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Show J I 3 J!!!? COALVILLE TIMES FLOODS III FRANCE , X, JACOB PETERSON. . , Editor and Manager. UTAH COALVILLE HUNDREDS-tARE-H0MLE8- UTAH STATE NEWS The convention of Utah municipal! (tee will he held in Logan on januar 34 and 25. Nefhi Manning, a popular young (nan of North Ogden, is dead as the result of injuries sustain d w hen a horse Licked him. The thirty-nlutannual convocation of the Utah grand lodge of Free and Accepted Masons a as held in OgdeO the first of the week William Smith Parker, believed o be the oldest man in Weber county, died at bis residence in Ogden .on January JK, of general debility at the sgg of 92 years. Freight Is now being diverted through Price for the reservation, of going over the Uintah rail vray. Price is becoming a bigger forwarding point than Salem is the nexE town to profit by the government electric ppwr, plant The tow Is tp be lighted by I he flrst town . of . .Maple.tou is of IjuRe.-Thalto considering ths matter. Oleomargarine at 30 cents a pound Is making a bigger hit with the bot)ef wires uf Salt Istke than -butter at 45 eeits, and grocers report- brisk for the cheaper product. The house of the disease In Salt Like and a war against the pest is urged by I)r. M. 11 fttewart, retiring health commissioner, In; his annual report to the mayor, Charles Davis, an- Ogden carpenter, slipped cm an icy pavement, the back of; his head strbcR" fhe corker 'rtf a cljsr case, his skull being fractured In three places, and It Is feared he x wHl not recover. The Southern Utah railroad is now carrying coal from the Consolidated Fqel company's mines, twenty miles south of. Price, and , will be hauling from 500 to J,OO0 tons dally within lbs next thirty daya. , Sait Lake is to have a new lnterur-ba- n line which will tap the territory to the south as far as Payson, Utah county, connect with the Bamberger line to Qgden and extend into Box Elder county to the north. Horse dealers from" "Isis Angeles have been in Cache valley recently buying horses. They picked up head, paying on en average 200 a head. j They advise the farmers to raise heavy leggafl draft horses. T. Murphy, of Ogden, while working at tha plant of the Utah Canning company, was caught in the machinery, bis left arm and right foot being badly Injured. It la feared it will be , necessary to amputate the foot. At a receipt meeting of fruit grower! of Box Elder county, It waa decided to use coal heaters la their orchards. A committee was appointed to secure the assistance of the local Commercial club in seeurJngY better Height ' rates on coal , i 7 . H.ILLawson has Just jnadeione of the largest single shipments of lambe ever sent out of Utah. There were sixteen canloads of heat quality, rolling fat, that Mr. Lawson brought-Iroi, the vicinity of Ephraim and and aent to the fancy eastern e - six-tee- n . J Ne-ph- - market. Dr. V. W. Knowles representing the national bureau of Animat Industry, who has been in Psovo for some time, commenced a teat of milch cows in the city for tuberculoids a few days ago. He will test all the cows In that vicinity and then those In the towns to the south. Tom Rice, an Indlan. 38 years old,. '1rnowtn the SaVt T jike county- - jall. charged with the murder of bla brother-in-law- , at Shem, Washington county, on December 11, 1909. The killing was the result of interference by the murdered man while Tom was beating hi wife. Lav on Baer, a boy employed at Che sugar factory at Logan, was badly hurt Saturday, lie is employed to run a beet grinder of some kind and in some way got his Auger caught in the. machine the result being that the 1 member was torn out. A. mortgage has been filed with the county recorder at Provo covering the Ttutlc Range railway, running from Spriugvllle to Tlntlc, and projected to some point In Nevada , by way of Deep Creek, and which is subjtTt to the lien of the Morton Trust company ' of New York. The snuff habit in Salt Lake is get-- , ting' a strong hold according to the statements of local tobacco and cigar flintier, and there is an increasing use of the compound. This Is apparforeign populaently --eon fined tion, however, and the sale I largest - j among foreigners. Six horses dead and two. more barely alive, out of a small bunch of ten, were found on a ranch Owned by TJeorge fonts, oifthe Jordan rivet near Salt Iatke by a humane officer, and an action will probably be brdnght against Couts. The animals bad died from starvation. ... The board of inquiry which investigated the cause of the disastrous wreck at Lemay has found that the wreck was caused by the failure of the crew of the extra freight to close the switch,' although no member of ' . the crew is "named. After a years search throughout the United States on the trail of a. black hand murderer, wanted In Chicago, the quest baa ended In Balt Lake through the arrest of Nick Uxelae. alia Bteve Koeovac, an Austrian who la now held In the county Jal - . for Chicago Officer; -t-e-the- S RUINED A3 RESULT OF HIGH WATERS. President Madriz Declare lnsurpnty Welcomes Chief ..Executives of ' Terms Are Preposterous and ferent State at Washington GOOD (RESULTS ALREADY" OB-- J jr wVlf Continue.'" 