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Show ,1 IT.tfl mm fOSECAST Fair Monday: cooler in south tion; Tuesday fair; warmer. porV- VOL. U OGDEN CITY, UTAH. MONDAY MORNING. NO. U2 STANDARD .CAN USE ALL OIL Kansas City. Mav 21. w. F. Gates of independence, Ka.. superintendent of nil the pipe iir.cs of the Standi.-Oil company of Kane a and Oklahoma, We are prepared to take care aid: of all the oil production in the Kansaa territory field. The Whiling, liidiiina. mpieted lu a few nipe line will be days, and then we ran handle all the oil produced west of the Mississippi river. The Whiting line, the construction of which wa begun last is to supply an outlet for six million barrels of oil stored by the company at Humboldt, Canry, Ramona and Xeoderha, Has. At Wblilug the pipe line will connect with the company's line to Bayonne, X. J., thus completing a line that will reach half way across the continent. The effect of the completion of the line to Whiting will be the Standard Oil company will be able to handle TS.OOU barrels of oil a day. Alreadv the pipe line superintendent of the company are laying out new line in anticipation of the completion of the Whiting line. One of there line will run from Paola to Rant oul. The construe lion forces for the company are also working on the order recently tabled, lyr the construction of 150 tanks of SS.oOO barrels capacity each. to Mr. Gates said he was unable state just where these tanka would 1h. located. JAPSIHER That Strike Will Spread Will Call on Dunne, Mayor State for Aid. '' to soe the old stains quo restored. However, Russia realizes the difficulty In the matter of the countervailing duty on sugar, which, withont further legislation, was rendered res adjudicata by the derision of the Supreme court of the United P tales, and, therefore, is willing to waive the question of sugar, but insists upon the removal of maximum duties upon hj products of petroleum imposed by the secretary of the treasury, which affects English vaseline and other products manufactured from Russian naphtha. The Russian government, also demands a guarantee similar to the one in the new treaty against any iiossibie abuse of the favored nation clause by specifically binding each country In the future under no circumstances or pretext to levy duties on the products of the other in excess of those levied on similar products of a third power. r Ambassador has laid the matter before the state deparvnent, and Is awaiting instructions. war SI. Sunday brought controversy now cnd ,vpr!;'lllnf f toward an in strike to many other the The express tfc. wpoU refusal to reinstate WBP!?rt. striking employe earned ,he settlement of the still adhere to Ulr nl"ht to it- i- - !?SiWt,p "t a SiS tTtha'llrmi 'involved In '.if; that they tonight Jgfiasd by the express companies l&tr. !JuJta union haa taken just ss the employers, ande by President Shea cadi union would never sit tt. ..vnrpHi com- to-th- ed SSS5?tsJi !l come to Sfita lisued Russo-Germa- ex- - tomorrow .niornlng, association, an i employing S.J men to WERE DRILLING d M tilwould change our directions In - . lb 'Utter. BarreJJ Mayor Dunne and Sheriff s the day In trying to ascertain of ( dee was going to be a spread atthe strlhe tomorrow. During the tain a eonl rence was held In the enws office. President Gontpers, of fit American Federation of Labor, ra invited to attend. After talking over the situation with Kayor Dunne ahd Sheriff Barrett, Mr. Campers withdrew to have a consultation with President. Shea. 1 have been discussing the outlook with Mayor Dunne and Sheriff farwtt, said Mr. Gompers. They asked me to u!te my influence and to do everything I possibly could to promt the extension of the strike. I told them that 1 would try and cooperate with the mayor and the teril and enddavor to carry out their sspnlon. , I told them that I under-tao- d that Mr. Shea and his associates 411 aot feel that they could agree to ths rtetlmliatlcn of and blacklisting of th expreM drivers, hut that I was will-- k to do everything I could In an 4riwy capacity to bring about te the end erf Curry, MS Baby Was in its Carriage Which Girl Stole. Idea of Killing Child Was Suggested to Her by Play. deputies Toronto, Ont, May 21. Josephine s and would make special Carr, a