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Show !HE 2 EXAMINER: OGDEX, MOUXIXU SALT LAKE AND STATE NEWS UTAII, FRIDAY was done, aud the gr.'I and the mother were taken to Dr. beady's office, where she talked in the same defiant manner aa she had in the court room. Thia waa communicau-- to me by telephone by Dr. Beatty, who in a kind way tried to convinra- the girl that it was for her own good. The mother also requested the doctor to examine the t. girl and pleaded with the girl to which she refuted u do. The girl nd her mother then returned to my chamber, where the girl told Mr. Young that she would not have objected to the examination to prove her innocence had it not been for the following facta, via.. That her mother lied about her; that her sisier abused her; Hint her clothing wa unclean and that no one could make her do anything but that she was perfectly willing to au limit to aa examination under eonditiun that she thought would be congenial. Mr. Young accompanied tbe girl to the Deaeuneaa' home, where, after preparing herself, she willingly, if not anxiously, lei Dr. Beat'y make the examination, which showed a negative condition snd did dim make it impossible for the girl's story to be true. Mr. Yoting then took th girl to her home, where she stayed that night. I believe the outcome established the fset beyond question of doubt that the proceeding saved the girl from commitment to Ogden snd enabled our probation system to prove ite saving power to a mlsuuderwiuod, misguided and weak girl. Furthermore, 1 would state that It would be impoasiblr for me or anyone else to have used milder language or to have put my questions In n more delicate manner iu n case where a girl of lti waa caught In a bedroom with a mau of 42. having run nway from borne with him and hxd been known (o have been with him on previoua occasions. .1 will say that IbU case shows the necessity of having some place of detention for girls other than the city and county jail, for as our custom U to spend some days in Investigation, all cases of boys, by reason of our Morris school, where we can detain boys who defy the authority of the court, but in the case of girls we have po place where they can he put in a normal condition, and where our lady probation offirer cm befriend them and give them the saving benefit of our probation system. Respectfully subWILLIS BROWN. mitted. The investigation la practically concluded. although the commission will meet In the morning and further consider the matter and may examine other witnesses. FROM CORRESPONDENTS AND STATE EXCHANGES) dom maintalnel by passenger trains trains. Tbe and never by to San Francisco furnished by M. J. O'Mhii Says That Proparty the raiiruad tai. not be estimated ia Contains Grant Bodies of Millfigures. Cars cf supplies are still pasting Gold Ora. ing over wes'i ru lines on their nay to . All supplies for "While 1 believe the Nevada A'pino the cityf by tbe be; devastated the relij-of th city's destibrer of la the two proposition mine of charge. battled free are tute M. being of Nevada." Mato aii In the monhern has and miking ImTRACKS BLOCK WAY. ey for several years. 1 am greatly our pressed aith the possibilities of Salt laikc,' May lb A allglu cloud Silver Peak prrperty. which is being comha arisen on ihe horizon of the Westoperated by the Valeada Slitting ern Pacific. The Oregon Short Line's pany. We have succeeded in opening up tracks and those being laid by the bodies of gold ore Western Pacific meet at a point some very there, carrying values sufficiently high the Jordan river and I First South streets. The tracks of be Western Pa to make it oan of the moot attractive or. on this side and the n esters milling propositions that I know . ritir, both In the slevolnpmcni work now in prog-tea- side of the river are left with gaps about. 