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Show ADVERTiSfc IN EXAMINER Tilt it charges, it the FOR price is THE REST ADVERTISING MEDIUM CITY THE EXAMINER IN THE REACHES THE COUNTY AS WELL SUESCRIP AJ THE CITY. OUR HON BOOKS ARE OPEN TO AD INDICATIONS THERE kERTISERS VOL NO. ;6i OGDEN I TAH. CITY, THURSDAY leriiu, liereylmi to the fikles tr.'iu Kii.-i- a !uiort- ibe t I'iCHg'-- i world s Id'i un i .as employed as a cieik hi The K Mair:iwsi..n ere. she became a ceik ai the Russian rorisulttle there. Dill had no cflu'lu! jtii.Tdiiif and was eu piotel of l,ei knowl.iige Of u and es.tliriii al.'iii:,. abii.g dencal nited TO PROSECUTE U.ii-shi- Steamer Carrolton Striae Fish Says it Would Have Been Better to Prevent the Crime of Coercion Than to Crews jeawrduy, up the matter concerning charges against President Peabody of the Mutual life Insurance company of coercion In connection with the elect 1 in of trustees of that company. These charges were brought to the attention of the district attorney some timo ago by Mr. Herrick. Mr. Jerome refused to act on them at the time, on the ground that he did not want his office used to Influence the election of trustees in the Mutual o. aud appeared depn-ss.-when till sentence was pronounced. j from N. S. W.. Octolier 17. for Honolulu, struck the south reef of Midway island ai 2 u'cl ick this uiorn-iug- . All the tiieuibeia of tin-- crew were saved. The weather is good, but there is no hone of saving the vessel. The Carrolton had been sei to leeward b recent sales. She was leaking ltad-ly- . lor spars were sprung and her , wafer supplies exhausted. She shaped her course for Midway, intending to anchor, hut in coming In site missed stays snd ran agrouud. DIVIDENDS THREATENS TRAIN IIU troller Notifies Officials That Unless 123.000 Was Forthcoming Train Would Be Dynamited. -- I Helena, Mont., Dec. 28. -- Unknown persons hari- - at tempt. to blackmail the Northern Pacific railway ruiiipany out of FJu.uuu afttr the method employed by Isaac Gravellp, who alter a dramatic escape from the court house here, where he wag being tiled on the charge of dynamiting ttains. was finally killed in the yard of Governor Toole's resilience. The railroad officials were notified that unless the amount was fonluMiu-Ing- , the Si. express would be dynamited today between Livingston and Uiliings. Instead, six detectives sere placed on the ualn. A supposed accomplice was located lu the baggage car, but aa he made no move, either fmm fear or failure to communicate with hla assistants, he was not molested. While a through express train, very little valuable matter la carried as compared with the regular overland cn the Northern Pacific, and coinpgratlvf Jy no plunder would have been secured had Uie train been dynamited. -- antl-dynasi- a CHRISTMAS SNOW IN ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND Snow, Accompanied by Wind, Produces Drifts and Obstructs Railway Traffic. Imidon. Dec. 26. Christmas of t JilG will be memorable for the heaviest snowstorms the United Kingdom has experienced In many years. In the nortiiern counties of England and In Scotland the snow was accompanied by great galea. There waa an average tall uf from four to six inches, which under heavy gale. drifted badly and worked serious hindrance to locomotion of all kinds and inconvenience to holiday makers. It showed again tonight, hut not so hard, excepting In the Uverpool district, where a fierce tilizxard raging nd the indication re that the severe weather will 1 cui-tlnu- There were small wrecks along lha csaaL "but. no serious lo of life Is reported. The crews of nearly all the wrecked vessels were rescued by lifeboats. Almost all the shipwrecked men had terrible experience and were completely exhausted before being brought to land. The steamer Hazel-den- e uk off struck ruck and Cloughey. Lifeboat men succeeded In rescuing the crew after an exciting experience. Another lifeboat made a similar rescue uf tbe crew of the schooner Ringleader, wrerked off Dun-genes- The minor Inconveniences of the day included the abandoning of hundreds of football and golf matches. The discomfort and the difficulty of getting