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Show - TOE MORXIXO EXAMINER, BLOODY BATTLE AT MO TIEN PASS Lockjaw Cauaea a Record of Four Mora Deaths in Chicago. Chicago, July 13 The Tribune to day aaye: Five more death were added ysater-da- y to Chicagos Fourth of July victims. Four died In agony from ltKk while the fifth auccumbad to wounds caused by the explosion of toy cannon. From o' her cl tics in the country two deaths from injuries anu five from tetanus were reported, making the total of lives Inst in the Tatri-oti- c celebration eighty-fou- Russians Surprise the Japanese but are Repulsed With Heavy Drive Them Back of 30,000 Japs Througli the Valley-L- oss in Attack at Port Arthur Confirmed. Loss-Japa- nese The arid Sl Petersburg. July si report of the Fort Arthur attack had reached St. Ietert.liiirg last night la ths form of a newsieiHr dispatch front Inwith Mukden and waa received credulity. but at about noon when Vice Admiral Aleaieff telegraphed the newa to the general staff, it treated a aenaatiiw. It waa Immediate-1.- " transmitted to the official Messenger. sud a few minute. afterwards the lKwspaper boys were racing through the streets, supplying the cruads.wnh the tidings. Members of the general staff do not oiler explanations of what Admiral Alexieff means by Jaiwncse sources, but thry declare that the viceroy would have officially reported sum important news unless it had reached him from sounes eutirely worthy of uedene. At tbs same time they say the report ahould be accepted with nverve, pending ibe receipt of mure ndvli-eib flnite In supimrt of the re-phowever, they point out that the date coincide with the second attempt of Admiral Togos torpedo boat destroyers to creep into the harbor. It le true that Togo due not mention a land attack, but this is not in bia province. Ths loss of 30,000 of the .besiegers in an attack against fortlil cations with guns in position and the approaches sown with mines is considered quite within the range of possibilities, if the Japanese, as on other stormed the fortifications a occasions, with their accustomed recklessness, if ths mines wsrs exploded tinder masses of men. The general aiaff already had information that the besiegers had occupied Takushaa bill, three miles northeast of the harbor, but adds thfil the Japanese were unable to hold the position. If the report of the loss of 30,000 Japanese la confirmed, General Nodzua army la in desperate straits, as General Kuieasel will not fall to take advantage of such a reverse and follow it up. The Japanese have not yet attacked Ta Trba Kiao. A diiqmlrh from Lieut. General Sakharoff describes a series of skirmishes east of Kal Chou. Tha troops belonging to General Kuroklu army are meeting with resistance at every atep from the Russian rear guard along the Blyua river. Grand Puke Sergiu Mikhailovich, an artillery oxiiert; is going to Manchuria in August. m am 13. a rt, lly ' AT MO TIEN St. Petersburg, July 13. An of- ficial communication from the Run- Accord- slan general staff, ssjs: ing to information derived from Japanese sources and received ly Admiral Alcxielfs military staff, the Japanese attacked tha Russian position at Port Arthur during the night of July loth. They were repulsed with enormous losses, it is difficult to calculate even sp prosimately the number of Japan- eso casualties which amounted, it is said, to I ho immense figures of 30,000. a under dropping bullets, were collect-in- g the wounded and carrying them to an Improvised hospital in a roadside temple, where thry were laid out in row under huge palntej and plastered god. Japanese details, with trenching spades, were burying the dead where they fell, and Japanese soldiers were bringing water to their own and Russian wounded anJ Impartially giving the wounded men cigarette. JAP CASUALTIES AT KAI CHOU. London, July 13. A dispatch to the an Japanese legation from Toklo nounces that General Oku reports that In the flghte leading to the occupation of Kal Chou the Japanese casualties from Jnly 5ib to July 7th, were four men killed and twenty wounded. The casualties of Japanese July fith and fith were about ItO men Milled or wounded. RUSSIANS DRIVE JAPS BACK. reMukdon, July 13. A dispatch ceived here from Port Arthur says General Pock attacked the Japanese right fiank July 6th, and drove the Japanese from their position. The Russian cavalry advanced as far as Nan Ga Pass. The Japanese are landing froow at Hiso Ping