girl, baa confessed to increase the number. The to the murder of William Murray, a roe and 1 are determined, he said. Infant. It Is alleged that the pear of the city shall be the girl has been in the habit of stealaulatained. fronts of President Gflmpere returned to the ing baby carriages from the stores while the parents department after a long conference with 2LU have PmMmt Shea. He told Sheriff Bar-"- h were inside shopping. The police recovered several of these carriages, that the strike would not spread which had been sold.. Last Friday the ef-tt- Jt teamsters are ordered girl went to a department store and t.o boy cot tel house. in front "Mident Gontpers left for SL Paul found a baby in each carriage of the store. She picked out the best tonight. A baby carriage, which contained commute of twenty-fiv- e was ap-- looking the- Murray child, and made off with tonight h.v President Dold, of She took the child to the woods StniT f0 F;,l,,ration of I,abor. to It near the city. and. stripping it of its an Erom the labor unions a threw it over an embankment, clothing, fo1 th continuance ?lty of the causing Its death. Later she placed "ke of the teamsters. the body In a culvert and buried it's made the BUM clothing. On Saturday rhe discovered reTaliative DUTIES. announcement that she had Psvteed Natl on the child's body in the culvert. When Clause Will Hurt accused of the crime she made a conAtne'lean Imports. fession. The girl says the plan of to her killing the child was suggested May 21-- 11:5 P- - m. -by a play she had seen at a theater. of wcur,n the mLhe mP0,Ation by Russia PULAJANES ON WAR PATH. tevi i ?n flu,y 00 American im- tl'km of of ret4llatlon for --the lm- - Lolonsl Wounded and Private Killed In uty by I'nlteil Fight UP Russian tin. w,lleh f Obaasador Mayer 21 Col. Wsllace TayMantis. May .J. a;lll5t- - ! assuming addl-ft- lor. of the constabulary was n Sy-Eto the fart wounded in an engagement with (no n.p lilch tariff. Fuiajanea May 17 at Magtaon, on Ike of Sr. mar. One private was killed tbe basis for a coast wounded in the engagement, ten and c!u-- That -- any Pulajanes were killed. Aid has ibity Ai,hr,a!.1 on d!ule tbe HI other ar-ihern requested. Two companies of Ct-bln which machinery American Twentv-flrs- t rtoorti i t,1:.: infantry will leave are especially S an rvr'np SMJcral logsn to reinforce the constabulary. maximum ws fighting continues in the Desultory Increase. Islands nouth of Jolo. intol.lttr?PmUng inM5uly- - Con- - Leonard Wood, who recently conducted Tni!, unt'-- . .Tu lhT. Jr: dispute a campaign against Mora outlaws, has American arrlred in Manila. pton tnT? l0..pr still for- burden 'h dispute I INCREA8E IN NAVAL POWER. Slate unl(l'1 lriiver good E - XdS-' -- Kf wj? T tion of President Balfour's recent speech on defense of the empire Is In correct. Lord Esher contends that the premier's argument, which was necessarily clothed in parliamentary and diplomatic language, was rather for an Increase than. decrease of the naval and military power. Lord Esher argues that Mr, Balfour Intended to convey the idea of the necessity of a naval force so large and mobile na to leave sufficient force to protect tho country from invasion even Vhen the main fleets are absent, and for an army strong enough to meet tbe future possibility of the Russian and Indian frontiers becoming conterminous. JUDGE TOURGEE DEAD. Broadcaux, May 21. Judge Albion Wincgar Tourgee, of Mayvllle, X. Y. American consul here, died today of scute uraemia, which resulted from an old wound, aged 67 years Judg Tourgee was taken seriously 111 semo months ago, but his condition afterwards improved and it was believed bis recovery was probable. Recently, however, tbe disease took another serious turn and Judge Tourgee lingered until this morning. He was born at WUllamsflcId, Ohio. Washington, May 21. A cablegram was received ax the state department today announcing Judge Tourgee's death. He formerly was consul at Halifax, X. 8., and was well known as lawysr, writer and lecturer. -i a Philadelphia, May 21. The annual meeting of the Jewish Publication So ciety was held here today and was ail dressed by Rabbi David Phllipson of Cincinnati, Rabbi M. M. Eichter of this city, and others. The society decided to cooperate with the American Historical