i L > q I rY 1 f T < < 0 ffl i zJ = THE EVENING PAPER C f > i WEATHER FORECAST IS THE PAPER OF TO 11 THE INDICATIONS ARE THAT THE DAY THE MORNING J y a t t t WEATHER WILL BE FAIR TODAY PAPER OF YESTERDAY AV t + AND TOMORROW t I t Fortieth YearNo 59 Price Five C r Cntc OGDEN CITY UTAH WEDNESDAY EVENING MARCH 9 1910 Entered aa Second Class Matter at tho PontoHIco Ogden Utah f 1 h Southern PaeiUcStarts Trains West 1 > From Ogden Overlts Own R ils t L rlADElr MLL OWNERS AVE IREA TtNED TO rUNIS Tf UNIONS N i i Big Factories to Remain Closed All Season If Employes Continue the Sympathetic Strike t = = = Unions Saining Recruits in Baldwin I Locomotive Works Open Shop Plant r Philadelphia March IDespil the excitement caused by the shooting up of Frankford avenue one of tho principal thoroughfares Jn the north western section of the city last night by a trolley carload of alleged strike breakers from St Louis there were no serious demonstrations against the trolley cars In operation early today C O Pratt the organizer of the carmen this morning denounced the Frankford avenue affair In which three men and n 11yearold girl re I ceived slight bullet wounds when the 4 trolley men shot from a swiftly mov in car Into the crowd He said it I 7as the usual Int resort of tho des I perate strikebreakers who finding everything quiet bhot up a town to creato trouhle Although many Jines arc again run ning today without any sign of trouble much apprehension felt as to the outcome of the fueling stirred up by last nights attack hi Frail ford rvenue < > i Acting Police Ganlajn Daloy said today that two ul the Philadelphia Rapid Transit company carmen had been arrested for the Frankford hooting and tljntlJtc police sore ecan hiiifj fo jlvoyothormcnLwliq woro I on ihof cnr Thocaptajh paid the dls I turbAnces w6ro caused bYthe new men and that the shooting was uncalled I called for Company Defends StrikeBreakers The Transit eompany in a state I m ment on the affair today said that for one hour prior to the shooting every car that arrived at the Frank ford barn had all windows broken Most of the trouble the company revs was caused at Frankford avenue and Unity street where It is declared ioen strikers men in uniform led the crowds In the attacks on cars One ef these men the company declares has been arrested and warrants are out for the others After the outbreak the company 1 says city detective searched every man at the Frankrord car barn and I found no firearms on any of them The Transit company says it has nev er given Its men permission to carry firearms but admits that some may I have carried revolvers for selfprotec MmAUborirb Director Public Safety flay still declares that the general strike is on the wane the labor lead ers assert that they ate steadily gain ing ground Many meetings of unor ganized workers are boluS addressed by labor organizatlosK every day and night and many ports of converts j to he cause of trade tntlontsm are heard Many of he special dl penBa Uona are withdrawn by the union and l It is declared COO baiters will join thin 1 t f lrHe today t The strike leaders today said they I had no reason to change their esti lIt mates that between 125000 and 150 one ppr > ona are Idle as a result of the calling or the general strike The city administration still conlin iHH to belittle tho walkout Director of Public Safety Clay adhering to his estimate that less than 20000 workers I responded to the strike call The di rectors figures are considered too low I as hosiery manufacturers only one branch of the textile industry of the 1 I cliv admits that 25000 workers in tlulr line alone are now idle The action of tho Philadelphia Ho E siery Manufacturers association in shttlufi down their mills until Mon day wIth a threat that IT the workers 3h do not return on that day u shutdown until fall will occur will probably be m followed by a similar movement by employers In other Industries The Hosiery Manufacturers asso Ist cent of the t elation represents 75 per ilr local output from eighteen hosiery mills They employ about 25000 per sons The owner ot tapestry carpet r Q inPlB may also shut down until Ion ile day kL dayTho union chauseurs some of whom returned to work yesterday afternoon held a meeting late last r0 night and decided o remain on strike The campaign cf the union leaders ninoiif the great industrial plants of Li the city met with nor success today I nt the Baldwin locomotive Works 1 I whro several hundred workers failed to report lhlR morning The strikers claim that about 2000 men In all dc I pnrtnientc of the plant have quit but thlB is denied by officials of the com pony Baldwins is an open hop Plant and the success in bringing out eon of Its men hat given tho ntrlko leaders renewed hope of spreading