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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL VOLUME OODElNr, UTAH DAY IS LOST TO THE RUSSIAN ARMY IX. NUMBER E1PI 103. WEDNESDAY, MARCH, 8 1905 INSURRECTION IN CAVITE PROVINCE DVfRHMEHT WILL jietylene Gas CONCLUDE TODAY Plant Blows Up, and Injuripiling Nellie McKay PeoOthers x ng Twenty-SiPenned Under Wreckage. ple RETREAT FROM MUKDEN Russian General Has Been Overwhelmed General Oyama and Will Make His Last Stand at Tie Pass. ittttt44 Granger, hM I 4 jar a solo. 4 444 of those present st the accident were young peo the pit The explosion extinguished utmost congpbta and resulted in the The shrieks of ation and disorder. of the men, cries the women and the As direction. in sir every the jent women Quickly as possible men and rushed towards the meeting bouse, to lesm the dreadful story of what had happened, and to offer such assistance Neariy all lime of the they could. The fact that a greater number waa not killed Is little abort of a miracle. It was with great difficulty that many of the Injured were rescued from their as position. Had not action been this direction It seems certain that some of the victims would perilous prompt In cremated, is a list of the most haw been following seri- ous? Injured: Vivian amice McRae, Ida Smith, WUiue, Nora Johnson, Elisabeth I Bawden, Myra Burden, Charles Haxel Hinson, Frederick Eldredge, Hemlnway, Melvin Grow, Haxel Murphy Erma Fairboum, Minnie Fair- born, Annie Mitchell, Arva Mitchell, Mabel Mackay, Annie Horne. Alonso 4 disappointed. After the government rested the deLaura Gerber, Irene Solomon. Fred Thomas, Wiley Solo- fense called Expert Accountant Doolitmon, Thomas Alma Mackay, Drills tle and asked permission that he be allowed to examine the books of the Home, and a number of others. Oberlin bank. The request was granted PITTSBURG BENCH and court adjourned. 8HOW RECORD BROKEN It la doubtful if Andrew Carnegie will take the stand. District Attorney It Is not PITTSBURG. March 8. With a Sullivan said this evening: CarMr. to Intention both as put list entry my. present numbers and high class, the an- negie on the stand, and I do not think nual bench show of the Duquesne Ken- he will be called upon to testify unnel club opened today in old city halt less his evidence should be needed In The exhibits number several hundred rebuttal of something Introduced by and Include almost every species known the defense." to the dog fancier. Nearly all the aristocratic canines that have been carry-ta- g AIRSHIP FIITTED UP off the blue ribbons of the bench WITH HOME COMFORTS how circuit this season are Included My aerial LONDON. March 8. uxmg the exhibits. Especially well will soon Presented are the Dalmatians. Collies yacht." said the d Pomeranians. start on its first cruise. BeneathelonBlack and tan balloon, slightly more toy poodles, Blenheim spaniels nd the other varieties of Up dogs are gated than No. 9, will be seen hanging bo numerous and of a high class. The what looks like a little house with a Judging and awarding of prises began balcony window running half Its length today and will continue until the show on each side. doses Saturday The balcony window loks out from night the observation 'room of the floating MOVEMENT FOR ORGANIZATION house, and in it the motor will have OF WE8TERN BOWLERS place. Behind it is a cloaed sleeping room, while in front you will see an MILWAUKEE. March 8. The Nat- open platform holding the ional Bowling association officials are boiler. advised that a movement Is on foot Steam can also be led by means of for the organisation of a distinctive a pipe to the open room for cooking Western Bowling league, to include and the closed room for heating purButte, Spokane, San Francisco, poses." Portland and Seattle. There Is f dissatisfaction over eastern dictation. j. ALEXANDER DOWIE WISCONSIN re-lar- di Santos-Dumon- t, ter-rtar- s, egg-shap- ed steam-produci- Ta-tn- n. no unionmen STRIKE CONDITIONS By Subway Trains Running on a Four to Headway Schedule But Strikers Claim the Situation Is Won. Six-Minu- 444 4 4 ST. 1'ETI .ltShr KG. M.uvh 8. 7 ; ii S'rc.-r.imnrs hinr it that 4 ilnis lo- ii T,1 km( t;:e Russian mh.iv ik In full retreat from 4 MuUi ii. Iulilii- iiitcivt Ik at a higl.iT ilih Hum at any time ilurlug 4 4 tile war. Groups Htimiund the bulletin lunr-and extra ikiimm'ii nell in sheaves. iipihiiistic governmental reports the belief in the 4 public iniiiil is that Kuropatktn has been overwhelmed by Oyama and 4 will make a last st.iud at Tie pass. The losses are enormous. 