcutlng (be powers nnd authority conferred by the provision, of thin treaty, oar shall any liabilities of the Vnlted States .arise in f.vor of any creditor or cl.1ni.nt of debt or dam-gr- a against Santo Domingo, which hill he considered or dealt with. In pursuance of tbl. treaty, by the United 8titef, it agent or officers, except inch shall be assumed In stay w.rd. All derisions and awards made by the United States, it agents and Port Townsend, Wash., Feb. 28. officer, In pursuance of the provision Charles Howard, a private of the 105th of this treaty, shall be conclusively coast artillery, stationed nt Fort Flagbinding upon government nnd people ler, I under arrest awaiting the arSnnto Domingo. The United State rival of an officer from Kentncky, is not bound by this treaty to consider where he is wanted In connection with on any claim presented to the nhootlng of one Harvey Jones. It for adjustment or settlement uptll According to Howards own. story, tas government of which the claimmade today, he nnd n 'companion ant or citizen or a subject has given named Vernon Singleton were walkowjwnt that the decision thereof by ing along a railroad track In the neightas United States, its agents orroffl-- borhood of Somerset, Ky., several thereunto duly re accepted as Anal empowered shall months ago. They had occasion to and conclusive. pas ss cut where trains were In the - T JUST FOR FUN - PV,,nt state ,hU the United habit of slowing down, nnd sgroed If make be bound to n tramp happened to be ejected from any wrd or any part thereofpayment to the n freight train then nearing the cut ?1Dt'' lb money to pay the would shoot him. Jones was ARMY BILL BEFORE HOUSE. JURY DECLARES THAT Dominican People Rejoice Over the Verdict and Shower the Defendant With Congratuations Even Chambers is Recipient of Congratula- Jury Was Almost Unanimous From the Time They Entered the Jury Room Was a Parallel Case to That of Chambers tions oathing influence of a good meal. prosecution really wlrted to benefit Shortly after alx o'rloek the Jury was the tax payer they would have brought allowed to administer to it material a civil action and caused the council-me- n needs by partaking pi a luncheon in to return the mouev to the diy. one of the local oafea, under th watch- - As to th Intent of the council In nmk-feye of on officer, and they had no lug these appropriations, there could more than settled down to work when be but little question sinro thieve do the decision was reached not anuuunee their deeds in the newsAs to the effect Which the verdict paper. will have on the othtr connrllmen Judge Cunt Woe the next speaker for The above verdict woe reached at 8 who have been ihreaimed by J. D. the defense. Calling attention to Mr. are possible, Halverson's address he said it had o'clock last evening, exactly three Skeen only conjectures hours and forty-fiv- e minutes after the but one thing seemsth evident to the been limited almost entirely to legal fact that to discussion. Thla, he aaMrted. was not case wa submitted vo the Jury, and public, and that is no sooner had It been read than the brB accusation and to prove the a question of illegal fees, as the court same to he true are two separate and had already decided that point, but crowd, which had gathered in the distinct propositions. the thing for the Jury to decide was court room to witness the climax in instriirtlons court's the The to jury whether th defendant took the money this, the second couurllmanic case were substantially the tame as those corruptly. In doing this It must contried in the district court, began to In case. They were to sider the defendant 'a Chambers the shower the defendant with congratulareputation nine tions. Sympathy for Mr. Craig among the effect that If the evidence showed We do not gather grapus of thorns reasonable ibuht that the or figs of thistles." the Ogden public has been noticeable beyond a had received defendant lie explained th action in regard during the entire trial and after the In excess of hie satary compensation a fixed by te tha resoiuliaa cf December 80, 19U4, decision wa announced all seemed to wee he of ordinance guilty charging agree that It could not have been and by stating that the councilman had receiving Illegal fnea within the the salary of 20 per month staring otherwise. statute. But in pass- them in of the meaning the face from th very beginPerhaps the greatest contributing question of the defendants ning. They had learned that there cause in bringing about this verdict ing on