OCR Text |
Show jniwauD no! MMMMAMMMWWVWMM : 11119 WEATHER F03ECAST FAIR OGDEN VOL. I. NO. 296. fierce battle between CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY MORNING. ME ARMED MAUOXTENTS IN PANAMA. OCTOBER A THE 2'-- Two Detectives and One Robber Killed and Three Wounded in Desperate Encounter at Saint Louis. d such au education of their children aa will prepare them for the duties of citizenship. We recommend to congress auch action aa nay be necessary to secure the use of the Enfcllsh language In legislation and the courts aa will comply with the conditions already atipulated. In all our island possessions we are glad to find that we can unhesitatingly congratulate the country upon the fact that their government baa sent to them so many earnest, zealous, high! trained and capable young men to meet and solve the' difficult problems that have confronted them. tcTBlair, iueitive, shot four time critical. We feel that It la our duty to develop ivxwgh the bodt , fugitive, badly in all our dependent peoples Whatever H. Vaughn, Jtm about the head by detectives la strong and good in them, Instead hla friends In of endeavoring to cast them into a 0CB he sought to aid mold of our own racial characteristics, , gt battle. room of believing that thereby they may conThe tight occurred In the men tribute to mankind something of perhouse on Pine street, and the Ihum the detectives sought to arrest manent value." n lusvccted of being implicated in a few tnia robbery at Centralis, 111, a WEALTHY TB18CO PACKER DEAD. Ysfekfl iso. under been had police house Tha to-CReno, Nev., Oct. II.' John Bnyles, Hiveillance l0T several daya but of the a wealthy packer of Ban Francisco, that time any first the to were seen to enter or to and president of the French hospital of that place, dledsbrre this morning. klVI. the fighting A few minutes before Asthma, for which the deceased came Vaughn left the house and to Reno in hopes of finding relief, was started to walk down Pine street. The the cause of death. detectives closed In on him and after . The body will be shipped to San he had gone a short distance from the Francisco for Interment tomorrow. ' home he was arrested. Accompanied by their prisoner, the Alnsefra, Algeria, Oct. II. A- terridetectives returned and entered the Anue. Shea, McCluskey and Dwyer fic storm burst over this region today. wen leaBag; Boyle and James were The river overflowed, sweeping away, many houses. The loss oft life is behind with the prisoner. Hardly bad the detectives entered kidersble but the extent of the disaswere ter is not- known. Tbe damage to the room where Hose and Blair a property was enormous. tnted, when they were met with waller of shots from a heavy calibre m. gbea sank to the floor and Psrrr followed almost Immediately. it that time the detectives had dim their revolvers and there was a dnfealng exchange of shots for severs! seconds, each man pulling the trlwr of bis weapon as rapidly' as Oct Louts. 21. Twoclty daad and another la not to live during the night while the fjfuain robber auapect la at and two othera badly beaten bat-- r the result of a desperate and Ciav between five officers JfctTinen whom they tried to ar- ntt The dead: detective. juha J. Shea, Al. Bose, suspect. Thomas Dwyer, detective. The wounded: detective; shot jmes McCluskey, tkosah siou.ach, critical. J?..,, ire v d - SPECIAL 'FORMS OF WORSHIP Episcopalian Convention Adopted Resolution Providing for Foreign Congregations. Boston, Oct. 21. The Episcopalian general convention today adopted a resolution in the house of deputies providing for special forma of worship to meet the requirements of foreign congregations which may be brought into the dhiirch. The resolution was presented some time ago by Dr. Wm. R. Huntington of New York. The resolution will be acted upon by the house of bishops. The deputies today elected the four following r.ussionary bishops, the nominations having been made by the house of bishops: Bishop of Salt Lake City, Rev. Franklin S. Spalding, Erie, Fa. Bishop of Hankow, China, Rev. Loof gan H. Roots, Nankow, formerly Arkansas. D. Bishop pf Mexico, Rev. Henry Aves, Houston. Tex. Bishop of Cuba, very Rev. Albion W. Knight, Atlanta, Ca. The house of bishops devoted two hours tonight to a discussion of the divorce canon- - amendment, making It more difficult for the innocent