4 4 TiiKIg, March 8. A dispatch from General Knmki states that 4 4 the Russians under rover of darkness last night evacuated the whole 4 line along the Fhu river, and are now in full retreat north with Jap- - 4 unese infantry pressing closely. The Russians burned all their sup- - 4 4 plies. Mukden's fall is apparent. 4 4 The Jaitanene this morning captured Manehuntan. southeast of- - 4 Mukden. la a great pass. Its capture give the Japan- - 4 4 ese eotitroi of the head of the valley to Futthun. 4 i CLEVELAND, March S. At the beginning of the third day of the Chadwick trial the government announced that it would conclude the presentation of its evidence today. Receiver Lyons of the Oberlin bank was recalled anil the books of the bank showed no money to the credit of Mrs. Chadwick at the time the eight certified checks that figure in the Indictment were drawn. The defense objected to the attempt to have Receiver Lyons identify two drafts Issued by the oberlin bank in favor of Mrs. Chadwick In 1908 to the amount of 880,000, on the ground that they were not mentioned in the Indictment, and at the same time announcing the main feature of the defense, namely, that Mr a. Chadwick had nothing to do with the bookkeeping of the Oberlin bank. The court ruled that the negotiation of the two drafts, as well as a check for $12,500 the same day, the latter mentioned In the Indictment, were part of the same transaction. Receiver Lyons testified that the drafts were drawn on New York. Dr. Chadwick was first beard In the case when he interrupted the district attorney, who threatened to bring in the Carnegie notes although not menThats tioning the name outright. what we want, shouted Dr. Chadwick. The Interruption received no attention from the court. Mrs. Chadwick smiled over the evident sensation created. Ira Reynolda, the pioneer victim, was culled, but merely identified the handwriting of Mrs. Chadwick in two letters and papers submitted. The crowd was Mackajr, Alice Warr, record-breaki- THE NEW YOHK III CHADWICK CASE Main Feature of the Defense Will Be the Fact that Mrs Chadwick March 8. An 4 LAKE, Had Nothing to Do With Bookgilf In a 4 rtploxlon of acetylene gas at house 4 meeting Mormon keeping of the Oberlin Bank. seven milea eouth of 4 last night wrecked the 4 voiding, killing Nellie McKay Vlvl gad Injuring Ida Smith, Wallace. Hasel Murphy. Eunice and 2 other. The 4 the building were blown raUiof 4 torn up and 4 out, the floor was the 4 . people pinned under tecta and wreckage. Mls the organ I HiOJ waa killed by waa slng- - 4 ddtfng on her as she KUROPATKIN IS IN FULL TO INVADE '' AT LEWI8 AND CLARK FAIR PRAIRIE DU CHIEN. Wls.. March 8. John Alexander Dowle, through his PORTLAND, March 8 The men em- agent. John Booker, la contracting for farm ployed oil the buildings of the nations 8,000 acres of the most fertile the Lewis and Clark exposition went In the Kicks poo valley near Viola on t this it Is believed he morning on a sympathetic Goose creek, where d will build a city. The farms are valued There are no union men on the grounds now. at from $50 to $75 an acre and are to em-Py- be peopled from Zion City. A colony GOVERNOR VETOED ANTI- Is to come here as soon as spring opens. VACCINATION BILL Elijah II has a large number of conToverts In the KIckapoo valley. ACRAMEXTO. March 8. The gov-- r bacco and stock raising are the prinvetoed the anti -- compulsory vac-bi- ll cipal industries. this morning. decUring dt vaccination has freed the country ELOPING MINISTER PLEADS NOT GUILTY "n cne of the greatest curses in his-an- d must be sustained. NEW BRUNSWICK. N. J.. March 8. WITNESSES IN The eloping minister, D. J. Cordova, THE BEEF TRUST CA8E was arraigned this morning and pleaded not guilty to two indictments of tHUAOo. March 8. Forty more and assault and battery oena for witnesses In the beef on his wife. Miss Bowne is still in t Inquiry were Issued today. Jail. Cordova Is endeavoring to get t1 total number of persons his wife to agree to a divorce, but the i.iln uinmoned up to 200. The Jury latter refuses. "'ane 0I1 the 20th and willgrand probably " Kenxtnn PRESIDENT'S SANTO DOMINGO nuiny weeks. MESSAGE MADE PUBLIC 0R- C. AMILON 8. The OF CHICAGO SUICIDES March WASHINGTON. sen-n- te messuge the president sent to the Ai!iiV,,Af!0, Milnh 8. Dr. Ivan C. Monday regarding the Santo Doyears, committed sul-ov- e. mingo treaty was made public today. els. Il.",.tal y the result of brooding It aaya the condition of affairs there l,fles ,n the management of sre such that action should be had na a it " In. mi ranee soon as possible. company. non-supp- - -t - i e 44444444444 two-thir- STANFORD CASE TO BE DROPPED Inter-boroug- m the " March . 