Walkerton Independent, Volume 29, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 June 1904 — Page 2

\’.i":\;” ri f ‘ ) & CIRCLING THI. GLOBE e Andrew Messer killed his wife and child and then himself in Cambridee, Ohio. ' Messer and his wife had freqgnent guarrels. Neighbors heard the shooting ,‘ In the night, but were unable to break s into the house 1 time to save any of - the victims. : ' The United States Supreme Court upbolds the oieomargarine law, knocks out ! the Cleveland 4-cent fare ordinance and A declares the constitutional right of trial by jury does not extend to the Philippines in the absence of specific legisla- . tion by Congress. All records of the Pension Bureau were broken by the receipt of an application for a pension from Peter West ! of Pendleton, Ore., who declares himself | ten times married and eight times (li-‘ vorced. Long as West is on wives, he claims only four children. The largest catch of halibut for a single day’s fishing ever made by any vessel in the world fell to the lot of the steam.er New England, Captain Freeman, M - which has reached Vancouver. Off Cape ~_George, Divon entrance, the' New Engi of fine halibut. ‘ Mystery of the murder of Andrew I. Green, “IFather of Greater New York,” has been cleared through the filing of a suit by John R. Platt to recover $655,385 said to have been paid an octoroon woman as blackmail. Mr. Green was killed by a jealous friend of the woman in mistake for Platt. Irvin Wise, a mechanical engineer, shot Katie Crass through the heart and then turned the revolver on himself, - sending a bullet into his own heart. The . shooting occurred at a boarding house in Allegheny, Pa., of which the Crass woman was proprietor. The motive for his crime is believed to have been jealousy. Three attempts at suicide in three days is the result of the public excitement over the Gillespie murder mystery in Rising Sun, Ind. The latest is Thos. Moore, a young farmer, who was found hanging by his neck in his barn. The others whose brooding over the case , caused them to seek death were Andrew Davis and August Greve. ‘T'he clubs in the National League are standing thus: Wi L. Wil New Y0rk...25 11 Brooklyn ....15 23 Chicago .. 2% 11 Boston ......13 22 Cincinnati ...26 12 Pittsburg ....16 19 St. L0ui5....17 17 Philadelphia.. ¢ 27 Following is the standing of the clubs in the American League: W, L. W. L Boston .....:25 10 Chicago '.....19 17 Cleveland ...19 13 Bt. L0ui5.....15 18 Philadelphia..2o 15 Detroit ......12 21 New Y0rk...19 15 Washington... ¢ 20 —_ s Standings in the American Association ~ are as follows: E: W. L. W. L. i Columbus ...20 11 Indianapolis. 17 17 7 Milwaukee ..21 14 Mianeapolis.. 15 20 ek Be Paunl.. . .21 M Toledo ......11.20 A Louisville ...19 18 Kansas City..ll 21 . BREVITIES, B e SSR *:‘ = > 5 %-igvi,\f,fig%” ffi; c l’"‘; T G, AL ELAUSSEIL WIC- Llty VL. UI~& O L President Roos pvelt 15 annoged be- © cause of the protests by some Republi- © can leaders against his selection of Sce- - retary Cortelyou as chairman of the nae tignal committee. e ~ The steamer Benton, which arrived Rl in Detroit, brought news of the loss of 3 the steamer A. Weston in Georgian Bay. i The crew of fourteen men of the lost boat came in on the Benton. . The city of Chieago obtained the whip hand when Judges Grosscup and Jen- ; ; kins ruled that the 99-year act does not . apply to Union Traction franchises . granted by the City Council since 1875. A cloudburst in the vicinity of Enid, Py Okla., did much damage. A portion of the Denver, Enid and Gulf track was washed away. All streams were swollen and country roads were rendered impassable. E. C. Jones of Harrisburg, Pa., a traveling salesman, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head at Allen- . town, ’a. He leaves a widow and two married daughters, who live in Ashtabula, Ohio. ~ Philip Robertson, a mining man from the Yukon, says he found a man dying in the Klondike wilds who confessed on his death bed that he was Willie Tascott, the murderer