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Show TOE 8 EXAMINER: MORNING OGDEN, CHRISMAN UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 2X COAL ORDERS SNOW STORM IN DRY OBSTRUCTS FOR MANY RECEIVES PIPE LINE IS HANNAH GRAHAM CANNOT BE FfllM) Dropped Out at Sight as Soon Preferred Chargea Again n Caruso. Has a dietetic value greatly I Dr. Price's Baking Powder carries only Lcalthful qualities to the food. ISSUED BY STANDARD PUBLISHING COMPANY. STREET CAR TRAFFIC SUSPEND. Prm Representatives of Comma nee Commission Arrived in City Yesterday and Will Investigate. Strong Wind Prevailed During the Night, Accompanied by Snew and Law Temperature. Fifty oners for 100 gonads of ooel each wJwrv issue from the office of this papef vesierdsy ao tbeee that applied end aj'Wed that they were out at coal. Thia 11.000 pound represents about half of a eonatgumeat placed at the dlepoeal of thia peper by one of th large ooal dealers of tbe city. Ths movement whirs by eases f extrema distress could secure alnost immediate relief, prove to to a wise aad popular oa. From early niorahiB until late In the afternoon the Standard oflloe waa the scene of antek activity In tha issuing of orders to those who were in need of Immediate relief. Upon each order waa the fallowing, which the applicant waa supposed to sign: 1 hereby certify that I am entirely out of seal and am la ImmecHat iaed of name." Thia reeauiioa was aeeea-esr- y owing to th. tact that a grant many eaaer Lava been repotted of people who la their idna full of ooal and yet were trying to get more. thm depriving those who are actually la want. Declare receive orders backed by an earnest appeal that all speed be observed Hi their execution and Had, on delivery, coal Mas bulging with fuel stored away enough tn many to last Ur wgh the winter. Wherever such condition prevail drivers have been given orders nut to linked, hut to bring back to th yards the ooal which ia then diverted to other patrons nuirs worthy of relief. It te ixd unusual for a driver to find on Ms arrival at a destination coal houses so full that they will hold no more, and despite this condition he is urged to unload on th ground. The Ogden Rapid Transit company and the Amalgamated Sugar company have Just stout enough coal to run them today and part of tomorrow Several car arrived from Balt Lake over the Rio Grande and more la expected early thia morning. The Oregon Short Mne company has dispatched n representative to Rock Springs to sue that the company gets the proportionate number uf cars loaded aa are sent there. J. T. Marrhand and Judge Elmer E. Thomas, representing the interstate commerce oommisslun. arrived In Salt Lake yeaterday afternoon from Denver to Investigate freight rates and complaints of car shortages. Fifty witnesses have been subpoenaed and It is expected that the reason why '.are for ths transportation of coal can not be had will be ene of the earliest matters considered.t Owing t the strung wind which prevailed last evening, piling the now upon the atroet ear track traffic waa atopped at i'&l clod. Cars on the main tine and th Twenty-fiftand Tweuty-aeeonstreet lines had great difficulty la making their trip throughout th entire afternoon. In soma caaee it required about an hour to make the trip from one end of the line to the other. At Five Points and aertk of Tenth atroet the track waa piled high with enow. At the end of the hue the Ogden k North western engine struck a anew and ice drift and waa ditrked. No effort will be made to put the derailed engine ou the track until today. At the corner at Twenty-eeoun- d atroet aad Madison avenue a couple of street cars and the mow plow were tailed for almost three hours. The snow would blow on the track as fast aa it waa removed. The same c at happened en the north end. where a aotiple cf earn were atalled for eoine time before they were finally removed to tho power house. The thermometer registered 30 degrees at o'clock last evening, and from that time until 1:30 a. aa. tod;, the mercury dropped at the rate of almost three degrees an hour. The wind blew the hardest between 12: