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Show THE 8HADOW COALVILLE TIMES ONE SURVIVOR OF SHIPWRECK N. JACOB t'K i h'HSOX, Ed Tor ami Manager. COALVU.LE - UTAH Nearly all civilization la the product f the city, where mind meet mind and each becomes brlgtaterfroin contact, aaya New York Weekly. Maasea of population may engender great vlrei, bijt they also engender great virtues, and If they do not produce, thy certainly develop the finest and keenest Intelligences that we have s of Greece creThe tittles ated moat of the ancient civilization that la worth having, and after they fell and the dark ages came In tt was of Italy that little mercy back and brought light, learning to the world Some of the blackeet crimes are committed In the country. Conan Doyle haa Sherlock Holmes. In one of his best stories, point out this fact It was a clever touch and U- - Is true. The country men le not more honest than the city man, although he may tack opportunities. Flaubert and Balzae have drawn grim pictures of sordid meanness In the rural life of Franco; Tolstoi has done as much for Russia, and Sudermann, Ibsen and Hardy have told similar black- stories of their own countries. The recent report of Jhffgjnmlsslon on country life , showed considerations which left very much to be desired In the way of Imtown-state- provement Congressman A. J. Babath is the man who some time ago announced bis belief, that the bestowal of great Ames Jean tortunes upon foreign noblemen by their marriage with American women involved an economic waste which ought not to go unchecked, says New Tork Evening Sun. He therefore Introduced a till In coogress providing for a aubstantlal esport tai upon such dowries By some curious bsd luck the bill got mlsialdTfi committee and haa not been heard from since. But Congressman Sabaths idea did not get lost He took tt with him, took It out and rubbed It on his sleeve and looked at It In all his spare moments showed It to his friends and talked about 1L Consequently the Idea has grown and amplified under consideration,' many persona have written letters to him In praise of 1L and to, though lost to sight, lta memory hat been kept very dear and green Indeed The final result Is that the congress man hae prepared a much broadened bUl, which he la going to Introduce. THE POLICE, Protest Against Suffrage Blit Cause of Meetings, Officers Charging Crowds With Swords When Trouble Began. Berlin Demonstrations by Socialists throughout the kingdom after mass meetings held on Sunday to test against the suffrage bill, reault- j serious affrays between the dem-th- e natrators and the police In many places "In Berlin several policemen were severely wounded by stones thrown by rioters, and score of Hoc I allst supporters received serious injuries from sabers of the policed ; Reports from places outside of Berlin give a number of casualties. The worst affair occurred at Hewnmuster, In Holstein, where a workingman was mortally wounded by a knife through Use Junes; auotbpf s hand wai'eut elf, while a third lost an ear. At Halle, after- - the close of the meetings, 2,000 Socialists attacked the police, who drew their sabers and wounded many. At Koenigs berg where the Socialists returned in a body from sttrburban meetings, the polfre hr attempting to divert the crowds into the side streets used their side arms. They also made a number of arrests. r At Dulsberg on the Rhine, Socialists, in a series of street demonstrations, came Into collision with the police. The latter used their sabers were cut and several manlfestants and bruised. VICTIMS OF EARTHQUAKE. lneffl-.clenc- y sh v . . Well-Mean- -c- What the South Pol Expedr an May Find on Its Visit to the Ant-tie Continsnt Discovered by the Aa rlcan Commander Wilkes In 1838. PlfiCHOTS ATTACK ON re M'CI E Declare Action of Utahn in Cuttji Expense Wat Taken Secretly1 and fn Defiance of Justice." PHYSICIAN CHARGED WITH HAVING POISONED COL. THOMAS SWOPE, MILLIONAIRE. New York. Gifford Plnchot, posed chief forester of the Un States, but etlll loyal to his polit' as president of the national consi tlon committee, defends rangers the forest service In a speech the National Arts club In New Wednesday .night. Mr. Plnchot terly assailed the action of Georg McCabe, solicitor of the depart nJit who as temporary chief after Pinckf t dismissal took action