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Show MJS90UD MESS IfUBiTB JEBTtt. 1M I WE4I8EK F33EC4ST MI VOL. I. NO. 329. .CGDEN CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY MOANING. NOVEMBER 24. TODAY AND IRiDW PRICE FIVE CENTS 1934. 1 Nov. 23. Wai-hingto- cl Hi.p'ests- - the actions of s.ime names Mr. i,ad, the American cinis il at Alexanorrna, in r noned in have lowered tne Antei'.i an flag in the itumiPMie during a recent brat loo in honor nt the recent of the sulian. It U said the officials and people of Alexandre!- ta regard the action of me consul as su Insult and it Is extiei-ieat I l.e stale department that a complaint on the subject will rrarh here soon from CnitKtautlmiple. hhuulil the Turkish government request tl.e recall of Mr. Davis, the state depart men i would comply with the request and he probably would be given another usiigu-nicuntil it should be known that hia action was unwarranted. OF 1 I Members Returning to Their Home- s- Great and Full Support Was Pledged to the Program Adopted. Enthusiasm A t ll mcet- - were Petersburg, Nov. 23 The Zemstvos is ended, the mem-,KliI Sm of the Jiaiieraing to there homes h d in g few days news of their an hot I to will be inread throughout. Russia, Sea. the to Caspian Finnish Gulf, mountains pgiwd and the Ural 1 In high spirits, cou- -i .1 litre are leaving iiumedi-l- i Mil that no matter what the i resit!", the days, November 19th y Vjj mark a turning point in t Russian history. i Th Rubicon la crossed. No ret rear is (he uuauimoua senli- j. possible." striving the workers. y VALUABLE RINGS STOLEN. St. i.ottis. Nov. 23. Two handsome diamond rings and one pearl ring belonging to Prince Fmshtmi of Japan, and a beautifully embossed emblem belonging to A. Sato, grandmaster of ceremonies at the Japanse court, the gift and decoration of a union mouan'h to Mr. Sato, have been stolen from the apartments of the royal visitors at the Buckingham club while the prince and hia suite were visiting the world's fair grounds. The missing jewels were f.i'ni. Die favorite ornaments of the Mikado's edi-i- n At last nights Joint meeting of cousin and, besides aggregating in and literary men, the Zemstvos, value. It is said, between $4,H0 and and the emhuaiasm prevailed were regarded as priceless heir ri e (rest jso-i- t mlfst support was pledged to theSvla-looms by the prince and hia family. Minister f Interior tm has Informed the Zem-- I SETS ASIDE DIVORCE. ! lit s that he will lay the memorial I Miiutiona liefore ihe emperor, and Omaha. Neb., Nov. 23. Judge Sears I n bile lie made no promisee regarding in the district court today granted the personal recommendalions, the are natiafled that tlio setting aside of the divorce granted sjnutvoistH kriw will not leave the emperor in Mrs. Sebulun H. Schafer. The woman's 'lie dark breadth, former husband, Paul Schafer, is the regarding the at. Oakland, California. The k tmgth and irort of the movement. postmaster decree waa granted on the ground that Uiberw is an Intimation that the emper-- i the divorce waa secured liy misreprei'bas already been aJvised of lie a itlii of the meeting and has expressed sentation. The woman has been mari:BMlf as unfavorable to it. Accord-Hgto- a ried to Herbert W. Back for two years, story whleh is told wilh much the marriage occurring but a few days L nimiEtantialliy. M. Pabiedonnnweri, after the granting of the divorce. The came into prominence through h. mU t have eonteneJ himself with cose Schafer's arrest on a charge of kidnapin expression of this opinion without, Ida own children. .niiering any advice. Tbereftivi, the ping ll'ory sore, the emperor called a family at which opinion was practlr-uj- y h Boston, Nov. 23. The full bench of united against yielding an iota. the Massachusetts Supreme court defor her when asked be young empress cided today that it is not a crime for '.es is mid to have replied briefly: the aeller of Intoxicating liquors, inI do not wish to see my son blown tended for delivery into a or town, to transport them by one garb stories iiowever, partake of the city not carrying on a regular and lawful, pars of common gossip In St. Peters expreaa business. Furthermore it was rj and although repeated in well in held that the carrier, though not a rimed circles, may have little fannda-- i members of the Munt-- i regular expreaa man is equally free to . Prominent transport