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Show advertise in the UTAH WEATHER FORECAST tXAMINEH THE FRICE IT CHARGES. IT IS BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM lit L the examiner Mi city, LmCHES THE COUNTY AS THE INDICATIONS ARE THAT THE WEATHER WILL BE FAIR ell If the city, our subscrip. Job are open to SATURDAY books OGDEN AGIST UTAH. FEDERATION STRUCK OUT Judge Wood Senders His Decision Upon an Important Motion Hawley drew Elo- quent in His Dennniciation of the Perpetrators of the Blowing np of the Banker Hill Mine Boise, Idaho, July 19. The fit Id for 'defendant Haywood haa not been con- Invited thereon before the instructions nected by the evidence with the crime of the court were settled. This testiargument both for the prosecution and The motion was formally mony will be admitted, on the proalleged. D. ha William of Haywood fcfrnM made and formally denied. mise and assurance of the counsel brea limbed hy Judge Wood, who In a Judge Wood announced a decision that the proper connection would be decBloa handed down today removed withdrawing from the Jury the evi- made showing that at least the various fam tonal deration of the jury all evL dence bearing on the deportations and acta of violence testified to by the heart ngoc the alleged conaplr- - employment uf detectives In Colorado. Orchard were either not commitowners and - others He admitted evidence as to the Vin- ted by the witness Orchard, or. If by mine ...ini the Western Federation of dicator mine and the Independence committed by him, gome other persou Inert Judge Wood decided that the depot. or persona procured him to commit y I darea of Haywood had made no legal The court room waa crowded to the such acts of violence, either of which aaso owner connection of tha mine defenses were proper and legitimate door when the afternoon session beiHallon, tha CiUbns' Alliance of (Jo Jo. gan at 2 o'clock. Governor Gooding, defenses, in court no evidence was Pinkerton detective of Idaho, was present for the first Introduced by defense pointing to, or rado and the for the time. When (fenry as laying a foundation Haywood came In he or Indicating that, the acts of violence evidence Introduced by the defense to found hla wifes invalid chair had been testified to by Orchard, If actually comthnw that the charge against Haywood placed aome distance from him. He mitted hr any one. were committed by and bla eodefondants la the outcome took hold of It himself and wheeled It any other person or persons than aa dI eonapiracy to exterminate the Into a petition Immediately at hla testified to by the last named witness. Fedrratlnn. Neither la there any evidence conright. Immediately following the announce, Judge Wood, as aooo aa he had tending to point to, or from which commant of this decision argument taken hla place onthe bench, began It might be Inferred that any Individ menced. Judge Hawley, leading counto bead hla decision as to the exclu- ual or any combination of persons sel for the state, apoke for two hours sion of certain evidence. He an- procured any other person to commit and fifteen minutes of the afternoon nounced that hla decision waa but a said acts of violence if they were a lion, the morning session having preliminary to the Instruct ions he committed, then aa testified to by said been adjourned to enable the judge o will give the Jury at the conclusion of witness. At the furtherest the testl the arguments. prepare his decision. mony introduced would only furnish The moat important phase of the a motive perhaps for aome one else Every seat In the court room was Outside the enclosure re- decision was the striking out of the to commit or procure the commission occupied. ferred for attorneys and newspaper case all evidence relating to the de- of various acts of violence involved, men. were many persons prominent In portation of miners from the Cripple which were testified to on behalf of . Creek and Telluride district of Colo- the state. public and private life and a aprink-rs do. But k la dear that the motive ling of women In summer costume added color to the auditorium apace. In the first instance Judge Wood alone in a third person to commit an Governor Frank Gooding. struck out uf the record that portion offense for which a parly la being Borriua, a number of the officers of of Orchard's testimony relating to tried is not admissible In the ulieence tha itate administration, Captain what Pettibone told him of a trip of testimony In some' way pointing to James McParland. Julian P. Steunen-beron which he had sent Steve Adams such third peraon