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Show r r TIIE MORNING OSXAillXEIJ UGDEN. UTAH, WEDNESDAY MOIJNIXO, NOVEMBER them of their va'uaij. Jacob a ticket scii.-- Mr the nd, was arrested today on ion but waa released ou Loun. Van-nii-- ii, MEN ARE MISSING r BIG CARPET AND Itl'G AUCTION ATTRACTS BUYERS. .New York, Nov. 13. More than a ll.uiisund buyers retail aud jobbing Louses every section of ihe Uniun have ariived iu attend one of ihe largest carf-- r and rug auctions ever held in this my. The sale will nearly the entire manufactured slot h of a great factory at Yo.ikers and includes goods valued at nearly fi.uiH),-uoi British Evidence of Commences--N- o Inquiry Presence of Torpedo Boats Proceedings Will be Simply an Amplification of Evidence at the Inquest. Hull. Eug., Nor. 15. The inquiry which England conducts on her own behalf in the North Sea incident, opened today. Admiral llridge aud flutter A spinal 1, a lawyer, who were appointed to conduct the inquiry and whose report will form the basis of the ilriti-.i- i case before the international commission. sat at a large table aurrounded by maps abowing the llogger bank, aud the North sea. Iu front was an array of counsel and government officials. The correspondent learned at the outset that the board of trade solicitors who have been preparing the case, have found no evidence to auggest the presence of the turjiedo boats among will the fishing fleet. The inquiry therefore merely lie an ampliflratlon of the evidence at the inquest and it will be adjourned to 1 guidon in the course of a few' days, the proceeding! hero being confined to a narrative uf the shooting. The assessment of damages which will lie dealt with in London, cannot he completed for some time, as many of the trawlers are etill at sea. The findings of the court will be sent to the board of trade and wil Ih submitted to the international commission. It is not likely that they will bn published before the commission commences its nerndons. but with the exception of the amount of damage it can is already known, scarcely add to a careful examination of all the witnesses in private having substantiated in all essential details the story the fishermen originally told. The Russian government was not represent cd at today's hearing. Admiral Bridge started matter with bust uess-- 1 ike promptness, briefly announcing the method of procedure and stating that there would be no speeches. Various counsel representing the trawler com pan lc and the victims received pertnlsslnu to examine the witnesses, and Mr. Pirkford, counsel for the board of trade, summarized the fact conlamentable occurnected with .the rence saying there wma nothing connected with the trawling fleet which could possibly account for the shooting. He added that in addition to the witnesses to be railed a careful inquiry had been made among the entire fleet, and the statements made agieed in ell respects. Mr. Plekford highly commended the pluck shown by the men of the trawler Gull in saving the wounded from the linking crane. The first witness was Mr. Behring, managing director of the Gamecock fleet. He testified that for 25 or 30 years the fishing fleet bad been trawling off Dogger bank. (he I forth aea convention relative to the question of responsibility. At the fureijra ijfllea k la wtid Russia due not deitiie u iu any way recede from tine baai of Ihe agreement. but she iroius-e- d a mot bflcsiiou of the language sub- -' mined in England's text. Ihe admiralty all along it U uud rriOMtd, cPinmlsKlim that the International should cu uftue lu inquiry to tlia establishment of the question ahether turitedo boats were off the Imager bank and whetht in any event the Russian slilpe were tusiiUd in firing. The Ao-riattt- d Treea learns that Admiral detailed report show a that nuine ahots from the baitleahipe bit the oue of the Ruasian eriitfser Aurora, wardroom and sheila enlerikig ilia wounding a rriest, who afterwards died at Tangier from the injuries which he sustained. Tile Russian adinitalty contends UiatthJa iaaddltlonal proof of the good faith of the vessels which fired on w hat they