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Show VOLUME VIII. NUMBER O Gr D E 1ST, U T A H 255. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1904 JAP BATTALION TAKEN UNIONS LIFE AT STAKE Many Jap Guns Are Put Out of Action yang Claimed to Have Been Reached by Mikados Forces Russians Report Capture of Entire Battalion. Liao AUG. 31 PETERSBURG, REPORTS GENERAL SAMSONOFF AN ENCAPTURED THAT he HAS TIRE BATTALION OF JAPANESE 8T. ft HOUSE TRAFFIC TIED UP PACKING ij 31. All the OMAHA, Aiu. Sdiii'.i tho guiKliiiu'M mi Omaha minis li;ivi vnliiiitMTH.i in strike In syiii.iihy with tin1 liutcluT. TIua will I'liili.ilily ihls evening. This will li up nil tlie.irntfii- of the p.ukiiu house. TWO HUNDRED HOGS ROAST BEFORE iil.Tl.MUi:. i & ' : - Ain;. 31.- TIME - The Slivei A; 1'iikiiii; ) l:ii XX. is .lesli iiy,.l ,y tnv "i lll. liilur. The loss IS Two huiulreil Ii.il: M..I ID . ile.-llll- t He Will Strive to Cause a Heat Famine Employes of Independ- WRITTEN LETTER FOO WIRELESS STATION DISMANTLED TROOPS. RESUMED AT LIAO YANG THIS MORNING FIGHTING WASHINGTON. Aug. 31. i i Consul-Gener- al Fowler at (he F reports that the wireless telegraph station there Concession by Latter Country of Momentous Document Is in PrintThree Hundred Miles of Mineral er's Hands and Will be Made LIAO YANG, Aur. SI. The fighting has been diamnmled. arto Lands Is between the Japanene anil Russian Public on September Twelth Pittsburg Capitalists REPRESENTATIVE HERRAN this resumed morning. was mies OF COLOMBIA IS DEAD the Cause of Combat. Negroes Will Visit Oyster Bay. . FOUR JAPANESE BATTERIES SILENCED ST. PETERSBURG, torhespondent of the Rusa The Liao 31. Aug. at reports that in yesterday's fight four Japanese batteries were silenced while twelve other guns were destroyed. General Mart son was wounded, Yang but continued In the fighting line. JAPANESE PENETRATE TO LIAO YANGS OUTSKIRTS TOKIO, Aug. 31. It Is reported that the Japanese have obtained a tooting within the outskirts of Liao Yang. Reinforcements to the Japanese armies are continually arriving. SAKHAROFF DESCRIBES THE DAYS FIGHTING ST. PETERSBURG, nt-General Aug. Sakharoff yesterday's battle as follows: "From the morning until 81. MIDDLETOWN. N. Y., Aug. 31. Dr. Thomas Herran. formerly representative of Colombia at .Washington, died at the Loomis sanitarium at Liberty, N. Y., Tuesday afternoon. His wife and two sons were with him. For years previous to the trouble with Colombia over the secession of Panama, Dr. Herran was a popular figure in the social and diplomatic circles of Wash- OYSTER HAY, Aug. 31. The president's Utter of acceptance xxas this morning given to a New York publishing house with orders o rush the trinting aiul binding. Ex'ery morning piper In the United States will be given a copy. The letter will be made public on the morning of September l!th. It will contain about twelve ington. thousand words. There were several callers today at CINCINNATI METHODIST Oyster Ray bent on social missions. EPISCOPAL CONFERENCE 8ENAT0R HOARS Secretary Lneb has received word CONDITION IS THE SAME tkat the colored business mens MIAMISBITRG, O., Aug. 81. The in convention at Brooklyn annual session of the Cincinnati con31. will no Is visit There WORCESTER, Aug. Oyster Hay tomorrow. It is ference of the Methodist Episcopal apparent change In Senator Hoar's expected they will head for Sagmore church opened here today with Bishop condition today. Hill. Bashford presiding. NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 31. Philip Marlines, who has just arrived from Nicaragua, says that war Is Imminent between that country and Honduras, growing out of the concession made by Nicaragua to Pittsburg capitalists of three hundred miles of mineral lands for which the company paid $100,000. Honduras now claims a part of the concession Is on Honduras soil and Is sending troops to occupy It. NEXT PRESIDENT VISITS THE PAIR ent Houses and Stock Handlers Are Called Out. 31 111 ,C, Iii'ilance cutters, KINGSTON, N. Y., Aug. SL Judge and Mrs. Parker phased through here today on their way to Ellenville to attend the Ulster county fair, as has been the custom for several years. Mrs. Parker was born near Ellenville BACKBONE OF STRIKE BROKEN IN ST. PAUL and both are well known in that local- ity. for Writ Three Hundred Dollars Comes from St. Louis Woman Brooded Over the or an Unknown San FranImprisonment of Her Man. cisco Husband. NEW YORK, Aug. 31. Through her counsel, Levi and Unger, Nan Patterson, the alleged slayer of Caesar n bookmaker, Young, the this morning applied to the supreme court for a writ of habeas corpus. Her argument wUl be heard at 10:30 tomorrow morning. Her counsel . will ask for a discharge on the ground that L there Is not sufficient evidence to well-know- ALBANY. Aug. 31. A check for has been received by State Treasurer Wlckser from New York attorneys with a note stating that It la a conscience fund. They sny It was placed in their hands by Attorney John T. Doyle of San Francisco for a client. The check la drawn on the First Na$300 con-vlc- tional bank, San Francisco. REMAINS OF FAMOUS EXPLORER ARE FOUND BANDTIS OVERLOOKED BEST PART OF BOOTY at CHICAGO. 