about, however, did not greqtly dampen the ardor of London's pleasure seekers. The popularity of the pantomime seems to be on the Increase. Not less than a dosen theaters In London and its suburbs, beaded by a splendid production of Slnbad tbs Sailor," at the Drury Lane, gave pantomime, and all report full houses. Con- cerning Her. 1 Washington, Dec. 26. Baron the Russian consul general at Chicago, who Is a guest of Baron Rosen, the Russian ambassador, says the Russian legal bureau, with which Dereylan was laentlfled In Chijlma was in no way connected wUh cago, the Russian cotisnJte. but like many other bureaus, was organised to prehe certified to pare legal papers toconsulate. Mme. the at official by clerk gleo was employed a at ibe Russian consulate. According :o Boron Schiippeabacb. Sclilip-penbac- f.u warded k-- 6 RAIN AND POSSIBLY it to PRICE FIVE CENTS her at S;.al!aid has keen working as a dai in Dallas. He had $123 with mill w hen he left Sedau and today had more than this aunt, haring sated part of Ida wagei. aa a day laborer. The putiiir i inclined to accept hla statement that he covered the shortage for other sn.1 did n.d profit by it liiuiself Traffic Manager liaues Orders to cept Both Local and Ac- Through Freight. UNBECOMING HiuihUin. Tex.. Ike. to licjmi of the Atiamic uf (he Southern Psciht- - IIiu-- today show that the line, art- experiencing l:nle difficulty In La'iis on of ibe siviae of locomotive firemen on tbe tli'tiston d:visiiiii of the Galvi-aiuu- , HaiTiKtuiig S.n Xlln'ulo line. Fourtc ii freight naiu nut r sixteen sere biiudleJ. All scheduled on 'lie diilsi.iii and on the Texas and New Orleans. east l the city, were The same U true. acAirduu to the reports, on the El Paso division west of S&u Antonio. In view or (Ills Traffic Manager U. K. Dudkip has Uaned notices on all both local and pflnta in accept VERBAL STATEMENT MADE BY FICTION It Is Claimed That Pichon Stated That Mgr. Montagninl Had No Diplomatic Standing, Rome, Dec. 26. Tn spite of the denials of the French government that It has made any reply regarding the Vatican's protect to the power against the expulsion from France of Mgr. Montagninl. until recently secretary of the pspul nunciature at Paris, the Vatican has been positively informed that M. Pichon. the minister of foreign affairs for France, has made verbal statements in answer to this protest to several diplomatic representatives tt Paris, who telegraphed the minister's communication to their respective governments. According to the Vatican's author ty, M. Pichon said that Mgr. Montag-nin- i had no diplomatic standing: that the papers sequestered at the nunciature were unimportant, the important documents having been removed previously, and, a the French government had not allowed the papal nuncio to correspond with the French bishops, much leas could It permit Mgr. Montagninl to do so. The Vatican now declares with au- thority that tbe statement that documents were removed from the nunciature before that building was searcbe j Is unfounded and calculated to deceive, and avers that it did not emanate from the Vatican, but from the French government. The local press ha published the summary which appeared In the Paris Matin cf the statement Issued by Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul on the Franco-Vatlcaconflict. This summary has not found favor with the Vatican authorities as it blames the French clergy, who are praised by the pope. The Oser store Romano says this summary should be accepted wit h reserve as coming from an Infected source, snd explains that the correspondent of the Matin In New York the archmay have misunderstood bishop. ALFALFA. Topeka, Kas, Dec. 26 Harrison Farkmsn. the man who first brought alfalfa from South America and planted it in the United Htstp. died today at Emporia, Ka., aged 73 years LEGALLY BUT UNJUSTLY A JUDGE. Dec 28. The judiciary Chicago, committee of tiie Chicago liar association. which has liectt investigating charges iigaiual Fii,'ri.ji (Viirt Judge Arthur H. Ctici!;iin of lotting become interesten In various himnoa! which came under ihe jurisdiction of hi court, tonight fouuii the jurist guilty of grave