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Show fOE MORNING EXAMINER OGDEN, UTAH, TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH II, 1903. Entire. Russian Army is in Danger PEACE TALK PHYSICIANS POLICEMAN KUROPATKIN TELLS OE 50,000 WOUNDED FULL OF Recall of the Russian Even Chemists DoNot Agree as to Cause of Stanford Death. Squadron is Quite Significant. Honolulu, March II- .- Iu tha absence Washington, March JL Th A undated Pmi ha high authority for tha of further discoveries, th. cane of Mrs. Stanfords death ia resolving itself tntn aiatetnaat that tha Russian second aquadraa haa been recalled by ilia a scientific controversy between cheat-i- s Kuaaiaa fonriBMi. I. aa well aa between phyalctans. Borne prominent phyaU'ians here, While not regard! sr a Mia alga of who do nut to be quoted, are lianoe, tha recall of Admiral la tha opinion of Kurnpcau against the poiaouing theory and bechaamllorias, la regarded aa a hopeful lieve that Mrs. Stanford died from natural causes. Oa the other hand tha auBign that peace 1 at hand. lb la lr anted that n Kuwlaa official topsy physicians and Or. F. Humphries, who attended Mrs. Stanford on ihe haa aapraareil tha opinion that Hual will be furoMl to aak for penes la view night of her death, as well as other dorturs who have bean prominent here of Kumpitlklaa defeat. While France baa made no mova for many years, are absolutely p.xitive aiatM tha battle of Mukden nur that death waa canned by stryrhnlre her advice officially, tha poisoning. H. A. Ouncan. fluid commisgorernmsot had been given to sioner, and chemical analylut of the vndarauad clearly that her ally fav- board of health, anil Edmund Hnorey, ored peace and thla may ezerciae an chemist of the L'nited States Agrirub Infiuaoa oa the mparora ultimata tural elation, formerly rhemUt of the daciawn. Germany baa refralued from hoard of haaltb, who made tba chemical giving advice either any. Perhaps testa, have prepared a alatemenl of the altitude of Japan may be Judged their experimenta, and the physicians liy tha fact that one of tha great have prepared a detailed account of the powers, iaUmated to be tha United autopy. Bialos, baa airongly urged within a month that the lima waa opportune to offer terma to Ruaala, but, according to Infonaatioa received here, tha Japaaeaa giw eminent paid aa heed to the advice tendered. Thera la much talk about iba terma Runeia would . accept but tbiu iu all pure a peculation. Japan could probably Inipuae any coa-- . ditlooa aatiifactury to tha powera regarding Manchuria, tha Uao Tung Victims af tha Bullets From tha Gun ,9001081110, Koran and even tha Inland of a Murdaeaua Danvarita. aa arrangement of Hakhalia, and about tha maintenance of Kuaeiaa aea Denver, March 13. Police Captain power la tha Far Kant, which might Hiibauua and Folic Burgeon Frank involve making Vladivostok an open Dulln, who were shot yesterday by port, might be conceded, but Ruaala George flhlialer when about to arrest probably will hold out againat two him, after ha had killed Mr. and Mrs. propositions tha cession of Ruaalaa Kay Hill, neigh brns. are still alive toterritory aa tha mala load and indent-ally- . day, and probably will recover. Cap-laiUnhauiia baa heru a member of the It la rumored that Kuropalkin al- police force for 24 years. naked to be recalled, but ready haa Mrs. ShhMler, who suffers from heart Uwra la no confirmation of this report. diaaaaa, lay unconscious many hotira after hearing of the deed of her TALK OF PEACE. t but revived early today. At the aatnpalra lit bnckshot were Bt. Paleraburg, March 13. 1:27 p- - m. taken from tha body of Mrs. Bill and --The announcement, in tha name of 7t from Mr. Bill's body. Bhiseler waa tha government, la the face of over- kllljjyr a bullet In hi. head, hut whether It waa flred by him-e- lf or one nt whelming diaaaler Buffered by Karo that a frmh army drill be ralaed tha poae. which ha held at bay for and the war prosecuted againat the three hour, la not known. Hid aster, who had had a lawsuit with haughty att Ituda aaaumed by Japan, may, alter ail, ha aimplv a aparriug fur SHI over a lino fence, la lielievad to position which la to preluria peace. So have been temporarily deranged. far aa the public here ia nmceraed peace la the only thing talked of, the MMiUmaut being that If diplomacy cannot bow bring tha warring powera into aagotiatioa. peace will