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Show JAPANS TERMS ARE MADE KNOWN THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. AKDBBW JEKIEK, Fatal uhar. SPANISH PORK, UTAH. Russia Is Expected to Reimburse tle Brown Men for Expenses Incurred In the War. r NO UTAH STATE NEWS Interstate Commerce It Is now practically certain that tho national guard of Utah will hold their encampment HAS BEEN FIXED. Commis-sio- n Has Ordered an Investigation. The Amount to Bo Adjusted by the Two Countries After the Japanese Expenses Have Been Ascertained. In Mantl. fares have been granted street car system to Collusion With Private Lines Charged Lake Salt the by those who purchase books containing and Roads Will be Required to Make Four-ccn- SUM Lit- t fifty fares. The Janitors of the Ogden school buildings will hereafter be compelled to wear uniforms when In discharge of their duties. The contract bus been let for the new school building at Mantl. The building Is to be modern and will cost about 117,000. The first work In tho way of establishing the Utah Independent Telephone company in Park City was begun last week. Percy J. Luster, arrested at Ogden on the charge of having fhurdcred his wife at Guthrie, Ky., on July 29, has confessed the crime. David K. Farley, aged 38, proprietor of a saloon In Ogden, suicided Saturday night, taking a dose of morphine large enough to kill ten men. The Richfield Fair and Driving association has planned for races and other sports, to be held for two or three days beginning September 4. Colonel A. II. Swan, who was one of the most prominent cattlemen In Wyoming some years ago, but who of late years has resided in Ogden, Is dead. A feature of Fridays exercises at the meeting of the Indian war vetep ans at ML Pleasant was a sham battle which was witnessed by 6,000 people. The daughter of Professor Nelson, of Moab, fell backward into a tub, partly filled with boiling water, and was badly burned, but will recover. A fire occurred at Santaquln last week by which Gabel Okander lost his wheat, barn and all his bay, about fifteen tons, all his sheds, three sheep and one calf. Daughters of the Utah Pioneers have Inaugurated a movement whereby It Is believed they will secure e pail, it not all, of the old Lion house tm Balt Lake City to be used as a hall of relics. four-year-ol- d Five thousand people visited goon on the 9th, It being South Sea Islanders day. The crowds came from all over Utah, Sanpete and Sevier counties sending up about 2,000 rep- resentatives. The parade of the Indian war veterans at ML Pleasant, on Wednesday of last week, was witnessed by thousands of people, who came from all parts of the Btate to attend the meeting of the veterans. In a quarrel that started over the use of a shoe brush, C. A. Allen, a negro Pullman porter, Btabbed Archie Webb, a white man employed by the same company In Salt Lake. The man was not seriously injured. A colored man was burned to death in a carload of furniture which was burned on the track near Morgan. The man was stealing a ride when th car caught fire in some manner and he was unable to get out. An Increase of only 62 In the school population of Salt Lake City over Iasi year Is the result of the canvass just concluded by the census enumerators The total for this year Is 16,931, while last years total was 16,849. At the old folks celebration In Ogden laBt week Mrs. Lena Allen, ol Huntsville, though still under 80, won the prize for the greatest number of grandchildren, proving up 130 descendants In the second generation. The total registration for Uintah lands Is 37,657. Over 2,500 registered at Provo on the last day. The number registered at the different offices was: Provo, 18,858; Grand Junction, 15,887; Price, 1,536; Vernal, 1,876. Charley Mitcham, brakeinun on the Newhouse branch of the San Fedro railroad, met with a serious accident at Newhouse, the result of which was that both forearms were broken and he was otherwise seriously Injured. The Utah Sugar company will erect a sugar plant In Sanpete county between Mt. Pleasant and Moroni, and will spend a quarter of a million dol lars In constructing the factory. Sanpete people are Jubilant over the In Salt Lake last week, Erwin Hens ley, son of a prominent Californian, was sentenced to serve twenty years In the