Too, about midway between Port Arthur and Port Data? on the east coast of the lJao Tung peninsula. EUROPE hungry" for SENSA- TION. St. Petersburg. r.S& the Front, with General Knrokia Forres, July 4, vis Seoul. July 13. Ths brief and disastrous attempt of tha Russians to overwhelm the small force which guarded the enlranra At Jap-tue- se o the Mo Tien pass, was a bloody affair. The Japanese troops again exhibited their resourcefulness and courage, and the Russians again threw away many liven Tha loans cannot , be ascertained until the battlefield has been searched. The Japanese are atlll driving the enemy up the valley. The correspondent saw enough to Justify the estimate that the Russians had more than 200 men killed or wounded, and that the Japanese casualllrs probably inil amount to CO. The Russians left thirty dead In front ef and in the trench where the attack began. At this point they had an equal number of men severely wounded and the Japanese took several prisoners and captured one hundred rifles I be Russians were seen carrying away two officers either killed or wounded, STORY OF BATTLE. At the Front, with General Knrokls Forces, July 4. via Seoul, July 13. Mo Tlcn pass opens upon a funnel shaped slope which rises for a quarter of a mile from the valley, and which la Hanked by bills. Thirty-si- x Japanese were quartered In a Chinese house near tha bottom of tbs hill, and two companies of Japanese soldiers were in n trench a hundred yards king, locate J on the summit of tha hill, which commended the approach. Two other companies of soldiers slept near this trench. Between 3 and 4 o'cloc k in the morning, In complete darknesa and with a heavy fog enshrouding the hills, two battalions of the Tenth and Twenty-four- th Siberian regiments, together with one hundred cavalrymen, approached the Japanese position. They surrounded the pickets end the outputs in the house and gained a position from which to rush the trench. Sereral other companies were so disponed that tliry could attempt a flanking movement on bot h the Japanese right and left. When the fighting began the building where the outposts were quartered became a slaughter house. The Japanese. aroused from their sleep by ihs seized enemy, their sword and oavn-n- et to resist the attack. The Uns-stswere at such dose quarters with the Japanese that if was Impossible nr the latter to use tWr rifles. The first fighting in the tren b and in front of the trench was head to band, and the Japanese who ran to man tha trench were but half clothed. The first Russian onslaught was repelled, but tha Ruesiaae charged twice tala within half as hour. The remainder of the Japanese regiment, however, to which the outposts and ths companies at tha trench belonged, their comrades and began to drive the Russians bark. Aa won aa It waa sufficiently light to distinguish the enemy, two hours after the beginning of the fight, the Japanese forced the Russians to retreat one mite down the valley. The trench wen covered with dead sad wounded men. Blood spattered nonet and grew everywhere testified to the hotness of the fighting. Chinees stretcher bearers, impassive ns July 13. Emperor Williams massage of good wishes to ths Wlborg regiment la attracting much less attention here than at other capitals. The Novoe Vremya says: 'Europe is. Indeed, hungry fur a sensation. Tha message was to a regiment of which Emperor William is honorary colonel and they find therein possibility of a breach of neutrality. Tha paper considers It much ado about potbing. The Bourse Gazette, a paper, is the only one which Interprets tbs message as evidence of German Friendly neutrality, declaring it to be a guarantee that Emperor William never will attempt to offer mediation, adding that a monarch so proud of a regiment bearing his name In fighting tor tha honor of Its country, never will thus affront Russia. pro-Germ- New York, July 11 A with lightulng. hall and JULY 14, 130 f. lARBITRATION MAY INTERVENE Only Hope for Settlement of Great Packing Employes' Strike Some Plants Resume Business With Non-UniMen Negroes Imported as Strike Breakers -- Meat Prices on BUBONIC PLAGUE IN RIO JANEIRO Advancing. Vigorous Measures Are Adopted Check gn Epidemic. burrt-an- e, torrential islua has occurred in the department of the Hatties Alps, pear the Italian frontier, says a Herald dispatch from Pari a During the storm there wss an turtfaquake shock lasting four seconds. It caused considerable