btdievwd to he loriiedo boats, haring aeon either fishing vessels or their own ships of the cruiser division. witLieut. Oit. one of the Russian nesses. will swear positively that he saw flames rtebig out of four tunnels of a low lying ship. RinuHan witLieut. Ellia, another ness who was in a turret of the Russian haitlmdsip Alexander II, sighted a ganbnat but' did not fire. H declares that he is jxitdlivo he saw a torpedo boat destroyer. Captain Clado Insists thnt be saw two toriiedo boats and the depositions of the officers of the Russian trannimrt Kamchatka say they saw four boats resembllag torpedo boats. In r WAR MOVES IN THE FAR EAST San Francisco. Nov. number l.alcr Nsiwhal, in of sailors cu ti from t 24 months oare in the Arctic, have libelled the itwl .tor F',500 alleged to be due fot wa aud money not paid in wuges. 15.--- Strange Disappearance of a Student Engaging the d Country American Legation Instructed to Actively Urge Arrest and Punish-men- t of Kurdish Murderers of American Missionaries. Auroiier of whi.li those stnaage dixaptmarances from time to time baffle every source of inquiry is now engaging ihe attention of tie police of this city atul the whole ceuatry. On September tab. -year-old Leo k'leischnsinn. the son of well-to-pa rents and a student of the city college, left his home to take a lesson vdtb his private tutor nearby. From Ihe time hr bade m mother guod-hy- e of the lad haa hewi nn without received. He disappeared leaving a trace and while every resource known to the police, private detective agencies and newsiwper energies has been utilized. the mystery is uncleared. Leo is about live feet, live inches in height, uf fair complexion and weighs aliout ltd pounds, His parents have given up their handsome home and nm live in a hotel devoting titter energise aud means to the seen h fur the minting hoy. New 15. sixteen- do ' PREPARED , ) FOR THE WORST v I Wife MuAderer Had in His Posaeation a Dose of Btryohnms Awaiting ' Verdict ef Jury. Aim-r.ra- CADETS REVOLT IN BRAZIL . o, EFFORT TO CONTINUE BUSINESS Portugal Cross the King and Queen Channel to Return the Visit of King Edward Prince Wales comes Them to England. aup-jiort- ed 15.--T- he atti-mp- Jo-ho-ur DELEGATES REALISM AT GET DOWN WAS BERTHA DOLBEER WORLDS FAIR TO WORK INSANE p Tee-tifie- tl. rie-alr- t vi M-- Vice-Preside- Nr AT ST. NATIONAL Is GRANGE MEETING ht Dear Editor: It may Interest some of your readers to know that the Marquise des Monstrler Marlnville, formerly Miss M. G. Caldwell, who, it will be remembered, founded the Roman Catholic university at Waahing-foaome year ago, has entirely repudiated her formfr creed. In an Interview with me the other day, she said: Yes, ll i true that I have left the Roman Catholic church. Since I have been living in Europe my eye have been opened to what that church really is, and to Its anything but sanctity. But the trouble goes much further back than thia. Being naturally religious my imagination waa early eanght by tha Idea of doing something to lift the church from the lowly position which It occupied in America, so I thought of a university or higher school where Its clergy could be educated and if possible refined. Of course in this I was greatly influenced by BlKhop Spalding, of Peoria, who represented it to me as one of the great eat works of the day. When I waa 21 I turned qver to them uf my fortune, for that purpose. But for years I have been trying to rid myself of the subtle, yet overwhelming Influence of a church which pretends not only to the privilege of being the only true church, but of being alone able to open the gales ot heaven to a sorrowful. Binful world. At last, my honest protestant blood has asserted itself and I now forever repudiate and cast off the yoe of no saying the marquise politeRome, ly dismissed me. It will be remembered that the Mar quise (lea Monstrler a Marinville. and her Kiater, the Baroness von Zood-wltare ihe daughters of the late William 8. Caldwell and his wife, who was a Breckeuridge of Kentucky. Shortly before hia death Mr. Caldwell became a convert to Knn.au Catholicism. and left his children to the care of