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Show COALVILLE TIMES' FIVE N. JACOB PETERSON, THOUSAND RESULT Editor and Manager. ... OF - Intr4 Utah. at ths May Poatofllc T, Mat tar. lift, aa UTAH Hi GOVERNOR WATERS LOSES SPARKS jfflGtf? WITH DEATH In Conlvllla, Sacond-Claa- a or SCBaCRimOH. Pajihlo la Adaaaaa. H JJ Ona Taar Montha ati JJ Thraa Montha Sinfla Capiaa TERMS HOMELESS STATE NEWS Balt Lake boa8la of a brass 'bind,' all of the members of which are ladies. The fund for the construction of the aew Commercial dub building of Salt Lake City had reached $134,000 at the close of last week. Three suspects have been lodged In jail, charged with robbing a store at Lehl, when a considerable quantity of merchandise was stolen. The assessment rolls of Juab county, just made.-publl- e by the county assessor, shows a valuation of exclusive of th Vailroads. A recent addition to the industrial interests of Utah is a factory for the manufacture of all kinds of coat-ta- r products, which has beeiP established in Balt Lake City. In a debate held In the Lehl tabernacle last week between replesenta-tive- s from Lehl High school and the Weber High school, the Lehl representatives were victors. ' labile attempting to'allght from a street car In Ogden, Frederick Collins, an elderly man, waa thrown forcibly to the ground and sustained Injuries which may prove fatal The Ogden chamber of commerce, recently organised. Is establishing permanent quarters, six large rooms in the heart of the city having been secured and are being fitted up annual convention The twenty-fiftof the Knights of Pythias, Grand Domain of Utah, waa held in Salt Lake City last week, delegates from all portions of the state being in attendance. During a light In a pool hall at Kimberly. Den Carter shot Lawrence Hamel, the bullet entering bis mouth and going through the fleshy part of his cheek. Hamel Is not dangerously hurt. Twenty of the leading wool growers of Utah have organised a corporation for the protection of that Industry, with a capital of $20,000, and to be known as the Utah Wool Growers' association. Oliver Noe, a private of company F, stationed at Fort Douglas, while despondent as the result of a protracts spree, placed tbe muzzle of, a . Mle. bead vlfto So fata .tuua--eej- a blpg frightfully qp utils ted. The state board of health has Ist sued a circular letter to the health officers and county commissioners in all parts of the state, notifying them that the board Is ready to begin the free distribution of antitoxin. Joe Sullivan, sentenced to life Imprisonment for the murder of Policeman Ford of 8alt Lake, made vicious attack upon a fellow prisoner last Saturday, stabbing him with knife. 8ullivan has been placed In solitary confinement. Preparations are being made at the state school for the deaf and blind foi the triennial convention of the Am erlcan Instructors of the Deaf, which will meet tn Ogden July S, prominent educators from all parts of the coun try having promised to be present The highest court of Mexico bar confirmed the death sentence of the three Mexicans who murdered Georgs Rose, a mining man whose home war in Salt Lake, the tragedy occurring In Guanajuato, September 11, 1907, while the men were pillaging Roses house. A good roads mass meeting was held In Salt Lake City list week, at which representatives from Weber, Davis and Salt take counties who are In favor of the Improvement of the roads of these counties were present, plans Wing laid for improvement of the public highways. , An invention which will ultimately of result In the saving of fully one-hathe labor connected with gathering sugar Wots has been received at the office of the Utah-IdahSugar com pany and pi area on exhibition. The machine Is the Invention of Abraham Goodmanaon of Lehl. Edwin S, Snelgrove, for the past five years bookkeeper for the Utah Association of Credit Men, committed suicide In Salt take City, placing a revolver In his mouth and blowing off the top of his head. Despondency brought on by Irregularities ! In - his accounts led to the deed. A bold sneak thief, armed with a pair of plyers, detached a slot telephone from a business house in Salt take, broke open the lock and secured about $10 In nlckles, dimes and The bold and unique robquarters. bery was performed in broad daylight and the thief escaped. As the result of the giving way of a scaffold on which he waa working, Grant Patterson, a Park City carpenter, fell a distance of twenty feet and narrowly escaped death. As it is. he will be In the hospital for some time, with several broken riba and a sprained shoulder and wrist. Aa the result of a decision la the case of a couple of Salt Lake merchant who had refused to 'pay their merchant's license, the court deciding that the law waa constitutional. It Is bellevedJthe problem of collecting this license has