V
LE7 YOUR WANTS BE
WEATHER FORECAST
rtfcNOWN IN THE tEhe
THE INDICATIONS ARE THAT TI
EVENING STANDARD WEATHER WILL BE RAIN TO
NIGHT OR TOMORROW COLD
ER TOMORROW AND IN NORTH
PORTION TONIGHT
r
HI ForethVearN0 283Prlce Five Centa
OGDEN CITY UTAH FRIDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 25 1910
TREE MEN
INDICTED
j
They Robbed Illinois
Central of Millions
of Dollars
Chicago Nov 5Frank B Harrl
man John M Taylor and C L1 Sw
ing former officers and employes of
the Illinois Central railroad and Jos
E Buker were Indicted today by the
Cook county grand Jury for conspir
acy In connection with frauds said to
have been practiced against tlio rail
road
roadTwo
Two counts in the blanket indict
ment also charge operation of a con
I fidence same Each defendants bond
I
Is fixed at 20000
A total of 4825650 It is charged
was Illegally taken from the Illinois
Central railroad by the four men nam
ed In company with the Osternan
Manufacturing company the Blue Isl
and Car Equipment company the
Memphis Car company and the Amer
ican Car Equipment icoiupany
which also arc mentioned iu the In
dictment
i The loss by alleged fraudulent deals
estimated by the present railroad
officials was 1600000 but the whole
amount of transactions with the car
repair companies since 190G when
the alleged illegal conspiracy is de
clared tohwcbcen conceived is
named in the Indictment
Bukor who escaped prosecution
when arrests first wore Dade was
indicted on the testimony of Henry
Osterrnan president of the Ostermnn I
Manufacturing company who testified
that Buker was the gobetween who I
I
carried tho alleged Illegal money
gained by padding expense bills to
the former railroad officials named
Osterman also said tho four men
Indicted were stockholders or receiv
ed a salary as a dividend from his
company I
HarrIman formerly was general
manager of tho Illinois Central Tay
lor was general storekeeper and Ew
Ing was general superintendent At
tho time the alleged repair padding
was done Buker was superintentlent
of machinery remaining in that posi
tion until last April
BOYS PLAY
IS fAT Al
Gun Went Off and a
Boy Fifteen Is
Killed
t
Utica N Y Nov 5Thc coroner
is today investigating the death of
Charles Mulcey a flfleenycarohl boy
vho was shot and killed by a compan
ion of Ibo same age Chas Jones near
their home In Forestport last night
Time two had been hunting and
wero on their way home when tho
shooting occurred According to tho
story told the coroner Jones pointed
his shotgun playfully at Mulcey tell
mg him to halt on pain of death
The gun went off and theCharge en
tcred the lads head death resulting In
ftnntly Jones declared bo did not
know his gun was loaded
NO ENGINEER ON I
A MOVINfi TRAINI
i
Racine Wle Nov 25The lives of I
10 passengers on train No n on tho
Chicago Milwaukee St Paul road
bound to Chicago hung in the balance
yesterday when Michael Crowley the
engineer was stricken with apoplexy
at his post and died while the train
was running at the rate of 40 miles i
an hour I
Tho fireman noting that his eugin j
cor did not Round tho signals for I
crossings called to Crowley and re
solving no answer went to the en
gineer and found him dead i I
Thy fireman stopped the train and II
backed Into Corliss where the body
was removed and another engineer
was obtained to run the train I
I
SETTLING FOR TIMBER
AT A LOW RATE II
Boise Ida Nov 2 LFlnal settle1
ment for tho sale of 24000 acres oC
t land in Latah county is being I
Made between the Btato Hnd board I
and tho Potlatch Lumber company
lon Bush tho state land
agent ap1
praised tho land nt an average ot 10 I
zmI aero but portions are judged to be
worth as much aa sis an nere I
The Potlatch Lumber company
bought the timber about eight years
ago under the usual contract allowing
twenty years In which the timber I
ehoiild be cut and removed The
company however docs net want to
cut all of this timber within the next
twelve years and In orlor to cut It
is willing to pay a nominal price
for it Although it ia said that much
01 the land Is mountainous and unfit
for cultivation still
as parts are ap
Praised at from 10 to 15 per acre
il Is expected that It will net the
tJtato not less than 210000
REPRESENTS TEN MILLIONS
FOR CHINESE REFORM
Boise Ida Nov 2L Fong Su Mu
the president of the Empire llcpub
I lie association
with headquarters at
Shanghai has Leon in Boise for thu
past ten days visiting the Chinese of
this city and gathering information
for his society Fong Su Mu came
direct from New York City to Boise