3iH worth of ore ia being open. These gaps are occupied by taken out dally and piled on the dump projierty claimed by the Oregon Short for futnre attention: while the matter Line. of providing milling facilities Is being - Opirtkilts tbe poser plant of the I'tah Light 4k Kailwav long considered. Y" extends across the tracks of the We are haring the ore tested in a Wssuirn Pacific leading towards the good many ways and only a fear days bridge being built by the latter road ago a car load was dispatched to Den- across the river. All obstructions such ver where it will be tried out with a aa houses, haras, fences, etc., on the with met which has dry process surveyed line of the Western Pacific success in other ramps. hern torn down and the debris reThe question of aster Is a most ser- have moved. Tbe grade is completed to the of one in nearly every portion ious Oregon Short J.lue's Y." On the westNevada, but Mr. O'Meara says the ern aide of ths obstructing T" the Valeada company owns springs' that is ready for track laying up to may be available to furnish ample sup- grade river. By the ply for a large battery of stamp. beA similar condition exists on the bringing It in from the marshes western aide of the river. From th low, by meant of powerful pump, th the Western Pacific's grade is bridge but the solved, can be easily (juration for a distance of l.nurt feet. completed a be would oi a kind of thin coat plant At this point the Oregon Short Lin maintenance. the wed as aa deal, great has a of say fence leading out However, these are filings that are now to Ihe right Buena Vista yards. On the westen being worked out by the companys ern aide of this second obstacle th glneers and until they have made their Western Pacific has completed its mill report, the quer lion of providing grads out toward Uarfleld. The confacilities will he pending. struction gangs of the Western Pacific Mr. O'Meara lias hern in Manhattan may to const rurt the grad and after looking that district over, acrossattempt the Oregon Short Line's obto convinced It is Is going thoroughly. structions. Complications are likely to make a good ramp. Th bulk of ths follow. ore there, he declared, will have to undergo mill iretunent, before going HER HAND BADLY BURNED. market. VALCADA MINE AT SILVER PEAK. eer-Tir- e Ir-i- . in-a- civ-naiv- r that during all rbat time she wa yelling and proU'ctiing sa vtruugly as In ber pow er. The officer exhibited a scratched hand which lie said the girl gave him in her efforts to resist Suiiu e Busily admitted that be was torn he mixed in tbe affair at ill, but even to wfnk a their existence until end of the present term. By a votf of If. to 6. the mle" was made operative. Its operation will ( tprive the high schools of a number of their best athletes in the spying track meets and some of their beet men ea the baseball teams. It also w ill disrupt a number of the debating teams and may put an end to th coming oratorical contest, rales the member of the different teams at once withdraw from membership in thv secret societies they will not be permitted to represent their that he as acting wider insiruciious from the court. The other witnesses called before the commission today w ere three new spa per men. Messrs. Brown. Choate anJ Young. Frobalkm Officer F. J. Lucas. Mrs. Robiusun of the Davit Deacun-it- ,' home. Mrs. Young, probation officer. They all agreed in substance as to the language used by the court and all agreed upon the force used upon tlic girl. As to the order or the court to have the girl examined there was difference of opinion, (tame stated that tbe judge got tbe consent of tbe girl's mother before he ordered the girl examined, while others stated that ths mother did not gtvs her content until after she arrived st the physician's office. Mr. Knox, ihe mother ef ths girl was not railed before the commission, although it was slated by at least one wltnfa that she denied in the presence of Judge Brown that she consented to the examination while in the court room. The statement of the Judge of the court, which was filed with the commission several day ago, was given t9 the public today and Is published herewith. To ssy that the written statement of ihe court does uot agree with the evidence of the numerous wit nr c before the commission today is putting It very mildly. In fact it would have been much better If the judge of the court bad consulted his witnesses before he eubniltied the statement, then there would not have been the very marked discrepancies between the statement and the evidence. Tbe only thought of the judge of the court, apparently. Is to try and wander away from the real Issues in the rase and make It appear that the oaly reason for the examination was to prove tbe girl's Innocence. The rule of law la that a per on Is presumed to be Into nocent. until proven guilty beyond a Ijogta, May 8. A Mrs. Munson em- reasonable doubt, and further than LOST MINE FOUND. , ployed at the Logan Steam laundry, girl should not hire been waa badly inju.v last niglil. She got that, the to prove her Innocence, but compelled A Nevada Nsgr Has Waited Twenty