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Show Acts directly upon the organs affected, and will give prompt relief in most disorders of the kidneys and bladder. It is one of the best remedies on the market Ike Emery Charles Good Over Town, B With the his wife search unwittingly of officers Good, alias directing of Charles the law, Rich, was had left it in payment Py -_-- of a $10 bill. ae ¢ Good had been around the » southern part of the state for several months in Mammoth and was recently Mving with his wife, but was foreed tuo leave that place by his brother-in-law, Joe Thomas, who suspected him of having in séveral burglarics béen implicated huaye there. Officers of Utah county are was that Gooa to believe rezson nected with the robbery of the Rio depot at Spe .ish lork, Western Grand the had he time the During Utah. buggy from Provo he secured a sum of money from William Taylor of fe lem, telling him that he woul? retur he next day and pay it back, which failed to for but the trick that she Good late did not know taken back Sunday night will be her on during the' past few Lake look of the I by Governor political fences Changes Horace for who dismay among the as did worth, for he that of had been on Oe to minster and, copper-producing den properties in which I am interested will be Increased and preparations for comthe ee eine ae will be college, when by lubors his Dr. the and of Mrs. Stevenson physiclan farther, part for a to tire, of of his rofessor atktenzait Tisde} reiterating some of Professor Morton's charge 8, and declared that the University of Wyoming could never be made a firstclass educational instiution unless 1 ts management were divorced from pol = ties and politicians. He intimated he was ready to surrender his position at any time, Tisdel came to the 1904. He is a nephew D. Clark of Wyoming. university in of Senator C. OWNY girls as were black looks magistrate, as prisoners out. halted showered the policemen Then Judge them. of men directly ~ortert you im- - >) are held es withont Robertson. Berkman part in affair may Yiddish, headquarters, which were de- some and might lead to the establishment of a plot to carry out the bomb throwing| of Saturday afternoon. These Letters Are Translated. letters were translated Kuhne Cohen, a cousin and according of to by the bomb Captain CONFERENCE. Salt Lake City, April 4-5-6. The usual low round trip rates wil be In effect via the Oregon Short Line for Conference, aoe on sale fron all Relate Wp to Spe Sede: Idaho, am ande, sr fone n stations south) A nd to 6th, inclusive limited oe: retorn to Apr Tickets on sale at Ogden and4 stations south, April ist tb ET quale. nt ed to Apri See 0. 8, I s fo. furtker eee ara. Berkman, found sealed and addressed but not stamped, contain such sentiments as those who kill despots and the criminally rich are heroes and that When death comes of their work they are martyrs. The other letter re ferred to the ‘brotherhood in London." Cohen May Recover. Cohen, or Silverstein, as he prefers to call himself, now stands an excellent chance to recover, according to Dr. Cuddibach, who has the bomb thrower in charge. He will also, in all probability, recover the sight of one of his eyes, but he will be frightfully deformed for the rest of his life. The man's vitality has amazed every one in Believue, particularly since he was declared a short time ago to be suffering from heart dls- ease by a Brooklyn physician, who gave Cohen but a few months to live. It was belleved that any severe shock would kill him, yet strangely SOROS the man has survived severe man could shock undergo Sisters Call that and at any still noitnal live. Hospital, There was a dramatic meeting at the hospital yesterday between Cohen and his two sisters, Sella, 21 years old, and Sarah, aged 19. The two girls, who live at 12 Delancey street, are timid, shrinking types of the Ghetto. An attendant took charge of them and escorted the trembling women to the prison ward, where a big policeman was on guard. Silverstein was lying comparatively quiet on his cot, Next to tempted bomb him lay suicide a man by thrower who drinking was had The In ban- a nurse stood near at nurse-to anticipate movement his life, that younger he might girl burst at- acid. swathed dages and -a male The make into hand any to end tears and shrunk back, but Sella went resolutely forward until she stood at the bedside of -the original whipped center chocolate-is just the article to brin ¢ an extra to the wife or sweetheart. smile * "Made only by her brothe "Selig," do she whispered, "did you it?" "I Se sort don't