follow. Many diplomat. believe that terms acceptable to both are only poanlble on the baala, not of ordinary peace, but augw la the nature of an alliance which would distinctly define and guarantee tha pualtlna of the respective powera ia Tan Persena Are Injured in a Collision Naar Colorado Springs. tht rtr Eat la tha future. It la certain, however, that Ruala Colorado Springs. March 13. issouri aa yet haa made no mow. Her ruufu-io- a Pacific paaseugcr train No. 11, allll reigna la tha higher circlet the Rio and the emperor haa not ym decided aoiithhouiid. running on tracks, collided with the Denthat he muat yield1. Nevertbeleaa the Grande peace party haa been greatly at length- ver and Kin Grande passenger train ened and ia now taking the position No.. 4. aorthbouad, lost night at Founmiles south of here, and ten that to attempt to coni lane the war tain. 14 were Injured. No. 4 was beadwill only court additional compiles-tlon- persona k and dangers at home, with tha ing la from iha amiih end of Ihe lu allow No. II to peas. Ihat chance of auccea for the Kuaalsn arms on the field of battle too remote train having the right of way. but be1o be worthy of consideration. But fore it could dear the mala line. No. U crash! Into the dining car, overaome of tha euipsrur's advise ra Inal-t- t that tha government la Irrevocably turning It. together with a tourist commit led to the war, that It would be sleeper. Tha niojit seriously Injured are: harder to atop than t go on, and that Conductor J. F. Creighton, of the If tha war la Indefinitely prolonged the financial reaourrea of Jaiiaa are dining car, K.internal injuries. Charles Richardson, Buffalo, N. aure to be ezhaustrd before Russia's while Kmuiia'a preailge abroad la ir- Y.. seriously cut. Mrs. Richardson, right arm broken reparably gone If ahe now bends the aud injured in back. knee. The situation Is not disstmllsr to ihal which prevailed at the end of tnc DRINKING CAUSES FATALITY. Crimean war. when Nicholas I. took a sudden decision to conclude peace on the best term obtainable. Benjamin Johnson fitabbsd to tha Tha effect on tha Inirrnal situation Heart by Then. Howard. peobalily wlQ govern tha final decision. The practical difficulties not only in 13. Benjamin Pocatello. March letting a new army to the front, but In Johnson, aged 23. waa slabbed to death are apprefully actually mobilizing It, slayer, yesterday afternoon sad hi ciated, even at tha war office, where Thoms Howard, aged 30, ia now in jail It declare Is officers many reluctantly charged with murder. idle to hope fir victory under the presThe two men had been close friends ent circumstances. Another general lot a loug time and this afternoon they mobilization might, set the country in engaged la a drinking bout which flames, la Poland, whence It is an- wound up Just before 4 o'clock when nounced another corps will lie sent lo adjourned to Howard's cabin. By the front, the mobilization of the last they time both men were under the inthat corps ordered to the war hail to be fluence of liquor and oJhnrou was la a abandoned, owing io the poimiar oppo- playful wood. sition lo the government's policy. At Fur souie time Howard did not resent home the elements which are trying to bis leasing, hut when the fun became force the emperor' hand would employ the angered by either horn of the dilemma selected, loo nnight. Ids older man, did. companion plunged whether peace nr war. In pi ess for the asomething knife into Johnsons heart, death folof a real constitution. granting They declare the government. Is now- lu a lowing almost immediately. Howard made no effort to escape and corner from widen there la no escape pending a preliminaiy without the support of the people. was locked upJohnson resided heie There is reason to believe that some of examination. the emperor's advisers share thla opin-lo- n with hi indents and was generally well and are again advocating the hold respected. stroke rf summoning a veritable conCAUGHT THE SPIRIT. stitutional assembly, appealing to the patriotism nf the people and allowing Detective Had a Hard Struggle In a them to do ide the question of peace or Great Heaps of Dead are Left on the Battlefield North of Tie Pass-G- en. Kaulbars Fell Heir in One Day to Two Fortunes Narrowly Escaped Capture. Totaling $300,000. --J- aps asoeoeooeaaaeeeseaa Koje-t-raua- f Rua-aia- t . ? i i i s li i OFFICERS ' MAY YET RECOVER ! 