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Show IX. NUMBER VOLUME SCORES OGDEN, UTAH 113. ARE iEAT POWERS PROPOSE KILLED BY THE RUSSIAN LOSSES WERE El 10 Are Victims of We of Build-in- g. INFLUENCES ARE 190,000 AT MUKDEN BATTLE Considering Proposal to Convene International Congress to End Russo-Japane- Conflict se OPENS THE E FAR EASTERN WAR EXPLOSION " MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1905 URGING Linevitch Reports Additional Troops From Russia In Excellent Spirits. Pope Claimed That 5,000 Russians Have Died of Disease and Wounds at Seeks to Influence Mediation. Harbin During the Past Week Conditions Are Appalling BEEF TRUST PEACE INQUIRY Still Emperor Declines to End War Time Has Come For Russia to Indicate Desire for Peace On a Reasonable Basis. Special Work. it Brockton a Mass of Charred Rains that Maw., March 20. A explosion In the ean boiler, a ,iih diplomacy in favor of mediation .7:50 AKr Shoe company's factory at in the war in the far east.' lie his comUtanomtag. the entire west half of municated directcly with certain rulers, tit imMini was rased to the ground including the kaiser and King Edward, e of the and also sent a friendly letter to dignitad from fifty to seventy-nvnployes were kUled and hundreds taries of the Greek church expressing the hope that peace will be declared. me Injured, more or less seriously. nee floors collapsed. The fourth CZARINAS DEVOTION TO floor filled with girls fell to the ground, L HUSBAND AND CHILDREN M most of the girls escaped by of linli- - buttle 4 Petit Journal st. Petersburg dispatch states 6.000 Russians have died st Harbin during the last week as the 4 result of disease or wounds received in hattle. The conditions there 4 are horrible in the extreme. It is estimated that the sick Russians at 4 LIVERPOOL, March 20. The Post states it is learned on authority or a prominent member of the Vatican thaf the pope Is seeking to influence Europ- UOCKTON, F'K'l KUsiil'Jli 1. March 20. Rcpciis limn far received liift.iioii acre killed, wounded mid taken prisoners nt the field guns were captured. General I,ineii,.h reports, under date of March 19: "Tlie coin- nmiider of the Second army reports th-i- l lie h.is had no further fight- ing. There are no reports from the first or third urmy. I have in- Hpecti'd the troops which have arrived from Russia. They are in ex- client spirits and good health." POPE SEEKS TO INFLUENCE EUROPEAN DIPLOMACY . T. "f Mukden. Eight se Ruso-Japane- fatal st. PARIS, March 20. A Harbin number 75,000. 4 V t?T. PETKRSUL'RO, March 20. The Nojoe Vreyma the first time advises Russia to seek peace. 44 4444444 4 4 44444 44 4444444 AMERICAN LEAGUE 4 today for 4 4 4 444 44444f4 REIGN OETEBRQR win-40W- There were 400 employes In the factFire ory at the time of the explosion. hoke out immediately, snd In a f? w a mass of slnutes the ruins were Annex The front of the factory, which left standing by the explosion, (tight lire, driving out the rescuers. As hour later the whole factory was w h ruins. Many of the employes were night by falling timbers and the rea-cowere obliged to leave these to Those on the lower floors their fate. nt thought to have suffered most. In III Tree Inge were from 200 to 300 of m Mi IN employes. doctors in town were called Vil The scene or the hospitals. isMence service and aU available whies are busy removing the the hut of the boiler wrecked a house h tk vicinity of the factory. The fire grad from the doomed factory to the lUDard block and Drake Tavern, vUch were burned. Several residences mt also destroyed. The Churchill sad Alden shoe factories were also on lit. The holler which exploded had been bfag idle all winter. The fireman who started the Are said the boiler seemed Is perfect cie condition and he knew no the explosion. for Up to 11:16 twenty-fiv- e ben taken from the ruins. bodies had Many are n terribly mutilated that Identification h tapoaslble. Moat of the employes h tie main part of the plant escaped, Nbsgh In the terrible panic many vee injured. The lire is under con-7- b Inn will reach $200,000. te tyb this afternoon thirty-on- e been recovered. The known i ere Albion Dahlborg, Samuel Tl- Bartlett, George Smith and I" lam gwanaon. David Rockwell, en-- jr Jhn Smith, Stephen Snow. It jtaiw thought the dead will reach bod-hjta- At l:li VIENNA, March 20. Vienna papers TO BE RAIDED contain the following report about the csarlnu'a perpetual anxiety for her She prepares husband and children. food for the tsar, who is in constant fear of poison; she assists at every detail of his toilette, as would the