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Show I'M V- tmSSm ' OGDEN CITY, UTAH. WEDNESDAY MORNING. MAY J0f 1905. BEET COMPANY Senator Depew and Hyde Have Now Been Served. American's Vice-Preside- New York, May 9. The directors of the Equitable Life sere the summons being nerved with brought by Edgar T. Brackett, at Saraof May Yeung, toga Springs, on who sue as a policy holder and stockholder for an accounting by all the directors of the Equitable. Senator Depew and Hyde had been served yeterday. A big corps of process servers started out today with aummones for the remainder of the fifty directors. Nona of the defendants had been .erred with the complains today. Extreme Duartment Stores Send Wagons to Without Police Protection of Gty fljrago. fu. tal and Escape Molestation. to change the convention from once Mr its business o naimosi sent their wagons of the city. In parts MU 5"7 tastsaT arUhout police protec their business rThrt StJwSiSixteen character. n hundred -work today, and the wl bs Increased tomorrow, Outstanding this apparent gain. are strong indications the strike will spread Hfiethe seat few days, not only but will Involve SFJKaTgs well. The drivers of a large 4k. Wenig Teeming company, ern chiefly engaged in delivering 7, vrat out today when one of ftoSaumber waa discharged for refus- to deliver Hour to a boycotted Wi Sfthat WYNDHAM TELLS WHY HE QUIT the There were numerous clashes n men between today tMU tad the police and union teamsters vho attempted to block the passage of the wagons of the Employers Teaming There waa also a number company. men by work-n- n of attacks of Is buildings, who pelted them with all sorts of missile from a safe iUtsnee. These lights were all In the durteter of rear guard attacks, and tom bo resemblance to the open vie Irtice committed during laat week. The most lerlou. light of the. day waa at like sod Clark streets, where union musters formed a blockade and brought about a congestion of truffle ud a series of lights that blocked the nett In that section of the city for ike greater part of an hour. Nobody vu seriously hurt and numerous ar-k-ti were made by the police. n Coil teamsters In the business of the city were especial objects of ittirk by workmen in buildings tar which they drove. A anon as missile of ail they were discovered mil wen showered upon them and h fcrrsl instances it was necessary tor the wagon guards tnd the police to send a volley of bullets flying toward the window. Nobody, however, van shot during the day. The taking of evidence relative to' the granting of injunctions issued tern- -' pomily by the United 8taten Circuit court is behalf of the Employers ud the seven express com panies commenced today before Master fa In non-unio- Carnival of Women strike or-J- lr and ,hot ..Iff rint stopped traffic on the Cr for neartF an hour;- wlndowa were broken. Three P1,ce wer necesaary to ilnurf-timoli. in the melee umbreIlai mingled with the fruit and, hurled by the women. Lt JAPANESE SHIPMENTS SEIZED Orimuiwhole.alem Were Only Involo-in- g Goode to Half Value. V that for 9- - n ' ll It came of StenTS?.1 i1? the Un,,wl States h"r lve been selx-talaresivj twf !lp",eIlt, r Japanese goods Cau SU.,Jtry at Port Angeles npU on th of the 10 vade he .?.ver. custom lawn ,hlB t,m tdmnV,U,?nK valued conCn.Lth0U:and8 of dollar have ar now t0rd the city0 houe and warchouaes of thin JUDGE BELLINGER VERY ILL Contracted Cold During Land Frauda. Pt Hearing of 9. Judge Ore., May Portland, Charles B. Bellinger, of the United States district court or Oregon, lies at his home In this city critically ill. While all hope has not been abandloeth ,on brJ2l ,he Practice of the oned that Judge Bellinger will reforeL "tew t0 accept the cover, bis physician admits that hia " on ,he rooaa ahlppel condition la grave. I fromrnE) and Judge Bellinger contracted a severe Points to I dn?eJvkh,n: hearings of the land PP1?- - cold during the era afflte.rM. fraud cases, and this cold developed discovered that the Papan- - Into a severe attack of grip. On e wh!!i on tbe othpr aide were Saturday his condition became more takln advantage of thia laxity m4 j serious and yesterday complications shipments with In- - et ln- - ln the shape of septic poiaon- VnlnM c8nlng Atont fifty per cent ing. It was not, however, until today, f th Boons. Rccent-forc.that It waa realized that the jurist's lr custom house condition wa critical, and not until hla Port has been waa largely late In the day that his physician waa but ttinzttei r?,,tln? a thorough ex-u-il willing to admit that there ?ade of pach Individ- - alight hopes of his ultimate recovery. waa hen that the Invok-!