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Show I RUSSIANS DRIVEN MEAT ST IKK AT END 1 THE WEEKLY SENTINEL 1 BACK, j Made PACKING HOLiE EMPLOYES WILL IU1 a ltir.NMi PabltshM STOCKTOH. utah statk BACK. BE TAKEN CTAI All Differences Are to be Adjusted by Arbitration, the Cld Errploycs to Be Reinstated as Soon as mays. At least 2,000 persons past the age of 70 attended the old folks celebration at Spanish Fork. Mika Slavlrh, a young Greek, was fatally hurt at 1mmontory Point. A large rock atruck him and broke bis back. The week on the Salt Lake mining exchanges closed with the sale of 141 95 shares of stock that brought 29,9G0.87. Between twenty and thirty trap shooters of Salt iAke City have organised a gun club and expect to aoon have 100 members. Local meat dcalnrs are of the opinion that the packers' strike In New York and Chicago will not cause a meat famine In Salt Lake. The state convention of the Republican party to mimlnate candidates for all state offices will be held in Salt Lake City August 25. Andrew Christensen, arrested In lt Butte on a charge of circulating 5 and 810 gold pieces in Salt Lake City, has confessed his crime. In the ore and bullion market, of Salt Lake, (he week closed on settle-(nent- s (112,000, comaggregating with the previous for (321,700 pared pne. All the pool and billiard halls In American Fork were closed last week, (owing to the fact that the owners would not pay a license of (50 per conn-jterfe- Possible. of ili- parking hnise embegun nine days ago, and which lm dcmorallz'-- thu packing throughout tiio country, was otllcil In Chicago, Wednesday night, i vreen at a (onfcrencu representatives of the packers, the official of the Meat (.'inters' union aud representative:! of all thu allied trades employed at the stock yards. The whole controversy will lit- submitted to a board of arbitral ion, both sides agreeing to abide by whatever decision this board in ay rearii. fending the decision of Ihe arbitration board the men will lie taken bark to work as rapidly as possible by thu packers, aud it la agreed by the packers that all the old emwithin ployes are to bo reinstated forty-fiv- e days from the date work la resumed. If any of the forinor employes are still unemployed at the expiration of that time, sueh persons arc to have the privilege of submitting their eases to the arbitration board for Tho rtrili-- - ploye..!, d - settlement. The strikers m Four-year-ol- d ps Slugged by Strikers. Slugged Into insensibility by a dozen men and left for dead on Da tracks of the trolley line, Anton an employee at ths Swift packing plant, In Chicago, is dying at the county hospital. Ilia injuries, In the opinion of the Inspector, were inflicted ly strike sympathizers sad the wheels of a trolley. The mea, according to a witness who has talked to the police, set upon as he was going home frost work. When they could not make him Join the strikers they broke hla skull, fractured bis jaw, kicked him about the face, head and body and that threw him upon the car tracks. Tie motorman of a car approaching not long afterward saw the body in tine to atop the car, but not before tie wheels had crushed Bartuslakovta shoulder. Barta-aiakov- will return to work as soon as they can be notified of the peneeable adjustment cf the trouble, and it Is expected thnt by Friday morning everything will he in normal shape at ail the plants In the different Titles where the employes were on strike. Half an hour after the decision had been reached to arbitrate. M. J. Ikinnelly, the strike leader, bad got Into comniunlrutlnn by long dislanre telephone with (he trailers of the strikers In outside cities an dhad notable. tified them that a satisfactory settleMiss nesslo Spencer of Ogden, ment hud been reached, and directed (while visiting at Spencer, Idaho, was the strikers to return to work as soon as possible. accidentally shot In the hip, but it la pot believed her injuries will prove JOHN BULL ANGRY. Serious. . Definite steps have been taken by Makes Strong Protest Against Russia's Seizure of Vessels. the Salt Lake Real Estate association A St. Petersburg dispatch, under for erecting a packing house and establishing a livestock market in Salt data of July 20, says: The news that Great Britain has delivered to Russia Lake City. a protest against the capture of thd Inquiries regarding the prospects & Oriental steamer Malacca Peninsula as with of this years crop compared Bast year's reveals the fact that tbs In terms which are believed to be alJucerne crop will be much heavier most tantamount to a demand for thu immediate release of the vessel as (his season. Archie Shields, aged 72, of Lakq well as a general protest against the lew was thrown from a load of hay artlcn of the Russian volunteer fleet steamers In in the Red by the wheel dropping Into a chuck sea la not stopping ships known here togenerally bole, his back being broken, death