penitentiary for holding up J. W. Adam b, December 25, 1905, and robbing him of $1.35 and a gold watch and chain. It Is reported that the Kennenck Construction compuny of Kansas City has secured the contract for building the Western Pacific railway. The road Is to be built by the Gould Interests from Salt Lake City to San Franclsoo t a coal of $11,000,000. Aniwer by September 5. Washington. The Interstate commerce commission on Its own Initiative as a result of complaints against private car lines, on, Tuesday unexpectedly began an Investigation of tho relations of railroad and refrigerator lines, both of which, It Is charged, are violating the act regulating Interstate commerce In several specified particulars. The complaint Is directed against the Armour car line, the American Refrigerator Transportation company, the Santa Fe Refrigerator InDespatch and eleven railroads, cluding the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific. The railroads and refrigerator lines are made respondents In proceedings which require that specific answer to allegations be made to the Interstate commerce commission by September 6. It Is charged that by way of rebates or other devices, the refrigerator lines are acting for the railroads as authorized agents, and he railroads, acting through the refrigerator lines, are collecting and receiving for the refrigeration of fruit and vegetables lower rates for some shippers than they are contemporaneously receiving for similar service rendered to other shippers. This Is held to be In violation of sections 2 and 3 of the act to regulate Interstate commerce. Another charge la that failure and neglect to publish at shipping stations and file with the Interstate commerce commission the rates and charges Imposed for the refrigeration of fruits and vegetables constitutes a violation of section 6 of the interstate commerce acL The commission alleges further that the charges published jointly by the refrigerator lines and the railroads for the refrigeration of fruits in certain specified territories are unreasonable and unjust and in violation of section 1. The territories described Include Indian Territory, Texas. California and Kansas. Portsmouth, N. II. Reimbursement for the expenses sustained in the pros eoutlon of the war and the cession of the Island of Sakhalin constitute the main features of the peace conditions handed by Baron Komura to M. Witte at tho conclusion of the morning session of the envoys In the general stores building of the Portsmouth navy yard on Thursday. The word "Indemnity was carefully avoided, the term being reimbursement for the cost of the war. No sum Is fixed, the amount being distinctly adjourned for mutual adjustment between the two countries after the Japanese expenditures have been ascertained. These are two conditions and those which the Russian envoys find absolutely unacceptable. It can be stated, however, that these two principal conditions did not come as a surprise to the Russian plenipotentiaries. The friendly fashion In which Baron Komura explained tho conditions before banding them to M. Witte and to avoid expression of the word "indemnity In the presentation of Japans bill for the cost of tho war without for fixing a sum leaves the way open negotiations and constitutes the main hope that a final agreement is possible. The other term are substantially what tho world evpocted and, with one or two exceptions, could probably he entertained as a basis of negotiations. They include the following: The cession of the Russian leases to the I.lao Tung peninsula, comprising Port Arthur and Dalny. The evacuation of tho entire province of Manchuria, the retrocession to China of any privileges Russia may have In the Rusprovince and tho recognition by door." of the "open sia of tho principle Tho cession to Japan of the Chinese Eastern railway below Ilarbln, the main line through northern Manchuria Russian to Vladivostok to remain of the JapThe recognition property. anese protectorate over Korea. The grant of fishing rights In Siberia northward from Vladivostok. The relinquishment to Japan of the Russian warships interned In neutral ports. As a whole these term are regarded as exceedingly hard In the eyes of the Russians. In addition to the two principal conditions, which cannot he accepted