-- , of th dealers NEW YORK POLICE SHAKE UP. rt 4 ,he con- New York May 9. The moat extenconsignments sive shakeup In the New York police irizM fL'i targest from Yok- - department ln years took place today anJ eardorff of Santa when Commissioner McAdoo rhsr na-!- i.i amounted In value nounced the retirement of two Into realated the spectors, ten captains and forty-fiv- e HIreillDerdOT" to rrllevln he sergeants on the ground of physical hu r.,i,t ,n tWTt nd disability. The Inspect oros retired th loraially declared eon-tar- are Thomas I. Druhan of Brooklyn, IviUL ,h' BovernmenL Other and Elbert O. Smith of arlem. and ffia"y aan w a, been seized. 1 W" hoV?'Vf of lac-J- 1 stk;-- e. ph, CONDUCTORS IN SESSION, Prei POflticv:chan" T,me Goes Over. thin?e-- h y - Eductor U. P. STOCK INCREASE. c Order ti. began Its I" ,hl c,t? Gmai Chw Conductor E. E. today.. Clark PrtUdhu. The reports of the grand aM !?bJ"i,td' lnrt rommiN! were appointed. The only bn si-- 1 'oitav ftaher U . ,he Grand Island, Neb., May 9. Despite the rain five thousand people had gathered at the depot to see and hear IreHldent Roosevelt. The pilot arrived at 6:10 and promptly at the minute the presidential tram pulled Into the station. The president, enilllug and happy, was out upon the rear platform, and lost no time in greeting the Nebraskuna gathered there. He had already begun to address the throng when Mlxa Anna Garmlre and the members of the high school graduating class worked their way through the crowds and presented the president with a fine bouquet of flowers on behalf of the business men of Grand Island. The president expressed his appreciation. After referring to his former vLlt here, his address took more of a general turn. He had barely closed when his train pulled out of the yards admiiM shouts and hurrahs. With only four stops for speeches, the trip of tho presidential train from Denver to thia city was uneventful The train arrived here at 6:30 o'elork. United States Senator Burkett and Ed ward Rosewater, punisher of the Omaha Bee, were taken on board and were the president guests as far aa Omaha. The speeches were all brief and were devoted almost entirely to the disruption of the country through which the president passed and to the subject of lrrigailon.J AND SELF started for rars ofPPonment the proposition Salt Lake. May 9. Tho Union Pacific Hallway company todayfiled articles of Incorporation, lnof Its per- creasing the smount ferred stock 9ino.fwn.000 as sutbor-Ized on Friday last atthe special held In meeting of stockholder A fee of 9Z5.OO0 waa this city. trresurv to-paid Into the State amended article dav when the SULLIVANS MATCH WITH ' MITCHELL Veteran Will Bet Any Part of Five Thousand Dollars on the Fight. Tacoma, Washington, May 9. The John here will say: L. Sullivan's here to close the representative la match with Charley Mitchell. The following teegram was sent from hen to Mitchell: Charles W. Mitchell, pugilist. Baa Francisco. My representative la here to sign I will not articles of agreement. deposit one thousand dollars, but will hot you any part of five thousand dollars. I will be on hand when time Is Will put up one thousand dolcslled. lars with Considlne aa bond If you do the same. JOHN L. SULLIVAN. NO WRIT FOR' VALENTINA Trenton, N. J., May 9. Judge Lan-niuin the United States District court, today refused to grant a writ of habeas corpus applied for liy counsel for Anns Valentina, who waa to have been hanged at Hackensack oa May 12th, for the murder of Rosa Salza. Counsel for the condemned woman claimed that she had not had a fair trial, but County Prosecutor K os ter, of Bergen county, denied this allegation, saying the trial had been impartial. An appeal to the United States Supreme circuit was taken. The appeal prnbabiy will postpone the execution of Mrs. Valentine for some time. WRONG GIRL ATE CHERRIES. Seatile, Wn.. May 9. Poisoned cherries, brought to the county jail by some unknown Chinaman venter-day- , for the purpose of killing Ah Sou, the Chinese slave girl, were eaten bv another prisoner, and made her violently rick. Prompt medical attendance saved her from any serious ef- fect. fruit Ah Sou refuted to eat 9. Stockholder LIVESTOCK of their annual meeting in Jersey City, reelected the old boxrj of directors with the exception of