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Show MOUSING THE OGDEN. CTAH. SATURDAY EXAMIXER: Yes-- . New March 2. Nearly refuges from RuMia ar-rived here today In steerage on Minsk. March 2. Anna Ixmalloitch and Ivan Kullkboff, principal! tha In the plo. to governor, prefect and oilier high officials during a funeral at the were ves'erday con- Cathedral, denned by a miliiar) court to be banged, though their attempt had A bomb wa thrown miscarried. and four shots were Bred wihout reoult. Anna lzwallurich la tha 3, 1008. PATTERSON! FROM RUSSIA. REFUGEES a MARCH MQRNiyo, 2.0t.H aasinaie the steamsr Penn)lvaula from Hamburg. Many of them left Rus-l- a several week ago, but sere detained Hamburg for a long inspection by health author- tries before they were allowed to proceed tu the United States. SEES NEW OUR BUTCHERS The Places To Buy the LIGHT daughter of a prominent general Choicest PHILIPPINE SUGAR BILL IS DEFEATED licensing commission brokers Senators Resent Slurs Cast at Morgan by Lawyer. Tha latter Ws&htagion, March from WlUlam Melton Cron veil, to the late Secretary of 8iere Hay, under gate of Deember tih, HM, wa taken up by Senator Morgan today le the examination of Mr. Cromwell before the committee on inteiwuente canal. The period eovered by th letter when the Panama Canal company waa a eeeking a prolongation of Ita concea-oion-reon thn lechmas. Tbo let tor ferred to an lndoaure and Mr. from well repeatedly declined to atate the nature of the lueloeure la tha cor reapondenre la any manner. Extraordinary political eondMoaa la Bogota worn referred to la tha letter and Mr. Morgan naked onarornlng thin refrr care, and when tha wltaeaa declined to discuss It. the eenator naked whether the vltneea felt that be waa obliged to ooareal any actlcna that would be agalaat the latercata of the Unll-e- d Statea. 1 refuae to aaawer anrb hypotheti.aid cal and Impertinent Mr. Cromwell. "I am eompelled. by the attitude of this eommiitee, to accept yonr nnuan a) and indereat replica," aaid Mr. Mor gan. "They am no mum unuwial or Indecent than your questions, aaaorled eui-slloe- tho wltneaa. Senator Taliaferro Interruptod and demanded to know wherein tho Question naa taderont and wltneaa aaid tho Indecency waa in tbo aanamptloa anythat ho had boon employ art to do Unitthing agalaat thn Inre reala of tho ed Statea. Mr. Taliaferro then that tho wltneaa be tastiweted not ta make tnaultlng rapHen to inquiries. Pbolrmaa Millard oald be (bought tha character of the reply by witaea e wan uncalled for and Senator enggoated that the questions he coached In dlSerent longnage. "This la not the grot Umo 1 have wot lead an Inclination an tho part of the wfcnaaa to lamia hlo laterrogotor," oald Mr. Taliaferro. Tho eoHoqnoy between tho member of tho oommltteo waa brought to a clone by Mr. Morgan who oald bo entertained nn reaantmoat of Inaulta from tho wUnaas; that ha hart too murh for that. Hn ceuaaalad kin oollaague not la mneerrn themselves In hla behalf. In manning the examination, Mr. Morgan had mad the teaUmony of the eeoretary of the .Panama Canal eom-paabefore the enaal enmmlttee four yonm ag; discussing tha deelro of tho company to aurmnder tho canal project to the United Statea. Mr. Cromwell tefuaed to teatlfy on thla subject, tilting nhalter behind hla relation to tho company. An Mr. Morgan oonatnied tbo of thin secretary. Mr. Lampm, hn aaid thn company planned to take thn cnnnl prof oat ant of tho Republic of Columbia and American tee It Mr. Croat wwll refneed to aaawer any qaeatlon on tha subject. but Mr. Morgan punned thn Inquiry, nahlug the wltneaa if ha had not hlmaelf drawn the plan. Again tho aenator aaked Mr. Cromwell If a had not ahown thla plan to a number of paraona. Mr.a CromwaH anld ha had outlined n plan to tho river and harbor commlttan of thn hoaae, but hn refused to state the difference between thn nchnmn and that submitted to tho house eommltten. Mr. Taliaferro appealed to the chair man to know whether the wltaeaa could refer to the plan offered to the house committee and then refuae to explain tu piwdelena on the ground that professional secrete ware Involved. Mr. Cromwell aaid tho argument would apeak for Itaelf. Mr. Taliaferro aaid that the wltaeae manner in should not dictate the which the committee get its Informadlaeualon tion. After considerable the witness outlined the homo committee plan briefly. It waa determined that the question of compelling the wltaeaa to answer should he consider ed by the committee at an eaecutlva aeaalon. Throughout the examination of Mr. Cromwell, Mr. Morgan kept clone to tha civil war In Columbia whlrh was Mo forerunner of the organisation of the Panama republic. He appeared to he trying ta connect Mr. Cromwell iwlth the International disturbances of this South American republic.