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Show VOLUME Vin. NUMBER OGrDEN, UTAH 260. JAPANESE ARE WITHIN HAS MFI-MORM- TUESDAY, STRIKERS IN THOUSANDS ON PARTY FEW MILES OF MUKDEN SEPTEMBER 6, 1904 APPLY FOR OLD JOBS ! AIDED BY MOTHER-IN-LA- AND MAY BE Thirty Thousand Have Subscribed Roosevelt Will Meet Diaz of Mexico to Movement Old Liberal With Chairman Lyons LYNCHED of Texas. Party to be Copied. MADRID, Sept. 6. This city came very near having a lynching the other i day, and the danger that a mob may SALT LAKE, Sept. 3. Prominent break into the jail is not yet over. The culprit is a young man who, Gentile, principally bolters from the assisted by his niother-in-Iakilled Republican state ticket, today decided his wife by throwing her Into a to organize an party baker's oven, where she was rousted along the lines of the old Liberal parto death. Movety. Thirty thousand have subscribed. Latest News of Kuropatkin's The movement was made by the Are REUNION OF ments Is that His Troops LOUISIANA VETERANS Keuriis faction. Tired Oat With Heavy Marching BATON ROUGE, La., 8ept. 8. The city la today In the hands of the United Confederate Veterans and their friends, whose annual state convenAc6. Sept. ST. PETERSBURG, tion was opened under most favorable from Mukden cording to a telegram Visitors arrived in large auspices. now within numbers last are the Japanese forces night and this morning The and more are on the fourteen miles of that place. way. The city is la distinctly handsomely decorated in their honor. booming of their cannon The gathering will continue for two heard In the stronghold. days. In addition to the business sesheld at the sions, which are kuropatkin HAS WITH OYAMA state university, thebeing program provides RACE for many features of outdoor enter's Sept. 6. General In out retreat Is being carried Kuro-patkln- MUKDEN, order despite The heavy rains which fell yesterday and today, retarding the heavy gun sand transport of commlaarlat trging. Long lines followed by trains of artwagons are good illery and finally by the army dragging Its way northward. The Japanese are continually engaging the Russian rear. The heada of the commis- liAl.VKSTii.N. Fivi..ii Texas, RiniKevelt Koine Sept. time 6. am' Cecil Lyon, ilinir-nv- n of the Texas Republican executive coinniittee, that he would come here for a week's hunting in Texas ami Indian Territory. In November President Diax will visit K1 Paso to attend the n.it ional irrigation congress and ut the x.mie time he will be inivted to POSTOFFICE CLERKS IN SESSION particiiate In the hunt with President Roosevelt. It is understood that PresST. LOUIS, Mo, Sept. 8. The ident Ring will aeept the invitation. United National Association of Post-offiClerks began its fifth annual DIES IN CONVULSIONS convention In St. Louis today with OF HYDROPHOBIA delegates present from many states. The four days' sessions will be taken CHICAGO. Sept. 8. Speeding In a up with matters pertaining to the In- train from Columbus to Chieago in the terests of the clerks and the general hojie of obtaining relief by the Pasgood of the postal service. The world's teur treatment for hydrophobia, Robert fair officials have set aside tomorrow Striekland, a boy aged five, to be known as Postotfiee Clerks' Day, died in the train last night In the and the delegates to the convention throes of terrible convulsions incident will attend the exposition In a body. to the disease. pivniix'-- t'nKiiiel ARE GATHERED BATTLE Of DULL 11 fair-hair- PRINCESS LOUISE cuer. AT YAI TAI reports that the retreating Russians have become dispirited on account of the constant harassing of the Japanese. A number of Russian soldiers have been shot down by their officers for trying to run away. OF HARBIN HAS BEGUN GAINESVILLE, Va, Sept 6. The third battle of the maneuvers at Bull Run began at midnight with the placing of outposts by General Bell's army and of Browns at a thoroughfare the throwing out of an advance guard by General Grant's army of Blues stationed at Manassas. The hours between midnight and dawn were occupied by Grant In placing artillery In advantageous positions for an attack on the Browns. Firing from the big guns began at long range shortly after daylight and was followed by infantry skirmishes and then by general fighting all along