her haad caught between ths rollers the perYear far His Reward. of a mangle, and It waa In up to the It should have developed upon son making the charge against her. wriet before ths stopped. If there was any charge, lo prove her About 20 years ago Mill Campbell, It wa Impossible machinery to release the hand guilt. an old negro, created great rxettemeni until the rollers had Ireeq loosened The statement of the court, whiPh is in Elko by exhibiting n large boulder and lifted up, and as one roller was fabulously' rich In gold, says the Free hot the women suffered awful torture approved and signed by Dr. Shaw, the man who left the elite and could not Press. He rlalmed to have found It before being it leased. be aecnred as a witness in this Invesin the foothills near Elko, but when Her the doctors say. will never tigation, end aeveral othera as well a in company with C. H. Sprouts, Joeph be of hand, any use to her, as the fingers tho judge hlmaelf, follow In full: Hosencock. J. Alexander (all deceased) and wrist Jo4nm will always be stiff. May 5, 196. Juvenile Court and F. F. Muller, now of Lu Angeles, Professor R. W. Clark, head of the Balt Lake City. Gentlemen: he started oat to locate ths ledge department of animal Industry at the Inasmuch ss certain erroneous reports from which he claimed to have taken college, tendered hi res- have been made by certain dally pathe specimen, he could not. find It. Agrlsultural In Several days were spent In a fruitless ignation today.tho order to accept a pers of this city relative to a case of poultfoa with Agricultural college a girl which occurred in the Juvenile search when all the men became dis- of Montana, at a higher salary. court I desire to acquaint you with gusted with Campbell, thinking that Sheriff Smirk raptured two youthful the real facte of the case. he was making rainbow ehasers ont of at Greenville today. Both The Aral intimation we had of this them. During all these years, how- burglars are aona of prominent farmer. case was when an officer of a ever, Campbell has maintained that he boya entered the house of widow a court brought the girl from tbepolice took tire specimen from a ledge and .They city, few diva ago and atole $20 la rash, jail to the probation officer'! room, achas often secured assistance to look after raaaackng the premise!. They . for-hilost mine. The fact remained by her mother and the offwill hava n preliminary hearing before companied icer prove that this girl, about whom that he had a beautiful specimen and Juatice Smith this evening. an article In the had where ha could have gotten it unless The defense In ihe divorce ault of D the papersedition,quite ran away from home ns ho claimed, remained unanswered. morning W. Jamas vs. iSiixsbeth o. James, to- with a man of bad record, and was disDuring the pant few months Campbell has spent considerable time look- day t,filed n m nut tonal answer and covered tiring with him In a rooming The defendant denies house, and on complaint of the mother ing for tbe ledge and It la now believ-- , ed that it hsn been found. Yesterday n The allegations of th complaint, and the man wag arrested and waa at the number of locutions were made In the then proceeds to charge her husband time in the city Jail, and that the girl . foothills about three miles south of with all sorts of vile actions and brut- had also been In jail that night. The Elko and today aeveral men were seen, al ronduct. Sh, demands the custody officer had with him the complaint that ths one chllj born to them and sub- had lieen made by the mother before starting out with powder, fuse,, drills, of .. etc., .and they ere reported to hfve stantial alimony. , the county attorney, rharging the man shown some splendid specimens. The with a statutory offenae for the ruin STRICKEN WITH PNEUMONIA. find is reported to have been made by of her daughter. The statements nude Dan Frank and la la the neighborhood to Mr. Young, the probation officer, Coalville. May 9. Mre. Eliza where Campbell used to .cut wood. were eo positive and the mother's story Those Intereated are maintaining kina of Provo died last night. The Ii aubitantiated them, that the complaint been has here about two weeks vl was made charging the girl with being strict silence but It has been pretty her daughter, Mrs. Frank Demi a delinquent, the charge being that aha thoroughly noised about that they have ing whoa child was a very rich claim, If they have really sick. The Imracdl was Incorrigible