- Mr. Klttredge'a oppositions disturbed thla examination. At 11 o'clock n recce wan taken until 2 p. m. to hear J. K. Market of Omaha. His Protest Against Railroad Mastery in This Country. March 1 Secretary Washington, Shaw appeared before the house committee pi ways and mronn yesterday in support of the Payne Mil for tho licensing of commission brokers, lie urged that the lice being of such broken would tend to keep "ah raters'' out of ihs business. 11a also advocated tbs appointment of n solicitor of Washington, March 2. The senate customs to represent the department lla session today by agreeing began before tbe Maud of appraisers. to the conference report on the Joint Marlun Devries and other member of tho board of general appraisers also rvsolution extending the tribal governadtoraled tbe necessity of licensing ment of tho Indian tribes in India brokers. Secretary Shaw also urged Territory. As agreed upon, the resotkat tho pay of special apun'ta em- lution read: ployed in tbe riiatoms service bo In"That the tribal existence ond the creased to $10 a day. that better men preeeni tribal government of the underout b to ferret obtained may UlKHHaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek valuations. and Seminole tribes of aatinna of InHo said the government loses front dians in the Indian Territory are hereto ftO.diM.iNii) a year n by continued In full force and effect $ I O.lKHt.iMH) nndervaluarlon frauds. for all purposes under exlotlng lew. until all properties of such tribes or TENOR. FAMOUS WELSH tha proceeds thereof shall be distributed among the individual members of Hen Dariea, tbe famous Welsh ten-dsaid tribe, unless hereafter otherwill appear In concert at the Salt s' lee provided by lew." Lake Tabernacle, under the a u apt era The bill tor the settlement of the afof tho Utah Oambrlaa aoriety, on the fairs of the flve civilised tribes of In22nd. diana wa then laid before tho senate, evening of Thursday, March Thla la Mr. Davies third visit to the Mr. IjiFollette's amendment prohibitUnited States, but he has never bees ing the sale of real lands In Indian wmet of Chicago before. Reginald De Territory tn railroad companies being Korea, tbe author of Robin Hood, and the pending question. raongnisad as the must eminent of Mr. laFulIerte continued hla speech American critics, speaking of the not- in support of the proposition. He aaid ed tenor, said, "Without a doubt Ben senators had Mid to him that hi Davies la the beat lyric tenor in the amendment went too far. hut. meeting world today. Davies was horn la that contention, he Mid that tbe legisSwansea, Wales. He Is now 41 years lation to be effect iva mut be poaltlve; of age. and baa been singing ever that an attempt to do less than la proainca he was a child of flve. There la posed by hla amendment wa to give uo doubt Mil Davies will be warmly busk Instead of the kernel to people welromrd by the music loving people who were crying out for relief. of Utah, aa well, as those of adjoinHe laid especial sires upon the ne- ing stales. Tho Cambrian society will cesalty of prohibiting railroads or run excursion trains from all points stockholders from acquiring tha lands mirth sad south, as well aa from Butte, and, la support of bis contention, reMont., and Malad, Idaho. ferred to the fact that through their officers the railroad of Pennsylvania own 96 per cent of the anthracite coal t. NO TARIFF KIM-sedg- M 1$ IN SIGHT oolf-raope- y y daf-Init- , - GREAT NORTHERN Germany and U. S. Have Come to Un- In that state. He declared that, they had driven the Independent operators and independent owners out of business, Ihua rendering all the people who use anthracite dependent upon the etghL or nine corporations tor their fuel. He declared that the people must be able to assert their sovereign authority over the transportation lines and that they must ha so controlled as to protect