OCR Text |
Show VOL I. OGDEN NO. U4. RUSSIANS BLOW UP 01 SATURDAY UTAH, CITY, BRAVERY ON THE MISSOURI LAUNCH KILLING OFFICER AND THIRTY IN i Mastee-at-Arm- s Died White Mentioned to Mine Mouth of Port RANCH AND REPUBLICANS HIS ROUND UPS -- Captain W. r ,,f i it,. , t A; Washington. (kiwlcs. iinini 'i i. Missouri, in I i ,iri. i,i ihc rti- asb-r- . which in. of tbe deeds of ii ,ix r mul u of the acts of hero.-d i, i , iiarui the tnndiicL nf n;v ru ami uirii, and of total dir - m.i of (lu.igcr displayed in the wot.- ,i lr. sud secuing the :n,,.. nlicl. Chiusiii Cowles said; Ai 11 o'clock a. i i .1 i is. ft while al .id pis.ii.vou tin. firth hn ranga No. 6. and ;. from the left gti. .i imrct. hail been fired. 1 heard A.lnMn, ,x,k.-aft and saw a g c.ii il.mn lutrsting from the after ti.i n S.aindliig Die and collision quar.r.v. din.-lcCoiniiuuidi-- r I' K. n,i to take her into shoal wi. t. aficrwuid anchored her in h.. ami onc-lufathoms. The oi'.rr ill ips on ihe range followed v u:,d uff.Ti-- e cry asaistiince. and v,vr" to save lives a they j cxpis tcl us to l to Assassinate Kuropatkin. PRICE FIVE Who Wr.-- Arthur-Atte- mpt 23, 1904. CONGRESS IS ROOSEVELTS Rescue L'-n- S. Accident Occurred In Endeavor APRIL MORNING, Kitchen of North Carolina Upbraids tcr-izr- , Cattle House for Being a Herd o and Lying in Roosevelts Green Pasture, ivii-sucol- : April 22. The Czar ly a few troops south of the river Pom-akubut that the Jaimnese there are n reived the following telegram occupying boats. Vi. tror Alexieff. bearing today' A Russian detachment of two officers 4u til men proceeded thither to your and thirty-tw- o report rptfully itiai today during the plac ing of in three boats. The detachment howJ.leu-wnaever, was discovered by the enemy and mine l.y some steam launches. men were shots were exchanged, three of our IV11 and twenty riflemen being killed. Staff Captain killed through a mine exploding under the stern of one of the Smeizin and eleven riflemen were severely wounded and lieutenant Pushkin launches-- ' and four men were slightly wounded. The detachment returned to our bank 22. Viceroy April Ietersliurg, gt. of the river under the cover of two of a announcement of the dest racour guna" oon ol a launch and the lose of twenty-o- n mi n by the explosion of a Ruaalan St. Petersurg. April 22. A corresmine at fort Arthur has added to the called the attention of the forsince the pondent has which prevailed alexin), office to the telegram of the Hareign the Petroimvlovak. to disaster bin correspondent of a German newsWe are paying the price of paper, publlshel yesterday in the Uuit-e- d said a member of the admirseem to States, that four unarmed American alty. n111 previous disasters citizens were held as Japanese spies leach noihing. The war commiaalon suppressed part at Mukden; that an American citizen dispatch, which named Reilly, and a Canadian named ol the Viceroy's Davidson, had mysteriously disappearshowed the mines were laid. It Is beed from Mukden nnder circumstances lli red that as launches were employed cause suspicion of foul play. The ibey were mining the eulrance to the that harbor In order to prevent the Japa-ik- u foreign office replied that they had no Information whatever niton the subject from forcing an entrance and to destroy the remaining and did not believe the statement can be true. shipIt u evident from the closing of the no St. Petersburg. April 22.-- 7:30 riiuwe that Viceroy Alexieff has p. m. Intention of letting his ships go to sea state of Beige has been extended ihe against a suiierior force, though this to all the towns adjacent to the Sitter-ia- n may nut le the policy of Vice Admiral railroad. who will determine on a gtcryilloff, assumes he when of niieraiion pian Toklo, April 22. 