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Show ii THE r.ocn of May 1. as follows; "The enemy offered stubborn resistance to our pursuit, adding 300 to our The enemy fought bravely n the last. Finally two companies ot tha majority of anillcry after losing surrendered. aidhe men and horses, made ing tiiP white flag. The officers assert lhat Pen. KasMalin-hy- . I ir burners conunauder of ihe eleven)! ihe MOUSING DOrEN, UTAH, WEHNEKDAY MORNING, EXAMINES. regiments and me and twelfth infa-itrcommander of artillery, were kiilnu. kill.Many other suiierior officers were y ed or wounded. Many refugees reiurne.l aud surrendered. Tb s and prisoners include ibiny officers officers and TRESTLE y RUSSIANS FLEE PANIC STRICKEN. 4 4 4 4 Seoul. Korea, May 2. 1 sulise-nuenil- :30 p. The Russian troop fled lain- 3uu men. a hen routed at Chiu- pursued by Japanese RUSSIAN GUNS PUT OUT OF AChil- catairy and infantry over the TION. toward 4 ly country 3. In the gbt bet we n Seoul. May Cheng from 1:50 p. a. until I and Russians on the Iilu the Japanese o'clock ar night. The Russian all the Russian guns posted to oppose the crossing of the river were put out 4 army engaged was composed ofof action before the actual crossing ft the third division, the Twentytook place. For two hours, from 7 unregi- ft seventh and Taenty-fourttil 9 o'clock, continuois lighting went menu of the Sixth division and ft on. the Japanese pressing forward and bri-f- t ft General Mistchenko's cavalry the Russian railing back before th gade supported by 43 machine of men and guns opposed to weight included ft guns. The wounded . them. Saasalitcb and General The Japanese Infantry, with a brilAnGeneral Kashtalinsky reached liant .lash, captured the fortifled Klulien-Chen- g 4 tun abeuce the Russian wore heights nortbwst . qf 4 eventually forced to retire afterand the pressure was kept up until aftierce light- 4 ter a jHirtion of the Russian forces 4 were driven toward Anlung. There was 4 furious fighting the entire distance. 4 A Anlung the Russians fought in 4 addition to Ihe force confronting them, either aide. Tien Tsln, May 3. An nflirlal ft strong detachments on Russian dispatch received here Tlielr retreat soon became so hurried eays that nine JaiisncMi merchant 4 ihet there was no time to resist amt vessel steaming at tile fullest twenty guns, together with a large epcwl towards the entrance of 4 quantity of antni unit ion and rifles and Fort Arthur last night, attempt- a number of officer and men, were 4 ed to block the harimr. but were 4 capttirod. The Russians were able to stink hy the lire of the Russian carry off all their wounded. forts. The harbor eutraneu is ni. Tien-Chen- -- clcur. 4 4 INFLICT IIKAVY 3. I)S8KR. St. Petersburg. Msy 4 emperor has received an v Ntkui. Noun.1The dis- semi-skille- d e for ion. TROUBLE AT TOrEKA. Mic-r- r DELEGATES POURING IN y Lee Angeles ia Scant of Activity at Methodist General Conference, Los Angeles, Cal.. May to the thirty-firMethodist general conference are pouring Into Uw Angeles today by hundreds. Sixteen special trains, twelve over the Hants Fe and four over the Boutnern Pacific, are due to arrive in the city tome time before night. In addition to the delegates that will arrive on theee specials many are coming In on tho regular trains of both roads. Among the late prominent arrivals la Rev. Dr. James M. King, secretary of -; $41,- the board of chun-- extension, who succeeded to that office during the last quadrennium. He will in all probabilto his present posiity he tion by the coming conference. Another churchman high in the councils of the church, la Rev. Dr. John Krantx. st :U$ i . , i . f Government Has Set Aside the Sum of for its Construction Engineers to Report . before the Pathfinder reaervolr la structed. FOUNDER OF DREXEL VARD DEAD. con- BOULE- Chicago, May 3 Mra. Arabella Root Del Armitage, aged 60 years, is dead at her home here as the result of a paralytic stroke. She was the founder of the Drexel boulevard Old Men'a Social club and a member of the Progressive Health club and