Ger- Managers Will Take Fifty Star man wife of some small cltisen, since Players and Cripple That the czar mistrusts every act of his servants; she superintends the tailor and Organization. the laundress, as well as the barber, and besides this she attends to every want of her infant son. It has become almost a fixed idea ATLANTA, March 20. Because Ban wltYi the czar that his son's life Is Johnson, president of the American threatened. His majesty tears that the loss of his son, whom he so long vainly league, refused to come to the terms expected, would cause the outbreak of demanded by the minor leagues, a coa revolution In every corner of his em- terie of managers declare they will pire, even among conservatives, and for thle reason every one in any way raid the American league, take fifty connected with, the imperial family is star ball players and cripple that orsurrounded by a host of spies, who in ganisation. The plan Is to give two their turn are watched by a second players to each of the twenty-fiv- e series. teams. This was decided at a meeting Naturally every one knows that he is under close supervision, and that the here today. The Pacific Coast league slightest untoward act would give room Is said to be a party to the scheme. No care is taken to for denunciation. prove the truth of a suspicion, but THE SHOP FORCE WILL BE DOUBLED every one in the ellghtest degree sus' pected is removed upon some vague SPARKS. Kev March 20. It la curpretext. Hence arises a general feeling of insecurity, as nobody knows what rently reported that within the next the next hour will bring forth. sixty days the number of employes in the shops will be increased two hunMINE JUMPED BECAU8E dred men. CITIZEN OWNER IS NOT The construction of the new road from Hasen will be principally responTOXOPAH. March 20. A rumor sible for this increase. AU of the has reached here that the Quartzite, rolling stock which will be used on one of the richest mining properties In this new road from Hasen to the end the Goldfield district, has been Jumped. of the Carson St Colorado will be reThe report Is to the effect that the paired at the shops in Sparks. This will make the shops at Sparks parties in the camp learning that John McKane, the owner, Is not a cltisen of the most important on the entire the United States, is not entitled to Southern Faclfic system. At the prea location and for that reason for- sent time the longest division on the feits all claim to the mine. system is the one from Sacramento to It is understood that & bitter fight Bakersfield. This division consists of will be waged by both side for title nearly three hundred miles. to the rich mine and trouble is pot The branch road from Hasen will not affect the changing of train crews now employed on the Salt Lake di- bodies had been except recognition "V ! the llat of dead will The search Is be- Jtb "PMIy prosecuted. Forty .are to have been injured, many of IBSEN CELEBRATES "'rrd forty-tw- o beyond believed eeventy-fiv- e. J seriotmly. :M fifty-si- x "wvred. ta of the SEVENTY-SEVENT- bodies had been H March CHRISTIANIA. BIRTHDAY Dr. Hen- 30. rik Ibsen, Norway's celebrated dramatist and novelist, was .seventy-seve- n Very little work years old today. comes from his pen nowadays, owing chiefly to hie continued illness, which has made him an invalid for nearly five yeara Rheumatism has troifbled him boiler which p to such an extent that has hardly been exploded was the ground floor of an L which able to move about in his rooms, even from the main building. Per- - with the aid of walking sticks. near 1,earG a dull roar and , ..cloU( f smoke rising and the RUSSIAN GUNS FOUND d of BURIED NEAR MUKDEN factory frilling to the ground. pi, hurst from the y ruins, t0 the maifl structure, LONDON, March 20. Baron Haya-sfrw minutes was a roaring today made public the following detach dispatch from Tokio: "Our fsu tory waB situated at ment at 4 a. m- March 19 occupied 3 nj'er Ca,mar streets, in the Camp-l- b Kayuan, twenty miles north of Id l about a mile south of the The enemy afterwards attempted iOilts 0f Brockton. A series of a counter attack, but were repulsed. summoned all the Are apparat- The enemy burned the bridges on the the scene and aldalso main road south of Kayuan and also us? 1 ?ty rom So nearby places The flre-- h destroyed a part of the railway bridge. k,itm.rlenced the greatest dlfllculty A number of Russian guns were found wi,l the flames, as the buried near Mukden." ory waa of an extremely . mcble nature, and nearly all the SUPREME COURT TAKES RECESS UNTIL APRIL 3 Tbow! "aturaed with