person divorced In a case involving Infidelity to be married. It will bo taken to a vote on tbe question of concurrence with the house of deputies tomorrow. , . ' possible. the excitement Vaughn 10 escape from his raptors and and uslit Bose and Blair. Boyle lames, however, clubbed their revol-rey- i and beat him about the head ntll he wsi Uumscloua and then went to the sic af Shea, Dwyer and McCluskey, the Utter having in the meantime sank to they floor with a critical wound in the stomach. One sf the unwounded detectives summoned an ambulance and the wounded officers and suspects were taken to the dry hospital. TALKS TO DEMOCRATS During ! PRICE FIVE CENTS 1901. ciher, or wbi'tui-- they shall govern ihi uuctvca will or lie prosperous, ia i.it pan of ilto Monroe doctrine. l i"il the people shall aua-u-d the con- fciiiutiou as vo pvuiiL the executive el tue remarkable policy auggisiad by (lie idler of iioci clary iloet, 11 is saio i say that we shall have uoi minis uecii for a larger army thaa we foriiieriy had. In the conduct ot the war tiepu tiueni, alone there cau bo saved to the people many millions a year, which tho administration not only ii ic 111,1 propose to save lint is frauk enough to say It.. Take - another ii'iMriKion, which I reciie as si rung presumptive evidence nf extravagance. Seven years ago under Democratic administration the civil and luiacellaucnua expenses of (he government amounted to niuetv millions 01 dollars, for the year. 1 hi ring all the history of this country, the expenditures of tli is character gradually fcouiuted up as the country Increased In population until finally it had reached the sum of ninety milliouK. Now what has happened. So tremendously have our expenditures under that head grown during lbs last seven years, that the laat fiscal year they amounted to one hundrey and eighty-timillion dollars. More than double the expenditures of li97. We deduct the extraordinary expend! ure for tha Panama canal and rights .amounting to fifty million dollars. Ve still find expenditures under that head to be forty-six mill ions of dollars greater than they were seven years ago. an increase of more than fifty per rent. "I bare ou another occasion referred to the wadte of money In Ihe Philippines, putting the cost to us at sis hundred and fifty million dollars, in addition to the twenty milllou dollars paid to Spain for the opportunity of taking Ha place In wasting llvus and munoy un tho Ihltlppfnsa, asserting not a dollar of it will ever come bark to ua. The answers a far have betrayed a desire to destroy tbe effect the statement should have. Tu that end, an issue is attempted to be n.nde as to the amount expended. "Tbe defenders of this pilry of Waste ray that. I put the figures too high. An examination of the speeches of senators and rciireseniativns in congress recently made, Including that of Senator Hoar In the senate of the United States, May 22, 1902, will show that my statement of rest was an Intel e, as It was intended to be, "Edward Atkinson, whose fame as a ststlKiielan Is secure in the confident;,! of bis countrymen, in a letter to the r per-fivt- iy DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR CRS CONTRAVIEWS, ON SUN- PRESIDENCY UTT DICTORY DRY SUEJiiCl S. Delivers a Bunch of G'tcrepsncies to Pilyrims From New Jersey, Who Gather Before the Veranda at Escpua. Esopus, Oct. SI. Parke,- - received a delegation n.nu New Jersey today. i'us New Jersey deWvmiun was presented to Judge Parker l.y Denny of Rayonue. who made a short address. Judge Parker said: The expenditures of tue government asys the suminisiraiiou have beeu managed in a spun of tvouomy,. aa far removed from waste as trow niggardliness. That expinduureahava been free from niggardliness rannot. 1 ihink, be successfully denied, lieuce it should be and ia frankly admitted. With the claim that tie expenditures have been managed in a epint of economy we must take Iimis. The facta presented in support of ihe charge of extravagance have not beau answered. We assorted that only seven years ago, and under a Democratic president, the total expenditures of this government were leas than three hundred aud sixty millions of dollars and we charged that In the last fiscal year the expenditures were over five hundred aud eighty-tw- o million dollars The figures have not been denied aud they cannot be.