been solved and there will be no further trouble. ! ...I- . a, lf Grabbed the Leader of the Attacking Band and Screamed Until Patrolmen Arrived on Scene. ' Trul Trip of Urjext Airslip Evm Constructed Ends in u Molt York. - While three employes Frightful Disaster. of the Jefferson hank were on their wav from the branch at Union anil Houston streets to the main bank on Canal street, carrying $13 000 rash, f Ten Thousand Spectators Stand Help they were attacked on First street by less and Witness Monster Flying Thrte men. who Jumped upon them Machine's Fall of 300 Foot. All and threw pepper In their faces, the of Occupants Being Injured. EdelSamuel leading thug attacking man. who carried the bulk of the money, grabbing hm money bag and other attempting to run wltfll Oakland, Cal. The great Morrell thugs took care of the other messen- airship, the ever New j gers. Edelruan tried to shake his assailant off, but was faring badly under the puinnieling when Mrs. Eva Javor-- i restauricka, a waitress In a near-bants grabbed the leader of tW attacking band by the arm She screamed so loudly for help that a patrolman the came running up, frightening other two thugs away, and was right at the heels of the man who had Fdelman by the time he had managed to shake himself free from the waitress. The fugitive waa cap tured. Court Refuses to Release from Asylum Stanford Whites Murderer. Y Harry K. Poughkeepsie. N. Thaw has accepted, apparency with resignation, the decision of Supreme Court Justice Morschauser that he Is still insane and that the Interests of the public will be best served by denying him liberty Pending the signing of the papers of recommitment, which probably will not bo done before a week next Saturday. Thaw will occupy Sheriff Chandler's suite In the county building here. In the meantime, an effort will be made bv Thaw's attorneys to Induce District Attorney Jerome to consent to the commitment of the prisoner to one of the state hospitals other than Mutteawan. Funeral of Governor Sparks. Reno, N'ev In the presence of thousands of mourners the funeral of the late Governor John Sparks of Nevada at 2 was held Monday afternoon o'clock on the portico of the Elk's home In this city. The services were conducted by the officers of the Elks s lodge. Supreme Judge Frank H. delivered a beautiful eulogy over the remains. All business houses In the city were closed and the entire Special city draped In mourning. trains brought humXceds of people to Reno to witness the funeral and all trains from the southern and eastern portions of the atate were crowded with people anxious to pay respect V th memory of John 8 parks. J SMawRsaMsmsmsssssswaamssalkma MW) JW 8hoota Woman Who Rsfussa to Elopt With Him. Portland, Ore. J. F. Blum, a teamster, on Sunday shot and killed Mrs. Daisy Hickey, wife of a butcher, employed In a parking plant at Trout-dale- . Blum then shot himself dead. The tragedy occurred in a lodging bouse In this city. Blum, it Is alleged, wanted the woman to elope with him and her refusal caused the crime. Beside her husband, Mrs. Hickey left two children who were at Sunday school when she was killed. Blum left a wife 'and two children at Baker City, Ore. Nor-cros- . - 'A : Charged With Many Murdsrs. South Bend. Ind. James Brtmmlng-atall- , aged 40. Is under arrest at Dowa-gla- i Mich., charged with six murdsrs. The police say he has already confessed to two, and Prosecutor Bresna-ba- n Is confident the prisoner will admit the other crimes. His arrest followed an alleged attempt to make his wife his seventh victim. She escaped and appealed to the ixilloe. The police, say he confessed to killing a man In Kansas, whom he had a grudge against, and was sentenced to ten years In the penitentiary. Johnson Says Campaign Publicity Measure Would Dtfeat Taft Va Governor Norfolk, John A. Johnson of Minnesota, ehile In Nor4h - Crampeeker folk, . dcoijuacud amendment to the campaign contribution publicity bill passed by the house Saturday, and he declared that If the senate paised it he does not see how the president can conscientiously sign It. "It is a bad bill." said Governor Johnson "If It passes the senate and becomes a law by the president's signature. I, .believe It will defeat the nomination of Secretary Taft for the presidency. Princess Elopes With Plebeian. Vienna The Austrian princess whose elopement a few days ago caused a great sensation in Vienna is Amelle-Loulssaid here to be Princess sister of Prince Emile Egon Von Furstenberg. head of the Koenlg-sho- f branch of the Furstenberg family. Iv Is declared .that she ran away with a man named Koxlan, the local ageut of an automobile company. The police are actively at work trying to locate the fugitives. The princesa Is 2t years old. The family hat large holdings In Bohemia and a residence f in Vienna. e, largest constructed, burst on Its