the In all these fee faith accepting were many duties which they hod to was Mr. Craig's own testimony while good up in the case not contemplated In thla salon the witness eland. His statements of the facte broughtand perform, roust considered be these among than became doubtful, were frank and although no little efary. They was an character important factor. some of them questioning whether the fort' was made to elicit contradictions in he never sought appropriation bud boon properly mods Arguments hi Crag Case. and mnaequemly th action wag reTor an answer. wee The rammed in the scinded. trial As In the Chambers case, the ver- district Craig Afterwards, when they had court yesterday- and after and had coneuhed with investigated dict was made to hinge entirely on the bod submitted the re- th mayor suuh action was found propthe question of good faith since the re- portsprosecution of boards of end the ermliaation ceipt of the sums charged In the com- review, as evfdenca la the case, Mr, er and accordingly another resolution plaint was acknowledged by the de- Halverson began (ho argument Iw- - for the same purpnre was passed on July 26th following. fense, end such fees, according to tha t Jh . When the matter Is finally investiruling of the court, were illegal., Thla stateth with his speech Prefaclng was the point on which the defense ment It would be found that he gated. In that the proeecutlng while the said. ootincllmea might not be focused all its energies and for which ths sees waa plalatiffla behalf of the acting It produced a wide variety of evidence. to the money legally they he remarked that the vvldrnce enliUed The prosecution, on the other hand, de- state, oca Bob waa limit- were morally, and the defens could th adduced pres by pended solely on documentary evi- ed almost entirely to the recorder of submit (ho question to the Jury with dence, toe minute of tne city council, the city council. On December 28, absolute safety. from which It attempted to show that X90S, he the council passed a Judge Maglnnia, In concluding the the defendant was governed by evil resolution said, which provided that there argument for the defense, spoke of motives when he accepted remunera-- 1 should be an appropriation of 25 per the weight which reputation should tion tor special service. to each councilman for services have in rases such ee this. Reputayear The verdict In thla cqse show how on committees, election boards and tion he designated as a safeguard widely Juries sometimes differ, for the boards far the years 1902 end 1903. when an attempt Is made to besmirch Chambers case, in which was returned It had been shown that the defendant one's character. No evidence had been WM p,r" was elected ss councilman on May adduced which would counteract (hat of defendant's high standing in tbs h!1.11 11. 1908, and served a little over V.u OBP, tn fi the nnnutert details. ,,ke! en months that year. He asserted that community. Th intent to defraud the beTha argument by the attorneys yes- - there hod been a sort of progression city, be alleged, would bo entirely terday afternoon woe spirited and to (B the onum-iboldness, since at first yond what could be expected of Mr. the point, and some of th Illustrations B small appropriation was made, then Craig. No direct evidence had been used were as convincing as . unique. on July 25, 19L and Dec. 25. 19H5, produced to show that be had to accept money which ho did not Perhaps the most elaborate and hit- - th sums of $110 and 8100.50 were ting simile wee that used by Judge allowed each member. On December earn. The defendant had sworn that Henderson. He asked the Jurymen to so, 1904, a resolution had been he had no intention to defraud whe e themselves the former who rd granting to Mcb councilman $100, ha supported the me. sure for making bore' He And animal, but not one cent had Jjecn collected special appropriations and, therefore, which he supposes to he hie own, tied under the appropriation, for which he before he could be adjudged guilty it near the fire station. In plain view of accounted with the inference that a must be shown that he committed the firemen and police officers he un- - sufficient amount of nerve" had not perjury. ties the horse and leads him to bin yet been developtd. He spent Mr. Halverson, he stuted, did not Three yeare later he Is sum- - aldereble time in discussing the legal ns much au refer to the documentary moned to Appear in court for appro- - phase of the question and dwelt on the evidence which h had