but before returning homo will visit
Bovoral of the coast cltlus Tho or
ganization of which lie is president
has a membership of 10000000 with
branches In several states of this
country Its purpose is to Introduce
Into the homo government fome of the
heat things which are Gained by the
rudy of other countries nnd it is ex
I pected through Its Influence to rid
the Chinese government ot some of
r Its most glaring evils Most of Its
Members arc progressive In spirit and
In sympathy with tho movement of
the present emperor
One of the edicts
of the Chinese em
peror especially pleasing to tho non
residents was tho permission to cut
the hair as do the citizens of the
country of their adoption Since the
order only the old men and the more
conservative have clung to their long
braids
ROTING UN
TE STRU E
Three Persons Are Shot
in the Chicago
Conflict
Chicago Nov 25Threo persons
wore shot one being wounded serious
t ly and many others wero subjected to
a rain of bullets here today in a riot
caused by striking garment workers
ntlackhlb nonunion workers on the
northeast side of the city J
Vincent Belle and his wife Anna
nonunion workers were accused by
the police of firing the shots and were
arrested
I
KIDNAPER HAS
P IS0N VISION
Plttsburg Nov 25lichen Boyle
serving a sentence of 25 years in the
uenHentlirv for the Iculnnnlnrr nf lil I
I tie Ely vVhitln of Sharon Pa eigh
teen months ago was the pianist at
the Thanksgiving cnlcripibincnt glvciu
for the convicts
At the conclusion of the program
she asked permission to sing n solo
It was granted and she sang I
Know That My Redeemer LJvelh
while many of the prisoners wept
Later she declared that she had had
a vision which convinced her that
she would never pass another Thanks
giving day In the prison that she
would either be released or would
die
WORLDS MARKETS
OPENING DEALS IN
STOCKS VERY LIGHT
I
New York Nov 25 Opening deal
ings In stocks today were so light as
to scarcely move prices from the
i losing level of Wednesday Excep
I lions were General Elecrlc which
advanced i 31 and National Railways
of Mexico second preferred 1 ll the
latter on the more reaISUi tug advices
from Mexico Otherwise the small
I changes were mixed between gains
and losses
A slow hardening movement sent the
level of prices up all around the gain
amounting to a point In American
Smelting Demand for stocks was so
dull that prices wore poorly held
Bonds were irregular
Chicago Livestock
Cattle receipts estimated at C000
market slow and steady beeves 450
fJTuJi Texas steers 350 < 0500 west
ern steers 12511 ijGO stockers and
fenders 335 570 cows and heelfors
225CTC35 calves 72567925
Hogs receipts estImated at 2500
market 5c lower than Wednesday
average light G55tfG95 mixed C55
705 heavy GGDff703 rough CG5
G90 good to choice heavy GSO57j
pigs G15QiGS5 bulk of sales GSOQ
G95Sheep
Sheep receipts estimated at 12000
market steady to lOc higher native
22fi110 western 250I10 year
lings L100515 lambs native 125
tlJ6i0 western I2fiG25
j
Omaha Livestock
s Omaha Nov 25 Cattle Receipts
1200 market active stronger Native
ulcers l25aG7i cows and helfcra
XUOauIO western steers SoOaSSO
range cows and heifers 2SOulGO can
ners 270a3IO stockers and feeders
00a535 calves 50a775 bulls stags
etc 2oal7n
Hogs Receipts 5500 market lOa
luc lower Heavy GGOaG90 mixed
G70aG90 light GSfiaG95 pigs 600a
CSfi bulk of sales G70aGi0
Sheep Receipts J100 market 15a
2Cc higher Yearlings 37i3al9C weth
ers 32GaL20 ewes 300aS50 lambs
yOOaG40
Chicago produce
Chicago Nov 2L Butter steady
creameries 2J < 5 < > 31 dairies 2327
b5Steall receipts 257S cases
at mark cases included 10 l222 12
firsts 29 prime firsts 31 I
Cheoso asy daisies 15 12 < S > 3I
Twins lJ12 Young Americas 15 12
Lpnghorna 15 2 > l
f
Sugar and Coffee
Now York Nov 25 Sugar Raw
firm muscovqdo 89 test olO cen
trifugal 96 test 390 molasses sugar
SO test 315 Refined quiet
Coffrio Spot firm Rio No 7 11a j
1S Santos No 1 13 12
EXICO S
NOW OU I
Uprising Has Failed in
l Nearly Ail Parts of
the Republic
Washington Nov 2GQuict pro
alls In tho northern parts of Chih
uahua Mexico according to a tele I
gram received uy the state depart j
ment today from Thomas D Ed
bards United States consul at Cludad j
Juarez i
Recent reports have Indicated that
Chihuahua was menaced by the rev
olutionists but the consul tele
graphed that he considered the gen
eral situation quiet
Train service Into Chihuahua from
tne south he reported is not being
interfered with all regular trains ar
riving on scheduled time
S temeJlts of passengers from