5 a Fellow 6ufferr.T TAINED BY NATIONAt MOVEMENT AGAINST TRUSTS. " and Prei! Villages Submerged and Houses When Waters Weaken the Foundation. Homeless Are Suffering. Col-lap- Paris Floods have exceeded ,all record and are fast assuming tin proportions of a national disaster In the northeast, and west, hundreds aie homeless and ruined Although It Is impossible to estimate the damage, it will be great. One of the wafer mains, serving one of the most populous districts, burst and the people of the district are without water. It ik feared that the city will be in a like condition soon, as the flood Is Invuding the pumping sta tions The contpn-Kseair factory, which supplies elevators In ParlH, also has been forced to shut down Officials of the prefecture are finding 'groaf difficulty' In securing shelter for the homeless Many persons vacated their quarters Saturday and ' 200 more vacated Sunday. On the boulevard of St. (Jet main a house is - tottering and threatening to tall on the chamber of deputies. One of the few casualties reported Sunday was the sweeping away of a man was trying to drag some floating logs from the river. The situation la the outskirts of Iaflp js even, worse than ip thereby proper. At AIfnrteville the dam burst, overwhelming 200 houses, the people being forced to .fly, leaving their be longings behind. Victim of Humaq Fiend. Denver, Colo. Alone In a flat, while dressing for school. Miss May Thust bad the clothing she waa wearing set on Ore by an Intruder hidden in a Closet A few moments later the girl wias severely burned by acid thrown or squirted on her face and hands by the same person, who escaped without being seen by the victim. Miss Thust, who is a jpomely girl of 16 years,, had the right jhlde of her far burned badly by carbolic acid. The identity of the perpetrator is unknown. Good Roads Attract Farmer. Washington Secretary Knox ; believes that the- congestion of population in great cities is caused In lafge part by the lack of good roads in this country. He told the house committee on foreign affairs that the reaion Frgnce wa the best agricultural country in the world was because the had good roads ao long, The agricultural population of Prance does not have to pend Ita mdney in repairing vehicles and harness every winter. I think gqnd roads have Improved the attractiveness of rural life." say Secretary - , Woman Seriously Burned. 7 New York. When Annie Koch's dress caught fire in the East Broadway house, where she waa employed, ehe ran, all aflame, arrow the street and beat frantically on the door of the Materni ty JhospltaL .Patient aL lhe wtndoi witnessed her flight arid raised an alarm of fire. This created consternation in the hospital and nurse restrained many ot the patient with difficulty, Tlie burning woman waa wrapped lx a blanket, extinguishing the (lamps, but not before she bad been Beverly burned. - ' FoUowiwq Jelaya'a Tactics, received Washington. Telegram at thq state department on Saturday Indicate that there has been a great revival by President Madriz of Nicaragua of the old Zelaya policy of imprisonment of respectable people for alleged political reasons. In one case, a house immediately across the street from the consulate was entered by soldiers without warrant. Troops are being hurried to meet the F,trada army. The general situation fln Managua la declared to be strained. - Two New Ship. for Argentine. Boston, Mass. That nearly 90 per cent of the 2!.fl00,000 to be paid by the Argentine Republic for the building of two "Dreadnauglits" in American ship yard will go for labor, and only about ten per cent for materials," estimated here One of the ships will be built at Quincy. Mas., and the other at Camden, N, J. Each will be 570 feet long with a displacement' of 38,000 tons and will have a speed of 22 knots, generated by horsepower. temf-offlclall- 40,-00- 0 School Highwayman. Cleveland. O A highwayman held up Misa Lulu Van Fleet, teacher, In a high school, Sunday night. Miss Van Fleot. after severely punishing him, bank-a- nd threw him Into snow Jumped on him. Upon leaving, how-eve- r, in her agnation, she left her purse, which had fallen on the ground, and the robber got it after all. Robbers Make Their Escape. St. Louis. The four men who held, up and robbed the Missouri Pacific train near