Geo. Foster Peabody, who waa succeeded by Charlea Jonaa. The report of the auditor showed the IHOflu for nine months ending March 1st, the date of the fiscal year having been changed, to be S4B1.35S, and the not surplus 191, 852. A statement gtveu out hy the director declared the returns were disappointing of the lack of rain in California. THEFT OF EQUITABLE POLICY Speeches WOMAN sympathizers not at Lake and Clark street! this gtonea .p0WerC gathered, lhr0W Bred! "i ona Enthusiastic Throngs Hear Optimistic KILLED Fruit y? ised celebrations for the laboring classes, claiming that Schiller was the special apostle of freedom and human elevation, which tho Socialist creed demands. The more Interesting ceremonies occurred at Weimar, where Misunderstanding With Under Beero-tar- y tne students of all the universities, Hia For Ireland Over technical institution and mining acaPolicy Was ths Causa, demies assembled und marched in to the grand ducal vault, where London, May 9. George Wynhnm, they deposited a wreath on Schiller's who has been absent, owing to Illness, bier. Crown Prince Frederick William, since bis resignation of the secretaryship for Ireland, returned to the house Chancellor Yon Buelow, the cabinet of commons this afternoon, and as a ministers, professors in their robes and preliminary to the introduction of the delegates from student nocleties gathered at the opera house here at midvote of censure of 81r Henry (the liberal leader), day and listened to the singing of the on the Irish policy of the government, cavalry song from Wallenstein with made a personal explanation of the opera chorus and trumpeters, the reasons for hi resignation. He said students clashing their kwords in he had Inaleted on retiring front the rhythm. Reports reach Berlin that the day cabinet, not on the grounda of policy, hut because political and personal was celebrated similarly in Switzerreasons had convinced him that he land, Austria aud the Scandinavian could better serve the government as countries. an unofficial member, than aa secretary for Ireland. His views had not changed in' the smallest degree In regard to the Irish administration. The union must be the fundamental principle of any sound Irish policy. Mr. Windham thought that the scheme for devolution was, in some ways, more open to criticisms than even the plana for home rule Itself. Double Tragedy In Hotel le Sequel to The situation In both Ireland and Heavy Lossea at BelEngland had become complicated by mont Park. for a personal misunderstanding to which he, himself, was partly New York, Jday 9. A man and woblame. He had never contemplated man, aa yet unidentified, both apany delegation of legislative powers parently Japanese, found tonight from the house of commons other than shot to death in awore the Dry the power of dealing with purely priv- Dock hotel ln the room of Bowery, where they ate bills. Consequently he had paid had registered thia morning aa Myron no attention as he ought to have done and wife, city. Shortly afterLeqii reof to the earlier proceedings the heard the couple form association. 8ir Anthony Mc- ward the night clerk exDonnell (undersecretary to the lord quarrelling and heard the woman lieutenant of Ireland), erroneously be- claim: Oh, Harry dont be eo cruel." lieved that he. Mr. Wyndham, would That was the last heard of the approve of the proposals of the until the door waa forced open couple tonight devolutionlsts, but as soon as he saw and loth were found dead. The man these proposals, he, Mr. Wyndham, had shot the woman, who apparently to them. strong objections registered had received one bullet In the head Such a misconception of his attitude was destructive In the case of nil ef- atd another ln the breast; and had ehot himself through the head. forts at social reform. Therefore he then Two cards also were found in the dofor his had concluded that power mans clothing, one that of the Meting further useful work In Ireland ropolitan hotel, San Francisco, and the was ended. Minnie Rogeri, Standard other of Campbell-BannermaSir Henry house, 620 Jackson street," then moved his resolution which rooming to be In San amounted to a vote of censure for the which is also supposed Francisco. There was also a policy and proceedings of the Irish of the race at Belmont Parkprogram yestergovernment connected with, and subThe police learned from a sequent to, the appointment of Sir day. habitue of the hotel that the man told Anthony McDonnell. Sir Henry said