and beyond the confound the old Campbell ledge they trol of her parents. pneumoi Wilkins was 68 yrsr which Mrs. old wl undoubtedly hare a honants Tho facia stated above were not ! she died. The body will he taken will create a big mining excitement. know n to me prior to the nsmlnelioa Provo today, whore the funeral will of the girl, which occurred after all 0614. . REFUGEE FIGURES other cases had been of, a r At its session last evening, the city re ordered and all disposed REACH THOUSANDS not witpersona council pssaed a resolution that in or nesses or interested In the case reHerald der to make the electric lighting plant quested to leave the court room, as It Salt take. May aiiaraiaiug. It would be neces- waa not our custom lo hear cases of eays: During the right days succeed- be aelf ing April 18, 116.293 refugee were car- sary to dispense with tbe sera lees of this kind in open court. Three reried by the railroads out of San Fran-- i the nlghf engineer, a saving of 860 porter remained in the court room, cisco. Of this number 71,560 were car- a month, and shut off the lights si 1 and owing to the fact that then r ried free. These numbers do not in-- , o clock Iqstcad of su all night service porter and the papers tbst they repelude the refugees who found shelter as heretofore. Judging from what is resented have been no kind and conIn Oaklind, Berkeley or Alameda. This ninj Mid on fho uMp thn cfly round siderate of the children who have come information was received In Salt Ijike may change the resolution somewhat. before me, even to the suppression of Dr. O. W. French reports smallpox name, and not Imagining for one moyesterday by Vice President and Gen- in Echo. ment that this rase would develop in eral Manager W. H. Bancroft of the Superintendent of School A. such an unprecedented manner. I did Oregon Short Line in a message from C. Slate Nelson was here . Vice President E. E. Calvin of the on a not. aak them to retire. The probation lour of Inpei-tinof our county and police officer made the statement Soul hern Pacific. This count ha been schools. While here Mr. Nelson was outlined above. The girl w called compiled carefully and Is the firm acto ssv that W. M. Roy den. our to the stand, and 1 proceeded In my curate estimate made public. The hrard N county nnn of the usual way to conduct tbis case and superintendent. greater portion of these people were most active and school men questioned the girl relative to her conhandled by the Southern Paclfle, from in the slate. duct wilh iht inan with whom she Ban Francisco. The Santa Fc and wa staying. She Immediatenumerous olhr roads hauled large INVESTIGATION OF ly defiant; Ignored the order of the . crowds from California to middle westJUDGE WILLIS BROWN. court, upbraided ber mother and ern points where they boarded trains of other systems and scattered In all charged her with rruleiy and other used imsecming language. Matdirections over the l.'nlted Slates. Commission Hears Evidenca of Hi Shameful Action. ing that she was a lsd.v snd that the When fares to eastern points from the officer. relHtiies and in fact everycoast are considered it will he seen Ball L.;r. May lO.Tne News one, wta lying thout her. and that v: that the railroads contributed hundred The intpstigmlon of the conduct of ahe would obey no order of ihe court, of thousands of dollars of service free Willis Brown. Judge of the juvenile no roramands of her mother, would go to the relief or the city. a No figures will ever be compiled on court. In ordering a girl nowhere that ahe did not want to go, taken from his court room to the office would answer no queMion that she did the money represented hy this exod-- . of a phtsfeimt to undergo a physical r.m want to tnrw-er- , and would lietcn us of souls from Ban Francisco as no of a delicate nature, was to no one who talked to her. Notwith-Mandinexamination In many ruse. tickets were concluded in Mayor Thompson's office that ahe run away from home People were loaded into sMcial trains today. The doors were thrown open to- with this nun and was staying with of ten and tnelre cars and hurried and newspaper men were admitted him. she instated with aurh vehemence way. A slip of paper was issued for day lo the examination. Several newspaper aa to her chastity that I was forced, identification, hu further than this no men who were In Ihe court room si tbe having no other alternative, to inform were kept of the distances . records the girl's esse was heard, were ihe