under M. Wittes Instructions, those relating to Russian naval power In the far east and the granting of fishing rights upon Russian littoral are considered particularly offensive to the amour propre of their country and of such a humiliating character as to be inadmissible. CHINESE HAVE A REAL GRIEVANCE Pekin. Wu Ting Fang, former Chinese minister at Washington and now vice president of the Chinese board of foreign affairs, was Interviewed Wednesday in regard to tbe proposed new treaty with the United States. He aid that the expiring convention was unsatisfactory from the Chinese standpoint and hence they deBlred Its reTho Chinese vision. government agreement to the exclusion of coolies from the United States and this point presented no difficulty, but the existing regulations pressed hardly on For Instance, merother classes. chants, travelers, etc., while nominal- - ly admissible to the United State, are forced to undergo an examination which possibly Is necessary, but which Is generally rendered very objectionable on account of the manner of the enforcement of Its regulations. He greatly regretted the boycott against American goods as It may possibly estrange the good will of the Americans, which Is highly prized. Apparently, however, the Chinese classes most concerned consider the prospects are remote for a solution of the difficulty and have decided that a boycott is the only means of ventilating the question. RIOTOUS STRIKING HEBREW BAKERS New York. Frequent outbreaks of rioting, calling for drastic action by the police, marked the course of tbe Starving Peasantry Show Signs of strike of the Hebrew bakers on the Open Revolt. east side Wednesday. In an attack London. The Daily Malls on a bakery In Allen street fifty riotdispatches with regard to the famine con- ers broke Into the place, completely dition In Andalusia, Spain, state that wrecking It and upset the barrels of the Spanish government has entirely flour and dough In the streeL The failed to give relief, and that as the police reserves had to be called out money grants are inadequate to meet before the rioters could be dispersed. the necessities, the resources are ex A committee of 100 sent from strike hausted. headquarters to a bakery In Orchard deaths street to induce 'non-unioare of occurworkmen Hunger daily rence. Theft and pillage are common, to attacked the shop, hearing of quit, and it Is Impossible to maintain order. Not a drop of rain has fallen in that district since March, and the summer and autumn crops will be ruined unless rain falls soon. Chicago. Oscar Benson, a policeRaising a Boycott Fund. man, on Thursday shot and killed hts Mathew Mamer, fifty Portland, Ore. The Telegram says: brother-in-law- , Ten thousand dollars will be raised years old, fatally wounded Nicholas by the Chinese of Portland to aid in Ketten, fifty years old, a clerk In the boycott in China against American Mamers Jewelry store at Harrison and goods. Two meetings of the local col- Desplalnes streets, and then commitony have been held, at which it was ted suicide. The tragedy was enacted decided that each Chinese In Portland In Mamers store. For some time Benshould contribute at least $2 to carry have been on the campaign. A local Chinese son and his brother-in-lamerchant Btated that every Chinese In at outs. In the morning Mamer comthe world had been asked to contribute plained to the police of Benson. The 3 to the boycott fund. latter heard of the complaint and In SPAIN GIVES NO AID. n which hundreds of strikers rushed from the meeting to the scene of cou-fllc- One policeman who attempted to defend the men was severely beaten, but held his ground until rescued. The patrol wagon, bringing a squad of reserves was furiously assailed by tbe mob, who stopped the horses and even dragged some of the men from their seats. The rest quickly charged the mob through a rain of bottles and bricks that poured from roofs and windows. After ten minutes hard fighting the mob was dispersed. non-unio- n TRIPLE TRAGEDY RESULT OF. FIGHT ARMY ANXIOUS Japanese Have No FOR WAR. Faith LABOR TROUBLES AT RIGA. Thousand Workmen Have Gone Out on Strike. SL Petersburg. The rumors of serious trouble at Riga were officially confirmed on Wednesday. Twenty thousand men are on strike. Many of the strikers are desirous of working, but