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Show y COALVILLE TIMES N. v- - COALVILLE A Juvenile band la being organized at Willard. The band 111 "be com poaed of about twenty piece. The popnlatlon of Utah waa Increased 1h,069 by babies alone during 3908, aa shown In A table compiled by ll. T. Haines, state statistician. The commissioners of Indian war veteran have decided to hold sessions until March b, when it is expected their work will have been finished. A raccoon was recently killed in the mountains near Thistle. For s time It was not known to what anl Inal family the one killed belonged to. Mistaken for a burglar while he was hunting for burglars, Albert B. rm strong wsa shot snd seriously Injured In Salt Lake City by his brther-ln-laWalter Oox of Provo has been trranted a patent on an attic window fastener, which permits the opening of the window without removing the .. screen. State Superintendent of Schools Kelson, who recently underwent a serious operation in Chicago, Is reported to be rapidly improving and will soon be able to leave the hospital According to statistics compiled by State Statistician H. T. Haines, there were 137 males and one female con wicted of felonies In the state during the year 1909 and sent to the state prison. Work on the construction in Salt Lake City of the new $60,000 house of worship for the Immanuel Baptist church will, be commenced at once, following the action of the congress lion at a meeting held Thursday. Mrs. Anna M. Bradley has renewed her fight In the Third district court to break thwlll of the late Arthur Brown, and secure a part of the Brown estate, valued at from to $150,000, for her two children. While 8alt Lake City seems to over -- run wlth footpad, they do not always uoreed in making rich hauls. Four ol that gentry held up a Salt Laker one night recently, and, after searching all hit pockets, discovered but tnirty $50,-00- Between 250 and 300 members of Young family attended the annual reunion in 8ait Lake City, on February 23, of the descendants of President Brigham Young and hla brothers, Lorenzo, Phlneas, Joseph and the John. tha Western Pacific klUaLAt.WMKhiYftL. when be fell under the rear oar of the worktraln at that place, having lost his footing in attempting to board the employ-t- f train. Theodore McKean, aged 17 year, ahot and seriously wounded at a character ball at Bountiful, by Jasper Hepworth, his chum, who did not know that .the revolver he pressed to McKean's body contained a loaded cartridge. The agitation of a sane and safe Ftourth of July celebration U growing throughout the state, and it la expect ed that at the different celebrations wai .this yrar thaprcnniBcuouaJiae.of.jex! plosive and fire arm will be strictly prohibited. While he nd companions wert playing with bow and arrows In a vacant lot, at Sandy, Leland Jorgen on, ths young son of Enoch of the high school,- - was in the kit eye with an arrow, the an -T?w splitting the eyeball. Joaeph E. Perry, for the past thirty years a resident of Park City, waa found dead in a chair at hla home by the milk man when be called to supply the family with milk. Death waa due to heart disease. Mr. Perry was 71 years old and a native of Illlnola William Nelaon, aged 39, who died at New Orleans from an attack ol pleurisy on February 32, waa a son ol f of the William Nelson, Salt Lake Tribune, and was one of ths beat known printers in the state, and a veteran of the Spantoh-AmericsJorgen-i.-prindpa- J editor-in-chie- war, J. M. Blckei of Richfield has per fected a process for converting gyp turn Into marble by a chemical process. This process consists of all ths moisture In gypsum being exuded by heat. The gypsum Is. then immersed In a chemical solution, which converts It Into marble. Snow from three to five feet deep has practically tied up active opera- tions at the great plant of the Union Portland Cement company In Webei canyon. Extra lorcea of men are be- tng employed clearing away the anow from the - quarries and - guarding - against aralanchea As the result of sn analysis by the state chemist. It has been decided that Mias Basel Aatell who died tinder peculiar circumstances In Sandy, Febru "ary 7, came to herB. death from morH. Cotton, her phine poisoning. sweetheart, will be charged with- mnr dev to ,4b second degree. Since the first of the year county clerks of Utah have issued bounty cer- tificates amounting to $1S,500, aa shown by the records to the state office. The state legislature of 1909 appropriated $40,000 for 1909 Snd 1919 to pay bounties After lingering for several hours at the Ogden general hospital, C. E. Gerber of