444444444 the Chemists Has Finding Murder Theory and the Authorities Entirely at Sea. WASHINGTON. open insurrection is declared to exist ill the provinces of On- vile iiii, Hiitsngas, 111 the lhll- i i Twelve hundred regu- lnrs have been hurried to the 4 troublous section. Unless lin- mediate improvement follows NEW Yl'KK. Mart'll S. Tin; stimnl it Ik proHeil to the day of the strike on tile Iiitcrlioroiigh's methods. The reconceiitrution Imlines found conditions slightly moKt horrible atrocities have proved in the ability of the comiMiny to Natives be- move trains. The subway Is running 4 1)1011 committed. trains on a four to six minutes head- 4 traylng the whereabouts of way. There are no exproMS trains. The 4 bands of Ludrones are lieing elevated manager say they have 4 hamstrung and their llis cut 5,000 men lo handle trains, and by 4 from their faces. j 4 night will be able to handle 4 4 of the normal traffic. The company 'Main-huma- 44 4444444 te will probably refuse Mayor George H. McClellan's arbitration. On the other hand, the strikers say they have the situation won. Thirty-fiv- e hundred police were today assigned to duty. Mayor McClellan last evening reached the conclusion that the transporta: question had assumed such a seri4 4 tion ous aspect that It would be necessary 4 ST. PETERSBURG, March 8. A dispatch from General Kuropat- - 4 to bring the two factions to some 4 kin today state that Mukden Is still held by the Russians and deny- - 4 speedy agreement. He aecordinly ad4 lng that his communication have been cut. It is known, however, 4 dressed a letter to both the Interbor4 that the Russian left Is In & critical position, with Renneukampfs 4 ough company and the Amalgamated association to this and. 4 corps In danger of being cut off. 4 The strike leaders, in a letter to the A Russian correspondent at the front says the Japanese had ar- - 4 mayor today, agreed to accept arbitracompany officials held a 4 ringed to enter Mukden on the 4th inst. 4 tion. The it Is generally reported and meeting 4 The Chinese governor has been Instructed to prepare a solemn 4 will decline. 4 reception to Rassulltchs Infantry, which surrounds a portion of 4 Lite this afternoon the company de4 Kuroki's men who rejected an Invitation to stirrneder and were shot 4 clined to arbitrate and asked for more 4 down. protection. There Is little disorder today. 4 With one collision in which twenty-nin- e 444444 44 44 persons were injured and none fiassed killed. New York yesterday through the first day of the general strike on Its rapid transit system. Hy this accident and .some minor casualties due "to the abnormal conditions, the sum total of the day was annoyance and vexation to a million or more people usually dependent upon the' lines for transportation to The of Weakened and from business. A flve-c- nr train on the Ninth aveAre nue elevated line ran away, going north, soon after midnight after leavstreet stntlon and ing the Ninety-thir- d of speed with any lessening scarcely ' er-rounded the two curves which form an 8" more than 100 feet above the FAN FRANCISCO, March 8. If the "Office Chief of Police, San FranTenth police were at a loss in the Stanford cisco, March 8. I hereby certify that ground at One Hundred and to a mystery yesterday they are entirely at to the best of my knowledge and be- street. The train was brought Hunsea today. The finding of the chemists lief the Investigation in this city of stop one block south of the One has weakened the theory of murder, the death of Mrs. Stanford has fulled dred and Sixteenth street station. The atand It Is evident that the case will be to result in the finding of any strych- motorman was so erased that he to the street, but was to Jump tempted soon can as as authorities nine the dropped whatever, either at the residence restrained Women by a policeman. The of Mrs. Stanford or elsewhere. rid themselves of It gracefully. fainted and men shouted when the presence of strychnine in the bicarboJOHN SP1LLANE, train was In flight. nate and the first poisoning in this Captain and Acting Chief of Police. will believed it forever remain is J. city J. BURNETT, BEGINNING OF LENT; unexplained, and the police practically Captain of Detectives. END OF SOCIAL SEASON. admit today that no arrests will ever The private detectives engaged In the be made. case also deny that they found any NEW YORK, March 8. The beginThe police officials concluded this poison on the premises. of Lent today marks the end of ning