Irish Roman Catholics of New York. whom his wife had met in church circles. The younger sister married some fifteen years ago a German nobleman, a Lutheran, and has since then also left the Roman Catholic communion. The elder has been In very bad health for some years, from having to occupy a iHwiikm before the world a a prominent Roman Catholic which was not a real one and to which her extreme generosity led her when a young and inexperienced girl. Now, at last, her own mind has asserted Itself and she returns to the creed of her ancestors. , u St. Louis. Nov. d Mary Gwrnilolin Caldwell is daughter of William Shakesirare. who. after being a theatrical manager in England, settled in Richmond. Ya., and in eventually made a large fortune building gas house in Chicago, St. Louis. Mobile and other cities. He married Miss Brockenndge, a famous Kentucky beauty. .Miss Caldwvil and her sinter I.ina spent the summers at Newport. where they had a magnificent house, and usually passed part of the winter, when they were not abroad in New- York. On the death of her father. Mina Caldwell Inherited 32.flOO.tSH). On Vico pmsidrct-elec- t day. I am feeling very well," he and want to see the expushuu if have to walk all the time I an tun. After leaving the club Senator waa given an automobile tow through a portion of the reMdouce s tion of went St. Louis, and then pro. ceeded to the ex pus it ion where aa ij. formal reception was held In the id. ministration building. Senator Fairbanks will proceed eta after leaving St. Louis to witness tha football game next SaYah)-Harvar- d turday. President Francis personally directthe party over the grounds. ed the course of Mingling of International Colors is the Featurs of the Decorations City is in Gala Attire in Honor of Occasion Nov? 15. The twelfth El Paso, Tex., national irrigation congress waa called to order today by Senator Clark of Montana, its president. The hall was decorated with the colors pf Mexico and the United States. The attendance was fully up to expectations. There la a largo amount ot work for the convention. The city is everywhere decorated with American flags. Music is furnished by Mexican bands. Including one specially tendered by President Diaz. The morning session waa devoted to addresses of welcome and responses thereto. Congressman W. R. Smith, of the Sixteenth Texas district, e tended a welcome on behalf of the state. one-quart- er a one-hzi- e lias-ibl- 1 invoked. Sufficient I' has already bees aceoae plished to arouse a national Vhtt-eve- r in the importance of this work. benefits one section of this republic cm snot fall to benefit the whs oountry and this scheme is sectional onei aa the welfare of 1mre of lya entire tr than one-havoiced, gnd the Indirect contrihatj to the nalfonal prosperity of half is tnqakudable. The eati depend upon the wrest lor 1 supply and likewise for a rnsrim its manufactured products. This a kind of reciprocity that enriches a country, genuine American lf tbeJ Ity. TREAT and CURE CATARRH aad all cvnhia diawoH I ta. Iff, NT, MM, Ihrwt. two, ifcMM- Kk.-- Imr. bowel, hidaoro, HiUtAil 1 -.ii i. of both - him. sod ZiMM of ebildrea. Homo TvooSomoS norm. Wrtto list If too eoa. l ot froo nUL uoptoB C'uMOltottoo hao mar- ried to the Marqnls des Monstriers-Marinvilla French nobleman. In St. Joseph's church. Avenue Hoche. Pari, by Bishop Spalding of Peoria. III.-- , the guaTdian and administrator of the of Miss Caldwell, assisted by Father Cooke. At (bn time of lier marriage Miss Caldwell was a very handsome woman. about thirty-fiv- e years old, and a devoted Roman Catholic. She had previously shown her devotion to the rhurch by gn lag 33'Huubi to found the Divinity Colot:i of the Roman Catholic In Washington. Some seven year previous to her marriage Mis Caldwell was engaged to Prince Murat, grandson of the king of Naplua The million send and one-hal- f i of which some thref; and million acres have bet-found to bs inapplicable and have been restored iu the public domain. The total amount of load available for Irrigation hu been variously estimated to he train fifty to sixty million acres, sulci., when