the line. There was actunl fighting this morning between the Seventh and Fifteenth regular cavalry regiments. The two opponents met In the road midway between the two camps and charged one another. They fought with fists and the flat of the swords. Much trouble was experienced In separating them. None were seriously hurt The rivalry between the two regiments has bred some . VIENNA, Sept. 8. ed SIX MASKED IS AT JERSEY BEGINS gin Firing. TOKIO, Kept. 6. An official dispatch this evening announces that the bulk of the Russian forces Is assembled at Yen Tal. The newspaper JIJI EVACUATION THIRD ce Maneuvering Armies at GainsviQe It Is Said She Does to Marry Her Place Big Guns and Be- sariat trains have already passed through Mukden and are receding northward. The main Japanese army la marching up along the roads eastward of the Russian lines of retreat, which converge toward Mukden. Another Japanese force is heading for Mukden from the westward from the direction of Liao river. General Oyama la evidently making a race for Mukden. He has a superiority In numbers, especially In artillery. RUSSIANS tainment. MEN BLOW UP SAEE Not Intend They Escape With Eight Hundred ResDollars Useless Pursuit in Automobile. A telegram to- Sept. 6. Six masked robbers blew up a safe In the Lehigh Valley Traction company's barn early this morning and escajan with nearly 800 of the receipts for yesterday. The robber assaulted several employe who resisted and bound They had only and gagged them. time to blow up one safe when 'an alarm Bounded and they fled In a ato-le- n wagon. Townsmen pursued them In an automobile, but failed to catch SOUDKRTON. day reports that Princess Louise of Coburg and Count Keglevitch Matta-ltcwith whom she eloped, have arrived at the Island of Jersey by way h, Pa, of France. It Is said that the princess plans to have another examination made of her sanity and to obtain a divorce from her husband. It is said that she will not marry the count, with whom her the thieve. relations are wholly Idealistic. BITTER STRIFE NEGROES-INDIILG- E IS BEING WAGED III PISTOL FIGHT OUTLOOK IN PENNSYLVANIA The GERMAN OCTOPUS MAY RIVAL STANDARD OIL Russ wires that the Japanese are now within twenty-fiv- e miles of that city. BERLIN, Sept 6. A new company He repeats the report that the Rus- has been formed at Hamburg which sians are preparing to abandon the may become a formidable rival to the city and says the evacuation has al- Standard Oil company. ready begun. The censorship Is being The new company, which has been transferred from Mukden for the pres- assured of the hearty support of the ent to Harbin as Interruption of the German government, will exploit the telegraph lines la believed possible. newly discovered oil fields In Holstein which the Standard Oil company has KUROKI 18 BEING failed to get control of owing to the HELD IN CHECK antipathy of Germans to John D. Rockefeller's pet enterprise. YEN TAI, Sept. (. Heavy fighting The first oil was struck In the fall Is of here today. of 1903, but it was then thought that proceeding northeast The Japanese are pressing northward it was present In small quantities of alng the ridges of the east railway. importanace only to the local towns, Several skirmishes have occurred but careful prospecting has shown that within twenty miles southeast of Muk-'le- n. 'the strata are to be found The Russians are holding Ku-m- In almost all parts of Holstein, and ip check with a rear guard action the oil produced Is of excellent qualwhile the Russian Liao Yang army Is ity. Proceeding northward. refuge In Saigon on August 80th will ALEXIEFF MOVES disarm In that port HEADQUARTERS TO HARBIN RUSSIANS RETIRE BEYOND YEN TAI LONDON. Sept. 6. The Harbin correspondent of the Central News wires lat Viceroy Alexleft and his staff TOKIO, Sept. 8. It Is reported at Harbin, having transferred that the Russians have retired beyond Ihelr headquarters there from Vladlvo-toc- k. Yen Tal, which Kurokl has occupied. Sept I Former Liberian Minister Is Shot Tremendous Vote Cast in Vermont in Effort to Cut Republican Many friends In Ogden by a Jealous Husband In with Serious Condition. Majority. regret of deep kl ' ar-rtv- ed 4 CRUISER KUROKI'S TROOPS ARE TIRED OUT DIANA WILL DISARM AT 8AIGON TOKIO, Sept. 8. The latest news of Sept. 8. The Japanese Kurokls movements Is thnt his troops government was today Informed by the are exhausted by the continuous French minister at Toklo that the marching find fighting of the fcnsslnn cruiser Dlnna, which took week. TOKIO, ST. JOSEPH, Mo, Sept. 6. Accusing him of paying attentions to his wife, Dr. William Carrion today shot Dr. J. R. A. Orossland, a politician and former minister for Liberia. Both are colored. Crossland's condition is se- VOTE al Former Ogdsnit Died Suddenly Pleasanton Hotel, San Francisco, Last Night. 