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Show OGrDEN, UTAH: armies BIG are engaged in I ARE ENJOINED BATTLE AT HAICHENG Details are Heager But Indicate Serious Defeat of General Kuro-patkiForces. MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1904 IP HANDS BOTH SIDES ARE STILL OFF Will be Evicted and Leiter Property That Is Unless the Beef Strike Takes a National Operated by ns Aspect. JBPIUNGF1ELD, 111, Aug. 1. Jo- WASHINGTON. Aug. l.-- Tlie Septi-inlie- r that non-uni- 1,-S- on UN G nl el Simun-chen- 8228,-58- 4. IS FIST and Government Had No Trouble in Selling Judge Parker Set of Jefferson's Inspectors Plead Not Works. Guilty Company Officials NEW YORK. Aug. 1. President Sarnaby, Secretary A rkin son and Treasurer Dexter of the Knickerbocker Steamboat company, owners of the locum, and Government Inspectors undherg and Fleming were arraigned In the Federal court today and ESOFUS, N. Y., Aug. L The hottest weather of the year failed to keep diJudge Parker Indoors today. He vided the forenoon between a long ride on horseback and a visit to the rye fields. The Judge's only visitor was a book agent, who succeeded in sellll Barn-hapkdd guilty. President ing him a set of Jefferson's writings, waa fixed at $20,000 and although the candidate is already post of the others sessed of several. at 15,000 each. nt on Wednesday morning. The arrests were made by Deputy Sheriffs Sebrlng and Bhaw, and according to their statement the men were driving through the canyon at g a pace. They made no stops nor did they abate their speed while drivlg past the Hermitage or the Oaks. At both the resorts numerous teams were hitched and the fact that no accidents occurred Is s miracle. When placed under arrest Theodore threatened to do all klnda of thing to Deputy Sebrlng, but he didn't. The authorities declare that they are 'determined to suppress the practice of fast driving In the canyon and evidently they Intend to make their promise good. record-breakin- Third Week of the Packers Strike Opens Quietly Settlement Not In Sight. pivs-idi'i- it REUTER'8 be desperate in the event of hit defeat. seph Leiter today asked and obtained will return to clyster Ray on the LONDON, AS- - The keenest anxiety It felt at the war from DISPATCH A the Federal court a temporary 90th and remain until iiith. AGENCY HAS - office for newt of the progress of the kurunion miners the injunction He ha no Intention of Interfering in general against SERTING battle. OR FRONT EAST at Zelgler, his mining property, which the beef strike unless the trouble OP ATKIN'S been turn- - RUSSIAN CRUISERS TO has been stockaded aiul which he ex- epivad generally tn olher trade or right flank has SAIL FROM KRONSTADT pect to operate with JAPANESE. help muses a meat famine so that the sitTHE ED BY after evicting all the unionists. Three uation take an aspect of national dis. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 1. PrepaDAY'S hundred and seventy-fou- r members of aster like the coal strike. Within the CHEE FOO, AUG. the Mine Workers are made defend- last few days the president ha been rations been have the for completed WON WAS HAICHENG AT BATTLE departure, under the command of Rear ants. The hearing Is set for Septem- assured by men in close toueh with the KUROKI, ACCORD-Nby general Admiral Enquist, of the cruiser divis- ber 15th. Chicago situation that the trouble will RECEIVED ion of TO REPORTS the second Russian Pacific solve itself by the men going haek to HERE. DEPORTED MINERS WILL work. squadron, now lying off Kronstadt. MAKE APPEAL FOR JUSTICE The warships will weigh anchor and 1. A big ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. OLD SEA CAPTAIN TO put to sea under sealed ordera within Gen-eat Halcheng. In la progrest battle three days. It Is also believed that DENVER. Aug. 1. Attorney II. N. RETIRE FROM SERVICE the the Count Keller, commanding auxiliary cruisers Don and Ural, Hawkins and John II. Murphy, counsel was killed by a which forces In the action, NEW YORK, Aug. 1. Captain II. probably are the ships reported for the Western Federation of Miners, shell.' General Kuropatkln's as passing Copenhagen with two tor- are devising ways and means to en- St. G. I.lndsay, bunting royal naval reserve, report to the csar leaves the result pedo boats, will be followed at once able the deported Cripple Creek minmakes his last ocean voyage as comno of the fight In doubt and makes er to return to their homes. Papers mander when the White Star liner by other converted merchantmen. death. s It Keller says. of mention This time the admiralty has resolved are being drawn and application will