infrar.lou of r induct unbecoming a Judge, and that he hy hla rather reck buss actions r usljr a a Impaired his No further action In the judge. ter will be taken hy the Bar asaocla-- i tlon aa no recommends! kma wore made to that body by the committee. The investigation by ihe Bar association was uiadr by request of Judge trait-tactio- he-luied Vie-tiin- through freight. At Lobe, near El Paso. Engineer Chet lan. Kutz Is reported to hate lieen assaulted sail no severely Injured that he HENRY LAYENMEYER could not continue the run. H. K. Willis, assistant grand chief MURDERED BY TRAMP of the Brotherhood of loxvino'lie Ku gineers. say that hla organization L thoroughly satisfied with the situation slid all it member are going to do Strenuous Attempts Wars Mads to all In their power to maintain then Lynch tho MJrdersr but Withcontract with the railroad company out Success. and keep the trains moving. Charles P. Neil, United States commissioner of labor, will arrive in HousAnimat., Colo., Dec. 28. After ton tomorrow morning from Washington and tender liL friendly cilices in several hour of diligent effort at storming the county jail here, a mob the coiroveray. which gathered after dark for the purpose of avenging the death of Henry SITUATION UNCHANGED. a well know n farmer near here, who was murdered in a most brutal way hy a tramp, diapersed Firemen Will Welcome tbs Commisand it la not thought that further atsioner snd Hops for Arbitration, tempt will be made tonight to carry out the plan of vengeance. The mob El Paso. Tex.. Dec. 26. There ia no orked Us wav Into tbs Jail as far change tonight In the local situation as the steel doors by breaking ituwn In the strike of the Brotherhood of the wooden doora, hut were met hy a Locomotive Firemen of the Gaheston, stern refusal by the Jail keepers to Ran Antonio and (SouthHarrisburg the primmer and finally gave ern Pacific Atlantic system) other turn over When apprehended the murderer than the giving out t a statement by up. gave bla name aa Leberg, Joseph Bedford, chairman of the griev- and many believe him io be Insane. Bedance committee of the firemen. ! prime was the work of a ford in hla statement aaya that the fiend. Alighting from a Santa Fe firemen are ron3denl of winning the freight train yesterday afternoon at fight, and that they have asauranrea Holiluiion station, near Ibis city, he uf the support of tho Brotherhood of crossed the river and secured a meal Railway Tralntnen. the Order of Rail- from a farmer nnied George Purvis, way Ounducuira aud the Order of j When lAberg finished eating he deRailway Telegrapher. manded but waa refused beThese orders are In full sympathy, cause of lodging, hla abusive language. 1.- -, the toatement declares; wl'b the fireberg left the Purvis farm and, after men. , preparing a camp on the river bank, we leave their Beyond the fact that bark toward Purvis' place, evisense of justice to guide the engineers' started bent on He set fire dently action, we have nothing to say shout lo s hay alack revenge. belonging to Henry Ihein," the statement says. thinking It was the propThe statement declares that Ihe fire- jAvemeyer, of Purvis. The fire attracted the men will welcome the labor commis- erty attention of wist took lie sioner. as they are willing now and berg into lo allowing him have been urging arbitration for a ride behindcustody, him on hla horse. When month." dismounted to open the Trainmaster Wade of the El Paso Invenmeyer at tbe road entering hla ranch, division stated tonight that the pas- gate Leberg struck him on the head with a senger trains are moving on time, and hammer, which lie found tied to that the freight trains go out aa fast saddle. The latter fell aa they ran be made up. Speaking of stunned and beat him over Lelierg Ihe statement Issued by Mr. Bedford, the head until be became tired. IceMr. Wade said that there was no founberg left his victim lying In the road dation for the allegation that the fire- and went bark to his camp at ibe On the men had sought arbitration. river aide. He returned soon after contrary they had refused the com- and with a pocket knife cut. a pany's offer to arbitrate the matter. throat