as tbe guilty party. a son of the murdered to get rid of claim jumpers in northern The witnesa Orchard has testified miand a large gathering of mem-ba- n Idaho. nutely and In detail to the circumof the bar of Idaho and adjoiniThis matter, he said, had not been stances Involving the Vindicator exng Mates were present. Haywood sat connected np in any way with the plosion, the explosion at the Independbehind tlx of his counsel. His wife. defendant Haywood. ence depot and the attempted acta of In her Invalid chair, waa placed on The next quest ion suggested by violence in the rity of Denver. hli right and his eldest daughter eat the court and argued by the counsel, The testimony introduced by tha beside her mother. Haywoode half-slat- said Judge Wood, Involves the mater defense in' relation to deportations, and stepfather occupied seats iallty of evidence introduced by the confiscation of property belonging to , close to tha defease group.. .defense showing, n long aeries of the; local unions of the Western Federation of Miners and Ihfi various conkr. Hawley, who has been in.' for deportations of miners sud other wveral day as the result of the strain anna and other acta violence la flict! between tbe miners and their id the long trial, commenced hie ad-- 1 wiving the destruction of property be sympathisers and tbe Mine Owners' Jims In a voice almost inaudible to association and the militia and the I various citizens alliances, does' not luyoae exorot the judge. He apolo-(lied for thii, however, explaining point to any one, or even Indicate that I that he had feared he Would be unany particular peraon either committed the acta of violence complained able, owing to 111 health, to deliver a prolonged address. Mr. Hawley la the of, or procured or charged to commit Nestor of the Boise bar. He li a man auch acta of violence. And, In the abof Impressive presence and aggressive sence of such connecting evlflencl, the court feels compelled to take this speech. Warming to hla subject, this evidence from the Jury and Instruct afternoon, hla voice lost all trace of weakness Hla address after the spaathem totally to disregard In arriving at their verdict. The action of the ing statement In which he explained (bat he had none, of the grace of words that constitute an orator, waa at times eloquently Impassioned, but withal a plain analysis of the evidence. He characterised the case the j FLARE-BAC- K most important ever given to a Jury hi the United States, and urged the Jury to a serious consideration of the responsibility placed upon them. His denunciation of the defehdant and hie coconapiratora as the worst band of criminals that ever Infested any section of this country, was forceful and hit eulogy of steunenberg eloquent In the extreme... Mr. Hawley described Orchards story as truthful not only because ofl Washington, July 19. By a process In one minute, or ten shots from both in a turret in two minutes, la the manner In which it wi told but of elimination, the naval board which guns record practice, and there la reason because it had been eorroberated In accident the believe that Lieutenant Goodrichs every Important detail Then when haa been Investigating of the to crew were about to smash that ha found reason for the confession In whereby the men in the turret turret ' the conscience of the criminal stirred battleship Georgia lost their lives, record. , haa arrived at the conclusion that a hy memories of a happy boyhood In a catasflare-bac- k this caused virtuous home there waa a waver of ' delayed MISSOURI RIVER OVERFLOWS. notion In the pleaders voice and trophe. more than a suspicion of tears among In one sense the verdict la received Ms audience. with a distinct sense of relief by na- Suburbs of Kansas City Haavily Counsel for the defense repeatedly I val officers, because It showed that Damaged. interrupted Mr. Hawley with protest they had no new element of danger to with. contend ud objections, but these only seemed Kansas City, nJI.v 19. Further (0 stir him to greater effort Once or They hnd experienced rains north of here heavy eight twice he turned to Clarence Darrow before and thought that they knew caused (he Missouri river, at Kansas ad faced him with a roar of anger how to treat with them. City, to rise a little, and, as a result, ad another time he aald, It does not A delayed flare-bacit caused by the cellara in two dozen wholesale he In the month of counsel to find comhouses. In the west bottoms, were parclosing off too soon the blast of exniae for these awful crimes. Stocks pressed air, which la supposed to ex- tially