Society in the celebration next ffh.ll of the 25ftih anniversary of the will, the settlement of Hebrews in the United who til'-- '3?0: natlon clause Esher, 22. Lord 2 only! London. May States. tonasav , V1-- , du',on accorded to was chairman of what Is known aa the in the new appointed Lord Esher commission, 8finif t0 Xorth Yakima, Wash., May 21. negotiated 1903, for the purpose of advising the Fire of unknown origin, which started creation the concerning In a clothing tore In the Wilson iati8v0Vrrntnent seems to ofgovernment a board for the admlnlsratlve busi- Block did damage to the amount of th f ness of the wsr office. In a letter pubfcatea Vii J'.1 !5.al.n-.?,anearly 825, 0(H), late Saturday night. bai S ufc in the Times this morning, n,ljraUy would likei.a infers that lhe inenl interpreta Tbe !os is fully covered by insurance. tn-:I- Major-Gener- Rtaso-America- n ft com-Franc- c? DECLARED IN CHICAGO Complete Power of Orientals. Honolulu, May 21. Most of white population of Lnhaina on Island of MauL including the militia, are prisoner In the court house surrounded by striking Japanese laborers. On Japanese was killed and two were wounded by the plantation police during an attack on n plantation mill. hundred The entire twenty-threJapanese laborers on the Island are nuw on strike and are showing a violent mood. The steamer Klnau left Honolulu this afternoon taking Nation, were churchmen and Christiana. He aid that there was a notion ln some quarters that Washington men did not pay much attention io religiou matters, but this was not the case. He also told the members he wanted them to know that he had been a Sunday school superintendent for twenty years, lie said that Christ wits sacrificed at the demand of public opinion. He said that it dos not always follow that the voice of the people is the voice of God. Secretary Shaw left at 5 o'clock over the Big Four for St. Louis, en route fur Oklahoma CHy, where he will addres the convention of the Y. M. C. A. e al guard company F, ronsisting of 80 men, commanded by Captain Johnson and forty armed Honolulu police, under High Sheriff Henry, to the scene of the trouble. Captain Parker of the Kanau expects to arrive at Lshaina between 10 and 11 o'clock tonight. The strike started a week ago on the Wailuku plantation on the other side of Maul from Lahaina. The Japanese made a long list of demands among them being the discharge of All the demand (he head overseer. were rejected. On Friday the atrike spread to the Pioneer plantation. The plantation immediately began paying off the striking Japanese when they commenced to stone the mill and resisted all efforts of the mounted police to drive them sway. The Maui militia which was called out, restored order temporarily. Everything was peaceful late Saturday, when the island steamer Clandlne left, but soon after the steamer's departure a clash between the Japanese and the plantation police orctirred. In which shooting took place and which resulted in a general outbreak and the imprisonment of the whites and the militia in the court house by the Japanese. Wireless messages were sent to Honolulu Baking fc aid. A Ing was also sent through fear that the wireless telegraph was not working. The secretary of the Japanese consul accompanied the force on the steamer Kina. He will try to pacify the striking Inborers. The entire remaining force of Honolulu Is on duty at the police station tonight under Deputy 8heriff Rawlings, although there are no signs of trouble on this Island. A wlrless telegram from Lahaina at 9 oclock tonight said that the situation was Improving. The Japanese laborers have quirted down and ngreed to resume work neat Wednesday. A peaceful settlement of the trouble is A message to the Japanese expected. consul state that the Japanese were visiting ths home of the contractor when the police interfered and shot three of them. Tri-Stat- e LAND FOR DOWIEITE COLONY John Alexander Elijah Will Establish Big Colony of ths Holy in Mexico. Mexico City, May 21. Gladstone Dowie, son of the Zion prophrt, John Alexander Dowie, and Judge Barns, a legal adviser, are in the cliy complet- ing details, for the taking over of i large tract of land for the purpoae of establishing a colony In Mexico similar to that at Zion City, Illinois. In an Interview today Mr. Dowl said: We have secured an option on one of the Gonzales tracts, embracing arras of territory In the State of Tamullpas. Ve arr also negotiating to acquire farming lands, making a total of one million acres The pa para closing the dral have been signed by the Zion agents and Lieutenant Colonel Manuel Gonxales, the owner of the Haltenda, and ln a few wseks we will begin the active work rf establishing our colony. 