- - Deduct In; from the latter amount the sum paid by this government for the Panama canal aud the Panama canal rights, we still have five hundred and tbirty-tw- o millions of dollars. After making that deduction wo find that It cost about, one hundred and sixty millions of dollars more to run the government Jest yeur than It did seven yoars ago. 1 he siatemeut on it s face raises the presumption of extravagance, and waste, a presumption which requires evidence to overcome. None haa been presMiied. By way of Indirect answer to the Democratic charge of extravagance, tbe Inquiry haa been put by tbe Adminlsi ration whether we propose to cut off tbe pensions. We answer, certainly not. And we further assert that the inference suggested by the question is not ingenious. Ihe amount, paid out in pensions hsj been decreasing every year since lSiet. But for the unwarranted order No. 78 which was fully considered in my letter of acceptance iiie amount paid for pensiona ia the seventh preceding year would have exceeded the amount paid last year. As li was t!c difference was only one and one-ha- lf millions of dollars. It Is therefore necessary for the administration to look In other directions than the dlshur-rnent- s for pensions for the jiiHtiiii-atiofor the exsens of expenditures of last year over that of seven years ago of over one hundred and sixty-ef- x of dollars. The Inquiry is further made by the administration whether we would dare to reduce the coat of the army. We auswer that moat assuredly we would, and we ask the people to decide between the administration and the Democratic contention on that point. In the year 1897, the war department cost less than forty-million dollars, , which was about the average coal ier year for lhe prereeding two year. This last year, a year of peace, the cost of the army was one hundred and fifty million dollars. One of the queatlieis we now ask the people Is what Is the use of spending more thart double ou the army now than wr deemed wise to spend previous to the Spanish war? A large standing army was unnecessary then, ao our statesmen thought and the result proved. It is alike unnecessary now unless militarism is to become a part of our jiolicy. If wc are to play the role of the big policeman In the South American states, requiring each according to some administration conception, of decency 4 industrial and political matters and further require it to keep order and pay its obligations, according to the standard which may lie set by cavil succeeding administration, and if in addition, the administration may at pleasure see to ii that the states govern themselves well and be prosiirroiis and orderly according to the criterion which may lie set by each adminfs. ration then we should readily admit that we should have an army rosllog one hundred and fifteen millions of dollars a year, t We should frankly admit that (he chances are that an attempt to expect such a policy will require a much larger expenditure of money than one hundred and fifteen millions of dollars a year. But the people have not as yet approved lhe administration's isilfcy In dealing with the South American states. They have not yet said by their votes that they are in favor of the conferring upon the president power to interfere with the internal affairs of a South American state at pleasure; to investigate their form of government; to see whether or not he is not to summarily decree such punishment ss in his judgment tbe circumstances warrant. "But tbe president has not the power to declare a policy equivalent to a threat, of armed Intervention whenever he ahull decide tbe circumstances Justify it. An attempt to exercise such a power would const itot a usurpation prohibited by the constitution of the United States. Hence, it is sate to assume that notwlrhstanding the letter of Secretary Root, which was read at the Cuban anniversary dinner, no administration will dare to attempt to establish a universal protectorate over American states, or to become responsible for their misdeeds. ' "Mr. Ol.iey admirably stated the purpose of the Monroe doctrine in Ids address at Harvard college. March 2, 1898: The vital feature of the Mon-- ' roe doctrine Is that no European power shall forcibly possess itself of American soil, and forcibly control the political fortunes and destinies of its people. "That