know, I. don't remember," stammered. "I'm glad you came o 5ee Then me, his o, I don ‘t remember.' talk rambled off they let me Everything of and he head nodding looked they long turned and away. the fresh air again the elder her shoulders back and a calm came her sister into her close to face. her she sobbed: "I glad be if my brother die." Girls Are Questioned. they were taken hefore In- spector McCafferty at police headquarters, where they were closely questioned Begs their brother and tola xy the inspector that they | fo eth crite four years ago, They took the name of Silverstein when their father died in Russia five years ago. Their brother came to "america with them and upon their arrival here he went to work for a tailor. "Selig has the been elder ill most sister, of his life," ‘‘and was always complaining about his station in life. The only paper that we ever saw Sellg read He was the studied was not Warheil, a great too ill he a deal, would Jewish paper. and when visit the he pub- He libraries and read books. He also aitended a nlght school in Brokiyn for a time.' "Was your brother ever interested in chemistry?" said McCafferty. "At one time, yes,'"' was the reply. "He often had several books on that subject in Kis roam." Selig, his sister said, had often complained of his head, COMMISSIONER IS ACTIVE, B. Sargent Goes to New York to Consult Authorities. Washington, March 29.-Frank B. Sargent, commissioner of Immigration, will go to New York tomorrow, and while there will consult with federal and municipal authorities as to the perfection of further steps to suppress anarchy in this country. The effort by anarchists to destroy the police of New York, following closely upon the attempt to murder Chief of Police Shippy of Chicago, has impressed the federal authorities here with the necessity of more stringent and rigorous efforts to prevent anarchists from Europe from obtaining 9 foothold in country. Though Commissioner Sargent does not admit that he is golng to New York for the purpose of consulting the authorities, there is more effective methods of keeping anarchists from landing in America, he said tonight, He will doubtless consult with several men in authority in this connection, Effect of Incident. Sargent said that he had arranged to go to New York some time ago to attend to routine matters at the emi!grant station on Bilis island. - "There is no question in my mind," he said, "that the Tatest attack upon the police in New York will result in greater vigilance on the part of the police in New York, and will make them much more eager to get Information leading to the deportation of al! those who come within the law against anarchists. "Our investigations are going on constantly under the instructions we recelved some weeks ago. We are getting reports and will act on them aS soon as cases are clearly made out. How we are getting the information has already been explained in the circular of the secretary of the depart- ment of commerce Mr. Sargent was and labor. asked if, while New York, he would not make inquiry in the present case. "It le Hkely that * will be possession tiles sufiered ve tad in noed there in special 6 sald: put. in of all the facts the authorimay Cascarete natold ‘minary. with ine roal plies, m freo from ule sthip ft wu beshalt all thas this of suffering B. P. morning. hnmantt <7 Fisher, Roanoke, y CANDY Ill. " r on re or yc 1« Sterling AMHUAL SALE, 7TEM MILLION BOXES Politics and Things Paul the ARMSTRONG. former Morton, navy, Life head now surance As railroad service, Roosevelt adherent, Lake April 6 Newhouse? circles have, but I am not go- ing to New York for that purpose, as in specific cases, the reporta are made eee and sent to the department here. secretary of the society to a is coming a is guest to of Salt Samuel In coming of thorough hinted the of Equitable eraduate and be It where a political visit of Mr. Morton is known that the trip to the West bears more or less political significance. At the same time, it is hinted by Mr. Newhouse that the visit will be of importance to the financial interests, but Mr. Newhouse prefers to let Mr. Morton tell why he is in Utah when he gets here. Mr. Morton was appointed secretary of the navy in July, 1904, and served fu President Roosevelt's cabinet one year, when he resigned to become the head of the Equitable Life. Mr. Morton is a little more than 50 years of age, and he has crowded into his life all the activity that an energetic, capable man can give it. .What he has in the way of worldly goods he has earned by hard labor and unstinted application of brains