flooded this morning. Mr. Hawley concluded this afternoon pel from .the bore of the gun the un- hod been removed to places of ufety 1th the statement that already he burnt gases and fragments of smoul- and the damage In this direction was had shown enough to convict and that dering powder covering which might slight Track gardens at Qnlndaro, ny juryman not willing to convict on be left from tbe last discharge. After upon the outskirts of Kansas city; the evidence connectlg the conspire- the terrible eeddent in the Missouris Kansas, and along (he Missouri river blowing up 01 the Bunkr turret three years ago. resulting In have been flooded, causing damage HHi snd Sullivan concentrator in 1899 the loss of over thirty llvea, toe ord- - estimated at 20,000, and several track xod the explosion In tbe Vindicator nance bureau caused to be fitted to fanners with yheir families are movnine in 1908 alone ought only to rid the breech of each of the great guns ing to higher ground. The atagt of himself of an unpleasant duty to bis an air bleat apparatus, calculated to the Missouri this morning was 23 feet, rite.' expel by compressed air any gaa or and with the additional volume of waMr. Hawley will continue hla argn- - cloth that might remain In the boro ter above here. Weather Observer "lent tomorrow when court meets nt of the pm. So far this haa worked Connor said today that the river probt. hiL.IL4 w 1 probBb,r conclude before well, and there have been no ably would rise gradually until tomorJudge Wood has notL barks since the device waa Installed. row night. If there are no fnrther hed counsel for the defense that he In the caae of the Georgias eight-inc- h raina in the west and the northwest Pcf argument for their aide to guns,. what happened was this: for several days, the Missouri will commence on ' Monday. The breech of the gun waa thrown still be low enoug-- i to take care of open and the air blast turned in at a the flood water without danger of a Boise. Idaho, July 19. For the first pressure of 100 pounds to tha square serious overflow,. Mr.' Connor Bays. C'occ the Haywood trial Inch. This ia sufficient for all orJI- - The Kaw Is rising slowly. mei McPatiand. the detectivestarted, whose I wir-nc- I I g, . er . i ! DELAYED -- SATURDAY MORNING, court ia this matter is peihap an unpleasant duty, but It k a responsibility that the court has no right to shift from itself to the Jury when called upon for final consideration of this caae. Counsel fur the defense urges that if this testimony is withdrawn from the jury nil evidence involving the Vindicator explosion, the Independence depot explosion, and other acta of violence and attempted acta iff violence in the state of Colorado testified to by the wltnese Orchard, should be withdrawn from the Jury. This evidence the court haa no power to withdraw from the jury; unl-s- s on the theory that the witnesa Orchard, being an accomplice and a cocunopiratur, hla testimony in relation thereto may be found to be entirely without cor roboration. He haa testified, although an accomplice and a eocoaspirator, to all of these acta of violence and has, either before or after, connected this defendant therewith. ' Tbe court Is clearly of the opinion that there la sufficient corroboration to necessitate this submission of this evidence to tbe jury and that the same reasons fur withdrawing thla evidence do not exist aa to the evidence of the deportations and other acta of violence In the Cripple Creek and Telluride districts. The testimony sf the State, fur whatever it might e worth with the jury, connects the defendant on trial directly with the larioua arts of violence involved la Die evidence of the state, so far aa thfy apply to the state of Colorado, while the testimony of the defense, whicq will be withdrawn from the Jury, aloes nut Indicate that any other pc son or persons either committed auch icts of violence or procured the conn losiun thereof: For these reasons th court will instruct the Jury when arriving at Its verdict to disregard 11 evidence Introduced by the deft is, and upon rebuttal, relating to leportatlona of miners and other perstnis from Cripple Creek and the vicinity of Telluride and nil evidence In relg tion to the In the same lodalltles between the Vteatera Federation of Miners and their aympxthlera on the one aide and the militia organisation, detective association and Mine Owners' associations and Individuals In the same localities on the other. Counsel for the defense have renewed their motion aa made at the conclusion of the case first made by the state, that the court