Si a. m. aad 2 a. m. Local Interest in roller skating teached It greatest height last night el the Auditorium skating rink, when the Oontust fur the most graceful gentleman skater, which, with the contest for the most graceful woman, was pulled off by J. B. Lewis k Co., prominent Jewelers of this city, was won. after much deliberation on the part of the Judges, by Gharlee Obrisniaa. fVonyjtly at 9:30 o'clock the bugle sounded and the following couples rolls into line amid tremendous enthusiasm on the part of the crowd: Rise R. Austin, Charles Ubrian;an; Biss G. Lashus. B. J. Wenger: Bra. C. E. Darla, J. E. Colston: Miss R. Collier, Horace Geiger; Miss Lauua . U Denmaa: Airs. K. J. ITrich, Lot-lag- Trank Van Cleve; Miss N. Bluth, H. Hoffmast wr: Miss G, Ludwig, M. J. McLaughlin : Miss StelU Campbell, C. Herrick: Mrs. W, S. Stewart, W. B. As every housekeeper can understand, burnt alum and sulphuric acid the te ingredients of all alum and powders must carry to the food adds injurious to health. Bieaart. alum-phospha- Groce heretofore supposedly hen been the poneeerlon af women, but the study the label oom-paa- ROOMS- -. EDITORIAL Phene i liidif.M.ii Ne. 11 No. U ton 'Fheea, tM ring. OFFICE lnd.panO.nt 'Phono Bolt Phans, ono ring BUSINESS la.a.- -' 1..1 . l . No, M No. & . i.. . ji BREVITIES Bom To the wife of J. T. BaodKorri, tengiotind boy. Mother sad ehlM doing well. WHEAT 11.10 PER 100 POUNDS. The belt ood cheapest of hoy ot Grout, 851 lth 8L Both phones. Dr. W. B. lister, the local dentist, reported to be nnder arrest la Pueblo, apoa the charm of adaltory. Jo The burning out of a chimney at 0:10 oclock laat evening, the Are department was called to iba property owned by John Tyler, on Jefferson avenue, between Twenty-fiftand Tweaty-cixtstreet. The damage h woo alight. Oenoral Buperintondont Honiara of the Boll Telephime company waa an Ogden vlalior yesterday afternooa. The dinner and reunion of the Ohio and Indiana people will occur Bat vriay evening et the K. of P. Hall, at o'clock. The dinner will coat SI eenta a plate. Tlekota on aale at Shgwa Bargain atnre. Praaldent Brock of the Tonopah end OoldAeld railroad, paaaed through Ogden yeaterday morning on Union Pacific train No. I, on hla way eaat. Owing to Sait the heavy traffic on the Lke division of the Southern PaclAc, the Short Line haa transferred three full freight rrewi to that Una to aaalat la handling the bualneaa. Two of theae were transferred a couple of days ago aiyl the third waa aeat over yeaterday. Mra. William Blnford haa returned from an eutended vlalt with relatives in Denver. Earl R. Geiger haa been appointed deputy grand worthy president for Utah of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. This ia a deserved recognition far Mr. Geiger, who Is a worthy member of that order. THEATERS THE BEST OF DORA THORNE onm-Bxinlt- That idyllic picture of the rural English home life, together with its flight to the runwt arlatucratic circles of English society . "Dora It proving one of the best and mote interesting and auocessful new pi.iys of the present season. The laiok rrf "Dire Thorne'' had a wonderful rogue Mvue yean ago, and still has a steady novel of its nlsaa it circulation: a haa aldcm been aurptirsed: a beautiful story of luxe wilttcu around a moral which la jrowerful a li sans IX Washington. Nov. 22 In the Virginia supreme court of appeals today. Judge Cardwell handed down a decision Uttlrroing the derision of the stale corpnmting comnilsrlnn (c!sr-Inthe two cert passenger rate act passed bv the Virginia legislature to the fourteenth amendment, of the constitution of the United Stares. cou-tmr- y HELEN LAMBERT York. Nov. 23 Helen laim-berthe grtress, who was Injured in the automobile collision in Central park. In which Tint taopxr lost hi life, died today in Roosevelt hospital. This makes the third death from the accident t. en FJI.WBE3 nail ED SIT UP AND TAKE NOTICE & COMPANY CAN AND WILL FIT YOUR EYES WITH IF YOU LET THEM. GLASSES I' week our optician sttir two patients to an oculist for treatment. One was a little girl who had been fitted (T. by an optician who badrn'r