5 : bus-Imn- -- l : pat-ki- . WRECK ON A COLORADO RAILROAD i 5 -M- a aide-trac- ) I ' V J war. Such a move, they aigu. wotdd confound Japan if the waa war and. If ieai-r- . would relievo th government of responriliili-and iuxiire tranquility at. home. Of imiise. It 1 i coined ihat this will inevitably mean a change in the form of government to a const itnriimal monarchy. The newspapers. with the escenlion of the Room. AWFUL RETREAT. Another oRIclal report dated to- Russian day from Tokio reads: - loee uver 155, nOO; 40.000 I prison- era, 26,540 dead on the field about 110,000 other casualties.' while-robe- d and iimmimiimmiim the Today's diapatchca only confirm tsimple'ieneiM of Kuropaikin'e defeat. No-vc- .e . Russians are nearing their Ha Pass poaitlona hotly preaed by the Japaueae and Bl- - Paleraburg admits that even the remnants uf the army are ia danger, ll la reported that Oyama's flanking armies are alreaoy la touch above Tie Puaa. and if this proves correct even a greater disaster, than la now apparent, may follow. Emperor Nicholas bae summoned a war council for tomorrow, at which the whole ailu-tio- u inforrements. Examination of the will be cunsidered. wounded and the prisoners shows General Nogi had almost entirely fresh force. The Japanese are always abla to STILL ITRSlING. keep thrlr forces up1 to full fighting Washington. March 13.'The follow- strength because of the earn with w hich ing advices have reached the Japan- they are able to transport troops from ese legation: Japan. A report received on ihe morning In a dispatch deled March 12, Kuro-patk- lu of March 13, showe that four furcei say: "According to reports are continuing the pursuit 'northward from the rear guard, a Japanese force Inflict-lag from all directions, meanwhile consisting of W division and a half, are heavy loaeea on the routed ene- within a short distance of the Russian my and had expelled him northward rear guard. The second army 1 entirely on tha 12th of March from marching coutlnually under the fire of tha district 26 miles north of Muk- the enemy who to advancing from the den, and waa still pursuing. east and wet. 'In the district extending thirteen General Kuropaikln adds that the mllea north of the railway north of rear guard advanced in perfect order, Mukden, an enunmma amount of carta but that the movement of the transladen with ammunition and war ma port along the Mandarin road waa teriala waa found abandoned. A re- very difficult, owing to the Japaueae of cannonade. Th port received oa Ibe afternoon country between Tie March 12th, eaya that one Ruuiaa of- Haa and Mukden Is luftreperaed by Port aitrrcndercd who at Arthur, ficer, rivers and sleep banka and tha Rusbroke him parole and waa raptured by sian wagons were obliged to halt and our garrison. await their turn, causing much delay. Another telegram aava: According Genoral Kuropatkln compliments the received March 12ib, a io report the Japanese intelligence department. of direction la the He eaya: "Thanks to the organix enemy's loaeei Singling are not yet ascertained; over tion of the intelligence department betm 600 Russian corpse already have and their reconnaissance, the Japanese found on the field. According to the always knew the positions occupied dl 71st statement of prisoner, their our army. The first regiment of A1 by vision was almost annihilated. Siberian rifles had the most serious though tba Russians burnt their afore fighting. They marched under the houae at Machuuian ami other place, Japanese fire from east and west, allll large quantities of fodder, am' almost continuously. Col. LueteUk munition and war materials fell into succeeded in extricating three officers our bands. and 15J) men of tha regiment with lu colors and one battery. Iu the battle CAPTURED THE COLORS. uf March 6th the regiment lost over 1,000 men. Reports are coming In of Tokio. March 13, 11 a. m. Army heavy losses by other divisions, nob headquarters makes the following an- ably the Yurteff regiment of the Twen division, of which only two nouncement : "All our forces have advanced north, officers and 619 of tha rank and file pursuing the enemy la all directions are left. nod Inflicting heavy damage and they hat a defeated the enemy who attempt BRITISH ARMY ESTIMATES. ed reiistauce at various place. "Our force have completely clearLondon, March 13. The army rstl