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Show OGDEN VOL. L NO. 246. FRIDAY CITY, UTAH, MORNING. SEPTEMBER 2. PRICE FIVE Ca VTS 1904. DOUGHTY JAP I ID SAME THE GREATEST BATTLE BY THE CANDIDATE. AETER large. e Port!.. Old th. of pounding Both With tho Negro Question Before Assembled Audience Georgia In Convention. the Tokio, ScpL S, 10 a. m. The Russians began to retreat on right renter from Liao Yang early Thursday. They were thrown into great confusion while attempting to cross to the right bank of the Taitse river. The Jaimuese pursuing them vigorously, seized a Russian cannon which they used to shell the Liao Yang railway ala- tlnn. Field Marshal Oyama's right attacked a heavy force of Kns- siana in the vicinity of Heiyingtal, twelve miles northeast, of Liao o'clock Thursday. His left began the attack at dawn (Fri- Yang, day), pressing the Russians towards Tatzho. It la thought be will se- - ntll addreeeed a large party ticket He .poke in part "Sthla verely punish tbe Russians. The Japanese casualties in the Liao Yang engagement have not yet been ascertained officially. It la announced that they will not exceed ten thousand. campaign Ike Democratic the Miionai leader, have prostituted demand- of Democracy, and are that they be blindly followed, ip the fact that they have every principle of Democracy. follow the Will the real Democrat, . aine rather than the principle. we mu.t la the south we ere told Wall atreet ml, mil to the aunrender to aouth iMtauie of the nigger.' The khouid demand to know the facta about aland on Judge Parker. How does he this alleged negro question? la hla from that of petition nt all different roumtcU? If o. in what respect? reThe (oath should demand explicit before ply to the following questions It rotes for him upon the presumption that he differs from Roosevelt on the of -- re One, would you negro question: fuse to eat nt the same table with Booker T. Washington? Second, would you refuse to appoint negroes to offices In the south? Third, if elected will of you refuse to receive cm terms equality at tho White House such ne- Booker at Bishop Turner gro Washington and T. Thomas Fortune? Fourth, do you approve the mixed schools of New York, Inaugurated under G rarer Cleveland, In which social equality is practically made n matter vt com puli toe? Fifth, If such schools black children and white children are educated together are n good thing tar your native state of New York, would they be e good thing fur Georgia and South Carolina? If not why not? Why did national Democratic lead- en surrender to Belmont and Wall street continuing. Hr. Watson said: "Senator John W. Daniel of Vlr-gial- a, let the cat out of the bag when in the committee on resolutions, that he was tired of being In . he declared Ihe minority-"Party names to me are nothing. doctrine la every thing. I call The spoB all Jeffersonian Democrat! kelp me make this fight against two Republican parties, headed Roosevelt and Parker. What do wed with two parties committed Wall to the by we to Let us have one for the street? people." The address was delivered at the rioslng session of the State convention the Georgia Populists which met Into afternoon, selected elector and "worsed the nomination of Mr. Wat- tor the presidency. , WILL NOT GO OUT. Btle. Mont., Sept. 1. There ! no Butte butchm going out P.P.Ihetle strike in obedience y? Jo Ihe cau of President Donnelly of union, said one of the I rnmiaent members of the Butte after the adjourn-o- f "1. that organisation ?wr rnlon has no connectiontonight. with JWiwlly i organization. We were wiihdS? :Uh. thal ,a,l0r un,on but a year ago." to tor STARTED JAPAN. Yn,vVi'sh- - s,pt- Nippon Kani&nawa Ifam put to y for Japan. She took 6,700 PTln- rtpsllv uf irKi'YbpinK nail. b0,t- w rp Pif?r' tanrhinery and leath- ree.nl PMP88WnKcra- - maln,y embarked on the Kan- - ! J? sea PAYs penalty TODAY. CVllai,l'lI,a- - 8ePL 1. Charles C. at tha 8tat fn7.hOInorrow moInff at S m.J n,,irdr of Leila Page .exPCUted it ,or tstion ania'hMlarlt boppd Up wel1 "'H tonight, Tbe BID 8opt- - 2 ' - , Jaiwrtod. 'min,,?-Sppt- ! The em-Ma- y ,ftav5 for Warsaw KaV farewp1 to the tt-Rt'tl- c JtaTe for In.pcrt the i;,0 . final,;. m,io?' "toe Yir - - - a. mf ha Gorman C S' hag burned hre an here "arch for tSBhein8 is?