any right to prescribe tor such a case at all If we cannot give you entire satisfaction. we pa you nn to an ocullat for treatment. Honesty at fill times i part of our business. LET US EXAMINE YOUR EYES FREE OF CHARGE. J. S. LEWIS & CO. OPTICIANS AT THE BIG CLOCK . i Proper Person te Suceeed Durand Is Receiving Attention. Ijtmdoo, Nov. 23 Tha Daily Tele graph thia morning devotes a two column leader to the importance o! properly filling the diplomatic vacanc. in Washington, and eavs the govern ment never had a more Important an rarely mare difficult task this finding a atMoesaor to Sir Mortimer Durand What Is wanted, what In the stride sense is nooesaary, la an unconventional embassador. The time ha come for a notable break with all for me I traditions, aad Sir Edward Grey choice ought to to "aa unfettered a tbe initiative ef the American presi dents going outside the ranks of pro feaslonal diplomacy to send us tha: brilliant line of representatives, ad mirably continued by Whltelaw Reid, who have toon for the last generation Uw most persuasive and Influential fig ure of our social life." Continuing, the paper says the new British ambassador at Washington will have to face a novel and atlmu latlng situation. Germany's rnpresen tative there. Baron Speck Von Stern burg, is one of the most able and moat popular figures In tbe dlplomatl. service of any country, while Francr never has been better represented at Washington than now, her diplomatic corps possessing "no more brilliant and engaging figure than M. Juaser and. The pc4ier .points out that both a bars President these diplomats Roosevelt's enthueiacm for the strenuous life. Sketching "picture of thi unattainable," the Telegraph says the ideal should combine John Morleyt literary reputation, Alfred Lyttleton' athletic prowess and Lord Charles Hemford'a popular temperament. "Whoever he may be," the paper says In conclusion, "he will have one of the ndMest opportunities ever open' ed to any man." FINNISH SENATE. Will Yield to the Demands of Russian Premier. St. Petersburg, Nov. 22. The decision 'pf the Finnish senate to yield to the demands of the K'isvian premwith the Russian ier for police In arresting Russian refugees, thus renouncing an asylum in Finland, is a staggering blow to the revolutionary cause in tbe grand duchy. Since the latter regained its autonomy It has been the base of revolutionary activity, hundreds of terror feta and revolutionists living at Helsingfors. Viborg and other centers. Among them is Gerschunln, accomplice in the asKas1natlnn of 'Minister 22. The O.. CONTINUED. Nor. HEARINGS Buckeye Findlay, of the Interior Blplagulne, and who Pipe IJjip company waa made tha de"scaped from Siberia -Jin a water cak. of fendant tn a atilt filed In the circuit Conducting Investigating Methods iavuial convention! revolutionists David L. William Business. late Grain j court today- by and terrorist nganlxarioos have been conn Hancock promt-utlnattorney of held on Finnish soil, and arras and thi ty. and George H. Phelps, Minneapolis. Nor. 22. The Mlnnexp-'l- e explosives have been smuggled Into The Interoffice. statr attorney general's hearings conducted by the the grand duchy in large quantities cf Ohio Is the plaintiff. The petltlo. line commerce commission for the through obscure ports on the sparaely lJn alleges that the Buckeye Pipe ttrpcse of Investigating the method i iiettled northern frontier. Conservathe tive Finns who united with the rest cert In the grain huntress in cumpuny la organized under the lss of $10. of Ohio with a capital stork northwest and the relation of grain the nation in the struggle against oou.n io. anil la empowered to transport to an :be Rnsalflcailon till rail rood companies, cam Finland, are now c aud store petroleum by means close at 3 p. m., the attnmev averse to any further alliance with bntpt ur the oinimlHstoa stating that lie 'he revolutionary parties, on the pipes. Tie petition chargee thatIt evern since Its organisation In 1886 vl examined all the witnesses he ground that a continuance at the agia member of an Illegal combine Cniantissluner A. Pnuity there-- i