the I itrlle SERVANT GIRL HAD SAVED MUCH MONEY Now York MarchThe family of the Rev Thornton M Niven was pleas I e J antly surprised today when they learned that Anna Gray who died rc J MI cently after serving Ole Nlvcn family for thSrtylwo years as a maid had left about 5000 in her will to tin members of the family Out of her small earniiss she had saved nearly three times this sum wiling the re mainder to various charities CANDY EATEN BY LITTLE ONES CONTAIN ARSENIC Plttshurp March 9TlJrcn little tots children of James Hamilton a hotelkeeper are in a precarious con dition thought to he the result of eat ing Easter eggs that contained ar I rnlc All three were taken violently ill shortly after eating ihe candy Au analysis he candy Is being made CDICA60 TO 1AVE FOREI6r POLICE I I Chicago March 0Chlcngo ir to have a lclb JijjpUeaJcsloiHo grJ With the regular force Twentyrive men will he examined In the Sicilian language and all who pass that test nnd tjic nerissary physical examina tion will be put to work This plan of having a corps of for eign policemen apart from the reg ular force has been cooled by Chlet of Police Steward to provide detectives I to work on Black Hand and other Italian murder cases hitherto impos sible of solution The chief and his inspectors be lieve men who understand the Sicilian language and people aro necessary to clear up the mysteries but the civil senice requirements have proved a stumbling block when it came to setting such men on the regular force As a rulo the Sicilians not only are lacking in regulation height and weight but also are unable to pass the American educational test for patrolmen The establishment of a new arm of the department will avoid this INEW ROADS TO BEULT Union Pacific Is to Develop Western Colorado Dcnycr Colo March IThe News r today says that a north and south connection through Colorado for tho I Union Paeltlc and Southern Pacific railroads is one of the purposes of the recent Incorporation of nix subsidiary companies of the Southern Pacific railroad The new line from Globe Ariz to Farminston X M and Du rango Colo will connect with a pro posed line to Cisco Utah from Duran go which ultimate will be extended I through the fruit belt of the Grand Valley in Utah and Colorado to Craig I Colo whore connection will be made with tho YamsiiUer branch of the Union Pacific railroad The line will tap the richest agricultural and min ing section in western Colorado There Ifl an abundance of coal lauds practi cally undeveloped WHY PARK GOES TO ILLINOIS CENTRAL I Chicago March 0 1 T Harahan president of the Illinois Central rail road who returned from New York csterdav paid ho Intcndcnt remain ing IndcIlnUfily ns president of the company Hcadmittcd that tho di rectors recently were searching fa a successor to him but that they wero unable to get tho man they wanted and had on that account abandoned the effort It is true that the director were Jooklnp jfoj4airpian to succeed mop Paid Mr tllarshfln and that the move was niaiteWWc orl with a request from meJi rfJf I OTH of running this road is MftUl rd and I thought 1 wanted tfnUffSy rbc Clroctors kindly can scntcd ta f ° me chairman or at J the board of directors provided they could find the man they wanted for president It appears that the position was of fered to sevojal men or at least sev eral men were considered and the directors could not get any of them It was thought best therefore to abandon the proposed change of pres idents and to give me help in running affairs Accordingly the board gave me W L Park as vicepresident to succeed I G Rawn and ho will take a great deal of the load off my shoulders NARROW ESCAPE Officials Caught in a Great Sewer g During the Tide New York March Borough Pres ident Cyrus p Mullor of the Bronx told today uf the narrow margin by which ho and several of his borough officials escaped death by drowning in the Great Bronx trunk sewer which has just been completed and turned over to the city The officials started oiiottSoTaay bn an Inspection or the sewer which is fourteen feet in diam eter and more than twelve miles long Wearing rubber hoots and carrying lanterns they descended into the huge pipe and had gone about a milo when they noticed that they were fplashlng thiough clear water six inches deep They had forgotten to take Into ac count the tide which was bucking up into tho sewer at a rapid rate They had gone too far to turn bnclc and after a hurried continuation they de cided to spring for the outlet before I the Inrunhlng water overwhelmed them I Five minutes Inter the water had risen to their knees and at they I floundered on against the current it surged over the top of their hip boots I and extinguished the nickering flames in tho lanterns which they carried