udviae the to return n verdict in favor of the defendant for the reasons given In aald motion, and motion will be denied. The defense noted an evreption to the whnle of the decision. Immediately after the court's declaim had filed, the jury waa called In and the opening argument uf the1 state waa begun by Janies H. 1 ,. Hawley. - Mr. Hawley has bora til- - for a week past and looked In bad physical-conditioaa he began hla address In a low voice. ' He congratulated the Jury upon reaching the beginning of the end on 'w hat hr termed the moot Important criminal case which haa ever paused Into the hands of any Jnry In the United States. All that the state desired, he declared, was that equal and exact Justice should be j cun-flic- It kn done. flaro-back- - ! 'flare-fljminimen- - nams v mentioned In securing of evl- Western Federation ,n the court room to-- ' ,w" come to listen to the ; Tim-r- deM . at 4t u 5 attracted mmldnnhi !!?? tint h the icars tTLI m,"unced at 10 oclock be ready to rule on xclutMn certain evf- - j 0,0 con'l,!cration of the ffiuments of , counsel He ,ntnictel James H. ' " CMnel for the state o b Mr hIS47 V pTOCed Bt that time. Bot MPeetea to con-- ' clud.uVTf7 "PriSnc iatomoiIow rternonn. The ,h0 dfense will he jj4!?" for E. F. Richardson, of roStr7 J,on,V morning. hn J in - ni WuSTtlll !!?" hry cl he 101 Jn4,y J"n!ructM t record- - Mr- - Blcb- moTe'l that the return a verdict that the tti,lJ 00 tue ground nary purposes, with the Important qualification that It should be done long enough to drive the last remnant of gas or cloth from the gun lre. In this caae the gases or smouldering clothe (which ia not known now) were driven probably more then half way to the muzzle cf the gun when the air blast waa turned off. The Georgia waa steaming at ten knots Into the wind, which blew Into the muzzle of the gun. The nnexpelled gases or cloths were driven buck by the breeze into the breech of the gun and out upon the powder charge, which wu Just about to be Inserted. The explosion which followed waa Inevitable. The cause of this accident will without doubt be aet down to the ambition of the gunners to fiiake a record practice In point of speed. Had their blast been kept out for a second longer, in an probability the accident would hare been avoided. Three shots from aa eight-inc-h gun In n turret 2J. PRICE FIVE CENTS 1907 KOREAN CAPITAL IS UNDER THE Dethroned Emperor Requests 1 Further Rioting Marquis Many Killed Ito to Take Necessary Measures to Prevent Japanese and Korean Soldiers Have Bees Consulates in Seoul Being Guarded. The Japanese press tary charge of the city. Japanese of action wu bud os lta own Initiathis morning generally sympathetic troops have been offered for the safe- tive, with tbe retired Koreau emperor as guarding of foreign consulates in an Individual, but none, however, re- Seoul. Emperor's Edict gret the act of abdication. Seoul, Koran. July 19. The abdicaIn the abveuce of the official text. tion edict of (be emperor is hit first STORM PALACE GATES. It la commented that there ia doubt communication to tha world since the whether the abdication means a comrepudiation of tho convention f 1905. with the gov- Five Thousand Koreans Made Unsuc- A translation of tho text of the edict plete cessful Effort to Center. ernment by the emperor. Suggestions follows: r were made that there la neceawlty of I have been in succession to my reclearly defining the position of the ancestors, on the throne 44 years and 19. A crowd Seoul, 1,000 of July tired emperor in order to prevent even hare met many disturbances. I have Koreans has been beaten back from not reached an Indirect meddling with the my own uealre. While tlie palace gales. During the audi- min inters ere frequently Improper nu n It tu a loo pointed out that, anyhow, ence with the cabinet last night, when and progress ia not (Mm trolled men, the change of government waa caused the emperor acquiesced to the de- tbs times am contrary to by natural by the initiation of the Korean gov- mand fur abdication, a number iff stu- event n- - A crisis extremely urgent in ernment, in which Japan had no con- dent attempted to present a peiilon the life of the people has arisen and cern whatever, and that It cannot bo to the emperor, but the police pre- tha progress of (he state t more than them from la Tuklo, July 20. , admlu-Utratb- doing so, driving considered a final solution uf The vented them back cant of the palace, where Incident. Hague It ia expected that Foreign Minister they remained all night, making At midnight. Chief of Pospoerhea. Hayaahl will effect