from ear to ear and attempted to eralp him. The burning STRIKE BROKEN. hay stack attracted the neighbors to the scene, who found the niultllnhed Fan Antonio. Tex., Dec, body. A posse waa formed and Lehern Pacific officials claim that berg waa caught a mile or two away, the Brotherhood of Firemens strike riding Lavennieyer'a boras. He subon this division of the system la bro- mitted to arrest quietly snd even ken; that all freight and passenger boasted of hla crime, saving that he full with are trains moving along had drank the bkxd of hla victim. was brought here and lodged In crews; that they have more firemen A then they have engineers striking jail. At noon today Sheriff Brown fireman waa arrested here today for started for Pueblo with hla prisoner entering an engineer's cab at the for better protection, but was met by a Bout hern Pacific station. The order crowd of 300 people, who protested, Issued Monday not to receive freight against Lebergs removal, snd he was at this point has been rescinded. again placed In Jail here. Although there were frequent reports of mobs BAGGAGEMEN GIVEN INCREASE. organising to dispose of Leberg, not until tonight did they set almut carryFargo, N. D., Dec, 26. The an- ing out the work of vengeance. Boon nouncement Is made by the Northern after dark several hundred men and Pacific railroad of the Increase of boys appeared at the jail. but. were wages of baggagemen flfi per month refused admittance. Almost immediand telegraphers $5 per month. ately thev began the attack on the ' I . lAven-meyer'- 28.-F- Unjust Use of Power of Monoply Has Tendency to Obscure the Moral Vision and Tempt Men to Violate Law. -- oul Jail. STALLARD RETURNS TRIAL TO FACE CHARGES Material OF COLONEL MANN. for Comparison of writing MOagro. Hand- Claims That He Had Knowledge of New York. Dec. 20. The trial of Colonel D. W. Mann on an Indictment Shortage in Bank, but Is Not Responsible for IL ' for perjury waa resumed before Re-- : ror.ler Groff in the court of general i today. Handwriting Expert D. C. Decker Sedan. Kan. Dec. 28. Otto D. Stadlarol returned voluntarily to Sedan resumed bla testimony as to Hie disputed "O.K. and W. D. M." of the today to fan the charge of embezzling 1 about $2(1,000 from the People's Na- Count Reginald Ward jet ter. Witness stated that he had discovtional bnk here, of which be waa r. He left Sedan during the ered that the characteristics of the letter M." wtre sJkj true of those night of September 2U. leaving notes found in tbe Standard in the evidence but hla saying shortage announcing that he had not used tha money snd of Colonel Mann's writing, but that was not personally responsible for the the materiel for a comparison of handdefalcation. At ilia home at Sedan writing In this case was very meugre. During recess. Mr. Littleton, countoday RUllard reiterated his statemem dollar of sel fur Colonel Mann, stated that be that he had not misused the bank's money and did not know did not intend to cut abort bin dewhat became of It, but after ill.vmver-in- g fense merely to get through with the the shortage he had dene wrong case. He thought it possible to finish the trial hy next Monday night. in trying to hide It from the director Goff will go from the recordand examiners. He admitted making false entries to do thia, but said he er's bench to th supreme court bench was ready to take whatever punish- at midnight next Monday, and If the ment should be given him for doing Mann care is not finished by that this. He offered tonight to explain all tlmee It mav result In mistrial. Fevered bank clerks testified that the false entries and to do what he could toward correcting the bank's the disputed writing was identical with the admitted writing. books. He also asked to be allowed to remain at Sedan and pay bark at TWO ROBBERS SHOT. once as much of the money as he could and to pay back the remainder of it as fast as he could earn it. AGuthrie, Okl.. Dec. 26. A Stale lthough hla shortage was sltout ti".