liquors without the act bepal Town round la, are arrangiitf a ing considered a crime. jiHlng of representatives of all ihe Hndpal cities of Russia In order that ie municipal ties may lake action in Vippurt of the representatives of the for Juil population. Authorisation If relneb a Hireling will be naked. ied, the meeting will be held priVate- - WILL ASK FOR RESTRAINING ORDER Officiala of the Iron Molders Union Will Go to the Courts to Get Fair Dealing. -- $5,-00- y Vi, I AMERICAN ihe The Svlatopolk-MIrsk- y is land. Ihe charge against siding and shelling . in the Mysterious .lest ruction or prnM-riyThe warrant for hia arresi was sworn to liy President Henry flnsriger of tha Eureka Foundry company, a personal friend of the aceiiKcd. A detective from this riry started for Cleveland late this afternoon to bring Valentine back to this city. Another detective went to Detroit fur Thomas Bracken who la charged with complicity in llie murder of n Samuel AVeuklev", a moulder here October 7th. The rate's of Fred Ruuhauaer, Jr., Fred Katihauser, Sr., and John Hook, Joeqph Holkiwell Joseph E. Valentine, were called in police court today and on motion of their attorneys their trial waa net for December Mth, the cases of Edward W. Trainer and Thomas Bracken were act for next Saturday. It waa learned tonight that the officials of the Iron Moulders union would ask the courts here for a restraining order against the employers association to prohibit them from continuing tha investigation in the conspiracy cane oik tbe ground that the rase bah reachr a point where it is persermlon rather than an inveaiigatiou. Vali-min- e non-unio- PLACED d Sacking 6oneession of Public Lands on Which a School of Fine Arts newspaiier. Zemstvo memorial and resolti-Int- tt were presented to Minister of the atstlor O., Nov. 23. NATIONAL LARGE ORDER INSTITUTE has InMructlona forbidding the nrreet faewspaper men for articles printed "Prince no additional arrests were made here today in connection with the allag'ed plot of tha striking moulders to destroy the Eureka foundry with dynamite. The day passed quietly at the found.vrirs. The chief interest centered in the arresi of Joseph Valentine, president of the iron moulders of North America in Clcve Cincinnati, is to be Erected. Jiisaft er- Sviatopolk-Mirsk- y as. The Municipal Paris, Nov. Paris is considering the application of an organization entitled The American National Institute, whlcn la seeking a concession of public lands on which a school of fine arts la to be erected. The names of many prominent Americana are among the patrons. The council referred the application to a committee which le favorably diapoaed but baa not yet reported. 23. coun- cil of DELEGATES INSPECT NAVY YARD ii tbs Evening N Large That the Attendance Waa Overflow Meetings Were Held. To the Building of 100 Locomotives for tho Harriman Lines. Philadelphia, Nov. 23. An order for tbe building of 100 locomotives for the Harriman lines has been placed with a large firm in this city. Besides confirming that tbe order had been received, members of the firm declined to say for which of the Harriman ro&la they are to be built. Ihe same firm recently booked an order for fifty locomotives for the Ran Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt ljtke railroad in which E. H. Harriman ia Interested. ton Francisco, Nov. 23. "toon of the convention No regular of Ike Ameri-- u Confederation of Labor waa held toll. luitead, the delegates spent the V la an excursion on San Francisco They were the guests of the labor aSBlutinna of the cities of San Frau-amaVallejo. After viewing various on the hay the delegates proced-- i i Vsliejo. where they disembarked ii were tendered a luncheon. About wer addressed bv Hon. Jas. Roon- K the mayor of Vallejo; president of Though the Heavy Defws'i rn Each Difficult Side Make it Extreire-for Either to 'Assume the Offensive. - 2 St. Pciernburg, Nov. 2 a. in i !., posi-Inliiagain point of a big battle So!,,., oi n;h,en. The Japanese, according t uu nffi.