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Show T WAT TOCSTOW. IIKUiR. . numh . - HUMILIATE RUSSIA FREED FROM ENGLISH PRISON AFTER FOURTEEN LONG YEARS nil UTAH STATE NEWS. Thera were 2,000 visitors from out-lid- s points at Mantl during the Scandinavian reunion. The stone work on the federal building being constructed in Bait Lake Cltjr Is neaiiug completion. Bprlngvllie Is to have a new busi-pes- a block, which is to be used for lodge rooms and business purposes. The E.ks of Salt Lake City have decided to entertain the orphans of the city on lurplo day, August 14, at Lagoon. A representative of manufacturing here did not warrant inch a reduction. The mil's involved In the strike SOLDIERS HAVE EVAC- have about three and a quarter mil- ENGLAND VERY ANGRY ABOUT CZAR'S UATED NEWCHWANG. SINKING OF SHIP. lion spindles and a weekly product V when running In full of more than Destruction of Russian Property by 900,000,000 yards of cloth. 8he Demands Reparation for the Sinktho Torch Follows Departure of ing of the Knight Commander, inSEIZED BY RUSSIA. Russian Civil Administration. cluding a Salute of tho British Flag. PortLeft 8teamer Which Recently United Statca Minister Conger has land Held Up by Cxara Fleet cabled the alale department that he The British government Is sending liner A Asiatic Portland The has been informed that the Russians to Sir Charles Iterdlnge, Instructions which has been seized by the on Sunday evacuated Newrbwang. He Arabia, the British ambassador to Russia, from sailed Russian Vladivostok fleet also confirms the published reports of the sink-nigprotesting ergetically against on the Orient the for Ore., tho sinking by the Vladivostok squadBritish steamer th Knight Corn-toof Jii.j 1, carrying about 6,000 ,nof ron of the British steamer with a b the mander Vladivostok Ru,a of freight, valued at $187,087. Her cargo consigned to "The American ,1uadro- - Until the presentation of 3.1.C7G barrels of flour, cargo th not the R,,Mian Eoveroment Trading company. most of which was consigned to Ilong- deadministration civil The Russian w111 maln- i the merchants, with smaller shipkong from Newcbwang night parted Sunday ;ta,ned regarding its contents, but It is uonts to Kobo and Nagasaki. and the destruction uf Russian govknown that Preniler Ba,four and bl8 from not was protected ve.sil Tho ' w11118 ernment property liegan Monday morndecided to demand war risks, and but a slight portion of fullest shall be that ing at the instance of the administrathe reparation war her cargo was insured against tion. made by Russia, or measures will be was deemed then to what A battle took place Sunday oast of risk, owing V4 cent being taken to follow up the diplomatic deTa Tike Kiao, which resulted in the an exurliituut rate, mands. The rate at this port has since Russians being driven hack, and it is asked. The British note Sir Charles liar-ding- e 1 will Ikh-and cent, increased to per believed they will have to retire to will submit will not mention the as a result of the news Liao Yang. Tho battle lasted all day. advance again amount of indemnity Russia must pay of the operations of the Vladivostok the owners of the ship and British WILL FIGHT TO FINISH. squadron. subjects having goods on board the hut all that will be sought will INDIANS. FOR vessel, THE BAD 8 took Yards Strike Will be Long and be the establishment of the principle Fierce Battle. Battle Between Cowboys and Rsdmen of Indemnity and apology. A salute of With all peace negotiations broken Results in Three Deaths. the British flagrmust also be conceded off and with all the allied trades News has reached Harlem, MonL, and the future protection of neutral unions employed at the different of a shooting affray at Rocky Point, In hipping assured. plants In Chicago, with the exception tho Bad Lands of the Missouri, in The attitude of the British governof the teamsters and the stationary which three men. all Indians, are said ment Is the result of the thorough conengineers, out on strike In sympathy to have been killed. Several cowboys sideration given to the reports reMRS. FLORENCE with the butcher workmen, who quit were wounded, one, it Is believed, fa- ceived from Sir Claude Macdonald, Mrc. Florence Maybrtck Is free. work two weeks ago, the stuck yards tally. The trouble is said to have been the British minister at Toklo, and the strike has settled down to what prom- startled by a half-bree-d named Brown. examination of International law au- She left Truro, Cornwall, July 20, on her way to France. ises to be one of the bitterest fights Brown and several Indians were on thorities by legal experts. Mrs. Maybrlck's Imprisonment was between capital and labor in the his- their way to the Crow reservation, RUSSIA LOSES DESTROYERS. not terminated with the clang of tory of America. Point at a for time Rocky and stopped the last sound which remains in doors, As has beun threatened for some There they began drinking and play- Reported That Three Warships Hava the ears of so many of her fellow time, the allied trades employed in the ing poker with some cowboys. A dl Been Blown Up by Japs. prisoners who preceded her to liberty packing industry quit work when agreement ensued and this led to tbs Russian who have