700,-iiOO- Shooting of Young Boy by Negroes Starts Number of Serious foots With Two Fatalities. Chicago. May 21. Chicago Is threat- on tbe building. Finding all the doers race war of serious locked and bring unable to force them ened with a sticks and tuber misilea were the shoot- open, proportion. Embittered k-bycar-olthrown at the building and every wind boy dow and flxutre in the ing of Enoch Carlkon. an place wa shats last week ly two negroes, the and demolished. While the distered in the vicinity of Twenty-nintturbance was at its height three and Dearborn streets have armed who had followed Tinsioy Into theraselve and clnhes between white the saloon dragged Bernstein Into tha and colored men have become so fre- batemenl and armed with clubs stood quent since the Carlson murdr that It ready to iMi-nhim. In the meanhas been found neceuary to detail time two patrol wagons and aa amscores of poliremen in the district to bulance filled wiih policemen were hurpreserve peace. Even this precaution ried to the scene. It was only after a lias been uuuceetu! in kerping the desperate fight iu which several of the opposing factions apart. rioters were badly bruised by the in a riot that broke out in this dis- policemen's clubs that the mob was and the whites trict tonight between forced back from the saloon, about ing tbe Murks, Jas. Cray .colored, was killed for Bnrnsioin. The police told them wounded Harry Bernstein was mortully that Bernatein had bren killed and to and a building ln which Bernstein was make good the remark, the bartender, being held a rapt It e suffering from who was uncunacioii. was placed on four bullet wound wu atoned and a stretcher, a rover thrown over hi partially wrecked by a mob of l.UOO fare and brought to the door of tha persons, saloon. This had a quieting effect on The troulde started when James the erowd and they soon dlaprraed-A- t white a and Bernstein J. accused the hospital Bern lain was reGray companion of being trouble makers, vived. Since the teamsters strike Gray has Another exhibition of tha exbeen employed bv a coal company ns isting between the whites feeling and tha a driver. The merits of the strike and Mark was given late when the shooting of voting Carlson were up Chaa. Poake was shot intonight, the shoulder led soon words for dionainn. Angry b- - a colored man during a dUturbsnce to blows aed In the fight that fol- at Twent.v-tliirstreet and 8teward attacked and lowed Gray drew a knife avenue. Po-k- e Is watchman in a coal lb men. nernteln, who' Is a bar- yard, and he asserts that several tender, drew a revolver and fired four negroes started a quarrel with him. shots. Two of the bullets took effect ln Gray' body. He fell unconscious BAD FlKfc IN WILKE6BARRE. sn.l died while Wing removed to a hospital. 300,000 Damage Is Dona Before It A Bernstein and hi companion Could bo SubdustL were leaving the scene two colored men seined tile bartender and a scufPa., May 21. One of fle for possession of the revolver began. theWilkesbarre, most disastrous , fires that has occolored, Folircman Special Tinsley, curred in this city in years, started came running tin. Seeing the colored early today and not until aflerauoa Bernstein policeman approaching were the firemen able to the him revolver toward the end, flames. The loss entailed control swung will reach , to the dlchargid according 831(0,000. relumed the weapon twice. Tin-le- v Tbe fire nrginated In tbs millinery fire, shooting four hulleta Into Bern- department of the !aae Long dry Bernstein fell stein's iiody. house in ,lha Welles building on that had gath- good and a crowd west the side of the public square, ered made Inward - Tinsley and the one of the wounded man. With fie sshlatsnre structures In handsomest and Costliest When first nf another negro men, Tinsley picked discovered theWilkesbarre. were