- ;?rrylng Ue,,t Lieutenant - ! I - R 1 : bSl A N. ARTILLERY ,Frid anilWy itwim , hi- XeCU- FAREWELL To After STRUGGLE DEATH - DEPEW REPLIES TO HILL IN. STEAD OF MAKING SPEECH AS IN. at and running De German and who left Hnffba m f August. lunkHt'lnian aw nothing of hopp for he Itw cJuver,ania Gllgeuheim been aban- - uLl STAND THE PRESSURE populistIS presiden. UNTIED " tTl Ste HIM IN Battle of Liao Yang Finds the Army of the Mikado in Command of the Situation and the Russians Retreating- - -- Instant Pursuit Begun and Severe Fighting Again in Progress This Morning Battle Scarred Veterans Astounded at the Endurance of Both Armies, a Conflict Waged with Intense Fierceness for Three Days and Nights Tokio Mad With Joy; St. Petersburg Prostrated. TENDED. Up Uttar Fallacy of Dmnocratlo Attack Upon Senator Green and the Wall Concerning the , Show Philippine. Binghamplon, N. Y.. SepL !.& aior Depew departed from hia original Intention to deliver a nun political at the Droomenrn Fair at Whit-nry- 'n peei-i- i Point today and devoted bis address to a reply to Hill's peerh of yesterday, mado at the bams place. He said In part: In regard to the magaslue article whkh was by Mr. Hill here yesterday 1 desire to say, flrat of all, that I have had tha honor to know Senator George K. Green for 35 yean and that I know him to lie generrsab noble d man very pubspirited lic spirited and entertaining. I never wrote nor said anything to President ..ouaevclt on the subject of the Senator's Indictment and I did not know of It until it occurred. 1 did not make any attempt to prevent the Indictment. I have never threatened a public offiner or la fact, the private dtisen in my life to Induce him to do or not to do anything be thought waa right and after my fifty year of experience 1 should certainly not begin with President Roosevelt. "Brother HU1 advocated the giving of tha FHlpinoa complete Independence. In the flrat plain we hold the Island by the name title and processes by which we have secured Louisiana from France, Florida from Spaln New Mexico, California and Arizona from Mexico and Alaska from Russia. I do not know how he could give them up auy more than we could these pneaesn Iona Tbe United States haaqflie highest moral duty to retain them. The possession of the islands upon the opening up of the Orient to trade to all countries which will follow the clue of the Japanese-Ruseia- n war makes them of Incalculable value to the United States and of equal value to any of tho great European powers u wa let them go." dim-usee- Thursdays news from tho ocat of The Inference drawn from this diswar closed with tha receipt of two patch waa that Liao Yang had been dispatches having a most significant evacuated, that city lying on tha left character as bearing on tha domination bank of tho river. of Manchuria at the dose of tho presNothing to confirm this was received right bank of tho Taitse river had treat caused Intense excitement" Late Thursday night the St. Petersburg correspondent of tha Associated Prase obtained an opinion from tho ent conflict until several hours later, when a dis- war office that tha withdrawal to tho Tho first cams from the Associated patch from the Associated Press cor- right bank of tho Taitse river became Press correspondent at SL Petersburg, respondent at SL Petersburg dated necessary so that the Russians would filed there at 10:16 p. m, and said SepL 2nd and timed at 1 :26 a m.. (Fri- bo able to repel blow in that directhat General Kuropatkin had with- day) morning said that Tha news of tion and that General Kuropatkin's drawn his whole army to the right the evacuation of Liao Yang and the movement was the carrying out of a bank of the Taitoo river so as to moot a re-General Kurokle flanking movement withdrawal of the Russian army to tho well defined idea rather than The stubbornness of tbe defenders. whole history of warfare tells of no such bombardments, no such carnage Day after anese of tbe Russian outposts when and no such persistency. General Kuropatkin gave the Drat day the fight has been resumed at dayorder to withdraw, was probably due break and kept up With hardly a momto their anxiety to keep the Russians enta intermission until after nightsouth of Liao Yang until General Ku- fall. War scarred veteran scarce believe rokl should be able to strike from the the stories which come from the seat northeast. General Kuropatkin, howof war and declare that it is byond ever. saw the trap and cleverly avoidhuman endurance for an army to fight ed it without respite for a week, each day YESTERDAY'S FIGHT- ; ING FIERCEST. of which has exceeded Its predecessor In intemdty of struggle and carnival, of hour to the filing this dispatch Up slaughter. Day after day tbe bous-and- s details the not war office has the given of dead bestrewing t he battlefield but 1st. of the fighting of September to be removed. The Japanese have exceedit Is believed that this fighting Invented new methods to Incined