of Amos J. Snell in ChiA cago several years ago. - The Russians have abandoned Port Dalny, previously burning the offices and residences, destroying the railroad and scuttling three large merchantmen, the 2 Zied, Boreia and Nagadan, and all the dredgers and launches. Many lives are believed to have heen lost in the destructive flood in Greeley and Nance counties, Nebraska. The kncwn dead are Edward Bennender and John DPollard, drowned, and William Ray, killed by lightning. Edwin S. Cramp of the Cramp Shipbuilding Company was the principal speaker at the hearing of the merchant marine commission in Philadelphia. He favored differential duties as a means for reviving commerce. A race riot between whites and blacks started in Philadelphia by a quarrel between children resulted in five persons being seriously shot or stabbed and in eleven being locked up charged with assault and battery and inciting to riot. Twelve persons were plunged into the Arkansas river at Salida, Colo., by the breaking of a foot bridge upon which a crowd had gathered to witness the ceremony of casting flowers upon the waters in memory of the country’'s naval heroes, and a woman and four children drowned. . The suspension of S. Munn, Son & Co. was announced on the New York Cotton Exchange. At the office of the firm it was said that Clarence . Cameron, the office manager and head clerk, had bLeen absent for about a week. An examination of the books showed apparent discrepancies amounting to about $125,000. Mrs. Phoebe Hearst has given notice of the withdrawal of her support from a number of the charitable, religious and educational organizations at the Univer- | sity of California, to which she has contributed about $20,000 a year. She says her finances necessitate a curtailment of her expenses. Formal charges were filed with the Secretary of the Navy at Washington against Judge Advocate General Lemly, alleging “falsehood and inefficiency,” in ap effort to influence the Supreme Court against the case of John Smith, on appeal of the United States from the Court of Claims. Smith’s attorney asks for al trial by court martial. |

s - ©ne thousand old-fashioned planos vere burped on the beach at Atlnutic' City by dealers. ‘ Yale University has been given $250,- I | 000 for library purposes by the will of i William B. Ross, the New York lawyer, [ who died in January. | Wail street is suffering unusual busii ness depression, and already 2,500 clerks { and stenographers have been laid off by ! banking and brokerage firms. i Mayor Robert McLane of Baltimore, weakened by overwork in rebuilding the ] city after the fire, and stung by criticism { of political opponents, committed suicide. The Nuational Piano Manufacturers’ Association, in session at Atlantic City, N. J., elected George P. Bent of Chicago president and William Bauer of Chicago secretary. | Painters and decorators of Boston, to the number of 1,600, decided after a lengthy conference to go on strike. The men had demanded an increase in wages of 20 cents a day, which was refused. Five persons were seriously and scores were bruised in the collapse of Hargreave’'s circus tent at Kort Plain, N. Y. A fierce gale came up during the as- | ternoon performance and blew down the main tent. Stephen Herbert, former butler for J. W. Kiser, has been arrested in Provi- | dence, R. L., and admits stealing jewelry valued at SIB,OOO from the Kiser resi- | dence. The bulk of the booty has been recovered. ; | |7 Rev. Frank W. Sanford, head of the | IToly Ghost and Us Society, which is a | religious community at Shiloh, Me., has | been convicted of manslaughter in causing the death of Leander Bartlett, 14 | years old. i Senator Matthew Stanley Quay diod' at his home in Beaver, P’a. The end | was peaceful, the patient having been in | a profound stupor. When death came | he swas surrounded by the members of | his family. | Lying on a sick bed, Miss Hanrah |: Mueller, a crippled artist, of Philudel- | phia, drew such an accurate picture of | the negro who had attacked ber that a | man accurately fitting the sketch was ar- | rested in Camden, N. J. | Starting in a barge moored at pier | No. 12 of the Delaware, Lackawanna | and Western Railroad in Jersey City, | fire destroyed five piers, causing a loss | estimated at $5.000,000, including the | shipping alongside the piers. The road | carried its own insurance. 