Celtic sails on her voyage for LiverOn July Slat the Japanese armies taht there shall be no question of the he made to some court, possibly the pool. simultaneously renewed their advance character of the warships engaged In Federal court, for an Injunction reFor thirty-tw- o years Captain LindThe Russian on our southern front. Don contraband. The and the Alliance Cltlsens and say hat followed the sea and for twenty-stopping straining rear guard offered a stubborn resistathe Ural will replace the SL Peters- mine owners from Interfering with any two years has been in the service nce until the attacks of the enemy burg and Smolensk which will come deportees who return to the Cripple of the White Star line, neterlng as a revealed that they were of greatly su- home and be recommissioned. Creek district junior officer. The Western Federation officials are perior strength. The rear guard slowly Captain Lindsay haa been In comretired In the direction of Halcheng. A BRITAIN ENTERS ANOTHER also making arrangements to reopen mand of the Celtic since she first was Slmuncheng Russian division near PROTEST WITH RUSSIA the union stores In Cripple Creek and put In commission In August, 1901. BeVictor that were raided and looted by fore that he commanded the Cymric. mccefully checked the advance of the enemy, which pressed toward our right While In command of the latter vea-sLONDON, Aug. 1. In the house of mobs on June Cth and 7th. flank. The Japanese main blow waa commons today Foreign Under SecreSheriff Edward Bell of Teller counhe distinguished himself by dedelivered by the Takushan army. Gentary Earl Percy stated that the gov- ty has advised against the reopening scending Into the hold and put out a eral Oku commanding, between Slernment had instructed the British of the stores or the return of the de- fire which had occurred among some muncheng and Halcheng, operating ambassador at St. Petersburg to pro- portees, fearing that such action .will chemicals. Three times he was overg test from various villages west of come by the fumes and finally taken against the Including of food lead to violence. on our eastern front. The ad- stuffs In the list of contraband of war. out unconscious. Captain Lindsay will vance of the Japanese began against INCREASE IN UTAH enter mercantile life. our main position. At that moment PLEHVES A83A8SIN DEAD; COAL PRODUCTION their chief force was disclosed opposMADE NO STATEMENT BLOODHOUNDS ON TRAIL ite our right flank and around It In the OF THREE HIGHWAYMEN WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Figures on direction of Sematse and Liao Tang. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 1. Min- the production of coal In the United The Japanese are also advancing ister Plehve's assassin died today as States In 1901 have been completed by JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Aug. 1. The east our of Hakiatse. the The three troops against who murdered the result of Injuries sustained at the geological survey. production highwaymen A second dispatch received from time he threw the bomb. He made no In Utah la given at 1,168,409 tons, val- Charles Hays, driver, and fatally ued at $2,026,038. This Is an Increase wounded Patrick Campbell, paymaster General Kuropatkln reports that the disclosures of any kind. over the production of the previous for the Puritan Coal company, a mile gradufighting around Slmuncheng south of Portage last Saturday are ally ceased Sunday evening. All the HEAVY JAP FORCE year of 108,314 tons, valued at Russian positions had been retained. LANDED AT YINKOW still In hiding in the Cedar swamp He adds that no reports had been reIdaho la credited with the produc- and continue to keep out of sight. ceived of operations on the extreme ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 1. Con- tion of 4,250 tons, valued at $13,250, Bloodhounds were put to work this right. The eastern Russian army re- siderable forces of Japanese have an Increase over the previous year of morning, but up to noon nothing In tained its position at Yenselln pass. been landed at Tlnkow under cover about 50 per cent the way of locating the men had been The Russian casualties have not been of several warships. The swamp la surWyoming produced 4,709,398 tons, accomplished. ascertained. valued at $5,916,951, an Increase of rounded by posses. The latest reports contain nothing AMBASSADOR RETURNS about 6 per cent over the previous STOCK HANDLERS ARE yet confirmatory of the rumora that RUSSIAN CAPITAL year. READY TO 8TRIKE AGAIN General Kuropatkln has been defeated. 