Eureka, "Mo., Friday night, are reported hiding in this city. Two hundred-me- n sad six - bloodhounds covered the greater part of SL Louis county ln an almost fruitless search for the boat In which the bandits are supposed to have floated down the river to a point convenient to St. Louis. The boat was stolen Friday night a few miles from the ecene of the robbery. Rewards aggregating 37,200 have been offered. Teacher-Whip- s Managua. Nicaragua. Madriz announced on Thursday tbit General Estrada's reply had serwq end abruptly the' peace negotlup and that reinforcements had be of to the front with the purp 4 striking a decisive blow at the pints' army. General Kstrada s reply was t ,m message inviting the ' K president Nurgent leader to send peace conih loners to meet representatives m , government at Greytown. - The . . . s rada niunia tin, sign y OeneraK Chamorro, stated that fl would accept Grey town as a meb place for peace commissioners pmiil- ed Madriz would recognize the mfb tionlHts a constituting a proviso,! government. jt President Madriz declared tke.il ... -- surgent terms M're preosterou their aeceptanceby him would I to iiloitimatizing i - government. "Thfir'meanr'Hn WILSON PRESIDENTGREETS GOVERNORS pki d f-t- opn break - tXttk addd. he negotiations for lieace, "and the resumption of militaty a tivtty. I regret deeply that this U . as 1 am sincerely desirous of efft-ing a reconciliation of all factige Apparently this is Impossible wlUpst further bloodshed, and orders lane been issued to send more troopi to the front WILL NOT DROP SUIT. Government Fight Merger Union Pacific and' Southern Pacific. Washington. It was stated authoritatively on Thursday that the govfo ment suit for the dissolution of tk on Pacific ud merger of Southern Pacific railroads would t be dropped. Attorney General has found nothing so fai hx his Investigation to warrant auepa conclusion. A conference was held Thursday the attorney general and Fraik B. Kellogg on the one side and Judfe Lovett, president of the Union Padlfc, and counsel representing the afliid Harriman lines on the other for 'tie formal presentation of feasonk ply the suit to dissolve tjlc merger of tie railroads Bhould not be pressed. ' ! The railroad interest i have madeTt clear that they feel confident the srit cannot be pushed to a successful and are willing It should le ' compromised. Will the-Uni- wii-ersha- The movement to combat the high prices of meat has spread rapidly and is assuming a na-tional character. C oincident with the growth of the movement came an- from Milwaukee and nouncenients Cleveland that the price of meat had dropped Jn Ml,WBIlkee two retall butchers slf,aks al 10 cents qllotd a IM)llnd , slrloln at tlre Bame plice 0,her meats In projortum. The wholesale ptiee of beef fell off 15 (cents a hundred pounds in Cleveland Dispatches from Kansas City. j Omaha. MeinphU. ttmore, Pittsburg and other ' cities, told of the rapid growth of the movement, deve land, credited wtth being the Originator of the scheme', "now has 50 000 names enrolled In the rrucade, whie-- f Kansas ( lt reports that it may soon have joi.uoo.. . The hcaiU of the., leading packing houses of Kansas City aocTThloago refused to discuss the elTert of the movement upon their business Fiom Denver comes the report that the giowlng movement to bocotl meat has aroused stockmen of tile west to a protest that the effect of the boycott will be against the stock-merather than against the packers. Proceedings will soon be Instituted by the .department of justice against beef trust, with headthe quarters at Chicago, is the latest from Washington. Complaints charging operations In restraint of trade have been investigated by the department. Suit probably will be brought under law. the Sherman anti-trus- t Chicago 4 TWENTY PERISH IN WRECK. -- - In welcoming the conWashington ference of governors at the White House Tuesday afternoon President Taft indulged in a little good natured speculation as to how .ne English system of executive authority might work-i- n this coun.ry, and especially e executive with respect to giving t to argue matters out. with the legislative branch and go before He said he the people if nectssary. t would like to have a talk with some of the governors as to their methods of obtaining legislation. "I would especially like to ask Governor Harmon bow he manages with a Republican legislature out In Ohio," said the president "I can assure him." added Mr Taft, "that tLere are struggles even when you have a congress which nominally is of y'our-owparty. There is no use mourning over tir lack of the English system of government in flhls country, for we can never have It, but you governors, as weil as 1, . have felt at time's the In justice cf "criticism which