the Woman's Relief corps. Mrs. Del Armitage bad heen active in charity work In London, Paris, Boston and New York. The Duke of Edlnborough and the Shah of Persia inritpd to sing before them and she was the composer of several songs and poems. br DEMENTED MAN ATTEMPTS SUICIDE Railroad Laborer Gaohea Hia Threat and Almost Scalps Himself With Broken Bottlo Before n ad. San Bernardino, Cal.. May 3. Aa a result of having had his skull crushed from a blow with a revolver several years ago which caused a form of dementia. Thomas McGowan, a Salt Lake Railroad employe, has mad a desperate attempt at suicide while confined in jail at Daggett. H slashed hi throat with a piece of bottle and aucceedod in almost scalping himself before he could bo been overpowered. McGowan had employed with n tunnel gang at Daggett and a couple of days ago requested the constable there to lock him up as be felt aa though he was losing his mind and feared that he might become violent. He was at one time confined in a Wyoming asylum. , tig-ur- ea 4 4 It Was by Their Desire the Purchase Money is to be Turned Over in Paris Rather Than the United States WBBMHBdKEAaM o o o O ama canal company whereby the will be in Paria. The contract specifies the Ranqtie da France as depository and the proportion of the payments going 10 the old and new companies respectively. The signing of this contract closes the transaction, it only remaining ftir the Morgan com-lan- y to carry It out hy making payments from time to lime to the Ranqu de France. This will be don sii as lo cause no disarrangement of the American or French money markets. The report that a syndicate of Paris bankers Is interested is lncorract. Tha other details correspond with those al ready foreshadowed." ELWOOD h. 4 4 4 4 4 BURNS, Carmel, N. Y.. May 3. Drew college, one of the pioneer educe- tlonal Institutions in the coun- try, waa destroyed by fire today. Loss. $100,000, with only $25,000 insurance. Ail the students, mem- berg of the faculty and servants escaped. Abundant Proof Evict, That With War Comes all the View Peace Comes all Tb" and With the Virtues." fU Hj'if f At New York, May J. In tha Independent of May 5 will appear tha first of three installment of unpublished letters of the lata Herbert Spencer with an introduction by George Llewellyn Rees. The letter were written to tha late Jamea A. Skilton and Dr. Lewis U. Junes, formerly president of the Brookwho w eke lyn Ethical association, among Spencer's closest American friends. Among the letters are the following: Septcmlier 7. 1891. Dear Dr. Janes: see they have been carrying on a discussion in the Open Court concerning my agnostic views considered as either I Jo materialistic or not propose to take any notice of the matter myself nor do 1 suggest that you should do so to any considerable extent; but it might not be amiss to 1 quote at length a parage from the Inclose the one of of think dividuals' psychology" I entitled the division physicwhich puts more fully al synthesis and clearly tliau any other passage the more comview I take and I pletely of the misinterpretations. have not Ihe hook with me here, but you may, 1 think, easily identify the of Itassage. It begins with a kind apostrophe to the spiritualist, showing how erode and coarse Is his conception and how much more refined la the concept inn which affiliates spirit not upon any form of matter but upon a form of motion. And then the passage goes on to point out that not even this refinement ia the one concept! by tpe. The Itassage continues by showing (using algebraic symbols') that it Is Imposlu sible either to Interpret matter terms of spirit or spirit in terma of matter, but that the problem la to the human intelligence insoluble so long aa there exists the antithesis of subjest and object, and that the ultimate power underlying both cannot be presented under either form. The passage ia a long one, but it might not be amiss to quote It In full and to point what is the reuse of Hie confusion In the minds of my opponents. At the same time that I assert that