In fiercenese that of any previous have erate the heaps of dead comrades, reday. the ashes for the honora of The absence of press telegrams from moving burial In Japan. Liao Yang on September 1st, aroused The wounded present a moat serious suspicious that changes of importance problem, as they tax the transportawere proceeding which the military tion on both aides to the utcensors did nut wish to be made most.capacities known. The most difficult problem which RAILROADS DAMAGED. hna occurred ia the bringing up uf supA telegram from the Associated plies of food and ammunition to every Press correspondent at Mukden filed, point of the fighting line, which exat 9:27 on the evening of September 1, tends from ten to twenty-mile- s. states that tbe train service between Never has such a bombardment been Mukden and Liao Yang has been in- known. An eye witness cbsjhe battle does not terrupted, but the dispatch of Vafangnw told the Associated Press mention whether the telegraphic that many officers suffered nervous communications are oiien. prostration following the terrible roar FIRST ATTEMPT UNSUCCESSFUL. According to a dispatch from Liao Yang General Kurokl made hla first HAVE attempt to erase the Taitse river late In the evening under cover of a heavy bombardment of the extreme Russian left The Japanese artillery which HAIL has been firing uninterruptedly for 14 hours, ceased about daylight tills morning and resumed about II o clock to conceal Kurokis preparations for TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN MUKcrossing the river. These preparations DEN AND LIAO YANG IS INnecessitated the establishment of a TERRUPTED." pontoon bridge, as the. river waa not fordable lower than Sakankanwan-tn- n, and the pontoons must have been Regarded in London ae the Moat Imfloated down the stream. portant News From the Far East, The efforts of the Japanese to cross and Means a Seizure. the river on August SO were not successful, and General Kurokl therefore ordered a portion of his army Xo ford It at Sakankankwanlun. Mukden, SepL 1 The train eer- KUKUPATKIN HELPLESS. between Mukden and Liao vice General Kuropatkin waa unable to The roade is interrupted. Yang prevent tbe passage, on account of the are impassable. distance from Liao Yang, about 20 e e miles, but for the same reason the Japanese were unable to bring the forces TMa morning's London, Sept. which gained the right bank immedinewspapers comment upon the Assocately into action.- Press dispatch from Mukrign say Kuropatkin heard of the passage of iated train service between the Taiise at Sakankankwantun alter ing thal ibuLiao Yang Is interrupted six o'clock on the evening of August Mukden and 31st and Immediately gave orders for and that the roads are impassable, as the luost important news from the hia men to fall back on the outer positions. This move ia explained by tbe scene of hostilities in the Far East, and desire to collect a atfong force with eav that thie is only one meaning which to repeal a flanking movement of' it, that the Japanese have seized Liao Yaug and the railway from the northeast. ing the tables upon liia foe. Tokio, Sept. 1, S p. m. Tokio rings with shouts and cheers fur the victory of Uao Yang. Lantern bearing crowds awing through the streets and surge around the staff offices, shouting Banzai." The details of today's fighting are scanty. It la only known that at dawn today General Okua army was hurled against the Russian right center on the southern line and to that the Ruselaua were forced abandon their lino and positions and retreat Their pursuit la now In progress.. The result of this pursuit and the result of the fierce battle waged on the eastern line, where General Kurokl la assailing the force which haa long screened Liao Yang, together with the abandonment of the Russian line, exright center on the aAuthern here the poses the Russian left. But Russian force la so heavy that it may pouihly be able to protect and extricate itself. The question of the occupation of Uao Yang by the Japanese la In doubt The official dispatches do npt make mention of such occupal-tiobut It la aaaumed that the RusLiao sians are withdrawing through Yang and that the Japanese possibly occupied it late today. Tonight no estimates are obtainable of the losses on either side. Field Marshal Oyama describes his losses In the morning assault as heavy. The early success of the attack was souiewbat unexpected on account of the strength of the Russian and the nature of the Russian defenses. It la confidently believed that Field Marshal Oyama will press the pursuit with desperate vigor and the Inflict on General Kuropatkin moat crushing blow possible. It Is believed that hia trophies will prove valuable. It la the opinion here that the Russians were not able to carry many guns with them and that they were forced to abandon or destroy vast quantities of stores. AVOIDS TRAP. The determined pursuit by the JapKUROPATKIN . n JMSE IHE - BT. PETERSBURG DISAPPOINTED. SL Petersburg, Sept 1. 