-0"- i, Capital special from Pawnee say: An unknown man Is dead, another the property that he left, reduced the net shortsarc' to about $12. "no, and perhaps fatally injured and Fred this has been made good by the Springier, a saloon keeper, aeverely bmlsed a the result of a ''holdup'' Htallard has not been rrex-ewas accosted ye', and probably will not be for laet night. Springier several days yet, although be will lie hv two ' ranger while tin his way tip his closely watched. Htallard wa Induced home. InM4 of throwing to cmre onie by a telegram fioin Ills hand as commanded, h opened fire wife which fh cent to him J.t- -i week and ne of the liandlt fell, dying al. She had no' heard most instantly. The ot her may at Dullu. arm was broken Sjiriiivler' from him mr.!l 'Deri xcept once when ill list- I4iv-e- . Lt m'v. i, leiict io lu i iiii : s Re-rord- stork-h-d-ier- d INTRODUCING' FORTUNES ACCUMULATED t lif g n MADAME DERAYLAN. Baron Schlippenbach Gives Facts Spokane, Wish.. Dec." 26. Sidney F1,wne. who slew his own father, on Sat"l o go free, though the Jury urday pronounred Sloane not guilty reason Judge W. A. " Hnenekeof insanity." he today ordered thatNil alia ion!d be taken to the Walla I nl'pntlary. ihere to remain until the 'irher order of the court. The Judge that this action was taken for ,p safety of tfie romnitinlty. it having shewn that the prisoner's insan- of a permanen' char"ter and "at he might again become violently any time. The court also held 1ht war- e liitd no power to dictate to the The comp- currency 1 1, Bos, Goes 28. a has dividend of 2o jut cent of all the creditors of the Aetna Ranking company of Hutte. Mont., hii.1 Ws-hiI. in, D. f. It decided that It will require about a month to prepart for payment wh'n thi creditors will he f notified. secretary of the association. Mr. Fish, in a communication to John De Witt Warner, sets forth the attitude of the association regarding Mr. Jerome's determination to take tip the matter now. nl It Mr. FUh said: Prevention - Better Than Cure. "At to the attitude of this association In bringing the charges against Mr. Peabody in October, our purpoe was to prevent the continuing of the crime of coercion of employes In behalf of the administration lickei rather than to bring about the punishment of a completed crime after the criminal had profited to the full term. While the punishment of the crime is Important and the association trusts that the district attorney will take up the matter vigorously, nevertheless, in view of the fart that the election and - by Mr, Jerome's acquiescence Mr. Peabody and bla fellow lawbreakers already hare reaped the fruita of the illegal action, so that our interest Is only that of all citterns, we feel that KING OF SERV1A any criminal' action to he taken at this time la the concern of the district CONFRONTS PROBLEMS i torn ey aa such, rather than ours. The wllneiftfts In this matter were, as the district attorney Is aware, clients Supporters of Murdered King arc Act of AHiert 8. Nard, who will no doubt, ive in Their Opposition to arrange to produce them at Mr. Je- . . Present Sovereign. rome's request. We think they will lie easily available If convinced that Mr. Jerome mesne business." Belgrade, Ferris. Dec. 28. The naThe witnesses referred to were tional asaemhly finally haa accepted, Herbert N. and T. Reid Fell of this the loan and asaesaraent bills, which chy; Edward O. Sutton of Springfield, were sent today for signature to King Peter. Mans., and Fred O. Paige of Detroit. The debate on these measures today was attended by rloorderly scene on the part of the member of the JAPANESE CONDITIONS assembly, arising from the opening IN HAWAIIAN ISLANDS expression of sentiment against the dynasty, present Karageorgeavlch which give rise to report in German Austrian quarters of a movement Government Discourages It People and dethrone King Peter. Foreign to From Coming to America Because the street disorders of the last few of Exiatlng Conditions. days the occurrences In the chamber today have added to the aeriouantas of the present situation. The king la at present confronted Washington, Dec. 26. A report on Japanese conditions in the Hawaiian with many difficult problem, not it.landa will W made to President least of which Is the renewed .activity Loose veil by Frank P. Sargeant, com- of the supporters of the late King missioner of immigration and natural- Alexander and Queen Drags, who isation, aa a result of bia recent visit Acre murdered the night of June 10.