comes to the executive because of the lack of the 77 English sj stein. President Taft address! the governors as My oear fellow executives and fellow sufferers." Governor Hughes of New York and former Mayor Seth Low. New Yor Cfty, spokeat the afternoon session. heart-to-hear- TAKES RAP AT ROOSEVELT. Scored for Alleged Vio of Law. ' "Ihtlon LANDIS Washington. Without debate and by a viva voice vote, the house on Tuesday adopted me conference report on the Ballinger-Piucho- t inquiry resolution and then devoted almost five hours to further dlbcussion of the urgent deficiency appropriation bill. Consideration cl this measure was not concluded. The session was somewhat enlivened by criticisms of former President Roosevelt by Representative Harrison. who denounced him for appointing rept4sgntaives to the third maritime conference at Brussels next April without due 'authority of law, and for his alleged numerous viola tions of the yvil service taw. . . h eo-op- -- d 0 d - Fhlp-Buildln- g - 1 the-ellglb- le CLAIMS THE HONOR. Chicago Judge Started Investigation Four Cars Leave Track and Plunge Into River. North Bay, Ont. At leaBt a score, and perhaps two score, people were killed on Friday when four cars of a Canadian Pacific passenger train on the Soo branch jumped from the LEWIS IS RULER. track and, falling down a steep embankment, plunged through the -- ice President o$ Mine Workers Quickly into the Spanish river. Some were Hammers Down Opposition. drowned, others were burned, almost There will be no Indianapolis. of the drowned; within hand-reaci Sutherland of the disgraceful scenes of repetition Represents Senate. still others were, crushed to death. miners convention of last year If 1 Washington. Senator Suthtld One" of the,- - Splintered cars' waa the e 1 can get the ration of, this .con;, of ,7fah boon honored. byhMt burned on thq brink of the river. The declared President Thomas yentlon,'' one as selected of the senators A U wrecked traln'was en route from MonU Lewis of the United Mine Workers upon the commission appointed by treal to Sa.ult Ste. Marie and Minne- of the close of Tuesdays America, to congress Investigate the Bellltger-- ' apolis. An official ..statement says session of ' the .organization. - He Pinchot trouble. The appolntmat ia that the accident probably waa due to ruled order of out Frank Jr Hayea of a distinct compliment to the Utak sen- a broken rail.1 Illinois and William Green of Ohio, ator, aa the commission was selicted leaders of the faction opposed to the UNDER CONTROL OF STATE. with great care In order that the inLewis administration, who objected to . vestigation may be. free .from suspithe-- - national organizers, being seated of" Power Water Question" Developing' cion of favoritism or prejudice. The as delegates if tkhir salaries are paid to be Left to State Interested. other member of the committee apIn the1 convention. 7 Shemian pointed - by-Washington. Senator Carter, after are Nelsoh of Minnesota, Flint of Cal- a conference with several western Eastern Forest Neglected. ifornia Root of New York, Republ- governor, who were in Washington Washington. the east and the icans, nnd Paynter of Kentucky and attending the governors conference, south have a right to ask the same Fletcher -- of Flor hi a,- - Democrats. prepared a bill authorizing the Is- attention by The naTionat government suance of patents to states for public to forests on the water sheds of the Half a Million for Aviation Prkea. lands chiefly valuable for the developAppalachians as has been given to New York. More than 3500,040 in ment of water power. the west, declared former Governor In effect, the Carter measure would Curtiss Guild, Jr., of prize money will be offered this year Massachusetts, held under the turn over to the states the whole president of the American Forestry for aviation meet at Its annual dinner auspices of the International Aero- question of developing the water association, It would remove the entire nautic federation. Tuesday night. "Not one state of the According to a power. statement issued at the headquarters problem of regulating the use of lands old thirteen," he said, "that fought In of the Aero dub of America, fourteen and 8treamschjefly valuable for the the revclutlcn. that holprd qiay for meets are" scheduled between April I development- of power from theon-tro- l flhe Louisiana purchase, that fought of the federal government. the war of 112 or that was taxed to and November 2, for which 1416.000 has already been promised pay for the ceding of Florida The by Fifteen Killed by Blast. Spain la benefited directly by the nalongest dates awarded' are those seY. N. Fishklll Landing, Fifteen tional forerft reserves established cured for the American meet, which will