1:26 a. jn. The news of the Japanese occupation of Uao Yang and tbe withdrawal of the Russian army to tbe right hank of the Taitse river reached only a small section of the people at 8t. Petersburg at a late hour and caused Intense exand disappointment The citement majority of the Inhabitants retired to rest believing that Russian arms had again been successful and that the Japanese attacks had been repelled. Ugly suspicions however, have been received during the day, owing to the absence of press telegrams from Uao Yang, leading to the belief that the communications bad been cut by Gen. Kurokl. NOW IN BTRONGER POSITION. The following statement was obtained by the Associated Press from the War Office at 10 o'clock Thursday night: General Kuroki's army crossed In force to the right bank of the Taitse river and it therefore became necessary for the Russians to be In a position to repeal a blow In this direction. In view of this development In the operations. General Kuropatkin derld- ed to abandon bis positions on the left bank and to concentrate hls whole army on the other side of tbe river. This position Is the strongest both In character and in site. The great Issue will be finally decided there. By withdrawing to this position the Russian army avoids the danger of being divided by the river and enjoys the advantage of compactness. General Kuropatkln's move, therefore. is not to be considered as a retreat but rather as the carrying out of a well defined idea. JAPANESE IN UAO YANG. The withdrawal of tbe Russians to tbe right bank involved the abandonment of J Iso Yang which Is situated on the left hank. The Japanese too advantage of this to occupy the city, but the sternest part of tbe fighting is still before them, nnless General decides at the last hour to again fall back to the northward. It la more than likely, however, that he finish. The will decide to fight to-cards are all In hla favor. It I believed, now that he has the Japanese divid- ed by tbe river, thus effectually turna cVttlng )of rtV'road communication which may deprive General Kurepat-kiof an opportunity to retreat to his As more northern base at Mukden. pointed out in th SL Petersburg dispatch, tho Mukden correspondent dost not mention whether tho telegraph communications aro open, A dispatch from Tokio fllad there at 2 p. m. Thursday aai that popular estimates of the date of the fail of Pert Arthur inclined to the laat week In September. Tha same dispatch points out with notable lack of comment that tha Japanese took advantage of General Kuropatkln's withdrawal to occupy tha city of Liao Yang. The ascend dispatch which may have a significant bearing on the campaign n . ia f that filed at Mukden at t:27 p. m. Thursday, stating that the train sen vice between Mukden and Liao Yang was interrupted, and it may mean tha of the artillery, and one military attache had to be Invalidated home for the same reason. Yet the artillery fire at Vafaugow was far inferior in Intemdty to thal at Uao Yang. DESPERATE FIGHTING. Tokio, SepL 1, 6 p. m. Additional details of tho fighting at Liao Yang, which aro arriving here, clearly Indi- cate its desperate character. The Japanese have changed the method uf numbering their armlos since their union, calling General army the right. General Nodzus the cento and General Uku's the left. A portion of tbe left column of the right wing, after dislodging the Russians, occupying an eminence north of Hsuchlakou toward evening on Aug, 2nh was exposed to violent attack by tbe reinforced Russians, and retired during the night to a ridge south at Hsuchlakou. where they held their Tbe Russians prepared to position. follow up their attack but desisted. The right and center of the right wing with Its main strength commenced a movement at 11 O'clock on the night of August 301 h, missing the Taltso river near Licntaowan and advanced toward Huangkufen to Tr.ua-tubut details of the movement have not been rejiorted. The Russian artillery fire against the right column of the Japanese center abated somewhat yesterday. The Infantry fight continued unabated. The Japanese held their positions. JAPANESE BEATEN BACK. The left column of the center waa vigorously engaged from Wednesday morning throughout the day, but