promptly Berntein up and ran Into a nearby controlled by theflame firemen In less than saloon. Tlnlev stood In the doorway one hour. A second fire broke out with draw revolver. The crowd, which in tbe basement of the building an was composed nf negroes, was erving hour after the first one had been for vepgeanee for the killing nf Gray and Tinsley, shut and hatred the door. The crowd which had now grown BULLETS DID NOT HURT HIM. to the proportions of a mob, moved Bnltlmore May 21. Geo. Horst, ait employe In a brewery here, attempted, to commit suicide recently, shooting himself twice In tbe head. The bullets have not been removed, but to the amazement of physicians who have Interested themselves in this cne, he is not only still living, hut according to present Indications, will soon be well enough to he out of the house. -j iel-deut- h ss Tslngtau, May 21. The newspaper! say that Japnn will establish a consulate al the Shantung treaty port of Weihsien and push Japanese trade In the province of Shantung. Welxhaion Is the most Important city ln Shantung. It Is situated In the midst of a plain separating two mountain systems of the province on liolb banks of the Felling river, which empties Inio the gulf of Pe Chi Li, miles northward. twenty-five BY HEAVY 1D as pro-pose- Hi S Ji v STORM 8APTING BROKE PAROLE. as Other as Buildings Moderator Moffat Says Presbyterians Should Meat Cumberland Peopla Half Way. rea-L-e- if I Are e 4 Tin-dey- JAPANESE IN 8HANTUNG. Is Killed and Two Churches OF UNION Train Dispatcher Well Wrecked hly I d IN SUPPORT Winona Lake, Ind., May 21. The assembly sermon delivered by Mod' erator James D. Moffat, before the delegates to tbe general assembly of the Presbyterian church, was a feature of a day o crowded with religious exercises, in eommemm'stion jot the 400th anniversary of John Knox, ths Scotch reformer, that many of the meetings overlopped. Much comment was occasioned by that part of the moderator's sermon which referred to the proponed union with the Cumberland branch of the church. Dr. Moffat said in purl : Them is undoubtedly a widespread feeling throughout xmr church that the United Presbyterian church should unite with us. We should not only ak them to come to us, as we have been doing, but we should make an earnest effort to go to them. We have been asking them to come to our position with respect to the singing of hymns. I am not sure that we should not go a considerable ways toward their position in the ma'ter nf the use of psalms Why ahould we not take the psalms of David as the form of our hyranody and write into them Jesus Christ? We need not take Rouse's version of the Psalnts, or any existing translation of them, but we can take a new version of the twentieth century. To this subject I would apply our text 'God having provided some better thing for ns that they without us should not be made perfect. I hope to see the day it may. The question of admlttim; the Cumberland Presbyterian church to the general assembly of the Presbyterian church now in ?s'n here, will be tomorrow a taken up by the ass-ma uppclal order f business. The special committee appointed to canvas th role and submit the pliufor the consolidation Is chehiled to report tomorrow morning. It is, however, admitted tonight that there m.-.-y some delay in submitting plans for the union hr ressoa of the fact that up to a krie hour tnntght there has com no request from the Cumberland branch, M essinn In Fresno, California, that it he into the of plans for the d Tnon. union will necessarily ftp laye:l until such a communication Is received. t d . Bt. Loul. May 21. Ed. Rafting, who gained notoriety qfter the assassination of Prexldent McKinley, heesnse of his assort Ion that he had tied tha handkerchief around the pistnld band nf Csolgoss, will be taken to the state penitentiary at Joliet. 111., tomorrow, where he Is wanted for vlolathnr-parole- . He was convicted of having committed petit larceny. FORTRESS that he t'ed CHRISTAIN Cleveland, O., May .21. Secretary of tho Treasury Leslie 11. Shaw, spoke at the Suudu) school of the Firt M. E. church here today saying that he wanted the members o the Sunday school to know that he aud many other men in public life at Washington Island of Maui Is In 1R SERIOUS RACE SERMON that jjaMrrow G. r, GIRL OF THIRTEEN the conference Mayor Pjirlll Barrett said tonight wl4 continue swearing in strike-breake- Ri-ln- "Should them he an extension of the Mkt and the rioting of two week Ws returned there 1 possibility haops will be called upon to maintain order. a 21.