damage. New York, July 13. The bubonic plague has appeared in Rio Janeiro, according to a Herald dispatch from that I city. The municipal and state authorities have adopted rigorous measures to check aa epidemic. I FALSE TEETH BLOODHOUNDS CAUSE TRACKING A FIEND DEATH asssssssassssseaeose were supplied with 250 colored nonunion workman during the, night. The. men were reported to have been smuggled Into the yards In covered wagons. Four independent small packing houses Inside the stock yards were re ported running. These were Booer 4c Co., Roberts and Oakes, Boyd and Lun-hasud Thomas Thorkildsen ft Co, FIRST TROUBLE. . . Not withstanding Jhe standi tslera by the officials of the teamsters union, one hundred drivers today refused to continue work after the packers n had resumed work with men; The drivers quit as individuals. Borne disorder occurred at the weatJ era entrance of the stock yards. Polish laltorers endeavored to Interfere with union firemen and engineers who had not struck. One man belonging to the firemens union was knocked down before ibe assailants were made to understand that the union to which ha belonged had not been called upon to strike. A meat laden wagon In Forty-thir- d street waa attacked and overturned. The traces were cut, the horses turned loose and the driver compelled to take refuge In a store. New York, July 13. The leadera and officers of tho Amalgamated Meat Cutters' and Butchers union, nearly 6,000 of whoso mem- ben went out on strike today, are in conference at the union head- It Is reported that a quarters. plan tor the arbitration of wage difficulties is under 'discus-- ' sion. - - CORRESPONDENTS. 12.-W- Hlim Kir-ur- war correspondent for the Central News and laindou Graphic, a military critic of considerable note, arrived here on the V. P. R. steamship Empress of India. Ho rlalms that the real reason for the refusal of the Japanese to allow any war correspondents to go to the front wss the fact that a number of "irrcRponslbla and sensational American newspaper reporters, who knew nothing about war or the duties of a war correspondent had born sent out by Individual Ameriean newspapers and that the Japanese not only these persons In the ban of prohibition but aim, on their account, the trained and veteran war correspondents. Kirton says hi statements are based on information Imparted to him by responsible Japanese officials, civil and military. J. Sheldon Williams, special war artist of the laindnn Sphere also returned frovv Tnkio on the Empress. He declares that It Is hopeless for correspondents of Individual newspapers to remain In Japan or try to get to the front. The only men who are doing the real war reporting. William . are the representatives or the Associated Press of Amrrica who are scattered all over the war from, and doing what Mr. Williams cordially describes as really splendid work. It Is ltnriersKNid in Japan lhsl the I act leal of the war has been reached Kunipatkin's decision to tight or fli bark will determine the length of the war and men returning to Yokohama from the front just before the Empress left, expressed no doubt that Kurnp. atkin intended to risk all in a general engagement on a selected bairi? nrd Mr. Williams says U.csr K. Dari and other well known rorreapondents re preparing to leave for America (m early steamers. . Frightened Woman Tries to- - ficrcam and is Strangled by False Teeth Chicago, Jnly 13. With so' sign of Assailant of Young Girl Is Object of Which Drop Into Her Throat weakening on either aide the only an Armed Posses Search, ray of huirn in the butchers strike New 13. today was the possibility that York, by Frightened July Clayton, Mo., July 13. A posse of the narrow escape arbitration may intervene to prevent of her soq young farmers, armed with rifles and revolfrom being ran down by a heavy truck, a ialmr war fraught with suffering and m led two vers, by minium blooJhounds, Mrs. Mary Murphy, wire of a Brooklyn privation to the strikers and heavy Is scouring ibe woods in tbs vicinity man-hunthas been strangled to death losses to the packers. of Fenton, Mo., for a young man who Nor Is the effect of the strike confalse her teeth. by la charged by Rosie Schlelsuer. 