ed the enemy out of the dint rids twm mates for 1905-0- 0 Issued today toUl e mllea north of Mukden and oa $149,005,000, an increase of $4,915,000 elltl over the last esii males. The increase Sunday were pursuing him. The Russian abandoned countless ia due to the provision of $6,065,000 carta of supplies and ammunition ia for the of the artillery. the district, for thirteen miles from Otherwise there would have been a tha vicinity of Ksolltun, out'.i of decrease. The estimate provide for Chlullkotzu. west nf the railway and a total force, bom and colonial and sixteen miles north of Mukden. excluaire of Isdia. of 221,300 men. The No time haa yet been had to count expenditure flr the North American them. and West Indian station is estimated One of the colors captured be- at $3,125,810. longed In the J62nd regimeut from the W'iltia district, whlrh had been en RUSSIANS NEAR TIE PASS. gaged In three previous wars. "Our Binmlntln garrison has arrest Tie Pa-- s. March 13. The Russian! ed a paroled Russian officer from are nearing their Tie pass positions. Port Arthur, who broke Ms parole at a Japanese detachments continue flhanghHl and proceeded to Binmintln northward movement from Mukden. Additional store Intended for the KAUllBARS NARROW ESCAPE. Russians hare been seized at Slantim T!m . h s fallen heir to two fortunes aggregating nearly $300,000. The flret notice of hla good fortune cam from Oakland, California, where the policemans uncle, James Elgar, died recently. Barber was oa strike duty and had not been home ia four days when hie wife hurried to the stacharged with returning to Involun- tion with a letter announcing that her tary service two negroes, named Gor- husband had been willed the bulk of hto uncles estate. don and Ridley. When tha husband aud wife had emThe opinion wa handed down by Justice Brewer, and, while It upheld braced each other over the sudden oputhe const Itutlonality of the law for the lence, the force gathered about and punishment of peonage, it held that aa wrung the policeman1 band until it the record failed to show that the ached. Barber went out on post and hto wrifa negroes had ever before been 1a custody, tha charge of returning them went home. At. midnight she came back with a cablegram announcing tha could not be sustained. legal disposition of eatata of another uncle at Ramsgate, England, which had TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. been In litigation a couple of years. The policeman, according to the cablegram, Taka Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet AU druggists refund the money 12 it was entitled under the decision to about $100,ii00. faUa to cure. B. W. Groves sign ture la oa each hog. 25c. PORTLAND MINE CASE. Council Bluff, la., March 13, Depositions of two witnesses were read today on the Doyle-Burn- a mining suit. Patrick waa Murphys statement that he saw Doyle aud Burns working on Bobtail No. 2 claim. In 1892, and that tha latter said Doyle was bla partner. Murphy admitted that he did But know where the Bobtail was until in 1893. At one point in Murphys evidence he referred to the date of Feb. 30. Mra. Beatrice Steadman, who waa at Cripple Creek In the fall of 1892, declared ahe heard Burns nevcral times call Doyle My partner. Rh'e remembered the men because their names were Frenchy. Croat-examine- NO PUBLIC DISCUSSION. Washington, March 13. The Senate today took up the Santo Domingo treats noon after the doors were closed. Mr. Teller made an earnest plea for consideration of the treaty with open doors, ao that the position of senator for and againat the measure might he perfectly understood. The motion to open the doors for the discussion of the treaty wa voted down without division. Mr. Teller thro the moped adoption of the recommendation of the eommlltee.Rhat a stenographer be present to record the debate on the treaty for the Senate. Thla waa defeated on a roil call. New York. Match 12. The Umbria, from Liverpool and Queenstown, for New York, la communication vrirelws telegraph, with Siaaobeu, Mas., at 10:30 p. m. off Nantucket lightship. STUBBS MAKES DENIAL. Haa Not Resigned and Has No Such Intention. . tin. JAPANESE RONDS. New York, March 13. S. Ichida, at New York Japanese consul-genera- l today mad tba following announcement: "I am authorized to slate that the issue of 100.000.00ti ycjin exchequer Tokto bond announced on 27th. being