is the national position, and it will be maintained. But bow South mil-lio- Carnegie Hally New York, Scene of a Gathering of Hosts to Hear the Former ' President. x (Continued on Page Eight.) Resents Attacks by Senator Culberson and te Delivers Scathing Arraignment on Straits of Democrats in eDes-pera- This Campaign Quincy .Mass., Oct. 21. Henry Cabot Lodge Uiuight replied to the speech of Senator Culberson of Texas in regard to a private letter written by President Roosevelt to Albert Shaw about Panama. Ha said: "Nothing could show the desperate sad belplusa condition of the Democratic campaign more strongly than the publication under misleading headlines of the presideui's letter to Dr. Albert Shaw which was read al a public meetSening in New York last night ator Culberson of Texas. The letter demonstrates not that the president was guilty of complicity In tho Panama revolution, but that be had absolutely refused to do anything which could by any possibility be 'taken as encouragement to the projects of revolution. The letter, s private one, was written October lUth, 1903. Tho revolution occurred November 3ud, and the letter, written long befor tho revolution. In the fullness of private confidence, demotwtratea that the president, no matter whal his private wished were, would not and did not taka any part whatever in fomenting or encouraging the insurrection. "The effort is made to give the impression that this letter is something new, just dragged out from dAk recesses to tbe great ligbl os a shadowy transaction. What ere tbs facta? "Just after the revolution of November 2nd and 3rd the opposition charged that the administration was guilty of fomenting and encouraging the revolution. Thcri.ttiwn the president directed that Ibis letter be given to the prose end published, in ardor to show, as it (kies show, that he bad carefully x, CLING8 TO PARTY. New York, Oct. II. Attracted by lhe presence of Grover Cleveland thousto the party of attschnwnt My ands of people struggled to get an en- my early has been Intenallegiance hall trance into Carnegie tonight sified with years, because I where tho former President of the have found passing in the from principles United States made his first and only which the I genuine Democracy baa de' speech of the campaign. rived its life and vigor, safe guidance Delegataa to Indian Convsntion John G. Carlisle, secretary of the and constant inspiration when as a aln Against Alcohol, Indian treasury under Mr. Cleveland, .was public servant I owed to my fellow Mr. countrymen patriotic effort and unsparso a speaker and shared with System and Agencies. Cleveland the great hurst of enthusiing devotion t tho people's interest. Like Molionk, Oct. asm. Long lwfore the doors of the But the principles and best traits f 1. At todays surged the Democracy reach their highest imMsion of the Molionk Indian conventhall were opened, crowds ion resolutions were of the building and portance and value at such a time as outride around the favor-hg adopted the exclusion of the traffic within ten minutes after the doors this, when our people are tempted by to the public glittering delusions and when they are bn the proposed new liquor a, ate into had been thrown wideauditorium was offered the kingdoms of the world if vMch Indian every seat in the big territory ia to be held aisles and corridors while In accordance with they will but throw themselves down treaty ar taken, unand worship the god of Mammon. I HEgements; urging that provision be their scores. Several hundred were entrance. tie fur believe we have fallen upon days when, continuing the tribal schools able to gain Democratic Indian rally was under more than ever, the enforcement of This big until are they territory s Businessmen the auspices of the Democratic doctrine and the acceptaWfpri into a public school system; Parker and Davis association. tion of Democratic conservatism and Jglng upon congress the appointment hall Mr. Cleveland arrived at the a commission to steadiness are needed. If our nationinvestigate the oclock and Immediate-l- y al great neas and the well being of wadltiun of the landleaa Indians of shortly after-buret our upon Ms enl ranee cheers wth California and favoring imme- people are to be pul beyond jeoaction for the relief of the Pimas forth, the demonstration lasting sevpardy. It died out and beSouthern ('aliornia who have been eral minutes. to dismiss on this It is not for-jn- e renewed vigor. with Prive4 of their water gan again occasion the Democratic creed, or to are rights and he when With Mr. Cleveland -" starving condition. Tdor J- -g eiMhe.hali w Is conclusion the W6 8L6 pmWIJt CAliiPBlR, ss if v conference adopt-Cleveland Mr. When 8. Strauss. to listen to ,.n. whn .i.H. i .h- a platform reaffirming the atate-ral- s that Chairman J. Hampden Robbs efmade last 'year favoring the the, were fruitless in quieting wadonuwnt of the reservation aya-e- forts demonstration, he arose and held up ud the discontinuance of Indian hla hand tor silence, but the people Wwies and of the Indian bureau f could not be quieted for two full minat the earliest practicable date. utes afterward. the subject of our Insular s The former president was made the platform saa: of the meeting and mountchairman The conference is gratified with ing the chair he aald: Progrosa that has so fay been There are at least two reasons why in the education and develop- - I am gratified by the opportunity to Prlitn of the inhabitants of participate in this occasion. It perPhilippine archipelago. We eapec-vnwn- rt mits me to breathe the pleasant atlhe wle .viem of edu-u- mosphere of resolute and harmonious that been put into auccesa- - Democracy, and. In addition it allows operation there. We would urgent-,h- e ms to meet face to face In such an extension of thiOi atmosphere those who largely reprethe People shall all re--e sent the business Interests of the city the inestimable e patadvantages that of New York and who betides reach from it. riotic enough to recognise the obligamiwJLi1 our Bvernment to give tion they owe to their country as wen WimJf1 mention to the industrial as to their business. of ,he,e ta,fla and aa RECALLS soup house times. ll t"e greatest importance to would be strange if I Hd B,,t It to provide for' the un- at this moment with deep lhelr products to bllity the days In the past and the SuS? of the nation. 4 previous support of thbU8J'Je remain- - qibuuvuj viatuiou wm tbe wriae action of f kiw York and If I did the the sustain- - all the patriotlam and all the govern- hwwe?mMlt B the revision of the hpv In these eoa- - ins ability of .ur citizenship are fithit,mPoto Rico n1 1,1 (be eeiab-W- in rawer of their approval and of found among the members of one p-dlnirable 7,tein 1 fidcncs amid perp exing labo.s. tkL 'there I mical party, and when before lve You will hi.h ?rcSe duty! 1 if m? those of our citizens not among ibe of 'be.wis action of the kraw gttrT!T:S,n.end tonight lbe cbosen been so boldly considered as those revision of the laws am with Pol. P,1illin j tllt should R ro aT,'i ,n the establish-tio- g Keato) of me no explanation orI aliens in their own land, whodarkness outer political Amlrable system of educa- the manner in whichthe be cast Into to be entrusted wiih tbe aa unworthy Starred either t.y of a govern-,n5- n in Hawaii are so my coukry and power and responsibility tf established by tbe people and for neither ment distrust tbo 1,1 otliep ltanda suit. mTrntense anxiety the people? When In all our bistory 1 W problems are to t me wbenT row ... -j- i-Tbe j,M a party so presun.pt nonaly as now large Asiatic pop-- r ,. -- f thf,rP p,,w T071 tho (Continued on Rage 3.) serloua responsibility for nominees of the re united Democracy. RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED De-dir- w Reg-rvatio- con-twie- d. TO DRY UP ua 8 - B it-"- J poa-wn- s de-itt?- .l rT-ca- m-t- it ha. c-- t dj-io- g ss , 1 J and scrupulously refrained from fomenting Insurrection, and the letter was immediately gives out and published Just a year ago. Two months or surra after the revolution and when the debate on the Panama canal was going on the Democrats were searching for a letter which they understood had been written to Dr. Shaw which they understood convicted the president of complicity in fomenting (he revolution. I replied that I knew the letter the meant. "I went to the White House, got a copy of this letter to Dr. Rhaw and with full permission took it to tbs senate and gave it to Senator Gorman. A while after Senator Gorman naked me If 1 had any objection to him giving the letter to tbe public; I aald I had not tha least, that the letter had been published and that they could do what they liked