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Show volume .tip. number gathering of the HIGHBALL WON REPUBLICAN CLAUS CALIFORNIA DELEGATION OF ATTRACTION. CEN-TE- OGrD E 1ST, 192. R AMERICAN RUSSIAN DERBY Big Event Attracted Large Crowd FAILURE M REAL ESTATE MEN OF JAPS FLANKING MOVE. JUNE 18. HIGHBALL AMERICAN DERBY, contln-nou- a CENLONDON, JUNE CHICAGO, June 18. With a WOODSON 8ECOND, RAPID WATTRAL of vlsitora NEWS ST. PETERSBURG Derby flay Inpouring ER THIRD. TIME 2:33. toCORRESPONDENT Chicago delegatee convention and CHICAGO, June 18. Under fair THAT GENERAL 8TAKELBURG day took on an animated appearance. usconditlone weather and before the Intrachoked ESCAPED FROM THE JAPANESE The immense crowds the ual Immense crowd, despite the bet- FLANKING MOVE AND IS NOW Among mural transportation. ting prohibition by the authorities, was to arrive conspicuous delegations seventeenth American Derby wee OUT OF DANGER. the on of a special that from palifomia run this afternoon. To substantiate elx Pullmans and one car of "goodies." ST. PETERSBURG, JUNE 18 A came George A. hie position on the question of gamIn the delegation LIAO YANG DISPATCH PLACES bling. Mayor Harrison ordered out Knight, who will make one of the of policemen and a THE RUSSIAN TOTAL LOSSE8 IN nine companies Roosespeeches nominating hundred plain clothes men, who, with KILLED AND WOUNDED IN THE velt Knight la a candidate for the seventy-fiv- e Pinkertons hired by the BATTLE OF VAFANGOW of the member national California AT 2,000. association the paddock and .patrolled elected. The will be and committee on Californians organised on the way to grandstand keeping an eagle eye TOKIO, JUNE 18 IT IS REPORTto a a ED THAT or nickel either attempts wager J- - W. Mcelected and THREE RUSSIAN WARJudge Chicago dollar. The crowd was good natured SHIPS APPEARED EARLY TODAY Kinney of Los Angeles chairman of as a rule, but here and there a feel- OFF FOU the delegation. A caucus of the deleYAMA, GOING NORTH. of resentment cropped out. gation will be held at headquarters ing The verdict of the spectators, how- FLEET STILL OPERATING arrival The delegation's Monday. was that this will be the last was received with loud acclaim, be- ever, ALONG COAST OF JAPAN cause of the good fellowship that fol- Derby day for ( Wbshlntgon Park. thousand less people were lows and the additional fact that the Twenty TOKIO, June 18 A Japanese steama year ago, though the er waa attacked by the Russian than Californians monopolised interest so present grounds were well filled. far as pertains to state delegations. squadron last night but escaped, takMayor David R. Rose's Copperfield ing refuge In the harbor of Fokuyama. see some to the There was curiosity but was added to the entries at the last Another steamer, the Iako Maru, was warring factions of Wisconsin moment. visitors reserved and overhauled by the Russians but the the delegates their salvos for the far westerners. latter, evidently afraid of the apWord had been passed around of their proach of Japanese warships, released the steamer. coming in greater style. than usual, including a carload of wine and fruit WOUNDED RUSSIANS ARE valued at $10,000. This was distribARRIVING AT MUKDEN uted to visitors at the elaborate CaliAGAINST MOYER fornia headquarters In the Auditorium. When asked as to the preference of in MUKDEN, June 18. Wounded for the Californians large numbers are arriving from .the battlefield. Mr. Knight said: Twenty-nin- e We have none, but Vafangow Car will vote for any man the administrat- Mine Owners Accuse Him of Com- officers and 784 men have thus CHICAGO, THE 18-T- HE REPORTS sec-indl- ng vice-preside- ion wants. OPPOSITION TO CORTELYOU. If George B. Cortelyou Is to be elected chairman of the national committee It Is absolutely essential that he come here Immediately, Is the subsubstance of a telegram that has been sent to President Roosevelt by Congressman LltCauer of New York, after a careful slilng up of the strength ef the opposition to Cortelyous selection. This call for assistance shows' the intensity of the feeling among the members of the national committee, who believe that a practical politician should be chosen to run the campaign. Senator Lodge and Cornelius Bliss, both of whom fully approve the president's choice of Cortelyou, are expected here today or tomorrow'. Their arrival may create a change In the present sentiment If the president Is determined to have Cortelyou It Is certain that the national committee will acquiesce. SENTIMENT FAIRBANKS. FOR Senator Fairbanks opened the day with Indications of continued silence. There is no reason why I should say anything," remarked the senator. The sentiment appears to be all Fairbanks. HITT'S BOOM .FALLS FLAT. The Hitt boom doesnt appear to be taking hold. His Illness Is unfortunate for his boom, since his age and the attendant possibility of Infirmity are the strongest arguments used against IN STRICKEN Salt Lakers Encourage METROPOLIS. Squadron Still Spreading Complet List of Dead is Fixsd at Terror Along Coast of and Identifications Number 532 Japsn. Inquest Begins