-iu- l tiacK. rciMirt, have received a eei. in f lie vtciniiy of Sintsin.bi, j which nd odf i toland Navy Yard. Gontpers replied for the Federation of Labor. luncheon the delegates were President After Entire Villiages Have Been Destroyed and Crops of Fruits and Cereals Ruined. oa a tour of inspection of the yard. where they were enabled to rT ,n intimate knowledge of Ihe Maxatlan, Mexico. Nov. facilities of the place as received from Tugio Tegucigalpa, capirepairing and shipbuilding tal of Honduras, state that a hurricane haa devastated the northern shores of I1', evening a great mass meeting that country. Entire villages have been tlle Alhambra theatre in j destroyed and crops of fruits and n Francisco. So large waa cereals ruined. The loss of life among k!. Jjettrndenee that it was neffaRatTry to ; tbe coaet Indiana is raid to have been raised overflow meetings. Tho are principal i ,arr. ContributionsBuffers being in various were homeless for the r" Samuel Gompcrs, n,,nc n. I. parts of the republic and the governThomas Kiii iv , W. G. Spencer and ment haa ordered a cargo of corn, rice There Wonal Dedegatea William Abraham. and beans from San Francisco. in the country as LiL. "ingaii and J. A. Fleet is fearin of famine the interior section were partPresenting tbs toilers of crops ihe third the Dominion ly ruined by storms some time ago. vicea Wlpmeni and ' I ! I fCina.i,, Nliani a fraternal Abraham, dele-Iff- it l,,e workers of n2ren,ln and 1 wnher of Parua-ph- r !! the first 2' country took -- at or Ms 's s'.mi theme the 5oeNr 01 the Britih laPlined vras operated1 . ,? Luea ,0 Ug cHIxenli-fsctiTw- a associations raid that he could , r2r nf assurances to the the United States 'tot o,.. ,bnr in England was on the, m. y wZT recently, according to the aid on behalf of the i liv W. fr waa 'to dW Vir ,SorietJr sent out on financial aid was I1.01 ?tomnlng the organization k exist. toy Bti kn11, Fraternal must Dele- - f England, Lthe 8rowth end meth-Biltii.T.ftor ovemenu In the United States. Is3,M Goinprg president of to of ,,r c,owd wm n appeal to tbe lf,ls of tohtT ,0 ald tUe hMtg wh0 to to th?Ci ih Ij-b- l i apiiareuity u.ie make a mrniiig The public hci,' hi areoly niovciueui. bciieie it itomible thar ihe u,i great armies can winter It's tl.au a rifle aiuii (tiKtani from eacli other, timugli the heavy defenses on each e:Je make It extremely difficult for ritiu r 1 assume the otfeuslve. It ia bslien'd. U .weNcr, that it the deadlock ia tu he brokm. General KuropuiklD will I"1, llclil Marshal Oyauta lake the inltanvc. as tho ItuwHlnna hare the better or the present position, namely, a auwng line or and liebinit them, making winter quarters, whore the Russian reinforcements are now for an advan.v next spilng. The Jaimneae also are being airongly reinforced. The river ace already frozen sufficiently to permit oi the movement of artillery and coinnusaiariai (omlilioun so that the country better adapted to a Japanese M'lvance than during the summer. 1 de-fen- ratia-tactor- Iamdon, Nov. 23. -- A riU touch from Tukio tu the Standard repuna increasing desert inn a of Russian Hues. Hie Russian defenders on the front of Port Arthur no longer fire on the approach of the Japanese warshlpa. A Japanese correspondent, writing to the Morning Post betray growing anxiety concerning the Russian Second Pacific squadron which probably is due to the strength of Port Arthur's reHe points out the Insisting power. consistency of Egypt in permitting Rojestvensky's ships to coul when not going to a Russian port. The Daily Telegraph's at Port Arthur says the Russian warships, when berthed will be completely isolated from other shipping and that they will lie allowed to lake on water cnm-atondei- KILLED BY THREE MEN. San Irancisco.vNov. 23. Un Ullin, mate of the schooner Empire, was taken to the emergency hcspifal today and suffering from a fractured skull fractured riba. Before losing Ullifl t)c tho street Bfcid b I6- by three was attacked on men, one of whom knocked him don he with a sandbag. When he recoveredfrom found that 112 had been taken home He managed to reach the friend and was transferred of d hoPital wftere fce ternoon. LAND FRAUD CASKS. land fraud case of tte government against bra Horace McKinley and oh.TSleDal down into a protracted r so Few witnesses have been testified aa to amln.,1 and this merely docuIha genuineness of various offlc.al would seem to the layman which ments but to have little bearing on the case, Portland, Ore.. Nov. 23. The se.