oil. of th Intense flr ao was tkqlhnt ot the firemen and police "ASHINGTON, March 30. The suTwir l,, jV?n unlor great difficulties. ite court today denied the applies-o- f th cnw.t0n wa" chiefly to Peter Miller and Thomas Shef-n- n given n Colorado, sentenced in of Part of it r.l)u,lJ,nt that escepdally h was nearest the boiler with election frauds, for a boQio the eany stages of the of habeas corpus. Contrary to the court didn't decide extri- elation were r.of 4 employes m the ruins. The flames, motion for nn Immediate Issue of bn,.. deci-TY'ln, idate In the Harrlnmn-HIstopjied the rescue work. V Pr ei I oured on the ell supreme court took a recess th Mra frotT the main structure April 3. employes in the different "JVJoKots of the factory have been the lire station and calls been sent out for every person Kape to indicate the fact, that Mme of the dead may be obtaln- ! I1 lo-o- IN N.Y. CHINATOWN t " Scale of Prices Issued for the Heads of Tong Leaders Chinks Wear Coats of Mail. NEW YORK, March 20. Chinatown is jin a state of terror over a feud between two factions of the Ong Long Tong and Hip Sing Tong, and the police are making every effort to prevent murder. A price of $3,000 has been placed on the head of "Tom" Lee, mayor of Chinatown. Mock Duck, the enemy of Lee, Is also in danger of his life. Red slips have been posted in all p&rta of Chinatown with a scale of prices for the heads of various leaders of Ong Long Tong. Many Chinese are wearing coats of mall. WOMAN GIVES BIRTH TO CHILD IN SLEEPING CAR CHICAGO, March 20. A child was horn in a sleeping car on the Chicago A Alton last night to Mra H. M. Shin-b- ar of 1398 Golden Gate avenue, San Francisco. The woman arrived here this morning and was taken to Grace hospital.' Physicians boarded the train in Missouri and took charge of the case. The woman waa on her way to Toledo to visit relatives. WHITE STAR LINER - 20. - - ters said: "XNV have suffered bitter defeat on land and sen. We can, however, still eontlnue the war. But both countries hnve suffered great losses in blood and treasure, and it would only profit' the rivals of both were we to fight on until one or the other is exhausted. Russia has had a hard task fighting the war agnlnst such adversaries 6.000 miles from home and I contend she cun make a dignified peace, without glory but not without honor. A the victor on land and sea. Japan can afford to remember, as Bismarck did at the conclusion of the Austro-Prussia- n war, that two countries which must live through the long future ns neighbors may need em-- other's friendship. Japan may consider the time propitious, on account of the situation in European Russia, to try and crush us. Suppose, for thfc sake of argument, she succeeds In fliiully forcing a humiliating peace; it could not be more than an armed truce. Russia is too big and powerful to retire permanently from tlie field. The cloud at home will eventually roll away. With the army and navy reorganised in five, ten or Hfteejj years, there will come Inevitably our revenge. No permanent peace is possible now or later unless Japan Is reasonable. To the suggestion of the possibility of an alliance between Rpssla and Japan, the minister said: A reasonable peace must first he established." What. was asked, "would be rea- sonable? Broadly speaking, Russias renunciation of her entire Manchurian policy should satisfy Japan's claims. She could have her protectorate over Korea. such privileges on the Kwantung peninsula and at Port Arthur aa the powers would not oppose, and the Chinese Eastern railway be placed under international control, Rusaia maintaining her rights to a railway line northern Manchuria to VladiVOYAGE through vostok." "What would be Russia's attitude NEW YORK, March 20. The White on the subject of indemnity?" Star steamer Cedric arrived today af"Russia never hus paid indemnity, ter the most turbulent voyage of her and history practically affords no career. She encountered waves sixty precedent for indemnity when territory feet high. Among her passengers was is not occcupled to insure payment, and Jabes White, a British pugilist, and his Japan holds not a foot of Russian termanager, Charles Mitcchell. White is ritory. Japan could, .however, ti$ie matched to fight Jimmy Britt at Ran the proceeds of the Chinese Eastern vision. The crews will be changed at Sparks Francisco. railway, which was built with Russian The will branch road as at present money." make the employment of several more CODY DIVORCE CASE Proceeding.' the minister said the dif' RESUMED AT SHERIDAN ficulties of continuing the war