Monday. Vice-Preside- WON DAY OF FUNERALS Vladivostok . reported with injuries. They say the retreat was being effected In perfect order when they left plicity in the Vindicator Outrage. TELLURIDE, Colo., June 18. President Moyer was taken to Cripple Creek this morning by a deputy and a detective from the Mine Owners' association to answer the charge of aiding an abetting the murder of Charles McCormick and Melvin Beck, who were killed In the Vindicator mine explosion several months ago. President Moyer le highly Indignant that these charges have been preferred against blm. ALLEGED PERPETRATOR OF OUTRAGE UNDER ARRE8T CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo., June H- UndersherlfE L. F. Parsons Is authority for the statement that there is confined In the county Jail one of the perpetrators of the Independecne depot wholesale murder, if not the actual criminal who pulled the wire that exploded the dynamite. The undersheriff refuses to tell the name of the guilty party, fearing that if It became public It would precipitate a lynching or an attempted lynching, in which a number of citizens might be killed In,trying to storm the Jail and get the prisoner. We have evi Mr. Parsons added: dence In our possession showing that six men are directly or Indirectly imhlirf. plicated in the killing. Five of these LA FOLLETTE IS ANGRY. men managed to get out of the disGovernor La Follette of Wisconsin trict, but we know where practically returned to Madison this morning all of them are, and they will be unsmarting under his defeat at the hands der arrest before long." of the national committee. He refused to say whether he would return. WILL BE FREE TOMORROW. , Ellhu Root, temporary chairman of the convention, arrived this morning. MANCHESTER, N. H., June 18. A He Is the first of the that attracted wide attention five of case representatives the president to come. years ago will come to an and tomorrow when H. F. Bailey, former cashier COMPROMISE OFFERED. Governor Murphy of New Jersey has of the Colebrook National bank, will formally proposed a compromise in be released from the Hillsboro county the national chairmanship muddle Jail, after having completed a sentence by advocating the selection of a chair- of five years for violating tbe United man by the national committee and States banking laws by permitting dethe creation of an advisory board of positors to overdraw their acounts to twelve members with Cortelyou as the aipount of about $85,000. chairman. Ellhu Root is said to view The Colebrook National bank was the proposition favorably. dosed December 28, 1898, and the affairs of the Colevllle Savings bank BRITISH TORPEDO BOAT were also tied up for a time on acGOES TO THE BOTTOM count of Irregularities. Both were found to be solvent LONDON, June 18. The Central however, and soon resumed business, News' Paris correspondent reports no depositor losing a dollar. Much that during the British naval maneu-vr- s sympathy was expressed for tbe conoft Ajaccio, Corsica, today two victed csshler as it waa generally betorpedo boats collided and . one was lieved that he had no Intention of comunit mitting fraud. ' Instl-tltutlo- ne BATTLE OF VAFANGOW WAS NOT A DEFEAT ST. PETERSBURG, June 18 Military circles do not view the battle of Vafangow as a defeat and they contend that General Stakelberg, unlike Lieutenant-General won Zaaealitch, more than he lost Whether General Stakelberg! expedition to the south had an Immediate bearing on the sit- uation at Port Arthur it thought that his presence has caused a diversion which will materially affect the operations In the southern part of the Liao Tung peninsula. It Is thought unlikely that the Japanese had north of Klnchou such a large force as that which engaged division, and the numbers seemed to indicate that they drew off some of the troops operating against Port Arthur. It is pointed out that the force engaged at Vafangow must recuperate for several days, and it ' Is expected that the fight will materially retard the siege operations against Port Arthur. The sole regret le that General Stakelberg did not draw the Japanese further to the north before allowing them to engage him, but experts suspect that certain conditlone compelled Stakelberg to fight at Vafanla Formation CHARGE m MOSS IS ROUND an Association in OVER IS MANSLAUGHTER BONDS $1,000. Ogden. 