Cheyenne, Wyo., died from the effects of a rifle ball, which passed through hla left breast and which the police believe was fired with suicidal Intent, the , tragedy occurring at a hotel r Objects to Alleged Methods of ficers In Obtaining Statements and Confessions from Thoso Charged With Crime. KEUICE Soldier Charged With Desertion Now Believed to Have Been Robbed Murdered. nd SENATOR HEYBURN DEMANDS AN 'INVESTIGATION OF "THIRD L DEGREE" TACTICS. ' Port Townsend, Wash. The finding of the decomposed body of s soldier at the base of a precipitous bluff near Fort Worden on Friday, near the spot where Private Robert B. Du aims body had been discovered a week before, has led to a general search of all the country between the fort and town. Detachments of artillerymen are scouring the thickets apd examining every place on the bluffs that might hide a body. During the past year a large number of men whose time was about to and hare expire have disappeared, been posted as deserters. In every case the man had money and there was every reason why he should not desert. The finding of the two bodies, with pockets rifled, leads to the belief that these men and others were robbed, murdered and thrown over the bluff. The man found Friday had been dead six months. The body has not been Identified. Of- -- Washington. li a resolution Intro- duced on Thursday by Senator Hey burn is adopted, the senate will take up the matter of what is known among police officials as the "third degree." The resolution provides for the appointment of a select committee of three to investigate "the practice of administering what is known as "the third degree ordeal by officers of the law for the purpose of extorting statements and confessions from those charged with crime." Mr. Hey burn said he had read an article in a Washington paper giving an account of the met hods .spld to have been resorted to by the Atlantic SENATOR TILLMAN IMPROVING City police to obtain a confession MILK from William Beyler, charged with the AFTER murder of Jane Adams. He asserted such methods were more cruel than those of the inquisition. UThey were' Declare 'hysleians Dietinguiehed not only barbarous, he said, but are Statesman la Practically Out of Dart--INDICTMENT AGAINST EIGHT in direct conflict with American Inst! ger and on Road to Recovery. RECTORS OF THE ALLEGEE tutlona under which an officer ia proNTRADE COMBINATIOhibited from talklng with hla prisoner on the subject of the charge against Washlngton-Senat- or Benjamin R. him. illman, who was recently stricken No one with a proper sense of duty Obtained with paralysis. Is making a wonderful Result would resort to such a practice to ob- - First Specific the State 8lnce it Began Its Inve Recovery, according to the physicians attendance at the bedside of the ligation of ths Milk Trad in announce- Greater New York. I SHAW EXPLAINS WAR TALK. TRUS War With Japan Morristown Speech! Philadelphia. Leslie M. Shaw, former secretary of the treasury, denied that he had predicted war with Japan in his recent speech at Morristown, N. J., which is said to- - have occasioned comment to Tokio. I did cite certain well known facts, the logic of which spells war," said I cited the fact that we Mr. Shaw bent sixteen warships to the Paeifle ocean to demonstrate our prowess, and hired twenty-seveships built of foreign material in foreign yards, and floating foreign flags, to carry the necessary supplies, and stated what all nfen know, that one hostile shot from the meanest country that owns a gun would have sent every one of these home, for no country would consent to have its flag mixed up In our contentions. Did Not Predict -- n New York. The mi troet was Indicted in New York Wednesday. After a long grand jc Investigation, a blanket lndlctnw was handed down In the crimli branch of the supreme court, nami eight of seventeen directors of t e. Consolidated MUk'Exchange, a Tit Jersey corporation, and chargig that they met June 29, I90T, in 3 York and "conspired together ft with others to fix the wholes prices of milk, and did fix it at $1 for a forty-quacan of milk, i ' Nine other directors of the change escaped indictment, havidg earned Immunity by testifying befo e the grand jury and before the U e inquiry Into the milk trade, wkltjh tlH Is I progroai d 0 cents - IIIQBOH UTAH UTAH STATE NEWS In the 1S JACOB PtlERSON. KJ:ior and Manager. KEN THROWN OYER HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE DRIVEN-FROTHEIR HOMES IN OHIO BY HIGH WATERS. M Towns Flooded and Much Suffering Must Ensue Unless Prompt Measures Are Taken to Send in Supplie Cleveland, O. Hundreds of people have been driven from