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Show DEATH TO OGrDE 1ST, UTAH 298. vm-NUM- BER VOLUME a. A : L UTAH DAY IS OBSERVED AT WORLD'8 FAIR Loi'lS. (lit. "i.i. Itah day waa observed at the fair at the Utah state building, today with an informal reception which lasted all the day. a THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1904 RUSSIAN LOSSES PUT AT : : THOUSAND TWENTY-FIV- E PUBLIC LAND JAP CRUISER WATCHES THE BALTIC FLEET : :J LISBON. Oct. 20. A disguia- ed Japanese cruiser, it la learn- Y eil. lias reactiej European wa- ter to wateh the movements of the Russian Baltic fleet. IN j IS IDAHO THROWN OPEN Report Is Current That Japanese Battalion Has Colored Cavalry Light Den pe InfantryInandRed Fight Have XhreeWhites Den Surrendered and Two Are E 1 Ffteenth infantry (white) cavalry (colored), three members of th$ lat-INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 20. The feaone white regiment shot and killed ture of the Republican cainapign in and another gu end totally Injured will be a six days tour of the Indiana San train for an early gn escaped by state by Senator Fairbanks, from OcFtiKi0tober Slst to November 5th, ending I kmp was overturned during the with a big demonstration in Indianapset fire to the building, olis. gw which The Democrats attempt to vie with with its contents and an adjoln-- y the Republicans in the sise of their building waa totally destroyed. cavafiry arrived from demonstration and will have Bourke Tbe Fourth Cockran as their attraction. Fairthe Ninth. They banks will make relieve to gr eut speeches me intoxicated on their arrival when on his tour. gey were entertained by the Fifteenth MORGAN TO FORM A little later the members gft.tr?, BANK IN DENVER to a in went a body g tbe regimentOct. 20. J. Pierpont DENVER, gftrfmi. house, took possession and to la Morgan engage in business in girted quarreling. Denver. To do this Mr. Morgan does goon the members of the Ninth cavinot intend to desert Gothum. He will ty (adored) arrived on the scene and maintain headquarters there, but i genera! quarrel commenced. Pistols shortly he will start a banking instiFour tution in Denver, associated with one ad knives were freely 'used. of the foremost bankers In the state tandrtd and fifty men engaged in the and some Kansas City capitalists. fight Morgan is constructing a chain of At I o'clock this morning shooting houses across the country. banking tu commenced by the Ninth cavalry, he invaded the St. Louis Recently rto killed a member of the Fourth territory. He is now perfecting plans one of the end fatally Injured antry to get into Kansas City and prelimiMembers of the Fifteenth Infantry. nary negotiations for a Denver instiFbnrth cavalry were so indignant that tution have already been started. Three Wlien assured of a location here he tkej Kt Are to the building. MUings were burned to the ground. will go on to Salt Lake City and then the dur-whi- the Ninth ch w - fifty-eig- ht - COLORADO REPUBLICANS SPLIT OVER PEABODY DENVER, Colo., Oct 20. Republl-ra- n over leaders are split in twain Pobody. There are two factions in the fray. One is made up of the conservative the radicals are The house depgeneral conven- the tion today adopted a compromise on Owners' associati- the report of the committee on canons on, the smelter trust, Colorado Fuel and divorce. on marriage and Iron. Victor Fuel and other mon-ff- rt The canon as adopted prohibits the combinations. Except for these, remarriage of either party to a divorce Peabody would have been made to retwhile the other is living, but leaves it ire a week ago in favor of some other within the discretion of any minister Republican. These corporations have to define to solemnise the marriage of Hpended targe sums of money to the Is divorced persons. An exception Pwsent campaign and are still oiling made In the case of an Innocent party he machine." To them the election to a divorce, but the Innocence must ft Peabody means more than does the be determined by the bishop of the ccesa of Roosevelt In Colorado or in divorcees' diocese. nation. It Is a selfish motive that k prompting them to go to any ends CHEYENNE PAPERS REFUSE kinnire the defeat of Adams by the DEMOCRATIC TICKET AD Aligned with Cripple Creek Mine - governor. Behind is CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 20. The - two Republican papers of Cheyenne the defeat of are becoming badly demoralised. The wsevelt In this state and in the natDemocratic party has no newspaper