with it." LODGE ON ROOSEVELT. New York, Oct. 21. In McClures for November, Senator Cabot Lodge gives a glimpse of President Roosevelt aa he swea him. He aaya of him: H would be worse than Idle for anyone, no matter how intimate hia knowledge, to fancy be could depict a character ao many aided, ao tried and teaied in auch multlferoua experience, within the apaoo allowed me here. Hla dally Ufa does not differ ia any respect from that of any other very, busy man of great energy who finds rest and relief not only in active life, but in a wide ami constant reading of books a tthbll, by the way, quite aa characteriarto aa any others, but of which the. newspaper- critics and humorists tell na little. , , "Theodore Rnoeovrft ' jppreheiMe very quietly. When he haa thought a knows subject, nut thoroughly and what he meena to do, be acta promptly. When, after full consideration, hn baa made up hla mind aa to what ia right, be Is unbending; but no man haa been in the White Honae for many years who Is ao ready lo take advantage, who haa made up hta mind more alowly. more deliberately, and after Theodore than more consultation Iloueevelt." uut-of-do- - t Manchurian Armies Resting in the Meanwhile --Russia Hurriedly Organizing the Second Army. nine LIQUOR AND SLSDAY in, lean states shall behave toward cui'U - Colon, Oi t. :l. Sews rearhei here this evening tln:t abaui armed men. a ho are thougiu to be malcontent Panamaiaus rather than Colombian suMUts. have been seen ill the neighborhood of Cuiebra, threatening hostilities against the Panamalan gover.t- ment. As soon as the authorities of the canal zone became ant of this force a delegation was seni out t ascertain their pur- pose. A reiKiit was to the effect that a fight inland had taken place and that a number of men were killed, hut there is no con " firmaiiuu of this report. 22. TODAY Military operations In Manchuria disabling all the batteries of their rivare awaiting the drying of, the roads al combatants. and plains rendered impassable for artillery and even for Infantry by the PREPARING TO HOLD THE PIA1N. recent heavy raina Meantime the corLondon, Oct 22. Tbe Rlandarda respondents at the front have only Vents! correspondent, desultory cannonading and unlmiKiri-atelegraphing October 21st, describes Ihe Shakhe skirmishes to record. The report, that the railway station battle and Incidentally refers to the at. Rhakhe had been retaken by the danger which temporarily threatened near Russians and that railway traffic be- Field Marshal Oyamaa right tween Shakhe and Mukden had lieen IletiKihu, where tha Kuauians In overrestored were erroneous. whelming force nearly succeeded in Tbe Russian government la hastenturning tho Japanese right and Isoing the dispatch of troops to the Far lating the men sent to protect Oyamas the Second ManEast to wing. He says it. was the indomitable churian army. ourage and energy of Ihe Japanese that saved tbe sit nation. infantry SMALL XrTH.IJSRY ATT ACK. The name correspondent under date of OciolN-- r 17th aaya: he :20 a. General Kuropatkin appear (o be Mukden, tot. Russians ou Thursday opened a.t ar- preiuring to bold tbe plain in front of tillery fire on Shakhe sin' inn, where Mukden. He la concentrating troops there seemed to lie a jHianee outpost aud strengthening hi defense works ItUbsisn movements. in tlirca lines, the outer- - along the watching the The guns were then trained 011 Ihe Minkin: river, tbe second along the Hun river and tbe lunenouht close to of Laniutung. a little east of thAl ukden. station The Jaimnese replied languidly. The weather is fine and sunny with a cold, bitiing wind. There was SHAKHE RIVER THE OBJECTIVE! a severe frost Iasi night. London, Oct. 22. The Times Toklo BOTH ARMIES RKSTIXd. rorresponiiiiat says thal dispatcher lroni 0dma's headquarters seem to St. Petersburg, Oct. 22.