their homes at Fremont and other points throughout northern Ohio by the floods which reached their climax Sunday night after thirty hours' rain. Damage to property will reach many thousands of dollars. At Youngstown two of the biggest steel plants are threatened by the rising of the Mahoning river. The Sandusky river is five feet beyond the danger line nt Bucyrus, and an immense Ice gorge has formed. The most serious conditions are reported from Fremont, where half The town ia under water. At Akron both the Little and Big Cuyahoga have left their banks. Many houses are fllood-ed,L Practically the whole of Crawford county ia submerged, and it is feared in remote parts famine may ensue If prompt measures are not taken. Local authorities throughout the whole dis-triare dynamiting the Ice gorges which have formed in the river. ct AVALANCE BURIES TOWN, e People May Have Met Awful Death as Result of Slide of Snow and Earth. Ssventy-fiv- message telephone Spokane. A from Wallace, Idaho, to the Spokesman-famReview says that twenty-fivperilies, and probably seventy-fivsons, were buried in an avalanche at Mace, Idaho, Sunday night. The catastrophe at Mace occurred at 11:30 at night, according to telephone reports received by the Walla Walla Union from Wallace, and overwhelmed the entire town of Mace, families ia covering the twenty-fiv- e the little village under tons ot snow and debris. Residents in Wallace Bays that the roar of the avalanche could be distinctly heard there. Mace is five miles from Wallace. e e Fight Against White Slavery. The expenditure of Washington. $100,000 a year in stamping out the white slave traffic would be money well spent," said Secretary Nagel in submitting to the house a recommendation that the total estimate for regulating immigration be increased from $2,400,000 to $2,560,000. Mr. Nagel ONLY HOPE IS ARBITRATION. saya the enforcement of the "white slave traffic bill, now in conference Over One Hundred Thousand Men WELDON B. HEYBURN. between the two houses and expected Out by Quaker City Union s. United Platts ienator from Idaho. become a law In a few daysr-wl- ti fto JCheCQn8GlidatedMUk.exrhF . will PhUadfilphlaAftet. ' eot$lX,K)0,ndthat the work BENJAMIN R. TILLMAN an accused was, formed under the laws haaZha4U'oaeoutedjtUtarenUv than! more than six hours the Central Lat After soon 87 the Carolina liuprerh South' Senator from Jersey person, and no brutal custom should the original immigration law enforce- bor Union delegates or Sunday voted" to call a sympathetic strike of 140 drive an official to subject a prisoner of this state annulled the charter of ment V nhot is made that he is now practi-mijlto a probate trial before his appear-anc- e the old milk exchange. trades unions in the organization, beout of danger, and is ImprovStrikers Grow Riotous. In open court," declared 8enator Wednesdays indictments are tie ginning Saturday. The delegates say the ing steadily. first obtained results by specific South Heyburn. Bethlehem, Pa. Strikers and 125,000 men will respond to the call. When the South Carolina senator their sympathizers resorted to disor"Such a condition la revolting to the state since It began its investigation This action of the Central Labor sense, and I think the entire subject of the mlk trade to Greater New was'Jlrst . stricken, the news was derly methods to prevent men from Union is fraught with momentous con-- , York. A commissioner appointed $y flashed over the country that .his going to work on Friday at the Beth- sequences, the union officials say. should be investigated". the attorney general has been hold- death Was only the question of hours, lehem steel works, where a part of Meanwhile, there is hope that the HOPES FOR BUREAU OF MINES. ing hearings, at which such impor- later ame the report that he might the working force has been on strike street railway strike will be arbitrattant evidence was obtained as to wa- recover; but that never again, would for three weeks. The strike sympa- ed, the repeated declaration of ef the Senate Makes rrant it being laid before the gnuid his voice be heard in the senate, as thizers gathered near the gates of the the despite transit company, controlling all Favorable Report. , he had lost the power of speech, and plant and mfmy ot the workingmen the the lines in the city, that "there is Jury. nothing to arbitrate. although ke might regain the use of were roughly handled.' Washington. The subcommittee of : CONQUERED BY CHINESE. bla limbs, he would never again be fights occurred. The disturbers seized the senate committee on mines and Favor Destruction of Veto Powor. ?! the dinner - pallaihe