6 p. m. Two signicommand. ficant speeches were made today at a f meeting of the ruunrlllora of the ProApril 22. Rumors gressive party. Count Okuma, a former gt. Petersburg, sit in circulation that two beggars premier, warned the people of Japan sicmpml to assassinate General Kuro-patki- n to lie prepared for Intervention durwhen he was In New Chwang a ing the war by some European power, few days ago. It Is said that the begand also for a great Internal expendigars succrrfied In approaching the ture when the war was over. He said general and were talking to him when that after the war it would he necessary i guard noticed that one of them put to float a loan of at least 1250,000.000. kx hand inside his robe. The men Masam Olshl, a progressive leader, ten seized and searched and knives expressed the belief tliat Germany 1m were found upon them, it said that would take tbs Initiative In Intervenit men were Japanese. The rumors ing He declared tliat no power would annul lie conflrmed tonight welcome the preponderance of Japan in the Par East, and that many of the St. Petersburg, April 22. The followpowers were prepared to resort to any ing telegram from Viceroy Alexieff hag and all means to curb the extension of been nicked by the Czar. Japanese influence. A scries of reconnaisanres carried 81. Petersburg, April 22. 10 p. m. out on the Yalti river has shown that The Novosti expresses delight at the reihc Japanese are concentrating In considerable force. It la believed that they port that King Edward Is seeking to have oiii one division- - to the north of mediate and finds In the fact that the M'ljst. They are also beginning to Japanese ally ventures to broach the troojia In Wlju from which subject when Russia la thirsting to (hey have moved the Koreans. avenge her defeats, conclusive evidence "Information has reached me that of the sympathy of the European powt'lantities of material, apparently ers. which realize the menace of a Japanese victory. The paper regards the parts of pontoon bridges, are collected idea of British mediation as convincopposite the Island of Mablkhe. Onr scouts have killed two Japanese ing proof of the possible necessity of aunts. one of whom appeared to be an an Anglo-Rusidunderstanding, addo fBccr. On our right flank our scouts ing; executed daring reconnaissances extenThe friendly mediation of Great ding over several days, on the left bank Britain for an adjustment of the of ihe Yalu as the result of which it conflict, when the proper has been ascertained that there are on time arrives, will undoubtedly render ' pclcrsbiirg, ini mo-tar- ty 1 nt care-ItararK- - ron-rentr- an Russo-Jap- anese authority because their political Interference was not . approved by the rhurch, and Nlrol Hood, who wrote a letter aversely criticising the election of Reed Smoot to the Senate on the ground that high church authorities should not accept such positions. The committee adjourned until tomorrow. emeu the IN ., CHINESE Powers Deposes to Hierarchy Part in Mundane Matters. He Recounts Stories of Democratic Convention of 1895 and of Erring Teachers. i'Tgtnn. April 22. A thorough u nf Mormon Interference in J;" rfOai-- g in Utah was given today J V'!c 0. W. Powers, the only wit- i!r:T! ,f"r 1,ie Spna,e committee on IV, I,'"'' aa'1 elections. Several times uw... Sa."rr n,a1e bjr counsel for the that his story was based hut the attempts were mt Brra of taken from fiti ' ',1a,,'m''n,s of memtiers of the r e'1,' which are a partr of H ' of he State, affidavits of ir. '",l1 various where thi. " " ll,fl"cnre was places manifested m.- i , "i fh-'- !" I1 n.- -- vidence. wl'l continue tomor- - x' ",b'r1 flat tors, the story c. 0 i.ii.f, ' I a , !ar r- - rp ronvciiiipn on he question m l1' ke tn the field or wlth- V!rk?' anJ PPinS tb BS a stale was IViwors spoke of Thaich- -' lir the Senate, and said cys after ThRtcher an-- ;i Pisiform opposed to ' n n. o in politics he was l,h 7 r', ,hr "' anttpostanI.effort was i) j t s y , li .. iiiis.m-ccsi.fi- sa to Russia. to Great Britain as well . April Asshlngtiin. - i KiximicM was sitili-il liitti-rlby Claude Kilchcu of North Caruliua, who lucliidcit in bis tiem-ra- l (irosvt-uor- , j cHeiigaiiou whom In- diaigcd wiili. Imiiug