tation would menace the aulonomv of com.m aunoui.cH that the commission Finland. tbn known aa the Standard Oil v.ll meet tomorrow In Duluth. pany. It operate tn alx eonntiea It northwestern Ohio, and chargea 2' This Htiertiii'in the witnesses LABOR FEDERATION. eenta per barrel for the transports the farmers' representation commerce tlun cf tdl anv dlaiance. Such charge (lour chamber of the upon Likely te Be Taken It la aald. are onlr nominal and so stAllatirs Open Shop Policy Up. F. li Van Dr.zen gave vhich show it is the lark of railroad imposed to prevent othera from irJ' the rliitios. which are retarding Ing themselvaa of such fac'.iltiea. Minneapolis. Nor. 22. At the are alleged to tie a holly ills it vi' :nmt cf the crop and rot limited of the Americas Federation of terminal for propurl.liisce to the service rendered irrnnrniKlntinn storage. ator today a resolution was Intro It la dated U be the duty if the if To si d that at ihe head of the lake luced under special order In behalf fondant as a common carrier tj sff-xbe terminal storage capacity la of the International Typographical now the public equal facilities fur ne ot elevators bushels These the Tnternattcnal Printing union, lia pipe lines, and that 'the charge bushels. Pressmen's if, ve on hiind but fi,87S.OO(i the assistant' should not be more than one eighth f :'n t Minneapolis termlnnl capacity union and theunion, International BrotherI a! for an Plaintiff cent on is There prays htiktiela s 3g.iNi11.111u) per hood of Bookbinders. The resolution nnd tha' .uiiil but hr7 "ffl bushels. ternstive writ of calls on the federation to Investigate the defendant provide for the puhlli fhn general policy of Public Printer qual and just facilities and trar.stair FIRE AT ABERDEEN. 8. D. Minings toward ihe employe if the tat'.on in Ohio and fix a schedule of office, and give reasons for such reikif. Tli pel 'on I aitne.l to Fire to- quests. It Is p reliable that tbe "open .. Nov. 22 Anerdecn. S Wade H. attorney general. ils'.. t wipe-- t .viu an entire Work on hep" po'.lci announced by President ' ain street and Ronseveit lit the Miller case will come Second between PULLYAN CO. RESPONSIBLE. Third avenue ra ising a loss of $2n0.-0- . In for It share of comment when this vs discovered l:i the resolution is isben up. The 22 I'a . Vov RuVng SHerman ti'nhe department store sn.i Greenahurg A was Introduced calling fur n.psn.x ha' tread raplt'v, -- estroving the SRter-'.a- upnn the that tlie affiliated unions of the not been wl'-f afluitc"-itlnhotel an'! a number f other busi- ;he federation to support the trades ir.it'-lived cu their car mid was one No ness Injured. union pay 'r of the country by ald-;u- g re but i been them to extend their circulation, formal CAREER DEFEATS HOPPE. sponulh e for the pretence and by junrcnlzln their job offices trl'i :e In I'a ft d supplle. Judge when uch shops were opened hv the 4ii..m,l.,r D VcUonre".! tofev New York. Nov. 22 In Tedr.y s paper minimum sentence prcvldr l 'uatrho In th American champ'on law which is a fine of $n ar.. the winner-wer- e PLOT DISCOVERED. h'p '.HImiiI an i sixteen The irnt'i. Albert fv.'ler of Bosttin Cm; York. iiiii'ret fee cotuttany were settled b New of Thomus St Petersburg, Nov. 22 A dispatch i JuUe r rtefosel Fr.ir k Hojtpe In the after hiking .f verdicts In s'a ca-- e nv.ve-- Rre from Astrkhan : i v. x "e-iit will er actio"., : f.iiiiiT uni Gaiiagt in. epor: e ! il.e discovery of to pfc itt j a prece.leut s 'vemirg mi any uf Rt. Ixe.tls in t" v'l'Bi'les Peto-iuu- i kl'.l Govenor General fiohuioff and the t'N. filed agalus' the PiillniAn company. TTHtch. 2k ii nigh' arrest if :he lermrira tmpilcaxL WASHINGTON. inuasM. '.L - - g fr-x- t DEAD. New isn J.S. LEWIS DIPLOMATIC VACANCY. . Tlto-nte.