8 of the WILL WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept. TO CALL OFF Slate Chairman Hall, uf i In force to lYiinxyhaiiia, rallying incrMxtf i be number of Democratic STRIKE. coiigrcexmcn from that elate, though inhuming, of courxc, that Hie tat will go Republican in the national election. He xuy: "We should, and cun, increase our Packers Will Take Men Back as eoiigreMHiuual ivpreentnlioii from the Fast as Places Are Ready for three we now huve to (ell members, memberadd seven to our present them Allied Trades Favor Endship in the state senate, double the ing the Fight. representation of the Domocraey In the house of representatives, eleet to be seven of the thirteen judge ehosen in November to secure the CHICAGO, Sept. 6. Thai llie vote of suceesfi of the Democrat ie ticket in the striking butchers workmen to many uf the counties now considered be will stock yards taken end the today to as belonging the nmehlne. men and that will the go back struggle GOVERNOR DAVIS to work tomorrow is freely predieted IS at the strikers headquarters. In the meantime the general sympathetic LITTLE RUCK. Sept. 8. Governor ordered for Wednesday morning strike Davis hits been by a 50,000 Is lie held In abeyance. to This may to 60,000 plurality, other offieers on the stale ticket were unopposed. also apply to the order declaring all meHl unfair after tonight. While tlie Kii'kers refuse to talk it MOODY MAY BE Is generally accepted tliut the conferences between the strike leaders und MUCH MISTAKEN representatives of the packers have resulted In the agreement of the lut-t- er to take the men back on the old terms on condition that the strike be called off. The general sentiment : Thinks Republican Plurality In among the striking butchers and allied trades now out, favors the accepNew England Will Be Enough tance of' the proposition and a return and to Spare. to work. More than a thousand atrikers had applied for their old plnrea at the yards 9 OYSTER BAY. Sept. 8. Chalrmun at oclock this morning. Mias Mary McDowell, the head of To Cortelynu of the Republican nntlonal the University settlement, la given the committee left here quietly this morn- credit of reopening (he negotiations between the imckera slid strikers. ing. Attorney-neiiprMoody wa a call- While she has been openly sympathiser ut Sagamore Hill today. He came ing with the strikers and aiding their families her good ofilcea have been acto give the president hi Impressions who made cepted liy the packers, of the outlook In New England. He known their terms through her. think the Republican plurality will Upon this new proposition a referthousand endum vote will be taken today. The go above the twenty-fiv- e result of the vote will probably be margin. 8 o'clock this evening. An Italian tramp was urresled at known at Today's meeting of the allied Sagamore Hill yesterday but was re- trades' conference board resulted in leased by Squire Franklin, the local unanimous instructions to ail the unions involved to meet this sfternoon justice. He seemed harmless. to decide whether to call the strike off or not. HUTCHINSON. DEATH OF E. M. BURLINGTON, Vt, Sept. 8. A tremenduou vote wa cast this morning according to advices received from all part of the state. The strife be- tween the parties is the bitterest ever known In the state. Thl Is one of the rious. The affair was a pistol duel, each largest vote ever polled In the hisman firing four shots. The men met In tory of Vermont. a barbershop and on the suggestion of If the Democrats succeed In cutting Crossland withdrew to the street, to any exwhere the firing began. Carrion was the Republican majority tent It will be taken as a sure sign of arrested. a national victory for that party. The AGO. YEARS 4JXXMM0 LIVED Democrat are therefore determined