Ita efforts to dislodge the Russians failed e 2.' j j Louise of Saxe-Cobur- g. that Thereupon the enemy in the south for the flight of ihe prince and Macla-alcYang commenced to retreat. be wa a,i agent of Lieut. Fount Our armies are now pursuing him.1' Keglevlrht. with whom she eloped nf Liao h at lup-om- e BUSY IN PARAGUAY. . Buenos Ayres. Sept. 1. The Par- aguayan revolutionists have cap- - tured Villa Conception and 40 men with arms and ammunition. The revolmionlete now refuse all the terms offered them by the gov- ernment and an attack on the cap- Vital Is believed to be imminent " Argentine has refused to recog- nine tbe insurgents ae belligerents Paper received today from As- unelon report that all the public " schools ere dosed and that owing to the scarcity of food the price of bread and biscuits ia one dollar per kilogram. . Lin-evltc- h, ai-tae-k Executes Romantic Escape from her Luxurious Prison and is Supposed to Have Joined the Man of Her Choice Saxe-Cobu- rg Badolster, Saxony, Sept. 1. Princess it now appeal, of Louise Mukden. SECOND ATTEMPT SUCCESSFUL. alone from her hotel at 2 escaiied Correspondent h of tbe Daily ChronThe Japanese repeated tbe attempt assert that u'clock Tuesday morning. She wa to throw pontoons across the Taitse icle and the inily MallLiao Yang Joined under the trees in the hotel near Liao Yang during tbe night of the Japanese occupied i Thursday. garden hv two women and a man. a cover of under 31st. again August e official confirmation of They entered a carriage and no is There beia and this attempt bombardment, driven swiftly away in the direcwere offibut latest the these statements, Severe been have successful. to lieved cial dispatches to tbe Japanese lega- tion nt Munich. A man named W. fighting my therefore be exiiected Imtion here reports the capture of the Grat;, who tfaa stopping at the hotel, mediately northeast of the city. heights soiiibwe-- t of Liao Yang at has not appeared since Monday night JAPS MAY REGRET MOVE. Ii is supposed he provided the mean dawn Tuesday. This dispatch adds: The action of the Japanese com- mander in throwing a force across tho rivr in the fare of a strong enemy Is considered to be extremely rash, and the position of this force, isolated from tbe main Japanese army by a deep desperate. river, may easily WILL NOW USE GUNBOATS. A correspondent of the Associated the Press at Vladivostok telegraph Japanese are relying on aid of the gunboat flotilla for future operations egainst Liao Yang and Mukden. The gunboats, the correspondent says, have not yet materialized, but In any case they would be In no position to render aid to a force on the right bank in time of need, because they would be unable to run the gauntlet The of the forts at Liao Yang. strongest forts are situated on the right bank, where the Russian army is now concentrated. GREATEST OF MODERN BATTLES. The fighting at Liao Yang has beaten all records for the desperate valor of the assailants aud the invincible force tho besiegers of Port Arthur, the correspondent adds, but Field Marshal Oyama, commander-tn-chto- f of the Japanese forces In Manchuria, waa satisfied that they were not required there and therefore sent then north. RU88IAN AID FROM MUKDEN. A special dispatch from SL Petersburg, which la not confirmed from nny other source, reports that General from Vladivostok, ia within two daya march of Mukden with 30,- 000 troops. CHINA WATCHING DEVELOPMENT The Siandard'a Tokio correspondent aaya thal dispatches received them from Pekin are to the effect that China la constantly increasing her military forces on tbe neutral aide of the Uao river and thal she has ordered General Mn to firmly enforce the rights and duties of neutrality In tho event of the Riiaslana being defeated at Uao Yang and attempting to enter neutral territory. TRIED TO BLOW UP RURIK. The Dally Mall a Shanghai correspondent says that Chaplain Okunot-zsebinoof the Russian cruiser Ru-rlwhich was recently sunk by the Japanese, has arrived there. The chaplain aaya thal after n vain attempt to repair the Rurik'a rudder Junior Lleut. Ivanoff. who succeeded to tbe command of the Rurtk, tried to blow up the vessel, but that ail the fuses were destroyed anil that he then opened the seacocks. The wounded, he says, were placed on cork mattresses and thrown overboard, the other survivors followed and the cruiser sank, turning completely over. KUROPATKIN IN PEKILOU8 POSITION. Commenting upon tbe situs lion in the Far East, all the morning newsto papers .discuss the problem as whether General Kuropatkin win be able to extricate his forces or whether Field Marshal Oyama