to abolish collegiate training of foresters at ( ernmeht expense. This action Mr. Plnchot deaerti-- i aa "a secret attack on the sent , prostituting the law, a method s fectlvely used by special intec against the people, and a cruel a id needless loss.' n n atrinr t, ; four-fifth- alr-filg- Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Washington Sta., Centrrila, Wash., with dhe" kidney gone, the other badly diseased, and five doctor In was consultation, Palma Driven helplessly from her to be in a thought course, in one of the wildest storms hopeless state. The that has swept the Mediterranean Jn story of Mrs. Sheaforty years, the French Transatlantic rers awful sufferings, Steamship companys steamer General sod her wonderful Chanzy, while running full speed in cure through using the dead of night, crashed on the Doan's Kidney Pills, is a long one, but treacherous reef near the Island of w 111 Interest any sufferer w 1th backache Minorca and all except one of the 157 or kidney trouble, and Mrs. Shearer will persons on board perished. tell it to any one who writes her, enThe sole survivor is an Algerian a lam weland active, customs official, Marcel Rodel, who closing 65stamp. years old, and give, all the though was rescued by a fisherman and who credit to Doan's Kidney Pills,Xsays lies In tne hospital at Ciuda-dela- , lavMrs. Shearer. x ing as a result of the tortures through Remember the name Doans. For which he passed, and unable to give sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. an account of the disaster. Foster-MilburCo., Buffalo, N. Y. In the ships company there were 78 passengers, of whom 30 were In the HE MEANT EVENING GOWNS first cabin. The crew numbered 70. It Is not thought that .any Americans t were aboard. The ship' was In ommand Compliment to American Woman Somewhat Marred by of Coptaln Cayol, one of the Unfortunate Error. most careful officers of the line. In his long experience he had never met Mons Pruger, who from his triumph with an. accident. He had intended la at the Savoy hotel in London has retire from the service soon. -Passengers of the Chanzy were come to New York to conduct a very mostly officers and officials returning fashionable restaurant, was complifrom thetr posts in Algeria, accom- mented by a reporter on his perfect panied by their wives and children, a English. few soldiers, some Italians and Turks, 'Well, said Mans.. Pruger, smiling, and one priest-"T- he Only Anglo-Saxobetter than, names -- nn the passenger list were "my English Is, perhaps, who supped Green and Stakely. They wereHmem-berso- f that of the Marquis X., an opera troupe of 11 that bad here after the opera the other evening. Our fine supper rooms looked very been engaged to sing In the casino at gay and fine, diamonds flashed, pale Algiers. fabrics shimmered, and everywhere, Insider Get the Melon. turn where it would, the eye rested on New York. Charges that certain of dimpled, snowy shoulders shining like the insiders in the Wells Fargo satin above decollete bodices of Paris company, knowing In advance that gow ns. the 300 per cent "melon would be "These decollete bodices Impressed, cut, had tricked stockholders out of the Marquis X. He waved his hand their holdings, will be laid before the and said: Interstate commerce commission. A I ave knowed parfattement that stockholder has prepared ' a charge the American young ladies was beauthat an agent for some Insiders trav- tiful, but ah 1 cannot say how far eled about the country prior to the more beautiful they seem In their melon-cuttinand Induced stockholdN. Y. Press. night dresses. ers to part with their holdings Just a little above the market price, but far The Wonderful Y. M, C. A. below the price- - to which the stock In the past ten years no other rejumped when the melon was an ligious organization has received so nounced. much money as the Y. M. C. A. Millions have been raised for new buildMillions for Waterways. projects ings all over the land, and with no ap Waterway Washington cost of parent strain. Its business like admina at the country throughout en142,355,276, of which $7,206,430 Is for istration of its vast resources, its in pushing Its work in the cities continuing contracts, are provided for ergy and through the railroad, army and in the jivers and harbors appropriation biu reported to the house Friday navy branches and its fine policy In following the armies in all recent by the committee on rivers and harwars, have created for it a world-wid- e cash outside the bors. The $7,000,000 At the last banquet ol enthusiasm. appropriation is for expenditures that may hereafter be made under the cnn.