Terroon Gomo Palaclo Parral Du
rango and other points the consul
auled indicate that reports as to
tim disorders have been greatly ex
aggerated
Henry Lane Wilson United Sttaea
ambassador at Mexico City tele
graphed the state department that
complete calm prevails In that city
REBELLION SUBSIDING
New York Nov 2GThe Insurrec
tionary flames In the stato of Chihua
hua Mexico have apparently subsid
ed to marked degree according to
dispatches received by VlccPrcsident
E D Kenuu of the Mexican North
western Railway company whose lines
I run between Chihuahua and Mndera
I
and El Paso nnd Torrazas Dr E S I
learn iprcsideut of tho railway
who Is in the City ot Mexico tele J
graphed as follows
Conditions In federal district nnd I
vicinity absolutely normal there I
i
hve been no serious disturbances of I
an character or Interference with I I
properties reports of disastrous dis
turbances In Chihuahua greatly ox
aggregated trains running regularly
with the exception of one Interrup
tion of service no interruption of in
terference Mexican Northwestern op I
eration
George Rutledge superintendent ot
the El Paso division of the Mexican
Northwestern Railway company tele
graphs from Ciudad Junction that no
foreigners have lkeiFinorestcd that
there has been no trouble of any kind
on his division nnd that the reports
concerning disturbances among the la
borers engaged in railroad construc
tion are absolutely without founda
tion
VicePresident ICcnnn has received
a message from II C Ferris general
manager of the railroad who is In
Chilhuahua confirming D Pearsons
j Information
I Passenger Report Quiet
El Paso Nov 5AIl was quiet be
tween El Paso and Mexico City when
the train came through which reach
i ed El Paso from Mexico City this
I morning according to the passengers
I All the telegraph wires In
were opera
tion and there was io fighting
Passengers who came from Parral
this morning declare there was no
fighting there yesterday and that the
troops reported as passing through
Torreon to quell rioting at Parral
were merely reinforcements and wore
not for maintaining order at Parral
These passengers bring the report
that an American named Storey was
wounded in the Parral fighting Mon
day at the same time that Thomas
Lawson an American was accidental
ly killed
Information to the El Paso Herald
this morning i from along the border j
of Sonora is that Hernioslllo Giraya
mas and Mazatlan are quiet I
A message from Cannnca says that I
quiet prevails there where eighty I
1 five soldiers are considered sufficient
forty of the garrison of 125 having
been sent to Naco I >
1
The story of revolutionists of Can
anon furnishing arms and anrnunl
lion to Yaqui Indians Is nothing hue I
a hoax declared the Herald COlT
Simon dent
I
Americans Warned
El Paso Tex Nov 25it J Mar
shall a mining man who was at Par I
iil during the shooting was among
the passengers arriving here today j
Americans were warned to keep
out of it said Mr Marshall i
Tom Lawson was killed and Storey I
was wounded but they were hit by
stray bullets The official report at
Parral said only four persons were
killed but there wero more than that
I
as I have seen a photograph of ten
dead in one spot I
All Is quiet now and no trouble
Is expected Its all uvcr Business Is I
going on as usual
M F Chaflln a mining man from
tho neighborhood of Zacatecas re
ported that there had been no trouble
In thnt vicinity
More Troops Moving
Prescott Ariz Nov 25 Although
everything Is reported quiet along the
border General Thomas left with
Company B of the Eighteenth Infant
ry for Naco Ariz early today While
the general will neither deny nor af
firm there Is a rumor that the entire
itanison of three companies will leave
Fort WI1ilplc for the border Satur
Jay Army officers said that tho cavalry
IIuachuca lias also
at Fort been or
dored to the border In view of the
present situation this movement of
troops is considered as a precaution
ary measure In order to protect
American Interests should any out
break occur
I
NO BULL FIGHT
II
AT LOREDO FOR MONTH
I
I
Laredo Tex Nov 2GTohero will I
be no bull fights or other entertain
ments at Laredo for a month Or more
The fight which was scheduled ot
open thereon November 2 has been
abandoned
The situation today along tho role
lean border adjacent to Laredo is
quiet
FORMER LEGISLATOR FOUND
GUILTY OF WHITE SLAVERY
I
Pillsburg Nov 22Jesse Blnestonc
I
a former member of tho Pennsylvania
legislature and Samuel Mosensen
were found guilty of complicity in
the while slave trade the verdict be