the Socialists deter them with threats of murder. It Is declared that there is a sufficient number of soldiers at Riga to handle any disturbance arising from CHARGED WITH GRAVE CRIME. the strike. A regiment of cavalry Is Chicagoan Accused of Murder Commit- patrolling the streets and keeping order more or less successfully. ted Last November. Wednesday night numbers of shopIsA warrant has been Chicago, sued charging George Lawrence, alias keepers had to stop work under comBennett Marsh, formerly employed as pulsion. The agitators sacked a meat owner refused to a chauffeur for various wealthy Chi- market because the Join the strikers. cagoans, with the murder of William Two million dollars worth of perBate, the young chauffeur whose dead ishable merchandise Is loading or unover the body was found leaning and the merchants have apsteering gear of an automobile at a loading, soldiers to act as stevedores for plied belonely spot two and a half miles In order to save this property. yond Clement on the morning of November 19. 1904. WORKING UP A SCARE. Fed Her Husband. Arsenic. Pratt, Kan. Mrs. Harvey Null, charged with murder In tho first degree In having. It is alleged, poisoned her husband, a farmer, and H. C. Kelly, a farm hand, charged with aiding and abetting In the crime, have been arrested here. Mrs. Null was released on bond. Kelly, who 1? several years her Junior, was unable to furnish bond. Null died suddenly on August 6th, after eating supper cooked by his wife. His stomach, when analyzed, was foynd to contain twenty-fou- r grains of arsenic. well-to-d- o Twenty Texas Health Officer Wante Troops Held In Resdineis. Austin, Tex. State Health Officer Tabor came here Thursday for the purpose of consulting with the governor and adjutant general. It Is said that Dr. Tabor considers the fever situation confronting Texas critical and that he Is here for the purpose of securing the consent of the governor to hold all the Texas troops In readiness to be placed at his disposal to patrol the Louisiana border If It Is found necessary to do so. I The chief of police of at The Mormon stake tabernao received sla, startwas many Alton, Wyo., work on which ments of a bomb thrown ed several months ago, Is now being tk WoJrS made j hurried to completion. It will be me day, was comC. L. Melvin, the when upade largest church In Wyoming joint thousatul was given a hearing at pleted. 4 lok tn(ire two of , charges and bound ovw t I,. A. McArthur, at one time trainer all I bonds to the district. It'' for E. J- - ("Lucky) Baldwin, of San take Nothing but petty tN"el Francisco, dropped dead at a resort 0 bank bok' near Portland. Ills home Is in San occurred recently along th. orrisFrancisco. McArthur was well known Japanese front. The wemher seelu circles all over the Pa- and the roads are drying In horse-racin0t zey dhere The street car strike cific coast. al at g a ,je sd 'o At a mass meeting of citizens of Mich., on since June 4, Wai buy up h Havre, Mont., resolutions were adopt last week. The railway win u tover to Toole to employees back on Individual lot of cd calling upon Governor 'e dri offer his services to mediate In the dif- tlon. or the or the between opera Because ficulties striking he was awakened t 1 jlorrlnPacific and In tors and the Northern the morning, Frank b certlflt duly clubbed E. R. Rusted almost to Great Northern railways. part of the Vulo, the bicycle rider with the Bap Baldwin was working near a .rest In a h brought it Cal, baling hay. sum and Bailey circus, who Jumps th not will to failed Ion Mrs. Mary Harris has been gap during the performance, m ythur Mrri do the trick at Helena, and fell to ths at Ottumwa, Iowa, charged wi Injured. His murder of her husband, who ground, being fatally Cha A wife loops the loop In an automobile found In bed with a bullet hole jonoratd' pnd she followed with her turn Imme- head on August 5. and facin want ti diately after the accident to her husThe dead body of Gus band. changed mi ranchman of Ladner, R. c1 was ordinal While Robert Russell, aged 81, and In Challuckthan slough with dent have his daughter, Mrs. Frank Ballard, aged of the clothing cut off and 1 with with Mr. 53, were driving across the tracks of Indicating foul play. iritce that the Moffatt road, north of Denver, a th' v( ten The pneumatic tube mall passenger train ran Into their buggy, committee has decided to extes i iUve been throwing them ouL Mrs. Ballard was Investigation to San Francisco, .