matter and motion as they exist in themselves cannot be matter and motion as we know them, they persist in imixirtlng into their own end Into my thought tbe or llnary conceptions of matter, and thus showing how absurd Is the incongruity when is supposed lo emerge front them. If they would keep ever Itefor them the fact which I perpetually assert that matter and motion as existing In themselves ran nol be matter think them, we then aud mol ion aa as could see no such incongruity we suppose. But they will constantly of mailer Import their own gross Idea aud motion into the mid : t or my vkw an! then debit me with the incongruity. 1 think a lei ter quoting the passages I have (noted and making this final explanation may be useful. March 12. 19U2. Dear Dr. Janes: I have just received from Mrs. Blsbce. of Dorchester. Mass., a letter with enI closures concerning her work-an- d have replied as follows: In efforts toward ethical culture there is constantly overlooked the one effort more important than all othere to suppress militancy. the effort Abundant proof exists that with war come all the vices, and with peace come all the virtues. Make this the primary thesis of all your teaching, and you will do more than in any other way." I send you tbia copied letter with the view of suggesting that you should make this troth the prinjsrv tLewl. your teachings. The Mippreibni tarnations! antagonisms is d, Somrm'sh,Ch W1U brl run-trol- tf. frt 411 8 You1 th' Bra of ,w furt hr " itt ustiees ptlitins-t nit it fortet ..ii after' TV air Mint' M- E1 - Frank B' 8,4!.Ri'l 0 itylati. VYft Jr njfgidrtit censor Thrrr 1 pincni a ice the set, but bt their jpoiniDff -Tney strength ve." 10 get b bode W tioa. kail" TH are-ha- onsax-ssgtv-ti- e TYNER ON TRIAL Hi to cat don rinding of saint Mt V building Bared ti casters hr than inordia It Ul talprad k Jnat cotraepo b to ca and Ms) par. it it 2. Both of were in court today when tie CiTpaneiliug of Ihe jury pro.vetM fcr the trial of Mr. Tyner and R. 1. Bi to ret.fon ciTroes of tbe yoK'icj.ottt. Urn. Tjar on an tnv!W paa brouiint into chair. Le:i th:.r half an hour in coTPi-t- ie the Jury. made an inprtii-iv- e Mr. W'jttViii.-'.ioi- i sis it ini' tit fc. '.hi defenre. rcferrl:; cor.dblcn o( ih fcsl-lfeeling y Gen. Tyii-- r and lo tho fact that he U now 79 yea. - of eg, lie d?lard. however. that fciu client does not dean consi.li rallon s' I on pity. A hr the cbitritrs. Mr. Worlhlngtw frequently referred to Gen. Tyner i honored rare?)1. Tears streamed dnr, 'it- oid man's face and he shook w.i Washington. May t corn-pirac- Tvnat rf ceric the east Triephn rime. cure rinvi the v Uriel waarc-qiilir-- d h-- ti'lon. Tbe Bret witness was Blaine Vi. Taylor, chief clerk of the poetoflee th" iiarlment. . He produced letter preo books and the official report of the qartmeut for the years 1898, 1900. INI ind 1902. Couneel for the defend placed a number of extracts from the hooka into the record. -- Nowa-Day- rat tb which I ill tbe net tbe Cct nr con H froaC here Vice Eipe Orpn night, vctlng Hegav refects Ing It than b ectav fender James Cowau, Bakersfield, May who Is charged with having shot ant killed James Cummings, the negro who was lynched at Mojave, was held without bail to the superior court late last evening by Justii-- Red ly, of Mojave. Wirnesaes testified that Cowan was the man who fired the shot that killed the uegro and that It was only tbe intention of the mob to give him n coat of tar and feathers, aud the crowd for the most part did not know that anyone had a rifle among them until Cowan flre.l. Other witnesses testified lo having seen Cowan taka the rifle from his hoarding house. Hia name waa also found on the scabbard. The riianir cominr tmtiy DECORATED 4lt tr.the t of i ns. w 10c asc Ok Alex cf WHEELWRIGHT BROS.. 2476 Wash. Ave. Crockery, Glass and Hardware Phono 147 Z the tapa with a Koraii onet adjust1 Gordm Ugrai aeritii lion, gentle Hitghi e Found In Many Parte of a Mjqey Pioneer's Rude Residence at Forest Hill. Tftnar) (bat m s 3. Auburn. May 3. John Long, a pioneer cf the