111.. Aug. 31. Marshall Field Is the heaviest taxpayer In the United States. Forty million dollars WASHINGTON. Aug. 81. Accordeven Is the assessed "alue of Mr. ing to mall advices the sultan of Bulu Fields taxable property, real and perand his retinue have left Manila fnr estili. the land of Ihelr nativity. The sultan sonal. In Chicago. This rec.ew of board of the wan paid back salary to the amount of mate Mr. Field's renl estate assessment Is five thousand pesos, and he and hie asretinue were loaded with presents. In- $30,000,000. His personal property Next year he $10,000,000. cluding revolvers, which they highly sessment Is miladditional an on will pay taxes prlxed. All estate. real of worth As an object lesson they were shown lion dollars and all In Is Chicago, of Ihls property stores of cartridges and projectiles of to the support taxes go Mr. Field's The whose use was explained to thon. the and city of sight la aald to have made a deep Im- Illinois. Cook county, Chicago. pression. SULTAN OF SULU 13 GIVEN OBJECT LESSON ST. PAUL. Aug. 81. President Don- nelly's strike order to the allied trades can have no effect here, as none Is organised. Have the switchmen not have been approached. yet They The backbone of the strike has long since been broken here. KT. LOUIS, Aug. 31. As a result of DENVERITES brooding over the Inca rceral Inn of her husband INDICTED ON MANY CHARGES in the penitentiary DENVER, Aug. 31. The grand Jury lius Lehmann, the xvlfe of a convicted yesterday returned fifteen true bills tnunlcliail hoodler, has become violentagainst three persons ns an outcome of ly Insane. She xvlll he taken to an the Invest Igutinn Into the affairs of the defunct Fidelity Savings assocl- -' asylum. a lion. E. M. Johnson, They ace: John SOUGHT J. UNION Jones, secretary, CHURCH president; BY METH0DIST8 and Gibson W. Campbell, former secMrs. Ju- LEXINGTON. Ky Aug. 31. The of the Methodist conference Kentucky annual sesIts Church, Bouth, opened sion In Lexington today with many prominent divines In attendance. More than usual Interest centers In the session this year as the meeting will consider and act upon the proposition to Join forces with the Methodists. retary. Indictments against Johnson and Jones together charge Intent to deceive and amklng false reports. Johnson Is Indicted alone on charges of embexxle-meand grand larceny in sums aggregating $20 000. Campbell rests under Indictments of embexxlement and approximates larceny. The amount nt $7,090. MANY MEET DEATH IN GRAND TRUNK WRECK X 2-- 3. guard. tacked the agent and guard. A fight ensued in which the guard, Tom Jenkins of .Cheyenne, was wounded. The robbers fled with the sack of coin ijut overlooked the $12,500 package. The money was pay for cm- ployes of Union Pacific Coal company at Cumberland. SALT LAKE, Aug. 31. The Pacific Express on officials here are ignorant of the $13,000 hold-u- p the Oregon Short Line at Kemmerer, Wyo., at midnight. , It is reported here that the robbers secured $900 of the Kemmerer Coal company but overlooked the $13,000 in their hurry. Three posses are now pursuing the bandits. ' working Ml If this falls they xvlll ask a reeaso liable bail bond so that Miss Patter- LINE TO SALT LAKE WILL SOON BE BUILT son may be free, pending the trial. PORTAGE, Win., Aug. 31. While District Attorney Jerome, in person, excavating for a new Baptist church will combat both motions. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 31. That parsonage here the workmen exthe Western Pacific railroad is nearly humed the remains of the famous ex- THIS AFTERNOONS ready to undertake the construction plorer and trader, Pierre Pauquette. OLYMPIC EVENTS of for portions of its projected line from 1 Historians have been searching Lake is evidenced to his discover Pauquetbody. years ST. LOUIS. Aug. 81. The Olympir this city to Salt track field championships will be re- from the announcement made at the sumed In the stadium at 2:80 thla af- local offices of the company to the efternoon. Six Olympic and four han- fect that Its agents have been Instruct-- , The dicap event will be contested. ed to secure the necessary operating sixteen events are, putting Olympic material for this task. pound shot, lifting bar bell, standing hundre Representatives of the company have high Jump, tug of war, four meter hundred two meter hurdle, race entered the market for twenty freight dash. engines, 200 ballast cars, two ballast The mile handicap was won by John CHEYENNE, Aug. 31. Train No. 5, the northsprgaders, two ballast unloaders and PutJ. Daly. Ireland: time, 4:27 bound Short Line express, left a package containing a line of flat, box nnd gondola cars. ting sixteen iound shot, won by Ralph Kemmerer $12,500 in currency and $950 in silver W. Rose.