1 WESTERN. ‘ Wheat and corn are in fine condition In Kansas and heavy yield is predicted. Money for thé Republic of Panama | will be coined at the San Francisco mint. | In a tornado at Pleasant Grove, IXan., David Fellingham asvas killed aud his | wife badly injured. The house was de- | molished. A double drewning occurred in Big Yellow creek at Hammondsville, Ohio. | The dead are Annie Platt, aged 14 years, || and Sadie Hardie, aged 12 years. / Harry (“Chub”) Piero was released | from Canton, Ohio, prison, no evidence ‘ having developed to conneect him with 1 the murder of George 11. Taylor. | The jury in the Gillespie murder rrial at Rising Sun, Ind., has been discharzed, ‘ after voting seven for aequittal and five i for convictioun without change on eight ballsts. } Twenty persons were injured in a wreck on the Cleveland and Pittsburg ; road near East Liverpool, Ohio. The |- | traia had run into freight cars that had | | dancing, card playing and theater going. The vote was taken after a heated de- || bate, ' - ] A jury in the Kansas City ecriminal | court acquitted State Senator Jesse L. |’ Jewell, who was charged with soliciting a bribe in connection with baking powder legislation in the last State Legislature. 4 Hiram Staley, a young business man, | was stoned to death just after stepping | from an electric car at Chesterfield, Ind., ' at midnight. His assailants have not | been identified and their motive is not | known. i Joseph Janes, who was arrested at |- Warverly for the burning of the livery | stables and other buildings in Mariotta, Ohio, and at Parkersburg, made a com- | plete confession. He said he had Leen | drinking. } r Fire destroyed the Los Angeles branch | - packing house of the Cudahy lacking ! Company. The loss is estimated at|: about $300,000 and the insurance at §265,000. The fire started in the lard | department. ( Miss Beatrice May Clifton, formerly || cashier of the E. J. Arnold Company in | | St. Louis, the defunct turf investment | concern, committed suicide by shooting '} herself in the breast. 11l health was | | given as the motive. !y Harry C. Foote, a commission iner- | 1 chant of Tacoma and son of the vice || president of the American steel works |« sf Chicago. committed suicide near Che- | 1 halis, Wash., by shooting himself in the | head. He was despondent. p Thomas S. Ingraham, first grand engineer of the International Brotherliood, | dropped dead in the Los Angeles con- | ¢ ventiofi, from apoplexy, which also || caused the death of Chief Arthur at the |, Winnipeg meeting last year. i t The plant of the Overland Cotton Mill ‘ ] Company at Denver, Colo., which went | ] into the hands of a receiver some months | | ago, has been sold at auction to the }a Whiting Machine Works Company of | Whitinsville. Mass., for $65,000. Fire in the old people’s home, Sml{ Francisco, Cal., caused great excitement | among the 113 inmates, but no one was hurt. The flames destroyed the uppet |! story of the building, a handsome strue- | ¢ ture of wood, erected by the late Charles Crocker. j Charles Dubois, when told that he | would not be allowed to smoke his cigarette in the book store of Fikes & Fikes | in Des Moines, made a vicious attack |] on one of the proprietors with a razor. | He is charged with attempt to commit |, murder. Ten persons in Las Vegas, N. M, | have been poisoned and Jose Tafaya and |, two members of his family are dead. |- Arsenic has been found in meat eaten | by one of those poisoned and in a water barrel. A grand jury has been unable |, to fix the blame. ] Emile Launer, a cattle man at Hel- { ena, Mont., was shot and killed by John | ] L. Simmons, keeper of a hotel. as the | result of a quarrel. Simmons had accvrsed Launder of stealing money which E was afterward found, but the quarrel ; ended in the shooting. ; James McDonald stands acquitted r»i'll the murder of Miss Sarah Schaefer, the |, Bedford, Ind., High School Latin teach- | er. and his attorney, R. N. Palmer, has |, promised to reveal the guilty person. |. The jury was out two hours and thirty | . minutes and took seven ballots. ‘ After a running fight with a monster | gea lion in the narrow limits of an ex- | press car and with the train running at |, | full speed, Express Messenger W. H. |

” - May was compelled to shoot the in‘uris lated beast to save himself just as the traln was nearing Kansas City. l Incendiaries set fire to Strecker’s livery barn in Marietta, Ohio. The entire } structure, together with Smith's oil well ‘tool works, part of the Marietta Distilling Company, and three small frame houses, were burned. There is said ta ‘be strong evidence as to the incendiaries. Rather than submit to arrest on a charge of wife beating, Robert (yeske, a Kingsbury County, 8. D., farmer, placed the muzzle of a shotgun to his mouth, pressed the trigger with his toe, and blew the left side of his head off, as Sheriff Peterman approached the Louse to arrest him. The Bell Telephone Company has begun estimates for a long distance lina between IKansas City and Joplin to connect with a new line that is being built from NSt. Louis to Joplin and thence through the Indian Territory into central Lexas. Over $1,000,000 has been appropriated for these extensions. The fruit growers of the Santa Clara valley, California, suffered an almost incalculable loss from high wind that at times blew almost a hurricane. 1% is estimated that more than one-half of the ripening cherry crop is destroyed and that from 20,000,000 to 30,000,000 pounds of prunes are on the ground. The snowstorm that began Tuesday morning lasted twelve hours and was general over Montana and the Northwest territories. The snow ranged from one to six inches and the lowest temperature was 27, at Marysville. The moisture will prove of great benefit, as the | ground was very dry. Sheepmen do not report any loss.. Most of them had twenty-four hours' warning of the approaching storm, and all the sheep were under shelter. Frank Green, a convict at the Ohio penitentiary in Columbus, is dead, Henry Gearhart, a guard from Lawrence County, is fatally shot, and Alber: Hubler, another guard, from Summit County, is suffering severe injury as the re- | sult of an outbreak at the prison. The shooting was all done %y Green, the convict, who shot the two guards and then committed suicide. Green was n| desperate character, having been sent to | prison for participation in the Somerset bank robbery a few years ago. Gearhart is shot through both lungs and cannot live long. Guard Hubler is shot in the arm and will recover. No one knows th = cause of the tragedy or where Green procured the revolver. He lay in wait for the men and without a word or without any trouble or fight began to fire. SOUTHERN. Texas erop condition reported good, but warmer weather and rain needed for cotton and corn. Verona Fleenor, under sentence of | death for wife murder, committed .\‘.xi-i cide in his cell at Morgantown, IXy. i A pegro, name unknown, has lmon% fynched at O’Neill, Miss., on the charge | of murdering Robert Logan, a sawmill n‘an. Thirteen persons were killed, three fa- | tally injured and five slightly hurt by an explosion of boilers which demolished the towboat Fred Wilson off I{i\'m'\'ie\\’! Park, Louisville, | The State Department is considering the pressing of claims against the Mex- l ican government by the Bonsack Com- | pany of Virginia for $£7.000.000 for :ll~i leged infringement of cigarette putvuts." Six prisoners—John Everett, Frank and John Taylor, John Patrick, Charles Hall and James Abrams—by digging through the steel ceiling and a brick ng}!