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Show m HESS flUASSCClATfD ITAH IWBIFB.8IWI VOL D. irtiVAAAAAAAJVVAAi TOIffl FORECAST F.:ir T'lesdav, warmer V OGDEN CITY. UTAH. TUESDAY. MORNING. MARCH 28, J905. NO. 87 In itir, juoMii.y the north warmer. PRICE FIVE CENTS SPAIN WANTS ORDNANCE. t' FOR CAPTURE BY Announcement JAPS of Withdrawal of Troops From Sunshu Pass Tends to Confirm That Prevalent Impression. St Petersburg, March 2S, In aome k. The impression prevalent hav-- j yiiinrv circle that tha Japanese ot the Jhe possibility removed M aaaumlng ip.in army In Manchuria heir the lnliative, will now turn umlon to the neat objective of the by vir Vladlvatock. la strengthenedfrom Associated Presa despatches announcing the wltn-- . Bunahu PaM the Imd raal of the Jajmneae from mediate front of the Russian army for miles south. a diiunct of tMrty-threIt la realized, of courae, that thla may he merely a blind to cover flanking improbable one ration., but it U not having cleared that the Japanese Muthern Manchuria of Ruaaian troopa and aecured a position from whence diffiexpulsion would be n long end cult process, may be eatlefled to hold ex-the Tie Pane line without further tension of communication. While the voice of the emperor'a ia for peace if honorable term, ere obtainable, the government a. is the part of wiedom. is going forward with all provision for the continuance oT the war. Preparation, are reported to be making for the mobilization It had been under-moo- d ot five corps. that the guards would be retained at St. Petersburg, but some of the officers of this crack organisation be- at convention did not by its very terms become immediately operative. We know of no contitut tonal authority which would authorize the executive to postpone its operation a day after thia time. - If he could defer its operation for ten nays there would aeem no reason why he might not do It for ten months. It would seem that he could no more postpone the operation of a treaty duly ratified than he could that of a statute duly enacted. Aa a matter of fact, in Ihe present Instance It eemi ton clear for doubt that the action of the Preaident ia attributable io the amhiguliy-o- f the language of the treaty itaelf and the confusion of the dates which occur In It, the harmonizing of which haa required the closest scrutiny and study the first date for Its operation being fixed by the diplomats who negotiated It, namely, the tenth day after the exchange of ratification, the second being that fixed by the senate, namely, the time when it should receive congressional approval, and a third element of uncertainty being Involved in the language of the act of congress stating that The President ia hereby authorized to Issue his proclamation and thereupon on the tenilr day, after exchange of ratification,' etc., the treaty shall become operative." The Dalton company protested services hare been relieve their the imposition of full duly on quisitioned and are making preparat- against There haa been a two consignments of cigars.' one enions lo that end. tered at Philadelphia on December recrudescence of. reports of a change 18, 19U3, and the other entering prior it was to in the head of the war office, December 17. The former ia susstated last night in n usually well inthat Lieut. General tained, and the latter overruled. formed source Bakarhoff will leave very shortly and be succeeded by General Ridger. now chief of the chancellory of the war of- -' Pee. It ia also reported that General PoUvanoff will be appointed chief of : ihe general staff. Pollvanoff Both ' Ridger are of the younger, school of repute W generals, but have . high and - administrators. theoretician Men Who Plot' Against Castro Have General Ridger. la the author of a numLeft Curace for. Safer Head- - . ber of text book on tactics. . quarters. Tftfe'fcoverhflUtr" la advised that . C hinese bandits are appearing In great ' Siberia Railway numbers along .the interference with the and causing Correspondence of the Associated train service. Press, Trinidad, March 19. Curacao haa ceased to be the headquarters for PEACE NEGOTIATIONS and they Venezuelan revolutionists . f aeem to have contend their activity It is rumored here London, March 27. The Telegraph on this Island. this morning editorially return to the that financial assiatance haa come to subject of peace negotiations and of the enemies of Castro and that Genthe common Interests of Great Britain eral Paredes la the leader chosen .to and Japan in the far east The news- head the movement. Although parpaper thinks that though such