833 Story of tha Alleged Crim at th Canyon is Related By Eye committee of Salt Lake real esNEW YORK, JUNE 18 EIGHT tate men is in Ogden for the purpose BODIES OF VICTIMS OF THE SLO- of getting a combination here which CUM DISASTER WERE RECOVER. shall result lit the formation of an ED THIS MORNING, MAKING THE Ogden real estate men's association. TOTAL LIST OF KNOWN DEAD 570. The great purpose to be obtained la FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-TW- to secure state so that BODIES HAVE BEEN IDENTIbe Ituh advertised credmay abroad FIED AND 263 PERSONS ARE MISitably. Incidental to the visit of the SING. Salt Lake gentlemen it is their deNEW YORK. June 18. Today, the sire to invite and to secure the atfirst funeral day of the victims of the tendance of Ogdeu real estate men Slot-urhorror, ea wthe stricken East and other citlsens on the Sultalr exSide district thronged with people. cursion of the Saif Lake real estate Many were the mourning friends and association. To this excursion the relatives of the dead, while others doSalt Lake men real estate have were attracted to the scene by morbid nated about $7,000 worth of real escuriosity. The throngs were subdued tate In the capital city to be distriband respectful. Men and boys reuted ui prises. The excursion will moved their hats and caps whenever on the 29th of June. The take place a funeral cortege was encountered members of the Balt Lake real estate passing through the avenues of crepe, association visiting Ogden for the day while the women and girls stood with are N. G. Tuttle, O. F. Feterson heads bowed. Many women wept, esand C. N. Johnson They will meet pecially at the sight of the white with leading Ogden real estate men at hearses with sometimes two or three the Weber club tonight at 8 o'clock. little caskets in one. All members of the club and all real Arrangements had been made for estate men of the city are invited to be more than one hundred funerals and present. as early as 9 o'clock the first of these sad corteges began to move. Services were held in churchdS of all denomiBAD STREET CAR nations and scores of ministers had been assigned to this particular work. By 10 o'clock a constant stream of WRECK IN ZIOH hearses and carriages flowed out of the district and made their way toward the cemeteries. The Brooklyn Lutheran cemetery will receive the bulk of the dead. Runaway Car Dashes Through City The coroner's police and other auSmashes Five Others One thorities who have been receiving and checking bodies at the scene of the Lady Killed. disaster and the morgue have carefully revised a list of the dead and mis- sing and so a comparatively correct SALT LAKE, June 18. By the estimate can be given today The to(aI Indicated death list le breaking of the drawhead of a con883. Two hundred and elghty-al- x of struction car loaded with gravel on the recovered dead are children, 258 East 8!de heights this morning five electric cars were wrecked. women and twenty-thre- e men. Mre Chapman of this city was fatal, A large number of missing are behurt and several persons were ly lieved to be wedged in under the hulk slightly Injured by jumping from the of the Slocum Witnesses. A O There ! dispute as to the removal of the steamer, the company claiming It to be the duty of the marine underwriters Tbe coroner's inquest begins Monday. Of all pitiful incidents connected with the disaster that Just reported by James Cocoran, a member of the crew, is the most harrowing At the height of tbe tragedy he ea wa woman give birth to a child and then Jump overboard with the new born babe Corcoran saw both die. Of the money, Jewelry and other valuables taken from the bodies of victims, estimated at $150,000 much has already been claimed by relatives of the dead. One of the bodies recovered this morning was wrapped in a large ellk American flag. Diver Glllugan recovered seven bodies in a deep hole In the bed of the river off North He believes that Brothers Island thirty to fifty bodies are still In this hole Mayor McClellan has ordered that the wreck be raised immediately. t gow. General Stakelberg Is praised for the skillful handling of hie men In the field. He and his old war comrade. General Kuropatkln, fought side by side in Turkestan, and he Insisted on PRESIDENT LEAVES CAPITAL TO ATTEND WEDDING again taking the field, though almost an Invalid. WASHINGTON, June 18. The pres-Wen- t, Miss Cairo w Mrs. Roosevelt, NO TROUBLE TO PLACE JAPANE8E BOND ISSUE and Secretary Barnes quietly left the capital last night for Hyde Park. N. 18 Three hundred Y., where at noon today they will atTOKIO, June twenty million yen have already been tend the wedding of hie niece. The subscribed for a second issue of ex- utmost secrecy was maintained regarding the trip. Returning, the preschequer bonds. ident and his wife will pan Sunday as the guests of Attorney-GenerJAPANESE BANK FAIL8 AND CREATES A PANIC Knox on Ms Valley Forge farm. al cars The runaway car went through the business section of the city at the rate of forty miles an hour and across four railroad tracks The motor men of the cars ahead called to the passengers to Jump, reversed the current, and all the cars were piled up at the terminus of the Rio Grande depot BIT BY A A DOG. vicious dog belonging to Mr. Neill bit the little three-year-o- ld daughter of Mr. Fowler, who resides at 267$ Lafayette avenue. The girl was sitting in an expres wagon which her little brother was hauling along the sidewalk. The dog dashed up and seised the girl by the back inflicting a severe wound. The dog will be destroyed today by Police Officer R. Burk. THE SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF. The Improvements on the grounds surrounding the State School for the Deaf in this city, have now been completed and present a most attractive appearance and show the results of careful attention. Vlsitora