were train crews necessary. All these crews will be changed at Sparks. fully appreciated, both from a military 20. The SHERIDAN, Wya, March and a financial standpoint, nut neither PASSENGER TRAIN HELD Cody divorce case was resumed here was insurmountable. He denied emUP IN TENNESSEE today, with Judge Scott of Cheyenne that the negotiations for a on the bench. The reading of the depo- phatically French loan were dropped because RusCHATTANOOGA, Tenn., March 20. sitions will take two days, when the sia would not make peace. He expected Passenger train No. 35 on the South- arguments of counsel will begin. that these negotiations would be reern railway, which left here at 8:10 sumed soon. The success of the interTORRENT for Memphis, was held up at tlje foot nal loan, the minister said. Is assured. WILL INUNDATE LOWLANDS As for of Lookout mountain. The express the question of a new army, messenger Is reported as Injured. A upon the exact situamuch depended PITTSBURG. March 20. An Ice- la- tion when General LlnevJh got the special train left at once for the scene. One of the robbers was trailed to the den torrent this morning Is rushing army out of danger. down the Allegheny river and threatmountains. The minister said further that comThe man arrested was Will Thomas, ens during the day to Inundate the plete details of General Kuropatkln's a former messenger. Mai Pruette, the lowlands of the valley and of Pitts- losses have not yet reached the gov messenger who was assaulted In his burg and Allegheny City with a flood eminent, but It is already known that to thirty feet. the Japanese reports are greatly excar. claims that robbery waa the mo- stage of twenty-etlgtive. Thomas says it was merely a Warnings were sent out afld many fac- aggerated. The reports that sixty tories are closed. personal encounter. siege guns and many hundred cars were left behind is false, as practically no siege guns or roiling stock fell into of the Japanese. No new THE CZAR SUFFERING FROM RELIGIOUS MANIA the hands general mobilisation has been ordered, and It may not be necessary. Of the 800.000 reservists mobalixed last fall, HAS TURBULENT OVER TWO HUNDRED WITNESSES ON HAND Investigation Will Be Most Exhaust-- . ive Ever Started Under SherLaw. man Anti-Trust CHICAGO, March 20. Tlie federal grand jury summoned last month met today to begin the most exhaustive Inquiry ever started under the Sherman act. More than two hundred witnesses are on hand in response to summons, and if District Attorney Bethea and hs assistant fail to draw forth complete evidence regarding of the beef trust it alii not be because of lock of effort on the part of those intrusted with the inquiry. The witnesses have lieen summoned not only from the Chicago uicklng houses and office, but from many other points throughout the country, including Fort Wurth, Omaha, Kansas City, tit. Louis,' Buffalo, Milwaukee, St. Paul, Cincinnati. Hioux City and Pittsburg. Fifteen grand jurors were accepted today to conduct the investigation. Of anti-tru- st twenty-tw- o men summoned two were excused because they owned stock In railroads, and live for other reasons. The questions asked veniremen were searching and indicated a disposition on the part of the government to carefully avoid a possible error. Other veniremen will be summoned this afternoon and the panel will probably be completed tomorrow, when the hearing of evidence will begin. Assistant Attorney General Pugin declared the investigation will be the most rigid. He believes sufficient evidence is already In iMissession of the federal authorities to indict the principal members of the alleged trust. The prosecution Is being made under the Ttherinun antitrust law, the mHslinum penalty fur a violation of which Is $5,000 fine. The purpose of the government is to prove, if possible, that the packers beef to constitute the trust have been guilty of contempt of court in violating the federal Injunction secured against them a year ago, restraining them from operating by common agreement in regard to prices, in buying and in other ways to control the market to the Injury of the general public, the stock raisers and dealers not in the combine. The men restrained by Judge Grosscup's decision In the beef case were J. Ogden Armour, Edward Morris, Ira Morris, Arthur Meeker, Churles F. Langdon, Edward A. Cudahy, louis F. Swift, D. Edwin Hartwell, Frank E. Vogel. William Russell, Edward C. Swift,. W. II. Noyes, Nelson Morris, Patrick A. Valentine, Calvin M. Favorite, Thonma J. Conrt, nors, Michael Cudahy, Albert F. Lawrence A. Carter, Jesse II. Lyman, Louis