liuiulliaicd Tlnxslore Uihim-vcIithe Yin ircsi-di-niilamliilai-- , whom in a rcci-u- t li ill the lions', In- - hail glorifii-as Hi- - worthy kucccs.mii' of Mr. AlcKlii- -' ley. (irosvenor adnoitcd tiiat four yiari ago In npixiscd the nonn illation of Hsuvclt for V In lint said dial Mr. KiMise.)t during the campaign had conducted himself in a dignified manner and had won the esteem if the people. Tin Democrats iu New York, lie said, had launched a candidate for l'rctddPiit wlio did not know whether he stood on hia head or his heels. Mr. Spiglit of Mississippi, said he recognized that tbe American nicnhunt marimt wsa languishing and tiiat nsi iiiucli of the exports of tho I'nlted Slates were being carried in foreign bottoms. The remedy, he Kiiggested, was a return io the tsiiicy of discrim- d St. Petersburg, April 22. An official telegram says Russian scouting parties report that the Japanese are concentrated In considerable force with war militia and pontoons at and around Wlju. Shots were exchanged south of the river Pomaku, where a Russian detachment of two officers and thirty-tw- o men lost their lives and two officers and thirteen inen were wounded. The Russian force regained the Russian side blow up. 1 belle) i n. thip to lie in of the. river under the protection of imminent danger :i:: I went quickly lo I be two guns. fire, found ihc t i. t iitiHahible to enter, streams of wa'cr were already A 22.-6 p. m. Seoul, April special dirtx'ted In it. All cntrnticcs were messenger from Gensau brings addi- barred with the dm-- and .lying. Two tional details of the recent Russian at- were on topof thei rr. t. one calling for tack on Songjln, In Northwestern Ko- help and every living to reach rea. The messenger reisirts that the him. Passing ai'oiiinl ihe turret, I saw Russians burned the Japanese consul- Pal her Gleason, who offered to send a ate and the Korean sustoms Godown telegram to the ulu.iral an.1 1 went (Warehouse,) rifled the telegraph office below, reached the berth and spliuier and finally, it Is supposed, retired to deck and found IJcnteuani Commander the northwest. The presence of a Jap- J. M. Orchard directing streams of anese squadron along the East coast of water below Into Hie ups-- r and themw Korea will. It is thought effectually overflowing into il.i- - lower handling stop all future Russian marauding ex- nxim. In a Idiiiou pi ihow directed from the tnrri't hy Lieutenant W. peditions. It. While. Met Giiiiurr Cox. who said: :40 Londim, p. m. A Magazines all flooded, fire umler conApril disiiatch to the Central News from trol. Then Lieutenant c. Havls. coming Port Arthur says new has lieen received of Ihe complete destruction of a up the ladder, said: 'There is a man the foot of this ladder who Is alive Japanese column on the Yalu river. at and helpless. 1 went down an.1 fell No details, It Is added, were obtainabout, found J. T. J. Donnelly, ordiable. nary seaman, and brought him up. being assisted by Chief Machinist Crnp-te- r, Liao Yang, April 22. General Kuro-patka man on the si. k list, who had will ihe that Japanese expects thrown away his much. Mr. Davis Yalu cross the to river. at'empt The concentration of the enemy's. mentions this mau esscially. I afterand pulled out tnree forces at Wlju has steadily progressed, ward returned 1 information brought by scouis and oth- more whom roul.l not. recognize,A. and G. ers show that there Is more than one finally ordered up Midshipman division there and that pontoons are Caffe, who benib'illy persisted in remaining In the lower handling room tip . coming up. his neck in water anil milch overThere was a skirmish yesterday op- to come ihe fnmre. He had to lie led posite Wlju on an island which the nut. by Afterward he his place Japanese occupied in order to pave the on deck an t as k. cd the navigator, iu way fin- the laying of pontoons, ilus-sia- n a very floor r;iiiilion. These three trooM in boats were attacked and Lieutenant Davis, Mi Ishipman Caffe driven back. and Chief