be held from October 18 to No- men, three of them Americans, were heretotore exclusively In the west. vember 2. No selection of a city for killed Friday by a premature exploAnti-Fooin a tunnel that Trust League. the competition will be made until all sion of form part of the local aqueduct to la Washington. Application for 200,-00bids are In. which will carry water from the As membership cards to the Anti-Foohokandara In "The Catskills to New Banker. Convicts Given Freedom. Trust liaague, recently organPi! u I O, gtenalard, former York Cfty. Five men were terribly ized to fight, by boycott, high food - Chicago. were so hut near the mouth mutilated, president of the Milwaukee Avenue of the tunnel that they were rescued prices, have been received, it was announced Tuesday night, after the first State bank of Chicago, and Henry V. alive. The orher fifteen .were found Hering, formerly Its cashier, who beneath a mass of roek and debris, meeting of the board of directois. Among organizations that have writ were convicted in connection with the hammered by the force of the ten for application cards literally the of bank the and the disapwrecking explosion Into a bleeding mass of Traveling Men's assoc ation, the Cenpearance of 31,300,000 of it- - funds, heads, limbs and ton-os- . beIt Is tral labor, union of this city, the were parolcb on Thureday. Stensland, lieved that one of the workmen, car- Housekeepers alliance and the who ws raptured after a sensational a torch, pipped and fell, ignit- League of American Pena omen. A chase extending across the Atlantic ryinga fuse an if setting off aseiles of letter has been received from Presiocean Imo Europe and to Morocco, ing of nltro glyeetlne dent Taft, It was said In which he en has served three years, three months charges and twenty-fou- r Hunters Ruthlessly daughter dorses the movement. days Wild Elk. Argentine Planning New Battleship. Say Hook Worm is Largely Humbug. Game Warden Sor Wyo Cheyenne, Buenos Avres The Argentine New Orleans. Dr. Joseph A Banna, enson reports that a gang of tusk hun naval commission has advised the govtit of houfsg surgeon charity hospital tera has Been ilaughterlng-wiid elk. ernment to authorize thereonstructioa at New Orleans, thiuka-the- re is a good In Jackson's Hde he ftjund nine dead of two Dreadnought battleships st deal of humbug about the hook worm. In one pile. A report front Jackson, j 28,0o0 tons each The proposed ves- The very fact thal Rockefeller gave that the citizens there j gels are to have a speed of twenty- says Wyo., a million dollars to help stamp mt have committee two knots an hour and will car.y appointed a the hook worm has added much to the and have warned vigijaace the tusk huntets to twelve guns of caliber. The talk of the- disease,1 Italian physician tecc ntly to d me hours or suffer death. Citizens of Uin- teasels "Tlrelo "betdchllcal and the contracts for their construction probthat reports of the prevalence of this tah county are circulating a petition ably will be, given to ihe Fore River disease had the effect of scaring Euopposing the Gros Ventre winter elk company of Quincy, froFn the senita." ropean away reserve required by congress. Mass. . I o . Negroe of Havana Hava tiihevanca. Promotion of Western Boy. Executed forTbeft Havana. Practically all negro Port Ait Prince,. Hay tL The public Washington. George P. McCabe-o- f members of congress, followed by a Ogden. Utah, solicitor of the agricul- has been aroused by the summary large crowd of negro politicians, visit- tural department, who woft the hearty execution of two sailors accused of ed President Gomez at the palace commendation of President Roosevc Thursday nlghUand presented a peti- for his work In connection with The havlng .stcflen merchandise from . the tion demanding that "the " president meat Inspection and pure, food laws, v barfs. ' Cpotr detection General Pertake cognizance of the action-o- f the has been directed by Secretary Wil- dinand, captain of 'the port, arrested management of the llaza hotel, at son to take full charge of the law de- the sailors whoT were immediately place recently after the refusal of the partment of the forestry service, com- shot It ) said the prisoners were clerk to permit two negro congress- prising twenty lawyers, and reorgan- given opportunity neither to explain men to be served with liquor. Ne- ize the personnel. Mr. McCabe came nor confess, and In fact were nefc groes. the president waa told, are con- to Washington by certification from questioned. General Ferdinand was tinually discriminated register of the -civil ser- arrested on Tuesday on the order c. against when they aeek lodging! the hilntster of war. vice of a clefk. nitro-glycerln- e Believes Secretary of Agriculture Farm