night, but this morning's editorial almost Instantly. resulting broadside from the newsM. B. Manning, an engineer whs papers reprinted here this afternoon (was well known in Utah about ten was a sufficient warning of the state of years ago, committed suicide on the the British mind and the public beBight of June 27 on a steamer plying came czdted. greatly between San Francisco and Stockton, In the hotels and restaurants the by taking carbolic acid. war was temporarily forgotten and Company E. of the Utah National nothing excepting the possibility of Guard, recently organized at Ogden, complications with Great Britain was Is to have a first class gymnasium, talked of. The old resentment against fitted up and maintained by the state Great Britain which had been much ameliorated of late became revived at or the use of the militia boys. the mere suggestion that that country A. C. Peterson of Elsinore was the was again seeking to Imik Russia, but victim of a dynamite accident one the Official World, which la charged the responsibility, is keeping cool day last week which will lay him up with calm. for some time, both his legs and and bands being badly Injured by the ex- Mrs. Maybrlck Released From Prison. plosion. A rable from Truro, Cornwall, EngCattlemen are becoming alarmed land, says Mrs. Maybrlck Is free and over the presence of a large number that she has gone to France. Mrs. of hears In the mountains east of Maybrlck, who was Miss Florence Mantl and Ephraim, a number of Elizabeth Chandler, a member of a animals having recently been killed well known and prosperous southern by bears. family, was married July 22, 1SS1, to The parents of George Elsinore of Janies Maybrlck of lJvcrpool. She was American Fork, who it was thought then 18 years old. Her husband waa (uul been killed by a train In Idaho, over 40 years of age. In the spring of received a letter from him, saying 1889 Kir. Maybrick became 111, and in that after sending his trunk he de- a few days he died. Ills brother incided to stay for a short time longer. vestigated his death and charged Mrs. The Moffat road has filed with the Mayorlck with the murder of her husU. 8. land office its maps showing the band. A long trial followed, and a definite location through the Uintah number of doctors swore that the docreservation. The filing Is highly im- tor died of arsenical poisoning. The defense proved that for twenty portant In the fact that It Is another step toward the building of the road. years Mr. Maybrlck had been a conThe historic beehive, which Brig-ba- firmed user of arsenic and tlint he daily look drscs iarge enough to have Toung placed on his residence killed a dozen ordinary nten. Mrs. tn 1855, has been presented to the Mtiykrlrk was eventually sentenced to Utah State Historical society by death by the judge, but later the senPresident Joseph F. Smith. A new tence waa commuted to life beehive now adorns the Brigham Toung house. Boy Confesses to Murder. Andrehas Olson met with a painClaude nankin, an orphan boy, 14 ful accident near Ephraim, a fork years of age, who was arrested and falling and striking him in the lodged in the county Jail at Maryshack. One of the tines embedded ville, Cal., on suspicion of murdering Itself near the spinal column, pene- George Mosse, broke down and contrating the flesh to a depth of two fessed his crime. The lay says that or three inches. Mosse. with whom In- - had been emPat Smythe, the Ogden saloon keep- ployed. bad abused him. and being er who was shot by James Bottomer, sick and without money, he decided to recover. trill probably Bottomer kill him, possess himself of funds and Maimed Smythe had beat him out of go to Atainodn. his home. Ilnukm says k sum of money, and, walking into he followed Mosse to whore he was milking a cow. and. aproailiiiu: him fimythes place of business, shot him without exciting suspicion, tired tho without any warning. fatal sin t and robbed him of hi purse. Jennie Rasmussen ol Sheriff Accused of Aiding Prisoners. Salt Lake City, was thirsty and drank Citizens m White l'ino couuty. Neseveral swallows of corrosive sublit have issued a vada. letter urging mate In solution. Her mother knocked the glass from her hand and Judge Brown of the district court to cent for a doctor. The child was thorough y imestigate or cause thn grand jury to investigate tint escape given an entitle and Is well again. T. Duke, who two years ago of two horse thieves fmin the jail at Harry I acpleaded guilty to ontiio'.linit funds Ely lnt week. The let or openly cuses in sheriff whoso the the charge from the Wells, Fargo A Co. hank, of Salt Lake City, while acting aa a men were. f assisting them to escape. paying teller, and was sentenced to The matter hus caused iiniisunl Intel' Newman, a term of four years In thu peniten- est because ofliasthe fad a thatw.wur Kilitl-tallthe sheriff, hmi tiary, has been granted a pardon. lu White i'ltic ciumiy. - Desperate Attack on Mo Tlwi Pear, But Were Repulsed, f General Kuril).