Machinist Cropter came unCaptain Sneizen, who was In com- der my immediate ohvrvai ion. wounded. was severely mand, "Lieuteua-.i- t William P. Scott was first iu tbe turret, followed by LieuLondon. April 23. Rumors of fight- tenant D. Karl. Lieutenant Marshall ing on the Yalu river are repeated in and Iaymaster Dyer remaining on various forms and from various points. deck to help get out wounded who The Shanghai corresixmdent of the came from the turret. Lieutenant Post says he heard that be first Japan- Crank an.1 Castleway gave ns water ese army had crossed the Yalu almost from below at onee. Chief Engineer without opposition and the Chroni- Hi eg was at the engines and Lieutencle's correspondent at Seoul says that ant Castieman in tbe fire room. All heavy lighting has occurred, but that the midshipmen were busy. Everyone for strategic reasons it Is Impossible was somewhat affected by the fumes. to send particulars. Lieutenant Commander Orchard and No authentic news, however, has Lieutenant Davis, especially. Father reached London showing that anything Gleason was everywhere, assisting has happened beyond skirmishing. every one. Ensign Hammer, simiAccording to the Telegraph's St. tar and volunteer, hard at work. Dr. Petersburg correspondent, the Russian Urle and his emps all looking after the strategists are reluctantly accepting wounded and dying. IJeutenant (Trie fell down the hold and hurt himself and no one was wiser until the fire was (Continued on Page 3.) over. Midshipman liagley and Midshipman Rodgers were all busy at tlielr posts. Everyone, officers and men, and everyone were cool and helped Intelligent ly." It Is shown by the report that Master 'at Arms Elliott, died while attending to the rescue of others, and that Ship Fitter Burgles and Klecirician Ixtary were Injured while doing rescue work. l.ieu-tena- in the llimso and yet 22. tuduy 1rchidcui lali- . ul ir : ul d a in a e - TINES FIFTEEN FIRE ESCAPES DIMOND AND HIS TYPEWRITER Burning Building. - Neidcrmiers Death on Scaffold Affords Scene of Horror. publications declared that until 111 wor.l treason was slrtken from the Jefferson Davis would Is an ari'h traitor. That, lie said, was a strike al the South ami lit Confederal soldier, lie also referred In another publication of Mr. UNiMielt, Iu which lie said that throughout Southern character there ran a streak of roars and brutal liarliarisin. It compared III kind, loving words of McKinley" In to Confederal veterans to "th Insult i.ig wurds of RuoKevell." He said tiiat in on of bis hooks President KoosevelL "delllieraiely teaches and ad-- v (sales lynching for the stealing nf a rag-ta- ll He asked if Texas pony. that honk did not have something lo do with stimulating the great people The peoof the North to lawlesKin-ss- . ple of Ihe South, he said, condemned lynching for all crimes. Iiecause th hand of civilization and Christianity had been lifted against It. No man the civilized world over, he said, would condone outrage against women "anil cl wn don't preach lynching or leach it. but knowing th weakness of human niiiurr, mobs cannot tt controlled In sparsely settled eoinmnnities where wn eaunot get sufficient police force on the Mjait at once." He believed that every good Republican would luma in shame that tbe President had Mattered lasiks advocating lynch law. made by Mr. Heading from a sia-crRissu'velt. while Coventor of Now York, he declared that Roosevelt had characterized the Congress of the I'nlted Stales a s herd or rattle. Th humiliating Hpeetacle." he continue I, "Is that sliu-- he has lsu-1resldent of the Pnlied State he has treated this Republican House as a herd of cattle, and the most humiliating thing alsiut it Is that the Republicans allowed the President to treat them as rattle and lay down berre him lu Ills green pasture." He provoked laughter when h said the President looked upon Congress as "his great ranch with the Republicans as his round ups. r), inating duties and tonnage taxes, Mr. Gardner of