and energy in the service of his employers and himself. He started as a clerk in the land office of the 3urlington railroad system, when he was 15 years old. He rose steadily until he became general freight agent of the Burlington, and then quit railroad service for a time. Later, he took hold of the Santa Fe a when it needed guiding spirit, and reorganized the system, placing it at the forefront the railroad systems OL of the West. Mr, Morton fs in every sense 2 selfmade man, Is a power in the country today, and his views upon finance, business or matters affecting the of the United are regarded as important of weight wherever they ° States and are worthy known. © Councilman Lew Martin isn't a champion of purity or temperance, by any means, and while he is the father of an ordinance regulating the liquor traffic an Salt Lake, those who know him an@® his recora a city official can not ‘construe his authorship as an indication of motives that make for the betterment of the moral tone of the community. Martin thinks thaf his ordinance will pass the council. It provides that saloons shall close at midnight each night and remain closed until 6 o'clock in the morning. That's about all the ordinance requires of the _ saloonkeepers Those who Know Martin and sentiment of the American party regard to saloon regulation the with say that the ordinance was suggested by the liquor interests as a move to check the spread of. sentiment, In favor of prohibition. In its zig-zag course across the continent, prohibition is stirring a titanic struggle that will burst forth, sooner or later, until it involves political parties and leaders and changes the political geography of several states. The saleon interests and bad politics a hung long closely enough enough boon period companions tions. hard With to an beat' together to on make some _ the Hquor for them proposi- oarganization that interests is feel the pulse of the counrry as accurately as a physician notes the pulsebeats of a patient. That the wave in favor of prohibition or more stringent saloon regulation has hit Utah, in its onward course, there is no gainsaying; and if the saloon interests of Salt Lake have consented to midnight closing, it may be taken as the first move in a concerted program to ward off an anti-liquor attack that would result in more drastic measures, whether by the eclty council or by the legislature. But Martin isn't the champion the white ribbon people by any means. His color of ribbon is blue, with a capital P, for the man who brews the brand it represents. Martin lolled back on the leather cushions of some of the city's choice upholstering in Mayor Bransford's private office and promised to move out of Utah if it becomes a prohibition state. "Why, I was back in Kansas,"' he said, "in the prohibition days along in the elghties. I lived at a town called Kerwin, and that town was as dead as other towns where lquor wasn't sold. The whole. state was dead, and this state will be the same way if prohibition carries. "But I can't kick on the old days in Kansas, I made more money as a mechanic in those days than I have since. I'll tell you about it.' Then Mr. Martin took the fat cigar from his cavernous mouth, aimed an unwilling, moist missile at yon spittoon and told how he had built "blind tigers'' in Kerwin until he became comfortbly fixed, and had six months‘ room and board at the prominent hotel thrown in. Why, he was so skillful at devising schemes that would secrete the booze and at the same time get it he won built in a the path @ name "blind of for tiger' the thirsty, himself. for a drug for reputation. Later, a he built "blind open graves, they were shot. over town, and his inventive the Martin isn't exactly W. C. T. U., and tigers" all la an account ¥ CAPITAL, 200,000,000, S50 C0 APO, SURPLUS, DEPOSITS, 23,000,000. In 00, genius at arranging some deception to cover up tracks brought in the money in great wads, He planned and schemed and originated and the net result was that more liquor was sold in Kerwin during prohibition days than there was in the days of the open saloon, a champion of you can't make Its Fine Flavor Finds Favor Everywhere some people believe that there is no ulterior motive behind his introdue tion | of a bill for SuSor re eat on. Tom Kearns Fak ‘tagh in Europe and {s expected to return to Salt Lake today And that may or may not recall 1 story that has been going the rounds t has never. been printed and Ton will get home just in time to ppreciate {t It happened that Joe Lippman was general manager of the Tribune while he was United States district