will succeed in completing tbe victory by enveloping in the morning, by which time she and destroying tbe Russian army. Tha consensus of opinion Is that General probably was far toward the Swiss Kuropatkin' position is most perilfrontier. Grata first had a room on the third ous. Tbe absence of telegrams from Uao fbior of the hotel, but Momlav moved to one on the ground floor with a pri- Yang, together with tbe news that the vate entrance into the garden. It la railway is interrupted, the newspapers as showing that General presumed that the princes used this regard has begun his retreat too exit and It ia certain that Frau Schubert, of Dresden, engaged tbe car- laie. ON PORT ARriage at a local livery stable. Neither STILL AT WORK THUR. I he driver nor the equipage have Interesting reports come from Tien returned. Tain and Che Foo that the Japanese Beyond the outskirts of the town have effected a landing of tnxipa and some of the occupants of the carriage the capture of two small forts near were transferred to an automohllo and s Tail, id a mile the carriage rontlnued 11 rapid flfgbL Tigers from Fort Arthur and near tha lightprobably to ennfuso those pursuing., house at Lianti Mountain, and that the It. is likely thal the princess was on-vttack Is being vigorously pressed. of those taken in the aiitomuhilf The chauffeur drove, the machin JAPANESE PREDICT through several roads leading in difNAVAL SUPREMACY. ferent directions from the , town, doubtless to further create doubt aa Vladivostok. SepL 1. The ambitious to what road the prlnceM really took. at Japan are freely disrusaed by An automobile similar to that which hopes Japanese prisoners here. All of them left Badelater was traced to Hof, forty are confident that naval supremacy miles away. Whether th princess will enable Japan to dictate term of took the lam. train there for Munich peace, which will include, according to or proceeded in an automobile is un- them, the possession of Port Arthn. known. The reports reaching here to Dalny. Korea. Sqglialien. Kamtehalka the effect that she bad been seen at and the commander Island, leaving Asch, Bohemia, and that rooms had Manchuria In Russian hands been engaged for her In Paris are con. OUTLINE OF VICTORIES. sidered in.probsble. The Japanese prisoners claim a first k, two-hors- ) ' ff eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee i Tbe right column of tbe left wing resumed the attack Wednesday morning. Several assaults proved futile and the Japanese troops were beaten back finally. Being reinforced, they again advanced and secured a position nt noun on an eminence southwest of llslnlintun. This ground proved to be n vantage point from which a final and effective charge was delivered nt dawn Thursday, bringing ibn first victory, Tho center column, after repulsing the Russians, in a night attack, pressed the Rusaiana against the railway with a portion of The leit column and surceedcd in repulsing a scries of assaults. Tho Russians continued to hold an eminence west of Shoushanpao and defied all efforts to dislodge them. The eminence was finally takun by atorm Thursday morning. Tbe entire left wing with all Ilia force continued against the Russian line thronghnul Wedneaday. At 3 o'clock In the afiernoon a force of Russians appeared five mllea west of Shoushanpao which tha Japanese reserves attacked. I ate Wednesday night a telegram waa dlsiiatehed to tbe general staff al Tokio saying that the left wing with all Its guns would renew Ihe and afterward charge against the enemy's position. REINFORCEMENTS NOT NEEDED. London,, Sept. 2 The Dally Mall's Kupantae correspondent, telegraphing under date of August 31, says that 36.01)0 Japanese are en route from Dalny to llal Cheng by railway. Originally they were intended to reln- - open-bande- In iS97. The princes, closely a' tended liy her went physician and a lady of the court , She to the theatre Monday evening. was nimaied1 and seemingly enjoyed haa enjoyed everythq music, as she weeks she has been thing for tha three of the permitted to leave the seclusion where sanitarium plcraon, at Cuswige, really she was a prisoner of state. She had been provided with attractive ccstur-e- a for this reappearance into tbe world and she waa allowed once more to wear the splendid Jewels which were part of her dowery when she married Prince Philip of Saxe-Cobur- After the theatre the princess and her little party had supper in one of her nximr.. She said good night al jl:3u and her guardian were no! awlre of her departure until 7 o'clock Kur-oiiatk- in three-quarter- -- (Continued on Page Eight) (iqSia 8a uo panaiiuuo) |