Massachusetts, said that the American tonnage was not as great today aa it was a hundred years ago. In 1901. he said, men on the imsaaKO of a subsidy hill, and some shiiis were built bill since June, 1901, not a keel for n siec--l sea going vessel had been laid In the I'nlted State Mr. Hitcln-tx'maintained that the was primarily jHillcy nf the Republli-anof subsidies for all favorite interests, not ably tin protective tariff, whh'h, be said, bad built up Ihe trusts that the material und the sinui-- of war for the Republicans In every campaign. Mr. Campbell quoted Thomas Jefferson to show that ho bad specifically directed his secretary of the treasury to deposit, money iu IVnusnn lc bank DemoOr banka which would cratic in vl w of sud; deposits. Mr. ldvemash of California, suggested that the first step In tbe upbuilding of (lie American Meivbant Marine was to make seafaring life morn attlrariivo to American Isiys and men. The bill waa then laid aside. Claude Kitchen, Democrat le. North Carolina, strongly assailed Representative Grosvenor and President Roosevelt. Representative Grosvenor, he said, had glorified President. Roosevelt, as a contributor to tim New York Journal, in signed articles, had referred to the President, then Governor of New York, as a "brilliant, erratic and curious sort nf man." Mr. Kitchen' charged that Mr. Rwwevelt. as a candidate for Ybe President, was distasteful to Mr. McKinley and challenged Mr. Grosvenor to deny It. as well as tho statement that. Mr. Ronsevelt, as Vice President, was humiliated by the friends of McKinley, including General Grosvenor, 22.-7- From er l, lie-lo-w Thirty Persons are Carried lie said, you men sit here and gulp down everything Kooscvrli says, and not one of you dares raise his hand iu memory of William McKinley.'' "Mi'Kinley had a rigid In think that ItiMiM-vel- i would lie distasteful to him." "Ciiuti'iiiplate' he sunt, the amazing lHviarlc of any Republican in ihe I'nitcd Slates being liunilltai'-i- l by General (iroevciior and contemplate this same lium inarslialliuK under his liau-ntin- - hitsts of Republicanism wlih Gnisveiiiir the chief liliglu blower." To say that Ibsincrelt filled McKinley s place. Iu declared, was a of ,M Kinlcys name. It was. lie said, a case of the ainlilll taking the pla e of the mminlaiii. i lie- owl's sT-er- i taking the place of the touiba symphonies. the iniunow tbu place of the whale.1 The people of the South know, he said, that twenty-fiv- e years after Roosevelt had in one of his -- i d , made com" i The fading of the bill being by the 1:i charge that the pleted the Senate adjourned. by the ecelesl-'tencS. Crmich, Honolulu. April 22-- W. Thia effort was ic l avoiding to the trit who arrived litre today on the steam: i? made to recant his er Korea, was jruvned this Vll"v of church interfer- - while bathing In the surf at Baikikt Manv bathers saw tbe drowning and ' effort was made io lilil iif Ail lea hers ' nn wife ami lies lio- resell.- - (nmoli. Mr. CmiicbV f"'in tlicir e. clesinsiicsl two children are in Rochester, V k. I " BILL. Misunderstanding Relative to Appointment on Canal Committee Loeee Servlcee of Gorman and Morgan. Washington, April 22. The general deficiency appropriation bill occupied most of the Senate's time, but before it wee taken up Mr. GalUnger spoke at some length on the tariff policy of the Republican party. While the reading of the deficiency bill was In progress 51 r. Cullom spoke on the Chinese exclusion bill. During the day the attention of the Senate was brought to the amendment of the House to the bill for the govern-me- n of the canal zone and some embarrassment was created by naming Mr. Gorman as Democratic conferee on behalf of the Senate In place of Mr. Morgan, who Is the senior Democratic member of the committee on Interocesnic canals, with the result that both Senators declined to serve. Discussing the act of 1902, he Mid that the exception made in that law in favor of treaty obligations had reference to the treaty