mining town of Forest Hill, was found dead in his cabin a couple of days ago. Coroner Shepard held an and during preliminary search Twenty-liv- e engines from tba Belt rail- of the cabin found $35 in small change way were sent into the yards to haul Cci'.ttere! about. A la'er and more the 35u ealtie cur to a place of safe- txieuded has nsuited in a find ty which, writ the except iou of Z'i of n. qrly 1 '10O in gold. that were tint ly bunted, they succeedThe cirrumsunce Is that the ed in doing. money was bidden and buried in all Pro-ideor the Hell railroad par.e of th cabin and cellar. Nol move K.nyh and I ition Htucx Yards company, said than $20 was found In one place. Title the loss wniil, in no way interfere Is not an unusual custom among with the opcnuiiiiis of the yard. After miners. It Is doubt fill If knew lnghimself. the tiro had . the I uc tit iou of all his money brought under Hie da mu. fanned by a stitf Invr'c. sptead to another quarter of New York. May 8. Arrived Vader-lan- d tile yards ami for a time the stock Frin.-from Bremen. Adelbert fioin Gear- yards hotel wa- - threatened. h -- February 2. 1895. Dear Mr. kiU. In one respect you have book or misunderstood an esw,,7 thing contained In them. that the course of things i.M.gft to be changed by teaching. rt believe any such thing. Kvrrm J'l have contended, and 1 com. ii,,1 n that feelings, not ideas, determine iZ cial results that everything not mum intellect, but upon , hari and character is not to be ii a vlay or In a generation. changed I When waa leaving Amerh-- in I waa unawares interviewed on huari the vessel just before wo Marled Th. interviewer asked me what l of the triumph over tha "bosroa thou,, ' had just been achieved. J exurecMi my belief that It waa onl a flaahi, the pan and that the old stats r things would after a time return It has. as you know, rerumed. Ths -rent disclosures have shown that the condition of things In New York had again become as bad aa it A true theory or social progress ia not a CAUSE of movement but j iimp. oil to the movement eerves simply to remove frictiou. The force product the movement la the aggregate of mn's instincts and sentiments, and th&t are not to lie changed Ly a theory. You think that I have got some and assurance of it might wr.s off Impending evils.l have hut honest: regard th equltabls claims of others while ulalnuiuil your ow:t. Tbe disregard of all ht personal interests Is the underlying cause of your present state in! of impending disasters. As I said yean ago as apropos of American affairs, 1 fatal trait In your society is tho aSMART dmiration for men, and I believe 1 said or Implied that a people among whom there in an admiration for smart r.ten will come to grief. If you think that a healthier ideal can he established in American society by teaching. I entirely disagree with yon. Uu !or your present condition ixa con id not lie got to listen. Dishes Are Cheap 4 DECORATE- D4 Jamea Cowan, Leader of Mob Which . Lynched Jamas Cummings at Mojava, Will Hava to Fact Jury. 1 St; Utah MUST ANSWER t l gcnlM 4 4 4 4 4 4 CABIN YIELDS HOARDED GOLD Union Stock Yards in Indianapolis Visited by Devastating Flames. THE In one He States, NEGROS SLAYER iipiilc-mrna- o 0 0o COLLEGE . LETTERS 190" w-- e PAYS ALL E XPENSE8 - UNPUBLISHED n. Washington, May 2. Approximately 5.1MMI men out on the SantmKv system is the situation today as claimed by President OConnell, of the International Association of Machinists. This statement Is based on reports received this morning. Of the u.ooo altoui. 