February purely au internal loan, ita interest will he paid la Japan only. A rumor recently circulated in Kumpc to (he effect that the Japanese government ia going to offer a large amount of thee exchequer bonds in France and Germany with the condition to pay Interest in Paris, is absolutely untrue, and haa no foundation whatever.1 RUSSIAN SQUADRON. Port louis. Island of Mauritius. March U.Thc squadron commanded by Admiral Rojestvensky waa etiil at Nossi Be island off the norihwe-- i coat of the Island of Madagascar, when the steamer Uxus passed there. It is understood Rojestvensky Intends Be until the end to remain at No-f April. The crows of the Russian ships were drilling night and day and frequently engaged in firing practice. There is no confirmaitau of the rumors current at Tamatav to the effect that the Russians have bought a small island in the Indian ocean to serve as A nave! base. si pi Si. Petersburg, March 13, 1:30 p. No further nwe was received from tha front this morning, but the magnitude of the catastrophe Is now apparent to all here. Where the curtain haa been (lightly lifted the picture of the awful retreat makes the flesh creep, recalling the scenes depicted in Tolstoi's War and Peace, or Zola's a Debacle. The war office admits that even the remnants of the army are still la danger. Field Marshal Oyama holds a magnificent strategic position. It 1 reported that Japanese flanking columns are lu touch above Tl Pass and that there may be a Sedan there. No adequate estimate of lotaes baa been furnished, but, with the nnlta captured on the left un- accounted for, the killed and wounded already total 65,000. The war office does not even know no curately what units ware captured. -- und-rak- ny March 13. 5:35 p. m. Little addltisual information waa vouchsafed at tne war offlre today. General Unevitch'a army, although Its units were scattered and confused, got off with tie fewest losses. General Kaulbars was' the heaviest loser, leaving 28.000 prisoners in the hands of the Japanese. Kaulbars himself, with the remxant of his army, had a narrow escape. When the Japanese drove their wedge across the railroad above Mukden he just managed to pull cleat by withdrawing south of the city and then moving Into the mountains barely in time to avoid General Kitrokla column which were already at the Hun river bombarding Fu iiS'S. According to latest advices. Gene's! Kaulbars ia being pursued and la not succeeded in extricating himjf from the mountain. General Mviuendorff, commander of i he first army corpe, waa wounded la the Shoulder. St. Petersburg, New York, March 13. Jeremiah Barber, a policeman who ha served tha rity four years, lias. It la reported, St. Petersburg, March 13. Gan. Kuropatkln. In a dispatch dated March 13tb. says fifty thousand Russian were wounded during tha last days fighting. m After a strung' spirit' In a rom in Helmr Mrret. a city drtertivr ha arretted the spirit, de-- Ic fierce realat-aiu- r. Wh.n Me lights were turned in. ihe visitor from the oiher wmid waa found to lie Mr. Jennie Nichole, a young and extremely muscular woman. Vreuya. and a w otheis vrhriee Bh will have a hearing today on voice is always for war, speak out charges of obtaining money under faise snaift.! for pea'- - at aimuti any priie. preienwes. ihe de:ci-iiv'- i hin was iiadlr 10m in the fighl. declaring ifca all hope of vir'ory i RETREATING UNDER FIRE. now burled at Mukden. Some papeis The raid on Mr?. Niiho- - pla.-- n was iilte the Novoeti, the Jewinh ortan, the (list move in a aeneral crusade Bt. Petersburg. Man It 13. A disag;i:nt ''Fake- mararialliati ms. spirit patch from Kuropaikln. dated March Pa'tt'y deronnee the whole Kar K and spirit phmngraidiv wliki 11. painting s):rn-i- Is ha leva tContiu'jed oa I'age Six) by the police. Ihf general rc- Chicago. March 13. wiili a FIFTY THOU8AND WOUNDED. KUROPATKINS Washington, March 13. Minister Grlscom baa cabled the State de- parlucnt from Tokio under yertirday date aa folluwa: ''Official report Japaueae army raptured 20,000 priaourra on the seen MMMMMI LOSSES ARK 135, OuO. Ja-clf- le i C LUCK OF PEACE : of Capture Chicago, March 13. J. C. Stubbn, traffic director of the Harriman lines, wa asked today by a reporter a to the truth of a report that he bad resigned or to about to do so. Mr. Stubbs stated emphatically that there ia no truth whatever In tha report he had not resigned and has no such Intention. The report, he aald, was without the least baala of fact. WOMEN VOTED FOR ROOSEVELT. 