trial trip when 300 feet iu the air above a crowfl. of 10,000 iee tators at Berkeley at 11:40 o'clock The sixteen men wbd Saturday. made the ascension with the big craft were dashed to the ground, and every one of them more or Jess Injured. Broken legs and arms and Internal Injuries were suffered by most of them, and It is believed that two will die. Immense Area in Texas and Okla-homInundated, Much Borrow and Buffering Resulting. Away After Long Illness Dus to Great Nervous Nevadas Governor Passes Express Train trashed Into Train Loaded With Pilgrims on Their Fort Worth, Tex. Seven people are known to be dead, 5,000 are home-- i Way to a Shrine. , a dozen or more are reported to have been killed In Fort Worth and North Fort Worth as a result of tha greatest rise in the history of the Trinity river, which, beginning at 1 : 30 o'clock Saturday evening, reach-i- d a climax at 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Five of the deaths occurred Sunday and two Saturday. Mayor W. D. Hart of Fort Worth a proclamation calling upon the unfortunate citixens to help the homeless. Muskogee, Okla. Not a railroad In Oklahoma is in operation, as a result of the heavy rains and cloudbursts that have occurred in various parts of the state. The last road to operations was the Missouri. Kansas A Texas, which was forced to quit at noon Sunday, when the bridge on the main line at Eufaula wen y down. Jul West Guthrie Is Inundated, with trom seven to ten feet of water rushing through the streets. The Cottonwood river is within four feet of tha filghwater mark registered on May 6, 1897 Residents of the lowlands, fearing a recurrence of the 1897 Moods, when seven or eight people in the valley lost their lives, began 'leaving their homes Sunday night and as far as possible transported their household effects to the higher ground, some distance from the channel of the stream. So far as known no one has been ili owned, though the river is twenty and has feet higher than normal ipread over the wide valley for miles. Thf property loss will be great, crops ol all kinds being washed out. Houses Unroofed by Storm. Austin, Tex. A terrific wind and ra'nstorm swept Texas from the Panhandle to the gulf on Sunday. The destruction to crops and Vegetation, trees and shrubbery was the greatest In numerous reported for years. were unroofed and places houses small villages and hamlets In many Instances were Inundated by the terrific rainfall, which In the space of four hours reached seven inches in Austiii was in the many sections. path of the worst of the storm and for hours the streets were Impassable Electric for either man or beast. light and telephone connections were disabled beyond Immediate repair and The many houses were . unroofed. agricultural sections of central and southern Texas have been immeasurably damaged, according to general . reports received here. aua-pen- The accident waa a most spectacu lar one. A great crowd had gathered about the vacant lot where the big gas bag had been Inflated wtth SOO.UOO cubic feet of Illuminating gas, ti watch the trial trip of thO airship There were sixteen persons, five of them engineers In charge of the five gasoline engines, several newspaper of the photographers, the Inventor airship, C. A. Morrell, and ; an Australlan aeronaut. Rising slowly under the power from five gasoline engines, the great airship lifted to a height of probably 3ou feet. Suddenly there waa a ripping, roaring sound, and the forward end of the airship tilted downward and It begin to settle slowly to the ground. The occupants of the airship clung desperately to the rigging, while the crowd of 10,000 people or more were before what appeared to be impending disaster to sixteen As the airship settled toward mi'ii. the ground, several of the man leaped and a number were seriously Injured In the fall. Others stayed with the craft until It reached the ground and they, too, were Injured by the heavy engines and the superstructure of the airship. Inventor Attempts to Descend on Ball Ground and Causes Panic. Toledo, O. Roy Knabenshue and his new airship,' capable of carrying three passengers, met with disaster upon the occasion of its second flight, on Saturday. Knabenshue attempted to alight In the baseball park where game war going on, but his machint lieoama. un na gobte waa $tt ' jw Evangelism AmongLaboring Men. fence back of the bleachers, carrying evanconsternation to the crowd. PropeKansas City,-- Presbyterian llers and gear were ' badly damaged among laboring men was the gelism and the airship will be out of commis- theme of the address at a great mass sion for several days. meeting for mej, at convention hall on Sunday, delivered by the Rev. Nevada and Utah, Idaho, Wyoming of Charles Stelzele, superintendent Granted Funde for Public Buildings. the Presbyterian committee of church