submitted In printing property to which he had no point that thq-cl- ty could have had no evidence and was evidently intending right And yet he had taken the ani- - right to levy taxes tor anything except to make an unfair move by bringing mxl, firmly believing he was Justified the actual costs of Improvements, con-i- n up all of these points in hla rebutdolqf so; he had not attempted to the ftes of councilman ting argument when there was no cover up the deed, but on the contrary, aequently could not legally he drawn from thla longer anjr chance for the defense to had done everything tn the very proa- - source. ' refute his statements. The circumence of the public officers. Certainly Attorney Hendemon, who opened tha" stance totliat Mr. Hnlverson depended show guilty Intent on the there would be but scanty opportunity argument for the drfenee, said that ac-t- upon convict a man for any kind of mis- - tion might property be brought against part of the councilman, he said, was demeanor on such flimsy chargee, el- - Mr. Halverson on the grounds that, that they failed to collect money on though such a state at affairs would although he had ben a public prosecu-b- e the resolution of December 30, 1904, while the facta In the case were that the exact counterpart of the clrcum- - ting officer for many years, he had In the case now under eon- - glected to demand Justice from the the same appropriation wa made dursiderstlon. It was Judge Henderson coundlmeo. The ftet that the council ing the following July and the money who, ufter the case bad been disposed was making these aiproprlatlons could allowed was collected without delay. of, stated that no man of mature But have passed uinollced since they The atrongest point brought against Judgment would recommend the prose- - were all announced In the papers, the councilman, he asserted, was that Ion cut of any case in which the clrcum- - But," gold he, these gentlemen who in December of the same year anothstances did not from the beginning give ere so iealous that the lew be upheld, er appropriation was made for 1905, promise of success much more alluring sat Idly looking as, f&r three year, thus causing two appropriations to than were offered in this Instance. didn't Hnlverson demand that overlap, but on examination It became i Why This assertion Is amply Justified by the councilman return the money e evident that this error oould easily fact that the Jury, with a single ter they had made the first appnipria-exceptiohave been made by the diy recorder was unanimous for acquittal tion? If he had, m further appropris-o- as tha resolution was oral and its the first ballot, and this exception (tons would have ben made." wording in the minutes was left to was wonover, as It appears, by stated that If the that officer. Mr.Henderson tha thej Wn, the Jury empaneled In the above entitled action, find the defendant, Win, Craig, not guilty of charging and collecting Illegal fees, os charged in the accusation ; that ths charge in the accusation has not bean sustained. (Signed) WALTER W. CRANE, Foreman." t ul i? con-hom- e. . . o IS x u 28s-Ne- r. re n L NOTES. The newspaper Vli dentes that the Dowager Queeu Margharila is going to the United States In the spring. Berlin. Secretary of the Admiralty Von Triplits. at s session yesterday of the budget committee, denied that the German port of Taing Tau, China, was to be mad a fortress of the first class. NEW STEAMSHIP SERVICE. St. Petersburg, Feb. 28. Th official Russ announces that a direct steamship eervlce between Ubau and New York will he Inaugurated at the opening of navigation. The Journal comments encouragingly upon Increasing commerce. , Rusao-Ainerlca- n t - BOLD HOLDUP. tong Beach, Feb. 28. Arthur P Wilson, a collector for the Metropolitan Life Insurance company of Long Beach, was held up, shot and robbed of 854 by a highwayman on (he track of the Balt Lake road near Obispo In r brood daylight Wilson waa not aert-ouslj- hurt, af-th- n, n SCHOONER'S CREW RESCUED. Man on the Wrcdcad Grant Frexsn Is Death, Nearly three-mo- st e( ochooner TO PRESERVE Riot and Race War Continues at Springfield, O Springfield. Fb. 21. Th riot ant rac war begun her last night are suit of tha shooting of M. M. Dsvta a railroad nun by Ladd and Dean, cob orrd, was continued tonight, the eight companies of troop called out to am slot tho local officials la preserving order not being able to prevent tho destruction of two hona and tha per tiol destruction of a do sen or more others tonight at Be hands of the