Products Are Being Sold - - Cheaper Abroad. Than, at Home. t. ,7'' ha TAKETHJIMJ Washington. "I am gathering proof which will show that American farm products are being sold cheaper abroad than they are In this country, declared Secretary Agriculture Wilson on Monday at the " high cost of living heating being conducted by a of the House committee ofl the Dibtriqt of Colombia. Mr Wilson gave evidence to show that the producer at the present time was getting a little more than formerly for his food products, while the ultimate consumer was paying an excessive price. "Tnul comparatively recently the American people enjoyed the, cheapest food du the world. continued Mr. Wilson. ."But nowadays not 'enough people know howr to faun profitably, khow how to get enough out of a day's an acre rewotk, know howio-inak-e . ne hire of the factory has spond. called the farmer from the plow. "The wui&i farming In th's counmI ih: Alleghany . try, is done mountains, and agricultural lauds is In consecheapest in that Ideality. quence, continued Secretary "Wilson, "thV boys have" left the. farm, and the scarcity of lalnir is now the greatest concern of the agriculturists. declared that Wilson Secretary Washington was one of the most expensive cities in the land and that retailers In this city demanded 42 per cent profit, where in cities like New Yotk and Phi'adelphia they were content with 17 to 20 per cent. the-rlgh- n d Dif- WILL of Beef Trust.' Chicago. Judge Kenesaw M. Landis, of the United States district court. In his charge to the federal grand Jury assembled Monday to investigate the methods of the "beef trust, declared it was through information furnished by him that the present proceeding was started. Judge Landis also saifl that after ha had notified the United States district attorney In Chicago on Janu 20, he was surprised to see, on January 22, notices In tne newspapers, coming ostensibly J rom ashlngton, that the government officials there had ordered the investigation. Away Millions. Chicago. After having given more to struggling colleges in many parts of the country, Dr. D. K.- - Pearson,- - almost 90years old, an- ounces Mopdey .that he Intend to give away every aent he possesses be-- j fore he dies. Dry Pearson is reputed z to be worth many millions. I am having, more fun than any other millionaire alive, he said. Let other rich men go In for automobiles and steam yachts. I have discovered, af-- , ter endowing forty-sevecolleges in twenty-fou- r states, that "giving la the " I most exquisite of all mundane de- - ; lights. Giving n Tillman Again in Limelight. Washington. The land grants of the northwest,- - which at- - the instance of Senator Tillman received so much attention from congress two years ago and figured conspicuously In a sharp controversy between Mr. Tillman and President Roosevelt, were again the subject of discussion in the senate on A resolution introduced by Monday. Senator Chamberlain, calling on the attorney general to say whether he had instituted a sult which two years ago his department was directed Ao bring to enforce the. rights of the government In connection with the grants, was adopted. -- Girl Kills Lover and Herself. Seattle, Wash. The bodies of Chas. O. Tucker, a merchant, and a young ) woman nSmed Elvira M. Bupkleman, formerly clerk in a Second avenue department store, were found in a room in the McLeod hotel Monday afternoon, with 'conclusive evidence that the. woman had killed Tucker and Ihbn' herSelf. Miss Bunkleman was 25 ? jearsoid and had been seen much, in Tucker's company during the past two years. Evidently she had gone to' Tucker's room prepared to kill him. She had not removed her hat or street garments. ' Trying to Make Gould Pay an Old Millinery Bill. New York. Katheryn Clemmons Gould, who last June obtained a of separation from her husband." Howard Gould, with alimony of 336,-9S-0 a jear, appeared on Monday in court as defendant in a suit to recover 32.980 brought fiy the Lichtenstein Millinery company. Mrs. Gotrtd"denled her Babitity nn the ground that, when the .goods were purchased, she was entitled to the , support of her husband and that they were necessities of life. de-cr- Puts Immigration Commission in Hole Washington. By cutting off a dell- ciency appropriation of 3125,000 for the national Immigration commission, ' the house on Monday lent its support To .siveraLmemberSled By Representative Macon of Arkansas, who dev nounced the commission and its wort and threatened it with Immediate extinction, Unless friends of the commission succeed In haring the item re stored to the urgent deficiency bill tn the senate, it will compelled to aa-- f pend for' lack of funds. The commission was created by an act, of February 20. 1907. con-gres- u, |