arrived from Aylesbury, where she spent more regugees to the assist cailed upon Monday use of weapons. When the smoke at Chefoo from Port Arthur, report than fourteen years of her life. It striking butchers iu their efforts to cleared away it was found that Brown, that the Lieut. Burukoff and two other closed at the arched doorway of the bring the packers to terms. In several Aloyslus Chandler and an Arapahoe torpedo-boa- t white convent of the Sisterhood of were destroyers torpedoed the Instances the men did not wait for the Indian were dead, their bodies being Epiphany In the little town of and totally destroyed by the Japanese official notification from their leaders Truro, Cornwall, with the black-robe- d builets. filled with on the night of July 25. literally aiaters uttering their blessings and to go on a strike, but threw down good wishes for her future. With two Horse. own From President Thrown their tools and quit work of their PREDICT8 END OF WAR. Mrs. Maybrick entered companions, narrow volition. President Roosevelt bad a Miss Dalrymple, secof the carriage Decisive Which Battle Will Reeult in The number of men wbo have quit escape from severe injury if not death to the sisterhood, and was retary Ruseian Defeat and End Campaign. work at tho stock yards in Chicago while out riding on Wednesday last. driven to Stauatcll, a small station under date of July 2G, the fourteen miles away, where she boardIs Cabling 2U.0U0. alone about He was thrown from his horse, shooted a train and started on her Journey Newcbwang correspondent of the LonBoth sides to the controversy deing over the animal's head Into the She will not come to One hundred to France. clare they will not yield, and will road. He landed on the back of his don Daily Mall says: ! tnd America until her presence Is considwho entered Japanese cavalry make a fight to the finish. head andneck and that the ahock did ered necessary. over had orders to return to s Ta It Aa not break hla neck la n miracle. Mrs. Maybrick. who waa Mist FlorGREAT LABOR WAR BEGINS. Tche Kiao, but remained until mornwas be was little more than stunned ence Elizabeth Chandler, a member of at the of British and the request for a second. He got to bis feet b ing a and prosperous southern Thirty-seveBig Textile Mills Made American consuls. who accompanist Mrs. fore Roosevelt, family, waa married July 27, 1881. Idle by Walkout The Japanese have not pursued tbs In - St. James chureh,- on hla trip," cotfld wen dlsmounfffv Piccadilly, to ' The strike order Issued by the Fall hftn1 as they desire to James Maybrick of Liverpool. She and,, although a little dizzy, assured fleeing enemy River (Mass.) Textile Council, calling ber he was all right with the First army in a decisive was then 18 years old. Her husband for upward of 30,000 operatives to rebattle between Hal Cheng and Liao waa over 40 years of age. Battle Lasted All Day. main away from the mills in protest In the spring of 1889 Mr. Maybrick Yang, which, even In the opinion of against a reduction of 12 Vi cents In A dispatch to a London news Russian officers, will result in a Rus- became ill and in a few days he died. wages, became effective Monday, and agency from Liao Yang reports heavy sian defeat and will terminate the His brothers Investigated his death and charged Mrs. Maybrick with the the response was as general aa the lap artillery fighting there all day on Sat campaign." murder of her husband. 3 long trial bor leaders had predicted. Practically urday. The Russian casualties, It la followed, and a number of doctors President NominaRoosevelt Accepts Into exceed not mills every one of the thirty-sevealleged, were thought swore that the decedent died of artion. volved shut down. There was no dis- 400, while the Japanese are said to The senical defense poisoning. Theodore Roosevelt on Wednesday order. Both sides admit this is the have lost more men. The Japanese, proved that for twenty years Mr. Maybeginning of one of the most deter- who were attacking the "southern de- formally opened the political campaign brick had been a confirmed user of mined contests which Fall River has tachment, according to the dispatch, of 1904 at his country home, Sagamore arsenic and that he dally took doses ever seen. The managers maintain were forced to retire precipitately, Hill, Oyster Bay, L I. President Roosevelts speech of acthey were compelled to reduce wages leaving their dead and wounded ou was characteristically forceceptance convincto save their business, whiie tho oper- tho field. The dispatch gives ful and direct in argument, and replete of names . cotton and details conditions atives say places. affecting ing with epigrammatic passages. The of the president will be circuspeech MAP OF PORTION OF MANCHURIA, SHOWING APPROXIMATE POSIlated extensively in the campaign, as, TIONS OF THE. OPPOSING ARMIES AND OF MOTIEN PASS. aside from the letter of acceptance which he will issue iu a few weeks, it probably will lie his only public utterance during the campaign. The formal notification of the convention was made on behalf of a committee representing every state and territory in the United States by Joseph G. Cannon, speaker of the house. RUSSIANS ON TIIE RUN THE WEEKLY SENTINEL the Salt Lake