Washington. Conferees upon the and labor; Governor Folk of Missouri omnibus public building bill reached and John B. Lennon, treasurer of the ah agreement and submitted their re- American Federation of tabor. The inport to the senate Saturday evening. Rev. Th. Stelzele made a personal The conferees allowed $175,00 for en- vitation to every union labor man In men were spelarging the Salt Lake building, per- the city. audia and Invited magnificent cially mitting $40,000 of the amount to be ence greeted the speakers. expended for additional land for the site. They also retained the items Of ought Shelter Under Tree and Waa $25,000 for building and site at Park Struck by Lightning. City and $20,000 Increase in the eoat a P. Howard. W. Louis. 8L limit of the Logan building. of this merchant commission Idaho items are: Boise, $125,000 wealthy killed for enlarging building, and Pocatello city, was struck anda instantly electrical heavy during lightning by $10,000 for site. over St. Nevada holds $75,000 for site and and rainstorm which swept Mr. Howafternoon. Louis Sunday building. who was a member of the Glen Wyoming was given an increase of ard. Golf club, an exclusive golf club Echo 185,000 over the amount carried by in the western part he bill, as It came from the house. with links located had been playing golf and the of city, The items retained are:,Rock a tree when it of shelter the sought Spring, $75,000 for building and site; The lightning ran rain. to began Lanier,' $115,000 for building; Casper down the tree, killing hlmlnitantly. and Douglas each $10,000. i Fetal Frisco Street Car Aocldont. Ask President to Appoint' Balt Lakor San Francisco. Two crowded trolas Commissioner to Toklo Fair. ' care collided at Devlsadero and Salt take City. A special to the ley Sacramento streets at the foot of a Herald from Washington says: MemHU shortly after noon Sunday, bers of the Utah delegation on Satur- Steep Henry Baer, a traveling saleskilling' day called upon President Roosevelt man, and Injuring twenty other paswith Hoyt Sherman of Salt Lake City, sengers, one fatally and several seriand urged his appointment as one of ously. The injured were taken to the the commissioners to the Interna- gt. Francis hospital near the scene tional world's fair at Toklo, The pres- of the accident,- where it is believed ident said the endorsement of Mr. all excepting one, a child, will reSherman ' would be given considera-- I cover. The car on the Davlaadero tton, and suggested that the deiega-- street got beyond control of the dashed down the hill tlon take the matter up with Secreterrific with speed. Root tary personally, which was done. Bill Shelved. ,, Enlarged Homestead Bouquet Worth $4,198.71. Smoot The jMOndell Chicago. The most valuable bunch' "Washington. of blossoms ever handed as a gift to enlarged homestead bill was killed for a person waa received Saturday by nils session of congress by the house, Mother Loretta of the House of the which voted against agreeing to the Good Shepherd in this city. The value inference report upon it and refuswaa $4,198 7L- Ju cash. The bouquet, ing to send the bill back to confer-- ' recomposed of' gorgeous multicolored encew When the vote refusing to was conference to bill the turn was aweetpeas. presented by a deleRepresentative Reeder oi gation of the Ladles' Auxiliary uf tha leader of the opposition, Good Shepherd, headed by Mrs. P. Kansas, bill on an Integral asked, recognition to lay the came Cavanaugh. Forming to Cannon table. Speaker th of the but hidden bouquet, part among the petals, waa a certified check for the rescue of the' western men by not recognising Reeder. $4,198.71. panic-stricke- n Non-unio- n 1 . Insane War Department Has Protests ConFarmer Stabs Priest Found Floating in Barrel. Games. cerning Sunday Salisbury. Mo. Rev. Father Joseph New Tork. The body of an unProtests Lubeley, aged $3 years, pastor of F. Washington. Sunagainst identified woman, supposed to have baseball continue day to be St Joseph s Catholic church of Salisplaying been murdered, waa found floating In pock-etknla barrel In lJtlle Hell Gate between received by the war department, bury, waa atahbed twice with a from and The outinjured, fatally mostly clergymen. perhaps Wards and Randall's Islands. The woman's eyes were discolored and her come of the proteste, however, la in church 8unday morning, by Joseph nose was bruised' Nearby la Thomas elmply a renewal of the decisloutbat Schuette, a prosperous fanner, living Jefferson park. Where many INfllan the beat Interests of the military near here, who Is believed to have service demand that games such as demented. The stab-bln- g outings are held. It la believed tha' baseball be allowed to be played on become suddenly the body had been in the water only of 400 worship, In view occurred a short time. The body had been fast- Sunday by