-lj-- which the prosecution asserts is the foundation of tbe chain of evidence on which it expects to secure final conviction. Each step in fought stubbornly by the defense and hour after hour Is consumed with argument pro and rcn. Six witnesses weie examined to day, the moat prominent of whom waa Coni'n-eninilinger Herman or Oregon who waa formerly commissioner of ihe general land office. Mr. Herman's testimony related principally to a visit of Senator Kltcfaeil in Japan with a woman whose name the oongresafan did not recollect to the general land office for the purpose of endeivoring to secure the expediting for Puter of several land matlcra pending in the commission. ANOTHER ILL-FATE- D STEAMER ARRIVES Port 'lowDxerd. Wash., Nov. 23. Another vlotlm of the recent, terrific storms off the coast arrived here today. The vessel la the schooner Mathew Turner from Iloilo, Oct. 27th. The vessel had a good passage until reaching the coast off her destination, Grays Harbor, when the storm nearly wrecked her, tearing out her fore and main sails and breaking the beams of both. Before the wreckage could be shipped clear the vessel waa nearly driven ashore. Heading northward, a almilar experience overtook the Turner off the mouth of the Columbia river. The erhooner was finally forced to try for the Siraitg of Juan .le Fm-a- . which she Bucreedtd In entering. The Turner will remain l.ci e fur orders. flow badly off for otfirera and how seriously this condition may affeci ihe navy and the nation ia told in the auntiul YYasliiugton, Nov. 23 CORNELL New York. Nov. 23. Cornell s sturdy athleie ome more laptiued the inter e.dcgaie chiiiiipinnship in the run today over t lit iiuirae between I'elliam Mauor at wi ion and the home of the New York Athletic elub on Travers Island, in Iaing island Sound. Five teams made up of 34 runners representing Cot nell. Columbia, Harvard, Yale and tho university of IVunsylvautu took part iu the contest, and of the seven men who carried the Ithacan colors, four linished first In the five placea. winning tin? tusiora with a total of 12 points. E. T. Newinan of Cornell led the big field during the greater part of the journey and fir.iNhed fully od yards In front of ilia team mate, C. F. McCoffin, who in turn waa a like dial a nee ahead of W. .1. Hall of YaJ. Today's contesi was the sixth event of its kind whirh lira taken place under the aiifciiicca of the intercollegiate cross country aiwociat tun of amateur athlete of America and Cornell baa won five times. Following is tits result by points: Cornell first with 12; Pennsylvania, second wilh 41; Yale (bird, with Cl; Harvard fourth, with 52 and Columbia last with 73. MURDERERS CAPTURED HIS SCHOONER TURNS TURTLE. A remark- able romance was abruptly termiiuai'd today when Russell P. Drake, alias James Russell laiwe II Miller, a paroled convict who has been living In Columbus since his release wm returned to the Ohio penitent isry for violating his parole. Miss K. Schnemer, an accomplished musician of Cincinnati, he married under the name of Miller last week. No intimation of 1 tie fact that her husband was a paroled convict reached the wife until yesterday when a statement signed liy Drake's Charles K. Heidelberg of Bowling Green, Ohio, revealing the fact, was published in the newspapers. It was through this statement also that, the prison authorities lrarnl that Drake had violated hia parole by assuming a new name and marrying. There was a pathetic scene at the apartments of the couple at the Alhambra today when Drake was taken into custody by an oilier r from tbe prison. His wife had previously announced tier intention of remaining loyal to him and help him live down the past, but ahe was prevailed upon by her mother to return to her home in Cincinnati. Drake, whose axe Is given as 43. was o citizen of Tiffin. formerly a Ohio, where he was the agent, of a fife Insurance company. Since he was released on parole he has claimed to own and valuable mining Haims in Mexi-represented himself to be secretary of the American and Mexican Mining company of America. Jalisco, Mexico. News reacheJ d schoonBoyce, built for Laurel capitalists, turned turtle off the rapes 1 aural, Del., Nov. -- here today er, Judge that the 23. four-ma- st during the tlorm of November 13t.h and its master. Captain Manluve Kskidge, and crew of ten men were lost. The Boyce waa built at Ba h. Me., at a coal, of $50,1)00 and waa enroute to Savannah, Ga., on her maiden trip. Seattle, Nov. 23. Mlth a hole In her port ride beneai h the water line but fortunately in a water tight compartment the cable ship Burnside reach'd At. g o'clock on port tills aflernrs-ii- . the