--F. who has bopn In thi city for severcl days, recruiting men received a message tonight from the Chicago Employers association instructing him to send to Chicago all the men he can secure. Curry had been instructed Saturday, when a setstrike of the teamsters tlement seemed likely not to send any more, t urrv sent several hundred men to Chicago earlv last week. The men are guaranteed 83.60 per day, with board and protection from violence. Only white men were sent. the twn-day- s' Her. it Kansas City, May e three-quarter- mm-nde- Mn-rt,- taw nld: Post-offic- alu-mp- were told before they nfd Mr. Wygant, that If thy treat oul hi sympathy with others fty could aot hope for reinstatement, cuiot now see any contingency Our BREAKERS San Francisco, May 21. A daring t to rob the stamp safe at the pnstofflee at an early hour tills mom by Walchiman ing was frustrated William O'Connell, .who spied one of the burglars at work while they were in the act of drilling the safe, preThe paratory to blowing it open. burglars took alarm and escaped with 81,400 worth of stamps. When alarmed they were In the act of drilling a hole in the safe and the s drill had penetrated about of an inch. The safe con BNAI BRITH IN 8ES8ION. talned $14,000 in stamps and considerable money. Milwaukee.- Wl May 2L The anIn the i&bhlerte room, adjoining that of the stamp department, was a large nual convention of the District Grand safe containing half a million dollars. Lodge No. 6 Independent Order of DXal B'Rlth embracing eight state session here today. CAPTURED CRUISER USEFUL. opened a President Adolf Kraus, in his annual Portsmouth, May 21. The cruiser message reported again in membership Mercedes, raptured at Santiago uuring the year of G70. Among the during the war with Spain, sailed to- recommendations advocated by Presiday for Newport, R. 1., after having dent Kraus were for the consolidation been remodeled na a receiving ship. The nf lodge.! in large cities Instead of cruiser has been undergoing repairs increasing the number; the discontinfor nearly five years and la said to be uance of endowment memberships; one of the best equipped receiving and protection against the persecution of Immigrants In large cities. ships in the navy. n labor. hr Akos Wyant, general agent of the company, said tonight V f. Espw of the dist h hr as a aettlement trite vu concerned the only way that it could be ended would lw for the tiwro STRIKE SAFE. Attempt to Rob Sin Francisco Frustrated. d to RECRUITS Mi-ye- an order to to til business houses, SL'dlota of whether they are antle.1- in the Strike or not. In teamsters the order of such an derided to go ad this afternoon and d rrlke should any teamster he or-Ifnr refusing to obey the Mth non-n- i of the association. driver making deliveries for the undoubt-rf&spivavta:hrrmB the trouble will to affiliated industries, as build-teg- s thtult employes employed on will refuse to handle material Jte n SHAW SAYS HE IS A Tslla lunday School That Voice ef People Is Not of Necessity Voice ef God. l is Roy Indication PRICE FIVE CENTS MAY 22, 1905. Fort Worth, May 21. A heavy wind storm, blowing at the rale of seventy miles an hour, struck this city from the southwest at 6:80 tonight. Part of the west wall cf the Texas ft, Pacific passenger station was blown in 8nd John Young, a train dirpatcher, The storm was most severe killed. Test of the city and all telephone and are telegraph wires in nil direction down. A pasaenger on a Texaa & Pacific passenger train from the west reports that the town of Mineral Wells was partly blown away. One church building belonging to the African Methodist Episcopal congregation was demolished. Many business building lost tbelr roofs, including the First National bank bulldi. j, a seven-storstructure. and Episcopalian The Baptist churches in North Fort Worth wera the badly wrecked, while the roofs ofstreet Grand hotel in East Weatherford snd the Johnson House ln West Bluff street, were torn sway. Fifty dwellor the city