1. American AMERICAN YACHT LOSES Slmuncheng Is located at the juncCARLSBAD. Aug. ture of the Fengwancheng ON TIME ALLOWANCE CHICAGO, Aug. 1. The position of and Lin Ambassador McCornick, who has been Ten roads. livestock handlers who struck at dethe taking the waters here, suddenly Two separate armies were launched parted for St Petersburg today. COWES, Aug. 1. Regatta week the stockyards In sympathy with the from the east, above the two roads, opened today with King Edward and packing house employes and afterwhile a third, under General The first ward returned to their duties, handling Oku, ACCIDENTAL DEATH Queen Alexandra present moved up east of the railroad from OF MONTANA MERCHANT race, for yachts over 100 tons, was won stock for the packing companies inTschichao, to try to cut off the Rusby Commodore Plants Ingomar, but volved in the strike as well as for the sian force there from Halcheng. If the on time allowance the White Heather Independent plants, has been made 1. a O. K. Paul, LIMA, Mont, Aug. latter move Is successful this force merchant of this town, waa killed yes- was given the race, Brunhilde second. plain by the official statement tha 1U be their action was taken In obedience to crushed. A portion of Gen- terday afternoon by the accidental dis- Ingomar third and Meteor fourth. eral Kurokl's army at the same time their union officers. It Is declared that charge of a shotgun. He was out huntWEAKER. advanced against General Count KelVEST GROWING they stand ready to strike again If It ing, and while taking the gun out of I. lers position at Dkhavuen, east of Liao hla buggy It went off. Mo., appears necessary. Aug. The charge SWEET SPRINGS, Tang, trying the favorite Japanese lodged in hla abdomen and he died Senator Vest Is weaker today. FORMER GOVERNOR PATTISON Plan of outflanking him on the right. shortly afterward. OF PENNSYLVANIA DEAD Still further o Salmatsxa-Llaon the north, FAST DRIVING IN CANYON. Tang road, the Japanese moved MINI8TER WITTE RETURNS PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 1. Former forward against Houtalatse, TO ST. PETERSBURG twenty-fl- v 8oderberg Brothers Are Arrested and Governor Robert E. Pattinon died at miles from Liao Tang. At all Plead Guilty. 6:30 this morning of pneumonia. The Points the Japanese ST. PETERSBURG. Aug. 1. Presemployed artilldisease was contracted owing to hard ery to the best advantage. Ministers of Council ident of the Theodore Soderberg was arrested in work at the recent Democratic naGeneral Kuropatkln's situation will Witte has returned from Berlin. Ogden canyon last night on two char- tional convention. ges, one for fast driving and the other for disturbing the peace by applyWON THE CHAMPIONSHIP. SLOCUM CASE FOR ing abusive language to an officer. HI was also M. brother. Frank Soderberg, arrested on the former charge. At the Ogden Furniture Company Team Downs Short Lins Aggregation IS IH COURT THE BOOK AGENT police court this morning both plead13 to 3. ed guilty and sentence will he passed 1' CONFIDENT OF WINNING The Ogden Furniture company's baseball team last Saturday trimmed the Oregon Short Line team by the comfortable score of 13 to 3. The game was scheduled as decisive of the amateur championship of the state and proved an easy mark for the Furniture boys. Gerhart, who twirls for the winners, covered himself with glory and pitched a splendid game. Taylor at short had everything his own way and ate up tereverything which came Into his ritory. Bramwell at third also played a snappy game and filled his position in fine style. Batteries Gerhard and Williams; Lund nnd Ponrman. Aug. 1. Quietude marked the npeulng hours of the twenty-fir- st strike. day of the stockyard men rontiu- Shipment of non-unil to arrive at the yards, four bun- - lieemen had arrived, the saloon bad been partially wrecked. It was necessary for the police to fire a volley over the heads of the rioters before CHICAGO, distributed vtred Hie being unsung plant. The packer cimmed heavy desertlou front the strikers' rails, hut the wholesale stampede antlcl- lusted this morning did not materialise. The stock receipts this morning were very heavy, being, 25,000 cattle, SS,-ihogs and 17,000 sheep. The ubaeiiee of President Donnelly of the Butchers' union on n trip to the western packing cities laken as an Indication that no Inuuediute steps looking to n settlement are contemplated. The commissary departments established by the Htiiker were thronged this morning by the mens' families. The packers now state that they will ue only two hundred of over five hundred teamster out on strike when the fight Is over, hnvlng inside other arrangements for the delivery of meat. The