City Salvation Army Las been In Lohl soliciting financial aid and la obtaining good responses. The Infant daughter of Mrs. Willard F. Funk of Salt laike City was so badly scalded that the iiltle one died the following morning. Robs Welis, of Balt Lake City, while riding homeward on his bicycle, was run over and trampled on by a runaway team, sustaining painful injuries. The people of Nephi are taking pride In the progress of their young band, which consists of twenty-tou- r members, ranging In age from 13 e to 19. It Is claimed by the knowing ones that a second Cripple Creek Is likely to spring up from the erstwhile proiltr less hills some fifteen miles south of Richfield. Rush valley Is being devastated by cricket scourge, millions of the n pests having scalod the mountains Rush valley and Death canyon snd Skull valley. The Lchl city council has granted a franchise to 11. Mahler of Cleveland, 0, to operate an electric railroad through the streets of Lelil City for a period of 100 years. r Albert Wilkinson, a of Kaysvillo, was hold up and rubbed of (19 by a highwayman In broad daylight on the public road between Kuys-rill- e and Salt Lake. Benjamin Tollman of lloncyvllie was badly burned on the leg by step-pinon a live wire while doing aomo carpenter work at the Bear River power plant at Garland. Andrew Jacobsen, a miner from Arixoua, while attempting to beat his way to Butte, was run over and suffered the loss of his leg by a Short Line train In the yards at Ogden. Adjutant General Burton of the Utah satioual guard has Issued an order fixing the timo of holding the stats encampment August 22 to 28. The place of holding it has not yet been decided. Fending connections between the new and old bodies of ore In the Johnny company's mines at Slalellne, operations at the mill have been suspended and the stamps bung up. Ilans for the Black Hawk reunion, to be held at Mauti on the 17th, 18tli and 19th of August, are being perfected. The seat of the Black Hawk war wus In Sanpete and Sevier counties. Harold Olson, a mason, while working on tho school house at Chester, was sunsiruck and fell friiu the lop or (lie building, breaking his leg, and, it is feared, sustaining internal injuries. In Salt Lako City last week, a child pushed a screen from a window and fell, but fortunately the screen lodged on a chair and the child fell upon tha screen, thus probably saving it from erious injury. lctcr Ottcson of Ogden was run over by a train and sustained injuries that proved fatul. Trainmen saw Ottcson on the track and called to him to get off. hut he became confused and was run down. Director Hyatts weekly bulletin reports crops generally good In Utah and making rapid growth, the exception being In the southern part of the state, where the prevailing dry weather has been of long duration, causing tho supply of water lor irrigation to run very low. Clarence Kenney, aged 38, a Salt street car man. attempted to kill Mrs. Mary Nichols, aged 4u, stabbing her several limes with a pocket knife, because he had become infatuated with her and she refused his advances. The Mormon church has Just issued a pamphlet giving the names usd ail dresses of the church ollicials and mission presidents throughout the winds world. This is the first authentic directory of this nature that has been Issued for many years. Governor Wells bus apjKiiuted delegates to the American mining which will convene in its annual session at Foil land, O;o.. August 22. The delegates will endeavor to have the next year Jjeld In Salt I,ake City. the fruit-growe- g gold-bearin- g enu-gross- , ht . n, i rt- he lf u well-know- n n n MAYBRICX large enough to have killed a dozen ordinary men. Mrs. Maybrick was eventually sentenced to death by the Judge, Sir Fitzjames Stephen, wbo spoke for two days In charging the jury. He said it was Impossible for them not to find her guilty In the fact of the medical evidence. The judge died some time later In a madhouse. From the time of Mrs. Maybrlck's conviction ber mother, the Baroness de Roques, was uni emitting in ber efforts in behalf of the prisoner. She succeeded in having the death sentence commuted to penal servitude for life and finally has obtained the freedom of her daughter, to whose rclt-as- o from prison she had devoted her life. The baroness was aided by influential friends on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1900, after the death of Lord Russel of Killowen, chief justice of England, a letter which he had written to Mrs. Maybrick in 1895 was dls-- . covered. It showed he was convinced that she ought never to have been convicted and it has been generally understood tbat all the recent American embassadors to tho eourt of Bt James have done everything possible to obtain Mrs. Maybrlcks pardon. The fact of her probable release was used at a reason for securing the postponement of a trial last year of lawsuits bearing on Mrs. Maybrlck's Interest In land In Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia until she was able personally to testify. If she was not able to testify In these salts Mrs. Maybrick and her mother would have lost all title and Interest In the many thousands of acres of land Involved in the case. Strikers ! j (Ths Positions of