workmen . were mining, which- hat -- hud under coneid-eratloo Capital ofThibt Fails- - Befors Attack able to talk, London -- Months agoTnTormaHon the Huff bill to establish a carrying and either emptied them of was cabled that' King Edward depreWarriors. of Chin "FINGY" CONNERS ELECTED. their contents or smashed them cated a bureau of mines in the department of India. Chlwse Brltsh general election in the cirCalcutta, the poles. the interior, met Thursdayand auagainst Of Wlir But to BossYlelds l'Has-aa- , cumstances Politic) then existing lest It sound on entered Wednesday thorized the chairman. Senator Suth- troops resthe death knell ot the hereditary prinTammany Chieftain. and the of Thibet the capital erland of Utah, to make a favorable idence of the dalai lama, the supreme ciple in the British constitutional sysAlbany, N. Y. William J. Conners report upon the bill tem. It appears today decidedly as if head of the Lamalst - hlerarch y, who made good his prediction Jthat. be -' were made7 SeveraTamendmenlathe king's fears would be justified. of the soldiers led would stiH be chairman ot the Demothe upon approach principal among which waa the chang- with several' of his ministers Into cratic state committee after its meetThe progressive forces making up the ing of the title of the head of the India. In saving his politipresent majority in the house of coming Thursday. near bureau from commissioner to dimons, whatever, their divergence of Serious trouble has been antic- cal scalp, however, he lost most of rector, and Increasing the salary from view respecting tactics, are a unit for of the his hair. the to action ipated owing $5,000 to $8,000. Another waa a spethe destruction of the veto power of chiefF. Charles which, small Chinese Tammany marchMurphy, army, cific provision granting' no authority the house of lords and ultimate purgthat might interfere with the laws, ing from Sea Chuen. -- China, subdued tain, whose complete mastery of the ing of that chamber of the hereditary betEastern Thibet, levying contributions situation waa realized by no one regulation! or rights of the states. Obviously the cabinet must principle. on the lama's home and showing so ter than by Conners himself, granted this demand or suffer Immeto yield MEAT TRUST IS NEXT. the Buffalo leader a brief political rediate defeat. respect for the monasteries. The Thibetans, resenting the des- prieve in the Interest of party harreLabor Troubles. Flftssn Indictments Against Leading ecration of their holy places, pet- mony, after Cbnners had agreed to in April, and repudiate hie reNew York. Labor troubles to tha Packing Interests Coming Up. itioned the Chinese foreign board, sign cent harsh statement concerning Mr. east and west, two violent strikes New York. After week of Investi- praying that the emperor of China Murphy, and the alleged auctioning of in of in Pennsylvania and threats of the interests the Budraging to New he gation by a grand Jury In Hudson Interfere York, which, Judgeship dhists. was The if police and troops petition dire disregarded, consequence fifinfirN. were result hla the of declared, county, J., indications are that aa ths Chinese propose to make the mities are allowed to continue shooting down and were unjustified of teen indictments will be handed up administration temper of the country purely to fact. workmen in defense of corporation against the packing Interest maintain- Chinese. property, all indicate that the United ing cold storage plants to Jersey City. To Build Heepital In Tree Top. States stands upon the brink of an InBOOKKEEPER GOES WRONG. The inquiry at Jersey City has been Urbans, O. A cottage hospital for dustrial revolution, the possibility of the most important to the east since treatment of tuberculosis, each the Loots Bank of $144,000, which are appalling to contemplate. Causing public opinion demand legal steps to to he built to a tree top, is cottage Samuel Gompera, president of tha ef Business. Susptnsloit the harden of the cost of lighted announced aa the plan ot Dr. Arthur American Federation of Labor, and The great store houses there hold Boaton. Following the discovery Funk, ot the medical missionary other conservative leaders, fear they the food supplies upon which New that the Natl City Bank of Cambridge Presbyterian church. Dr. Funk took would have little control if the radical York sod its suburb draw, and New had beta looted of $144,000, the insti- his Idea from D. O. Stelnberger, a element should assert a dominancy. York and New Jersey have been co- tution was closed on Wednesday, resident of this city, whqe home is operating in the investigation. A