-- - the International committee. Senator. tinuing contract system. ThebIU Is Root affirmed that they had made budget, al- - their way by working with men more theoretically an annual saxlnai-"Cothouh no ngvlu- - a Over mi4 - harbors thanby talking ; to them with us, not Go do mat bill has been reported since that March 2, 1907. By their appeal to all classes of Chris-Hanas well .as to Seventh-Fiv- e Thousand for a Husband they have kept out of doctrinal theolNew Y"ork. A verdict for $75,000, ogy, and by their activity in good works said to be the largest ever rendered In they have escaped cant in religion. an alienation suit, was awarded on All Interested In saving our boys and Friday to Mrs. Charles C. Hendrick of young men rejoice In their world-wl- d Brooklyn against Laura Blggar, for- success. Leslies Weekly. mer actress, accused of alienating the A Gift to Bryn Mawr. affections of Mrs. Hendrick's divorced Miss Cynthia M. Wesson of Spring C. Hendrick. Charles husband. Dr. has given $7,000 to Bryn field. sued for $100,000. Mawr Mass., Mrs. Hendrick Miss Wesson, who was college. Neither the defendant, who Is said to from Bryn Mawr in 1909, graduated be In California, nor Dr. Hendrick ap- was prominent in the athletic affairs peared At the trial but both were rep- of the ingtitutlon, and her gift Is to resented by counsel. ,:i be expended toward the betterment ol the swimming pool. All undergradIn Florida. Hurricane uates are required to qualify afl swimhere reached News Fla. Tampa, mers, as the exercise is one of the late Friday night of a terrific hurrimost popular of the college sports. cane in the middle section of the state. A small village three miles Well Yes. north of Lakeland was almost wreckIf you want a thing well done ed. The station was blown from its Get an expert to do It for you. foundations, telephone and telegraph Aint that more sense than What you wires were blown down and crops were going to say? persons badly damaged. Twenty-fivwere in the station and a number Head Bookkeeper Must be Reliable. were painfully injured. n Italian Government Publishes List of Casualties on December 28, 1908. Rome. The Italian government has published an official return of the number of victims In the earthquake which devastated southern Italy on December 28, 1908. At Messina there was a total of 77,283 victims; 27,523 bodies were recovered and buried; 325 Inhabitants died from their Injuries, and 32,477 persons are missing, lost beneath the ruins. In the other localities the deaia number: Reggio and THAT TELEPHONE TRUST district, 7,969; Palm!, 1,734; Villa San Giovanni, 1,092 rGalicco, 5l; Pellaro, Minority Stockholders Making De ir922. Several sman communes have a ate Effort to Block Morgans Gas collective death loll numbering 7,108. New York. JL P. Morgan may) InhabiToday MesBlna numbers 70,000 s of whom lived In the untarlly testify in New York In al r tants, days concerning the recent pur 8 town before the disaster. by hla firm of a controlling intercU the United States Telephone cony Americana Ar Thirsty, of Cleveland and the Cuyahoga, ft be must Americans Washington. . 8LiIlltStrjEtloL Judging JratSL the Jigi-ports of drinkables set forth in a ng Statement just Issued by the bureau of the companies are In New York tatlsdcC The United Stales drank deposition to be used in the THiTo the essence of more than a billion courts in the suits to check conm-mstloof the purchase, maintain ng pounds of coffee In 1909, valued at that J. P, Morgan & Co. acted forth $86,000,000 that was about a dollar Telephone A Telegmph worth of coffee for every person In American company (the Bell Interests), In acthe United States, A lltle more-thaa hundred million pounds of tea, val- quiring six independent companlet In ued at $16,000,000, came In. But .In Ohio and Indiana and that, as compspirits, wtqea and malt liquors, the etition has ceased In that territory the nation touched Us highest record for transaction Is Illegal, Importation In 1909 and consumed forCollided With Peweri That B . eign products of that kind to the value ' of more than $26,000,000, more than Washington. William H. Tuner, United States army declares In hi annual report tnat he could reduce "the coat oFmaintalnlng the nation's were military establishment If b given more officers and a new system of selection and detail. There Is wssts la many directions through ths of civilian employe and enlisted men who receive extrn pay tor performing certain duties In an tndlf fsrent way. Great saving could undoubtedly be achieved through the inauguration of system and the appointment ofcapabl men, aa push for twice... -- much-a.