ing rendered In tho criminal court to
day T1o men were charged with j
conspiracy to place Grace Weiner IS
years old in unlawful resorts for tlio
purpose of receiving money from her
FORTUNE UNEXPECTED I
Orange N J Nov 25 Thanksgiv
ing day for the children of the law
Jacob Deckenbach formerly a resi
dent of Orange will always have a
peculiar sl illlcnnce for It brought
thenews that they arc heirs lo a for
tune of 10DOUU left by their father
I Chance alone placed them In time
I way of tho money the administrators
of his estale having discovered time
existence of the children only through
a long search
CIT fSOf
LARg SflfI
Have Total Population
Almost Equal to One I
Third of Census
Washington Nov 25Witll only
Portland Seattle and Spokane Wash
mind Duluth Minn and Superior WIs
missing the cItIes of tho United
States of 25000 and over have an ag
gregate population of p7S03S35
This announcement Is made in a re
capitulation bulletin issued today by
time census bureau I
Fortyseven of the cities contain I
n ore than 100000 apt of this num
ber eleven have risen into the 100
000 class since the census of 1900
There has been much larger growth
in the cities below 100000 than in
those above tho percentage for the
I former being 3D1 us against31S for
i the latter
Portland and Seattle will be added
to limo class of larger cities In 1900
Portland had 0042Mihd Seattle 80
671 so that there will be at least 19
cities in these containing more than
100000 each
I
YOUNG RUSSIAN is
SAVED FRI DEATU
Chicago Nov 25 Chicago and New
York humanitarian organizations
Joined hands yesterday to save from
deportation a young Russian whose
brother lives in this city Interest
was excited in the case because of
time fact that his return to Russia
I will be equal to a sentence of death
to bo shot as a deserter ho having
fled over the border Into Austria and
thence to America In order to escape
service in time army to which he had
been called
j Several telegrams that arranged the
i campaign of succor were exchanged
during the day lielweeii the Hebrew
society of Now York represented by
I I Lipitch amid Alexander D Scel
pnfrcund of tills city secretary of the
Independent Order of Bal BRith
Haste was necessary because of the
governments threat to Immediately
deport the Immigrant who Is being de
tallied at Ellis Island
Wolf Izwascslkow who in Russia
lived near the city of Magiloff and Is
an expert furrier Is the voiing man
who faces deportation with the cer
tainty that If returned to his native
land he will be shot as a deserter from
the army Word of his plight reached
his brother IL Izwascslkow a tailor
who lives in Chicago
The mesdage came in a telegram
from Mr Llpitsch of the Now York
Hebrew society who slated that the
government ordered the deporta
tion of the Russian who was without
the minimum amount of money re
quired to distinguish him from a pros
pective public charge The immigrant
the telegram said had lost the ad
dress of the brotherinlaw residing In
Brooklyn who was to hae supplied
him with funds and thus enabled him
to land
A telegram to Mr Llpitsch Informed
him that the name of tho brotherin
law was Joseph Soskin Jiving at 79
Johnson avenue In Brooklyn
The young mans brotherinlaw In
this city will help supply the funds
to release him from Elils Island I
I AMERICAN cAiiii
IN REVOLUTION
I Chicago Nov 2 Somewhere down
in Mexico enveloped by the rebellion
i against President Diaz is Noble B
i Judah Jr who has just been selected
1 a member of tho Illinois legislature
I Fears for his safety have been exolt
I ed because of Inability to conimunl
I Onto with him by telegraph since last
j Saturday
j The last word I bad from my son
j said Noble B Judah Sr was last
Saturday when ho wired mo at soma
length that he WitS about to go to
Chllpeuzo in Mexico H0 said that n
company of nirnles was patrolling the
1I0lghhllrhood whIch at that time wan
quiet although published reports
were that th9 rebellion was spread
ing iu that direction He promised to
wire from Chlliwuzo but did not do
I
so and Ihae received no word to
several Inquiries While I do not sup
pose Uior6 Is cause for worn I can
not help being anxious J
PESIIDNT
CffllTCSED
For His Attitude on the
Deep Waterway Un
dertaking f
J
SL Louis Nov President Tafts
attitude toward waterway projects I
was attacked by William Kavanaugh
president of the LaketolheGulf Deep
Waterway association In tho latters
address at the opening of the associa
tions annual convention here today
The attendance at the convention
which met In the First Kcglmcnt ar