13. President March Roosevelt today gate a cordial greeting to three women who cast their ballots in November for hia elector. They were Mrs. d. L. Wiley and her of two daughters, Wyoming. They were introduced together with Mr. Wiley, by Representative Mondell. On election day the entire Wiley family rode overland 30 mile in order that they might cast their votes for Mr. Wa-hingt- Roosevelt.. TESTIMONY IN BRIBERY CASES. Subway and HcvatesJ Roads in Bad From Strike. Con-ditio- n New York. March 13Thxt ditioaa resulting from th striketh kl Inter boro ugh system have not breaT? Justed waa plainly apparent lotto r an though the strikers had ated by their national orgawmttaTa.il even, advised by their local offieSw make aa effort to get back theJ ci places and tha Intarborough had a nounced tut th effect of the ttriu'. had passed schedule, were monTta regular and inadequate today thaw ary time since lat Tuesday. Even In tha Subway, where th enw paay concentrated nearly all Iu effbru for several days to perfect a fore & operatives from among the and where everything appeared to be approaching a normal haaii last week, the service today was fu from aatlitflMtory, Trains were Mcmt-ela fairly large numbers, but at reduced speed. All trains wen emu overcrowded. It was on the Elevated that conditions were at their worst, however. Tha Ninth and Sixth avenue lines oa tha west side, which were making fairly good time last week, were operated today apparently with great difficulty. A far uptown aa 116th street the car became crowded and a repetition of lest weeks ocene. of parked train, people unable to get aboard and mra cumbing to the roof, were repeated. Even during the rush hour from is to 30 minutes would pass between train. On th Third avenue line oa tha east aid, conditions were aa bad, it ant worae, than at any time since the beginning of the atrikei While the. station platform at one point waa crowded whh people, waiting for a train, forty empty ram were standing in the center Out of commission, A guard, wh vn one of th waa asbd why these cars are not used. Ha replied: They are out of order. Til company has 800 care that caaaot b run because their motor ar oet w order or something to tha matt wftB them." nrlke-breake- rs d long-delay- strike-breake- Tendencies in This Toward That Which is Debasing New York, March ll. In aa address here before a large audience la tha Broadway Tabernacle, Dr. Arthur T. Hadley, president of Yale, baa pointed out the danger of "money worship and laxity in public conscience. It is only within the last fifty yearn, ha said, "that wa have really begun to feel the consequences of the appeal to private judgment aa a standard of right and of the toleration of Individual liberty in thought aa well aa la action. Freedom ie a good thing, toleration ia a good thing; but when freedom and toleration are carried ao far that a man withdraws within himself with the worn out excuse, Am 1 my brothers keeper hla own efforts at personal salvation, however well meant, are brought to naught. "Amid the daily contact of men, habit of thought, standards of value, subtle influences in the estimate of right and wrong pass from men to man quietly and unconsciously. By thU subtle contact a sort of public conscience is created. The difficulty of keeping our standards of business and of politics pure today to, 1 think, greater than it has been in any previous generation. Tha task of convincing people In a democracy that liberty brings duties as well a rights Is harder than the corresponding task under an aristocracy. "Our industrial machinery and our political machinery are both excellent in their way, but no Industrial or political machinery, however good, can take the place of public spirit and "Here ie the great vital need for Not to make the American people law abiding and intelligent that it ia already; not even to make It kindly and courteous and industrious these virtues we have, if not In ideal measure, at any rata sufficiently for the practical purpose of life; but to fight with all ita heart and with all ita soul that dangerous spirit of selfish 1 Relation which encourages a man to take whatever the law allow and moat approves the man who has taken moat. There must be a sense that power I