troops on military reservaThe In- women.' tham of many ened into the barrel by a stout rope tions, partieularlyly where these res- ere, man was taken to n nearby do not ervations Jured come into Immediate -cured arouad her waist and then where his wounds were atfastened around the outside of the contact with tha surrounding dvil to by physicians. tended -- v. community. barrel. Body fe Accident Is Supposed te Have Been Due te a Misplaced Switch, the Cara Being Telescoped and Shattered to Matchwood. Antwerp. A railroad accident ol 'unprecedented horror in the annals of train disasters occurred Belgian Thursday morning at Contich, a station six miles southeast of Antwerp, on the main line. An express train from. Antwerp to Brussels crashed into a train loaded with pilgrims on This their way to a local shrine. train was standing on a siding. Several of Its cars were telescoped and shattered to matchwood. The total number of dead is placed at fifty and the wounded at over 100. Rescuers from Contich were at once on the scene, and the lpbor of succoring the Injured anf removing the dead was conducted with all possible haste. Special trains with doctors, priest and nurses were sent to Contich from Antwerp and Brussels. The accident is supposed to have been due to a misplaced switch. The engineer and the fireman of the express train were killed outright. WILL 80LVE CURRENCY PROBLEM Senate Adopts Joint Resolution Creating Monetary Commission. Washington. The senate on Thure day adopted a joint resolution report, ed by Mr. Aldrich from the commit tee 'on finance creating a commission to be called the national monetary commission, to be composed of nine senators to be appointed by the pro siding officer of the senate, and nine representatives to be appointed by the speaker of the house, to Inquire Into and report to congress at the earliest date practicable what changes are desirable or 'necessary in the monetary situation of the United States or in the laws relating to banking and currency, and for this purpose the commission is authorized to sit during sessions or in the recess of congress at such times and places as they may deem desirable. No Reduction In Pricea of. Steel. Hew York. B. H. Gory, chairman of the board of directors of tbo United States steel corporation, has given At a out the following statement: meeting on Thursday of representatives of the principal manufacturers of steel in this country the opinion was expressed by each one present that the prices of steel are reasonable and should not be reduced; that reduced prices would not Increase purchases, and that most of their customers do not expect or desire any change. The opinion was unanimous that the meetings should be discontinued for the summer months, unless the chairman should deem it advisable to meet any time for reasons which do not now appear." Fullerton Elected Moderator. Kansas City. Rev. Dr. Baxter P. Fullerton of SL Louis was elected moderator of the Presbyterian church in the United States on Thursday to succeed Rev. Dr. William H. Robert of Philadelphia. The first day of the general assembly of the church was characterized by a spirit of unity and which promises much for the results to be accomplished during the ten days the conference is to be in session. Rev. Fullerton was not opposed In his candidacy for the office of moderator. 8train and Overwork. Reno. Nevada. Surrounded by his three sons and daughter. Governor John Sparks, conscious to the last, sank to death at 8:30 o'clock Friday morning. But a moment before his death the governor said: "I do not fear death; have done my best; I am tired and These am ready to go. Good-bye.were his last words. The illness which culminated in the governors death was directly due to overwork and nervous strain, attendant npon the extra session of Nevada's legislature late last fall. Governor Sparks was bora in Mississippi, August 30, 1843, and came to . this state in 1863, engaging in He owned large cattle ranges In Nevada and Texas, as well aa a large cotton plantation in Texas. He was elected governor in 1902. and again In 1906, by large majorities. Lieutenant Governor D. W. Dicker-so- n la now governor of Nevada. Decants to Nevada eight years ago. wife, - stock-raising- GUARANTY FUND DRAWN UPON. Oklahoma Banking Law Causes Joy to Depositors. Guthrie Okla. Within one hour from the time H. H. Smock, Oklahoma had taken banking . commissioner, charge of the International Bank of Colgate, for alleged violation of the banking laws, he had authority to pay the depositors in full, though the bank's cash and available funds in other banks fell $22,000 short pt the total amount of deposits. The commissioner was enabled to do this under the operation of the new banking law, and this is the first time it has been called Into juse. When the cash was exhausted the commissioner