mory was as large as at any previous
I conventions Prominent among the
delegates and guests are United States
I senators congressmen and governors
of state
I A special train of waterway boom
ers arrived this morning from Chi
cago
The reports of the secretary and
treasurer and the address of Presi
dent Kavenaugh of SL Louis were the
principal business of the morning ses
sion
Workers from Now Orleans and San
Francisco are among the delegates
seeking approval of their home cities
for the Panama exposition The mat
ter it is thought will not be brought
before the convention
The delegates differ as to the depth
I they want the Mississippi river to be
made > by tho government President
Kavannugh leads In urging fourteen
feet while a strong contingent will be
satisfied with n ninefoot depth
Prefacing his address of welcome
with a review of the work of the asso
ciation PIesldent KavanaiiRh declared
that the organization had consistently
demanded that river betterments be
put on a practical basis This associa
tion he said like other river associa
tions condemn the pork barrel policy
and demanded that river Improve
ments be put 011 a practical basis In
which commercial conditions should
be hold paramount to political consid
eration
What Is the result AVlthln the last
four years public sentiment has
changed water improvements have i
become nonpolitical and even tho
President dcsnlto a growing Indiffer
once toward our great project and
favorable action toward his own river
has announced hereafter that no pork
barrel hills will receive his approval
Fromtho beginning this associa
tion imas allen ttio vlcw tnaT navlga
tinn should be developed in connection
with a comprehensive system be
I glnniiiK with tho lakes to the culf
deep waterway as It natural main ar
tery
Throughout its history this asso
ciation has insisted on principals that
each waterway Is a unit from Its
I source to Us mouth the only prin
clple on which the perpetuity of navi
gation can rest
Thanks chiefly to the fidelity of
men now present the Slxtyllrst con
gress at Its long session last win
ter enacted a river and harbor bill
superior to Its predecessors In sev
eral respects largely in which it
contemplated a modern Iakestolhe
gulf loop waterway conditional on
approval by a board of engineers for j
which provision was made
The item was well Intended and I
had the intention been carried out
faithfully the critical point of our
project would now doubtless bo past I
It Is n bitter disappointment that
We have to record at least paitial
failure of this Intent through an of i
tidal partiality first noted bv some
of us in last years river trip The
President postponed appointing the
board under the act for many weeks
thus making It apparent that tho j
boards reports in conformity with
the act of congress must necessarily I
be hastily arrived at The President
also appointed mon on this Uoard
whom the pooplo feared were un
friendly to the project Thus by in I
direction the purpose of the legis
lation has been delayed If not thwart
ed Surely tho President misunder
stands the meaning of that memor
able river trip Surely he misjudges
the temper of the men of the Interior
indeed of the country at large Our j
present need is for legislation so I
definite and specific that It will be I
come effective despite indifference
and unfriendliness from any quarter
however exalted or however unex
pected and unwarranted the opposi
tion may be
Why should not the Sixtysecond
congress at its first session adopt
tho nolicy of comprehensive water de
velopment already approved by tho
people and show Its good faith by
a specific provision for a deep water
way through the national artery con
ncctlng tho great lakes and the gulf
In accordance with tho plans we have
framed at great cost
I
PRESENTED WITft
MARRIAGE LICENSE
I Denver Nov 2GClem Crowley
1 captain of the Denver university foot
ball learn which was defeated yester
day by Colorado college In time deci
sive battle of the season announced
< last night that it was the happiest
I day of its life
This howrever was after he hind
I boon Joined In marriage to Miss Fla I
i via Field Churchill a University
Park girl who had watched the game
nnd who did not Intend to bo married
for oulte a while
Friends of the young people pro
duced a marriage license at a dinner I
after the game and the wedding took
place at the home of the brides par I
ents
I
ROBERT ANDERSONS HEARING
Provo Nov IHobert Anderson
city attorney of Provo will be giv
en a preliminary hearing at 10 oclock