grand probably forever, by National Bank in the branches of a giant oak. Dr. Creates Court of Commerce. Packers Will Put Up Fight Jury to New York county ia to begin Examiner Pepper, acting on behalf Funk and hla wife are stationed at Washington. Consideration of to a few days. Chicago. The Chicago packers In-Hamadan, a city of 80,000 population, old administration railroad hill to of the comptroller of the curreney, jer8ey City. N. J..'ou charges ot west 200 miles Teheran. about Later a warrant' was issued for the ate a court of commerce. and amend 0j congpiracy on Saturday held a con- -' Arguments In Coal Trust Case. if of Georg W. Coleman, n the interstate commerce law. was con- - (erence wlth thelr attorneys, at which Judge' Threatened by' Black Hand. Philadelphia Argument In the gov- Street ban It ratio en Friday by the the eluded young bookkeeper unanimously-decide-d ernments suit 'to dissolve the New York. Since United Stales Tt j commerce last heard of to Kansas City a Interstate on mlttee of northern district of tooth and nalL as one the anthracite coal trust was con- waa extradlt,on Ray few ago. Coleman is charged Judge York to was ordered reported. The vote was of them put it, and to resist to the week sentenced cluded to the United States circuit with days last New embezslement .The institution court Thursday. John G. Johnson, to U Insolvent, the federal peniten- 6 to 4. The majority report will rec last any attempt to serve papers on capital stock , pf tong terms in the the ithe for them or to force them to trial. They coal closing argument $100,000 and the surplus having been tiary at Atlanta, Lupo.the wolf. "and will exhaust every legal device to dereven other notorious counterfeiters tall roads, denied that a conspir- wipes! out by the defalcation. -- bad men," he has reFormer Governor John L. Bates, and acy existed among the feat the New Jersey authorities and roads to keep up price or to monopo- the receiver, wtlL liquidate the ceived maintain it will be Impossible to extrathreatening, letter from the t lize the trade. assets. Black Hand. f-dite them. T Control Output of Asbestos. Has Lost Touch With World. Day's Work In Congress. Want Woman Mayor for Denver. Turnip Were Free. Denver-T-he Times says: Deals ar. O.-- Free on were Consideration of the turnips Washington. Denver. A woman mayor tdr DenToledo, Gondokoro, Soudan. Colonel Roosenow being negotiated to Denver which velt and Kennit, with the members at poetoffice appropriation hill carrying ver! That Is the goealp following the menu of many Washington birth- to the formation $239,000,000, was begun in the house Tuesday night's banquet of promi- day dinners In Toledo. A carload of nil! probably result their shooting party, who arrived here 90 cent control will ot tru8t per Thursday. Representative Gardner of nent Denver women, to which no men the vegetable was distributed by J. C. Saturday night on tha Belgian gunMaasachueetta spoke on high prices, were admitted. The election ls two Bonner who was dissatisfied with the of the asbestos output of the world, boat Bloch, passed Sunday resting; In of Office the and in the put few contending that the tariff was not an years off, but it ia whispered that price offered for his shipment by ternaUonal representatives Asbestos company, the their experiencesfor Colonel Bonner adver- wholesaler search important factor In determining such the advisability of having women ia giant elands hav- days in the field perhaps two Of Used his intenUon also as a sort of Northern American Asbestos com ng. price. The senate agreed to vote next proved fatiguing. An effort waa Wyoming Consolidated A them waa not only discussed, bat high prices for the Pny. on Sunday to secure from Coin made against Thursday on the special savings bank waa SUle advocated with enthusiasm, jt bill. Senator Bailey spoke to oppo- Is charged by retailer a statement on politics nel vegetable Roosevelt asserted that more ' affairs generally, hut sition to that measure, pronouncing it men voted to the last women tnd public municipal ele unoonstltutienaL Senator Gordon of t ion to Denver; also that mphatlcally refused to discuss these women riceptSesVil kinds? and Ji resell tatlvesreof English and8 Californit delivered hta farewell ad- - Jflciala who have held office in Col, -- bags and of theli itters, a he said, he bad completfr to capltaUsts n, of tons disappeared turnips the ten o( f dreM , touch with the outside world. jrado have proven efficient. mlnnte rt Or-dcre- d gesslonjf - y Hand-to-han- -- d -- -- . llv-In- an-toq- o-fight --carrying coal-carryin- g i caa-dldat- Le seventy tUed h' |