-to the islands. 1903, aod the popular Commissioner Sargeant today ex- aroused by the recent escapades of pressed the opinion that. ' ther are George, the crown prince. fewer Japanese One of the deputies opposed the in the Hawaiian islands now than there were two loan on the ground that the member ago, a greater number having of the reigning family would personcuine to America in that period than ally pocket a large portion of It, and Mlkl Salta, the the final debates brought out. antidyNrrlved in HawalL which a in .lai.nnese general at Honolulu, inti- nasty demonstrations mated to Mr. Sargeant that the Japan- number of riotous students sustained ese government discouraged its peo- serious injuries. Premier Psalca has ple frau coming to the United Slates received s number of threatening letIwauRe of Its knowledwe of the con- ters intimating that fhe present dyditions existing in thla countrv, nasty will meet a fate similar to that on the Pacific coast, and It of its predecessor. was apprehended that the coming Tbp late King Alexander was a Lore of great numbers Of Japanese member cf the Obrenovit's family. It "light induce a prejudice against Is asserted that secret meetings of leaders have been Diem that would be emharrasaing.- the Tbe commissioner of immigration held for the purpose of selecting an found that the own.-rof sugar, pine European prince as a successor to in the King Peter in the event of a successapple and other plantation! inlands are in serious need of labor. ful dynastic movement. nd many Japanese are' coming to the Hands to work on them. Ha says PROBABLE DROWNING. hat it is the effort of the Hawaiian planters to diversify their lsbcr aa far Portland. Ore., Dec. 26. Private adpossible, not codflnlng it to sny one vices received In Portland from Capt. rHce. but getting people fmm all quar-'eWilliam P. Gregory of the U. 8. 8. of the world. A second shipload from Juneau. Alaska, anof Portuguese will arrive at Honolulu Heather,the nounce probable death by drownin a short time, and it is probable or Capt. James E. Lennsn. the bat these immigrants will make the ing Alaskan pilot. Capt. Hand their permanent home. Many pioneer waa engaged tn piloting the Heather more plantations would be operated in Alaskan waters when that vessel Tn the Islands If it were possible t arrived at Juneau, where he disap''tain the necessary laborers, but up peared. in the present time labor haa been Capt. Jim" Ixnnan is known prob"ante, it la expected that the arrival ably In every prominent sespert In bt the islands of European laborers the world. For a quarter of a cen" ill be a solution of the Hawaiian lab-r- " tury he had piloted vessels from problem. Puget Sound north. Of late year he has been the government pilot In Alaskan waters. NOT TO GO FREE. S:dny Sloane, tha Patrtcid to Penitentiary. DECLARED. lkc. Washington, DYNAMITE . The district attorney's letter was referred by Judge Herrick to John De Witt Warner, chief counsel fur the who in Policy Holders' association, turn handed It over to Russell W. Fish - they 27. LINES laborer - Ideas island. North i'acihc (Wan. 2,The balk Carrollton of San Frmiri-c1.852 tons. I'apt. lit n.! ricks, don of the pi Ison as to his method of trea'lug (he priMimi. Young SU.aue. wliu was happy. Juollf.nl mid singing discoui-Hge- Escapee. M Dec. Punish the Perpetrators Later. New York, Dec. 26. District Attorney Jerome hu written a letter to D. CVdy Herrick of couuel for the Mutual life Policy Holders' association, aaylng he is now willing to take Reef and DECEMBER and ON HOUSTON linvp. VESSEL LOST. MORNING. MING - is.--.