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Show u1 Ogden MP Mutca going shined. --n liaa naming Oon-- forget this. t J51a auntrr gn forecast U U II It the Examiner aa a paper eherlatioa in the whole Utah Weather a ta ,aek Prcinct (RECEIVES FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES) VOL. DL NO. 89 OGDEN UTAH. CITY, FRIDAY MARCH MORMNG, to quit work however, that the on Monday will meet with a practically unanimous response. Prepared to Strike. Scranton. Pa, Marh 9. The announcement of a auHputfjoii of mining In the anthrachte fluid was not. wlbolly unexpected Viv. The companies have takrn It for granted that there would tie a alike and preparations wert made aoordlngly. Stork yards have bet-- tidlt. guards have been hired to promn property, and all of the minor official; firemen and office ejerka, have hew asked to sign an agreement to helj protect the company property. All he companies, it is understood, will rake an effort to operate all the vashrie and some m the collieries. . Prepared tar. Strike. ' Pittsburg. Pa.. Marh 9. When the newi of the dlaagreeiont between ibe bitumlnoua operator, and miners reached this city might several opn erators wbe had poefiitely declared their opinion on the probable outcome of the eonfrvnre, freely expressed their satisfaction. Fines ihe January meeting he operator in this district have mate active preparations for a snapensiai. if strike i finally declared, it h inserted here so far aa western I'enmylvania and Ohio are concerned, it wll be won by the mlnera after a auipmaion of probably thirty days. They aaae their opinion on the fact that ihe lake shipping season will open within the coming mouth and in erder to held their trade in the northwester market st the operators will be fiTord to concede the ram demanded By that time, it la figured price will have advanced to a profitable point snd operators rsn afford to pay a higher rate for mining. 30, Fair Friday; PRICE 1906. Saturday showers. FIVE CENTS er WILL WORK MINES. . - Could Not Agrct on Increase of Wages. Philadelphia, March 29. Offl- rials of the anthracite coal com- panics controlled by the Pennayl- vanla and Reading railroad an- ntfhnced today that they intend to operate their ooHleriea as usual next week, notwithstanding that the award of the anthracite strike commission expires on Saturday. Reports from the coal fields show that the other large companies and the Independent operator also in- tend to continue work pending a settlement of the differences be- tween the mine owners and their The mining companies emplpyes. are still rushing coal to the stor- age points convenient to Philadel- phis and New York, and are also jiuletly making preparations in and about the mines for a possible strike. ANTHRACITE Men Will Not Go to Work Monday Morning. not anticipated or foreseen Intervenes MITCHELL SUGGESTS for peace. The final vote In tho conference in ANOTHER CONFERERENCE the central competitive field, on which QUIT WORK SATURDAY the other districts base their settlement, was upon a motion offered by President Mitchell toadopt the wage be scale,of 1908, which would have been an increase in wages of 5.55 per cent. The operators of Illinois, Indiana and Can Ohio voted ngalnat the proposition, ' which defeated It and the disruption of the conference followed. Operators of western Pennsylvania and the mlnera of the western slates voted for It. Indianapolis, Ind.. March 29. The Tho Robbini Proposition, hdlinapolis. Ind., March 29. The anthracite mlnera acale committee toJoint meeting of the bitumlnoua coal F. I Robbins and other operators night Issued tn order for a total susoperators and minora at the central of he representing about one-thirof mining In three anthracite competitive district, oompoaed of weat-coal production of western Pennsyl- pension Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and vania, Ohio, Indiana and IlllnoU, of- districts beginning Monday morning, 2. The committee otlfled Presit, llttnota, and of tho aonthweaiern fered to pay. the advance and urged April compoaed of Miaaourl, Kansas, the mlnera to accept thia advance and dent Baer (hat the miners' scale commit tea will meet operators scale Tnu, Arkanaaa, Oklahoma and continue to work In their mines, even committee In New the York Tuesday at 19 Territory, reached a final tho other mines in the four a. m. At the close of the though meeting of ifrtement today on the ge arale to atnte should be Idle. the committee tonight President H Into affect at the expiration of the The convention of miners tomorrow Mitchell of the United Mine Workers on April 1, and the print arale will take action upon this situation to timed the following statement: of the central dlatrict adj- decide whether to permit thia or der Th committee .appointed by the ourned tine die, while the Joint, acale