the general public. It had been iud that If the railroad companies want the coal land they will get them regardless of what congress may do. He cuuld nut agree to that doctrine. I want" he Mid, lu pul on record the protest of one Individual against the doctrine that the railroad companies can secure the mastery of the national products of ibe country no na to Interfere with their being fhir and transporters uf the prods eta of the country. I want It put on record that this government of the United Ktates ia stronger than any of its creature, stronger than the nib roads In the aggregst end all the centralised power of the corporation represented by unlawful rorpomtiona and trusts. I would write It tn the statutes that the railroad companies moat he common carrier and nothing else, and write U so as to make It affective. Mr. Clapp Mid In reply to Mr. Ijs Follette that the Indian committee lied hesitated to accept the amendment because It dealt with the regulation of tbe rellroade which Is provided for In Mother bill before the senate. Mr. Stone announced hi concurrence in the vlewe of Mr. Clapp but expressed the opinion that there should not only be no present sale of the present coal hind, but further leases also should be prohibited. Mr. Teller doubted the right of congress to My that railroad stockholders shall not the owners of ooal lands. He believed in restricting the railroads but would proceed In any op dnrly and legal way and not In a way that would create gmter evil than It would eliminate. Messrs. Mallory, Patterson and s also found legal difficulties in accepting thr prohibition put upon the holders of stock In railroad companies, although professing sympathy with the purpose of the resolution. Mr. Newlands charged that the great corporation practically oonirul all the coal lands In Pennsylvania and West Virginia and said thev were rapidly extending their operations In Colorado. Utah. New Mexico and other statea and territorls. Mr. Teller took exception tv some of his statements, declaring that there was no munopoly of the coal lands la (Vlnrsdn and he defended the right or the people of the west lo rant ml rrMiuicea. lie criticised the too great extension of the forest refer-vstiosystem and said It wa done in pursuance of "The insane notion that the government must hold the lands for the unborn. even-hande- d derstanding. Washington. March I. Correspon-deac- o between tbo slate department and representatives of Germany ret, tlv to an agreement or arrangement with reference to tariff relations between the United (baton and Oermnny, was laid before tbe bouse yesterday by Mr. Payne of New Yorfc. In n report of the Shepard resolution calling for Inf urination. Mr. Payne addressed n letter to Secretary Moot asking what action the house oonuuitien on ways and means should take on the iVsoliition. Mr. Root replied that there was no agreement with Oorpiany other than la contained In tho correspondence between nimarlf and the Gorman ambassador. This he submitted to Mr. Puyae, who tnrluded It In a report to the house that the Shepard resolution be laid on the iaMa aa Its purpose wus accomplished, Thla suggestion waa acted upon. letter from Secretary Rout to Speck Von Sternberg, dated February lth, gives a complete review of thn demand of Germany for changes in American tariff regulation and lha concessions the United States treasury department la witling A Baron to make. In response to this letter Baron Sternberg wrote a note stating that hla government fnlly realised the the American government had in modifying Its laws and was tiling to grant reduced dutice to the United Statea until June Sth. 1907. Secretary Root replied that the President would immediately issue the necessary proclamation, assuring to Germany the reduced duties of section I of the IMngley act. and he raid further: 'I am sure that there could not he more sincere and kindly purimae or mure reasons hie and view than have aeluated the representatives of both countries In the treatment of this subject." open-minde- d ber-om- e New-land- n PURCHASE. LOWENTHAL "I Buffered DEAD. Washington, March 2 By n vote of to 5 the senate committee on Philippines today defeated tbe Payne bill, which had passed the house by n vote of 256 lo 71. The action of the committee had bees foreshadowed for nearly a wsek, although the