a definite arrangedistributed carbines ment with the Korean government re- lice Maru-Yamgarding that questlun. Telegrams to the 1 mi lace police, but the crowd from Seoul, dated midnight last night, continued to increase, but remained The elaborate ceremony of aay that a general calm prevails. orderly. Japanese troops have been called out transferring tbe imperial teal to the and a battalion la guarding the palace. crown prince ia In progress thla fore-noon. Some shops are doaed, because JAPANESE TROOPS IN CHARGE. ! uf the sympathy of their proprtetpra with the emperor, and the street City of Seoul la New Under Martial around tbe palace la filled with1 peo- a 1 J Law. P- - The Japanese papers hav pubSeoul, Korea, July 19. 9 p. m. The lished aotry- sensational rumors, but no la there indication of s revolt The la at became and city nightfall quiet Korean Official Gaaette ia now rtreu-- : now under military patrol. A heavy rain, fusioning the outlatlng on th street, the first official announcement of the abdication, break of today, waa .largely luatru-mtntin dispersing (he crowds. All which was signed by the emperor and traffic haa been stopped anJ the Japa- seven ministers In favor of th crows nese shops are guarded. Tbe police prince. At the Japanese residency. Marquis report that twenty-fiv- e Japanese were Ito end Viscount Hnyuhl, In answer killed and wounded In the day's rioting. The casualties among tbe Ko- to as Inquiry regarding tbe emperor's action, it Importance in affecting tha rean a are unknown. whole Japaneae-Korea- n situation, and Aa official Japanese report ascribe the ahontlng today to Korean aoldiera. whether or not It was In acoonitnc who could not be controlled by their 2.2 officers. ' The Boloe of tbe firing and tbe newt that casualties had resulted a statement. The emperor repeated hla dec la re greately alarmed the emperor, who at tins that ho woa not responsible for 1 oclock tonight, sent by the minister of justice a long apologetic message the aending of the Korean delegation to tbe Marquis Ito, to tbe effect that to Tho Hague, and aakod Marquis Ito's he regretted that his Ignorant sub- opinion of tha cabinet! resignation Marqulo Ho rel jects had caused violent commotion. regarding abdication. Ho therefore relied upon Marqulo Ito plied that tha matter wholly concerned to take measures necessary to pro- - the emperor of Korea, ud not him- -' vent further trouble. After the entente. Marquis Ito called upon Genera) Haaegawa to taka mill- I . al 22 st jmsmszja. The attorney plunged almost Immediately Into the confession of Harry Orchard, upon which, the people presented their caae. He cbaracteried the story aa the most extraordinary redial ever heard in a court room. There waa no attempt at concealment and the alory waa told In a way which Impressed one with its truth and carried conviction. Harrv Orchard told hla story In no anirit of boastfulness, declared Mr. Hawley, nor did he tell it In a spirit of revenge. 1 say to you, gentlemen, that Harry Orchard baa no more hope In hit future than he haa pride In bis past. He expects no Mrtbly reward. Inthe light of an awakened conscience, he told the truth, with no desire to shield himself, or any one else." Ban Franciaeo, July 19. After being Mr. Hawley asserted that the truth out Just n month, the telegraph op of Orchards story Instead of being era tors In the Oakland and Ban Franshaken was strengthened by the cisco offices of tho Western Union and of Attorney Richard Bon a Postal Telegraph companies settled unparaldefense, a their strike tnta afternoon. The opleled in Its fierceness and length. erators almost unanimously voted to Strained criminal, thouh he Ia return to work under the name conditions and salaries aa prevailed when Hawley stated that Orchard's stood the test of fire and left the they went on atrike and to arbitrate Imprest of truth upon all who beard their grievances and differences, aa IL provided for in the compromise offer Tbe state, Mr. Hawley said, had contained In tbe letter from Colonel corroborated all the Important details R. C. Clowery of June 20. By the of Orchard's testimony. The contra- terms of the agreement, aigned by dictions from the defense came only I. N. Miller, assistant general superinlut from witnesses who had been partici- tendent of the Western Union; L. W. pants to the confessed Crimea or prov- Btorer, general superintendent of the en perjurers. He expressed the belief Postal, and National President B. J. that Orchard's amry would bring to Small, for the telegraphers, both comwithout prejJustice the worst aet of