- - Chicago: distance, eight feet This makes a new MARSHALL FIELD PAYS seven Inches. at 1:30 this morning, in charge of the station agent TAXE8 ON $40,000,000 world's record. and a A few minutes later three robbers at- X Aug. 9 In directed against bur center positions and right flank. Our troopa made several counter attic ks and bayonet encounters ensued. Some positions were taken by the Japanese, but at the end of the battle were reoccupied by our troopa. During the artillery battle our battery did some effective work. At 4 In the afternoon the enemy were observed attempting to turn our right flank with considerable forces, but several battalions of our reserve went forward and after a fierce engagement compelled them to retire. The fight continued after darkness set in and only ended at 9 o'clock. The spirit of the troops ia excellent. We received the news of the heroic behavior of Port Arthur's garrison Joyfully. Our casualties today were conslder- able, according to the number of a meat f inline mid call llic attention of the public to the seriousness of the wi'.li .1 plan ailopicil jcyicr.lay by the siiu.it ion. The sirikcrs hope by this strike leaders to continue mnl extend means to force intervention. the picking house strike, iiinl realisAs a icsiili of Donnelly's appeal, the ing that tile life of tile union is Ht switchmen's union will hUl u meeting slake unless some more forceful blows this afternoon, when It is expected a are struck at the packers, the union vote will be taken on the ijuesilon of strike In olllcials this morning calleil out the the proposed sympathetic which the sxxilchiiien are to refuse to stock ha Millers employed by the Union handle any cars loaded with packers' Stock Yards and Transit company to goods. It Is reported thnt a telegram the number of tiiii) men, of which 123 has been sent to Grand Master Haiv-le- y arc special policemen. The remainder of the sxvltchmen's union of North are employed in weighing, counting, America, asking him to order nil feeding anil drtxiug cattle. It Is be- switchmen In the country not to hanlieved (hat (he walkout of these men dle meat trains belonging to the packwill seriously cripple (lie opera Mon of ers. The police detail nt the yards the plants. Before going out the stock was increased today iu aiilU'ita(lnii of handlers took care of a large part of trouble. this morning's receipts. Reports from Kansas City and OmaPresident Donnelly alined another ha say the situation Is jiot affected by blpw at the puckers this morning when tho new general tsrlke oilier issued by he announced thnt he would ImmedPresident Donnelly. anil all iately call out the butchers According to President Donnelly workmen of the Independent plants. there will be no union meat produced The Independent plants which will tie In the country when the latest order forced to close down today 010 Boyd goes Into effect tonight. This order & Luham, Roberts & Oakes and will Involve 13,000 butchers and meat & Co. This move will hrlng on Hoore In Cht- 4,300 of them I. SENDS' CHECK WANTS EREEDOM the our evening the Japanese attacked Her Counsel Will Apply front positions before Liao Yang and Jtsdge and Mrs. Parker Visit Scene of Habeas Corpus on the left bank of the Taltsho river, of the Latters BirthbeBond. both their artillery and rifle fire place. ing Intense. Their main efforts were Illll'.Xiii cago. Twelve thousand pickets will patrol the stock yards district night and day from mnv on. Lieutena- describes Des- 1 ! xvouuds dreseil they reach about three thousand. The Japanese losses must have' been heavy. CHE Donnelly Will Put Up perate Fight ' X X t t X X X X BUFFALO, Aug. 31. A dispatch to the En- quirer states that a wreck took place on the Grand Trunk between Richmond and Quebec at 1 1 oclock this morning. Over fifteen were killed and many were injured. Two passenger trains collided head- on. Fifteen bodies bad been recovered from the wreck at 1 o'clock. Twenty-tw- o injured are lying in the hospitals. It is thought that there are several more bodies in the wreck. One train was an excur- sion enroute to the St.Hyacinthe fair and was heavily loaded. Roth trains, going at a high rate of sjeed, met at a curve. A special relief train with nurses and surgeons has been sent from Sherbrooke. The forward coaches of both trains were telescoped and the engines are u shapeless mass. Among the dead is J. P. Blanchett, a member of parliament from St. llyaci nthe. X X X X X X X t X X X |