maud that all miners auspend work Bhamokln convention, December 14, committee of the Muthweeters dlaadvance.. until have all been the paid met tonight end had under consideratrict decided to report a disagreement ' Advanca Rfuaad. tion the letter signed by Mr. Baer, to the Joint conference of that district tomorrow. It lo expected that the confmlnera' convention dated March 20, and wired him the A of session the erence will a once adjourn sine die following; today formally endorsed the demand without an agreement Cenferenee Tuesday. for the 1903 scale, and the miners cast Will Quit Work Saturday, their final vote In Joint conference for to you a meeting of "If agreeable thia demand na their ultimatum. The the Joint will be held The action of the two conference adOhio opera tori Illinois, Indiana and In New York at 10 o'clock, Tuesday, will directly cause the auapenaion from hered to their position not to pay any April 3, for the purpose of considering work after Saturday of 178.000 miners the wage scale In the anthracite field. ulna some unforeseen submission of advance. The debate today was marked by The committee having the matter the differences to arbitration should infeeling. One of the dra- In charge instructed the anthracite miterna and indirectly will affect 206,-- considerable matic events was a dispute between ners, except the men necessary to run more mlnera, not including its on 150.000 miners In the ffnthra-clt- e President Mitchell of the mlnera and the pumps and preserve the properties, Clarence Parker, president of the Mad- to suspend work on Monday morning, field, who were tonight ordered to ison Coal company, which terminated April 2. pending further instruction wpeod work Monday. after a misunderstanding had been ex- from the committee appointed by the A notional convention of the mlnera plained by A. L. Ryan, secretary of the Bhamokln convention. 10 be held tomorrow to decide wheth- Illinois miners' organisation. er miner will he allowed to The entire miners' committee will the sign Mr. Mitchell discussed at length the meet la New York at 8 o'clock Tuesdnnre scale demanded and today refrom evlla railroad resulting fund by all opera loro with a few ex- alleged day night to hear the report of the Joint of coal mines. ception, and go to work where the ownership to of the One the earnest operpleas JOHN MITCHELL, tranee I offered. Operators employ-- I (Signed) ators to pay the advance In wages Chairman." 25.000 miner in the central comD. was C. made gen' asked Thomas, by petitive field have openly offered to The coal operators of Illinois, IncomNew of eral the manager England My the advance the Joint confdiana, Ohio and those of western Pennpany, who urged that even a loss of sylvania who have opposed In the Joint erence sessions. during standfrom business a wai better The wage scales of all conference the payment of any inmlnera, both profit than n strike. athradte and bitumlnoua, will crease In wages to the mlnera, met e point Saturday, except those in Tennea- tonight at the Clsypool hotel, and at Against Railroad Ownership. ad Alabama, where the acale will a lata hour made-publi- c the following railroad his argument agnlnnt During in resolutions, which were adopted In exeaplr September. One national offmines, .President ecutive less!on: icial of the United Mine Worker said ownership of coal Mitchell said: tonight: 1 desire to take up for consideration Where, .. The coal operators 184,500 Miners Affected. not personally, but officially, what 1 beand representatives of the mlnera of the. states of Illinois, Indiana, It Is a foregone conclusion that all lieve Is a subject pertinent to the do-- ' Ohio and western Pennsylvania this great question the ? miners whose scales expire Bntnr-11- 1 termination ofbetween have met in Indianapolis at the tho coal compacease work until officially notl-- relationship a railroads. It la suggestion of the president of the by the nation and dlatrict officers nies andto certain mo and la matterless to the United States for the purpose of t new contract arrangementa have ef America whether Mr. Parker endeavordin to agree on a scale an made people their acale. governing Is president of the Madison Coal comof wages nd mining conditions for The bitumlnoua miner, affected, a period beginning April 1, 1906, and Indirectly, by the disruption pany and the purchasing agent of the or and the parties having been un- the conference number 884,500, dls-5- ? Illinois Central railway company, whether some other man rosy hold able to reach aa agreement and follows : Pennsylvania, these dual positions. But it is Importhave adjourned sine die, be It Virgin-Vlrlnl. Macjland. 8,000; West "Resolved, That we, the coal ant to the people Involved what that 15,000; Ohio, operator of the states of Illinois, relationship is. Indiana, 15,000; Illinois, i. f Indiana, Ohio and western Penn- Blames Railroads, A4M0: Michigan. 