the government had him he had lost, 1,700 at the races. attempted a policy of Impartial Irish administration on the lines of the Wyndham-McDonneletters, but had fled from It at the dictates of a small party of Irish unionists. te assaults srteraoon by bombarding a non-unio- n Anver of a fruit laden truck with and other fruit. A mob of ora-tlon- s Campbell-Ba- Cbanmy Shermnn. Witnesses for the employers told of the trouble thnt led up to the strike men. Berliit, May 9. The Schiller cenlen-nar- y waa celebrated today throughout Germany with public meetings, processions, the tolling of liells, theatrical performances and- musical entertainments. All the universities observed the day with exercises, Including of Schiller's. At Frankfort, Berlin and other towns Socialists organ- nnerman rec-tiu- n Socialists Taks Part and Claim That ths Poet Was On of Them. MEETS. Return Are Said to Be Disappointing. New York, May CELEBRATE CENTENNARY OF SCHILLER pro-rexsi- non-unio- n sad twilled concerning In two yearn to once In three. During the evening a reception waa tendered the visiting delegates at which Governor George E. Chamberlain and General George H. Williams, mayor of this city, made addresses of welcome, and to which response was made by Chief Conductor Clark. Considerable interest la being developed In the selection of the next meeting. Cincinnati, Boston nad Memphis, Tennessee, are making vigorous efforts to secure the convention. PRICE FIVE CENTS IN HOLD the American Bret Sugar company, nt Vice-Preside- M Parts FQEECAST Fair and warm er W'edne.day and Thursday. VOL n. NO. 130 X HTATHE8 the Officials Bay Trusted Employe Stole Document From Vault and Raised Loan on It New York, May 9. A man giving the name of William .Italy waa arrested today at 8troundbiirg. Pa, charged with the larceny of 27,000 from the Equitable Life Assurance In thia city, by the ue of a forged signature of a holder of a $50,000 imliry and by conspiracy with an employe of the Equitable society. Italy's name Is said by detective to be Samuel Ixililey. In a statement Issued by officials of the Equitable society today It waa explained that William C. Colton, of Bronklyne, Maa, waa the owner of a $50,000 policy in tha Equitable society. In March, 1904. he borrowed $37,000 on it, depositing It with tha society a a security for the loan. A few months later, the officials say. the policy waa stolen from the vaults of the society by a trusted employe, working in eonjuction with laibley. The hooka of the aorlety containing a record of the previous loan were altered and Colton's name was forged to an application for another loan of 27.(hiii. The second loan wa made. It la declared, to 1 Sibley. In negotiating third loan Lobley waa detected. . Like Typo of Citizenship. North Platte, Neb., May 9. President Roosevelt special stopped at Sterling today. The president addressed a large crowd there as follows: It la a great pleasure to have the change of saying a word or two to you. For more than three weeks I have been ln your great state and 1 admire the divers! flealion of Its Industries and wa' ler at Its great future. Here is the eastern part of the state we come to the ranch country, not only the cow business with which I was acquainted myself once, but here where you are starting thia great sugar beet Industry, that being peculiarly an Industry that does well under Irrigation. The eastern part of Colorado, which, fifteen years ago waa considered as only a country for sage brush and Jack rabbits, has now come up so that It has relatively ae great a future ae any part of the state. One of the great factors In accomplishing the result is Irrigation. No community more than Colorado appreciates the need of Irrigation. I congratulate you on the material future of your state, hut most of all on your type of cltliecsblp. You who fought ln the late war know that what counted waa the average of the man who went into the ranks, and It la the average man. woman and child of Colorado that makea Its future." Routo is Changed. Omaha, Neb, May 9. Late this afternoon It waa decided to change the route of the presidential train and send it across the Missouri river, at miles north of Blair, Neb, twenty-liv- e Omaha. When the train reached Fremont it was turned over to the Northwestern road, which took the train to Missouri Valley, across the cut-of- f la, where the main line branches off and run direct to Chicago. The trip across Nebraska today was a most pleasant one for