morning of Novemlmr 21st elm struck a submerged rock in Seymour Narrows. She will go in dry dock tomorrow. An error in the tide tables is given as the cause of tbe mishap. Chicago, Nor. 23. A maa giving the name ol George Weeks and who answers the description of the mysterious Dove" for whom the police of four counties have lieen searching since last Saturday as the possible murdered of Bate was arrested yonfght at Klnmnaa. a small town 30 miles west of Joliet. Tbe man was captured after a chase by posse of farmers and of- fleers from the village of Kinsman. He was taken to the town of Ransom and detective a who have been working on the case were sent for. He denied all knowledge of tbe murdi-- of Bate, but acted in a strange manner. and German navies. It is eiiprcially desirable, the report ways, "that every battleship and oilier powerful vessel requiring the greatest skill and experience for proper efficiency, should have her full quota of ultima of suitable rank; yet many of our battleships have lieutenants os navigators, practically all have lieutenants as ordnance officers and several battleships have ensigns and even midshipmen aa watch and division officers, 'this very unsatisfactory and even dangerous condition ia due to Ihe many urgent demands for ultima, the existing Inadequacy of numbers making it lnigswlbls to detail oncers of appropriate rank. The Increase ing numbers of midshipmen graduated from the naval academy in time will relieve the situation in the lower grades. Inn more are needed than existing laws ui-l- en lieulenant-commana-e- ra Because of the important part played hy loriiedo craft In the war In the Far East it ia deemed advisable that Hie larger vessels of this tyie lie commandTu ed ly UeiiUuiant.-romnitnder- s. bow much older the captains the officers detailed a rommaudrrs in chief of the North Atlantic fand Astatic fleet and that the lnw reviving this grade provide that no officer snail hold the raug of in t fiber the active or retired list, rxcept while exercising siu ti command uniil he shall have riimmand admit a v for two years or else aa a flag officer for three yrars altogether, at lenai one of tiiiwe years as a and that offiier may not a they reti-- o lie prol. moted to Hie grade of Attention Is called to the mdiapenaa-bilil- y of cruiser, the report saying. "Yv require cruiser eqiiadron in the North Atlantic, SouHi At '.untie and I'arrilieun and also on the Kuropt-aHtatlon, all ihew being already on the approach of hnutillies to combine in one fleet, wherever nowled. in the e, our force should consist of a large squadron nf cruisers and on the Asiatic station the hatileabipa should be supplemented wilh a full squadron of miloere. Regarding tbe paramount efflcleney nf the haiilrahiiw and the part played by them in the Far Eastern war. Converse lays: 'Although a hundred and more lor-pelamia and destroyers have been months actually engaged fur five gainst baiileaiiiiNi, which nave been excised to attaek at times, without numlw-r- , yet we have to learn officially of a torpedo from a vaasel causing the Ions of a single t.Mlhli. Those which have hern sunk owed their deal run Ion to submarine mines anchored or broken adrift, torpedo veasela nut contributing to the reanit rxcept by the confusion and acme of greater danger due to their presence. It ia evident that In the final summary of kinaim tbe achievements nf torpedo vessels will count leas than wns at first supposed. It eannot be claimed there lore that there has been ao far any smh outcome to be expected from this war whatever may be the rs wait lea among balUashlpa. Early in report Admiral Converse calls attention to tha neej of a general staff or board "an advisory body which hall riot be under the control of anv bureau, but responsible directly to Hit secretary. 