girl that if would not the covered by unknown numbers of refu- time called witnee. a was also a num- court in rMahlishing her Innocenrc went to New York. Oth- ber of ascourt gees. Many of all the damaging atiarbes. iu the ( ers fled to New Orleans nd southern There was no difference there was hut. one way for the points, while others hurried to (owns between the practically s to the rough, court to ascertain tbe real facta, and near the Cunndisn border. While rn vulgar and obscene language used by that was to have the court, physician route no expen v or labor was spared tho judge in his examination or the make an examination If her mother by tbe railroad companies to make jonng girl, neither was there any dif- was agreeable. the passengers comfortable. Food was ference a to the amount of force uw.l The mother bring agreeable to this distributed through the trains during to get the girl from the court room to arrangement, ihe court waa adjourned between Jumps long widely separated the physician's office. to give the mother and the girl an optowns, exirs rrew and extra equipThe cxecpiion to the general portunity to visit the ph.vairian'a office ment wer pressed into servlre and line of only evidence was Officer Siainrfc. and they went mt in charge of Protrains were kepi rushing from tho de- He was evidently aslpop at the time bation Offirer Clark, accompanied by vastated city night and day. the examination was being the police officer, who volunteered to Another ltrm which has no little and. notwithatanding th fact that nil go with them, aa he had ome ' importance Is t is hauling of baggage the other witnesses stated the exact knowledge of the girl defiance ofprior ihe free. Each refugee carried a bundle used by tbe court, which can- law in a similar episode at the city of the few posse unions spared by the language not be pnt In print owing to it char- Jail. The girl left my court room, giv' qtjshe and fire. Each refugee train acter. the police officer did not hear ing no etidenre that she would offer carried hundreds of pounds of baggage anything of ihat nature at alany reaiatanee. and the only display on which If carried under the reguisr rate though he stated lo I li juvenileall, court her part aa noticed by nit-- waa aa ahe would have awe'.lrd the earnings of the commission today that he heard about was leaving the door the officer placed trips by several thousand dollars. that was said in (he court hia hand on her arm and ahe jerked Not only In carrying refugees from everything room on that occasion. The officer's saying, Don't you dare touch the city did 'he railroad show char- itsUmony did not. therefore, agree away, nie." As to what d after ahe which represents thousands. bat with the other eye witness on that left tiie court room ity, know until the supplies bulled to Ssn Francisco point. IJe was also rather mixed ax on looking out of the window Inot saw her would swell th-- grand total were regu-- - to the trouble caused by the girl and lawn in on Hn attitude of the standing rates charier. Over 700 cars of tbp resistance she pnt up. r defiance. Being opiw-any. viosupplies passed through Ogden during He at first said that he used no forcr lence whatever, and iwt wishing the the ten days succeeding tbe dlsaatrr. to take the girl from the room, hut officer lo exercise It. I immediately Whole frcighl trains attached to the Inter in his examination he admitted sent clerk on the rim out of the court fastest engines procurable and in that she hung onto the doors and re- room to tell them not to humiliate charge of effici'-n- t - crews were rushed fused to go and several time m down the girl by taking tier through the . to the city undti- a time schedule eel- - and had lo be lifted to her feet, and it recta, and to order a rarriage, which s cross-complain- lfi.-rTh- e e ld-ye- g . alt testl-mon- run-lucle- tran-pire- 1 lr Directory of the F. C. WOODS A CO. Architects. 66 A 67 Fir,t NOTORIOUS Who Posad aa J. Piarpont Morgan, and Marcus Hanna, Jr, n TRICKS OP THE OIL TRADE. 10. l ArchitaM P. A. ISAKSON Contractor and Builder. 22d at. Ball Phone 45-24- 7 298-Z- i . D. W. STONE, Contractor nd Builder. Office and 424 30th SL hop at rtsidunc. 25 6S2-K- BUILDERS ti. .,? av. Waahmgton i I . j JOHN G. ELLIS, Contractor and Buildar. All kind ef mill work. Roar UUh A Oregon Lumbar Varda, 24th St. SMITH A BLATTERT. Cornice, Tin Roofing, guttering and ganeral jobbing. 427 Twenty-thir- d Street. C.J. HUMPHRIES Buildar and Contractor. Shop and Office. 