in ionCortelyou has been urging that the city, and when Mr. Henry Arp. a "body be pulled down In the Inter-th- e prominent merchant here, and chairnational ticket. Fairley has man of the county Democratic central Jeen importuned from the national committee, visited the officers of the Petdquarters to eliminate the govern- Leader and Tribune, the two Republior entirely, because he Is endanger-th- e can dailies, to make arrangements for national ticket throughout the printing the Democratic ticket as an wintry. This plea ixm Cortelyou advertisement he was Informed by each keen heeded In that several ta thnt they would not print it at any have been made to comply. But mine owners and other corpora -- price. "M have put their veto to the move- ELOPEMENT KEEPS ment. LOUISE OFF THRONE o tor, however, the hostilities have "to confined to the leaders at the DRESDEN. Saxony. Oct. 20. Even r71 headquarter hut the bitter-rt- o for these days of mourning forand the of engendered Is on the verge of dead king. George of Saxony, waking out into open combat. decorous acclaim of ttie new King radicals are . over the Frederick, there is an undercurrent of odslide that has desperate set in throughout regret that the Crown Princess Louise tat for Adams. lost her has, by her indiscretions, crown. The democratic behavior of the princess, when she was the we to of the crown prince, endeared herwas all Saxons and their liking for her not utterly destroyed by her escapade with In eloping In December, WO., children. her of tutor a former DESTRUCTIOH Giron, Is Now. heartsick and divorced, she is It London. in In retirement living a Tussaid that she bears by courtesy to her. lost is can title, but Saxony the conserve tive faction which has national committee, alarmed over be- at-jP- illPSllEET U Hasted Schooner and Both On Rocks Further WORKMEN DASHED TO DEATH FROM SCAFFOLD a By the fall of I, Oct. ween Swan and Seneca were y two workmen were three and leath feet. They fell fifty 20. Wrecks Reported. wmJKach. n- re: - gel, stonemason, irk. stonemason. 'lartlnlque Vni liirtit!r,'k t0lay off th( ne,,r M,aml flnn, a b tondi htnul idly ihree-m- BUSINESS ai n,ar to"'Pieces. er BVed. "" "r other vei coming in. section OF TOWN IS DESTROYtu 1 V. TOKIO, ct. 20. The opiwxlng armies are now devilling iheir Ume to burying the dead and caring for the are planwounded, and meanwhile ning additional movements. It is now known that the Japanese left army lost about five thousand men during the recent fighting. The further discovery of Russian dead indicates that Kuropatkln'a losses reached twenty-fiv- e thousand. The Russians have been reinforced by thirty thousand men of the seventeenth, tenth and sixth Siberian corps. Six divisions of the Russians now confront the Japanese left army. It is stated at the war office that the Japanese left army captured near Lang Touc Hiech six ammunition carts, five thousand rifles, five thousand rounds of field gun ammunition, and seventy five thousand rounds of besides clothing, rifle ammunition, tents Rnd other war materiaL Little information is obtainable concerning the situation with the right and center armies. Additional casualties are reported, including twelve officers killed and thirty wounded. According to the fullest reports obtainable here the total Japanese casualties are In the neighborhood of eight thousand killed and wounded. RUMORED SURRENDER OF A JAP BATTALION Oct. ST. PETERSBURG. port Is 20. A re- current this afternoon that tbe Russian vanguard, on their west front, on Tuesday surounded a battalion of Japanese infantry, wbicb was forced to San Francisco. to surrender. A detachment under General Mitchensko is also said to KING EDWARD ENTERTAINS of AMERICAN NAVAL MEN have compelled two battalion Japanese to retreat.1 The Japanese LONDON, Oct 20. King Edward are reported to be slowly retiring. today gave a luncheon at Buckingham Palace in honor of Rear Admiral Jew- DEFEAT OF TWO JAPANESE DIVISIONS IS CONFIRMED ell and other American naval officers. Choate and Secretary Ambassador PARIS, Oct. 20, According to the White, naval attache at Stockton, of the St. Petersburg corespondent were present. Temps the report of tbe defeat of two Japanese divisions on the Shakhe EPISCOPAL CONVENTION ADOPTS A COMPROMISE river has been confirmed. time" element, which is to Peabody; the opposed ether faction contains the radicals, (to declare for Peabody or nobody. Then latter would sacrifice Roosevelt end Fairbanks to carry out their