the president, leaving Denver early Tuesday morning nearly the entire day waa spent ln crossing the Nebraska plains. Several speeches, all brief, were delivered by the president from tne rear platform of his car. Special arrangements had been made by the Union Pacific company for the A special car presidents comfort. Mohler, accarrying companied ly the train from Denver to FYemont. The schedule prepared for the trip was followed exactly, and at no point was there any delay or running behind time. During the day the Union Pacific transmitted over Its wires the fresh news of the day, which was delivered In Its regular bulletin form to the president who hia gratiflnition at this innovation In keeping his train In touch with the new of the world. Tho Chicago and Northwestern road sent a pilot out of Omaha at 9:50 o'clock tonight to MUeouri Valiev where it will take up the presidential special and take it eastward. Vice-Presl.le- SLOW . FREIGHT RATES Commarcial Principles Should Regulate Them In Conclusion of International Congress. Washington, May B. Tha only rate question, phae of the railway before the Interna- which will come. tional congress, la that of alow freight rates," which topic has juat been concluded by section four, for presentation to thn general session of tbe conconclusion Thn gress Thursday. reached by the section ia that "tariffs ahould be based on commercial principles, taking into account the special conditions which bear on the commerrendered. cial value of the service With the reservation that rates shall be changed without arbitrary discrimination to all shippers alike under like condition!, tbe making of rates ahould be far aa possible have all the elasticity necessary to permit the development of the traffic and to produce tha greatest results to tho public and to the railroads themselves." On the question of length of tlma on duty and working regulations for employes and laborer, section four has reached the following conclusion for presentation to the general sesThat due to sion of the congres: the many peculiarities of railway service, it. is Impossible to so reconcile the rigidty of the law wth tha elasticity necessitated by the various requirements by the needs of the public, the employes and employing management. It la held that the employ era should have the greatest latitude to fix under the control at competent authorities, the regulations of work. WINDSTORM IS CAUSE OF GREAT HAVOC A terrific . tonight wrought havoc to many building In thia city and vicinity. At Klwood, Kas., acres ihe Missouri river from till city, a large elevator belonging to the Harraun company waa partially destroyed. Four men are imprisoned in the wreckage and It la believed they cannot be extricated. Los 100,000. y brick buildTne walla of a ing In SL John street, belonging to Grocery company, the Rolierts-Parke- r waa blown down. Five men in tbe building narrowly escaped. St. Joseph, Mo., May win-lstor- OUT THE OLIVE Stock Growers Convction Holds First Annual Meeting in Denver Stirring Speech by Hughes Denver, Colo, May 9. Tha American Stockgrowers association which waa organized last year by aeceders from the National Live 8tock association, ia holding ita first annual convention in thin rlty. Several hundred cattle men were present at the owning aearion in tha Broadway theater today, at which addresses of welcome were made by Governor Jesaa F. Mayor Robert W. Speer of Denver and John W. Springer, former president of the National Live SUiek axwiciatlon, and a response by W. W. of tha Texas Cattle Turney, president . Kaixera Discussions among the member of the American Block Growers' association Indicates that affiliation with the National Uve Stock Axxociation la out of the question at present. Freoldcnt J, F. Hagenbarth, of the latter organization, is in attendance at the convention, but the executive committee of the nasoclatlon, of which the official head haa not assembled aa anticipated. There will be no clash at this convent Ion," a id President Hagenbarth, today. Our organization want pence and 1 for everything that will promote harmony among the stockmen. The present convention will dlscuaa waya and moan of securing better rates and ssrvlre from ths railroads and of fighting the alleged combination of tho jutekera. Sines the organization of the new association Its president, Conrad Schaefer, ha died, and In advance of the axsemlillng of the convention the mem-oer- s had practically agreed upon tho choice