attorn< When he took the managership of th Tribune, Kearns agr éd to give him a certificate of. Tribune Pe ind at the end of Lippman's first vear a manager, he would Ely Nik 2 bonus of $10,000 There were some provisions and specifications which provided that by the first of July, at the end of the first year, notice would have to be served upon Kearns by Lippman ealling, in a way for the ten thousand plunks. In the meantime, Lippman was to get all the emoluments that come with shares of stock and was to dip into every dividend. While Lippman was manager : ee Tribune he discovered that the an Poh, of gram owed the Tribune other things. $8,000 for paper and Keith and Kearns owned. intere&ts in the Telegram as well as the Tribune, but Lippman didn't own any Telegram stock, so he forced an accounting for the $8,000, got his dividend and pocketed the money. About tha time he was naving trouble with camper I. Cannon editorial writer. It happened that the Ke S paper went after W. A. Richards, t commissioner of the gcneral. land office, and necused him of various forms of misconduct, growing out of the opening of the Uintah' reservation Lippman went to Washington and ascertained that the charges, as is characteristic of all Tribune charges, were untrue, and he agreed to print a statement retracting all that had oecen said Cannon induced Kearns to repudiate the statemrent and it didn't appear in the Tribune, and that ts one of the things that led directly to the breach which resulted in Lippman's resigna- A. Fisher Brewing Co. o8e So Phone No. 265. ee See | SBOSOEORI SOD MAKING LAST SPRING'S CLOTHES READY-TO-WEAR is an easy them or to matter us if yon send eleaning for the repaiing, Our the French Dry (‘leaning Surest and safest, is NG a Cleaning ka 9 & Dyeing Co. Main Office Ist. So, & State as t happened that Lippman Tao his $10,000 and he had only a few days of grace in which to get the money by serving notico on Kearns of his resignation, and calling for payment of the originality The and attreebonus. Kearns scented trouble ind tiveness of a ee ia worth started for Eurone, and there ensued more than is the Iabor end ma1 race agross the continent that was et teriul used more ‘spectacular than a stern ¢ has In rowing contest. O. W Pow: rs was | retained by Lippman to serve notice o Ifearns and Judge Powers started cast on the fastest train he could find. He landed in New York with the documental notice In his pocket and caught Kearns, who was seaving the WaldorfAstoria for parts unknown Judge Powers halted Kearns in the lobby of the hotel and in the presence of \ McCune sr. 18 2 witness, served the notice, which won for Joe Lippman his $10,000, or whatever was left when he paid Powers the fee that was coming to him for his gallant transcontinéntal chase Then Mr. Lippman resigned from the Tribune, taking with him a cut of the BSOLUTBLY FIREPROOF 78,060 from the Telegram, the $10,000 bonus from Kearns and some other dividends that came with his holdings of one Door from Broadway stock In the paper. ory Yori NEW 4 Sinee his retirement from the paper, superior, perfectly appoint Joe Lippman has freely confessed that refner tel appenli nent n &_ especially nae a people Dearie ti the Tribune has paid no dividends, and of whether that is a compliment to the $4. 00. "Parlier Lippman brand of financlering or to bedroom Da ty bath, the Tribune policy of conducting an $6.00 and $6.00, Tw ler and bath, $6. 00, "sc expensly agency of ruin, regardless ang on of cost, you will have to figure it out HARRY L. Bho ef Hotel Victoria. for yourself. aaten, and Isle- Phones 1133. HAMLIN PAINTS HOTEL PIERREPONT | 43, 45, 47 West 32nd 8t. ore Kryptoks Are for People Who Need Different Glasses for Distunee and{ e@xNear Sight. Kryptoks are our clusive production; you will not find them elsewhere in Salt Lake, COLUMBIAN OPTICAL Co, 259 Main a Salt Lake City, Utah. clephone 2152-k. a nn. y ‘OU HAVE YTHING TO JUST CALL MOV ON = £:C. Watson Transfer Co. SSS TU PoUnRTH BELL WES'. IND. De 1565. | <i Clayton Music Co. | ‘UNION DENTAL CO Utah's Leading Music House. LT 10 ane LAKE Keuth wos Sixeat, 218 SOUTH MAIN Honest Work-Honest Prices P. Rinleess Extra Ne Pay. All Work Positl On of Teeth or rely Gitasien Pheonpes--Nell, 1126-T; Ind. 1126. sac y store, all comers, The sliding springs and other conmake for the concealbooze and bar and the white apron established Martin beside a to open merelal men took soldiers the Instances some list the upon not were names whose one being Simon Fleur. For him they executed a man named Simon Ford, Congress will meet next month to elect a successor to President Alexis. He will likely succeed himself He is nearly a centenarian, and it is said, that he intends to end his career under| the title of emperor of Hayti | first and it pleased panels, secret traptions that ment of the man with the for of... 27) list: extreme the in brutal military to ‘the furnished was names midnight. after shortly officers were on thelr later 27 men hour An kneeling where, to the cemetery, way that He war-| foreign is little there week of two the ago describe two weeks as soldiers officlals and the cutions of of action BY BERL 29.