new busird of control which was selected Saturday to manage the strike met today and started a new line of Rctlon by adopting resolutions to be presented to the building inspector calling attention to the alleged violations by the packers of the building laws In housing non-uniinen In buildings without the protection which the laws demnnd. The state factory also Issued Inspector this morning four warrants against the superintendent of the Morris plant, who Is charged with employing boys under sge. In a fight Rt the Nelson Morris plant yesterday between Andrew 81ms and John Davis, both non-uniworkmen from Indiana, the former was stabbed and killed. Sims was employed by the packing company as a waiter in which had the Improvised dining-roobeen fitted up for the men employed as s. Davis was employed ns a cook by the same concern. While eating dinner they became involved In a quarrel over the food when Davis stabbed Simms. The police and a mob of strike sympathisers clashed last night in the vicinity of the stock yards. Two nonunion men had entered s saloon and asked for a drink, when strike sympathisers protested against the bartender serving them. Several policemen succeeded In ejecting the attacking men and the doors were barricaded. The rioters, reinforced by several hundred of their friends, returned later to renew the attack. A riot call was sent In, hut before the patrol wagons with a squad of po- - . 1 m strike-breaker- deiiel in ihelr attack. No one tun seriously Injured. they m-i- PRESIDENT DONNELLY STATE8 CAUSE OF THE STRIKE SIOUX CITY, la.. Aug. 1. President uf the Butcliera' union, who came here till morning, declured that the strike was brought shout by ths packers for the purM)se of desnonstrat. lug that they have not formed a meat trust and delre to hnve the Insprea-lo- n 1 Soundly go out that the Independents can supply all the meats needed. Directly he says the strike will result In an investigation by representatives of the dcpui'lnseiit of commerce and labor as in rise of putting meat on the market. NEBRASKA GOVERNOR MAKE8 INVESTIGATION OMAHA, Neb., Rug. 1. The strike situation Is unchanged. Governor Mickey made a quiet visit to the packing district and saw a car of nonunion men arrive at the Armour plant without disturbance. He returned to Lincoln satisfied with the manner In which the sheriff Is handling the situation. The strikers say msny men are deserting. INJUNCTION 8T. JOSEPH, Mo.. Aug. 1. A temporary Injunction, returnable on the 22d, was granted by Federal Judge Phillips today against the packing house strikers on the application of the packers. The affidavits cite a hundred lawless acts and contain the staten enls of the chief of police and sheriff that the situation Is beyond their control. MANY DESERTIONS AT KANSAS CITY KAXSAR CITY, Aug 1. The police Hint many skilled butchers deserted the strikers today and returned to work at Armours. There wns ho disorder this morning. reiKirted OFFICERS AS ESCORT FOR PACKERS TEAMS 8T. JOSEPH, Aug. 1. No strike disturbances occurred this morning. One hundred officers comprise the escort for the packers' teams. ANDREE THE PHILIPPINES GRANTED BY FEDERAL JUDGE FOUND LETTER IS BY WHALER Disease Makes Appearance at Hong- Message from Man Who Tried to Reach the North Pole hy kong Plague Gains Balloon. Headway. 1. About WASHINGTON. Aug. are week thirty rases of plague per while at Hongkong, being reported cholera haa also made Its appearance at that port. The latter Is considered a source of great danger to the Phil- CHRISTIANA, Norway, Aug. 1. A Norwegian whaler hH found, north of Spitsbergen, a bottle containing a letter from Andree dated 1898. The text of the letter Is not given. ippines. MANY SUIT AGAIN8T AMERICAN COMPANY BY VENEZUELA INJURED IN TROLLEY ACCIDENT NEW YORK, Aug. 1. Fifty passengers were Injured, eleven of them se1. Minister riously and one fatally In a head-o- n WASHINGTON, Aug. Vencollision between a runaway Mount cables that the Bowen at Caracas ezuelan government has brought suit Vernon trolley car and a Yonkers against the New Tork A Bermuda As- trolley car at Woodlawn late last phalt company upon an allegation that night the latter hae pledged itaelf to develop other resources of the country In ad- NO ATTEMPT MADE TO REOPEN MILLS dition to bitumen and failed to carry Bowen out the contract Minister FALL RIVER, Mass., Aug. 1. The has been Instructed to protest against a receivership on the principle that an gates of none of the mills were opened American corporation Is being made this morning and no developments are anticipated within ten days. the victim of government exigency. |