of Murdo Mackenzie, a prominent Colorado and Texas cattle man, to lie Mr. Schaefers succeaaor. The appointment of committee anJ the address of Colonel W. K. Hnghes consumed most of the time of the session. days W. K. Hughes of Denver spoke of the American Stork Grower. Amort can Ideals and American Monopoly," He said in part: We must get back to tlw American idea; individualism must be again built up here. Heart again must be put into the common Individual man. It la he who doea the work, and let it be underxtond that we now mean thnt thin government, created by, of, and for the people, must also be owned by them and not by the corporation, and these corporations, now liecoming hurtful powere, muet go under government control. In doing title we violate no laws of Justice. Corporation are not eo popular In England oa with ua, and nothing like so general. They have not there touched the public utilities and they have here. Where they do they will be controlled a they are in Germany, In France, and, in fact, all European countries. What we ask la simply that our Ameriran government be kept to ita original calling, and, in the langurge of our fathers. That aorlety he protected, all violators of positive law punished, and that liberty and the rights of man remain the aim aud objects of the American government, our fathers builded. With President F. J. Hagettbari.h and Secretary J. H. flwinn, W. A. Harris of Chicago, general manager of the National Live Stork association. 1 watrtix Ing the proceeding of the convention. We are here to extend the olive branch to the American association," We are willsaid Mr. Harris today. ing to make any reason hie concre-slon- a to the new organization and shall be very glad to have it affiliate with ua. Our executive committee consist nf ten ntpmbera, Keren of whom are stork men, and if the Amer-Wa- n association desires to come in we will enlarge the committee and give the new organization two members." anaik-iaiion- WAR NEWS Japaneaa Are Sanguine. B. C., May 9. Japanese advices received today reflect sanguine feeling with regard to tbe battle. naval Considerable temper la displayed by many papers regarding alleged breaches of French neutrality. The Russians, through secret agents, are alleged to have bought up all the available coal supplies of Hong Kong, Saigon and and ten colliers are said to have STILL A CHANCE. l,een sum-pi- t iously chartered. Rusand sians are insuring the vessel Acting Secre- granting bonuses to crews. Large Washington, May of rual are also reported to tary of State Ludbii- I in receipt of a shipments telegram from Governor Stokes at have been made by a foreign firm at irenton, stating that so far no applica- Hoji for Russians. At Saigon a number of natives tion for a reprieve in the case of Anna Valentina, under sentence of death for were captured endeavoring to act fire the murder nf Rosa Silva, haa been to the Russian store of coal. Rumors are current that the Rusmade to him that it appears that the courts are still open to her, but If sian squadron haa lost many torpedo that should not be so he will give craft during the voyage. The Kokumln, a paper weighty consideration to the application to the stale department, based on of Toklo, publishes a report from San Franclaco, May 9. The South- a request of the Italian ambassador Fort Arthur that Ihe Japanese trainern Pacific todir announced officially tbat the execution of sentence he ing hip Tausklshlma, which disapthe excueion rate that will obtain passed. The governor further riatee peared six months ago with over two from California points to Portland that hia power to grant a reprieve hundred apprentices on board has been found among the vessels sunk at during the Levis and Clark evpo waa only for a limited time. Fort Arthur by the Russians. , aition. Tbe first exeurion train will leave MISSING WITH UNION FUNDS. Russian Version. this city June 3 and win be continued Allrn-rta- r, 9. E. thereafter. St. F. From May 9. General Francisco. May Saturday Petersburg, this San every cashier of the Electrical Workera LineTltch, In a dispatch to tbe empercity and aa fa25. south a Fresno the From Los Angeles Union, local No. 16. i alleged to have or, dated May 7th. gives the Russian rate will be 1.518 belonging to official version of the recent raid made It will be 135. The ticket will be absconded with without stopover tht organization. He hsa been miss- by Russian torpedo boat destroyers good for 10 dy a com- from