18 years fined to the employes sod packers in woman The for island went to Coney old, I he daughter of a prominent farm- Ian oullng. In his hurry to cross tbo the nine cities where the fight will be er, wltn having al tacked her. street her son dashed in front of a centered. The consuming public will Item and narrowly escaped. His moth bear a large share of the burden in er attempted to scream and fell higher prices for meats. Reports alstrangling before a rrowd of pleasure ready have come from varioue cities seekers. She diad in a few minutes that prices of the product have been and the doctors found tha cause in a raised. This advance, too, wai said ARMOUR RESUMES KILLING set of teeth half way dowa the throat. to be a forerunner of others if the KANSAS CITY, conflict continued long. Kansaa City, July 13. At one of the In addition to the 60,000 employes allx local Armour's, plants. ready on strike, upwards of 30,000 which werepacking Appropriate Ceremonies Mark the shut down yesterday, as a more are Involved Indirectly, and most Event at Seattle. of the strike, killing was reof them will rcsmi. probably sumed today on n small scale. The otn-- er be idle before tonight expect to be running soon In addition to all the Seattle. Wash., July 13. With apslaugh- withplants new men. The big retail dealers propriate ceremonies, the new United Haywood and O'Neil Furnish Surety tering plants being tied up the. strike have mode arrangements to do their affects branch industries where such Slates army trader Major Kran Thomfor Thole Appearance. as wo launched at Ballard this afterarticles as butlerine, soap, buttons i own killing temporarily and assert that noon. The vessel was christened by and combs are manufactured. The there will be no increase in price of at least at present Natalie Denver, July 13. ty Ilium D. Hay- canning departments where Fisher, grandbeans, meat, Quiet prevailed early today among daughter of Major Evan Thomas who wood. secretary-treasurof the West- soups and all kinds of meats are put was killed In a battie with Monoc Inern Federation of Miners, and John M. up are also hit bard, the employes har- the strikers. dians 31 years ago, and for whom Ihs O'Neill, editor of the Miners Maga-xlning gone out in a body. Although tha strike was principally In the Interest of unskilled laborers, craft was named. Many army officers today furnished bonds of flO.UOO Forty thousand persons, approxiand ladles attended the ceremonies and Ij.OOO respectively, to insure their mately, find employment in the nig n number of this class of labor nt Arwhich were conducted by Captain F. A. appearance at Cripple Creek in Seppacking houses in Chicago pnd this mour's did not go out yesterday. Thaw men do not belong to the union, an efGrant. Tits new boat, wblrh Is lo be tember, for trial on the charges filed number already has been reduced used by the artillery corps In the Puget against them In cwmiKtkm with riotThe effect of the strike on the fort to organize them not succeeding. Sound district, is 108 feet, 23 feet beam ing at Victor, mechanical and other department!, it Tha unskilled laborers were put to and of 400 horse power. Is declared, will increase this army of work today in the killing department uneiupkiyed in Chicago before the end The management stated they expected DENOUNCES PEABODY. to Increase their force gradually. of the week to nearly 46,000. J. P. Cudahy of the Cudahy Packing The detail of police at the stock Milwaukee, July 13. Samuel (tamIn n statement, intimated that pers, president of the Federation of yards has been increased, and ali night company. his company Attended to make their the officers disthe strike patrolled addressed to the the Ijibnr, delegates an open one. We will hire nil International Longshoremen and Ma- trict snd the streets adjacent to the plant men who are willing to work, said Mr. In pairs. yards. rine Transport Workers amtoclulion There wss considerable speculation Cudahy, regardless of whether they today, lie denounced Governor Peaare union men or not We have 600 to body of Colorado for his course in tho as to whether the packing house Flames Destroy a Warehouse and Are miners' trouble, and also said that the teamsters would go out on a sympa- 800 men left In our plant and expect to hire all the men we need. We will Only Kept From Spreading by system of Injunctions was wrong. He thetic strike. George Golden, bust first use these men Sn cleaning up the Good Work of Firemen. also said the American capitalists were ness agent of the union, set all doubts at rest at a meeting of the teamsters plant After this work is done, we Chineselxlng American labor. to begn killing again. Joint council by announcing