a triple sons familiar with the situation and desirable the the strength of Castro's resources bealliance la eminently Monroe doctrine would prevent Amer- lieve no revolutionary movement will ica from allying herself, but aa far as be effective, still the activity of the Great Britain and Japan are concernrevolutionists ia a source of constant ed there Is nothing to prevent n per- tnnoyanco to him, and they aeem to manent offensive and defensive al- be stronger now than at any time liance, which (he Daily Tela graph since the close of the Matso revolucontends might even Induce Japan to tion. Generals Rlcre and Pensions in Curacao are forego Indemnity and which by plac- who formerly lived Britain's ing at Great disposal in now in this Island cooperating with India the service of Japan's fine troopa General Paredes. A.l of these ofwould forever remove the apprehenficers fought in the Matuo revolution sions of Russian invasion of India. and have good war records. Parasdea The Daily Telegraph further says that la about 85 yearn of age and la reputed such a treaty, which would date from to be an able leader. the conclusion of peace would, with Offlcals in Caracal have been much the moral support of the United States disturbed by the rumors of activity in behind It he n guarantee for the pre- Trinidad, and the Prancfh const cable servation of pence in ine far east, the recently was cut to prevent the revoopen door In China and the develop- lutionists here from communicating ment of trade for all nations in the with their party In Venezuela and on Orient. Russia herself the article the island of Cuaracoa. Preaident his forces in says would reap advantages in her Castro has increased enormous empire, which only requires Caracas to two thousand. The country districts have been drawn on for soldexploration and development. iers and within three weeks the number of troopa in the Venesulean capital haa been raised from 600 to its present strength. Secretary Washington. March Taft today notified president Roosevelt. that the census of the Philippine Islands had been completed aud published and under the law of July I. 1902. two years from thla dae the President shall direct the Philippine commission to call a general election for the choice of delegates to a popular assembly. All legislatin' poser on be the Inland will thereafter vested in n legislature, consisting of houses,' the Philippine commission and the Philippine assembly. The conditions on the elcc.iun will be called is that complete peace shall have continued in the territory of the island not occupied by Moros or other tribes. The popular election la not to extend to the Moros tribes. Taro resident commissioners to the United States will M elected when a legislature is chosen. FORTUNE AWAITS . ROOSEVELT ACTED TOO HASTILY PREFER ARBITRARY of Appraisers Bays He Had No Authority to Postpone Cuban AUTOCRACY Reciprocity Treaty. Board New York. March 27. The board of the United States general appraiser announced a decision today in which they hold that President Roosevelt possessed no legal authority to postpone for ten days the date hen the Cuban reciprocity treaty took effect, as he did in hi proclamation of the treaty. The caae waa brought by the Dalton company, maintained the treaty took effort March 1st, when the ratification look place. The point had already been decided in the negative, and the hoard of appraisers did not pass upon it in today's decision. The United States senate when it hfifled the treaty Inserted an amendment that it should not take effect till approved by congress. Congress approved it. December 17th and the President. on that date issued his proclamation. He provided, however, that the treaty should not take effect for which ten day. Judge Somerville, who wrote the opmion for the hoard, calls attention the fact that the first clause in the "t of congress of December 17th Provides that the treaty shall go Into effect when the President baa satisfactory evidence that it the intention of the republio of to glv full effect to the convention and issue n proclamation " Judge Somerville then says: Tha Proclamation itself, however, recites Jhat such evidence has been received President. Its language is, And whereas, satisfactory evidence Boon received by the President the United States that the republic Luba has made provision.' etc. It ? difficult, therefore, to see why the Moscow, March 27. A meeting of the nobility of the government of Moscow in which there were participat- ing at so representatives of the nobility from various sections of Russia has