Vladivostok. He says Captain privelege. ing since April 28th. Today emBaron Raden, while reconniotrTing the feloniu with him charging plaint. London. May 9- The correspondent bezzlement. wa ewom to by G. F. coasts of Japan with a torpedo flotilunion, anil a la, burned a Japanese schooner, two at Moscow of IheTImes hears that Keetley, president of tbe and put the the Russian Kd (tom hospitals will warrant for hi arrest we Issued. He mile off Cape Soutsoukl, removed to Chlii in preparation is said to have been a frequent patron crew ashore, and also captured another schooner fifteen miles oil the Japanese for the probable evacuation of Harbin. of the pool rooms. Victoria, live-stor- Sin-spo- SOUTHERN. PACIFIC'S FAIR RATES - 1 coast. After removing nine of her crew. Captain Radra sent the prize to Vladivostok. Nebagatoff Sighted, Paris, May 10.A - dispatch from Saigon to the Uetlt Auras!, ajra: "Ncbogatoff's squadron apiivared at daybreak of May 9th, twenty miles off Cape St. James, preparing to ascend the river to Saigon, where the commander expected to find the necessary orders for effecting a Junction with Rojeattreneky and revictualing hia fleet. He was hailed at aca by a scout belonging to the Ruaalati Second Pacific squadron, which communicated to him France! declaon. that (he junction of the Russian squadron ahould occur oulalde of water. Nebagatoff then disappeared on the open sea, sailing toward the Second TaclAc squadron, which doubtless ia awaiting official orders on the Annan coaaL" Indo-Chine- -S f- K In Spite of Mormon Offer to Educate and Keep Them. San Frandsco, May 9. Detained on the ocean steamer Sirra by the immigration officers are four small chil- dren, the oldest of whom is a girl of yean and the youngest a boy of live. Their names are Harding. Their rase was investigated by United States Immigrant Inspector Griffith and he found that their mother ws dead, their father a carpenter in the government service ln New Zealand, and tbat all the money they had was 21 cent. A Mormon missionary named J. 11. W. Goff, who had been stationed In New Zealand two yeara ago, presented himself ti take charge 0 of the children and stated he had wherewith to pay their expenses to Utah. Goff stated that ho waa acting for another Mormon missionary, named Stephens, who waa to take charge of the children In Utah and. they would be sent to public schools in that at ate. The special board of inquiry decided that the Immigrants were liable to become public charges and therefore denied them a landing. 11 SOCIALISTS INTEREST THE WORKINGMEN 8t. Petersburg, May 10, 2:45 p. m. l Democrats are straining The every effort to make the propored dem-ouration on the Rua-ia- n May day a aurrexs. They have succeeded In Interesting the workmen of several St. Petersburg factories, and yesterday at the committee's invitation a meeting of workmen was held In tbe people's Island, at which, park on Fetruff-k- y after, affirming their peaceful Intention, it wa derided to participate In thn parade. A resolution was paxaed faking the Douma to furnish a hall for a big meeting in the evening of May 14th. There arc indications, however thet attempt to create disorder may be more xurreeaful in other cities than in St. Petersburg. One of the biegeat obstacle to tha eneeeae of the Socialists plans la tha Influence of the women, who are urgand eons to keep ing their out of danger. The continuing disorder In oth-- r parts of the empire have create 1 ap. prehension ln administration rirele. A state of siege haa lieen proclaimed at Melitopol, In th South of Kuasia, and in the government of Grodno an-Viln on the Pulisn frontier: and the government announce if intention to further extend the lte of siege If disorders continue. of tho No further disorders In Zhitomir are reported. Boi-la- st da a CONSPIRACY senil-offilc- h TRIAL. trial which beof Captain Tamhurina and others accused of conspiracy against ilu) government waa continued today. The teotlmony tended to show that the organization being formed was for the purpoe of rending an expedition to Africa. After the court uad overruled a plea that the high court waa tbe only tribunal competent to hear the ease of conspiracy the trial waa adjourned for a fortnight. Faria, May 9.-- The gan Kingman, Kan., May 9. A wind storm hero this afternoon did much y damage to building. One brick structure wa demolished and John L. Franks was fatally injured. The wheat crop was not much hurt by the wind. two-stor- .t |