-wa Imported.... lq tends to load departments 1899. .with employes who are chiefly con-Vigilance Committee for New York. earned about the drawing of their salNew York. Fifth avenue has organaries ised practically a vigilance committee to deal with a brand new form of briHubert Latham, having given an ac- gandage that gangs of stylishly dressceptance of the Invitation of the Mar-gui- s ed "holdup and stronga'rm women de Polinac to Join him In n hunt are maintaining on that aristocratic at Gerru, France, got out his mono- thoroughfare. - It Is to be known aa and plane, Installed his hunting" parapher-nall- a the "Fifth A venue Association and soared toward the hunting among lta members are William K. lodge of the presldept of the commit- Vanderbilt, B. F. Yoakum, Jacob tee of aviation, making the distance of Bchtff, ex Senator William A. Clark, miles comfortably within an hour. Harry Payne. Whitney, William Kills and other equally well known. After hunting for hour and stocking Corey his airship with game, hs returned Originator of Meat Boycott home. This la a novel Incident In the Cleveland, O. Fred V. Sebeltn of : development of the air craft It read Cleveland, la the originator of the almost matter-of-coursso rapid haa meat boycott. Mr. Sebelln is the shop foreman of the .Cleveland Twist bsen ths growth of custom. Drill company. He suggested to the men In the factory that they give up ' A bank wrecker in Wisconsin haa meat till the price came down been sent to the penitentiary for ten eating to something reasonable. They acyears. The only way to break up this cepted his lead and one day only six sort of high finance Is to treat lta prac- meat order were given in the big titioners as common thieves who sim- room of the company, which holds 500 ply take other people t property with- men. The fame of the boycott spread. out any formalit- y- or technicality. Then it spread to other states and When the man wbd wrecks a bank by the government at Washington took It up. Juggling lta finances Is put on a plan J Boy 8hoots His Mother, with ths burglar who blows open Its vaults and safes, then there will be a New York. John Brady, 9 years of chance for ths law to protect the pub- age, shot and instantly killed his lic from all classes of thieves, ho mat- mother. Agnes, aged 31,in their home In the Bronx. The bullet first grazed ter how their stealing la named. the cheek of a baby In Mr. Brady's On of ths professors announces arms, then buried Itself In the mothheart The babe, too, would have that Halley's comet will b visible ers been killed, the police said, but for from the Pacific coast only. If this the instinctive action of the mother .to tt-- froarliCT-iircasrin- h JhjCMeg Jotjaf,.4ftterestJft,Uiiia.comet has been unfairly worked up. Instant the pistol flashed. The boy had been punished by his mother, but Report from Germany are to the he claims, the shooting was accidental. effect that a passenger airship is beFear Ineurrectlon In India. ing built and wlU ply between differLondon. Following new evidences ent points in Germany. The data of of sedition in India as a result of the first excursion Is not announced. the muzzling of the Indian press the war office has begun to The United State navy wanta men past week, the jnass-Brlttabout Calcutta, troops and though their offers are not munifi-cen- Cable advies say a plot has been disyet auch service Is surely better covered Implicating a number of natean doing nothing at all. tive soldiers wearing the king's uniform. Orders have been issued to the , Kermlt Roosevelt has shot a bengo, Bengalese garrisons to prevent terbut neither be nor his father has bar roristic mass meetings and the police ged s wimpue. Let us have a wtmpus! in the