1.20b are machinists and the others aro lioilnrntakcTS, blacksmiths, tinf smiths. copHr workers, helpers and lalstr of the Allied Metal Mechanics. The reports say that twenty-onshops and round house aro affected, all ahopq west of Jatjiiiiis. Colo., to the Iaciflc eoast being completely tied up. The situation east of iJiJunla to the Chicago terminal is not so serious, it Is said, but all machinists in that section are reisirteil lo be out and the allied interests I11 some enops as well. Telegrams from John McNeil of Kansas City, president of ft Iron Htiild-rrs- , the Boilermakers and John Rlnntim, say that they are in entire accord with the machinists and have given inHtriictions official Kan.. May 3. The Santa from Gen. Kurupatkln forward- FeTopeka. patch shops whistle called the big ma4 appeared Baasulitch. Gen. front a dispatch ing jority of the men to work at. 7 o' daybreak commanding the Russian forces which fnrla and the with been have Japanese engaged still pro- on llte Yalu. It is dated noon Kuu-dareeding. Thirty Japanese prison- the ordered how he and describes era have Veen raptured. Russian forces at Antung and Kulien Cheng lo fall hack along the main road toward Kong Wang Cheng. This movement has protected from St. Petersburg, May the threatened flank attack by guns -now m. admitted that is It it, stationed at Pelletinakyine mile north hath Generals Zawaallleh and 4 of Kulien Cheng and Chin Gow, vilwounded were and 4 Kashtallnaky on the LIU vela river. Here the lages 27 4 that guns were captured by ft fighting waa protracted and aevore. 4 the Japanese during the recent 4 The and Ruaalana lost 4 horse. being obliged artillery 4 lighting on the Yalu river, to abandon 4 few guna. Gen. Sassulilch says: on yalu. FIGHTING we were unable to hold ' 4 our Although 4 position! here we inflicted heavy 4 Toklo, May S. 6 p. m. The buses on the enemy." 4 fighting on the Yalu continued 4 on The pur4 Monday. 4 HURRYING !0.0uo TROOPS TO THE Japanese 4 aued the Russians, who resisted 4 FRONT. aur4 4 stubbornly. The Russians 4 rendered some artillery. The 4 Rome, May 3. According the dis4 Japanese had almut 200 more 4 patches received here Gen. 4 casual tic. 4 ia on the march from LiaoKuropatkin Tung to 4 Wang Cheng with twenty thousONLY 10,000 RUSSIANS. ft Feng and troop. Seoul, Korea, May 3. It hai CUK88INQ AT LOSSES. Washington, May 3. The secretary been learned here that after the 4 of the Interior has set aside, provis4 fighting of Sunday on the Yalu 4 St. Petersburg. May 3. 2:30 p. ra. 4 the Japanese, on Monday morn- ionally, the sum of $41,000,000 for tha The alienee of the anthoritlea here construction to pursue the enemy ft of the Pathfinder reserin, started the later of details the fightregarding voir on North Platte river In Wyomthrough the mouniaius. The Rue- 4 Yalu on la river the ing Interpreted 4 elan forces are said to number ing. Construction will proceed upon 10,000 men. .. They sustained 4 omtnoualy andallthere- is a consequent favorable reports of engineers in th aorta of of prevalence Irresponsible field as to whether an adequate area of 4 heavy Josses. 4 rumors the regarding magnitude irrigable land can be found in western of Riiaaian some Nebraska, Tha reservoir will be of the loanee, 4 &4U4Z4Z4S4tS.4Wt;44U4 J as as 3,000. These sufficient capacity to supply all of lha high figures going Ht. Petersburg. May 3. Vic AJmlral manifestly are groaa exaggeration. land under It In Wydming, but it is Togo made another desperate attempt The absence of official Information ia considered necessary to increase this to block the entrance to Port Arthur explained by the general staff that a area by utilising water in western Nelast night, but failed. few Japanese have succeeded in the braska where there are large areaa of Viceroy Alexleff reported officially rear of the Ruaaian posit Ion In cut- arid and semi-ar- il country to which that tha Japanese sent eight lire ship ting the wires. water ran probably be brought The to block 'the entrance, hut they were Heavy loasea are admitted but they details of post and method of getting all aunk by the Russian torpedo boats are not believed to exceed a few hunwater to this land are to be worked out and the fire from the land batteries, dred and some guna. The latter, leaving the channel clear. The viceroy while protecting the retreat of tha aim reported lhat the Russian! sank Ruaaian forces from Antung to Kin two Japanese torpedo boat a. Lien Cheng, had to be abandoned owThe fire ships were discovered by to the loss of the horaea. The sesrrhllxhts of the batteries