3,600; aylvanla, representing 80 per cent Jentncky, 4.000, and the southwestern "Mr. Winder stated yesterday that of the tonnage of the territory in-40,0000. Of these 120,000 hre stock of the Sunday Creek Coal volved, who have felt, and still crnled. All districts have in the the feel, unable, to pay any advance JWK baaed their settlements on the company wma owned by the Hocking .If the in wages at this time, do hereby "mu in the central competltivqjleld. Valley Railroad company, and stock of the Sunday Creek Coal compropose that the president of the In Other Districts. United States appoint g commi- pany Is owned by the Hocking Valley Tba railroad company, (hen It means that slon to investigate al matters Jn he other jintrirt, which. In the Judgment of the com- fo low dlatrict has they may show a loss of profits or o.w": T commission, have an Important bear--. liTf iifa ,ed 11,0 c,ion of the central show small earning la their coal before signing. Its statement hue pany and still have large earning on lng upon or relation to the scale of wages which should be paid all postponed awaiting the action their railroad company. F. L. Robbins said: classes of labor In and about the ""a today. T may aay the responsibility of low coal mines of the territory herein K'chlgan dlatrict la usually railInvolved, and ether condition now ld'a tlon and prices today la due more to the Imposed and Insisted upon by the cowcit of thia meeting, road ownership of coal companies than Tv. 'coal transported to their desire United Mine Workers of America, to have state Virginia convention ?l h be such commission to report to the th outcome of at prices that would not otherwisecommade, and we have to meet that president of the United State Its finding of facta, together with ita "'cky Operators association petition. recommendations. iff endeavoring to get PRINCE PAUL MAKES DENIAL Be It further ' resolved. That consent to hold their such commission have power Mo Hh a View to nego-c- e administer oath and compel at-Moscow, March 29. Prince ' Paul "iiiwut any refer- tendance of wKneasea. Th consent has not Dolgoroukoff,' tn rrply tot the rebuke tog of the marshals of the nobility, deJ. H. Winder of Ohio was chairman ' enieff clares that the charges that he la of the meeting and C. L. 8criggs of central competiUve dts- - fomenting trouble or revolution among Hlinoia was secretary. A standing tn ere absurd. His only committee of two operator from each wika r ?,T been Ten to the peasants the adds, la that he of the four states, of which J. H. Wincrime, 8a,urday prince n,Bht Peudlnff lieuicnh la a member d the cqnsttltuiional dem- der is chairman, waa appointed. The resolutions la full were teleWw fS?lbTj',frn fliatrlct has here ocratic party. !h Mlltnl district, as graphed to President Roosevelt to411 ,od,y- - i failing to REGICIDES Tft BE RETIRED. agree npoa a night Wi. t 200,000 MINERS WILL It May Held In New York on Tuesday ArUtrat ion Alone Prevent Genetal Walk Out. HELD: IN d Business lected; con-Tltrea- -- i ex-pe- mat-terle- dt-J- 63.-r!- gov-centI- xl n-,- d i.. ttwnwUtln fiintggla of Ten Days. nWged!f?reement XLat.tea "Upis ctme after a tay. "d Relation With 'Great Britain Will Be Resumed- - NEWS JN COAL FIELDS, Diplomatic ' w?e! ?t,t8 1898, Jj?8 ? ha. T Belgrade, Servla, for the SL Petersburg, March 29. The first actual elections to the Russian national parliament took place today when twelve member of the council of the empire were cboen by a eongreaa composed of representative associations tiff trade and Industry throughout European Russia. There waa no ipeech-makin'The member choeen are well known men of Affairs and of high standing in their respective communities. They are all conservatives. Former Minister of Commerce Tlmlraaeff, who presided over the eongreaa, waa unanimously elected as one of the delegates to the council of the empire, and he undoubtedly I demined to be the leader .of the liberals In the upper clumber The other member are M. and M. Glesmer, member of the fW Petersburg council of commerce and industry; M. Avadkoff, president of the Industrial coal and metal eongreaa of Kharkoff; M. Oondasoff, representing the Baku bourse committee; M. Kahnekof. Kleff bourse; M Moukhlne, director at the Volga Kora bank of Kharkoff; M. Krastovnl, president, of the Moscow bourse com mltte; M. Roehwanil of the Warsaw bourse committee; M. Kramer of tbs Riga bourse; M. Baoullne of the Niuh-- , nl Novgorod bourse; M. Kossel, a manufacturer of Cntherlnnbourg. 