conspirators panies are to that ever Infested any section of the udice, all telegrapher! who went on United Statea. atrike and the question of Increased Referring to the laws of conspiracy. wagea l to be taken up after resumpMr. Hawley that If a combination ia tion of work. The employes of each shown to exist, every peraon connect- company will appoint a representative ed with It la equally guilty with nil and the company one, tbe two to sethe others- - for every net. deed, or lect a third, who- will constitute tha utterance growing out of the conspir- arbitration committee. acy. While the telegrapa companlei do As to the method of bringing Mover, not openly recognise the anion end Haywood and Eettfbone to Idaho from insist upon dealing with their own emColorado, Mr. Hawley said the coarse ployes, the fact that representatives adopted waa the only one open to the of the companies aigned an agreeproaecuthm and bad been passed upon ment with Bmall fa regarded by the by the highest court of the land. operators as a recognition of their Counsel for the defense would dwell organization. About 259 operator who were in(Continued on Page Three.) volved will return to work Monday morning. Bmall today sent n teleo President to General Secretary-Treasuro gram Russell nt Chicago, saying: ' o Wesley with all local officers Communicate COMMISSIONER BLOODGOODS Tokio, July SO. (Noon) M. O and say the settlement of the Ban RULING. commerO of the director IahU, Francisco trouble ia entirely satisfacclal bureau of foreign offices, O to ua and urge them to caution I tory for O to America will start today Indictment Not Prims Facie Evidence, members against further atrike talk. treatment O of But Cannot Be Rejected. Investigate the Bmall aald tonight: President Japanese and the labor ques- Q not fighting for the signwere We O tion. Milwaukee, Wit., July 19. United of a union oontracL All we deIt In reported that should the O ing Statea Commissioner Bloodgood, in sired waa the acknowledgement of our correspondence which was ex- - O right to organise and the privilege of the case of Guy D. Goff and six other O indicted between men, Washington Milwaukee changed prominent adjusting grievance through commitand Tsklo, on the Ban Fran- - O tees by the federal grand Jury of Colorado of employe. Thla we have seschool O he cisco InddentA published, In connection with the alleged cured." this O be would Japanese Indignation land eonapiracy case, ruled that The report, how- - O Increased. Indictment is not prims facie evidence WOMEN AND CHILDRENS DAY. ever, ia authoritatively disc red- - O of a renewed oinaptracy held by the O lted. government, but It cannot he wholly 19. Sunday Norfolk, Va., July It la expected that M. Ithll's O rejected, because It is such evidence visit will serve to dispel the O school childrens day and World's Woof the original conspiracy ae may be last cloud of doubt in the O mens Christian Temperance Untou' followed with independent testimony, friendly relation of both na- - O day were observed simultaneously, tending to thoW a renewal of this O t lie Jamestown exposition, today, with tion a. original conspiracy. O several hundred children anJ white was postponed unFurther hearing ' from many ribbon representatives til July 29th, WAS AMICABLY SETTLED CAUSED THE EXPLOSION 1 JULY n - oooooooooooooooo er - . oooooo 00 ooooooo AND SUNDAY. - before Imperiled. I feu a danger like that that befalls a person crossing the Ice. Fortunately we hav a atm endowed by nature with virtue, brilliant and well worthy of being charged with plana for the development of th government to whom ws transfer our Inheritance sanctioned by the custom. , ancient time. "Therefore, be It known (hat as toon aa it ia proper (a be dime, wa will hand tbe affaire of state over to (he crown prince aa our representative." Court usage ta aald to make the meaning of the abovs an actual abdication. While insufficient time has elapsed to show tbe effect ot the emperor's action on the situation, advisory opinion at th Japanese residence general ' regards the abdication na taking away th force of Japan's intended blow. Korean Troops in Mutiny. genus, Korea, July 19, 5 p. m. A company of Korean (mops mutinied an hoar ago, escaped from the barracks without their officers and at -- .. ... st reel at tho Great Hell. After firing several voll-y- s they scattered, continuing a desultory firing and attuek- individual Japanese. They were Joined hy tho populace, who used atones and clubs. Ten wounded havo already reached the hospital la tha Japanese quarter where the Japnneaa are