-rejiorta that two dtvisii.n of the Russian army mad a du.,suu!t on Mo Tien at diiv.n on July 17, but were The casualties were not Staled. At 3 o'clock Sunday morning a heavy fog veiling their movement!, two division of Russian!, commanded by Lieutenant General Keller, made an assault on the Japan cte positions at Mo Tien pass. General Ktiroki adds that the Russians all the Japanese positions at Mo Tien pass, and In ita vicinity, The Japanese reslstd desperately. stubbornly, repulsed the Russian and pursued them for a considerable distance westward. Kurokl in bis report praises tie valor of bia men. Strike Leaders Oppose Violence. President Donnelly of the atrlklig packing house employes of Chicago, on Monday sent out a circular urglig tho men against violence, as follow! : "We must win because every American citizen must have living wages; must havo the very best for the children; must fight lor recognition for the union. Wo can win if you stick by the uulou; if we obey the union when it says, Molest no person or property and abide strictly by tie laws of the country.' " Of the men injured In Sunday's riot near the stockyards two are in a critical condition. Largest Order for Mosquito Nettiny Ever Given In United 8tates. General Davis, governor-genera- l the Manama canal strip, Siaa advXd the Panama Canal company that ne wants 100,000 yards of wire gauze to prevent mosquito invasion of the zone. General Davis says that this will be, perhaps, the largest order for mosquito netting ever given. Admiral Walker suggests that copper and brass wire might also be used. For the hospitals 20,000 yards will be needed, while for screening the houses along the canal zone 75,000 yards will be used. Unnatural Mother Suicides. News has been received from Wash., that Mrs. Jennie Holcomb committed suicide at that place by shooting herself through the head with a revolver. On her dresi waa pinned a note confessing her guilt of the murder of her child by means of poison. Tho child died July 11 and owing to the peculiar circumstances surrounding its death, the coroners Jury investigated with the result that suspicion attached to Mrs. Holcomb. Fearing arrest; she committed suicide. Ma-chia- JAPANESE BLOWS DI 2. inn and the Japanese loss 1,200. WATERS j FORBIDDEN' The Japanese also hare been in active contact with thu Russians east of Hal FOUR THOUSAND MEN KILLED PASSES GUARDSHIP RUSSIAN Cheng, where there have been many BY EXPLOSION OF MINES. DARDANELLES. THROUGH minor actions. All along Kuroput kins front and flank the Japanese are movGovern Had Captured and Occupied a Fort ing into position, but the general at- Newspapers of England Urge in Action tho Near Port Arthur, When Mines to ment Take Matter, Is tack being postponed until supplies Wera Exploded With Harrify-- . Showing a Feeling of Irritation. and reinforcements come to the front. Ing Result. Progress along the muddy roads and The Constantinople correspondent o! mountain passes Is slow. A Junk with dght Russians and fifthe London Standard, In a dispatch Heavy Losses Admitted. dated July 17, saya: ty Chinese on bnsrd. arrived at Che-fo-o A St. Petersburg dispatch saya the "The Russian guardshlp Chcrnomo-ret- s on Tuesday, five days from Port war office baa no further details of Arthur. passed through the Bosphorus The Russians refused to tslk, hut the Chinese say that on the Russian repulse at Mo Tien pass. from the Black sea this morning. The loss of men, which it is freely The Chern&moretz Is a gun vessel July 11 and 12 the Japanese captured admitted considerwill he probably and occupied with 4.000 men one of belonging to the Black Sea fleet and guns, one the eastern forts, near Port Arthur. ably In excess of General Kuropat-kln- s carries two figures given out last night. Is gun and seven quick-firinand ma Before reinforcements arrived the Russians cut off the 4.000 troops in greatly deplored. But evidently the chine guns. She Is equipped with two the fort and exploded mines, which engagement at least served the pur- torpedo tubes and carries a crew of resulted in the killing of every Jap- pose of demonstrating that General 160. Kurokla army has been heavily reThe Standard's Toklo correspond) anese soldier there. inforced north and the general staff ent, The Chinese report also that the cabling under date of July 17, la now Inclined to believe that the the Jijl Shlmpo. In an editorial says before night they left Port Arthur a deRussian torpedo host sunk a mer- Japanese commander may have expressed the hope that Great Britain chant ship near Port Arthur, mistak- cided that a frontal attack from the will see that. Turkey lends Russia nq south Is inadvisable and la concen- assistance by allowing steamers o ing her for a Japanese transport. trating hla forces for a direct attack the volunteer fleet to pass the Darda Many Chinese