made productive will susisln s population of from twenty to tstuiq-flvmillion people. "As the government cannot pro. ceed until the titles are properly vested In It, it is evident that rapid progress ij every locality canno be expected. The work is being pmecui-ein thirteen stale, and throe ter rltories, and all poasllile projects are biting examined. Some of Ikon which upon the surf ace seem easy and are found upon careful rumination to be entirely Impracticable and their abandonment givoa rise u disappointment and adverse critirisai which la entirely unjustifiable. ' The reclamation fund will he reimbursed fur every duHor expended in tha course of time, by the eetder, for the price of the land to which be m quires title and the cost of the to pnmnimnts which shall be asnesed him. No return cpn be expected for some years to come and under the ten-yeinstallment plan tha will be very slow- - Afire ten year the receipts will he vety la large and they may be reinvested new Improvements. In the mesatiw the aid of the government should he forty-thre- e ....WE. - wa 5. i s. 19. lkflO. Miss CalilueM 1 Expetitio Francis, Fairbanks, unammjiiaied, arrived today from lndiauapofa, was met at the union siatii:-.- i by ftc ident Francis and Col. J. C. Rm The party proceeded to tfci Si. bimj club, where breakfast wa taken, alter which Senator Fairbanks was curled to the World's fair. Senator Fairbanks stated ihai his decision to visit the expcsiikin hs-been made hastily and that he om ' not be able to remain more than William R. Philippa apoae for the State university, and Captain Brail for the city. Responses were made .hy Gifford Pinchot. of the United States geological survey ; W. C. Johnson of Denver; A. Carlisle, of South Bend, Ind.. and I. L. Smith, of Hood River, Oregon. Souator New lands of Nevada, Governor Pardee of California and Governor Morieon of Idaho also delivered addresses at tha morning Herndon. This afternoon. President Clark delivered hia annual address. He spoke In part as iollows: Active operations for the construction of dams and canals and other improvements are now going on in Arizona. Nevada and Idaho. For other project in California, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana available sites have bet'U select ed, and adopted, estimate are being made and contracts wHI he let In the near fntare. In all of these eases, sums have been set aside ranging irom two and million dollars to three million dollars to carry on the work when the contracts arc completed. In order to prevent private appropriation f land and water rights by speculitora in the localities which seem to be applicable to the provisions of the law, the department of the Interior ho withdrawn from entry large areas of land In the. several state and tcrrllnriua, amounting to the (kt. Conducted Through by President OPENS AT EL PASO Mon-trier- one-thir- LOUIS Grounds REPUDIATES ROMAN CATHOLICISM in-e- n MORS FAIRBANKS e Chicago, Nov. 15. Fifty grains of trychnVie in tablet form has bees found in. the pocket of Victor Roland OShea after he had been taken to the St, Petersburg, Nov. 15. The forth- county jHll to await tha verdict of the which retired to determine his coming meeting of the presidents of Jury ocaidltlon at tha tims bs killed mental thirty-eigh- t BRAZILIAN REVO- provincial semstvoa ta ab- his young wife, Amy Hogaensun Otitis, LUTION CRUSHED. sorbing public attention to the ex- from whoiyi he was separated by her e parents. 'Jthe poison was discovered clusion of other quest ions. Rio Janeiro. Nov, 15. The rev- placed formally The continued suggestions from after O'Slu. had under arret , he having been at liberty olutionary movement has been abroad regarding peace are tresledtllke under heavy bonds until the moment crushed aud order Is completely Sodre restored. Senator Lauro their predecessor as unworthy of ser- the jury retired. O'Shea attempted to and Deputy Barboza Lima, lead- ious consideration. The mere mention kill himself by shooting after be ktiTed era of the movement, have fled. of mediation arouse the ire of thuee bis bride twe years ago. The jury bad Other loader have been