8t. Pet era burg. March 29. The con- h stitutional democrats have non a sweeping victory in the municipal elections in tha cities and towns of the St Petersburg dlatrict outside of the capital itself. Their ticket, with Prbfeaaor Paul M. Milukoff at its head, hd including one of the Eaaen brothers, who waa concerned In the movement to set up a provincial government last year, following the massacre of workmen In St Petersburg, completely buriod the Octoberists and other conservative parties. It is noteworthy that Professor Milukoff, althdngh the editor of a paper published hem, could not be a candidate In tha capital, as an old Plehve decree forbidding him to reside either In 8t, Petersburg or .Moscow on account of his authorship of articles of evil tendencies, still stands against him. It Is understood that the delegation took a solemn pledge to demand that the national parliament call Premier Witte and Minister of the Interior for the acts of reDnmovo to pression committed since the manifesto of October 80. am-we- r FEARS REACTIONISTS. Helsingfors. Finland. March 29. There is Increasing fear here that the reactionist of St. Petersburg are planning to provoke trouble under the guise of which they will withdraw some of the liberties granted to the Finns and recommence the policy of the RuMlficatlton of the country. Tho Socialists declare that if Bt. Petersburg defeats universal suffrage which waa promised by the emperor and If diet their demand for a la not realised, thtey will answer with a general strike. OFF ON FISHING TRIP, Prince Arthur and Party Have Gone to Lake Cowtilcan. Lucan, B. C, March 29. Prince Arat Wilkaabarre thur of Connaaught and party arriyeK Surprised. here- - today by special, train and were euent, leaders of the regicides af-f,,- ad Se- Miners and Operator March 29. The will ahlrtly through be placed on the retired list, thus parWilkesbirre. Pa.. March 29. The ana differhi! for a resumption of action of the miners' acale commlttete ing the dJustrt b,lt it e diplomaticway ,w,i KlXnnTu with Great Indiana polia in ordering a suspenlyfstiona anthra- - Britain. The most prominent will be at cni sion of work la the anthracite region 8110 ,Jri after suspend debarred from wearing the army received bare with surprise by the Saturday unless something miiur. mil nneratora. It is believed. tlcli 1 Men Uppr House - cf-n- ws MYSTERY Ten Suspects Have British South Afric- Will Be Ten Days Been Arrested at Before Traffic is an Colonies Resumed Aroused. Duluth, Mich. i ARE ALL THEY MINISTRY FOREICNRS HAS RESIGNED THIRTY MILES OF TRACK OUT' Tvo of the Men Ad- The New Government Trains Are Moving Now Facing on Santa Fe and ult They Were in a Crisis Minneapolis So&them Pacific Duluh. Minn., March 59. Instead of clearing the mystery of the murder of six Bukariana lu Minneapolis dwelling. thq arrant in thia rtiy toda yof ten person! on suspicion his only deepened Ihe mysiery confront in the police. It was believed thai thdae now in custody here were in some way connected with the crime. This suspicion waa confirmed in a way during the later developments in the rase tonight, when it was learned by ihe police that six hunting knives were sold by the Kelly Hardware company of this city to foreigners one 'day last week. London, March 30. Th new governIas Angeles, March 9. With (ha ment la finding continual trouble In Ita exception of (he Bolt Lake mad, th Indealings with Bomb Africa. By railroad situation la oouthern Callfom tervening to delay the esecatkm of ala la practically normal again. Contwelve native convicted of having ditions on (he Clark road, however, been concerned la tho ambush and are fully aa bad aa previous report a murder of loilce Inspector Hunt, in have indicated. It wao given out from the recent native rising In NauL which Ihe office of Second Vice Pres Id eat haa been attributed. to ihe Ethiopian Clark of that road that no trains would movement, the imperial authorlUe be disrated through between Bolt Uka have evoked aa admittedly grave and and Loa Angeles with In ten days, and delicate crii which. will require the probably not befora (wo weeks. most careful handling. Dispatches from Thirty Milas ef Track Domagod. tho Bouth African colonic show that Between twenty and thirty mflea o2 tho cofooLts are boding, wjth Indigna- track Is badly damaged. Trains from tion and railing meetings to protest this end are being operated na far ad Knives Bought in Duluth. against a procedure which they regard Vegaa, and from th Balt Lake An emplore of the company left to- aa being calculated to endanger the end as far ax CaMeate. Hundreds at night for Minneapolis for the purpose safety of the whole white population. men, under the personal charge of of Identifying the hunting knives found General Manager Wei la. un engaged In In rhe house abere the crime was comFeeling Running High. replacing th ruined (rack nod roadbed. mitted. Thia is regarded by the Duhaa been added (6 thq fir ap- No effort is being mad by th conn FjcI one aa most of the luth police import- parently by the unjustified importation pany (o hand! through