-Were You Need Not Wait | i t be repeated. igo would eq whites in this city, fearful The finished} yet not has Alexis President re volu-| his bloody efforts to stamp out consuls | forelgn the upon urge tion, govern-| their of asking necessity the for here warships the to keep ments has Alexis President time some no} be will there that word his ziven i faith little but executions, more assurances. in his placed exewholesale the of details The Pleasant, Palatablo. Potont. Tasto Good, Do Good, Never Sicken, Weakenor Gripe boc. Never gold in buik, Tv ae genu me * tabioe stamped coo Guaronteed | | President's Faith Little Promise That Massacres Will Cease. : March Prince, Port au of presence the for not waters, ships in Haytien massacre the that doubt CATHARTIC we UnTag tao Si | WHITES IN HAYTI FEAR REVOLUTION in Thanke Best! For The Bowels have Frank this t! s Later, said Dnrineg political condition would would of the Brooklyn detective head- quarters, they connect Alex Bergman and Cohen with very startling plans, Two letters written by Cohento his daugh- don't me. bandaged him Outside in girl threw develop today to have contained inflammatory utterances Lippman thrower, his at Gathering these sensational results. On Saturnight, Detective Lieutenant We- clared highly forbia- incoherent, Why "I can't see. z0? Don't bother is dark." them farewell, Both of the zansky of the Manhattan Pres- gether. "And the obverse truth, if all we may be, and should be, falls, like a summer morning's glory, on ail life's seeming littleness, and makes it grand and wide and high, because this pulsing light makes glorious humanity as it makes adorable and perfect fatherhood. "And no more in any strain, save that with ‘our beasts of Ephesus,' no more in any tearful cry for clearer vision do we toil on the earth, but with the sunlight of the perfect we move through life's long day, glad in all God is and would blessed in the pride and joy this poor humanity may be in itself and for Him-a thing ever glorious in the light of His truth."' became rnine years I suffered with chronis conue id an ring gnis vie I had to t of wa ovory 24 hours before y a te a an "ny bowels. Happily I , i mo well. map atipas ieon In sy tion I conld brio H Ca spiritual. After five minutes of whispered conversation, the two sorrowing girls de- captured in Cohen's rooms at 82 Beaver street, Brooklyn, a bundle of letteers and documents written for the Ge ns STARTUP Onc.) Is the be parted, day ~ o public Page and shall fixedly The 5 days a His value "And if there be aught relatively or absolutely incomparable in the universe, it is the light of the Christ, measured on its relative side by narrowness of all other vision of and His heart, or absolutely by which it achieves in life given over to the dominion of its spirit ideals. "And only in the light of Him of Nazareth do all men find God the pitying, loving, seeking Father, see Him in visions that put to shame the poor thinkings of our heart in the vision of all we have apprehended He might be, Knowing Him in this better light as the one tender and righteous alto- typical more UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT LOSES OFFICIAL HEAD A old, th West- continue of From years ‘Robertson, Stevenson, was have of bail until Tuesday morning, The rest of you are held in $3,000 bail." Immediately afterward Murphy threw an air of mystery about the proceedings and denied that he had ter, have finally succeeded in placing the educational institution "on ts menced at 0 feet." The latest proof of this is the announcement that the college is to exbuild a girl's residence, near the presA arning-to feel tired priare £ sign that ertion is not laziness-tit's a sl ent Converse hall. a vitality, the system lacks needs en Dr. Stevenson came to Salt the tonic effect of Bags Sorsepertlley rid Lake about two years ago, Westmindela e Sufferers should no beginfining to ster college had been in existence some of that tired feel ng ey years, but was in danger of losing the take Hood's Sarsaparilla today. site that had been granted to it, on condition that it should have a college building constructed within a certain time. In the year's time that was thus sagt ed him, Dr. Stevenson managed to et the building constructed. It was 29.