5 '! I i j Pa-rifl- Ad-nia- rll do nf the American navy are than those or foreign navies, the report says the youngest American commander on the day he attained that rank waa older than the average age of Japanese and the same as the average German and English captains. He Jtkiaaaeff the compulsory retirement age lor Japan ese captalna and waa sixteen months of the compulsory retirement age fur German and English officer. No specific remedy for this is offered, beimiae Admiral Converse feels that if the need be recognized by higher authority, saL- -' Isfartury means may sunn be devised. that until j He remarks, however, measure is adopted for tbe compulsory retirement of commanders and captains gain promotions at cerjihat do not tain ages tho flower of promotion and In the different I the ages of officers la tha Latest Explanation of the Augrades will not be aatiafactnry. Authorization by congress of two tomobile Tragedy Near Lemoht, In ia urgently requested, Illinois. order that our flagship may not be beneath foreign officer holding inferior Chicago. Nor. 23. A labor union comir.iQria. It is manifestly undesirable, save conspiracy ia the latest explanation of automobile tragedy near Lemon i, tbe admiral, fur our flag officers to be the beneath all others in mailer of pre- 111. According Io the story John W. cedence in international affairs with Bate, Jr., the young chanfner, waa Hie which they have to do as representa- victim of bullets Intended for Mffwln Archer, a vital witncea for the prosecutives of the United Slate." criminal cane involving a It ia therefore recommended that, the tion ia be conferred upon number of Cbirago labor union offiriala. rank of Archer waa an employe of the same automobile company 'for which Bat worked. It ia a singular fart that Archer and Bate were tbe only two chaufuers on duty when lb auUuunblle waa hired by telephone for Mr. Dove, the murdered. Only a moment before Archer waa alone, and it was sudden impulse or presentiment or danger M Archer to turn tbe work over the Bate. Archer haa for months believed himself in danger since be gave testimony in the rase nf an alleged rofemion slugger who waa (barged with a lucking n elrcVical workers apd who was freed by g change of court orders. The alteration of tbe records was discovered and led io the rnnvMlon of a court clerk and several uffirfais of labor unions on a charge nf conspiracy, other esaea were atlll pending. Archers attorney was today slrugly impressed with ihe probability of the labor union conspiracy explanation of the tragedy . A that be laid all the facts before the state's attorney. A partial corfirmation i row Mirceednd In cutting lliein clear of the theory fa the fact that Dove" ia said to have avowed himself an of ihe vcbhuI. Tuesday afternoon, Hie six vessels had passed tbe bark-i- n electrician while caaualy explaining bis Hue and failed to uffurald. the mate, identity during an attempt to hire a a men named Bntmrr, and two sea- horse and buggy In Joliet tbe day after men, one named O'Neill left the vessel tbe tragedy. in a small boat to seek assistance. At this time tbe gale waa raging with ANOTHER FAKE FIGHT. great fury and there is no doubt that the three men were drowned. This Buile, Mont., Nov. 23. Tommy Reilmorning the steamer Eider uu her way ly and Jimmy Flynn tonight fought in Ban Francisco sighted the dismastIt being understood ed barkeullne off Tillamook Rock. The eight fake rounds.were men on both if their feet at Elder gave the men acme provisions that end tho bout would be declared a tha and hastened bark to the Columbia draw. TlSe men almost refused to go river where she summoned assistance. on beesnae of tbe slim crowd, hut were Tugs and government vessels put to finally Induced to go on after the sea and tbe Wallula Boon had the crowd threatened trouble. The two men wreck in tow. When the Webfool ar- mads hardly a pretense of fighting, dead. rived hr her men were aln-oand clinching meanwhile exsparring a for iota ia vnsui-total The except remarks and smiling at each changing lOO.OuO feet her lumber cargo, of wh'ch one time shaking ha (ids. at other, 18C9 at was lor;t. She waa built In Ihe crowd kept up a continual cry of Cues bay and ia owned by the Simpson fake and left the theater disgusted. Lumber company. The fight waa held under tha auspices of the Montana Athletic dub. Buenna Ayres, Nor. 23. The strike movement here still continues, but owing to the determined efforia of the Shreveport. La., Nov, 23. gix government its effects have been amenegroes engagaj is a deadly fight " liorated. The telephone service waa in a room, the participants being armed with shotguns and pis- today, iboae willing to work tola. After the battle three lay being given police protection. The dead, the other three lay dying. A railway companies arc operating as woman and three children also usual, having conceded a red net ion or hours wilh tbe former pay, which were in the room during the