on hoard the merchant- on Liao Yang. nelles. The Jiji Shlmpo declares that man were drowned, but the white Britain la bound under th Great crew of the steamer and a number of Chicagoans Discover Ancient City. e terms of the alUancd her Chinese passengers were rescued Udnunki, the ancient Adah, perhaps by the Russians. If this story la true, the oldest city in the world, has been to prevent such assistance being the steamer in question probably la discovered by the University of Chi- given. Almost without exception the news the Hlpaang, belonging to the Indrv cagos excavating expedition in Babyof London, In editorials or oth China Navigation papers lonia. Thia which company, city has for many years Monday waa forty-eigh- t hours over- been the object of search by Oriem erwise, comment upon the Russian voW due from New Chuang. and which toilets. It ia mentioned in the code of unteer fleet steamers passing the was reported to have struck a mine. Hammurabi, an early king of Baby- Dardanelles, and the government ia The local agents of the Hlpaang aay lonia, which document was translated urged to take action, especially for thd they believe the eteamer to have been recently by Professor Robert F. Har- protection of ita commerce in the Red lost per, director of the expedition. He sea and neighboring waters. The Daily Telegraph, concluding aa has Just received the news here In a OLD QUESTION REVIVED. J. outspoken protest, written with traces cablegram from Professor E. Status of the Black Sea Fleet May Be Hanks, field director of the expedi- of government inspiration, says: There is a limit to complaisance tion, who since leaving Ki country Discussed by the Powers. last winter for Biinya, tn Bal.!onia, when neutral commerce under tha The first impression In dlplomstlc has announced many Important disBritish flag la molested in a way tn circles in St. Petersburg that the ac- coveries. which we have been for a century and tion of the Russian volunteer fleet n Houses Employ a half unused. Packing vessels In stopping neutral ships In Help. Special dispatches from Berlin echo the Red sea to senreh for contraband the is feeling of irritation that exists In the of order the Quiet among day of war would not give rise to interLondon. of the the South striking employes national complications, is being superseded by the impression, which Omaha packing companies. Few, if WAS A FAKE. there is good reason to believe la any, of the old men have returned to well founded that, instigated by Groat work, hut tho packers have given for- Reported Massacre of Thirty Thou mal notice to the livestock exchange sand Japanese Not True. Britain, It will at least lead to an inthat they are prepared to slaughter The Imperial headquarters staff at terchange of views between the and G,000 hogs daily. Tokio officially powers signatory to the treaty of 1,300 cattle deny the reporta from Paris, regarding the status of the re- Strike pickets prevented traveling SL --Petersburg that the Japanese lost men returning from their routes from 80,000 men In a battle near Pert Ar maining ships of the volunteer flryt now in the Black sea. Thus the old entering the yards of the plants un- thur on July 10 or 11. Not a shot til the chief of police escorted them waa fired on either date. question of the Dardanelles may again become the subject of Import- personally. IN PATH OF FLOOD. ant diplomatic communications. Turks Kill Smugglers. The right of a belligerent to halt What threatened to become' a gen- Great Damage Results From Breaking neutral vessels on the high seaa to eral of a Reservoir. period of unrest such as was exascertain If they have contraband on a year ago when an attack "With the roar oTTTiagaratne new perienced board, la not questioned, hut the right waa made on the American Consul reservoir of the Citizens Water comr to detain them even for a few hours Nagels sen, has begun In Beirut. On pan y at Scottsdale, Pa., bunt at mid may be held to render the belligerent Friday afternoon, June 17, two Mos- night Sunday, and mere than 300,000 liable to damages. lems, caught smuggling arms and am- 000 gallons of water rushed down the munition into the Lebanon district, valley, sweeping all before it and InSOME HARD FIGHTING. were fired upon by Turkish soldiers undating crops and wrecking build8even Days Engagement Between and killed. One of the men killed had ings in ita path. It waa discovered Russians and Japanese. bden for many years a lawleaa char- about 9 o'clock that the dam waa in Hard fighting has been going on for acter. Moslems at once charged danger of breaking and messengers several days in the neighborhood of Christiana with murdering the two were hastily sent through the valley and before Icng the whole to warn the Tong Chu, eight miles east of Ta smugglers people. Hundreds of llvei town waa thrown Into a wild state were thus saved, for a few hours latei Tchs Klao, says a New