J unjab jirovlnce now have full authority to use their firearms on the sl'rhtost provocation. , French Ship Crashes Into Reef and All But On of 157 Persons on Board Perish. BV80C1ALT3TS DEMONSTRATIONS IN CLASHES WITH CULMINATE MERITS OF THE CITY. Recovery of a Washing ton Woman. Remarkable , OF DEATH Arrest Followed Quickly After Grand Jury Investigation and Report of Coroners Jury. Accused Enters Pleaof Not Guilty and Gives Ball. Kansas City. As a climax to the lengthy investigation of the mysterious death of Colonel Thomas H. Swope on October 3, 1909, Dr. B. C. Hyde, husband of the late millionaires niece, was arrested on Thursday on a charge of murdering the aged philanthropist. The warrant upon which the arrest was made was Issued at the reguest of Attorney John G. Paxton, executor of the Swope estate. First degree murder is charged. The warrant says that Dr. Hyde with felonious Intent administered strychnine to Colonel Swope on the day of his death. Xr.-Hy- de waaj 'taken to Indepen- dence, Mo., where he was arraigned before Justice W. F. Loar. He was released on a bond of $50,000. His preliminary hearing was set for Feb- ruary 17, me to Investigate the ..death of Colonel Swope,.... .Preset color Conkling maue a request for a jury, after a coroners jury had de- gand jury Thursday that the cided millionaire-philanthropis- t had come to 'his strychnine poisoning. 8ENATE CLASHES death - from - WITH COURT. Fsars Constitutional Prerogatives of Members is Being Interfered With. Washington. Whether a court at law has power to summon before It a committee of congress was the cnief subJecLoL-dlscussiobefore the sen-at- e and house on Thursday. The senate gave positive Instructions to Senator Reed Smoot,. Jonathan Bourne and Duncan Fletcher not to respond to the order issued by Justice Wright of the supreme court of the District of Columbia, dl rectlng them to appear before him. The proceeding grew out of a suit Instituted by the Y.alley Paper com pany of Holyoke, Mass., as the result of the committee's award of a con tract for furnishing paper for' the government printing office The refusal of the senate was based on the plea of the constitutional prerogatives of members of congress. n that position. It was brought ont during the recent in vestlgatloi of postmasters claims tor extra allow ances between the years 1864 and 1874, that Mr. Turner had been active In promoting them. Adverse reports were made upon all of the resolutions bearing upon those claims, and for several days Senator Penrose ha been awaiting the printing of th reports. It Is stated that Inquiry at the government printing office disclosed that the delay was due to orders from Mr. Turner, and this fact results! in the resignation. . .President of France to Resign, Paris. President Fallieres is In extremely poor health and he will re- sign his office job May 15 French statesmen predict that M. Falller predecessor, M.Loubet, will succeed him. There are three candidates to sucoeed the president Besides M. Loubet, there are M. Doubost, president of the senate, and M. Ribot, formerly prlms minister. President Fallieres Is so 111 that he can scarcely attend to hla duties. His resignation was written several weeks ago, but for fear of precipitating a polltfcsl crisis he decided to salt until May. -- -- 8P1T2ER WAS THE GOAT. Sacrificed by Sugar Trust After Years of Faithful Employment. The sugar trust made New York. a scapegoat of me. It deserted me It hounded and ruined absolutely. me after I served It faithfully, for twenty-ninyears. Thus declared Oliver Spitxer, former dock superintendent of the American Sugar Refining companys plant at Williamsburg, after he had heard a sentence of two years In the Atlanta prison Imposed upon him on ThursBe day by Justice Martin. Spltzer was Plan May Meyers Approved, convicted for conspiracy Washington. The long drawn out by underweighing sugar. In house the committee on dispute naval affairs over th subject of enChild Drinks Poison. dorsing the plan of Secretary Meyer Edith Seman, the Denver for the reorganization of the navy la or H. W. Seman, found daughter practically settled, it was stated on a boftle containing carbolic acid while Wednesday, and the committee will about the kitchen Thursday take action next week which w Iff V. ulaytng ternoon and drank the Contents, dy In