-The Laramie, Wyo., March cndawed by J. H, Converse, president board of trustees of the University of of the Baldwin Locomotive works of Wyoming this afternoon peremptorily Pittsburg. The girls' dormitory is endowed by removed President Frederick Monroe a Salt Lake woman who promised $15,Tisdel on the ground of alleged mal insubordination and 00C on condition that an additional $10,administration, 600 was raised. This fund has been affairs. untruthfulness in university Professor J. F. Tower of the Agricul- eollected, and Dr. Stevenson announces the building will probably be comof tural college and director th e that pleted by August. The foundations United States experiment statlon was have been built some months,/ .made acting president of the uniA hall for boys, to cost $31,000, deversity. pends on the gale of a piece of prop‘The removal of Tisdel has caused a n erty, which Dr, Stevenson hopes wil. be ugly feeling among many members of consummated in the near future. In the faculty who have indorsed h is|}addition a fund has bcen started for a $20,000 heating plant, and has alStand, and statements and eee ready grown to $9,000 by the wholesale are expect ed, issued 39 implicated on that terms nature. Robertson was directly implicated in the throwing of the bomb.' Calling all «f the prisoners, before 2 Stevenson the and came to men He w: is the light, and is so, because He put into the racial consciousness the sense of all the great God is In His purpose, His nature and His life, and that which by life's relationship we may and should be. "For as light reveals always itself primarily and the objective afterward, so Jesus, the Christ, {s the light lighting every man because He brings to the human heart in the unfolding of his tender word and work, the vislon of the spiritual glory in which the Father abides and the call to us to share it in a life whose dominant i908. CONSTIPATION demonstration of the infinite things abides apart from God's revealings. "The incarnation was as much a psychologieal as a philosophical necessity. For mtan can find illumination in spiritual things only by the windows of the physical life. And when Jesus Bowery loiterer. "T am going to hold cach of you men in $3,000 ball,'' seld the magistrate. One.) M. revealings the throwing of the he asked Murphy. Held Without Bail. "Yes,"' was the reply. ‘We believe Dr. Stevenson Announces Improvements as Result of His Untiring Efforts. efforts in NEW YORK POLICE SHOW VIGILANCE most Robert of bomb?" Mrs. Salt Untiring nature Spiritual, through "Are any plicated in WESTMINSTER WINS CAMPAIGN FOR CASH ident the His claim to be men's splritual A. Simpkin, the and relations Droege Wads- counted it voiced upon the led the lobby Speaker of was "Andrew Carnegie, in an Interview the other day, refused to grant the demonstration of the soul's immortal{ty on the base of human reason or scientific deduction. No satisfactory There last night by announcing that "the jig was‘up," and that the Agnew-Hart bills will pass the senate this or next week. White's desertion of the jockey alarm know been human Continued would gamblers' study morning "Nearly all life's 8 training and education and sensation have been in the feild of the material, despite the fact that life's abiding interest is with the spiritual, And it will be easily demonstrated by one who will think thoroughly in even a limited circle, that only he lives, finds even broken measure of perfecting and satisfaction, who demonstrates the spiritual The true seer and scholar are alone found by the spiritual way, "Splendid guesses have been made by men touching His dwelling place and nature. But what a man knows of the infinite and the truly spiritual, he knows because God has given him cook, Views. White, the Congrega- "John is not alone in the claim that Jesus Christ is the light of men's lives, and his priority is but in the matter of time What Jesus Himself claimed was unique and absolute. He eald: ‘I am the light of the world.' John echoes it in the claim that Jesus is the sole light, giving to every man that comes into the world His illumination. And unless we are prepared as a Christian church to surrender all, we must surrender nothing of Jesus's unique claim for himself. It Is not to be thought that Jesus's claim must stand apart from the test of all truth, so far as we may bring it to bear