ftat the expect The Cudahy plant always has been Seattle, Wash., July 13. Tbs Gaffney , . teamsters will remain at work as king warehouse, at the foot of Pine street, strictly union. H AkJWl 1 as there Is work for them to do. in this city, waa destroyed by fire late A crowd of men and A number of the women have appealnumberboys last night. For a time the flames ing more than 6,000, for the most part ed lo the Kansas City, Kansas, flood threatened ths water front, but good striking employes, gathered In squads relief committee for aid, saying tbn work on the part of the firemen preI todB' Bbout ! th X7 A to thestock their husbands who were packing house A W A vented them from spreading beyond the X yards and discussed the situation. In employes, were now Idle, and the shuty Gaffney structure, a affair. In general the greatest good nature pre- ting off of their income, coming on top which was stored hay and grain. The Rule That Delegation Must Firat Art vailed. The only activity especially of their losses by the recent flood, has damage is about 920,000. noticeable at the great, gloomy and left them destitute. ranga for the Meeting. deserted looking buildings wan at the The strike will work n hardship to Swift and Armour plants. In the can- these persona, even If they receive Oyster Bay, July 13. Secretary Lnab department of the Swift estabtrike benefits. toJay explained why he refused the ning n number of men were nt The strikers remain firm. They, in miners' delegation from Pennsylvania lishment, work, while at Armour's a gang was most cases, stayed away from the 1c go td Sagamore to aee the president. string plants, snd seem determined to entry Mr. Loeb said there is a rule here that busy loading provisions into on n peaceful campaign against their no delegationi shall bo received by the of refrigerator cars. Workmen were also busy tearing up employers. president uulens they have arranged the rails of the Chicago Junction railappointment with the president way within the Was a Member of the Famoue Coryards, and replacPRICE ADVANCES AT OMAHA. This rule has been strictly adhered to ing of the old rails with new rupt 6t. Louie Aeeembly. during the stay of the president here This fact was taken by wave to ones. Omaha. July 13. There ftere no and it will be enforced during the rean expectation by the railroad new developments In the strike nt ' mainder of the time the pres- officials that the of traffic resumption South Omaha and Is ident here today for the summer. Mr. Loeb would be delayed for several everything St. lands. July 1!. John H. Schnet-tier- , days at continued in sn orderly manner. ' a former member or the Si. Louis said the labor leaders came to Oyster least. were There no at took him unawares when they and prectlcilly receipts Pay municipal assembly, today pleaded demanded to see the With a seeming certainty of n meat president. Had famine ahould guilty In the circuit court to a tha strike but more tif bribery. Sentence has not yet the men announced previously that than a week, both the packers and the they would be here on Tuesday. Mr. strike leaders Item imposed. took a serious view of Hnhneitlrr wa a member of the Loeb says an audience wh the presi- f anu ms 'combine" of nineteen which dent might have been arranged for the I, J 'tuatlon today. Each side thought- deli-ga- t Inn, hut under the circumstances fully ecnsldered the arbitration chanpractically controlled all legislation IxN-Mr. he mitld Jo nothing but nel of escape from the entanglement. several terms of during the assembly. refuse to says Indeed, predictions were ventured that allow them to see the presian armistice might be arranged within dent. NOTED EDUCATOR DEAD. twenty-fou- r hours. Such optimism, however, was received with a good deal New ork. July 13. The Rev. Dr. of Incredulity. Samuel Muss, one of the foremost Bap lOTILTO President Donelly. of the Butcher tint educators ami divines, is dead a( Workers union, expressed regret that his home here after an illness of more the packera offer to arbitrate had not then a year. He was bora In Kentucky been made earlier. Had it been, the seventy-fiv- e year ago. lllr,ke n,iiht hBTe bwn verted. Dr. Moss served as president of the s The delay of the packera to agree old Chicago University and of the Into he arbitration, said, is respondiana stale university at Bloomington, sible for the st rike. They did not make lie wa also editor of sereral Baptist known . their