édm'__ reenup, Ky.. iail, have esPassenger train No. 2 on the Vicke | burg, Shreveport and Pacific was wrecked between Hauglhton and Sibley, La. Two postal clerks and a negro brakeman were killed and a number of persons hurt. FOREICN. f A dispatch from Tokio says the Jap- f anese have stormed and captured the | tewn of Kinchau, about thirty-two iiles ‘ north of Port Arthur. i Castellani, the bacteriologist, has llis~i covered the bacillus of dyseéntery, says a ' dispatch from Colombo, Ceylon. He is | cenducting the final experiments and | will read a paper on the discovery before 5 a medical association. } Fifteen thousand Russians, advancing i on Fengwangcheng in the belief thut the 3 town had been abandoned, were met in | Tatung Pass by 30,000 Japanese, and | 4.000 Russians fell, uccording to a report : from Newchwang. It is said also that ! 1,000 Russians surrendered, | The Japanese were defeated in a bat- | tle at Kinchow, according to reports re- | ceived in St. Petersburg. They were | lured into a detile swept by two Russian | guns and their ranks decimated. The | Russian loss is 141 men, and it is be- | lieved the Japanese loss is much greater. % The Canadian House of PParliament, | after an all-night session, divided on the { third reading of the Grand Trunk Pacifie ; bill, and passed the measure by a vote | of 105 to 9. This assures the construe- ! tion of the greatest transcontinental | railway in the world, with the single ex- | ception of the Trans-Siberian Railway. | IFollowing the capture of Kinc hu\\',! the Japanese stormed Nanshan MHill, ; 2,100 feet high, surmounted by a heavy ! battery, and covered with trenches and | mines. After sixteen hours of fighting | they charged up the steep sides, aided | by the fire of thrre gunboats in Kinchow Bay, and drove the Russians back. A Russian report places the Japanese loss at 12,000 killed, and another report says the Russian loss was heavier. IN GENERAIL. Weekly trade reviews, Dun and Bradstreet, say better weather has improved ‘ conditions in many trades. o The National Association of Muté.'[ Tusurance Companies has voted to hold the next anuual meeting at Chicago. The Belgian legation at Washington declares the report that Secretary lay had been requested to investigate conditions in the Congo Free State to be a mistake. Guatemala brown ants, which are said to be a sure protection for the cotton plant against the ravages of the boll weevil, are to be imported into this country and liberated. The corner stone of the new arts building of the Ottawa university was laid by Monsignore Sbaretti, the representative in Canada of the Pope. There were present among others Cardinal Gibbons, Lord Minton and Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Government ownership of all wireless telegraph stations at points where over-the-sea communication is possible has been decreed by the cabinet in Washington, and the Navy Department is putting the order into effect. One result will be that Marconi will be forced to move his stations to Canadian soil. In place of the Marconi station on the Nantucket lightship the department will establish its own plant, using a modification ¢f the SRlaby-Arco system in its eight stations. The government will make na charge on messages to and from ships at sed.

¥ 2 i TN N 1\ WAR DURI}G WEEK. i Nehent e s ? JAPANESE ARE CTORS IN SIX | CAYS' FIGTING. é | Tl | Mikado's Land ArmPargving Steadily ‘ on Port Arthur wifs., Seemingty luvincible Advance % Kuroki’s Men Threaten to Take -tress by Storm. | - | The last week of ] o war, like most of its predecessors, }~ Japanese, The | second important 18 ¢ bhattle occurred |

=1 resulted in a | iyisive but most x‘r\wl}' victory E"“l“’ } | Mikado's men. | R (inchou lies (:ili % Liaotung penin- | ! *'l a, thirty-two I#"es northeast of | t.¢ Arthar. In its : Oity the penin- | @ is but two | Mes wide and | {lhimm-d from | B b sakh By tha |