- beis Cl y . g VERSIONS. LEAKS ED LAST EVENING. gliding and rolling and "cavorting," and tha smooth, eaay motion of the contesting skaters last night, partica-Urlof the men, was a rerelaaon to the crowd, which yelled itself hoarse and cheered and stamped to the echo es he favorites circled the coarse. Amid deafening cheats tha gold watch donated by the J. 8. Lewis waa awarded Charles CbrlUin. true. The oonaegiiKucea of aln sel- although L. Denmaa and W. B. Btew-ar- t were favorites with the men and dom end with K origin vtora, Is an old adage, but one which ia ever new, wisuen lining the walla three and four ruling of the Judges proved coming up before us aa a truth day deep. The with the peifds. slUuwgh the by day, and one which shall do so popular aa long as the world shall laat. This contest was extremely close. Standing in the center of the imtheme la brought out in the play of ''Dora Thorne." as in the bonk, with a mense interior were fire representawonderfully original setting. Tear, tive women of Ogden, acting aa and laughter follow in quick succes- Judges. These aero Mrs. E. M. Consion; slnree heart Interest ia ntsnl-fes- t roy, Mra. A. P. Bigelow, Mrs. H. L. at every turn. Interwoven with Bell, Mrs. F. W. Baker and Miss Minnie Klneel. As each couple gilded by the moat powerful 4 all themes love. "It la love which makes the flowers were presented the ounteetlng world go a round " "Dora Thorne" women by the judges. This closes the ountests inaugurated by J. S. towle will be seeu at tha Grand Saturday. k Co., but similar events will be pulled off this season by the management of TON YONSON." the Auditorium. Shaking hands with au oil friend ia aimcut aa good aa announcing the reMRS. WYAITMSSiS AWAY turn of "Ton Yon ana'1 to thlu Yon cornea here to the Grandi on Sunday for one night, commencing Died at Ogden Hospital from Effects of an Operation. Bund;. Yon Yunona la a young feHow of Mrs. Isabelle Wyant, the wife of whom one never grow tired. Ho la Wyant, a well known Southern modest, alwata in good humor and al- Frank ways he the right, thing at the rigni Pacific machinist, died at the Ogden time. The public la very foml of this general hospital yesterday afternoon (he effects of an original, kind hearted young Swede. at 1:46 o'clock from The fhet that the comedy haa been operation upon the stomach. Mr Wyant waa born in Maryland seen on the American stag. ftr the RESPITE past Afteen years la demouatmtloa of forty ofyearn ago, and baa 'been n resi- 3AE6E Ogden for almost twelve years the fact. This puts Yon Ynaenn in dent SINKS OFF TORONTO the same class wKh The Old Home The deceased leaves a husband and Masala and Ednu ateaiL" Way Down East." Rip Van two daughters. o friend-tcircle uf Winkle" and James O'Netll'a Moute Wyant, and a large mourn her untimely demise. Th CrlMo." aa far aa longevity is conStorm on Lake Erie Sinks Barge and deceased was a member of tha Ratli cerned. Caueea Death of Twenty-thro- e It la. of course, remembered from bone Sisters. persona The date if the funeral will be an previous visits here that "Yon Y onP,r ion" telle a auiry of a young Swede nouitced later who enCMinterw vicissitudes on hi Buffalo. X. Y.. Xov. 22. The gale arrival In this rountry. hut who AnCAR LOAD Of MACH.HERY f Wednesday night and Tburaday on to all them owing ally gels through caused a heavy loss In:ie Great his sterling honesty and blend-lik- e e nocence, which wins him many Shipped to Goldfield for Mohawk o vessel property and twenty-thro- off Resolute sank tves. Leans. The crebarge A been new effect haa friends. Toronto and six men were drowned. ated thia year in the famous tog jam, ! lie A carload of machinery, with tlirw barge Athens Is probably lost off which occurs at the end of the third act and ia one of the must thrilling f other care to hold It down' forms ; landnaky. O.. with eight men. All ope for the Athens, however, has not incidents in nature which ha ever rpecial that will pass through Ogdon een abandued and tugs are acouring today on record run to Giddfleld. The been produced on the stage. .eke Erie for her. Yon YooamT ia himself new this schedule uf this special will be aa a passenger train, and it 1 1 The losses i sported are: year, too. He la George Thompson, a The Hurlbnt: stranded on Lake distinguished Swedish actor, who first routed over the Union PaclAc and Erie. won hla rpurs in the Royal opera Southern Paclllc. The machinery Is a ponton of an The C. B. Hill; beached on lake house