pronounced against constitutional government of the kind enjoyed by the nations of western Europe considering such institutions unsuitable to this country on account of the geogrnph-Ira- l conditions of Russia and the political development of the Russian peoThe nobles are of the opinion ple. that some degree of popular representation should be introduced but there should be no limitation of autocracy arbitrariness but an administrative the people and that the ruler and should be brought Into cloeertouch. The bar erf Moscow it's meeting n popadopted a resolution calling for ular assembly to formulate a constitutional act defining and limiting the governmental systems. The meeting the formation rf n also advocated civic militia for the protection of and control by municipalities or control of the Zemstvos, lo which transferred. ' polics should also bo TEN YEARS Man Not Hoard of For Thirty Yaars Has 110,000 Ready at Hia Command. San FrsncUeo. Cal., Marcli 27. That facts are often stronger than fiction was afcatn demonstrated today in Judge Coffey's court room when the estate of John 8. Doe waa called up for final distribution. The estate has been pending many years in the probate department, and now only by the merest chance there was ssved for Frank L. Doe n legacy, which, together with Interest, will be In the 10, 000. John 8. neighborhood ofDoe, n wealthy pioneer, provided in hia will that each of hi nephews and nieces should receive a legacy of $5,000. All rf these legacies have been tong paid saving Ihe one in question and Frank L. Doe haa been lung considered dead by hia brothers and sblers who had not heard from him for a period of over thirty yeara. It waa only within a couple of weeks that Calvin W. Doe, n brother living in Big Rapids, Mich., received n letter from hia brother Frank, from Durango, Colo., which by mere chance he sent to Lorlng B. Due, a brother residing here, but not knowing that Frank's interest in the estate of hia uncle had tong since been foreclosed of his ranee. liy reason Telegrams were hastily exchanged and it aeema now to he beyond doubt that Frank L. Doe ia living and entitled to hia legacy. The appearance of Lorlng B. Doe in court at. the eleventh hour prevented the distribution of the estate and all that ia now necessary for Frank L. Doe to acquire the little fortune awaiting him and of which he ia ignorant, la to appear In court and make satisfactory proof of hia Identity. - non-nppe- a YOUTH EXPLAINS MYSTERY Boy Who Disappeared Simultaneously With Aunt Clsara Up Motive of Runaway. Chicago, March ently adequate explanation of the mysterious disappearance of the boy, Frank Ely Rogers, and hia aunt, Mias Florence Ely, four years ago. at C. Rogers, father of the hoy. anston, waa made tonight to n representative of the Aaaociated Press of Though simple and straightforward, the troth ot the mystery according to Rogers, la stranger than the many fanciful stories that have been written about the case. Mr. Rogers tonight said: At the time of the disappearance my son Frank, like many boya of hia age, was fired with a desire to ran away from home and see life for himself. Hia aunt, n sufferer from melancholia, was about to be placed by ua In a sanitarium, a proceeding to which she strongly objected. As a result of there circumstances, the two left home together and went to Buffalo. Thera they separated. Miss Ely entering n large store apparently to do some shopping and leaving Frank outside. She had previously given him a small turn of money. From that time not seen Miss until now Frank-haEly. and neither he nor we know her whereabouts. Frank, following out his ideas of seeing the country made a living as heat he could, and has finally returned home after many vicissitudes. This is the explanantlon of the learned front my son." mystery 27. -- Her Attorney Attacks its Validity and Will Appeal. . FRANK DOE The first appar- Ev-Jam- Cleveland, O., Match 27 Unless the higher court interferes, Mrs. Cassle 1 Chadwick will siend the greater part of the next ten years in the Ohio state penitentiary. A sentence of ten years wps imposed on her by Judge Hubert W. Taylor in the United States district court today. Mrs. Chadwick was convicted on seven counts and , sentenced upon six counts. For four of these counts n sentence of two years esch was imUpon two counts a sentence posed. of one year each was lmjioaed, making n total sentence of ten years. As soon as the senlenee was pronounced Attorney J. B. Dawley, counsel for Mrs Chadwick, took exceptions to the sentences upon each count exThe defense cept the