(dpass. lawyer, I Instantly killed and her father died will start from Washington on i to y 9 over several hours later from Internal in- to that city In a few days. l u' the s juries. The police authorities of Lofo skin 10 f0 Several enlisted men of companies arrested 168 workmen who were j explanativ G and II, encamped on Crow creek, In gene of era In the strike last month, Half of Wyoming, were seriously wounded by workmen threaten a i general i ttetdeman shell unless their the explosion of a three-increpresentatives in zit poun found by tbe men In tbe hills where leased. a h val the artillery had camped In the march The ntor A dispatch from Chicago iaji of last year. One of the men attemptmerman I 6 cille for Walsh, years old, ed to drive the shell Into the ground a from tt years a helpless cripple, was ma. when It exploded. dew of walk while praying before the s! i Clarence Riner, who has been with of SL Anne at the Novena, held the Carpenter survey party, on the Kankakee. Montana-Idahboundary line, has A collision between the troops been taken to his home In Cheyenne d Jews is rep: body of to recover from severe injuries susto have taken place at Zhitomir, tained while at work. He was caught rumored that a number of per beneath a tree which was felled to were killed and wounded, but it make way for the survey line, and are not obtainable. was severely crushed. William Ilenry Myers,, a cW Mrs. George Reese of Butte Is dead of Philadelphia, has been comlcti as the result of a peculiar accldenL Involuntary manslaughter and While eating breakfast a piece of batenced to eighteen months tap con rind gained access to her windment for running down and k pipe and all efforts of physicians to Eleen Sarver. dislodge the object were unavailing. A thousand Socialists who An operation was performed, but It in a forest a holding meeting gave no relief. The patient died In soli. extreme agony, literally strangling to Lodz were surrounded by ure were The majority of them death. worn Miss Annie Hood of Seattle, aged and many of them were while to escape. attempting 38, committed suicide by jumping Cecil Sharpless, aged 10, was or. In the burner at a sawmill at Anacon-tes- , Wash. Efforts were made to res- on the hand by a rattlesnake at cue her with grappling Irons and by fathers aplpry, sixteen miles I turning the hose on the struggling San Bernardino, Cal. The child 'fit made! woman. She was identified by jewelry brought to the San Bernardino b neve a p and bits of charred clothing. Ill pital, but died In great agony. i the app stai health is said to have been the cause isvestlg&t The governors of twenty-siof the act. have so far accepted the invitation There wet chair r Mrs. W. K. Smith, living near Basin, the National Civic Federation to Ea md. natioi Wyo., recently set a hen with what point delegates to attend the tilted wltl b be to she supposed were hens eggs. The conference on Immigration tbe chai brood was hatched a few days ago, In New York City December 6 and bribery and is a combination of chicken and tilting ti Andrew P. Anderson was shot of the duck. The front part of the fowl is killed by Henry Holland at their sb Hendr Cali chick and the rear part duck. It has camp on Lost near Deep rceek, dust the J web feeL It makes a noise which is sixty miles west of Casper, Wyokm wa a combination of a chick's peep and a men were herders for J. B- 0Ue sited mol ducks quack. The freaks are healthy quarreled over a division of the rat1 and will be sent to an eastern zoo. The governor reports that the A riot between Japanese and white lng at Pu Chou, In the province Of men on the streets of Blaine, Wash., Chansl, China, is purely local. resulted In the serious injury of one soldiers sent out, have three only white man and at least four Japanturned; the remainder havingat PJ1' ese. The trouble grew out of a The officials 10 fight ably deserted. between an American nnd an Oriental Yuan-Fare sending n large the with artillery to the scene of St one of the canneries. turbance. Mrs. Minnie Burke Is In Jail In Seat The American charge at Bat tie, accused by her husband. Michael cables the state department