enact vote had not been known. Tbe senators voting for the bill were: Lodge. Beveridge, Long. Car mack and MeCreary. Tha negative vole were: Hale, Burrows. Dirk, Nixon. Brandegee. I n, Dubois end Stone. After this decisive action bed been taken. Mr. McCreary moved that the bill be reported to ibe senate adversely la order te give the senate a chance to conaider k. Mr. Brandegee move'd to table the moth in and this was considered by n vote of 7 to 6, Mr. Nixon voting with the minority, on this proposition. Thn action effectually disposes of the measure unlese the ch terms! should appeal to the eenaie by reeolution. After Mr. Brandegre'a propoeal that the bill should ba tabled, Mr. Lodge, the rhairmaa, addressed the committee. He aaid the rouroe proponed was unusual and that there could be no good purpose monipllhed In thus preventing the- senate from reviewing the action of the eommiitee if it dA-- s fl d. The opponents of the bill made Chicago Reformer Declares in Favor of of Socialism. Chicago. March 2. Commissioner of Public Works Joa. MedtU Patteraun has tendered his resignation to Mayor Dunne. The resignation wa amt by Mr. Patterson to Mayor Dunne Wednesday. Nothing waa publicly known ash-ingt- TriE CENTRAL MEATS For Fine Meats - s; St one-fourt- h a DELAYED We Keep the Best Meats The Armour Meat Market BALLARD & MEATS RINCKERS BY A self-respe- London Meat Market Fresh and Salt Meats Had to be Sent and Snow Plow THE REPUTATION WHITE SEMING MACHINE CO. lf FREE TREATMENT GIVEN DAILY DR. DOWS CATARRH REMEDY catarrh, instant throat, antee goes with every bottle. If you have any doubt as to the merits of this remedy, ask us about it. d tr F. CAVE H Z U! 14 , orr Greenwell Bros. Butchers l. . The Market Affords of the resignation, howeter, until a MEAT MARKET copy mailed by Mr. Pattereoa at W was received by the City Press association here. FOR YOUR CHOICE The letter written by Patterson to as follows: Mayor Dunne In pert is "It was through s common belief in Wholesale and Retail th cause of municipal ownership of municipal utilities that I first became acquainted with you and. in thla letter of resignation, 1 desire to express publicly Just how my view on this WE HAVE THE BEIT. aubject have changed. They have not diminished. They have enlarged. I TRY US. used to believe that many of the ilia under which the nation suffers and by which it is threatened, would be POULTRY AND FISH prevented or avoided by the general IN SEASON Ball 171-Ind. 246 Inauguration of public ownership of Phene Ind. 19a Bell S9-Phenes But utilities. my experience public in the department of public works has 2321 Washington Avenue no reply. 355 Twenty-Fourt- h me that this policy would After the bill had been effectually convinced not be even of the way sufdisposed of, Mr. McCreary moved to ficient. report hie bill whleb provided for free Mr. Patterson then rites the case of trade with the Phlllpplm-- Immediate- Great Britain and Germany. In the ly. This motion was lost, only four former country, he declares, where senators voting in the affirmative. municipal trading has been successThey were McCraary, Culberson, Car' fully developed, the problem of the unmack and Stan. le of tremendous The Payne bill provides for the re- employed In becoming where governGermany, duction of dixy on auger, tobacco and Intensity. ment ownership of railroads has been Beats them all for Fins Salaried Money will buy; no Inferior rice, imported from tbe Philippines to and municipal- ownership at handled meats 22 par rent ef the Ding ley schedules Inaugurated of utilities is paramount, the and fir absolute free trade after poorpublic are growing poorer and the rich three years, j are growing richer, with an acceleration hardly less than that ao evident in the United States. He then calls ihe attention of the FRESH AND CURED mayor to two Instances In this city where large corporations have attempted. as he says, to over-rid- e the law. Fish and Poultry In All Seasons FRESH FISH ARRIVE EVERY Tbe letter conclude aa follows: DAY. The universal ballot gives every male citlaen an equal political opporJust Phone us and we will tunity. Common ownership of all tha take care of you. Beth phones 653. means of production and distribution would give everybody an equal chance St. 331 Twenty-Fourt- h Phenes Bell 477k; Ind. 316. at