Chang dis- of excitement. Shops everywhere patch. It la rumored that the Russian were closed and the Christians fled to the whole valley was under water. In waa places of safety. loss the The damage to the machinery and engagement reservoir alone will amount to at least MAP OF SCENE OF RECENT ACTION fN RUSSIAN-JAPANESWAR (50,000. When tho torrent swept down AND APPROXIMATE POSITIONS OF THE OPPOSING ARMIES. upon the valley, buildings were torn from their foundations and carried on the crest of the great wave like aa xnany waahtubs. Crops valued at thousands of dollars were completely Wiped out Bridges were carried away. i ! g Anglo-Japanes- Non-Unio- E MAY BE TROUBLE AHEAD. Runia Taking Chance Woman Jumped Overboard. Tragedy again marked the homeward voyage of the North German Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II. On the arrival of the vessel at Plymouth, England, almost at the hour that an inquest was being held over the body of F. Kent It was announced that n sccoud class passenger, Mrs. Lipscbnltz, bad commim-- suicide by jumping orcrlMiard when the ship was ono day out from Now York. Hundreds of passenger witnessed tho suicide and watched the efforts of a lifeboat lo rescue the woman. d Terrible Ravages of Cholera. Refugees from Teheran tell terrible stories of the ravage of cholera. They say that on some days the morThe Europeans tality reached 900. are abandoning property and are fleeing to a ramp in the mountains. There is a pitiable condition tiu-l- r of affair at the railroad stations which are almost without food. The government has ordered the doling of the frontier for the purpose of preventing the introduction of the disease. Attempt to Float the Maine. Regarding the proito.-itio-n that the old battleship Maim- - be raised in liavnna harbor, Acting Secretary of the Navy Darling ha addressed a letter to R. H. Sewell at New Orleans, who stated that he had a contract with the Gnlian government tn float the wreck. The acting secretary said that while the docs not contemplate tailing any pc tlon regarding the wreck, it has no power tn relinquish any rights the United States u::iy have in it. In 6toppini Neutral Vessels. The news that the Russian voluz teer steamships Smolensk and SL Pei ersburg, now criuslng in the Red Se are stopping ships of neutral nation and searching them for contraband c war Is causing the liveliest Interest li all circles. Russia has evident!: weighed the question, believes hersel to be within her rights and nelthe fears nor anticipates Internationa complications. Indeed, some of th powers may have been sounded b; Russia on the subject. Xerertheles foreign opinion Is awaited eagerly an1 more or less criticism is expected. (in the large map the Russian force a are ahown by unahaded rectangular figures. The Japanese forces are indicated by black rectangular figures. The black star marka the location of Haiechang, occupied by Japanese on July 6; the unahaded ctar Indicates location of Ylnkow, aaid to be one of the Japanese objective point. In the circular map of Port Arthur la shown the position of Takushan hill, reported captured by the Japanese.) NEGROES MOB A NEGRO. Black Brute Run Out of Cripple Creek. A mob of negroes at Cripple Creek. Colo., compelled one of their own race, named Edwards, to leave the district under threat of hanging him If be remained They were Incensed by an exhibition of a group of moving picture, for which, they allege. Edwards posed. The pirture represent a supposed rrlinliinl assault upon a white womnn mid a ehase of the criminal by M.mh liuiiud. Depraved CHILDREN ARE CREMATED. Intense Heat in Chicago Causes 8ev eral Deaths. waa the hottest da; last Sunday Chicago has experienced in thru yean, and three deaths and a score o prostrations was the result. The nai Imum temperature of 94 degrees heat any record In the weather bureai since 1901, when 103 waa recorded There was scarcely any breeze am the suffering was intense. In thi down-towdistrict the heat was sci eral degrees greater than the officla records show. n Caught In Burning Mine. Two Perish In Fire Which Deatroye Fire at the Bella View mine, m a Hotel. Laporte. Cal., destroyed the mill, The Humphrey hotel at Susanvilie, gine room and other buildings close In Lassen county. California, caught the mouth of the big tunnel. A hu fire Tuesday and was entirely de- pile of timber lay close to the mot stroyed, with the exception of two of the tunnel, and this caught on fl children, a daughter of Mrs. Laparry Four men were working In the turn and a son of Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Mil- when the fire broke out. and fears i ler. the occupants The entertained for their safety as t escaped. children were burned to death. There tunnel is strongly timbered and It was hut little insurance on the build- thought these timbers will catch f be estimated. from the huge fire now biasing. ing and the loss |