202 21st Phone 2S0-Bell. BROWN (RON A BRASS WORKS. doom, balcony, counter railing., etc. 2266 Waeh Avo. Bell Phone. Iren fencing, eidewalk JOHN T. NEWTON Contractor and Builder. Office at residence, 99 27th. Phone 175 Ind. Shop rear of Wright A Bona Co. CALVIN STUART! Contractor and builder. alteration, shop work, Repair,' and porch window screening. 2120 Royal Ave. Bell phone 973-- F.nt OF . Boll Phono Lity Phon. (&5nl, A DIRECTORY Jr, New York, May 10. Albert L. Brown, alias who McDowell, gained notoriety a lew years ago throughout the country by posing as J. Pierponr Moigan. Jr, and Mareuz A. Hanna, Jr., was on other charges yesterday when he reached this city error discharge from Ring Sing. He is wasted by the police of Detroit, Chicago, St. ixui and Astoria, Ore., on swind'icg chargee. Brown was sentenced to three in Ring Bing tn November. 1908.yean for windllng Tifthn Co., of this city, out of a diamond pin. In Hkil lie was sentenced to three years in the Jefferson City (Missouri) penitentiary for n swindle in Bt. Louis. He was taken to Jeffrraon City on a train handcuffed to a man named Francis Mathusik. Both men. rlll manacled together. Jumped from the train which was going at the rate of an miles an hour. Brown waa recaptured but Maihmrlk got away. After hi release from the Missouri prison. Brown wss alleged to have swindled many persona In Oregon by a fake company known aa the London-AmerlcaMining company, la thi operation he pcaed an. J. P. Morgan. M. A. Hanna, Jr. When bla Jr, and was imminent tn the west he rapture came to New York and was caught in the Tiffany swindle. Chicago, May Nat CONTRACTORS AND SWINDLER Of SUfi I Bank Bldg. Both Phonaa. schools in any public contests. x. Both CALVERT A It siBrifc Contractor and Builfer Lima Mfr. 216 seel. PhBn aid1" 800.v w. o. ridges Contractor and Builder. Altwation, Shop Work. B.II Phon n.!?' 415 264-K- . geo. olmstead! Contractor and builder, at hop residence, 500 Ogden. Bell phone 2th TV2 481 x. cmh ELw Galvanised Iren and Coprar niahaa. Skylight and Tm Ran! 2459 Grant ave. M. GILLES, General Contractor and Euiku. Planing MilL Office and Milt 22nd and Wash., oppoit Tibm CARL SAMUEL80N, Gcnaral Builder and Contra. ' 537 29th 8L Bell phono 384 PETER UNANDER. Gonoral Contractor and hulls. 359 9th Bt. Boll phono 675-j- . The Inquiry by the go vein meet through the Interstate Commerce rommlsston. Into the relatione between the Standard Oil company sad the railroads, commenced here today. Two of (he points upon which it la aid the investigation will endeavor to throw light are the matter of the pipe lines of the Standard company which are laid along the railroads' end tbe purchase of Galena oil by the railroads for headlight and signal purposes. The first witness waa E. M. Wilhoit, of Topeka, Kansas, now an independent oil operatt. who ten years ago waa an agent of (he Standard Oil company. He aalj that while In the employ of ike Rtindard Oil company.' he had, in following out the instructions of his Hiiperior offloere, bribed clerks In (be offices rf railroads end employee of Independent oil concerns, In order to obtain Information of the details of the business done by the rivals of the Standard 01 company. He declared that agents of the Standard Oil company are held personally responsible for ail oil sold In their territories by Independent companies and that the drivers of tank wagons are expected to i;uyi up their stork by selling 206 to 2Ht gallons from n wagon load of 200 gallons. He said the actual tests of the product of the Standard Oil company to determine the quality ere carefully guarded and that when it waa found necessary to cut the prire to meet the figure iff a competitor cheaper quality of oil was substituted and riarantced to he of n higher grade than It really was. Mr. Wilhoit said different grades of oil were sold from the name tank by managers of the Standard Oil company. I YOUNG architects y auti-nii- ws mti. 11, th- - - - MAY MORNING, MAN TAKE8 DOSE OF MORPHINE. right-of-wa- Mystery and Meager Particulars Met in Effort to Get Facts in Case. The News nays: Salt Lake, A case of atiemiled suicide wae reported at noon today from 1013 Blaine avenue, the victim being a young nun May 10. named Duncan about years of age. Arcording to the report, which it la Impossible to confirm at the residence, aa the physicians and relatives of the boy refuse to be tntenrieaed, or to make any statements about, the caw. Young Duncan took