position until after the For the last three years unions haJ declared the strike and he made his home in this city. In hla when it was too late for me to do anyyouth he learned the printing trade, at thing to stop the trouble. It will be sn which he wnrkrd fur several years in expensive war, lmt apparently it will Dullsville and t'incinnaii. In (he closhave to he fought ohl We are strong ing years or the Civil war he was apstronger, slrange as it may sem, pointed home secretary of the Unlled than I he parkers. We have the whole Christian n mi mission, whbh ' ' 8Utfi"a"r-whhad for it object the roiic i,r those I telegraph and line,, which I had suffered injury ihrongh the ara to he in use from now on. war. will eat up all thrir dividends for two years." In spite of expressed hopes for an early adjustment of the difficulties the packers hare hurried preparations non-unio- , LAUNCH ARMY TENDER GIVE BONDS e, one-hal- f. SEATTLE WATER FRONT THREATENED R ASlJN MINERS T1 TRNFn V one-stor- PLEADS GUILTY indl-dira- blulj COMING WVMrAIGN 1 leb-phn- e anliavenollirfi. , NO EFFECT AT SAN San Francisco, July FRAXC18C0 13. of eastern packing house The strike emploret will not affect the price of ctmd meats here, unless It should be dT ta duration, the supply on hand being considered equal to the demand for g year. (Continued on page S.) We make a specialty Prescriptions. Telephone orders of 0 ra Carpentering, Building, of Remodeling Houses Promptly attended to. All and work Guaranteed. Nelson, 646 Telephone 32t-j- r. Ole Enquire of nth street CHEAP RATES TO CINCINNATI, 0, VIA UNION PACIFIC RY. Account Grand Lodge of Klki Union Pacific will sell tickets lo tits Cincinnati. O., July 11th, 15th and lfiib. for 648.75 limited to July 27th. - ALBERT F. RICHEY. UNDERTAKER 'Phone 150 2373 Washington A ve. Chas J. A. Lindquist FUNERAL FUKNMNGS and Embalming OPEN ALL NiaHT. And they are handy as a o M9D WsMX Asa. promptly attended to. J. E. CAVE, Prop. iaesa 0 -- css cL , ' went Democratic. This ts the first gun the campaign and is considered a fair test. The Indian Territory is on (ire with an unconquerable Demorralir iSignedi D. M. W1SOM." Judge Parker today received nnlifl-atio- n from William R. Hearst that he Is to hare the support of the Meant newspaper. He refused to say wheth-- i er or not he had any word from W J Bryan. Recanting the dale for the formal of csTutiftaTe. there is uo definite tufotmaiion available. kiju essential. The office employee eoon found themseivee in the packing house, acting ns for the strikers. It was claimed by the superintendent of the various plants that there would be no trouble in supplying all vacancies within a day or (wo with capable men. Information credited to union source was to the effect that ISO colored workmen presumably from Kansas City snd Ft. Lxmlff, were twins brought to Chi-rrny the large packer and an ordr had been placed for 500thatmore cct. Nelson Morris A Co., it was said Pock- We can furnish your camp tent and all, and equip yoil with everything for every kind of ssusfjSSsSa-s- ! ssst ''Syfssws t Drag Store GlrJ. ih Prices advanced st all the pacta houses again today and the belief wj! expressed that they wotflj continue k no do as the supply of fresh met beraine nearer exhausted. Everything was quiet throughout tb city of South Omaha todav, the polici of the men being to prevent tny di; tnrbance. None of the strikers near the packing plants, and ns u tempt was made to disturb the mr who are caring for the stocks of great meats In the coolers. COTS MADE TO SLEEP IN CHAIRS MADE TO SIT IN et knife. Claimed the Fugitive Assaulted a Lit- 1 fbe slucLyards. There was littiey at the packing bouse, ai though .some cattle were slauehten-- ing- done Our Camp Comforts I'iililh-ations- AFTER NEGRO . SI. Joseph, Mo... July JJ.--Th, . striking butchers were paid off ti day and the packing coininsie,. have given nut the word that all men and boys applying viu put to work. All the packer, , claim ' to- - have a small force st work antj shy they will add to it day by day, , They Fold And Tuck n IJH Ths Cepof Columbus, O.. July 13. Police headquarters have Just been noli tied that a nmli in the south em 0f th(, ,iy after an unknown negro, who t hare asssulied h.tle whp sir, eesssss, STRIKERS PAID OFF. er MOB tle - BRIBER REASON FOR BARRING Victoria, ll. C July r. HURRICANE ACCOMPANIES EARTHQUAKE. JAPS GREAT DEFEAT. THURSDAY MORNING, GO DEN, UTAH, Game. sub-st.tut- es go i |