effect, tentative approval of the lee-- ' ine within a few minutes. Other chll - rmryltheTdeirrfhe- tn to wrjfrUl' BT g e di, pisylnguesr'fier'sougbt e CLEAR-HEADE- Lone Robber Hold Up Bank. y San Bernardino, Cal. A lone robber held up the cashier and two patrons In the Bank of Highland -- on Friday, securing a tray of gold; And making his escape, after firing several shots down the street to frighten posA sheriffs posse Is sible pursuers. in pursulL The tray Is believed to have held less than $1,000. The chief bookkeeper in a large business house in one of our great Western cities speaks of the harm coffee did for him: My wife and I drank our first cup of Postum a little "over two years ago, and wo have used it ever since, to the entire exclusion of tern and coffee. It happened In this way: About three and a half years age I had an attack of pneumonia, which To Cure Leprosy by left a memento in the shape of dyspep Denver. Believing that certain rays sia, or rather, to speak more correctly, y machine may cure lep neuralgia o' the stomach. My cup of of the cheer had always bepn coffee or tea, H. Stover, a Denver physiDr. rosy, cian, started for Hawaii on Friday but I became convinced, after a time, with the Intention of making experi- that they aggravated my stomach trouments at the leper colony at Molokai. ble. I happened to mention the matDr. Stover took with him a small but ter to my grocer one day and he sugespecially constructed apparatus, sup gested that TgBrd' Postum a trial Next day lt tame, but the cook made piled with a new feature of his own the mistake of not boiling It sufficientInvention. ly. andwe did not like It mughl This Murdered Six People. however, soon remedied, and now Richmond, Va. Howard Little, who w9 like It so much that we will never murdered Mrs. Bessie Justis, her son- - ehange back. Postum, being a food George Meodows, and his wRej beverage instead of a drug. has been and three children in their home yfer j the means of curing my stomach trou- X-ra- in-la- - opportunity demonstrate the bottle way from her, hut she ran tember, was put to death by- electro-- , given In the next year the worth of his behind a chair and drank the poison cution tn the penitentiary here at dawn Friday. x before they could reach her. plans. . filled Friend for Burglar. Confesses to,Traln Robbery. ' Kills Father for Loveof Woman, ' Tex. Id St. the Bartlesville. OkltL "My stepmothLouis.Followlng his confession Fighting Groveton, er was my. tempter to such- - an extent dark with a man whom he believed that he took part In therobbery of a that I thought I loved her and so to be a burglar, S. T. Lockard early Missouri Pacific train near Eureka, to death Mo on the night, of. January 21, killed my father with an ax when she Thursday" stabbed t ordered-mto. Peter - Itrowu, on with a butcher-knif- e. Procuring trial here pharged with murderinghis light, Lockard found he had slain day to a charge of robbing the malls. best Ebellng was arrested at Hot Springs, father, made this remarkable admis- Carleton Swlnney, one of hi sion on the witness stand In court friends. Swlnney, a prominent citi- Ark. W. W. Lowe, who is Implicated He told his story - without emotion. zen, during A temporary fit of Insan- in Ebellngs 'confession; his brother, Mrs. T. H. Brown, the supposed siren ity, had broken from his attendants James Lowe, and S. W. . Emerson, who. the young man says, helped him and entered Lockard' home. The lat- sere arrested here Wednesday. The screams of arrests were k(ept a secret J'fhe In the crime, listened to his story ter was awakened by the with calmness and almost Indiffer- bis wife and found the Intruder lean- ! Lowes and Emerson, when arra'gned, ence. pleaded rot guilty. ing over Mb bed. he-m- e an D awelTT inaA today, and have used no other t remedy. , My work as chief bookkeeper In our Co.s branch house here Is of a very g confining nature. During my days I was subject to nerr ousness and the blues la addition to my Ick spells. These have left me since I began using Postum and I can conscientiously recommend It to those whose work confines them to long hours of severe mental exertion. Theres a Reason." . Look In pkgs. for the little book The Road to Wellvllle." E ke a bore letteef A aew troa time. Tier re eeaalae, trae, time ti tall at hamaa coffee-drinkin- latvrfit. " ut 4 |