The testimony of the chemist In the morning that a mistake had been made the social season and society doff ball In the transmission of the cablegram Inquest on Mrs. Stanfords deuth pracfrom Honolulu of Sheriff Henry with tically completed the case for the Jury. and opera gowns for the proverbial and ashes of the Dnten Attorney-Gener- al Andrews is sold to sackclothAs a matter of fact, however, regard to finding strychnine In the biperiod. carbonate. They think the decimal have been directing his questions at is nut so eager to forego Its point before the figures 682 dropped off the Inquest with the idea of bringing society custom in years and that the cablegram should have out the probability of the suicide of pleasures' as wus the will be no elaborthere True, gone by. 662 of Instead reud hundredths grain Mrs. Stanford, using as the basis of but of until functions ate after Easter, 662 grains. , such theory the fact that Mrs. Stanlate years the concerts, muslcales and The police authorities have deemed It ford in San Francisco became of a like nature which necessary to deny the perisistent ruwith the extreme bitterneas other affairs mors afloat that they found strychnine of the taste of strychnine, yet made society has decreed are permissible in Mrs. Stanford's residence here. Act- no remark on the night of her death during the Lenten period, have grown affairs that those ing Chief of Police Splllane and Cap- that she had experienced the same Into such elaborate littain of Detectives Burnett have given taste In the medicine which is said to who take part In them are given between or recreation rest for tle time out the following statement: have caused the end of her life. the galtles of the winter sAson and th equally wearing diversions of the REPUBLICAN EDITORS ENCAMPMENT OF summer. Reports from Atlantic City, MEET AT WASHINGTON. MINNESOTA G. A. R. Lakewood and other resorts of the fashionable set are to the effect that ' 88. The March WASHINGTON, ST. PAUL March 8. The old state the hotels and cottages are filling up men who work with pen and brain all was resplendent , today with rapidly. What the metropolis loses In capital the year round to propagate and desocial gnyety during the next six weeks fend the principles of the Republican flags and bunting In honor of the vet- will doubtless be to the gain of these party are just now much in evidence erans of the Grand Army, Department popular resorts. here. They) are the members of the of Minnesota, whose thirty-nint- h anRepublican National Editorial associanual state encampment whs called to JEFFERSON'8 BIRTHDAY tion, whose annual meeting began this TO BE CELEBRATED Simultaneously morning in the assembly room of the order this morning. New Willard hotel. President John A. the ladles of the G. A. R. Womens ReNEW YORK. March 8. Following Slelcher of New York called the gath- lief corps and other affiliated bodies be- the suggestion mnde by Richard Crnk-e- r before gan their sessions. order ering to shortly Just before his return to Europe Though the at10 o'clock this morning and Vice Presitendance ompares favorably with that the Democratic club will celebrate the dent Fairbanks and Senator Chauncey of other a big dinner to be held In encampments of recent years, month withballroom formal greetings to the reports Depew extended of the Waldorf-Astori- a. of the offiffleers show that the grand the visitors. Besides the address of the ranks of the veterans in this state, The dinner, Judging from the President Slelcher and the reports of as elsewhere, are being plans already made, will be one of the gradually thin- most the other officers and forenoon pro- ned by death. Great notable political nffalra of the preparations have gram included addresses on lively been made for the annual year In this city. Among the promitocamp-fir- e topics by Dr. A. E. Wlnshlp of Boston, night when addresses will be made nent loirty leaders who have already William S. Cnppeller of Mansfield, Cby a number of Grand Army veterans accepted Invitations to be present and laud Lafayette Young of Des Moines. of national prominence. The sessions deliver addresses are Governor DougIowa. of Massachusetts. Governor Johnof the encampment will continue over las This sftemnnn President Roosevelt tomorrow. son of Minnesota and former Governor received the editors at the White Francis of Missouri. Covers will be House and this evening they are to 8ENATE CONFIRM8 THE laid for about 600 and the guests will be entertained at a reception given Democrats from NOMINATION OF AMBASSADORS include prominent in