flocking for refuge. The corra- ap0ndent of the Associated PretA while on the scene, noted seven Japanese and four Koreans dead, and three Japanese and two Korean wounded. General Haaegawa ta sending dismounted cavalry to reinforce the police who are now searching for the muntlneere. The military have been ordered ouL While at the residence of tbe general an outbreak of the people was discredited. General Haaegawaa apprehension haa been fulfilled, in regard to the emperors guardA Collision Between Japa and Koreans Tokio, July 20. Lntor telegrams from Seoul state aome collisions havo occurred between the Japanese pottos state Sunday schools. Mrs. Lillian and rioters and that Korean soldiers M. Stevens, national prasldent'of tbe . also fired upon the Japanese police. Womens Christian Temperance Union, Some were wounded on both sldeA The trouble waa immediately supwas on the program. pressed hy the appearance of Japanese artillery, who apparently terriSWIFT'S SUCCESSOR NAMED. fied the rioters. An extra edition of A Korean dully, saying that tbe emperor Kansas City, Me.. July 19. Thomas would be carried away to Japan, la B. McPherson of Omaha was thla afternoon elected president of the Na- causing excitement. tional Live Stock Exchange associaMONARCH WITHOUT A FRIEND. tion to succeed James C. Swift of Kansas City. London, July 19. The emperor of Korea la without a friend In Europe STRIKE OF ORE DOCKERS. sufficiently Interested in the status of empire to interDuluth, Minn., July 19 Mining op- the ancient Korean erations npun the Mesabs and Ver- pose a word In hla behalf. Hla majmillion ranges arc at a standstill and esty had always been friendly with the fleet of the Pittsburg Steamship Russia and the outcome of the war waa a great blow to company promise to be tle.1 up as s result of the strike of the ora dockers. him. He then looked to the United The entire mining department of the Statea for support When Edwin V. United Statea Steel corporation la now Morgan, who waa American minister to Korea from June 26th until NovemIdle. ber 29th, 1905, when the legation waa abolished, refused the request of tbs MOBS ARE DISPERSING. emperor that he take refuge at the legation nt the time the Japanese were Are of Murder Italians Convicted the emperor to sign a treaty pressing Militia. Closely Guarded by giving Japan control of the foreign the emperor of Koaffairs of New Orleans. July 19- - With the rea wae Korea, and the greatly disappointed, peaceable dispersal early today of n final removal of the American legaposse of 300 men, who had formed nt tion waa a great blow and disappointGretna. La., to lynch tbe Italians con- ment to him. Almost all foreigners victed last night of the Lamana mur- who knew the emperor considered der, the acute crista In the klJtaping him as well meaning, bnt a weak man, to ia believrd incident and. murder and his son, the present crown prince, have safely passed. is not regarded as nn Improvement several This posse was the last of on his father. small mobs which formed at widely ae parted points and threatened hangMIDSHIPMAN CRU6E DEAD. ing the Italians. Governor Blanchard's prompt action. Boston. July 19. Midshipman James In ordering out two companies of state militia within two hours after the ver- F. erase of the battleship Georgia dict Is believed to have saved Hie died today at the naval hospital In Chelsea He ta the tenth man to die Italians lives. Tbe soldiers arrived at the Habn-vlll-e as a result of the powder explosion in after-turrof the Georgia during jail, where the prisoner .were the confined, shortly before midnight. In target practice In Cape Cod bay lat time to forestall plana which were on Monday. font to take possession. Nearlv one hundred aoldiera guarded Washington. July 19. The body of the jail' today, and It may.be neces- Midshipman Cruse, who died In Boston sary to keep them there until the aa (he result of hit Injuries received Italian are retpoved to safer places. In the accident on tbe battleship The prisoners must first be sentenced. Georgia, will be Interred in Arlington Indignation over the Jurys'mfld ver- cemetery, near this city, next Sunday. dict has grown considerably and many Judge Cruse, the young mans fathof the reports of the court proceed- er, has asked (he navy department ings. while they show a fair trial, that Midshipmen R. T. Lowell. J. W. comment to tbe effect that several of W. Cummings and Rufus King and 'he Jurymen are large employers of three other clsaaniatea be directed to Italian labor, which augments the re- act as pall bearera. ED sentment Russo-Japane- ... se |