Pfaelser, Albert H. Vedder and Ferdinand Sulzberger. None of the heads of the packing companies will be called before the grand Jury. Their heads of departments and other chief employes, however, have been subpoenaed nnd are expected to corroborate in their testimony evidence secured by government secret agents. Rumors are current that the Investigation into the beef trust methods will turn into a battle royal of the beef sup-isis- ed ed Bo-che- trust itself against the Schwardsthlld A Rulberger company and other indeund The Schwarzschild pendents. Sulzberger company Is supposed to have acted independently of the re's called "Big Five since Judge Injunction was issued, and to have done many things in trade inimical to the trust. Inspired information from Washington is that the tichwarss-chll- d & Sulzberger company Is in danger of being caught in the toil by the grand Jury, and that the "Big Five" is disposed to help along the case against that firm. In this connection it is reported that the Big Five recently made nn offer of $20,0(10.000 for the Rchwarssrhlld A Sulzberger Interests; that the offer wus 140.000 and the Fourth army corps, refused, and that the "Big five thereSpends Two Hours Daily In the Palace Chapel Praying for Russian numbering 40.000. are now beginning upon decided to make a fight. The Into arrive in the far east. If. therefore. dependents naturally will side with Crucifix Victory and Repression of Revolution-We- ars Llnevltch's army totals 200,000 when Schwarzschild St Sulzberger. Some of he reaches Harbin (if that, ror instance, the prominent representatives have as Protection Against Assassination. Is to bo the new base), ha will have volunteered to give the grand Jury inan army of about 400,000 without sum- formation they consider valuable. The moning additional reserves. Rome reg- beef trust representatives deny that ular units, like a division of the guards, they are nt war against Schwarzschild 4 4 4 4 Sulzberger, but it is believed the Inmight be sen without further 4 4 quiry will disprove their assertions. 4 BERLIN, March 20. The newspaper Die Welt says the esar Is 4 REPORTED KILLING OF CHIEF 4 suffering from a religious mania. He spends two hours every day 4 GREAT SYNAGOGUE AT MOSCOW IS REOPENED OF POLICE BY JEWS 4 praying In the palace chapel. lie telegraphed Father John of Kron- - 4 1 'np like4 Htndt to COLORADO for Russian special prayers compose victory, JISER recently effective work and entity 20. The great MOSCOW. March 4 wise for the .repression of the revolutionary movement The emper- - 4 BORISOV, Russia, March 20. Three SAILS FOR VENEZUELA l',ant 'h those who fnlled 4 or sent a simllnr telegram to the Archbishop of Moscow. The esnr 4 synagogue which Grand Duke Sergius squadrons of Dragoons have started he abandoned. HuLm, e news of NORFOLK. March 20. The cruiser 4 also wears n crulflx on his breast continually as a protection against 4 forcibly closed fourteen years ago has for Berezina, where armed Jews are the accident had 4 been reopened and reconsecrated with reported to have killed the chief of Colorado left for Venezuela at 8:30 4 assassination. Ifoiilniued on 44 a thanksgiving service. police and a number of assistant. this morning. pnge 4 ) spread-jlhtaU- hi - Tle-Un- g. N ht con-to- Il be-- i M.mii Kmnrii- NUliol.is. nlmst' woiil is 1:11 il. Mill ilccliiii'M to .'iliaiiilmi tlie liinMvinuMi of the war. and the government maintains its ability to continue the coiillict, powerful influences, including several of the i.iiipei'or's own in m 1st eis. are now strongly urging that the time lias rome to Indicate to Japan Russia's desire for peace upon a reasonable basis. Should Japan then attempt to impose too onerous conditions, these influences argue that, in view of the universal wish to see the bloody conflict ended, Russia's fliosl-tio- n will be sterngthened abrond by the alienation of sympathy from Japan and the situation at home improfled when tlie nation is made to understand thut the emperor's pnclfic pro-- I sisals have been met with Impossible term. One of the emperor's minisWliili- S Grand Jury Begins Its and the Sick Russians Number 75,000. Bin.MINiliI.AM, Muri'li 2U. Tile Pot says it is informed by a high diplomatist that two or three of the great THE tiijES ADD TO powers, including Great Britain, are HORROR OF SITUATION considering a proposal to convene an International congress to end the war and to revise the rules of warfare. Com-pjjShoe y of the Grover Federal ,r. 44444444 44444444444444444 444444444 he 1 444444444444444444 444444444 444444444 Grdsa-cup- |