- red BE THAT FRIDAY. III lie in b-- WILL THURSDAY 1 Life. ARE - Providence, R. L, Ikc. 28. Distinstudent of political science, hlatoriau and educators representing liiuiiv lending universities and tuber educational insiltuiioua of tbl country, assembled here tonight f.ir ihe opeulug of a series 'of annual meeting to be held under the auspice of Brown unlveraiiy during the remaining data of the present week. Convention of the American Historical association, the American Economic association, tbe American Political Science association, the American society and the Bibliographical society of America are Included In tbe program of the week. Prof. J. W. Jenka of Cornell university, president of the American Economic association, delivered the annual address to the association tonight, his subject being The Modern Standard of Business Honor." Prof. Jenka said: Gsthsrlng Qtaat Fortunes, The frequency of great fortunes, gathered, perhaps legally, but in ways felt to be unjust, thnmgh the mwer of monopoly, have tendered strongly to obscure the nmraj vMun of many well meaning men, who have been thereby led to coufiind morality with sorlal righteousness; and their acta have formed the excuse fur many others to break laws which seem to them unjust. The profit from in unjust though legal slock watering may well prove mure demoralizing In biusineM circles tlum tbe Illegal freight re site which saves from ruin a grain shipper caught at a disadvantage." guished three miles northeast of here yesterday and hot night. Details ot tbe trouble are not known here, bnt tt ia known tint at toast five negroes lost their Uvea as a result of it. Bevcral others are retained u haws Been killed, but these report lack DOUBLE SUICIDE BY DRINKING ACID Frank Delaney Hands Carbolie Acid Walla They Drink . ta Beesie and Die Yogether, Elmira, K. Y Dec. 26. Although a guard waa standing close behind him tonight, Frank Delaney, a railroad man, succeeded In a bold attempt to end his Ufa and lha Ufa of a woman who occupied a cell In tha womans dormitory of fhe Elmira miiuiy jail. The wottisa waa Hearts Wells, awaiting sentence on January 3 for abducting a young girl and harboring her for Immoral purposes. Delaney poHaeased a power cf attorney for tbe woman and when he called nt the Jail and stated that ho wished to consult regarding the signing uf Important papers there was no objection a the part uf the warden, who sent a guard along with hint. The gunrd stood close hy while the man and woman ware conferring together, Remady Diacuaeed. In the way of remedy Prof. Jeuka when suddenly Delaney drew from submitted that the state should make hla pocket a Iwttle of carbolie acid the conditions such that human nature amt passed it through tho ban. The woman seised It and awallnwud the would not be templed beyond lt streugAg, and make and enforce laws content, instantly Delaney pressed a second bottle to bis own lips. The which shall forbid UBsrnipiilnii practices like the employment of child la- guard sprang upon him, but the noun bor or tha adulteration of goods. fought him fiercely for a moment ami It may seem a tame and impotent then collapsed. Ha died before a phyconclusion, concluded Prof.' Jenka, sician could be called. When the door of the cell was unthat there is no legislative panacea for our business Ills, and that iiptm u bolted 'the woman lay dying on tha as Individuals reals the responsibility floor. Bhe, too, died within a short for Mir impmrement. The Justifica- time. tion for the conclusion ta hnman nature and the eaperience of the ages." DEATH IN RING. SETTLEMENT Falla Uncenaeieus at End of Eighth BY BROKERS. Arnold, Lo A company, slock exchange brokers, who failed last Thursday, have filed a art U urn dil with their creditor on Ihe basis of Ml per real cash aud (8 per cent In notes. According to the assignee, Arnold, o A company's liabilities were about $90(1,0811 and assets about Tbe firm will resume again aa ream aa certain legal formalities have been compiled with. Round. New York, Dec. 26. Fargo, N. D., Dec. 26. After hearing tbe testimony of several physicians. the coroner's Jury which haa beta Investigating the death of Calvin Good, n negro pugilist whodied after being knocked out at a recent nodal aenak-of the local lodge uf Blka, rendered a verdict that Good died of pneumonia, and no blame attached to d the Elks. Good went on for a bout with Jim Gaines, another negr pugilists. There were many note abkw at the ringside, including QUIET NOW PREVAILS. Sheriff Elect and State Attorney Barnett. Reports of Diaturbancee Hava