to AMHERST. Mass, Sept. 6. Prof, pile up a big vote and are confident head of the expedition in Wyoming in thl morning of reducing the Republisearch of the remains of extinct anior 17,000. mals. has Just returned, having been can majority to 18,000 assistHis ten weeks. absent about ant T. C. Brown of Fitchburg. Am- WYOMING DEMOCRATS IN CONVENTION herst 04, and W. W. Palmer of South-fielAmherst '05, will remain In Wy8. A disoming for about two weeks longer. CHEYENNE, Wyo, Sept. expedithe Prof. Loomis reports that patch from Rock Spring say there tion was a very successful one snd wa good attendance at the opening that more than five hundred specimens of the Wyoming State Democratic were secured. The convenThe party first went to Rapid City. convention there today. 8. D, and started from there with the tion will nominate candidates for conteam of horses used last season. They gress, governor, state treasurer snd drove 450 miles to the Rig Horn Ba- Judge of the supreme court. sin In Wyoming, and on Gray HUI river gathered about half of their collecOLNEY 8PENDS THE tion. On Brldger creek they found DAY WITH PARKER their choicest specimens, many of which were entirely new. The best ESOPUS. Sept. 8. Richard Olney specimen Is that of a prehistoric horse, rarker. No which Is nearly complete. They have spent the dny with Judge made as to been ha statement also specimens of early monkeys, what subject were discussed. squirrels and pigs. d. yt will the CATTLE BUTCHERS VOTE TO STAY OUT 4 The cattle morning, by to eleven, to atay out. seventy-on- e are voting on the unions other Eight question. The packers reiiort a few non-unimen applying for work. With the exception of the casting men all the unions voted to stay out. However. If Chicago votes in favor of a return Kansas City unions will follow suit Kansas City, Sept. voted this butchers learn sud- death of E. unexpected which occurred at M. Hutchison, the Pleasanton Hotel, Sun Francisco, last night. Mr. Hutchison, who Is a brother of T. S. and John Hutchison, was for several year clerk at the in thl city Reed and Pacific hotel and hi happy, genial disposition made for him an army of friends. No details of the circumstances attending hi death have yet been received here, but his brothers left on the noon train today for San Francisco to attend to the obsequies. For the past two year the deceased was employed as day clerk at the Pleasanton Hotel, where he died, and during his sojourn In the Bay city he rmide many friends. Deceased was thirty-foyears of age and was born at Burntisland, Scotland, coming to this country about eleven years ago. den and ST. PETERSBURG, Harbin correspondent UNIONS lVinoi-r.iii- anti-Morm- Russians Assemble at YenTai. DEMOCRATIC 6. on STRIKERS ALL WANT THEIR OLD JOBS a OMAHA, Sept. 6. Anticipating the end of the strike, about two hundred strikers applied for their old places this morning and fifty were taken bark. Of three hundred colored union men who went out two hundred and have returned to work seventy-fiv- e within the last three days. All nre skilled workmen. ur ARE WILLING TO GO BACK TO WORK RECEIVES POPES BLESSING. MONROE, Mich.. Sept. C. A special blessing from his holliness Dus X, signed with his own hand, and a magnificent medal blessed and forwarded by the pontiff, were among the honors received today by John Davis in commemoration of the completion of his fiftieth year as s parochial school teacher at St. Mary's school, this place. It is said to be the first time that papHl honors have lieen conferred on a layman In America for such services In parochial school work. The singular and exceptional recognition was secured through Cardinal the papnl delegate, at the suggestion of some of Mr. Davis former pupils. , Mar-tinel- li, EAST ST. LOUIS, Sept. 6. Ry a vote of 1.750 to 511, the strikers decided to return to work on the packers terma President Donnelly was notified of the result. FIFTH KANSAS CON- GRESSIONAL DISTRICT ABILENE. Kas.. Sept. 6. The Demo- crats of the Fifth congressional district are holding their convention here today. The Pnpullst district convention Is also in session and a fusion candidate will probably be agreed upon. The two persons most prominently mentioned for the nomination are Judge J. A. Flack of this city and It A. Lovltt of Snllna. |