arrested. not agreed. the time court adjourned in authority. The reiteration of and orders were given for a sealed verMany persons have been killed that President Roosevelt, dict today. or wounded. having the support of England and DISAGREE OVER LANGUAGE. t France had already been approached WILL RAISE PRICE OF 8L Petersburg, Nor. Li. A aiffe reice by Japan and was ready to offer hia THANKSGIVING FOWL. has developed between England and offices, in view of Russia's position. Russia over tb language of the article Is not considered to be a friendly aoL Albany, N. Y.. Nov. 15. Warren county farmer who raise great number of turkey for the eastern market AftertSome Bleedshed They Surrender are reported to hare formed trust and and Are Placed in Prison. unanimously decided that the Tfaaaks-glvln- g fowl Is worth more money this Rio Janeiro, Nov. 15. Tha awideuta year than heretofore. The present price of the military sehuol revoked yester- Is 23 cent, and a rla to 30 cents a day evening andadepoaed the command- pound 1 expected next week. ant, General Costinlleut. This was followed by secret meetings held at ilia miUary tub at wldch Generals Otyin-piSilvers and Travaasoa w era pres: ent. Tcavataam waa appointed to succeed General CinStauent. The whole school, at aliout I p. m., under command of General Travasaus, of march! on the flown, but were met by a deUkflunent of aoldlers and military Tie-u-p of Telegraph Service Bs tween police. A serious encounter followed, New York and Chicago Cause , which General waa Travasaoa during Broker to Retort to Ususual wounded and hia hurae killed under of WelExpedient. him. Hie adjutant was killed. The caChicago. Nov. 13. Cut off from Ibe dets then fell bark and occupied the east sturm'a the ditniction of teleby hills iu the neighborhood of the school. and wires. Chicago te'ephone graph At 2 p. in. the soldiers and police, broker have resort cd to extraordinary by the war vessels, attacked the in their effort to cstablien cadet a jmairinm. aug at 5 p. in., the expedients business with their New York onii-e- . surrenwithout iBdete. shelter, being won which 1 executive council, Portsmouth. Eng., Nov. Messages were sent around the world dered. They were all placed In prison. way of Yokohama, but no replies king aud queen of Portugal reached lengthy document, intently listened t was made by Major Go- by An were received in ilme to be of value for Portsmouth today from Cherbourg, and to by the delegates. The portion uf mez Castro a.ul rea Incite to othn In other instances the day's trad-ng- . subsequently proceeded to Wiudsur this report which created the greatthe Real Engo school of artillery, messengers were dispatched to New to return the vlail which King Ed- est Interest was that relating to trade volt at this waa unsuccessful. The gov- York on the flyer which leaves ward paid to them at Usbon last autonomy. A lung list of dispute, rel- hst ernment la receiving much' praise for year. The visitors, who crossed the ative to trade jurisdiction were cited the measures taken to suppress the re- Chicago jiiitt after noon. th hope being that the fast train would lie able channel In King Edward's yacht, es- and the merits uf the contentious gone volt. to reach the tuetroixihs before the corted by half a dozen British war- into. The coinmitiue decreed that ojienlng of the stock exchange today. ships. had an imposing welcome at unless the Chicago Federation of lnv-l- r Still another cxiiedient was to telegraph Naval headquarters, where thirty to and the central bodies of lndian-aKill- s to Rochester or Buffalo, lo e and Washington, complied with forty warships, elaborately decorated wlueh cities wire were in operation with bunting, had assembled in their Ihe demands and const lint ion of the FEARFUL METHOD OF SUICIDE. aud from w hich the orders were mailhonor. No such naval pageant had Federation of lAbur before the exed to New Y ork City. been witnessed here since the coron- piration of the present session, that Sen Francisco, Nov. 15. Thomas ft wan the n.oet complete tie-u- p of 45 of ation review. The Prince of Wales Ihe charters of these organizations