the Russian Forces Ars Shown by Unshaded Rectangular Figures. The Japanese Positions Are Shown by tho Black Rectangular Figures. Motien Paaa la Marked by a Star.) t j Attack Thirty Negroes Kansas City Yards. The first real show of violence on the part of the striking packing house employes at Kansas City was displayed when Armour & Co. tried to take thirty negroes In a box ear into their plant. A mob forced the crew to stop the train. Then the negroen were pulled off the car and roughly handled. Scv-- ! eral shots were fired, but no one was hurt, and when the police arrived tho crowd had dispersed. No arrest were Made. Eight Hundred Killed in the Near Ta Tche Kiao. Battle The Japanese legation at (Washington has received a dispatch from the foreign office at Toklo. dated July 27, saying that General Oku report s that on July 24 hla army commenced an attack on the enemy, posted on Taping-lland other eminences near Ta Tche Kiao, which were fortified with a strong defensive works. The enemy was dislodged after a fierce artillery fight and a lose to the Japanese of 800 men. n Candidate to Wed. News cornea from Shepherdstown, W. Va., that Henry O. D&vla, the Democratic candidate, will In the fall marry Mrs. Katherine Reynolds, widow of Dr. John Reynolds of Shepherdstown. Mrs. Reynolds Is 70 years old, while 8raator Davis Is SU. There ia a youthful romance back of the story. When Mr. Davit was a railroad hrakeman he became a suitor fur her hand, but her family clijei to tin- - mat rb mid Davis was relumed. n-- His Nerve Failed Him. Although he s.ashed his throat and wrists, stabbed himself In the arms in several places and then set fire to his house, II. J. Wilkenson's effort to commit suicide at IJttle Rock, Wash., was a failure. When the house began to hum Wilkenson's nerve failed him, Nelgbbors, aroused by his cries, rescued him and brought him to Olympia for surgical treatment. Wllkenson la 75 yenrs of ago. and lived alone. Deby drink. Imspondency. aegi.ixat--at pelled bis ntti-m- Blaze in Big Land Refinery. Fire broke out aiming the parking bouses In the stock yards in tho lard refinery of Swift A Co.. In Chicago, Wednesday, and soon gained such headway that every available fire In the stock yards district was called out. Rumors of Incendiarism were rife. Examination, however, apparently showed the cause of the blaze to have been an overheated dynamo. The building was filled with tlorres of lard, many of which exploded, spreadin every direcing the burning tion. The loss is half a million. eu-gl- gn-asi- Church of England Home at Truro, Cornwall, Been Resting. LIPTCN MAY RACE AGAIN. i Where CONSUL IN Mrs. Maybrick Has SERIOUS TROUBLE. Significance in Fact That Shamrock III. le Not for Sale. It may or may not he significant of Sir Thomas J. Upton's Intentions regarding a fourth challenge for the America's cup that Shamrock III. has been withdrawn from tho market. When the first and second Shamrocks were sold last November It was generally understood that the third Shamrock was for sale also. About ten days ago a yacht broker made an Inquiry concerning the Shamrock of J. Kelthly Crowther, Sir Thomas' manager In this country, and waa unhesitatingly Informed that she waa not for sale. Mr. Crowther succeeded Mr. Davis aa the I.lpton agent shortly after the conclusion of the last Sir match for the America's cup. Thomas Is expected in the first week of September. Albion W. Tourgee Accused of Making False Reporta Albion V. Tourgee, familiar to readers of postrchcllion literature as the author of "The Fool's Errand" and other works dealing with the reconstruction period, has recently got Into trouble with the wine shippers of Bordeaux. France, where he is tho consul fur the United States. They claim that Tourgee has made reports to hla government regarding the blending of Bordeaux wlnea with those of Bllboa. Spain, and the sale of the product aa pure French wine. The association of wine growers at tho French center of this Industry condemn Mr. Tourgee roundly and refer to him with fine Gallic sarcasm as a romantic novelist not in keeping with his duties as a government rep- To Fight for Suffrage. Dr. John F. Keybiiru, one of tho oldest physicians in Washington and noted as one of those who attended President Garfield the summer he died, has begun to agitato tba Irene of suffrage for the people of the District of Columbia. Dr. Reyburn was a delegate to the Chicago convention and has decided to use the authority of bis position as the official leader of the Republicans of Washington to make headway, If possible, for the suffrage movement I)r. Reyburn says he Intends to lead a vigorous movement before the next congress. Effect of Political Honors. Among those who crowded around Senator Fairbanks after the nomination at the Chicago convention was an old Indiana lawyer who somewhat embarrassed the rice presidential candidate by piping out: Ah. Charlie, I knew you'd get to be a big man one of these days. Seems to me. Judge, replied the senator, "that I was pretty big when you used to teach me law. "Yes, Charlie, you were a toll lad, cried the old man In a high voice. "Nature haa set your head pretty high, but this nomination will fill you nut shout the chest" fie resentative. 1 |