proghave ram, while the conservatives tried to bring about Peabody's withdBOSTON, Oct. 20. rawal from fiie state ticket. uties of the Episcopal old Present Thousand Acres In Most Productive and Most Easily Irrigated Part of State May Now Be Entered On Easy Terms. One Hundred FLEET MAY SET OUT AT LAST Is Gutted. Cal., Oct. 20. About Great Democratic Orator Will Warm this morning a drunken .o'doA Indiana After Up Republican took place In a notorious den mem-g- n between district red light s tb Speaker' Chilling Breath. g or BALTIC Army Retiring. Are Killed and the VOXTEREY, of Retreating-Mika- dos n., Oct. 20. The bus nld Peinhlna $100,000 ay. A loss of Nearly JAPS OBJECT TO CHINESE COSTUME8 WASHINGTON. Oct. 20. The state department today transmitted by telegraph to the American embassy at St. Petersburg a formal protest by the Japanese government against the Rlleged use by Rushan, soldiers of This government Chinese costumes. nets u a medium of transmission, but takes n. i part in the dispute. STRONG REINFORCEMENTS GO TO AID KUROPATKIN Divide Coaling Is Now The Mukden correspondent of the In Progress. Tageliliitt wires that Kuropatkin will be reinforced within three weeks by a complete army corps, consisting of five divisions of light infantry, and LONDON. Oct. 20. The Times this many batteries of quick firing guns. states that there is no doubt morning are he doomed, The Japanese, says Baltic fleet is starting in the unless they can defeat the Russians that In decisive fashion before the arrival earnest for the Far East. The fleet of these fresh troops. will proeeed hs a unit as far as Cadis, whtre collier await it. It will SEVENTY-FOUTHOUSAND JAPS OFF TO THE WAR then divide, the largest vessels going by way of the Cape. Several Germnn ROME. Oct. 20. The Italia Milltalre liner recently purchased by Russians has u dlsjuitch front Toklo stating thnt and which are now taking on a supninety transports left Basebo yester- ply of coni at South Wale porta will thousand men. proceed to Singapore to await the arday with seventy-fou- r two hundred guna and ammunition rival of the fleet. Captain Jackovlnff. formerly of the and clothing, bound for Manchuria. The second army will consist of four battleship Petropavlovak, who Is now hundred thousand men and a thousand here, explains thnt the delays in getting the warships through ' the cRnal guns. make a division of the fleet advisable, DETACHMENT OF COSSACKS the cape route being only a fortnight WIPED OUT BY. JAPANESE longer with coaling at sea Instead of in port, lie believes the voyagle to ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 20. Saka-ro- ff the Far East will he made In ninety reports that no skirmishes took days. On the 18th a deplace yesterday. COPENHAGEN. Oct. 20. The Rustachment of Cossacks which were pursuing Japanese outposts came under sian Baltic fleet anchored off the Bknw the fire of machine guna at two hun- list night, where the vessels of the dred paces. Their horses and all the feet are completing their coaling. Cossacks were either killed or woundSKAGEN. Denmark, Oct. 20. The ed. The engagement took place near . Russian Baltic fleet arrived this mornSand! Pou. ing and anchored In the bay. OYAMA WILL ENTER NEXT WEEK DEAD MAN RUNS . MUKDEN TRAIN FOR MILES MM ROME, Oct 19. A telegram from st McCook, Neb., Oct. 20. A Burling Toklo states that Field Marshal has advised the general staff thnt ton passenger train was thundering next through the darkness on its way from he expects to enter Mukden McCook to St. Louis late last night, week. while the engineer sat upright In hia LIAO YANG H08PITAL seat, with his hnnd gripping the FACILITIES ARE EXHAUSTED throttle, dead. The engineer was James O'Connell. ROME, Oct. 20. A telegram from The train had reached a point some Loao Yang states that the accommo- distance from here and was running dations for wounded there have been at a high rate of speed, when the fireA exhausted. service of hospital man happened to glance at the nnd observed that a pallor had trains has been organised to convey the Japanese wounded to Newchang, overspread hia face and thnt his body where there are hospital ships in the an neared rigid. The fireman went over and touched the engineer nnd was harbor. -hocked to discover that he was dead, and evidently had been dead for a KUROKI REPORTED TO BE DYING FROM DYSENTERY number of minutes. The fireman ran the train back to LONDON, Oct. 20. A dispatch from McCook, and, when another bad been St. Petersburg states