music, art,' apart, study, recreation, and the respect of travel, others. I tor one cannot see why those thing should be concentrated more and more In th hands of a few. 1 believe that the ownership from A. WRIGHT, Prep. which money spring should be vested In the whole community. In other words, aa I understand It, I am a SoRelief cialist. I have hardly read a book on Game and Fish In Season. We handle nothing but Prime 6tor Soria Ham but that which I have just All meats an Beef- - Specialties: Hems made Lard and Sausage. enunciated I believe in general to be in every line. their theory. If It be their theory, I strictly fiirat-clas- a am a Socialist. Yon will find, and Used St. 616 Twenty-Fourt- h Both Phones 138. other advanced liberal and radicals, who believe as you do, will soon find, that you are merely paltering with akin-dee- p measures when you atop 2- The Cheyenne. Wyo., March northbound peeaenger train on the short of Socialism." Mayor Dunne at once wrote Mr. PatCheyenne A Northern railroad, the terson. accepting hla resignation and of A line the Colorado Wyoming Southern ay stem, whleb left Cheyenne promising to reply to hla Idler ia the at l:l a m.. yesterday, reached Iron near future. Mountain, 46 miles mrth of this city, TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. OF AN at midnight, having been delayed sixteen hours by the storm. A enow-ploTake LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine ARTICLE IB NOT and relief were .sent from this Tablets. Druggists refund money If city to the rescue of the passenger it falls to cure. G. W. GROVE'S alg MADE IN 0 train which had been' stalled by the nature Is on every box, 25c. DAY drifting enow. There were thirty passengers on the belated train. IN COLLISION. TRAINS All telegraph wine entering Cheyenne were down last night save one Lincoln. Neb, March 2. A local THE FIRST WHITE SEWING MACHINE WAS PLACED over the Burlington to Sterling, Coloand n freight Inin were ON THE MARKET IN 17fl. WE HAVE MANUFACTURrs da Linemen who wer sent nut passenger In collision on the Union Pacific railED AND SOLD OVER 1,600,000 MACHINES. OUR PRESover were the Union Pacific yesterday road near North Hatte, the engineers ENT MODEL IB THE BEST, HAVING MANY IMobliged to wait at Archer until daybeing unable to see ahead of their PROVEMENTS WHICH STAND FOR PERFECTION. break as they could not see the wires trains on account of the bliiiards. EnCALL AND EXAMINE. and polca In the storm last night. an Gann and and gineers Rapid recovery from the effects of Firemen Reynolds Brown Finn were and badly i he storm is being made today. About in9 Inches of snow fall In thia vicinity. hun and several passengers were The storm was accompanied by n high jured. wind and In soma regions the mercury CIPHER COUE FOUND IN BOISE. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, OGDEN, UTAH. dropped nearly to aero. Stock looses will be small an cattle and sheep ura la Caldwell, Ida., March 2. The grand good condition. jury today continued Its examination Into the assassination of WORST STORM OF WINTER. Frank 8teunenberg. The prisoner, nev of the state penitentiary were wit- It the detective are able to decipher preHarry Orchard, was before tbe Jury nesses before the grand Jury this af- code letters and telegrams which Denver. March I. Six end one-haall thla forenoon. When Orchard came ternoon viously were meaningless to them. on Inches of snow fell In Denver yester- from the It la stated that a cipher code book Thia cipher la aaid to throw light jury room he appeared to be day. accompanied by a high wind, mak- in good spirits. found In Orchard's trunk after his ar- the workings of the men under ing it the worst storm of the winter. Detective Swain and Warden WbK- - rest ia proving of great value, as by rest. Railroad traffic in Colorado and Wyoming delayed and telegraph wires in the storm tone were rendered USrlP. Advices from Wyoming Ray that slock suffered In that state. Heavy snow fell In toe mountains, In some places three feet on the level. assuring plenty of water for Irrigation. Rock IMtind passenger trains, which should have arrived 1:11 night, were stalled al night la snow drifts. A wrecking train was sent out thla Gives relief and will permanently cure morning by the Union Pacific. Some of its can. are tbougut to have left etc. Our guarhay fever, cold