af- la moat rase baa beeu accepied. In fray, but were not harmed. The (rouble arose over the woman. Rerarlo strikes arc general and rioting Several people have la intermittent. dl.'iiiriiunce. been injured iu I i , vice-admir- V; ; I a I: LABOR UNION CONSPIRACY i I i. vice-admir- J vice-admir- t, ' i - j; aui-pos- ed non-unio- Four Days the Crew Were Huddled on the Top of the Cabin With No Protection Whatever from the Gale. well-to-d- BURNSIDE REACHES TORT. Rear-Admir- al Capture the Intcrcolegiaie Champion ship Over Pennsylvania, Yak, Harvard and Columbia. VIOLATED PAROLE George A. Connport of verse. chief nf the bureau of navigation, approved by Secretary Morton today. Experience especially in gun fire lie says Im shown that, it ia necearary io increase, tbe number of officers assigned to ship, ao that the exit mate made in 1902. of Ihe number of officers needed for ship in commission. Is inadequate. It provided for only about one ball as many oflicei's aa ships of the ramp claim carry in the liriiiah, French AGAIN WINNER illl-rA.- hr r Navigation. Hie navy is and provisions but the cirnapondent adds that It. is uncertain that they will be permitted in coal, the Men Who Killed Fred authorities seeming i be undecided on Three Hold-u- p Shot a Barand g that point Seriously King 4 4 tender in tha Toils. Copenhagen telegrams rrjtort Hint the supplementary detachment of the Russian Second Pacific squadron is Minneapolis, Nov. 23. Three murdermen who killed Fred ers and hold-u- p at 111 detained at Skagen by storms. The Japanese, amirdlng to a disKing and seriously shot Bartender Edward Mingo Iasi night during Ihe progpatch from Che Foo to the Chroni.-lp- , are reported to have captured the Brit, ress of a turkey raffle Is a raliam at tab steamer Tung Chow, laden with ;.-00- 0 Columbia Heights, a suburb of Minnecases of canned meat for Purl Arapolis, were captured at Cambridge, Minn., fifty miles from tills rlly tothur. night after a chaos lasting 24 hours in which at least l.OlHl men have engaged since tbe killing. O., Nov. 23. Rear-Admi- ral y io Coiumbtia, : Is Told in the Annual Report of Converse, Chief of the Bureau of Tbe spiru of tbe men are good mm tile food ia sate flic lory. Ihe rations of tbe men at tbe olIihmus are seut to them at night, as it would be inqsissilile to tin so during the day tiPiause the Japanese shell every cunvov. dlrcetiun they Vice-Admir- al t ! XIVC-- . son-in-la- T-- rommndant oli-ee- sc nt for better conditions for Ku-sia- BATTLE Appcaisii.-ei- l a. NEED OF OFFICERS . or. JJ-- Indit'A'iiUis are yruwitii; ihat Hie Japav.ttv are taku on ibr ing a u i.:e iiiuienii-ut- . bfi. A large number of ri I'uiriMsaari w.igous bske been e.1 XiM aotna g :i:g artitiery exi lu.igca h.tvcaiao Imeu npiemme.l from the east card Men wlio have caput red h irae have been pernu'ted io cell them to offi. era. l .c pro. ee,i in go to fiinu.ieN oi nu-i- i killed in iR'ilc. Fu. uer ia upcoming Mui-dcu- b Astoria, Ore., Nov. 23. With fhree men of her crew missing and probably drowned, vhh her deck awash and the surviving memliers of her crew well Dish exhausted from five days exposure to the element a, the old American barkeniitie YYcbfooi, waterlogged and dismasted, limped lino port tonight jn tow of th. tar lug Wellula. Captain Lewis reports iiiw of Ihe most unusual occurrences. While his vessel rolled in Ihe heavy seas off tho mouth of the Columbia river yesterday, threatening every moment to go Io the bottom three Mean schooners hound south and three bound north passed him yet none offeied him The providential nppenr-enc- e in the Eldar raved their lives. For four davs the craw of the barken-tin- e waa hudled on the top of the cabin with no protection whatever from the gale. Excepting a few raw potatoes the men had nothing to eat and only such water as could be secured by catching rain in their oilskin hats. Captain Iwia states that he could not possible have survived two daya longer. The Webfont sailed from Coos 14. Bay for San Francisco on Octoberlumcarrying a cargo of 330.000 feet of enber. Soon after learirs port she countered the first of the heavy galea which recently prevailed. On the 18 she became water logged. The cabins were flood and everything loose waa carried away. During ihe night of I bo 2 st all three of her masts were roll-- d out, lint it was daylight before the af-ti- -r I ? ! S 1 ot ed Hi-h- k I 1 i |