hualaoH, ant dues that haa yet been discovered of coolies. While It waa said that it was Impoa , w illon the result, and much depend are load In aibls to accurately estimate the dams The conservative as it i known and admitted by Boku-tof- denunciation of the papers acage done to the Balt Lake road by the government's (he spokesman of the suspects, tion. la justification of the govern- floods, there was no doubt that th that he and several of his countrymen ment's unuknal course, it is pointed out financial loos to th eompsnyraroald be passed through the city last weak on that two natives already have been vary large. their way from Albion, where they executed for the same crime; that the Southern Pacific Open. had been employed during the winter, colony la under marital law, and that The Southern Paclfio today repojta for Minneapolis. Imperial troops have been invoked to its line open and nil trains moving. nsalat In suppressing the rising. The The train from (ho north ew'the Ban Do Net Evade Question. liberal contend, that Lord Elgla Joaquin valley division, which have The chief of police says the suspects had .fullpapers constitutional, right to exer-cis- been delayed by landslides, ere floating In no way attempted (o evade tha poveto and assume that b .will in tbta forenoon, and tho line In now ' a lice, and Boknloff promptly picked out bq able to give satisfactory reason for clear alt the way (trough, say the offthe Inen who came from Minneapolis his icii 1. ' oourse. a Ith him on Monday. Boknloff aars he conditions Ths Bants Fe report In Parliament. left the Albion camp Tuesday of last Its Baa Diego branch, aatlafectory. When he arweek for Minneapolis. London, March 30. At the adjourn- which has been th womb effected, is rived, he aay. the six victims were In ment of parliament at midnight ques- open today and trains art running on the house that proved their tomb. They tions were in both houses on the schedule time. were with him at Albion, but he de- Natal crisis.put In (ho house of lords, clares he left that station two days Lord Elgin, ihe colonial secretary, reahead of the remaining members of the plying to Lord lanadowne, confirmed party and never saw them again until the auapenaion of osecutlona, but said he met them In Minneapolis. For three bo had no further information to imdays then, sixteen of the Bulgarians, part. He added that there was no poswere together sible Intention of Interfering with the Including the victims, Jn the house where the crime wa com- self government, of the cotony, but that mitted. Ihe execution of twelve men under sentence by a court martial wa a aerioua Mm Taken to Minneapolis. Mary Wallace ef Denver Die ef matter. Her Injuriaa He sdVa that the reason the victims In the house of commons, replying ' remained behind when the rest of the In Mr. conservative, party went north was that they were Winston Churahlll. under colonial secWashington, Match 29 Mrs. Mary assigned to lighter railawy section retary. said It waa lord Elgin end not C. Wallace of Denver was fatally inwork at. Balem, N. D., and Intended himself who liad postponed the execugoing to that city at once. Petroaatja. tion a. The government had no inten- jured in the public elevator in the m-ti-e wing of Sie capital today by atone of the suapecta, and a cousin of tion of standing belwern (be prisoners one of Ihe murdered men, left to t and their punishment. The government tempting to I nave tha car while it wag Minneapolis tonight, where he will at- wa in full sympathy with Natal in Ita in motion, end she died before 6 o'ctock A eoroner'a inquest will bo tempt to aid the police by identifying time of and did not apprehend tonight. tomorrow. She was the victims by name, and with aneb jliat anyanalcty, aerioua or constitutional Issue held probably caught between the senate floor and other Information an will serve lo would he raised. t Ihe top of the cor and crushed about throw light on their movements from the breast An ambulance conveyed her the time they left Albion np lo the last TRIAL SET FOR SEPTEMBER. to the Casualty hospital, but in tha moment he saw them alive. Up to Ihe meantime ah was treated by Senator discovery of the duhe which Indicated soon that the hunting knives were pur Packing Corporation Will have Hair- Gnlllnger. She lost eonarlousneaa released, but first stated after being rhieed in this city last week at about ing Then, that her relatives lived la Denver. Bhs the time a large party of foreigner hod been an almost dally visitor to , were pasaing through thia rlty. the poChicago, March 29. Judge Humph- the galleries. Senator Teller gave dilice were Inclined to the theory that none of the prisoner had anything to rey today set the trial ef the packing rection- that she should receive evarf oorporatlon. whlrb were denied Im- attention. do with the