In Stockholm, and later created for hknaelf a name on Broadway, New order given by the Mohawk lease, tlu Trie. The Athena, missing; lake Erie. York, which assures him a future on operators of which ere willing to pay The Puritan, aground; lake Huron. the stage even should he abandon a fancy price and freight rates lit order to get the stuff at the mine The Con fort, sunk; Bt. Clair river. Swedish comedy. stranded; lake Tbe Coneuiaugh, The Lumbermen's quartette thia that they ran finish up the last thirty Th ,2rle. year is composed of four men who Cays cf their lease with a whirl.1. TM1 Mohawk lease expires January The Pratt, damaged; lake Erie. gave up choir work to travel with Is the second special car they have The Resolute, foundered off Toronto. "Yon Yon non" and thus become acThe Pere Marquette No. Hi, strandquainted with the country in a prac- ordered during the last sixty days. 'd lake Michigan. tical wav. On the wliole, the show Schooner Paige, ashore; lake Mich la better nd larger than ever before BUCKEYE PIPE LINE COMPANY. business. Is gan. of capacity worthy aud Suit Brought Against the Company Steamer Taylor, missing; lake vilchlgsn. by ths Stats of Ohio. LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL. y EXAMINER TELEPHONES Nr ra. Xov. ham. the woman whu real of Enrico Uaruao on a 22.-H,- miat, tu. itou, AUDITORIUM RINK THE CENTER OF ATTRACTION. Offered by J. S. Lswis far Most Graceful Gentleman Skater Waa Wen by Mr. Chnaman. But more important than all else. die alum powders ROT ARE DISCOVERED MANY POINTS. AT be- yond the conception of any one who has not used it. It wifl make your food of a delicious taste, a moist and keeping quality and a digestibility not to be obtained from any other baking powder or leavening agent. Avoid STREETS PERSONS PRIZE o-- ba-he- i! c T man-lsmt- i is-in- -jj 'wtn.wj wwbb-.w- , shape. great disadvantage - without proper nourishment or shelter drum the element. Thru, fined out in heavy clothes and with towteria and tools, they repaired to the new break and oummeneod work. Juat bow loug a task it will be is conjectural. Mr. Cannon was nut able to guarantee a full voltage lost ntgJl. but thinks that by xuiatant labor the leak may be clo-jThe position of the pipe at the Jake is flavors hie for effective wortt. It may be that the pipe line has livid its full period of usefulness. In xiog the breaks, th roUetineea uf Tbe repairs were completed at a ate hour last night, but the line was tot used. Bower for the city was from the Bear river station. fur-ilske- d iOXSIISSIONEK URGES ENLARfilNGOt MARINE Par Cent ef Our Exports Last Year Were Carried In Amei Only 12 lean Ships. Washington. Nov. 22. The annual report of Commissioner of Navigation hamberlaln slate that only July ID last the documented merchant vessels of the United States numbered 26.008 uf 6.674.H8S gross tons. The report urges the enactment of the merchant marine commission bill, but which has (Mined the senate, including the prevision for American mail llnea to Aouth America and favors the bill to abolish the discrimination against vessels in pilotage chargee in the states from Virginia to Texas, rhe summary of the report says: The year's construction waa 1,211 vessels of 416,746 gross tons. Only three ocean steamer were built. Tha tonnage built during tha current fiscal year up to November II aggregates lUl.OOO gross, and If the present rate of construction is no chucked by strikea nr delays the output of our hip yards will be the largest in half a century and will be close to th output of 683,000 tone in 1866, tha , ear of our greatest construction. During the year only 13 per cent of tbe exports and import! at the United Hates were earned In American ves- sel." Commissioner Chamberlain pub a full list at all the vessels In trade between the United States and South America during the first alx months of this year. An American merchant steamer, he aaya, ia never seen In the ports of Brasil, Argentina, Uruguay. Chile or Peru. The report aaya that of 120,764 men shipped, 87,676 were native, 28,466 naturalised Americans and the remainder aliens. lishes