and age. year apparLuby, wire iiervire that the stock exchange awaited the royal yacht at the dura Would be permanently revoked. ently a laborer, killed himself to- has known in the Iasi sixtou year. yard jetty, and immediately after .he day by Jumping fmin a five story There wa no time during the was moored he boarded her and welday building oil Eddy street. He is be- when any Ireker kfiew the condition SHAKESPEARE comed King Charles aud Queen Amel- PURCHASE THE lifted to have lx on insane. New Y'urk the market at the moBIBLE. of ia to England. a ment. quotations being so far behind time as to Le valueless. New York. Nov. 13. Littlv interest sale of the Waa displayed in the Shakespeare Bible which bat just taken place, nays a Herald dispatch from London. Bidding on the souvenir opened at 910 and rose steadily to fli.-0at w hlch price it waa soul. The bouk is to go lo America Immediately. If the signatures therein are Masked Men, In True Bandit Style, Hold-uand Rob Paosengcro on Listen to Reports and Spend Time in those of the bard of Avon Ihe value of i One of Beneficiaries Under Will the book is ten times the amount paid. Miniature Railroad on Fair Earreet Debate. Deceased Wae of Unsound Experts, however, raised a question as Grounds. Mind. to the genuineness of the poet's sigSan Francisco, Nov. 15. Delegates nature. St. Louis. Nov. 15. It has just beRan Francisco. Nov. 15. Mrs. Elizato the American Federation of Labor come known from the eximsiiion po- beth C. Phillips, beneficiary under Berconvention were in their places early Bead-aaC. IS. ll F. San Nor. Francisco, lice station, in at two on the second day of ihe session. The men held tha Pn'.liccr' w ill to the amount ot haa been appointed master of the up and robbed a train masked on the has declared to the Jury in Judge miniature meeting was called to order by as railroad at the nurld's fair Occidental A Oriental liner court that the testatrix was or Coffey's Gompers promptly at 9 o'clock. successor to CapL Armstrong,Coptic Saturday who rein true western style, scrurinfr unsound mind when she made disposinight Upon the preientatinn and reading of Bead-nail Caps. money and valuables the committee report on rules and nr centlywasdied in Yokohama. of tion of her estate. Mr. Ifftiiilrs was a formerly an the Coptic in the about fllih) anil then amounting The cousin of Jivtin Dolbeer, the father of der of business, the delegates showed e;aping. officer and mad a the of rhfef eapaetty In no uncertain manner that they train, containing the engi.ieer and Mis Dullieer. and waa on of the few as captain. three paasfuger. was making h last relative that the young heiress retnetn-here- d the coaventlon to be one work trip in her in her testament. In and accomplishment, voting against a trip and was crossing a deserted plot s New York. Nor. 15. Wm. L. Dud- of ground when suddenly two masked Phillips admitted that preposition to make the two Saturdays ot the me with drawn revolver appeared In she had tried to Hiduie the executor falling during the fortnight session ley, ona of tb youngest member half holiday. K waa even suggested Consolidated Stork Eroha-jce- . Is dend the shaft of light thrown by the hed-ligh- t. to make an allowance to her 325101. and called to the engineer to She felt so pughl.-tohavto hob) night and Sunday sessions, from typhoid fever. He was a great had at least hot. no action was taken on these grandson of Peter Kuiyreeant. the slop. The tram immediately raure to a as much as Mia Dolbeer left to the standstill and, while one robber covermother of Mis Warren, whh w bout the famous Dutch gBsainor ot First propositions. ed those aliuard, the other relieved tesirairix bad barely an acquaintance. James Dunes rend the report of the TO ROYAL engagement waa broken because the prince insisted that half of Miss Caldwell's fortune should be settled upon him. t runner ceed to the and watch the operations of the Turkish aud Persian am hoi hies who have Delegates From Over Twenty-Eigundertaken to anvM the Kurdibh murStates Gather at Portland. derers uf the missionary, Rev. B. V. Labarcc. who was killed Portland, Ore., Nov. in