mob. Up to midnight no caaaultioe John A. Beckerman. In collision with the Nor folk and Washington outward bound steamer In Hamptcn Roads last night, was this morning treed to Norfolk and ran aground to pretest her sinking. The New York steamer Princess Anne, which got s (round in the outer harbor after sailing from Norfolk last evening, was floated apparently Jured today and proceeded unln-gear- had occurred and the riot had musleted mainly of marching mobs which either set lira to or strand the homes of negroes. Hundreds of people were oa Ube streets and the excitement ooa Unites Intense. Brakeman Is Dying. Martin Davis, ths railroad brake man shot by fh two negroes, Dean and Ladd, (o be dying 1 lonlftit Acttlng Prosecuting Attorney toy bourne Just before midnlgbL took the dying statement of Davis, which will Its used against the accused when they coni to trial Davis la the son of a Coin m bus attorney. A eommittoe of lawyers eanaMIng of City Solicitor Tatum, former Repre-eentariCharles E. Siewart and Paul a Suloy, has been appointed to pro, ecute the cooes against the r inter. A maos meeting ha been called for to morrow night by the Commercial clubs president, N. B. Fairbanks, a brother of Fatrbanka,.to devlae means to eradicate the causes which have mod the rioting possible. : i Burning Houses, ; The boil of Rev.' John CL Curry,' a negro preacher, wee atoned, and the ' family fled terror stricken from lb The mob tine set fire to it, but tho prompt arrival of thoi military, prp-sealed lie destruction. The Borneo at Kabea Campbell end Charles FlMmore on Central avenue. were riddlad with stones nnd at this point a bey whoso noma la not known, was shnt la the leg. ' Tha miHUa baa devoted their ate tentlon to control of the larger crowds leaving the polios to look after the, smaller end of the riot Promlacuoue and random shooting has boon A feature tonight and ho added to tho general terror. Two negro women, who Jumped from the second stagy of their homes when assailed by the mob, were aerimwly hurt and were taken to a hospital va . Oklahoma City, Okie., Feb. 28. John Burrows, testifying hare In the Missouri ouster proceedings, said that white In its employ he was sent to Oil Mississippi by the Walera-Piere- e company to attend to its turpentine, rosin and vaval toras bualnes. Judge Johnson for th defense asked: Who aent you?" Th Watero-Plerc- e company and the Stands rd. Who got th goods? The same companies What was the purpose of your Many Narrow E so pea. 11:80 o'clock tonight tha mob had succeeded In burning two houses ' and bad stoned and partly demolished a doxen others, all being inhabited by negroes. The first place visited was th home of George Miller at York Up to and Harrison streets. When ths as oault began Miller ran In his ban feet and without coat or hat and escaped from Ala pursuers by going to the city hall where he found shelter with the Coal oil woa applied to. his troops. house which was soon n maw of flamra visit and was destroyed. From "To tee all the turpentine refiners Miller's thequickly mob went to the homes and buy up the product." of John Logan and Nosh Ingraham, a Where was It shipped!" double frame bouss on York street, To the Standard Oil company and and the torch was applied after the lh a law. mlll4ag lo'i How do you know shipped trflllcnp,,n,, rJ,pe bouse d was The practically the Standard OH company? were in hot purBecause P paid the freight bills for strayed. The militia suit of some of me rioters and nt it" of the Watero-Plerc- e Central avenue chased them st th J. A, Brown, company at Newkirk. Okie., tes- point of a bayonet. Even while this tified that he bad orders never to sell wee going on some of the members of any oil In Kansas, though some of the the mob who were At a oaf distance Kansas town were only eight miles from the soldiers, stoned th house distant. He also said that all of the of negroes, windows being riddled with . oil received At his station came from rocks, as they ran. the Whiting refinery for the Standard. WILL WORK ON SUNDAY, All of the oil whlrh a sold by him hod the Standard .brands on It. Bhamokin, Pa, Feb. 28. At the col T. Hathaway, for twenty-fou- r TO RECOVER MONEY. yearn manager of this division for the lleries controlled by the Pennsylvania Waters-Pierc- e company, when asked railway companw notices were posted Creditors of Defunct Concern to Sue as to relations between the Standard today announcing that hereafter, ui Chicago Broker, com- til further orders, all eoKleriea win bo company