thst a rumor is supplied, it went on to St. Louis. Had current that Kuroki is dyng from the engineer's death not been disdysentery. The rumor is unconfirmed. covered and the train stopped before reached n station It was approaching. it would hnve collided with a train comlrg from the opposite direction nnd lives pmhnbly would have been acrifleed. R - Oy-nn- ter Japanese Are Within 500 Yards of Fortress Ida., Oct. 20. One hundred of public lands in southern Idaho were opened for public entry today by the state land board. The tract is on the south side of the Snake river, In Cassia county, and embraces some of the richest and most ItolSE,, It Will Proceed to Cadiz and There thousand acres productive lands In the state. The water for Irrigating the lands is derived from the Snake river and la provided in a sufficient abundance to cover the entire tract with one foot of water In a month, which is easily twice as much as will he needed. A dam has been built in the river at the head of the great canyon which raises the water about fffty feet above Its natural level. By this meala the water is diverted into a huge canal, which carries the water at the htgheat possible level westward seventy miles, distributing it all along the way into laterals that reach every part of the vast tract. The entire area of lands under the canal Is 271.000 acres. Forty thousand acres have been oiened and taken up by settlers. Owing to the deirumd for the lands oixmed up todny it Is probable that the state board will decide upon' an early date for opening the remainder of the tract irrigated by the canal. The Irrigation scheme is the largest ever carried to successful conThe cost of tbe clusion in America. dam and canals amounted to 12,500,-00The climate is very mild In winter and Is adapted to the raising of all kinds of grain, vegetables and fruits that may be raised In the northern stutes. The cost of the land under this canal is 50 cents an acre to the state and $25 an acre for the perpetual water right. The payments may be made aa rents an acre to follows; Twenty-fiv- e the state on making application end 98 tin acre for water for the first two veaioiis. The second pnyment of 25 cents an acre to the state may be made at any time within three years upon Inking title to the land. The subsequent payments for the water right arc the same as commonly paid for annual rentals In other districts, namely 92 per acre at the end of the second season and each following year to the eighth year, when there will.be two annual payments of $3 each and a final payment of $4. Improved lnnda In the irrigated districts of Idaho, In the Payette. Boise md Bnnke river valleys, are selling for from f 100 to 1250 an acre, although they were sagebrush deserts five or six yearn ago. The only clearing required on the land is the removal of the sagebrush, which can be easily done for two to three dollars per acre with a cutter that la drawn along about two Inches below the surface of the soil. The ROCKEFELLER NOW land may then be Irrigated, plowed and POSSESSES RARE EAGLE sown to alfalfa, a quick money rrop. NEW YORK. Oct. 20. To his other earthly poasessions John D. Rockefeller has added an eagle not the American eagle aa yet, but a very fine specimen of cinereous or sea eagle, which was captured 150 miles from land by the crew of the tank steamer Excelsior of the Standard Oil company on Its nvnire from Rotterdam. It was off the coast of Nova Scotia that the bird, apparently tired out. took refuge in the rigging or the Excelsior. and, though it nature ia fierce, readily submitted to capture. An ornithologist went shosrd the ship today at Bayonne, and after the eagle had been pronerly classified as a rare specimen in tese waters it was caged and sent to Rockefellers place In Tarrytown. The rapture of the eagle brought to light a curious bargain that the StandEx-Minis- ter ard oil king had with the masters of oil the ships in his servto. TChsn a bird la cantured at es It Is brought to port, and If pronounced by an ornithologist ns worthy of a place In Rockefeller's collection. It is sent to Pocnntlco Hills, where, under the agreement with the captain who made SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 20. Rev. accused of abusing his daughter when the capture, Rockefeller keeps It until Charles G. Adams committed suicide Jessup attempted to Interfere and dur- the bird dies, when it is stuffed and ing the struggle Adams shot Jessup. presented to the captain ns an ornaby