of 189 which was the only treaty bearing on Chinese immigration then in force. He thought it riesirshle that there shoiild he a specific reenact inent of former hlnese exclusion laws. 11 therefore would favor the retention of such portion nf 'h would a.rompli?h House provision this result. Later Mr. Cullom formally offered an amendment to strike out the major jiortion of the Chinese exclusion pro. . vision. Mr. Lodge also offered an amendment aliens other and excluding Chinese whose emigration is encouraged by agreement with any transportation e. ip EXCLUSION double service sa li e n On the scaffold Jailor Whitman disregarded th custom of asking whelh er the condemned man wished to say anything. The shroud and hcsiri were quickly adjusted. Th bandit, moving hia head so that the rope might more rasily In arranged took a lust glance al the spectators. He appeared as If In a siusir. A moment later at lu:35 o'clock, the trap fell, tho chair being being quickly removed aa he shut downward. Tho shroud became partly disarranged, and lb fearful muscular struggles of the dying man eonilntied for 15 iiilnules In view of the of the execution. An official examination showed that hia neck had ha declared profound eiiiiti-mp- i for tho legislative branch of the government was unfit to he lt Executive head mid was a dangerous man. He rinsed by quoting from American Ideals," in which Mr. Roosevelt, lie alleged, had denounced General Grosreurir by name as th champion of foul and dlxlKKieni polities." Then turning to Mr. Grosvenor, h said, "read that and then read yuur recent apeei h defen ling the President and tell the llniihe that you fts-- like thirty, Speaking deliberately, that any man who had sn-- I'eiita'' Replying. General Grosvenor said that it was unimportant what he had written four years ago. Ha (Gmavenur) four years ago was mi opponent of the nominal tun of Roosevelt, and at that time be wrote a popular opinion of Mr. RnosevelL whbli was printed all over the country, in this be made It plain th a;itlment at that time. And "if Ihe gentleman thinks ho can mak me HiHilogle for that statement, he has got hold of the wrong mu." I never said he was distasteful In in as a eandf-laie- , said Mr. tlruavenor. "Mr. Roosevelt was pul on tbe tlckt with Mr. McKinley, bill It was McKinley who got ail the abuse." General Grosvenor said that no man on th stump ever made a belter Impression than did Mr. RnosevelL ills dignified manner of presiding over th Renat and hla modesty with Senators waa eomnisudable. Then cam tba crisis of his life, the death of President McKinley. And then it waa, said Mr. Groa-venthat th tears of the Democrats Iwgau to flow. Th statement of Roosevelt at the bier of McKinley that he would carry out th policies of McKinley saved untold money ksuwa In this country. I stand here today a friend of McKinley, and I say tbnl there la nut mm of McKinley's friends willing to ray that they have sot always been (real.! with kindness and consideration by Theodore Roosevelt." Throughout, th .lsat-fou- r years Roosevelt hsd dvcloid and his utterance had hern patriotic and sound. He challenged th Denus-raito uams a single instance wher President ItnoM-vcl- i had dictated to Congress, adding, I have never known a piddle man. holding a high posh ion. who was more amenable to public sentiment than President Roosevelt." Pour yearn ago be was against ltiamevel! for Nice President, but today he believed he waa more dangerous lo tbe Democratic party than any other man hi the country. There would lie no one cheated when Roosevelt was nominated at Chicago. All know who and what he 1. No man In this country ever had a brighter or a more brilliant career or had to a greater extent beyond the hoi of hla closest fiends. 