a trust ami not a privilege; that life ie to be valued not fur what it enables ui to get out of people, but for what It enables us to give to people in the way of service. the church: Sacramento, March 13. More testimony was heard today In Judge Harts department of the superior court, in the cares of Eli Wright and Frank French, deposed state senator, charg ed with bribery. The hearing waa on motion to aer aalde tha Indictments on the ground that the grand Jury which CHARRED REMAINS FOUND. presented them waa not valid. The motion to aet aside was made on the ground that some of the jurors were Husband of a Woman to Placed Under alien. Several technical objection nrreit to the court proceedings were made by the attorneys for the defense and Marysville. Cal.. March 13. Tha overruled. charred remain of Mr. Joseph Nance were discovered today hi the ashes of TRANSFER OF GEN. SUMNER. her home on the outskirts of Marysville. During the heavy wind and rain PEONAGE CASE DECIDED. Washington. March 13. Major Gen- storm which prevailed the cabin waa eral Sumner to to be transferred from burned and only the nearest neighbors Washington. Mnrrh t- - In the peon- the command of the Southwestern knew of the disaster until daylight. age rase or gunnel M- - Clyatt. vs the military division, at Oklahoma City, The womans liunband Is under arrest. United Slate, the supreme court to- to San Francisco, commanding the Pa- Several shots were heard at the place cirof the division cific ia place of Major Gen- last night. day reversed he dechuon cuit court of ippeals for the fifth dis- eral MacArthur now with the Japanese trict, in favo- - of Catt who was army in Manchuria. Now York. March 13. Mrs. Winslow Judon, n wealthy resident of New Turk. March 13. The National St. the Mo., has notified Joseph. Board of Fire Underwriters at a meetthat ahe haa been police Brooklyn WAR CGUNCII CALLED. ing today rewired to recommend the robbed of five rings valued at filjuo. withdrawal of all fire insurance bni-ne- i beside valuable papers and some in the state of Arkansas. Thl rash which were In a reticule she St. Petcrliqrg. MtTih 13. 5:43 p. haa sum- m -- Emperor NirholM aet Ion w taken becaiiite of the pro- carried on a Brighton Beech train. moped a warronnril for tomorrow . posed enforcement or the Mra. Judson ia vlritlng her daughter, ar which thf whole situation will law by the Arkana legislature. The who ia the wife of an electrical engibill become operative March 23. and if neer. The be ci.nsldcron while robbery occurred not repealed by tuat date all policies nhe wa on her taking miCrn in the State will l cancelled. an ..excursion to the beach. r, ELOPEMENI Unfrocked Minister and a Girl Make a Sensational Case New Brunswick, K. J-- . March 1L The trial of J. F. Cordova, the unfrocked minister, and former! P tor of the Conklin Methodist Epbcek pal church of South River, who nf charged by his wife with assaultresult battery and abandonment, as a wit of two sensational elopements blacthe daughter of the villa ksmith. waa begun here today. Julia Bowna, the young woman wit whom Cordova twice fled, haa declined to forsake him, una waa brought into court toduyj u aa 8b extremely unwilling witnraa. await-in- g been kept In Jail aa a witnesi the trial, .teedfastly jrfulut her accept ball offered for the Pr w The flret elopement of returned curred last May. but they A w afterward. South River aoon weeks ago they Main were ar to Washington. There they under a. here and brought prehended per1-tentl- Mles Bowne etiil proclaim y her repwtedff ity to Cordova and be has to newt P declared bio willingness to unhanaei. isbment If Mia Bowne RAIN IS OF BENEFIT. Sacramento. Cal.. March raina are .till tailing out the Sacramento valley foothills. Fanners and frdt of tot any tha heavy rain of great benell be will yesterday all cropa. .. roJ meningitis RAMPANT. New York. Mmchl2.-n.-tC or spinal menhtgitto. forty 5"redeht bt killing about ciiy w h.n Commissioner DarlUgtnn ofths and with department to In this IML'S Hist Y?ork ia New nSSSS the ravsg kill. about fifty PW )ImE which attacked by . & of those BANK ROBBED- - Fremont. Ohio. March vP . tMr an of the Genoa Bank blown by three ; P- - ooo I" aecured A reported to have P In neLb and $50,000 , poeie la la pursuit. t3 antl-comp- grand-childre- n MICHIGAN Menominee. 'nt earthquake abort house was felt last night W iUie il |