and passers by are cordially invited to step into and visit the grounds, as well as the buildings. BICYCLISTS IN COLLISION. Hayes Matson, while riding down street hill on hie bicycle h collided with a afternoon yesterday lady who was going in the opposite direction. Both were thrown to the pavement but neither received Injuries other than slight bruises. The young man's wheel was- badly damaged. Twenty-fift- - In consequence of RANSOM FOR PERDICARIS TOKIO, June WILL BE PAID TODAY an failure of the Important bank at Osaka a serious financial panic preWASHINGTON, June 1. Consul-Gener- al vails. Gummere cables the state dethat It has O. S. L. TEAM VICTORIOUS. partment from Tangier ransom the been rash The Oregon Short Line baseball arranged that Var-le- y and Perdlcarle release of for the team Initiated their new grounds last Intimates but will be today, paid strong evening by defeating the that he has some doubt as to the banMound Fort team In a seven-innidit's good faith. game, by a score of 10 to 8. 18 ng RARRV HERE OH A VISIT of Betting. Cortel-yo- u Saturday, june is, IS HOT TRAPPED But There Was No Undercurrent of Oppoeition to for National Chairman Fairbanka for TJ T A. I--I FALLS TO THE PAVEMENT. A stranger by the name of Rube Reals fell to the pavement in an apoplectic fit at the Union depot about 7:80 last night. His face was badly bruised as a result of the fall. He is being retained at the police station until he thoroughly recovers from the effects of the fit. THE PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION OF HARRY MOS8 WAS CONCLUDED THIS AFTERNOON AND HE WAS BOUND OVER TO THE DISTRICE COURT WITH BONDS FIXED AT $1,000. The preliminary examination of Harry Musa, charged with voluntary manslaughter In having caused the death of 'William K. Krone at the Hermitage In Ogden Canyon a week ago lust night, was begun in the police court tills morning before Judge Howell. Much Interest wan evinced In the proceedings and long before the examination commenced all the available spare In the small court room was occupied ly spectators. County Attorney Hulanlskf. assisted by Judge W. L. MHglnnls on behalf of the family of the deceased, prosecuat-e- d, and II. II. Henderson appeared on behalf of the defendant Moss, whose wife occupied a seat beside him within the bar of the eourt. Rsy Horr, a locomotive fireman, was the first witness called and he testified he was present at the Hermitage the night the fatal quarrel took place. He was standing ten feet from Stone and thirty feet from Mose when the dispute arose. Some words passed between the men and then he saw Moss pick up a rock and remark ss he did so that he would keep it "for a case of necessity," or for further orders," or words to that effect He then saw Moss throw the rock toward Stone, Taylor and Wilson and as he did so he heard Moss say something, but witness could not catch the ' language used. Stone then approached Moss and the fight was started. After some blows had been struck Moss retreated behind his friend, Dick Slater, who bad now appeared on the ecene and was divested of hie hat and coat prepared to enter the fray. Stones friends demurred to Slater entering the fight as he was too big for Stone. Stone again approached Moss, they clinched and went to the ground, the former being on top. At thin stage James Hancock interfered in an effort to atop the fight. Walter S. Wilson theh caught Hancock by the throat and pulled him away and the witness then interfered in behalf of Wilson. At this moment Stone called i out. Tin cut," and hostilities ceased. Stone was at once taken to the saloon where Seymour Clark and Hancock endeavored to staunch the flow of blood. A number of persona were preaent In the saloon and offered various sttempted explanations as to how it happened, some suggesting that Stone had fallen on a stick or a stone, but Stone himself when asked made no reply. Moss, who was very much intoxicated, and had objected to being taken advantage of while In that condition, then entered the saloon and stated that he inflicted the Injury with his fists. The witness at no time during the quarrel saw a knife. Dr. J. 8. Gordon, who attended the Injured man. waa next called and described the wounds. Stone had received three stabs at the angle of tbe Jaw. One waa at the angle of tbe Jaw and went no further. Another ' went downwards and wounded the jugular vein but did not pass through it- The third wound severed the carotid artery. Hemorrhage caused by the injuries caused death and the injuries, In the physician's opinion, were made by some sharp Instrument Robert L. Edwards, who is also known as Taylor, took the stand. His story was similar to that 'related by Horr. He stated that he went to the canyon with Stone and Wilson and that they drank two bottles of beer en route. They did not stop at the Hermitage o nth way up but continued on to the Oaks where he and Wilson drank two glasses of beer and Stone one. On their return to. the Hermitage on the way up but con tin -to the dance hall when Taylor said: Come on, leta go to that dance." At - (Continued on Page 6.) |