first count. intends to make tha claim that' the court cannot impose a separate sentence for each count that the Jaw applied to the genera charges instead of each Incident of a general charge. The various counts of the indictment are considered by the defense to refer only to details of the general offense. Till point will also be contested In the higher court aa will the other points of the Chadwick trial, which resulted in her conviction. Either Judge Francis J. Wing of Mr.. Dawley will go to Cincinnati tomor-moto make arrangements for 4 review of the case by the United States circuit court of appeals. The first step taken by the defense will be to ask for n stay of sentence until the appeal la tried out, Thera waa an with United States understanding Marshal Chandler, United States Attorney Sullivan sad the court today to the effect that there would be no attempt to execute trf sentence uuill to carthe defense had ry the caae to the. higher court and there obtain n suspension irf Ihe sentence. Mrs. Chadwick will be defended to the last court. No action will be taken by United 8tates Attorney Sullivan regarding he other six indictments against Mrs. Chadwick in the federal court until the present caae ia finally disposed of. If the present trial and sentence la sustained by the Inst court the other cases will be dropped otherwise they will be used against the woman. Mrs. Chadwick waa not particularly affected by the action of the court toshe had resigned day aa seemingly herself to any action that might be taken. She waa convicted under the indict meat in which she waa charged with conspiracy with President Beckwith and Cashier Spear to certify her checks when she had no money In the Citizen's National bank of Oberlin, O.. By good behavior Mrs. Chadwick can reduce her time of imprisonment , to six years and four months. S McCORMICK-BID- CZAR CASTRO MAY GO TO WAR Fiery Venezuelan Haa Broken Off Diplomatic Relations With Colombia and Created Bad Situation. Correspondence of the Associated i reus. Trinidad. March 1- 9- Ircsl lent Castro haa again refused to resume diplomatic relations with Colombia, and in o doing bsa created a situation which many South American diplomats fear will lead to war Im-- t Colombia and Venezuela. year President Reyea visited President Castro in Caracas and it waa rumored at that time that their differences were partly settled, but such was not the rase. President Castro ha persistently refused to permit Colombia to carry on trade except under ennui t Ions which are almost prohibitive, through Maracaibo and other purls near the euatern boundary of Colombia. whlah afford natural outlet for Colombian products which can be marketed at other ports only at a This discrimination loaa. great against Colombia has almost ruined I ho trade of ono of the richest sections of the republic and has also brought kiss lo Venesuelans who depended on that trade. Preaident Castro haa disregarded overtures of both Venezuela and the Colombians, however, his purpose being to punish Colombia for its alleged assistance, to the Natao revolution. At present Colombia la In suck an unsettled condition and Its finances are so tow that war seems unlikely, liul diplomats familiar with South American politics believe the time is not far dlatant. when Colombia will take arms against Venezuela if the roinmorcial restriction placed upon the eastern part of Colombia by Castro are not modifled. FIVE MEN LOSE LIVES that l.ord Salisbury wrote the totter without consulting the premier and that he, a member of the government, should eo bluntly repudiate Mr. Chamberlain's policy aud emphsHlo the strong divergence of views ia party on the fiscal question is considered not only an Indiscretion. but a tactless more whirh Mr. Chambarlain and bis parly will be bound to resent. A letter from Mr. Chamberlain in reply to Lord Salisbury's communication appears ii ihe Time this morning, in which, after expressing regret Several People It Is Reported Have Been SPIRIT OF Killed or Hurt. DISORDER IS SPREADING St. Joseph, Mo., Match 27. Fire men Inst their lives In the Missouri river here todav: THE DEAD, ltilly Oscar Lewis. Harry Taleut. Harry Smith. Howard Hutchinson. The nit'll wove engaged in d.tke on ihe Kansas bulldiug operations water side, opposite the pumping station. They had beea brought to the Missouri side each evening by a small steamer, but on srenunt of a heavy wind and rain storm this evening the steamer wan dela)ed and Ihu men rather than spend the stormy night in a shack on the Kansas hank determined to cross In a skiff. About inld