NEBRASKA Opposed BANKERS OBJECT. to tha rency Isaue of Other CurThan That Now Provided. Omaha. Nov. 22. The Nebraska Bankers' association today went on record a opposed to the plan of currency reform proposed by the commit-fe- e of the American Bankers association. Tbe committee on resulutionv made its report this afternoon and precipitated a very lively debate which was participated In by President Fnr-gavice president of the rirat National bank of Chicago, a member of t ia American Bankers a'sHoclalioD committee which ronnlaled the plan of reform. James Ecklea of Chicago, former cnmptrolled of the currency of the United States, rpnko before the convention yesterday in advocacy of tiie plan. The report of the resolution committee which was adopted .itllnws in part: "That we are oppored to iaue In time of financial peace, like the present, of any bank note currency, except that now authorised, secured by a deposit uf United States bonds. "That we favor legislation by congress authorizing the issue of an emerdgency circulation which will be taxed so heavily that it could nut be ltancd except In time of rreat commercial atrinrency and impending panic and would be retired when the con dU tons requiring Its issue ao longer existed." ELECTION indK-bnieu'- j . t?y and mistreating annexing monks- - huue la CeiiUwl park' tp-ii- R-- SOLDIERS heard, he said, and when that w.tnp appeared he would require less ig. ten minutes is complete hla rsst Despite tbe efforts of the r;nhaa been found impossible to the witness today, but be felt safe H assuring the court that the whom he referred would M in A report thatihe referred to was the missing n...-- u Graham spread. Hannah Graham dropped out sight when she left the police ratio five minutes after she had prefer, ths charge against Owruso last Prut,-- , afternoon, and witnesses for the prow, cution testified that the utmost deavors had been made to find hr but without aval. Should she app he would furnish a sensation than any which have inarkri the two day's hearing in the York rill police court. Sensation in Court. Today was not without aanoaiioni When court adjourned laat aigiti Caruso waa on the stand and hla exas-- I nation was resumed when the cam was taken up today. Deputy Pjiin Commissioner Mathot questioned i defendant closely concerning the (bar years which he baa appeared in tfcii country under the direction of Htln-riConrled. Caruso acknowledged that he waa in New York in 12"4 ad that en February 4 of that year he sang In "Parsifal at the Metropolitan opera house. It was at this point that the real aanaation of the day cam. The wide doors directly behind the magistrate's bench swung open, and i woman in white and with a white veil drawn closely over her face stepped into the room. Caruso, look upon this worn a, aid the deputy police rommlNakmcr as the woman raised the veil aud reDid you erer vealed her features. see her before? The defendant moved uneasily, hesitated and them repHed. No, I have never seen her. "Did you not. on the afternoon at February 4, 1904, during the second act of "Parsifal, stand behind thi woman in the Metropolitan opera house and subject her hr exactly the name indiglnlties to which it Is chirped Hannah Graham was subjectad it the Central park monkey house? I did not," replied the witness hotly. "I never saw the woman before, as far as I can remember." Is it not true that on that afternoon not only thia woman, but other women, were the victims of much action upon your part?" per slated Mr. Mathot. Carnes's connect broke in with wsa m vigorous objection, which talned. It was reported in the mart raw that tha woman in white waa a manlier of the chorus of the Metropolitan opera company. A Diverting Feature. One uf the diverting features of the day waa the appearance for the defense of Dr. Adolph Draalg, former American consul at Madrid. Dr. testified that he waa in the monkey house at Central park during Caruao'a visit there Friday aad that he observed no improper action oa the tingara part Ha declared that com forward H &had Involuntarily the elngere behalf because h knew him personally; knsw