ings in various paryf The Second ward school building was partially wrecked. The storm extended as far east as damage Terrell, but did no particular at that point. Handley, seven miles much property east of here1 suffered not learned at this limo damage. It if any one was killed outside of Fort Worth. y PETER BUSCH DEAD. St. Louis, May 21. After a week s illness from eppeiidiciliu, Peter Busch, non of Adolphus Busch, the lirewer, Mr. died today in Bt. Lukes and Mrs. Adolphus Busch and their daughter, Ills Wilhelminn, are on the Ocean en route to Europe. Before thev dpsrted from New York that the condition of they went advised tbe patient was not serious. An operation failed to relieve him snd he began sinking ho-pit- AtU-.ntl- c CUBAN LIBERALS ADJOURN. candidate will he nominated tomorrow. General Gomes has telegraphed to the eastern delegates to support Jose Goruex. The only other candl date no wbeing considered Is Governor Nunes. Gomes's nomination appears to be certain with Nunes or Senator Seayas aa t. MALICIOUS FABRICATION. WAS L DEFENSELESS. Ft. Petersburg. May 22.-- 2:05 a. m. The commission on investigating the surrender of Port Arthur has finished the first half of Its labor. The lnvetl-- ( gallon nf the documentary evidence presented by General Btoessel In hit' own defense tended to show that tha fortress at the outbreak of war was nearly defenseless, without supplies or. cash. Tokio, May 21. It Is officially an nounced that. Press reports circulated in Europe about the removal by Jap' anese of the Korea emperor to Japan, have absolutely no foundation, such an Idea having never occurred to the government. The report Japanese muHt be taken to In- - a malicious fahrl cation, calculated to do mischief to th Japanese." NO FAITH IN POST. TO HELP THE NEEDY. Vienna, May 21. Vienna was ln open air fete today for the purpose of raising funds for poor and sick chilThe park-lik- e dren. Rlngstrass for more 4kan a mile, was lined on both sides with gaily decorated booths, where pretty women sold all manner of things. Vast crowds attended and the financial results wen- - most TURKEY St. Petersburg. May 22. 2:05 a. m. Ambassador Mayers institution of a y special mesteuger service to carry trues to Berlin evoke sardaps castic comment hv the pn-of St Petersburg. The X'ovoatl say the new ambsssador evidently puts slight faith in tbe governments postal sericr. IN MORE TROUBLE. Constantinople, May 2L Roumanl.l Insists on reparation for the acts of the Valle of Tania ln arresting several Roumanian school inspectors In spite of the privileges conferred upon them by the pone. The Roumanian government declares that nnlvss tha demand for reparation Is complied KISHINEFP TERRORIZED. with relations with Turkey will be St. Petersburg, May 21. Kishlneff broken off. Is reported to be terrorized by teachFAIRBANKS AT FAIR. ers and student, Jews being frequently asuaulted In the stm-ts- . Riots have occurred at Stedleff, RusIndianapolis, Ind., May 21. here on Fairbanks will sian Poland. Schools, government officials and churches, having been Sounday next for Portland, Ore., where he will represent President Roosevelt st the opening Of the Leads snd Clark TIRED OF AGITAORS. exposition June 1st. A small party Afwill accompany the n Poland. May 21. The ter spending several days st Portland, Llx, will come eaaL leader of the workmen's organization the have issued a proclamation urging CONTINUAL SKIRMISHING. their followers to return to work and not heed the propaganda of agitators, who have brought them .to beggary. Harbin, May 21. An officer wjf) h rci timed from the extreme left of the n FATAL POLICE ENCOUNTER. r.rmy says that the Yalu detachment is continually eklrnsihing Buenos Ayres, May 21. During a wit :i the Jssnese with whom Is 5.00 demonstration of workmen today the Chlnexe bandits armed wirh Russian police came In conflict with the mob rifles and officered by Japanese. and during the encounter two persons strong wind is drying ths roads were killed and forty wounded. cm-bu-r- s Vice-Preside- nt Ru-sla- Ku-sla- Havana, May 21. The national convention of ihe Liberal party adjourned a few changes in today after making the platform. A sroret session tomorrow will consider campaign plan and it Is expected that a presidential ' J - i |