and the Waters-Piercpany, declined to answre on advice of worked full time on Sun darn Hero 28. The Judgment Feb. Chicago, after th mines have dosed at noon. Commission counsel. creditor of the Wear In In this failed city company, which 1903, asked the circuit court today to of appoint a receiver for the assets bill WILL the concern. It is charged In the MOYER that in 1919. prior to the failure, th comofficers of the Wesre Commission broker pany paid to A. J. Lichstern, of this city, 1300,005 for loose said to have been incurred in the purchase and sale of sharps of stock by the Wesre Commission company. The bill charges that no actual sale of purchase of stock were made, and Boise, Ida., Feb. 28. It has been close he had been to death. That wa that if they were made they were definitely decided that the investiga- the same bomb afterward used for made by Ldchstern from and to him- tion of the case against Moyer and killing him. The bomb was like th The court is asked to hold his associates for the murder of for- one laid for Judge Goddard In Denver, self. Lirhsteru liable for the sum of money mer Governor Steunenberg shall begin having a bottle of sulphuric acid so said to have been received by him before the grand Jury at Caldwell to- arranged that the cork would be from the officers of the commission morrow. It is not known . whether drawn by n pul ton the wire. When company. Harry - Orchard, who is said to have the successful attempt was made a made confession to his- part In the long fish line was attached to the wire, crime, win be taken before the Jury. the bomb being tied to the Inside of NEW MINISTER ARRIVES. In the statement made by Gorsrncr the gate post A pull on the line fired Gooding respecting the confession the infernal machine and accomplished Venezuelan Denies That Caatro H it was stated that the object The unsuccessful attempt mode Orchard, Plans. by Adopted Aggressive Orchard the prisoner hod told of two unsuc- was mr.de in November. former pent two weeks there in that month, Garble-ra- . cessful the to or slay attempts Sen 25. Feb. Washington. effort from the ?th to the 22d. the newly appointed charge d'af- governor. One of these was an favorA home. his to shoot him at In this arrived who faires of Venesuela. Washington. Feb. 28. In executive able opportunity did not arrive. Prior city last night, took charge of the lega- to that session la Did was bomb today the senst confirmed tho seemed It a concerning tion today. When asked the pathway taken by the governor. following nominal tens: Harry L. Pal lbs condition of affairs between France It wa arranged with a wire stretched dork. California, consul st Amoy, and Venesuela h stated that nothlag China. vicPostmasters California: D. new has developed. He denied that serous t,he path. Jhe Intended tim. however, unconsciously stepped W. Morris. Modesto. Nevada: C. A. President Castro hod any aggrewlve Aover the wire and never knew how Bocmer, Sparkt plana r Itas a e Norfolk, Va., Fej. 28. After a harrowing night on the deck of their vessel, with the life avers on shore unable to reach then, either by lifeboat or breeches buoy, tud with death staring them In the f for several hours, ochooner the crew of th Georg M. Grant, torn Brunswick, Ga., to Perth Amboy. V. J.. lumber laden, went ashore at Cspe Henry, were rescued today by the Norfolk tug Jack Twoby. which stared at once to Norfolk with the ship recked men. Con dltloiu grew worst on the Grant as the hours passed, tud just before the arrival of the Twthy It looked as though the schooarr'a crew, already half frosen from evosure. would have to take to the rigstog of the vessel to save themselves. Immediately after the rescue of the Grant crew her decks became awsih and the schooner soon sank. Her cirgo remains Intact as yet, but the coalitions on the coast one still severe and the Indications are that the vessel wll fie n total wreck. The UNABLE . odopt-imsgin- Jrturg. iot. Rome. NEWS inti-nd-e- LIBERALS i. FOREIGN l' lt DURNQVOS POWER Washington, Fab: 28. The details of th pruwialun of the army appropriation bill occupied th house throughout the day. Several pags of the measure yet remati te be considered. Throughout member of th appropriation committee, headed by Chairman Tawacy. were In eattuoveroy with Chairman Hell and members of the military committee. Bach contest was aa effort either in th direction of reducing or re wining the amounts car-riaIn the bill. In some ceres the appropriations committee wa successful and in other the military