They pressed on Joining hnndu to prevent any of the members of the party from falling baclc They were waist deep in the water when they saw the light at the mouth of the sewer Soaked to the shin and with the wa ter at their armpits they emerged and scrambled up the steep bank to safely I CALUOUN BIDS IUE VETERANS 600D = BYE I Chicago March 0 W J Calhoun aped through the downtown district last night saying farewell preparatory to his departure tomorrow for Pckin and hill pont as minister to China lie made two speeches one to fifty busi ness associates around a banquet ta ble the other to fellow members of Columbia Post Grand Army of tho Republic In his parting address to the old soldiers Mr Calhound said I I may never see you again for the yearn are passing rapidly for us all But I shall often think of you my comrades in She lonely hours that will he mine amid different scenes and associates church and I am a member of no aCknowledgo faith In no creed but T do believe the cowl in this world will endure in the world to come I place you men ou a plane about myself I know what you endured in the great civil strife You antiheroes in my eyes and I still look to jiou as I did when as a boy I thrice raji away from home In order at last successfully to win place In the ranksf I THIRTEEN IS A T VERY lUCKY NUMBER Juneau Alaska 1 llIrhlOC the shift of miners wlitl were waiting at the skip In the M e can mine when the powder magazine exploded last Wednesday night killing thirtyseven men the Only survlyor Jsila Derotch who wore about his neck a brass Iden = tification tag bearing the number 13 Doretch is In the hospital at Douglas suffering from wounds but will re cover AUTO DEAL ISClOSEU t Morgan Becomes Owner of Big Concern in i Detroit I Dotroil Mich March SThe De II troit News today SIIJF A deal of Intiuense importance in he automobile world and one which I promises to add much to Detroits in dustrial advancement wntcloKed yes terday in Now York liy SJUch tho on lire plant n dstoc l > Unng3 of tale E M V company were transterred I to J P Morgan Co The price paid was G000000 it is said J L Book vicepresident of the T H F company says that that prop erty alone will ultimately he capital ized at from 30000000 to 50001000 It Is true that the stockholders of the E M F company leave sold to I Mr Morgan said Vice President Rook last night BlijijRAFT ON TIlE ILLINOIS CENTRAL Chicago March 9lit a news ar ticle today the Chicago Tribune says An Inquiry into alleged grafting operations in connection with the equipment and repairing of cars has 1 been carried on by the officials ot tho Illinois Central railroad for the last two weeks The amount involved in the alleged graft has been variously figured from 100000 to 5000000 The latter fi res were reported from St Louis as tho probable theft figures as indicat ed from discoveries made by Comp troller M 11 nisuvelt While Chicago officials denied land night Mint any such shortage as 5000000 had been uncovered they I admitted they had been on a still I I hunt for graft and that tho search being made is wide and goes into every department of the road having to do with car repairing and equip ment It was said that suspicious circumstances had been uncovered but that no direct evidence of guilt had been found The road owns CaOOO cars and they are scattered IhroiiROiit the country so it will require weeks to check up an repaired cars and toll whether ma r HON e NEPHI L e MORRIS I I Of Salt Lake City will address the Ogden I Betterment League at the 1 Weber Academy I Wednesday Evening 1 I I March 9th r I I < At 8 oclock p I j t t i I 7 l I i ih Public Is Invited To Attend i No Admission Charged j l I 1 c = ASSSENGfRS TO BE ElD ATCARUN 1 I UNTL TE I lAST BREAi IS CLOSED eWe is expected to conform to the I terials bought and paid for have been used BODIES Of MAiL I CLERKS FOUND Washington March VBodies of some of the postal employes who I were victims or tho avalanche which swept down the mountain at Welling ton Wash on March 1have been locorercd according to advjccs ic tclved by the postofflce department fom F W Vnllo of the railway mall service at Seattle The bodies were thce of Postal Clerks Fox Tucker thin Ladu and Mail eiglipr Ahearn who with fpur other postal employes I were on the Illfated train TWcuty four pouches of letter mall nine pounchesand two sacks of registered mall thirtyseven 1oplstorcd letters and three truck loads of paper mail also wore found Clerks Ilosait Hoofer and 1ottlF Ice and Mall Wpighnp Bnhn have ilot been found although their bodies I liractically arc known to be In the I dehrls KILLED A WO 1AN IKILLED niDE A CRIME 1 Gplville Wash March 9George L PepOQii jn jail here charged with Implication in doutluuiuliInviIe filth who is alleged to have boon