upon the divine content of Jesus's epee eS and teaching At east Aas Hie touches our life may we may test him, and in measure go further If there be aught trite it is the certitude that in our thought, importance rests with the vitality of the spiritual the unseen, the cternal, with us and about us, to like very much to be his party's candidate for governor, and who would accept the IMeutenant governorship if he failed of the first place, created field field there, but rather I intend to extend and push my Utah operations as much as possible. With the rise in the price of copper which I look for output or here necessary. issued their White i the ukase if you broken months. Page after Senator NEWHOUSE BACKS UP BOSTON CON. from day nominabills keep the Presidential year, are wielding quite as powerful an influence in proane the passage of the anti-racé gambling bills as any other. house. (Continued Is the direct reform and the Hughes to the steering committees of the senate and assembly. There is no mistaking the determination of the governor to force the enactment into law of these measures indicated at the regular session if he can or at an extra session if he must. Fears of an extra session together with the eagerness to get home and a ard it Is probcharged with also be- Géod's home was formerly in Ohio. Good is still in Salt Lake at the the ballot back Year's 29.-''Pass rtSORES e's Mb ituiation. ee it the dicted that the combine of nine Republican senators intended to unite with seventeen Democrats to hold up the Agnew-Hart measure will be husband's to Provo the you New This March lead the Republican senators against the legislation. Belmont, Keene and flees that they have enough evidence to connect him with several crimes committed in the southern part of the state until Y.. gambling, and call and club junta has created almost as much found that Mrs. ood's been there for some watts to the officers at the depot was train N, anti-race will Measures Senate to Assembly. to Phillips yesterday Material ee Reform on Albany, failed. his room in the Salt Lake = oye aken t the officers and their prisoner Sea whereabouts, DETERMINED Issued tions to there they trunk had She stated HUGHES Ukase Wife, About 1:30 o'clock she again started up town and this time she went direct to the city and county building, where she was met by her husband. The deputy sheriffs were close behind and arrested Good before he had a chance to g¢ét away. He expressed a desire to go The Pure Drug Dispensary)} 112-114 South Main Street et Soon after Good's arrival in Salt Lake he telegraphed a railroad ticket anc A 60 cents to his wife in Mammoth with instructions tao come to Salt Lake immediately, This was his undoiig as the railroad agent in Mammoth, }nowing that Good was wanted for several erimes he had committed, at once notified the sheriff in Provo. Mrs. Good started for Salt Lake Sunday morning and Deputy Sheriff Hale foliowed, At Springville she was put off the train on aceount of her ticket being made out wrong. This, however, was soon fixed up and she continued her trip to Luis city without further incident, On hér arrival here she must ha suspected that she was being Cie for she walked up town and back down to the depot again, evidently trying to tHrow the officers off her track, but without success, She tried several ways to mislead the officers. On her arrival at the depot the second time she bought seyeral postal cards and one of these she addressed to a party named Smith at Thistle Junction, which contained a message bidding her husband goodbye. The purpose was only to fool the of- ficers, STORE ON SPECIAL BILLS do. Sends our DEUG church devoted = ariested in Salt Lake Sunday afternoon by Deputy Sheriffs alma G. Hale of Provo and Ike Emery of Salt Lake. Geod is wanted in Proyo for the theft t ot a horse and buggy, which he secure d from Stark's stables several days ag Oo outfit was and falled to return. The where h found in Springville Sunday at Jesus's revealing, and of the solitary Nght Hilumination. Rev. P. pastor, said a Purityin Drink at ee Charies tional $1 a Bottle, $2.50 for Three --_-_- -- Alma Hales and Shadow Mrs, sermon 30, -_- The MARCH 2 G | 5) Ps Paw SALT Drunkenness | Addictions |= 2d Drug oe Orry, UTAM. Salt Lake eure Exchalange sera oe me tw OR Se j ~~ Kidney Remedy TRAIL WONDAY, Or -wEtane~- HER C1 7 o™ TO LAKE | CLING SALT Study of Revelations of Jesus Discussed By Rev. P. A. Simpkin\* Liverwort Deputy Sheriffs Follow Woma n and Land Man Wanted at Provo. REPUBLICAN, 3 LEADS OFFICERS TO HER HUSBAND INTER-MOUNTAIN BBOEr CODES THE Speen 2 |