committee. Incident of the day included an effort to recognise the heroism of two of Ban Frsucisoo'a firemen who lost thvlr itvea In the recent fire on the transport Meade. Mr. Kahn of California presented oa amendment to pay their widows 15.0(H) each, and many member approved, but a point of order was fatal to the attempt. Mr. Hull retracted hi former criticism of Minister Roc kh 111 on ths question of the return of the United States share of the Boxer Indemnity. Provision for more than 800 clerks, employed in th staff and at army division headquarters, went out of the bill on a point of order by Mr. Tawney, who developed the fact that there as no authority of law for their employment. i sev-lnJni- ot "s WTER Members of Military Cemmittae and Appropriation Committee Load Debats. CRAIG IS NOT GUILTY they ejected at the designated spot, and Singleton nnd ' Howard commenced shooting, he asserts. Jones was dangerously wounded and both aasaUants flad.x Howard soon after enlisted In the army In the hope of sinking his identity. bslted States to Dotennina on Debts, Howard showed no hesitation In amendment gives to the telling of the crime, and averred that lnsted of the Domln-- a both he nnd Singleton had been drinkrepublic the right to determine ing. Neither was so much under the influence of liquor as not to know Public shall be what he was doing, however. paid. ,mendmlt provides the fotowta? Paris, Feb. 28. Suit brought by enetom receipts or other Countess Bonl De Castellan., I (formBOMB MADE IN DENVER. which shall come into and be erly Anns Could) against her husband, the for n was reached today Plumbsr Recalls Making Lead Rscep-tacitentn of the separation txlM m,,ody e acting In San Domingo. upon the docket of the first tribunal for a Man, t?.SXJVMon thereof- - ball not of the Seine, but the court adjourned ,h Jurisdiction or pro- - the ease for n Feb. 28. According to fortnight when n date Denver, 'he courts of Santo Domingo, for the hearing will be fixed. Hurry Orchard's alleged confession It was teamed here today the bomb with which flteunenberg was killed at Caldwell, Ida., December 30 In Denver. lost, was manufactured Orchard, It la said, confessed to having secured the lead receptacle In which the explosives were placed from Charles T. Roach, a plumber at 1651 UBLED BY Court place, diagonally serosa the street from a furniture store of Geo. A. Pettibone, one of the suspected men now undef arrest in Idaho. Mr. Roach said that he recalled having Feb. 28. The rose-?r- e expected sooner. lead receptacle and gave a Interior Minister The pinna of the social revolutionists made this of the man who ordered It description fcfk to!.. ,notber decided set to interfere In St. Petersburg w I" f when the action f the St broken which tallies with that of Orchard. A nrreet the of batch up by Police in dosing the central twenty-siagitators, among them being DROUGHT 18 BROKEN. democrats was Pnnripi twelve Jews uni two Germans. ' 4WJ The police have also arrested ,V ! ! man Relieved Sorieua Condiwho threw the bomb, which Rainfall Has tions In Australia. broke np the loyalist meeting upon t SchlueM-lbereiqbankment February .. ws San Francisco,' Feb. of tti He Is accused of a number of politics! . ,h pTty. of the terrible drought the breaking ,,einPt to Interfere murders. th, which for years has paralysed the Ini by ,h7l'on- - tahlch In condemned The weekly official report of , of Austrlla was brought here ny Partylitical crimes throughout the empire dustries onbT, by the steamship Ventura. today tore tuibortT0,?1' D?n,OTO- - Hhout shows that assassination, bomb throw- When the vessel left Sydney it was asI? Uve Police would harri- ing and j.-- ,. are still in full swing, sured that record breaking crops and robbery es Birr ucb ,ctlon In especially In Poland, at Odessa i plentiful pasturage would mark the taviin the in th Caucasus. The most atrocions return ef of prosperity. The lesson approaching re- was at Brest, government of whirl. by the great famine will be trailer wit,,n,,Med ubordlnate Crodno, where revolutionists locked leamod In practice by the establishment. put today ald re cer-ftfour policemen in a house, poured of storage systems to husband thel non ' national petroleum on the building and net It water supply In future lor use In dry I 4 which might ha on 1 fire. have been received from government under the of this treaty and until the jwistan ta been set apart by the duly wnt or officer of the - 8,,el to be applied td said w FIVE CENTS 1 TJ ASSOCIATES BE |