and guard-ship- s, ing breech-lockhowever, were carried rreedlng toward Port Arthur away, so the gttas will he of no serfrom the east shortly vice to the enemy. after midnight. The torpedo boats ami According to the latest Information were boat ordered torpedo destroyers Gen. Rasaulitch, la retiring in good ornone the but of out, larger warships. along the main road and the JapAdmiral1 Alexleff himself went on der anese are now following him. Onlmard the coast defense boat Ovashnl. Tha guardshipa at the entrance of the falls are expected as soon as Gen. is again in communication. harbor and tba forte opened fire on the Saasullt.ch There Is no conllrmatlon of the reboats, which lasted until 5 oclock in ports that Gen. Zaasaliuh or Gen. the morning. The ateamera were armed with Kashtallnaky is wounded. Hotchkiss and Maxim guna and re- In In the meantime the public remains the dark and is the prey of idle rusponded hotly to the Russian fire. The mors. The war bulletin boards aro Russians succeeded In saving a few members of the erewa of the lire ships, bare and not a single dispatch has come through from the front. The IncluJlng two officers. of the Russian losses given from Japanese sources la the dispatches ENEMY FOrGHT BRAVEI.Y. from abroad ar carefully eliminated lomdon. May 3. 4 p. m. The Jap- by the censors. Until Gen. Zasaalltcha anese legation this afternoon gave out offlrial advices arrive, the general staff Gen. Kurokla report, dated the aftrr- - ia inclined to believe that Zasaalltch, Paris, May 3. Haring wound up the allowed the fight tb mature beyond his details of the big Panama transaction r power. Tha fight Ing at Chin Gow waa connected, with the Panama transfer. J. severe and stubborn. The P. Morgan left Paris toay. Before bis Japanese took up a position on both deiwrture he gave tbe correspondent of flanks of Chin Gow and ram to close THE quarters, some desperate hand 10 hand the Associated Tress the main points work being reported, many of the Rua- of th final agreement, as follows: SUCCESS MARKET The Panama canal company wished aian soldiers. In the fever of comliat, AVE. . 236S WASHINGTON refmdng 10 retire at the command of to have the monpy turned over in Pails their officers. According to the gen- insipid of In the United Riatrieand was Live and lat Live" la our eral staff, only shout 9.000 Russia is willing lo pav all the expense. In motto. Wo do net promise were actually engaged at Kill Lien order to arcompllfh this t'c United to oolt you something for comCheng, and along the Litxavena were States has appointed the Mu. nothing. Our Moats are fresh. two regiments of Siberian riflemen of pany fiscal agenty for the purpose 01 We endeavor to please everytbe payment, the Morgan company In 3.000 men each. body who patronizes tha Gen. Mistchenko. commander of Ihe turn lo make a contract with the Pan SUCCESS MARKET. eastern Cossack brigade, had 1.5U0 CosThe LILLIE BRAND LARD sacks protecting th Russian right not made by a TRUST OUR flank lower down the Yalu and also a no LEADER, compound or brigade artillery, four batteries of eight EASTERN LARD mixed with guns each. Gen. Kartxoff with 1.500 Aek It your GROCER for It Cossacks, higher up the Yalu. was 10 lb. buckets $1.10 at Pit Slfc. located 6 lb. buckets 55 if 3 lb. buckets 35 ADDED 300 CASK ALT! '8. No. 1 bacon 15 These prices for one wrek g p m. l Tokln, May only. IM was rerM)vor here n. report Phone orders given tpe; ul fll il.vv from Gn. Kurnki. It ir. dse-attention. totter and cays: a Yeiferday th enemy cffril FROM & BURG! stubborn reslMjno; iqa'crt om- purPhone 227 Y. suit. adding about 309 to our os.vr1 tie. The enemy itood with : 'i- tion until their artillery, :tp of two batteries, lost the ui.:Jo:v: of Its men and horse. They then broke the breeches and closing apparatus of their guns, a id hoisted the white flag. According to a captured Russian officer. Maj. Gen. Kashtallnaky, comIndianapolis. May 3. Fire at the mander of the third east Siberian rifle Union Stock yards early last night the colonels of the lltb and ELECTRIC