I
Entered na Second Class Matter at tho Pootofllce Ogden Utah j i
tomorrow morning before Justice A
A Noon on the felony charge alleged
to have been committed with Anna
Phillips Sheriff Georgo Judd and the
girls mother went to Ogden tonight
and will bring the girl back with
them tomorrow morning It Is sup
posed that she will give important
evidence In tho case
THE BRUNEAU PROJECT
TQBE EXTENDED
Boise Nov Applications for
the extension of the Bruneau project
have been recently filed by the Twin
Palls Land and Water company The I
additional applications include 40
000 acres more of land than It had
been expected would bo Irrigated The
main canal of the Twin Falls com
pany Is to bo enlarged to the size
of a river and the storage capacity I
of the American Falls reservoir will
be 3036000 acre feet of water The
entire project runs twentyfive miles
south buck of the Snake river and Is
bounded on the east by the Salmon
river and on the west by tho Brunenu
river I
riveriLe BY
ANNDRN
Whiteman Shot Down
by a Piute on the
Warpath
Kiugman Ariz Nov 25lnvegtign
tiou by Coroner Smith and Sheriff Gill
con into the recent murder of Dr
L W Gilbert a California physician j
who is supposed to he heir to a II
500000 estate In the Isolated region
of Goldbug Mill revealed yesterday
that the physician was killed by a
Pluto Indian by the name of Queho j
The Indian It appears quarreled
with the other members of his tribe
and went on a lohc warpath after
whites Dr Gilbert was the first white
man he met according to the reports
brought back by the officers and he I
was shot down without warning
A reward has been offered for Quc i
hos capture and trailers now are af 1
tor him Plutcs lolnine In the hunt
Queho is tho first one of his tribe to
take the warpath since the memor
able killing expedition of A vote who
murdered five white men before being
shot down by members of his own
II uIIJc DrrailbcrTwas at thmetflume 1i well
known practicing physician of south
ern California It Is not known why
I ho was In ho desolate region where
be net his death Telegrams and
correspondence In his possession ap
pear to show that ho was heir to the
estate of Edward D Tremble
NEW REGISTRATION
OF THE CHINESE I
Portland Ore Nov 2That a
I
measure requiring an immediate re
registration of all Chinese now with
in the United States is to bo consid
ered at the next session of congress
was the announcement of Daniel J
1ee commissioner general of im
migration In the United States who
was in Portland yesterday
Mr Keefe declared himself in fa
vor of radical exclusion measures He
advocates the giving of authority to
his department to deport without ref
erence to the federal courts any Chi
nese found In the country without a
certificate after the new registration
shall have been ordered
Mr Keefe regards the proposed law
as the only successful solution of
the Chinese coolie labpr question
While tho number of Chinese de
parting from the country Is much larg
er than tho number who find their
way Into tho United States our In
formation is that 50 per cent of thoso
now here are here illegally
Since thu last registration Chinese
who were boys then have grown up
and do not < nl present resemble pic
tures taken of them as babies so it
Is Impossible to refute pictorial evi
dence successfully II i
ONE DEAD fOUR
ONEINJURED
INJURED IN AUTO
Fresno Calif Nov 2Jolmiu Gard
ner is dead and Josie Kugo Mrs
Gladys Harrel and Charles Tanner are
all senously hurt following a wild
plunge of an automobile In which
they were riding early this morning
into an Irrigation ditch near this city
Tho machine capsized pinning all
four of the occupants underneath
They lay in this condition for an hour
before their cries attracted passers
It
WON 15MILE RACE
Chicago Nov 25Curtls Booth
running under the colors of the Chi
cago IrishAmerican A C won the
annual 15mile run under the auspices
of the Opportunity club yesterday by
I nearly two blocks L P Pilllvant
the Illlnols A C long distance runner I
was second j
Booths time was 12910 Of the j
twentytwo men who started twenty
j
finished
I
4f + + + + + + + + + + + 1
+ 4 + 1
f NEWSBOYS ENTERTAINED +
I j
4 L +
+ Newport R 1 Nov 25 4
4 Four hundred newsboys and +
t messenger boys of Newport 4
4 wero the guests last night of +
4 Mrs Frederick K Vandcrbllt +
4 at a Thanksgiving baliqueL 4
4 Prominent society people both +
4 men and women served as wait +
4 era and waitresses 4
+ +
44T44 4 44t4ttf44
BALDWiNS
DEMOCRACY
Goes Back to Pre
Bryanite Progressive
I ness of the Party