him to be a gentleman, the greatest tenor of thia or anv other time. Being a benefactor ai humanity, he desired to protect Caruso not for hlmaelf ahae, but for hla great career. "1 volunteered to assist Mr. Caruso !u exactly tha seme way that 1 volunteered to aaalat Theodore Roosevelt te bo president at the United States," sold Dr. Pensigar. He swore that from hi observation it would have been physical impossibility for Caruso to have acted toward any woman in th demonekey house In tbe manner scribed by Detective Cane yeaterday. He stood within ten feet of Caruao at the time he waa In the building. Heinrich Conrled. director of the Metropolitan opera house, describe! Caruaoa mannerisms much aa did Dr. - tk-- c Deualger. "To ba brief, he Is pompeous. is be not?" asked Mr. Mathot. "It would be more kind to apeak of It as a habit. replied Mr. Conrled. Several other witnesses teitifled a to Caruao'a Inability to speak Rngllih and the hearing waa then adjourned until Monday. The police oourr room again bouae1-great crowd today and hundred were unable to gals admittance. a NEGRO OFFICER UNSEATED. Chicago, Fun Ant. rain, Tez.. Nov. 22. Flvf saldlers. rhe List, with one exceptk-- r members of the Twenty fifth InfiTitr who hxve been held tr the house here dree tire Brcwnsviiie trouble, wese discharge ' without horor St the port headqunr ter t?i1s ninrn'n. Ol man. ! hv order frr-the war department. Is betuc hld n rasa-rla given In the for r-tr--J epe-cls- a his detention. Nov. 22. Ferdinand L Barnett, the negro assistant stated reattorney, who. aooordtng to police turns. waa elected Justice of the ne elecmunicipal court at the recent cantion. has been unseated1 by the vassing hoard. The polios retains owe Barnett a plurality of 139. but the official count, cunpleted today. hows that Thomas B. Lsntry (Dem.1 wu elected by a plurality of dewa tne only Republican feated for a city office. FAMINE Ft. Petersburg, IN RUSSIA. Nov. 22. RPJ-fro- m tbe famine districts of show that the diet roes ia eteadfly growing acute. The peasantry Indrivgovernment of Kaxan have heel en to desoeratlon and are eelung Iheir daughters Into slaver y to Mo JW' nedana of the Caucasus. Girls !2 to 17 rears cf age have. beam e or $50 to $76. A form ow typhw 'ever known as hunger typhus nJ -- RELEASED. .? Friday, may uppmr in ihiIkv , morrow to prosa the charge . him. Juat before court adjourn-- a u, night at the end of the second dai'. hearing of ihe charge against u. singer. Deputy Police ConmiiMi"tt aMthot, who ia conducting ih pr,. cutiun. said that be had litt.e ta evidence to offer. There was ol!j uo! wltneaa for the prosecution jr-- 't N CANVASS IN OHIO. Columbus. O.. Nov. 22. The officii ceavaw of the rote cast a; the 1st elect Ion in Ohio was completed bv th secretary tf sfet Th 'ton vote was 92.2&o. Fr secretary c state. Thompson i i received 408 1'66; Hoekfu 'Deni ,, 361.674; Henal : (3oc.t, is.4:t:; .jghes (Pro.i. 11.970 Eiaenberr ab.i. 2.221; erattet 't,V u:itn'a pluraiiij - - jsssxrensfesisrhi ill luck follow the efforts of the Utah Light k Railway company to repair the pipe line. Yesterday when bath breaks had been patched up no aa to hold water, orders were given to (ura the valve at the daun near th Oaks. Bearooly had Die daun men received the notice whun another and more serious break was diacuvertMl in tbe pipe oppueite the Oaks Cafe. ' On learning the news Engineer Cannon gave to his men a brief respite from their labors, most of whom hare been working night and day, at a the woods composing it was a matter of surprise to the men and engineers in. charge, who expressed doubt about the strength iff the pipe to wlitot&nd. satisfactorily, tbe enormous pressure constantly bearing on its cylindrical . ti-- e AVENUE. Wooden Structure May Have Served Its Usefulness Lights Will Burn Dimly. (t pldemlc. - COMMITTEES. FORTY-TW- O Guthrie. Okie.. Nov. 22- .-" business occupied the onnstlt'iUoe onvention today. A number Ulcers was nasied by Cbalnn . working ay and forty-tw- o ees were decided on and spectre"-Thmembers of th rnrKma ston" commltteee will to named chairman next Mood?. by |