drew checks upon the st&tej guaranty iund. Under the operation of the guaranty banking law In Oklahoma, a tax of 1 per cent Is levied upon the average annual deposits of all state hanks, and the money thus raised is used in payment In full of all depoe itors of an Insolvent state bank after the funds of the bank have been exhausted. CAMPAIGN PUBLICITY. That Would Have Effect of Reducing Congressional Representation in South. Washington. The bill requiring publicity for campaign contributions was passed by the house on Friday by a vote of 160 to 125, with the Crum-- . packer amendment added. The amendment would have the effect of reducing congressional representation in the southern states. It is believed the bill will not pass the senate. The bill provides for publicity of contributions made for the purpose of influencing elections at which representatives in congress are electeo, with what is known as the Crumpack-e- r amendment, prohibiting fraud in registrations and providing data for a reduction of representation among the BUI states. Case Regarded at Closed. Washington. No action looking toward the expulsion of Representative-GeorgI Lllleyof Connecticut from the house is contemplated, when toe special commission appointed by Speaker Cannon to Investigate the charges brought by Mr. LUley against the Electric Bot company submitted its report to the house last Tuesday and more so after the report had been read on .the floor the next day, there was much speculation as to the probable outcome. The severity with which Mr. Lllley was handled In the committees findings gave color to a report that these were to be mado the basis of a resolution of expulsion. Coat Miners of Southwest Will Return piatt Case Ended. to Work. New YorlbMae 0. Wood, whose suit for an absolute divorce from Kansas City. Thirty-fivthousand United Statea Senator Tfcomaa C, eoal miners of Mtseouri, Kansas, Okla-homPlatt of New York, has been on trial and Arkansas, members of the in the supreme court here for several United Mine Workers of Anerlca, who days, was committed to the Tombs have been on strike since March 1 last, after Justice late Thursday, prison The O'Gorman had dismissed the com- will return to work at once. plaint in her action and ordered her convention of miners of these states held in $5,000 ball on a charge of per- here on Friday ratified and signed the jury. This sensational and dramatic agreement reachid by the Joint subclimax-- to the Omaha woman's suit committee of the miners and operagainst the aged-- senator came after ators late Friday night. Prices and a day in which the defense had at- conditions are to remain the same as tacked the authenticity of the famous they were last year. letters. To Entertain Wives of Delegates. Life Sentence for 'Murderess of Ruth In order that the city may Chicago. Miller. entertain in a proper manner the wives Kansas City. Mrs. Sarah Morasch, and daughters of the delegates wh. aged fib rty eight years, was on will eome to the Republican National of found in murder guilty Thursday convention, members of the Chicago the first degree by a jury tn Kansas Womens clubs are making their piano City. Kans.. which tried her on the on a wide scale. A committee of. four, Ruth charge of .poisoning Miller. The woman wil be sentenced with Catherine Waiighn McCulloch at hat written to Chairman Up-hato life Imprisonment The little girl Its head, of the local- - committee offering died from the effects of eating poisoned candy, which the woman sent entertainment for the fair sex, particularly the wives and daughters of the through the mails to the childs fourteen-year-old whom delegatee and the members of the naBister, against tional committee. he. held a grudge. Jurors in Ruef Case Failed te Agree. Scandal Forces Kansas Paster to Ten-ds- r Resignation. San Francisco. After being out for Leavenworth, Kan. Something of a hours the Jury in forty and one-hal- f the trial of Abraham Ruef, the far- sensation waa caused here on Friday mer political boss of San Francisco when it was announced that Rev. It A. and the central figure In the bribery-graf- t Ell wood, pastor of th4 First Prosbyi ' against whom terian church of Leavenworth, had prosecution, whofesale indictments were returned, tendered his resignation to the elder of the church to take effect at once. . failed to agree upon a verdict -- and The resignation which was .accepted, was discharged. The specific charge was admitted by the elders to be the tn the Ruef trial closed Just against result of charges preferred against bribe of $1,000 to toe was the offer of hr the mother of I young" former Supervisor Jennings Phillips girl pastor in the church, who laid before the to Influenc Ms vote favorably npon elders letters which her danghterhad an electrle railroad franchise. received from the pastor.' e a ' -- four-year-ol- d |