I New York Nov 25A lower tariff
Is the first duty of tho Democratic
party an the result of the vote of con
fidence which the people of the coun
try have given It says Judge Simeon
13 Baldwin Democratic governor
elect of Connecticut In a long Inter I
view on the political outlook pub
lished hOle Inilnv luilrn lnl lTrfn
observations on the political situa
I tion include the following
Tho Democratic party must not
bo a standstill party It must go back t
to prcBryantc progrcsslveness Our
central idea must be the reduction of
the tariff whicli means In the old
phrase the lowering of taxes The
result will bo to lower prices
Tho best way to retain success la j
to hold to a reasonable middle course
The real position for every party to
take is a middle position and that Is
the position the Democratic party
should take No party can be really I
I great and enduring unless there Is
room within It for men of quite dif
ferent views on minor points Tho
Democratic party ought always to
have a conservative wing a progres
sive wing and a moderate center I
belong to the center
I think that the powers of the In
terstate commerce commission havo
probably been enlarged too far
What makes this country great r
and keeps It free Is free trade ho
tweon all the states and territories
from ocean to ocean with absolute
local selfgovernment in each of tho
separate states Interfered with by
congress only when necessary for a
few national purposes
To retain the position in which the
Democratic party finds itself today
it must continue to be the party of
the constitution The beauty of our
federal constitution lies in its slm
juicIly Its use of general terms amid
Its avoldanC of detail Tho mer
who framed it wero really irrnat In
their knowledge of world politics
I The courts of the present day are
fully able to Interpret tho laws to
meet the Heeds of time tlmog There Is
a vitality nnd freshness on the part
L of the American Judiciary which Is
qulte adequate tosuch an Interpreta
tion of the constitution as will make
it secure the needs of the day
END Of THE I
BIG MUTIINY
I
Brazilian Congress to
I Grant Amnesty and
j Mutineers Surrender
I
i
Rio Janeiro No dThe capital
slept last night with the guns of Its
own navy trained on It lime mutineers
lonmlned seemingly masters of the
situation Toward one oclock this
morning one ot the mutinous fleet
fired upon the naval arsenal Time
scout cruiser Dcdora has joined the
battleships MInas Gerens nnd Sao l
Paolo and the scout Bnhia in re 1
volt
Todays session of the chamber ot I
deputies was awaited with anxiety
but its vote of amnesty rnd the sur I
render of the mutineers cleared the I
situation The demands of the naval f
men were granted
I ist evening the Sao Paolo and the
Uahia withdrew from the rnrbor sup
posedly because they feared a night
attack from the loyal torpedo boat i
dlstro ers Tlio MInas Gorans bow
I over remained opposite the palace and
was Joined by the cruiser Dedora
For several nours everything was I
quiet Then watchers on short noted
activity on board the Dedora and an
hour after midnight tho small guns of
the Dedora awoke the town It was
at first thought the revolting vessels
were making n combined attack on
time city For a time a panicky feel
I Ing was general Then it was disoov
I ored that the firing was directed only
at the naval arsenal The cannonad I
ing did not last long and no great if
damage was done
j The local garrisons and the loyal
torpedo boats did not respond al
though according to this mornings
j popers their officers had received I
I sinister orders as to their duty In J
I certain contingencies
I When tho Dedora had ceased firing
j the put to sea accompanied by tho
Minns Gcrcas Morning broke with
the mutinous craft still outside the
I harbor and they did not roiiirn to port
until some hours later p
i Congress met In extraordinary stis I
I
don this morning cue chamber of
kpulles first concurred with tho sen i
Uc in granting amnesty TO time mil
I
finders Both houses then passed rca
oiutions conceding the demands of the
tzIloms
As soon as Ihe action of congress
bvcamo knowifi the mutinous crews
surrendered and the revolt was at an
tud The city was soon quiet and
resuming Its normal activity
Rio Jancrio Nov 25TIme govern
iiioni of Brazil today yielded to its
mutinous uiivy Congress meeting in
extraordinary session decided to
meet every demand of the ultimatum
presented yesterday Including general
umnesy of the sailors who after raui
Continued on Page SIX
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