an overdose of morphine with suicidal Intent, and waa plrked up early this morning In serious condition in the barn at (he rear of the house. i ' Dr. Chas. Stewart whs summoned at once, and continued to work over the patient all morning. At the request of the family he refused to make any statement of tbe case, as did also members of the family. Blaine avenue L located between Eleventh and Twelfth South streets, and between Ninth and Eleventh East. The young man was living there with his mother and brothers and slaters, the father having died some time ago. 2U SPIER'S DEATH Causes an Investigation ef Books to Be Made. y RECORDS The Herald today says that experts are examining the books of ('has. L. 8pler, the confidential employe of H. H. Rogers, and whoe death from a bullet wound at his Staten Island home, early Monday, is not yet officially explained. Mr. Rogers wss asked Inst flight regarding the developments of this invest Igntitm snd Ih quoted by tbe Herald r folios: This matter Is on I am averse to discussing. As a matter of fact, it Is ton early to talk of the condition In which Rplor left his affairs. It In true export accountants are going over his hooks and papers, end nntil they have completed their work it In Impossible to exactly determine what result they will reach. They hare lira far examined the stork books, and It will be necessary to go ovi-- tbe check and hank hooks and other papers before any authoritative statement ran be made." Besides taking nut a new life insurance for ITS.non during the Inst month. It was learned ye'.-rdthat Rpler f23.u0li policy which had renewed lie had permitted to lapse, lie obtained this policy nrlginHlIy on May 27th, 1904. and paid the premium for one On April 1 1 Mi. last, he visited year. the office of the Equitable Life Assurance Roclety and applied for re instate-ment-. He then submitted to a medical examination and wa reported to be a first eta risk. He paid the new preendowtspniy-yca- r mium. This ws ment policy, in favor of Mra. Rpier. He had hern paying for some year on a (2,3(i'i policy in the Equitable Society. New York, May In IN THE BIG FIRE. San Francisco. May 10. The Firemen's Fund Insurance company has discovered that the vault, containing all the records of Its insurance business In Ban Francisco; has been destroyed. The falling of nn Immense steel girder, which broke off n corner of the vault, gave th fire easy access to the records, including all policies, maps, etc. President Dutton has made a statement saying step have boon taken by tho company to meet tbe new conditions created by the destruction of the lire. A new company, to be known aa the Fireman's Fund Insurance corporation, la to he formed as soon as legal holl-day- a cease and incorporation can be effected. The new corporation will have million aura a million capital and plus, thus insuring, Recording to President Dutton, complete ability to meet every outstanding obligation, an the million capital and million surplus is in addrlon to tho assets of the old corn-punIncluded in tbe new corporation and estimated st eight millions. Masonry and Cement Contractors WHEELWRIGHT CONSTRUCT. JACKSON CO. All kinda of cement maion work, excavating and pipe laying, sowers and water systems. Ogden, Utah. BATEMAN BROS A DOYLE All kinds of Coment and Masonry work. - Excavating, water ayetema. eeware and ave. Bell J. Brisk a IH and O'NEILL CONSTRUCTION CO.Contr actor and Bulldern ef re. Cement Walk, Street PivjM and Gravel Roofing. 423 25th , J-- I, 8285 Well FRED A LUND. General Contractor in brick and atone. 678 2tet St Bell 'phone 448. 383-- L. A LEVEDAHL Brick Contractor. Pra peclalty, Ind. 'phon 699 BUCHER Brick Contractor. Mantle, Gratae and Tiling. All kinds of cement work. Cor. 26th and Grant Bell phono 257-- GEO. H. GREENWELL Brick and atone contractor end mfgr common and pressed brick 231 22nd Bt. Bell 'phone 317-a- , aaaaaaaaaaaaaaAaM..vVVVVVVV)ftAriri Painter & Paperhangers Directory c. o. ISAKSON. Plain and decorative painting and paperhanging. No charge for eetimatee. 160 2nd 8L Bell' phone. J. R. DRANE. . Painting and paper hanging, 2438 Ind. 586. Waah. Bell phone S84-k- ; Sign Writer, Painter, Paper Hangerei Eetimatee Given en General Contracting. 277 24tk L Both phonaa. FRANK LAUER, Decorative Painter and Hanger. 