stream the overloaded skiff was swamped by tha high waves and four of tha men sank in tha muddy water and were seen no more. Hutchinson was seen swimming but sank before Nona of Ihu help could reach him. bodies have Iwcn recovered. soliciting of laltor here for plares outside ihe islands. There are many solid tots at work on all rite Islands, on plantations, to engage trying Japanese laborers fur California, and the license is iptcudcd to apply to them. Tha legislature a few daa ago mado u trip lo visit and Inspoei the leper settlement. The members, accompanied by over 2H friend and relatives of topers at the settlement, went on thn 1 winter Ktnau. Thu fact that no is olation of visllora and leper ins enforced, according to rule, but visitors were al towel to ssrodpie and come in contact with the affllt-leones, bus oerartoned considerable criticism. CARNEGIE IN COLLEGE BUSINESS Says GIFT WAS OIL KING'S New York. Mureh 27. Andrew Oar. nrgie ws i'io guest of luumr at Mis annuul dinner of ihu Alumni of Kte toveils' Intitule at the HdImI President Alexander 0. night. Humphreys of Stevens' institute announced that Mr. Uarnegie, in aitdl-lio- n to the f29ii,MMi which he has glvvn to the Institute, would give 5i),iHi0 more, to which '.ia himself would add 850 .(ski, when the Alumni raised another $140.(hmi. Mr. Carnegie: "1 w.mt la tell on, gentlemen, that your career Is much one. Stock higher than a gambling la not a bnsinr.-- , it is g mere parasite on luisiuess. "If 1 had g son i slmuld prefer lo have him enter oh a professional career, such sa you chose, rather thnn any other.- I have been looking largely into .mail colleges of late and I have entered Into the college business, as I not lung airci entered into Ihe library business. 1 dbl a riproar-Inlitisiness at Ihe lihrsry stand, hut I could look nheiol and ace the demand f'T the libraries slneken. My secretary says that the demand Is 1 think a down to one library a day. e young ma.-- who cops in a small than rdurttinn receives better at a larger one. ' I like lo eu men not excelling in foot bull or thinga pertaining to the foot. lint, excelling In head expansion. Hpurt is too ganernl-l- y taking the plsre of vahmhlp knowledge at the big colleges. "Since I have gone Into the new business there Jims Iwen a great boom. Within the past few days I ham received more than 100 application for the material I am rending to smnil Business, gentlemen, - ti colleges. OWN IDEA Alr Board nf Comminaionars For Foreign Mtaatona Did Not Bag From Rocksfollor. American requested tbe 1 out.-ridcr- moil-be- slt-Ize- i e. in Ha Did a Riproaring Trade Libraries But That Demand Is Blackening. for conference regarding list ns well a the general policy of the hoard Thia conference was of followed in time by tLo promise - g rul-leg- i - j TABARD INN CONCERNS . BANKRUPT gltifl.OOO. Ho far an I know no person sough I an Interview with Mr. Rockefeller or any member of his family or any member of hia staff of aecretariea. and no Book Lovers' Library and Other En totters were written to bring Influence terprUes Run by Seymour Eaton Are to Reorganize. to hear upon him in the mstter. I believe that the gift wan a spontaneous one, given from hie own impulse JVilIsd- - Iphia. March 27. Flic confor the purpose nf work carried ua cern. slib-- with the liouL Ity the board." and Tuhard inn library, uf which acre Seymour Eaton I IMPROVES. SITUATION hern placed In the hands of a today by ihu United Stale Circuit American Note to Bento Domingo court. The establishments Restores Confidence. are the Philadelphia Book Store company. Tabard lun Press Company Tsharo Inn DrugTabard, Knidi.-a- , Ran Domingo, Republic of Sanlo Marrh 27- .- A note from Amer- gists Specialty company and tic Tabard Inn Food conijieny. The liabiliican Minister Dejrson to the Dominito I'lvstdcnt Eaton's can government was published here ties. are to, than y54,umi, and this after noon. The pH per, which I ml ini I r that the pending Dawson-Fanchc- as--t- s exeei.