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Lo e . B B DY LG Kinchou heights, Wl .y form a strong | and useful cutpost -ll'or[ Arthur. Be- ' tween aadnchou an 'ort Arthur there was no available latjing place for the | Japanese troops. Itfyas necessary for them, therefere, to sud aßove Kinchou and mareh dovese :“'*l§hphrrflmy could take IPort Al'q!l!'. Owing to the circumscribed area maneuvering for possession of I\'m‘\lmu and Nanshan hill behind was almyst impossible, The | situation resolved %elt’ into a plain case of fight, : The battle laste hfor six days, but the severe fightin 3Cms on Thursday, ! | May 26. The Rus ,ns fought like heroes, but the Japa l.e fought like mad | men. The Nippo Se combination nf! fanatical, reckless{iravery with cool, ] precise calculationy s demonstrated in | the Dbattles of thelTalu and Kinchou, has never before peen secen in wmilitary history. f It is bardly todmuch to say that live Japanese are if sincible. The only way to stop thempavhen they :‘«-wi\'of definite orders to ko ahead is to kill them. And from jresent indications the only way Rugla will be able to whip them in thish-ar will be to kill them all. As long :fih there is a live Japanese army anywaere in Manchuria it is apt to be liqmrious. The world is bfginning to regard the Jap soldier wit!, excessive and un- | easy admiration, What sort of a soli dier is he who eax in three months ‘lupsq-t all the carefully collected and | thoroughly accepted dicta over mili- | tary art—who can disprove the infalli- ! bility of the lesserg of Cold Harbor, | St., Private, Plevna, Shipka Pass. and the Tugela—who ¢an in the face of ‘ modern rifles carry a strongly fortified tnd numerously occupied height Ly di- ! rect assanit? ! Later news of the Kinchou-Nanshan } fight makes the Japanese victory even | more n\'vrwlw?ming_ They captured | lifty guns from their enemy “besides,” ‘ns their official report puts it, “many | other things.” s After taking Nanshan hill, at T p. nr on tis night of May 26, the {nd\‘faflgnmc&'@xm on, and on the morning oF = May 27, occupled Naqgres T e cond lne of L Areßuestin dg::*‘ Ms@ troops now envelop over's Ay alienwan Bay, on whivu,m!&,ts‘ situated. The Japanese neknom'a.@m killed and wounded and say the cnewy left 400 dea:d on the field. The Russian general staff acknowl- | edges that it will be ditficult if not imil’“ssilii\’ for General Stoessel to make | another stand outsids of Port Arthur. i Probably the siege of that stronghold - will begin forthwith. The Japanese l'&mply they will endeavor to storm it | within two weeks, If they sueceed in | this seemingly impossible attempt | their success will mark a new epoch in llht‘ world's history. i So much for Genersl Oko's Port Ar- | thur army. The meovements of Ku- - roki are not so theatrical or traceable. | Kuroki's left is at Takushan on the | sea, where he has a base. His lines - extend northeast to Fengwangscheng. %\\'hm-u is his center and main concen tration. 'This place is fortified Dby | 80,000 troops. Advauee guards have . been thrown out from Fengwangcheng on the two roads to; Haicheng and | | Linoyang. Between the Japanese | scouts and the Cossacks there is con- | | tinual skirmishing, | [ The strength of Kurdki’s entire foree : |ls unknown, The troops landed at Ta'kushan have been estfnated by the | Russians at about 20000. Kuroki's | lright constitates the ‘k)'stvr,\'. How | strong it is, where it k. and what it ! purposes to do are all matters of con- | | Jecture. It is on the read which leads :to Mukden. Some days ago there was ‘ ‘& rumor that it had appeared above ! Mukden, thereby cutting off the retreat of the Russian concentiation at I.i:m-] yang. | Kuroki's line Is so long that it seems as if an active eneipy might attack its various columns an®beat them in detail, but the ground “Qx‘which suchJ operations would bave tebe carried on | Is exceedingly broken. &f a superior | Russian force of 30,‘?0{“01' 50000( moved to crush Kurokis right wing, It would find itself unable to draw out the full effectiveness o?i its numbers owing to the narrow pfl&sses and mis- | erable roads over Which‘tt would have to