crime. Mr. Wallace had been living to f munity at the hearing which ended last week, for the second Monday In Washington for about a year. TURN FOR THE WORSE. September. Early In the day a confer POLICE BEING STRENGTHENED. ence was held between Judge HumphNot Is Condition Governor Fattisons District Attorney Morrison and rey, However. Alarming, Attorney Miller, representing the pack-er- Russian Authorities Preparing for a if Outbreak. regarding the dal of the trial of Governor 29. Columbus. O.. March the corporation. Thn district, attorney Fattison'a condition took an unfavor- asked Bt. Petersburg, March 29. A special that ihe trial he immediate, and able turn tonight, but II 1 nW regard- "Mr. Miller In Septem- committee under the presidency of data favored a Issued ed alarming. The physician ber. The conference was adjourned Premier Witte haa been called for tho the following bulletin at in: 30 tonight: without action to permit the district purpoee of coordinating Ihe work of "Governor Pattison is not quite so to consult with the authori- the troops nd police in handling revowell tonight During the litter part of attorney ties In Washington. Later a hen the lutionary and agrarian outbreaks. Tho the day and evening be baa hem more conference wm Dlatrict At- police and rural guards ere being evrertleaa. Temperature normal; pulse, torney Morrlnon resumed. formal mo- erywhere strengthened. The BL Petersentered a 96; respiration, 22." tion asking for a new trial of tha im- burg police force haa bees Increased by munity plena. It was denied, as waa a a hundred officer end 1,300 men. InTIE-UIN WINNIPEG. similar motion made by Mr. Miller rela- volving an extra expense of 1404.000. tive to the corporation. The court A military train fa held in readiness Motormcn and Conductor itrika; Not then net the date for the trial. at the Nichols railroad station. a Car Running, Li f, dia-trte- In-it- THE MURDER and qarrlaged met by automobiles which conveyed the royal party to Cowirh and Cowhlcnn- - lake, fourteen miles from here, where two day will be spent in fishing. The villagers crowded at the station and royally welcomed the prince - CRUSHED BY AN ELEVATOR Akers-Dougla- a a. P a mass Winnipeg. March 29. After 11 day conmeeting leafing nearly ductors and motormcn In the employ BILL ON of the etreel railway went on atrik for thia morning. wogm higher Beetles of violence never before wit nested on (he streets of Winnipeg folBY lowed nrtompto to run the cars. A howling mob of nympsthlaera showered brinks, atones and mud on every car. Driven of drays took keen delight in blocking traffic by driving npoa ihe Washington, March 79. Senator Dil- unless accompanied by parents, and track. Wire were cut and switchesto lingham today submitted the report of strengthens the provision excluding the attempt opened, and finally polygamlais. criminal and prostitutes. run can was abandoned. Many flgbti (he committee on immigration of hf The head lax is Imposed on aliens and bill occurred between striker amending .the Immigration laws. entrance except in certain cate, and The changes made In (he present law is abolished In the case at a 'foreign are numerous. Tbe head tax on in- official coming to the United Slates INBANE. IMMORTAL" J. N. FREE coming aliens la increased from $2 to overland. The bill forther provides 85 and steamships are subject to fines that steamship companies be required United Entire la Knewn Over th of 104 for bringing to (ho United ' to furnish Mats of all outgoing alien State. State any penona prevented from en- before departure for the United States. To aid In promltlng (he distribution by reason of afflictions of mind tering Upper Sandusky, Ohio, Match 29.ad- or body. The present law provides of admitted allena among the state The Immortal J. N. Free waa for such fines only in the case of and territories desiring settlers, the division of informajudged Insane today and was sent to aliens afflicted ith lothsome or con- hill establishes tion in tbe bureau of Immigration. Inthe state hospital at. Toledo. Free la tagions disease. known all over th country as the man The bill adds to the classes of aliens formation concerning mates and terriwho has been trying to lift the veil now. excluded by law, nil Imbeciles, tories will be collected and distributed and "put on the pressure" for years feeble minded persona who are men- among admitted aliens and states and He has traveled throughout the Unit ially or physically defective, auch de- territories may maintain representaed Bute and never paid a cent for fect being of n nature which may af- tives at the various immigrant station railroad fare. He la 78 years of age fect tho Immigrant' ability to earn a for the purpose of Inducing alien to i of 88. xettie there, living; children under 11 REPORT Wmm SUBMITTED triks-breaker- W SEN. Dlllllll |