-- 11.00,1.1)00. Those sv convention subject to favor- sols, Mr. Hu i on rays, are by the nascnfiurt-from able report by the eommiitvu on for- ture of ihe prospects Rout lie to Atlanta and from Boston eign ff airs has of being ratified by the United States in Ksix Francisco, in more than 2.iu sens'e in October, has created a great cities. ss well ns on scoruz of train confiand ocean steamships. impression snd Judge Holland aoiMiintd John M. dence. It my cause the sl'iiHlInn to Kinln. Clrnrle, M ecu rye tori an,l B. The proHifi!ion rliMnge completely. of foreign creditors ponding ilocMon Thornton Eaton receivers nt ihe Philinn. by the American government and the adelphia hook store and company R. 1,omloii liaion was named as Santo Domingo Jnipruvi-im-n- t for the three other comerr,, ft is hoped will be accentml a nd difficulties with European with security of prevent Among ihe plaiutifls arc the J. B. gniernmenls. Quiet continues throughout the re- Llpplncoit company, tho .Macmillan company and I). Appleion & Co. Counpublic. sel for the creditors tatcs ilia' the action is an amiuHlile one. in anticipaMIXED WITH LEPERS. tion of the reorganization of the Honolulu Lagialatura Visits Settlement in Reckleaa Way. eff'-ctc- d stni--men- i. x St. Petersburg. March 28, 3:30 a. m The internet situation is causing great anxiety though It it said the intellectuals" and the educated clarses generally disapprove of the revolutionary spirit which is permeating the peasantry and laborers in The Crimea ia burning with polsnd. dissent, snd the strong hand of the to military force has been invoked revolution nt crush the incipient Yalut. near the emperor'n summer Honolulu. March 21. via Kan Fraff-rlsrresidence. The .pirit of disorder has Moderate Lile to March 27. Ad. Whiling. U. S. A Sebastopol. sin-eicrals in St. Petersburg are becoming who was Injured by a fall from a car. the Siberia last alsrmsd at t situation, reports hav- while ashore from d and driveo to the late Alexander pal- entirely d and that every ing been receivrd showing that an week is recovering rapidly from a ace. where he wan received in audi- residence in the town wan more or actual revolutionary propaganda la dangerous wound In the head and will The ence by the emperor who chatted lens damaged- being pushed with vigor In many sec- soon return lo San Francisco. with him for twenty minutes on variof the empire. The authorities gunboat Petrel has received orders to tion, ous topics, not alluding, however, to of the government of Saratoff are proceed from here fo San Dtogo. She FINNISH DEMONSTRATION. the war. Mr. McCormick was then closing the schools there on account will leave as soon as she returns from the empress and the received by of the disturbances. a trip to Midway island. DEAD. . PIERPONT MORGAN dowager empre-uillelsingor. Finland, March 27. Secretary of the Territory A- - I C. PEACE. TOWARD marked a by NO STEPS was demonIs at work on a refunding Atkinson. Today gr?t DAKOTA BAILS. t Abo (former capital of Introduced in the present stration to bill be Ran Francisco, March 27. DetecUnder its Finland I and Helsingfors, thousands Paris, March 27. The French for- session of the legislature. tives detailed to assist Sheriff Brown assurances that Its New London. renews March 27. for with In office Finthe The of workingmen parading searching eign the territory will be able to of Humboldt county terms, relhere conundertaken Dakota. ton been 25,000 bands has nation steamship nish freightplaying nothing J. Pierpont. Morgan, an escaped up the bonds at any time by a the Great Northern national air and the people singing ative to peace negotiations. The Ven- take vict. who disappeared from the steam- er, built for new issue, which It la understood can offiThe unaltered. roundis as sons. was lied were status Steamship vessel company, Speeches for New patriotic made ezuelan er Corona, while the be floated on much more favorto this York for her voyage around the Horn Id the Finnish and Swedish langu- cial here taking the view that no ac- now ing Point Reyes on her way able terms. Caracas the resolutions until The Dakota Seattle. to ia were taken be to will and have reported exported to ages adopted tion Introduced In the A bill has been city on Saturday, remain at New York for several days favoring opposition to conscription. court decides the question pending in Senator Fazon Bishop. their superior officer that. In their by branch mre legislature of the to concession suU before committed New going the ento to Newport orderly and the regard The gatherings opinion, the prisoner ter n drydock. iti hv iumiilnK into the ocean. police did not interfere. impo-sihl- RIVER Tried to Goss the Stream in Skiff During Storm and Were Swamped When Half Way Over. TACTLESS Lord Sulisbury should think he his father's misapprehended views, be proceeds to give extracts delivered from speeches liy laird Salisbury between 1893 and 1895, which Mr. Chamberlain maintain show that he approved of retaliation and colonist preference. Mr. Chamberlain adds that it waa only after Lird Salisbury's death In 1943. that be (Chamberlain) developed hia jiolicy beyond the lines of these two