pojfmnfl accused Ray Wilco said I to bo an oxconvict of being response tile fpr Mrs Popoons demise accord I ing to Sheriff Graham of Stevens county I The sheriff says Pepoon has made a lengthy statement to him declaring that Mrs Popoon was insane at the timo of her death and assorting his belief that Wilcox had presumed too lar on the friendship existing between blnisolf and the Pepoon family and feared that if Mrs Pepoon recovered her mind she would betray him The authorities arc still searching for Wilcox MORTGAGES WIPED OUT New York iJarch 0 Mortgage1 amounting to approximately 370OUO hold by Trinity corporation against I if t > eight parishes of the church In Creator New York have been volun tarily wiped out by the mother church RKbTN1 I t N COt O BiA AntiAmerican Feeling Intense in City of Bogota Bogota March 0The rioting which began with u quarrel between the manager of an Americanowned street railway and a poHetman Monday con tinues Tho antiAmerican feeling is intense The mob which forced the I suspension of street railway traffic committed further violence last night and the American manager was forced to seek safety nt the United States legation j SILLY POST CARDS I f ARE DESTROYED I I Now York March 9A systematic crusade against tho silly postcard IR being waged by the authorities in sev eral larger cillci of the United States according to an announcement today by Postmaster Morgan Replying to a committee from the Ancient Order of Hibernians which lodged a protest against the sending of offensive St Patrick flay postcards Mr Morgan said Pnople may as well understand that it is only a waste of time and money to try to Indulgo In the Sending of IUy postcards through the United StTtloM malls Any cards or other mat torTthat Is vulgar or an insult to any destroyed person or race will be deJ whenever it roachcs this office This office has destroyed thousands of them nl Hl this Hundreds of already season thousands were destroyed by postmas ters last year Metal New York Marco I1end quiet spot InOaJCO Popper easy standard spot iSloalM Ma > I315al035 r = 1 I 1 I I Remarkably Rapid Progress Made in Repair = ing the Damaged Road Through Palisade Canyon = = = Western Pacific to Use So P Tracks = = = No More Detoured Trains t A message from Division Superin tendent Manson dated Palisade md received at the local offices of the I Southern Pacific last night reads Barring unforeseen delays the line In Palisade Canyon will bo open for through traffic Wednesday Send No I S and the fast mall by this route be ginning Wednesday morning Trains will bo held at Carlin until Thurs I da I day dayIn In complance nth the superintend ents order the two trains left Ogden at Jn and 1157 a m but before de parting passengers were notified that they would he hold at Carlin for the final word and they were given n choice of remaining in Ogden and de parting on Xos 3 and j Thursday or proceeding west to the point where tho last of the brinks arc being rap idly closed No more trains aro to lie detoured by war of Portland and by Frirta passenger traffic on tho Southern Pa schedule in force prior I IlL the disas I trous washouts of ten days ago I The resumption of through traffic came earlier than expected As lie cUngl t1 inTv6rkt1it we5t or Palltade they discovered that the damage to the road was not as great In the center of the canyon as at either cud and thai as a consequence temporary repairs to allow of the passage of trains could be made in several days less time than had been forecast I For over a week the combined ef forts ot all the construction forces at I the command of the Southern Pacific from Ogden to San Francisco have been centered on the work of reopen ing the transcontinental line Two general managers made their head quarters In the Hood zone and re I mained in direct command day and night With tho opening of trafllc General Manager CaIn will return to San Francisco and General Mana ger Bancroft is expected to reach Os den tomorrow oveninp I No estimate of the total damage caused by the floods has been given I out by any of the railroad officials I but it will approximate half a million dollars not including the loss of busi I ness caused by tho interruption of I traffic I II Continued on Page Six I DEMOCRATS ARE MUCH PROVOKED Washington March flThC bill re quiring the publication of campaign contributions which It is charged I has been held In the house committee on election of president and vice I president will be considered at a t meeting of that ivunmittoo this week I Representatives Gaines of West VII Cinla chairman of the committee said yesterday that he will call a meeting tills week but he declined to discuss the committees probable action on the bill Representative McCall Republican Mo