'ihe House adjourned. or. s smt-eede- Mother Jones Makes Trouble in Castle Gate been broken. Evidence is Dragged From Him Tending to 6how That Anonymous Letter Wert Fakes. San Franclw-n- . April 22 The Important development in the hearing of -I case today was ati the admission by Dimnud while on til? stand which the Government lawyers say will form smother link In the evidence holding fr trial at Washington the four men ac used nf defrauding the I'nlted Stales of puhrii; land?. Tits hearing to lay revolved about the incriminating si1'-- vinous letters which the prosecution claims were written by Dimond and wbnh displayed an intimate knowledge with the alleged Illegal transactions of the land agents. It is ngrred by all concerned that the anonymous leti-- is were written on a certain make nf typewriting tuahine. In his teaiiiwmy yesterday Dimond denied that he imxxcased that particular when the letter were bind of mailed, having previously sold it. To- Firemen Searched Five Floors of Tenement House Rescuing Adults and Children Overcome by Smoke Hyde-Diinon- New Tork. April 22. Two alarms and an ambulance call were sent in this afternoon for a fire in a tenement bouse on Second avenue near 89th street. The firemen carried several persons out from the second, third anl fourth floors. Many others were said to Instill in the building, among them a number of children. Aliour thirty persons Were carried out by tbe firemen. Some of them had lieen oven-omby five-sto- ry niai-liii- the building and in an short time had swept through the stairways and llghtshart to the AM the usual means or exit rrum the iqiper floor were thus nil off and In a few moment the windows and fire escapes were crowd d wuh women and children Reassured by ihote on Hie afreet that aid was at hand, thev awaited the coming of the firemen and many were taken to the street in safety by means of ladders. Firemen and policemen then began a systemaUi-seanof the various floors and a number of persons who had lieen overcame by smoke and unable to reach the windows. There re Waehingto.i. of o ir.ion besigns of a tween the civil snd military brandi'-of the gnvertim-'- .t respecting the ist the use of wireless .leerp telegraphy Id newspaper correspondfisition of tbe service ents. The branches b t!i ::;'!iy In favor of mn'r!. which makes toward R'lFsian t It ihe Fiipyjort of is evn arcin' I t"l uo civilian should be allowed to neet a wireless mast lecnus? wit non t execuO.e liermii-slon- , tre with that of tise might ls ' While tfce Kta-- e some piiilisr is not crystal li red. Depar'.ifpr.t It Is known that the department Is disposed to tnoie aiitiotisly In the laying of anv hweepinz preposition on prlvu'c III il j.t i newspiijs-- r or 1111d;ff-rn- ee s re-u- ;,i Washington, April The Senate comn.ltte? on military affairs today rethe ported military academy appropi lull. The committee incorporated th bill tj Increase the efficiency of the medl-- al and ordnance dcpai t ment-- i of the army by enlarging both corps, also the bill making appropriations for four camp slice for the military lorccj. itu biding a site in Sun Luo, 22. ia-tl- Calif. 22 I I ' !i- for all. NTIdrriiicicr had bnaKtcil continuously of his courage. - Imt aa the last and monicniK appeared b- collapst-wan unable to take tlm-- ciumceuiive steps of a march to the gallows. Dr. F. V. McNamara. Jail physician, had visited Nciiliriucicr previously and said thai his p'lislcal rnidiim Tin I'midii was satisfactory Il mill Ihc lirpiiiy ;hMff 11)1 wM wt h the dcs'h tmifJiril, lhat appeared rh i jju waik wotjl-- l) wi'hou S'd. Deputy Peters tbtn read (he document and Ncidcrmier rtarted from bis He had gone only two stops, ce'I. neceswhen he sank and i wan sary to iift him t Ihc scaffold. us-- l e 1 1 ! i Apill but. e i day. Dimond. under admired that it- - had sold a rytiewriier of the make in iueMlo;i very recently, that th ptiri ha-- - r was a man who hsd nfiti-- r and Hist the a lsk in Diim-nd- ' instrument bud never hw-t- i ittit f the efflee. nf. rouciy. April 22. Atheist to the seemingly unnerved completely. Peter Ni'idrrnicier, bailer of the car barn bandits, was hanged today from a ehair. contrasting with his mnipanions in crime. Gtislnv Marx and Harvey Van