their honor hy Vice President and every section of the country. Mrs. Fairbanks. WASHINGTON, March 8 The president sent to the senate today the MORE BRITISH STEAMERS THE RUSSIAN FLEET SEIZED BY JAPANESE nomination of Peter Osterhaua and EVIDENTLY RETRUNING Joseph Hawley to be brigadier-general- s, 8. The March TOKIO, British retired, and Frank Hitchcock of steamers Venus, from Cardiff to VlaTAXANA RIVO, Madagasgnr, March Massachusetts to he first assistant and the Aphrodite, from the The Russian fleet has sailed Mr postmaster generaL The senate In ex- divostok. same points, have been seised by JapJubitll, French Somaliland, apparently ecutive session confirmed the nomina- anese warships, making a total to date n Its return. tions of the ambassadors sent In. of thirty-tw- o. 444444 Regulars Hurried to Troublous SecHorrible Atrocities Are tion Reported Natives Being Hamstrung and Lips Cut From Faces 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 444444444 44444444 PLANS OF NATIONAL MOTHER8 CONGRESS March 8. HeadWASHINGTON, were quarters opened today for the triennial meeting of the National Congress of Mothers, which begins Its sessions hero day after tomorrow, to continue for the week. The advance guard of the delegates and visitors la already beginning to arrive and, judging from all indications, the attendance will eclipse that of any of the previous meetings of the congress. The chief speaker at the coming session will be President Roosevelt and hU address before the congress will be. it Is said, the first appearance of s president of the United States as speaker at a womun's convention. For the iast three years Mrs. Frederick Behalf of Philadelphia has served a president of the National Itongross of Mothers. During the, coining convention the triennial election will be held. The congress will hear reporta from twenty states and Increased efforts will be made iigninst polygamous doctrines and practices. The general sessions will be held mornings and evenings in the Methodist church. The after-mawill be devoted to social functions and sightseeing. Hon. II. B. McFarland, commissioner of the District of Columbia, will deliver the address of welcome at the opening sesThe reports of sion Friday evening. standing committees will be heard Saturday morning. The reporta .will be presented by Mrs. Florence Kelly of Metfo-liollti- in New York on child labor. Dr. Cornelia De Bay of Chicago on legislation, Mrs. W. F. Ilefferan of Chlcngo on education. Mrs. K. R. Weeks of Knssas City on literature, Mrs. D. W. Standrod of Holse City, Idaho, on domestic science, and Hastings Hart on dependent, defective and delinquent children. Preiddent Stanley Hall of Clark university will deliver an address on child study Saturday evening. The religious education of the child In the home will be the subject of the Sunday serfrom the twenty vices. Delegates states represented in the congress will give their reports on Monday morning. President Roosevelt's address Is scheduled for that evening, as Is also the triennial address of the congress Miss Marie president, Mrs. Behalf. Shad rock of London on "The Art of Htory Telling:" Mrs. Margaret Dye Ellis and Senator Dubois of Idaho on "Mormonlsm,' 'are the chief speakers scheduled for the following day. A novel feature will be the International Day," next Wednesday, which will be introduced for the first time. Childhood conditions In other binds will be the subject treated by foreign representatives, among whom are Sir Mortimer Durand, the British ambassador. and Mr. Hlokl of the Japan . FIGHTING AGAINST THE TRADING STAMPS. OTTAWA. Ont.. March 8. A delegation of several hundred of the leading retail merchants of Montreal and Que-te- c waited on the government today and presented a petition urging the necessity of amending the law so as to abolish the use of trading stamps and punish traders who persist In utilising them. The protest Is the culmination of a sentiment Im opposition to the trading stamp system which has been strength steadily gathering throughout the dominion for a year or more. The move of the Quebec and Montreal merchants has the Indorsement of the merchants associations of nearly all the chief cities of Canada. - RUSSIAN WAR COUNCIL EXONERATES GEN. STOESSEL GLASGOW. March 8. The Heralds St. Petersburg correspondent telegraphs that the Russian council of war has exonerated General Rtoessel for the abandonment of Port Arthur. "BLACK POPE DYING OF CANCER OF LIVER ROME, March 8. Father Martlr general of the Jesuits and known a the Black Pok" Is dying of cancer of the liver. |