that!.' Burke, with attempting to poison turn. coinin'1' Burke is In n serious condition. The Chinese In that city have agents ented by telegraph to their husband alleges that his wife gave orders wfth the purpose ol Singapore and Hongkong S00"8 8tr;chnlne American no more ship him to killing get his money. Slam. A coroner s Inquest and autopsy The Venezuela congress has over the remains of Joseph Whitford, estimates to the amount of $11,000. who was struck by a Butte street car the The s largest ever granted. and picked up dead, disclosed tho fact Ilshnients Include $2,2 5G.,0,, ,or that Whitford had been killed and his elgu debts; $2,500,000 for 'he body placed upon the tracks In an and navy, nnd $95,0' to cover up the crime. works. General Manager r. j, Horn of announced th9 October 2 has been Northern Pacific has wired l'lickcr Kupertend-en- t trial day for twenty-fou- r Weymouth of the Seattle division, ln lawyers and five corporations that he will give the striking opera- in Chicago on charges of cowMlC tors ten days wich to murn t0 in restraint of commerce, accept work under certain conditions as to rebates and Interfering with 8' rating after being reinstated. uiont witnesses. ' Two men were killed, two of 2,000 Sod a severely mooting During and six slightly Injured in an accident In the woods at Dlutowo, Ru99' at the mine No. l of the Union Pacific sacks and infantry appeared. f Coal company at Cumberland, Wyo A cialUts opened fire on tho troop , 15 feot lon. 8 feet revolvers, and the troops replle and 10 Inehes woU lng two of the Socialists, tll t' 1 h s. o well-arme- x the afternoon went to Mamers store, Jumped over the counter and, throwing his arm about Mamers neck, placed the revolver against Mamers head and killed him Instantly. Nicholas Keeten, who was In another part of the Btore, the only known witness of the murder, was shot In the abdomen when he attempted to rnn from the store. When police reached the place, Benson was still living but died after a few minutes. He placed the revolver In his mouth, the bullet passing through his brain. THE ALBANY HORROR. In Success of Peace Conference. London. The Times correspondent with General Nogls headquarters In the field sends tho following dispatch, dated August 12, by way of Fusan: "The Japanese army Is anxious to commence operations. The higher officers do not believe that tho military progress has been sufficient to Justify the expectation that Russian will concede the terms necessarily required by Japan. the first of ju)? One Japanese was killed and three been 246 cases of struck by handcar being their typhoI d Injured, Washington, D. c train near Missoula, MonL Thirteen Persons Were Killed and Two Fatally Injured. Albany. The collapse of the John G. Myers company department store on Tuesday, which resulted In the death of thirteen persons and probably the fatal Injury of two others, will be Investigated by a special commission. To avoid the possibility of a prejn-diceInquiry Mayor Gaus decided that all the Investigators shall be out of town men. d The discovery that the thirteen bod- ies already taken out will account for all of the victims of the accident Is a surprlso to Albanians who until Wednesday afternoon expected that at least a dozen more mangled forms were burled beneath the mins. So sure are tho wreckers that no more bodies are there that they havo bus pended their search. ANARCHY AT WARSAW. Several Policemen Shot by the Jewish Socialists, Warsaw. The police were busy Thursday afternoon filling the Jails with Jewish Socialists. They cap tured 250 armed with revolvers and daggers In a synagogue on Novollplt street. Fifteen others were arrested by a patrol on Francis Sekauska street after an exchange of shots. A bomb was discovered In the Btreets In th morning and three policemen were shoL i - - , u jj ' el-fo- rt !!2 ? ,T' T's;r. Tim Shea, J. t. Harrington, Thos. Ryan and C. J. MnnhnVe arrested at plclon of being lmnllelrea,i n 8U8 at tempt to rob the bank o m T at dasin. The 1,ewtt blPW oft the outer door with 'Cerlno, but got no further S eighteen and arresting 458. News has been received fro cade, B. C., of the drowning school teachers, Miss Agnes of Vancouver, B. C., and MM son of Cascade. While atten picnic they went swimming Una lake and lost their lives- - |