Dine. who. slanding erect, kissed an image of Christ and died without a tremor. The thn-executions were separate, twenty minutes apart . tbe same scaffold being Chicago, last. : smoke. The fire started In the basement of Obispo Hie Three Companions Who Embraced the Roman Faith H Dies a Professed AtheisL Unlike l Inimedinteiy together. strapped . Neidi-mi'-r'- were s H" was hand-- ! ci:jr--lplaced n a hospital track and to the cti'l ol a tier of reds. Then three d- riiiic1 srri- - I him down contra-- y a ILjr.tt of a fairs. Enitn-Inir-r S- lo g'.T.cral expectatii.a made r.o effort at reals! i!ig. Kavmg dazp. Le was ro'hlt.g. and almost in a over ihe trap zest d on chair placed of the gallows No preacher or print accompanied lie having flnuily said. Xeideruii-- r. a la-- opporiunity wIh-iwb(U Wlu-C.e- - oD-i- i cil l.. ci u. tl.si liv'd, an hth'iit. il - as klarx and Van Dine asked that they he allowed to bid each other goodbye and this waa granted. They counselled each other to be brave and Joined in hoping they would "meet again." The men had been bitter enemies until a few days before the execution. Van Din being Incensed at Marx fur making tb confession which to the captur of other bandits. was When the body of Neldernn-ler- . went Marx iciiioved. slowly sevwith to scaffold the eral priests, and' after having confessed, repented and received the laid sacramcntM. as did Van Dine, both having been converted to the Roman Catholic fHltb. Marx. like Van Dine, was neariy attired in black, and in the coat lapel of each was a while rose. had worn a rose of dark red. Marx showed no emotion while on the scaffold, and in a steady a litopy aftPr ihc-- priest. voice res-at(-Ho fervently kissed the crucifix, and at 11:17 o'clock was hanged. His neck Thirty 8hots Ware Exchanged Yeatem terday and More Trouble la Expected. j Fa!tUkeClty, April 22.- -A special io th(sTiihui:e from Castle Gale saysT "This morning a body nf coni com-Isguards waa fired on by striking Italians about oiih mile town. The striker wer hidden among th nicks along the canyon. The guards returned th fire, and in all about :(Q shots were exchanged, but so far as known no one was injured. During die past few days the strikers have very restless and threaicning. having ft en worked up iu this point by Serious trouble ia Mother Julies. exp eleil at any time. ftrlgudier General I'sniiim of tb ns Ktaio militia was sent to the coal broken. While Van Dine stood on Ihe drop today to inve.iiiiiais th quespraying and wailing for Ir? arms lo tion. be pinioned and hi lege secured. Ihe lirmae fell from he einss piece ef l'ie Paris. April 22 - Th callows and dangled before ih ycs Press ts siuhnri7(1 to aqjoun-thit of th bandit the noose, th cm tract py which the ranxpiit Van Dine continued rraying steadily Canal passe? to the I'nlted is to the end. signed and sealed. The title to the In the United canal ia now vested fContinneil on Page 3.) States. The dneament by which thia transFt rtershurg, April 23. Of the action is cone unlimited bears the sigBo and Idren-to- r officers who saved front the natures of I're-sJc- it two midshipmen have reRichma.u of th Panuna Canal sumed duty and two Lieutenants hare Canal company, who signed for th Inen nh;ignr-- as io th company as Its responsible officials. of Iirt Arthur and Visdl The iram'cr Is complete ar.J with VOhtuk. out roHenaum. and the United 8ates secures a perfect title. ' Seoul. This mult has been accomplished April 22.- -6 p m. Rumors Lad ffghtir.q on the Yalu unexpectedly, as the public rcr.ctiiT.ing river ere sti'l uncmifitTued. Beyond been given to understand that the conadmissions concerning constant skirmtract would not be executed until after ishing, nothing is olitainabie fimti the tbe meeting of the stockholders of 6 vague the Panama Cuual company tumor military auiluiriiii:? idi-row- - at which Die question of ratilicw-tiuthat, a fionlul u(ui k t prevui!-iinmlui-nt- . would be submitted. h-- ny lie'-on- Disrr-xsrdfr- w.-n- d s lu-i- ! u |