inhaling illuminating gas this For some time Adams was practic- ment for hlibcabln. In this way Rockefeller has gathermorning in his room. Adams was for- ing law here. Last night he had a merly an Episcopal minister. quarrel with Maud Ellson, who room- ed a collection of birds from all pnrts Several years ago he gained noto- ed In the same house. He tried to of the world. riety by having shot and killed Dr. persuade her to return to him, but she Jessup at Berkeley. He was never refused. He told her he would com- NATIONAL LIVE 8TOCK EXCHANGE IN CONVENTION punished as it was claimed that he mit suicide. This morning the landwas insane at the time. Adams was lady found hia dead body in his room. ST. LOUIS, Oct 20. The live stock exchanges of Fort Worth, Denver. InWOULD EMULATE THE DETECTIVES GUARD THE City. RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR dianapolis, Chicago, Kansas CAR BARN BANDITS Omnha. Sioux City and other ImportOMAHA, Oct. 20. A gang of five WASHINGTON. Oct. 20. Following ant stock centers throughout the country are well represented at the boys who were arrested here confes- a personal Interview between Secre- annual meeting of the National Live sed that they intended to imitate the tary of State Hay and Count Cassini, Stock Exchange. The sessions of the Chicago car barn bandits and blow up the Russian ambassador, at the secre- convention were opened today and house, guards have been ordered will continue throughout the remainthe Harney street barn. They meant tary's for the Russian embassy.'- It ia un- der of the week. Probably the moat to secure the money In the barn and derstood that the state department Important matter to come before the embark as nnd train robbers. They was Informed thnt letters threatening convention Is the to raise also confessed to many daring holdups the count had been received by him the commission on proposition a car of hogs from and burglaries within the pnst few which were supposed to come from the present price of 28 a car to $8 a months. either cranks or funatics, or both. car. to turning hit a mine and was severely She managed to reach late Port Arthur advices the Japanese damaged. Dalny. have captured further minor positions Shelia from the Japanese siege guna in the Rlhlung mountain after several continued to fall into the harbor damaaaults made on them. The Japanese aging the gunboat Gallak. The town also captured an iron railroad bridge Is full of wounded. Flour is plentiful. and the heights south of the bridge, The slaughter of horses, mules and which is five hundred yards from the donkeys for food continues. main fortress. The Japanese lost Reports from Chinese sources allege that the force in Port Arthur numbers fifty men. 5.000 men, exclusive of the militia, On October 12th nine Russian cruisers left the harbor and proceeded to which does guard duty. Warm clothing is scarce and the Shao Ping Tu. while they bombarded the Japanese left flank. Japanese garrison is much worn by the exhausttorpedo boat destroyers hurried to the ing siege. scene and the Russians retired into Japanese reinforcements arrive daily at Dalny, while the wounded are shipthe harbor. One Japanese destroyer while re ped back to Japan. CHE FOO, Oct. 20. According ' Notorious Has Committed Suicide - 0. LONE WOMAN TRAPS TWO BEARS AND KILLS THEM ETNA, Cal., Oct. 20. Mrs. Albert Iee trapped two bears and killed them both a few dayv ago while her hus- was absent In Terka on Jury duty. The Lee home Is at the Moffett Creek sawmill at the foot of House mountain In Scott valley. Mr. Lee had recently bought n new hear trap and hHd already captured band two animals In It when he was called away to be gone nil week. He asked M" wife to look after the trap in his absence. She had the good fortune to catch a brow- - hsr Sunday night and anon the night following. Hether ine. xfriid that the trap might not hold the bears securely until she could call In some neighbor to dispatch them she In esch instance took her trusty rifle and killed them herself 'nly one shot was necessary In each case. bus-'Mtn- l's WClTiST GROWING New Consolidation Capital BIGGER Incorporated Is a Hundred and Eighty Millions. TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 20. The certificate of incorporation of the Ameri-ca- n Tobacco company was filed with the secretary of state today. The consolidation includes the old American Consolidated and Continental Tobacco Its capital stock la companies. 3180.000.000. James R. Duke Is |