In the head, sore the rails, due to the solid packing of habitually from ron.ti-patioSioux City, Iowa, March 2. The Doan's Reguleig relieved and Union Paaaoager station here and constrengthened the bowels, so that they th snow. Chicago, March 2. Rerthould The mountain roads experienced 76 year old, died yesterday. In have hern regular ever since. A. E. necting terminals panned into possesvery little trouble. sion of the Great Northern railroad to- 170 he aa el president of the Davis, grocer. Sulphur Springs. Tex. International Mutual Trii.t company, day. The price paid waa $1,250.01)0. STORMING IN NEBRASKA. the name of which was changed in Washington. March 2 Private claim 1672 to the International hank, which hills front the committee nn claims Lincoln. Neb., March 2. DLpatchc he tilled until the bank hsh consol- had the right, or way In tile house Norfolk and other idated with ibe Continental National today. It wtu the rliulre of the com- from Alliance, SPRINGFIELD'S MILITARY CAMP in Nebank in 19. lie was president of mittee to gel 2K hills through. Each uf western and northern point the Chicago Sinai congregation for ten these hill carries a comparatively braska sy the worn storm of the win Is to be Maintained Until After has been raging for twenty-fou- r years and from 170 to 172 wa presi- small amount, the entire 2S carrying Sunday.hours. At Alliance the conditions are dent of the United Hebrew charities. bill IlS.Oiiu. growing worse sod wire facilities are 2. Springfield. Ohio, March demoralised in the western part of the Last night pamted without a rep CLIMATIC CUR B. late. Northwestern Nebraska la feel etltion of tho riotous scene of tha Ing the first real billiard of ASKS FOR 200 WITNESSES. tho two previous nights la thin Thn Influence of climatic conditions er. city. The military and police ap-in the cure of consumption I very parently have the situation well in Chicago. March 2. The name much overdrawn. The poor patient, hand and, with the exception of BLIZZARD IN KANSAS, of 2id wit new for l he govern- and the rirh patient, too. can d much two incipient Urea early last even- ntont were demanded bv Attorney better at horns by proper attention lo Kan-log. no Incident occurred to din-Miller who food digestion, and t'tty. Mo., March 2. A seacting for the pack- regular use of lurb the peace. It was announced vere Mizxard rage! today in western cr tn the trial of the Immunity Germsn Syrup. hYee cxpRtoration In this morning that the troop will Kansas, extendug Bom Ellis, Kan., to was resumed tho morning Is mode renafn by Gerpies when the not be withdrawn until after sun- a point twenty miles west of Kansas man Syrup, ao Is a good nlght'a rest today. day.A City, Inin Colorado. the and somewhat excited and tha absence of thrt weakening Although long Brakeman Doris la mill alive al- weather was not wry cold, a strong followed, .ludg Humph- cough and debilitating night sweat. argument though bis death la looked for at wind drifted tha snow and played hav-o- e Rest lea nights and tna exhaustion due the government rey ruling tha a to coughing, the ony tnemsnt. with telegraph and telephone wires. ahnulrt give tho name. and greater, danger Jacob Korh was arrest No serious delay to railway traffic waa wa announced, dread of the consumptive can be preWhen early the ruling today tor assault on Private Ar- vented or stopped by taking German DUtrirt Attorney Morrison said: reported, however. : sold last night. Koch was later such Information no and have We liberally Syrup Should regularly. taken before Arnold who Identl- BELOW FREEZING. you be able to go to a warmer climate In onr possession." fled him aa bla assailant. you will find thn or the thousands nr then rulail Humphrey Judge Wichita, All guards were Kan, March 2. Th worst removed from - consumptives there, tho few whr, are !orm of ihe season began here at 9 that n search he mad. hv the gw htin ret tor ?J benefited and regain strength are ernment for the nanie and all o'clock thia morning The temperature those who use German Rvnip Trial ia below the freezing point and a stiff correspondence regarding them. bottles, 25c; regular s're 'be. U all wind prevails. Telegraphic communi1 druggists. a e e e cation to the southwest le Impaired. re MEATS H 14 ki DRUGGIST Cor. 23rd L Washington Ave. UailK Ogderv FREE TREATMENT GIVEN DAILY |