- -2 a. m. indicate that tle Shakhe river is. the enThe armies of Russia and Japan, of the objective advance, and trenched a short, dls'ame jrom each that appearances original suggest that another other, south of the Rhakhe liver, are fcreat battle la imminent in which the forced to continue inactivity until the Japanese will assume the offensive. fine weather now prevailing dries the sodden ground and the tired warriors RESIGNATION ACCEPTED. are sufficiently rested to resume operations. Honolulu Oct. 21. Governor Carter Russian corrcsKadents report that aome armaments of the Fifth Siberian has accepted the resignations of High cor pa have been engages In eligot Sheriff A. N. Brown and Deputy C. F. on account of dissatisakirmivbea on tha advance line the Chilllngaworth faction oVer tbe of past few days. , The First and Fifth Siberian corps the liquor and gambling laws. C. Hathitherto unmentfon-- ter, a Pinkerton man. has been invesin inthe only coriw tigating here for some time at Goverreports of the fighting on OrL nor Carters request. William Henry 19th, shows that General Kuropatkin has sent tbe re.iwves to the trenches, has been appointed high sheriff and corps a Hatter deputy sheriff. Detectives and giving other much-tire- d captains are resigning and there will thorough rest. Meanwhile the Cossacks are raiding be a reorganisation of the police force of the territory. the Japanese lines. It devefopa that after the Lone Tree hill route the Japanese were unable to MEXICO'S OUR GUEST. remove a nurntwr of cannons in addition to those left on the hill and which San Francisco, Oat. 21. Ramon Corremained midway between the Rusof tiio republic of sian and the Japanese trenches. As ral, Ihvy lay, the guns were so exposed to Mexico, arrived here tonight frem St. Louis, having been delayed bg various fire from Ixith tides that it for either side to get them railway mishaps. He was met at the Oakland mole by Admiral MrCalla, IT. during daylight, and repeated atand a company of marines and tempts have hern made by both to se- S. N., across the bay to this city in a cure the guns at dark. Up to the pre- takerf sent. Cossacks have secured, three of government tug. At the local transport dock a large military escort tbe cannon. Tbe dexterity of the in this sort of work was repat-edi- y awaited the Mexican official and him to hla hotel. A banillustrated during the Russian will be given Mr. Corral tomorarmy maneuvers. On one occasion - quet row by'bical cltiaear they, abstracted tbe artillery harness,nt com-titui- e 1 22.-5- m.-T- e - nt Cos-soc- ks HEAVY DAMAGES A8KEIX Bulte, Mont., Oct. 21. Two million dollar la the amount of damages asked for ore, alleged to bat(e b cen illegally extracted from tbe Nipper mine through the underground workings of the Parrot claim in 1902 by twprosen-talive- s or tbe Amalgamated fcumpsny, according to a complaint filed' with (he federal court today, Mr. Hclnxo and ot hers are plaintiffs In the action against the Parrot Silver k. Copper Mining company and th Anaconda Copper Mining company, both ' auxiliary corporations of the Amalgamated company. VESSEL ARRIVES IN PORT AFTER STORMY VOYAGE. Seattle, Wxh., Oct. 21. The steamship Olympia, Captain Juhp A. OBrien, of the Northwestern Commercial companys fleet, arrived today from Nome. She had one of tbe roughest voyages of any vessel reluming from tbe geld fields, tho storm bclug almost continuous from Noma to Cape Flattery. Several horses were klllixl by the burking and buffeting of the vcaecl. K. while J. Hogan, steerage steward, intoxicated, jumped into the sea from the stern of the vessel on the first day out. His body was not recovered. KANSAS WILL EXHIBIT. Toppka. Kan.. Oct. 21. The Topeka Commercial flub tonight resolved in favor of a Kansas exhibit at the and Clark exposition. The next legislature will be asked to make a liberal apprupriatiiyi to finance tbe exhibit. Columbus, Ga., Oct. 21. Gordon, Ahas been destroyed by fire and its Inhabitants are destitute. labama, 8L Louis, Oct. 21. Portland, Ore., waa selected today aa (he place for the 1905 meeting ef the American Mission- ary association. NEW YORK REGISTRATION. New York, Oct. 21. In Greater New York today, tbe third day of registration. 158X41 names were added hi the list of voteri, making the total for the three daya 573X71. Ia 1900 the total registration for the third day waa 126.704; 11,937 leta thaa the total today. Throughout the state the total registration, ia much larger than for the aame dap ia 1900. FOR CARNEGIES dAJLACB OF PEACE. The Hague. Oct. 21. The powers signatory of The Hague peace convention are to be asked for a fund of 1100,000 for the maintenance of Andrew Carnegies palace of peace. The at eoet of the betiding la estimated about $800,000. It is understood that the Interior will be modeled 'after thi magnificent Palais de Justice at Inis' eia. e k. to. |