LIGHTS STEAM HEAT brigade; 12th rifle brigades, and the commander caused a lux of $:t0i).i)io to the Deli CENTRALLY LOCATED. of the rifle artillery battalion were Raliruad and Union Stock Yards comkilled In the light lug. pany. The insurance is $Ii)0,im)U. Thirty-ld Twenty-secon371 Street. ll seems the enemy was eutircly ive head of cattle were burnr.l and S. our ELWOOD Prop. routed by MRS. attack, because since 40 acres of cattle sheds atui live stock yesterday many have come in and pens were totally destroyed together NEWLY FURNISHED THROUGH- - surrendered. Our prisoners include 30 with uliout 5110 tons of hay and In.tiiiti OUT. nllicers. 20 of shorn are sounded, and liiishel of cum. MODERN EQUIPMENT 200 men. Jim of whom are wnuuded. Who:, the tire Wits discovered, about Board by day or week. A report frtun the chief surgeon 2tai head of cattle were in the yards Rate Reasonable. of Hie first Japanese army ehuws that and a large force of cattle lueti at we had 798 men killed and wounded. once Telephone 530 K. began the work of rescuing them. Fort Arthur, May 3. Ttic Japanese squadron off Fort Arthur after today and rngHged tin warships. The tight is Four Trainmen Injured by a Peculiar Accident at Colorado Springs. Colorado Springs, May 3. A switch engine on the Colorado Springe and Cripple Creek railway this morning fell through a trestle into south Tejon street in this city. Four trainmen were injured, two seriously. The bridge htch stood thirty feet above tha street a.l been weakened by the heavy rain, the street beneath being a steep hill down which water had rushed for the past 24 hours. Tha injured nr: F. C. Kraig. conductor; Leonard Dew, fireman; J. J. Harrihaa, brake-maand W. F. Auer, engineer, all ol clock this morning. All of the workmen except attorn one hundred of the Colorado Springs. union machinists carried their dinner pails and resumed their old positions quietly. General .Manager kludge says . will be troude in securing the STOCKMEN MEET. necessary men o run the shops at 3 Denver. on the sysMay Delegates Topeka and othei from every important stock rain- tem without the union workmen. ing and shipping point west of 4 Third Vice President Hurkalew of the the Missouri river were present 4 Machinists' union, says the strike U at the opening of the Stockmens 4 not declared off and will not be until convention called by the Cattle tho Santa Fe company agrees to the Growers association of Texas, 4 proposition of the uniou. which assembled at the Brown 4 At Cleburne, Albuquerque. San Palace hotel at 10 a. m. today. 4 The Needles and far west It is proposed to establish a per- points the strike is much more effecmanent organization of livestock 4 tive than at Topeka. A special to tho men west of she Missouri river, 4 State Journal from Lajunia, Coin., independent of tbe National Live- - 4 says no attempt ua made to open 4 slock association. Already aa a tile shops today. v result of this movement ronrea- - 4 4 sious have heen made by rail- tJUIKT AT HAKRRSKIELD. 4 roads to shippers of livestock. J. 4 HskoihlicM, (V. kTay 3- .- Absolute 4 J. Dixon of Yahington, D. C is 4 quiet prevails around the Santa Fe 4 attending the meeting as a repre- - 4 4 shop hero, where the machinists went 4 senlatlva of the government. out yesterday. The round house Is being guarded by special deputies and no one la allowed to enter without a pass, so aa to prevent any possibility of damage being done the property by irresponsible parties. All Santa Fe Railroad Shops From Lajunta West to the Coast arc Tied Up. Feng-Wang- h 1904.N ENGINE DROPS THROUGH OVER FIVE THOUSAND 1 (Continued from Pane One.) MAY ALL UNION MEN Want to Remember that PUTNAM has Complete Lines of Union-Mad- e de Union-Mad- e Union-Ma- de Union-Mad- e Union-Ma- de Union-Ma- de nn ev did ain Rumt landa Cwai Ij1. herai Goodp. Union-Ma- tad a cerate )ry 0 V ri hats that ttlet Shoes Clothing Overalls Tt. Jumpers re Shirts etc bg R- Cali and Look them Over 1 Re -t Cej liU Fi, Putnam Clothing house 2345 Wash. Ave. For) la tt bi. kali L-- OGDEN l U t: |