Bean Hunt In the tenth round Good fell unena-acinu- s Exaggerated. and remained in that condition hours later. Memphis, Tenn., IVc. 26. Advices until he died several fmm Brooba and Wahalak, Miss., ttv Postmortem disclosed tbe fact that lungs were iMdly congealed and night state that quiet prevalhi at both hla well aa throughout Dial ha would probably have died of of those towns tbe surrounding territory, and that pneumonia with In a abort time, bla the trexipa and rlvll authorities are In death being hastened by violent exercise. complete control of the situation. Gaines, the aacrmsful opponent of According to Ihe moat reliable refled to Winnipeg. ports, the disturbances of tbe last Good, few days in Kemper county were not REMAINS FOUND. aa serious aa at first reported. The trouble la attributed to the action of El Paso, Tex., Iv. 26. Tho rea reckless mob. which, in aesrrhlng fur the negro who attacked Conductor main of PrnfcMor TNunaa Crindell Cooper aboard a Mobile A Ohio train and his party, who left Dmigbus, Artx. last Sunday and shot and killed Con- in June, 1904, on an exploring expedistable O'Brien of Wahalak, killed tion into Tlburon islands, located in three negroes and wounded several the Gulf of Oalitornfa, but who ware never afterward heard from, have Just other. Feeling against Ihe negroes wss in- ham found In a droMwt la Sonora, tensified by the killing of Conductor where they perished evidently for K. N. Harrison of the Mobile A Ohio want of water. The idrarlflcaiiun was on Monday made through letters addressed tu railroad at Crawford be. GrindeU found with tbe remains, night, and believing tbe mob was yotid control. Deputy Sheriff Alexso-de- r waa principal of tbe Douglas sc bole. at Fcooha asked that troops be sent there in order that Innocent neo groes might he protected. Two com- o O ANOTHER EARTHQUAKE. panies of state troops are now en- O o o camped at Brooba. O late thla evening. Governor Yard-ma- O Rantiago de Chits, Dec 28. twenty five O Half of the town of Aries, In O aocompanled by numbers of the company of state O the province of Tamm, has O stationed at Jarkaon, left for O lcen hy an earth- - O fleo-.hVardmun slated O quake and other towns in tbe O that there had been no fresh out- O neighborhood have suffered O break. tint that be Is going to the O more or lees severely. The O scene in order that he might make a O seaport of Iqnique, 120 miles O The troops O south of Aries, waa not dam- - O persons) investigation. are to be relieved who have been on O aged. With the recollection of O hours. O the August disaster fn-sIn O duty fur the past twenty-fou- r O their minds the people in the it O earthquake zone are greatly O NEGROES IN FEAR. O O alarmed. O Assemble at Bcoeba for Protection by O $880,-0(H- a ), ten-roun- ooooooooooooooo n. tnll-lltl- a, h Militia. Scooba. Miss, 1er. 26 An Asso who arciated Press repre-enta'irived In Brooba tonight about dark, found the streets crowded with groe who had gathered from mile around. Thev were highly excited, but there was net.hlng threatening In ihelr demeanor. According to their statements most of them had gathered through fear that, violence would be done them If they remained in the surrounding districts, and fear alone had driven them into the town. With rompanlea of nnlitla patroling the street Ihere seemed to be little apprehension among either white er negroes. Among the whites the opin-kI fieelv expressed that the enlre trouble was uncalled for and could have been avoided. Tlie difficulty which aroused both rcvs lii ibii- - citr and viclulij oocurred n ooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooO HICKS TO LECTURE. Bakersfield. Cal.. Dec. 26. Hlrka this morning Miner signed a contract for $380 a week, tn continue for a year, with N. J. Schmidt, a contracThis means tor of Berkeley. for tha now famous miner the sum of $25"60 for a year's public appearance on the lecture platform. With Illck will go Harry LinrliW. who assisted In the rescue, and two of the miners wlti bored the rescue will trt.1 of his Hick drift. caperlenre while luitoiiibed in the shaft at Fniisou. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o i |