April last. from 28 states are expected to arrive Despite the por:e' repeated promhere from the east this morning to atises to the American legation imi to tend the thirty-eight- h annual cunveu--tin- n permit vendors of IdldeK of the hible of the National Grange, patrons aulocal to molestiil. the be society of husbandry, which will begin a ten thorities at Angola. TreUizomt and days' session in this city tomorrow. Ordu still detain vendors, have seizThe delegates will spend today in real, ed thidr Lilile and threaten to arthe many of them recovering from rest any one attempting to sell them. effect of their long journey Dorn the The legation therefore haa addressed Atlantic to the Itnlle. A strong delea more Imperative note to the pnrie gation cornea from territory east of tha calling attention in till Missouri river. with instructions which the leThe program for the entire convenbeen haa had been assured givgation will not be known unt:l the Nation not en to Htirremler the hihlr and tional Grange officers arrive and take Interfere with the work of the bible (fliargo. The conferring of the sixth dehouse, and commanding a prompt setgree will probably open tomorrow tlement, falling which the uiatter mornings session, and then Master of would be referred to Washington. The National Grange, Aaron Jones, will The effort made to obtain permisannounce the standing committees. His excaof the sion for resumption address may be expected to be deliverUniverof the vation of Dr. Banks of the ed tomorrow or Friday. The afternoon's Sensational of Creed Chang sity of Chicago at Risniaya, have thus session will le devoted to hearing ofFounder of Catholic University. far proved unsuccessful. ficers' reports. New 15. AssociatNor. The York, New York, Nov. 15. Horace Inger-ool- l. has received tha following: for more than half a century a ed Pro member of the New York produce ex- Before giving it publication, its auchange, 1 dead from paralysis. He was thenticity has been fully verified by cable from Rome: 75 years old. Rome, October 30, 1904, Editors of 15. Thomas J. the Associated Pres: You have my New Ybrk, Nov. fall to print the encloeed Thorpe, right tackle of the Columbian and permission as it wide a publicity as posgive been has football team, university sible. Yours truly. Marquise des elected captain for the season of 1905. Turno-JVr-ia- York. N'ov. Storage Warehouse Causes a $100,000 Blaze. Now Yori, Nov. 15. A consider side quantity of meals in cold slur-ag- e was incinerated, much valuable property was destroyed and many block along the water front were threatened by a Are that raged fur several hour lu the United Stuck Yards in Jersey City early today'. Whether any human lives were lost is nut yet known, but it was reported that three waicltuteu empluyed iu the building bad nut been aecuunied fur. The damage is rsiirULied at llOd.lHKi. The Are started lu the cold storage of the plant and is thought to have Ireen caused by an explosion of ammonia. In spite of all the effort of the firemen the fire crepi sieadily along, the pier, at last approaching dangerously near the great stuck piers, where thousands of cattle, sheep and hogs were confined. The Erie road's big grain of elevator, containing thousands bushels of grain ready for export shipment, and the property of the Berwind-WhltCoal company was seriously threatened but the flames were fought hack before eerious damage was dune lu that direction. Constantinople, Nov. 15. The AmerH. ican consul at Harput. Th.iL.a Norton, haa been i.ihtniwed to pro- of Officers uf the in . PROMISES Sixteen-Year-Ol- Attention May Have Lost Their Lives in Stockyards Fire Jersey City Exploding Ammonia in Cold PORTE MUST KEEP BAFFLES POLICE v o 16, 1004. e. Vnt-verei- ty Special Offer in Privatt Diseases wkoMomaorlacrmo Prto lllwwi o imSoi eawd W n lavtioe w loaftlia.ie aw1.!? CoftiMiMi..afkoimxaa. m mtorwoo(wuono-hlinn bm to. C0.rli.u DO preo M nron.il.w'' oad SOT XK TOO TO PAT TDKU UXJt !. - iho imr Or -- . trMtm.nl-OUuHKfor wwnh'M WLLAB tOTU. CUHB1-C- M-" TOC WISH TO- YOt'HsKI.ir. PR. 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