420 24th etreet. N. E. OBERG. SANDER. Eeti-mate- and paperhanging. Ball 'phene pain- 1004 21d It 246-- PETER ANDERSON. House painter, artistic pipe hanging. Eetimatee an contract work. 452 28th St Bell phono itta. JOSEPH W. LUND. House painter, paporhangar, estimates given on contract work. 2763 Park Ave. Ind 'phene 1444 Paper Fainter and paper hanger, A. MULLER A BON, Contractor, general house ting HOPSON A CO, I. & Dealsr in Wall Paper, Paper Hug ing, Painting, Tinting and Gmeii Dscorating; 38 years' expeiim-258Wash, avo, opposita Llbn7. a W. given free. 2032 Ballantyn avenue. Both 'phones. HARRY RUBEN. We do the artistic work of tho city. Relief, fresco and scenic original dsslgnlng. Lot ue ehow you our work In Ogden, General work also. Office 243S Waah. ave. Bell, 384-g: 2 Z. L BACON. House painter, paperhanger, 15 years experience. Contract wetk a specialty. 260 Wash. Ave. Id! Phone 597K. N. 8. WILSON, House painting, natural wood paper hanging end piper cleaning. Shop 421 23rd 8LSL Bell 'phone 4494c. Res. 558 21et CROP REPORTS. Wahington, May 10. The crop reporting board of the bureau of statistics of the department of agriculture, and from report of correspondents agents of the bureau, finds the area under winter wheat remaining in cultivation on May 1st, . to have' been about 29.623.0(H) acres. Thi is alx per cent or about 1.710,000 acres leas than tbe area reported as sown last fall and 1 per cent, or about 941.000 acres ires than the area of winter wheat reported aa harvested last year. The INJUNCTION OBTAINED. average condition of the growing winter wheat crop en May 1st, was 91 as Against the Chicago Federation ef compared with 89 on April 1st, 1908: Musicians. 92 on May 1st, 1905; 76 on May 1st, 1904. and 63, the mean of the May Chicago. .May in. Tho long fight averages for the last ten years. of Musithe Chicago bands cian and the INSURANCE FRAUD. under the urnneof the Ameroiganlr.r-t'ninn or North American Musician Minneapolis. May 1(L Sensational ica. reached a clluiax yesterday when testimony wan given here yesterday by Judge Walker issued n Injunction re- W. F. Bechtel, being tried on a charge 936,500 of the straining the Chlrag'i Federation from of misappropriating comLife Insurance Interfering In any wjv with tbe bands Northwestern named In the hill of eomplalnt. pany' funds. Bechtel told of paying The Ml upon wli 'h the Injunction 65.000 in marked bills to former State was published ws :he result of tbe Insurance Commissioner O'Shi r the cmitlnued effort In a room la th Rran Hotel la Chicago out Federation of Musicians to force St. Paul. j. of business those bands which have reMr. Bechtel said O'Shaughnessy had with the regu- demanded the money, saying, I'm not fused to ally theuiscv.-elars. in the business for ay health." and The hoycott of which the bill com- "Remember there are two of ns." injunction plains. and for which th was lsucd, has been carried on for ADJUSTING INSURANCE LOSSES. three years hr the !ofendant union. . The union caused serious Ijondou, May 10. At a meeting of complications in the labor day parade managers of Insurance com panics here two years ago and c other times. Involved In the San Francisco disaster, it wa voted to telegraph the following RULE. Instruct ion tn the companys represent a tirca at San Francinca M u y iu. The Chicago Chicago. We desire n committee to get with of eduention last night took the American board In adjusting companies most stringent notion possible under losses in strict conformity with each the law to put an cr.d to high school company's separate fid icy conditions, fraternities an.l secret societies. acting on legal and expert advice, reNot. only did the school trustees re- ferring home disputed cases Involving sort to vadiral measures to stamp out important principles and doubtful legal the secret socittie hut they refused liability." Plasterers Contracting Union No. 25 2 Local n c. non-unio- n 196 2d PRICE. aBell St 'phone 754-y- GEORGE WILKINS. 1131 21st St Bell phene 983 24th T. A. REID. St Ind 'phone 50-x- . 3181 H. A. SHUPE. Bell Phone Adame Ave. 71 . S10. 973 24th W. F. REID St Ind phono 1B' ugh-ness- s intii-iria- n A Director oftne & B. DENKERS, All Kinda of Job Printing Neatly done. (Union Shop.) 23491-Ave. Ind. phono 216. INDUSTRIAL of OsdrOV JOB PRINTERS 2 Wirt. PUBLISHING CO. B. F. Thomae, Manager. All kinda of Book and Job Printing. Baaement 2406 Waeh. Ave. A. L.BCOVILLEPRES "d Prlnterm, Emboe office, Poet era, g0 Opposite 'phone. J. O. WOODY PR'nJ' Printing That 2375 W binding, all y'- Both Are-. 'phone. : Bell 'phene. A. T. HESTMARK, Printer and bookmaker. Punches for Irooe Phone Wash. Ave. w Bell ciULTl |