the author of tho bill de clared that the timo had alIcd vyhen the committee should take some action on his bill Rcpreseiitative Ruckcr of Missouri ranking Democrat member of the com mittee declared himself forcibly on the alleged holding up of the bill in committee and said that the Demo cratic members had demanded ot Chairman Gaines that he call a meet ing of the committQe to consider the I bill 1 want to say said Mr Rucker that unless a mooting of the commit tee Is called during the week I shall next week denounce the whole i > ro c > from the floor of thu house Tho minority hag done everything it can to get action on this ill but Itp to date our wlsnes have been unre warded A great majority of the house favors this bill IN A DRUNKEN FRENZY SHOOTS HIS FRIEND I Edwin Biglcr Severely Wounds a Young Man Named Orglll at Rauch Nophi March SA man lying at the point of death and the one who fired the shot lying in the county Jail has the old old story attached to it Drink did it Edwin Bigler George Painter and Robort Chappsli were boding cattle dowit on the Sevir river at a litHo settlement called Mills a few miles i southwest of Juab Tho young men all tool a ride iif to luab Chappell J and Painter rode jcr to Stephenson ranch but Uiglcr remained at Juab where he got hold of some whisky which was the causeof his undoing On their way hack they stopped at the ranch house of the Juab Develop ment company Here Biglcr scorned to become Insanely drunk and pulling out his sun tired at the IIOUHC The I bullethit a knot and exploded five of I the pieces hitting i young mail by the I name of Orgill I Ivy a man from Sclplo immediately jumped onto Blsler and beat him un mercifully Bklor did n6t recover consciousness Mil this morning and i was almost inconsolable when told of his serious act In shooting a young I man who has always been his friend i One of the pieces of the hnllot ha pierced the lung of Orgill and doubts I arc entertained as to his recovery iMAYBRAYS f I BAD GANG Their Trial is Begun in Council Bluffs I Iowa I Connell Bluffs la March 0 J C Maybray and thirteen of his assist t ants were arraigned in the United States court here today and pleaded k not guilty to Indictments charging I them with wholesale swindling I Ma bra and eighty or more other defendants are charged with being I concerned in extensive swindling of bankers and other persons in different I pates of the country by means of fixed races prize fights wrestling I bouts and similar methods I The trials are of Interest because of the wide territory over which tho defendants are alleged to have operated operated ated and the prominence of the per sons who fell ietlniE to the swindles One hundred witnesses from a dozen I states arc here to testify In addition to those arraigned to day about thirty others named in the indictment haw been orrcoted in dlf Iciest parts of the country and will he brought to Council Bluffs as fast a > hell cases can be heard The government has considered time prosecution of these men of sufllclenl importance to assign Silvester II Rush special assistant to the attor ney general of the United fates lo take charge of the cases Ho wlll bs assisted by District Attorney Temple and George 1J1 Stewart Colonel Tom pies assistant Among the defendants Is Harry Forbes the pilzoflghtei who was nr rested at the ringside after lie had been beaten last week by Abe AWl Clarnco Forbs also a prizefighter Is another defendant Benjamin Marks the wealthy Coun cil Bluffs politician is alleged to have been a promoter with Maybray There are also twelve civil suits for aincAmts aggregating 70000 which will be tried during the present term of court These suits axb against Marks and officers of the First Na tional bank who are alleged to have taken part In financing the big swin dling games By agreement the civil suits were continued thirty days and will not come up until th criminal actions have been concluded Judge McPhereon Insisted on mak ing tho record clear and when the defendants woro nllr1d upon for pleas they were required to stand up indi vidually and give their names and ros h encc and plead to the indictment The defendants appearing were Loon Lozler Ed Leach John E Doh bins R E Goddard Claronco Glass i Clarence Forbes harry Forbes Win I lord Harris John II BQath George M Marsh Edwin Morris and Bert It Shores Three others Wlllard Powell Frank Scott and T S Robinson were represented by attorneys who stated their clioutB were to appear tomor row All pleaded I not guilty and thoir 1 trials will begin tomorrow Five dn fcndants wore lthul1t attorneys and pleaded poverty I The court appointed attorneys to defend them Muybray he role was cheerful He paid never heater and during his thirteen months lu jail he bad not uuMBd a meal