general principles. SL Paul. Minn., March 27 A report reached thla city tonight that the little town of Louisburg in the St. Petersburg. March 28. Ambas- extreme western portion of the stale aua farewell bad McCormick sador had been prarttoally wiped out by dience with the emperor and em- a tornado and that sevenii persona afternoon, special press Monday had been seriously injured. It was having been granted him to also stated mat from two to seven adieus formal without hia the make were killed, but up to n late liour it presentation of his official letters of has been to lack This of telegraphic facilities,owing recall which have not arrived. to verify the made was in deference arrangement latter statement. n town of about 100 to the wish of President Roosevelt Louisburg McCormick Mr. to Parla proceed that In Leo Pareto county, and inhabitants The ambassador at has neither telephone nor without delay. telegraph noon took a train for Ttarkoe-8el- e connection with the outside world. and was met at the station there Reports from nearby towns, however, a with n stale coach with state that three store buildings were IHE MISSOURI SALISBURY SAID TO BE had FAREWELL IN Boston, Musa., March 27. In an interview tonight Dr. Jamea L. Barton, secret ary of the American board m aunimlsstoners for foreign mis Ions, declared that the proposed gift of to Ilia f llHMHty by John D. Rockefeller diaetis-aloboard, which has caused wide was unsolicited and spontaneous, originating in an Jnipule of Mr. fyxskefullcr to further the work ot Hie board. Mr. Barton said; "The initial atep inward thia gift waa taken by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., mime two years ago, when he unsolicited. asked the secretary of t.m American board to drop into hia e any lime when lit New York. Ting conferenre waa held and ihe board work dune by thn American waa Inquired into most carefully. "Some month later the of the board spoke upon ita work in the church nt Dr. Amory II. ilralo-forat Mont Clair, N. J. In the auBluntly Repudiated Protective Tariff dience waa the confidential aecretary Viaws of Chamberlain Without of John D. Rockefeller. At the cloto Consulting Premier Balfour. or the aerviee the Iwo secretaries were introduced to each other by Dr. BalLondon. March 28. Premier Bradford, and further questions were conference had a four yesterday asked In relation to Ihu work of Ihe long with Lord Salialiiiry concerning the American board. totter to the latter'a Times, relative I waa aaked lo present a Hot of to the late Lord Salisbury's attitude nubjecta, which were la Immediate toward protection and Joseph Cham- need of auppnrt and whirh could not berlain's fiscal policy, which letter haa be aitpported by the regular receipt a caused n great so uni Hon in the lob- of the board. Such a list waa pro- promising. bies of parliament. It is understood duced. Still later an Interview waa that s u Washington. March 27. Spain has never lieen able to iwmer from Cubs, the ordnance left there at the terminawar. and tion ot the Senor Ojeda railed on Secretary Taft today to learn the position of this government in the matter. Under the terms of peace it was held that Strain was entitled to nil of the movable ordnance in Cuba and Porto Ktco, and in the Utter case its claim had been recognized and the ordnance transferred. But in the case of Culm there appears to be some difficulty lu securing the recognition by the Cuban government of the obligation entered Into by the United States. Secretary Taft rauaed a cablegram to he sent to Minister Squlera In Havaua, Instructing him to notify the Cuban authorities that the of ordnances remain the pron-rtSpain and should lie returned to Spain. Spunlsh-Amerlca- to o INSURGENTS WORK FROM TRINIDAD CASSIE GETS lur-ine- s. com-lianie- MILITARY HONORS. Washing) on. Starch 27. In .compliance with a request from the Mexican forwarded throuch the government state department, the war depart nti-u- t ha ordered that full military honors of Senor be paid to the memory Eiiplroz. the late Mexican ambassador, on the occasion erf ihe obsequies over the remains in this city tomorrow, were Issued today by General Chaffee, chief nf ataff, for the participation of in the funeral United Stales troops The stale department ceremonies. waa formally advised Inday that the Mexican government gratefully accepted the offer of ihe United States to send the ambassador's remains to Stale warship Mexico on a United ard the naval authorities have been Instructed to secure as soon as possn ible. a suitable vessel for the purpose; trana-ponaiio- |