maneuver. While Kiroki's line is long from end to end, lt(’.s not equally thin in all places, but is concentrated in three columns at Takushan, Fengwangcheng, and the uginown point north or northeast. Snjll bodies of Cossack cavalry have befn able to insert themselves betweely the three points of concentration gid get in the rear of the Japanese. The raiders have done little material;%‘_harm. Their chief value has been thit of scouts and collectors of intelligince., Kouropatkin's army lies parallel to Kuroki's at a distance ¢f 100 miles. The scouts and advance ghard of both armies are keeping touch in the interval. Kouropatkin's right rests at Newchwang, and his ferces extend along the line of railroad through Haicheng to Liaoyang and Mukden. The main concentration is at Liaoyang. Because of the railrocd, however, the Russian troops are exceedingly mobile, and the center of gravity can be rapidly shifted. Liaoyang is being well fortified. : . ‘

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l i - oo o o ! CAPTURE OF KINCHOW. | |'Strofl;;lmld Taken by Mikado's Men{ After Desperate Battle. i Kinchow, a strengly fortitied [m.\iliun! near the narrowest point of the I,i:m-! tung peninsula, or “the Regent’s Sword,” | as it is called by the Japanese and Chi- § nese, was captured Thursday by Gen. | Oku's forces after a desperate battle. | The first assault was delivered upon | { Nangkwanling, a little to the south of, | Kinchow. Here, apparently, the Jap-!:nu-n- fleet gave assistance in the heavy %h- mbardment. When this position was j carried a fearful struggle followed for | the great eastle at Kinchow, which must | Ih:.\'v bean strengthened very much by | { the Russians since it offered formidable | (r!‘.\i.\i;nzt'v‘ to the Japanese in the war | with China ten years ago. Now that | ll(ixu'hm\‘ has fallen and the Russians | { have retreated to the southward, the { way seems open for a determined attack | { upon the approaches to Port Arthur, { thirty-two miles to the south. . | Japanese losses in the fighting at Kin- | li‘!:n\\' were estimated at 12,000, and rej ports put the Czar's casualties even | greater thoan this. 3 | The Japanese captured Kinchow the | first time on Nov. 6, 1804, Two weeks !3::3:'l’ they were in control of Port Ar- | thur, This was less than a month after | their first llanding at Pitsewo. Howerver, ithm’v is no comparison between the diffi--7 N | e ? RN 1 7 3 | 3a = | et 4 N i | A& ; . 7 ,c;/"'fi;f/" N g ) ; 2/4,' '” —— gl * § P‘ ~ | &, s ! | : < | e TRt LR et P | ¢/{i! "_/ o ".ilft-,; , ¥ & 4 i & ST i (Jf‘.'/./Q 5 f‘/’ . ' | W7 e i . / '‘, ,‘//‘- d, /52’/( ) i GENERAI EUROKI, eulties which are now to be encountered | and those whiclh were offered by the { old-style guns and the not very deter- | mined soldiers of China. Russia has }::”.”“" men or more to defend ort Ar!‘ll»?ll'. Gien. Stoessel is believed to be | an officer of great ability and the highest | determination. lle is fighting to maingl:;fll the greatest of the fortresses in the | far East. 1f Port Arthur falls the hope II Russia to put a victorions fleet upon { the eastern seas falls with it, since the | { destruction of the great warships in Port 1.-\x:?nn"s harbor and the loss of that {hnse of naval operations would render the Baltic ships rather purposeless ilv‘; they should make the long and pertlous | { voyage to the Orieat. i | The Japanese troops have swept all the Russians from their defenses west of Talienwan bay. It is now improlabie | that the latter will be capable of offer-! ’in;: any further serious resistance in the territorv north of Port Arthur. The Japanese estimate the strength of the Russians about Port Arthur at 20,000 men. The Japanese have 50,000 men at Kinchow. Chinese continue to eseape from Port Arthur, but little reliance is placed on their statements. They say food is growing scarcer at Post Arthur and there is good authority for saying the Japanese believe they can starve out the Russians in three months. KOREAN TROOPS IN BATTLE. Cossacks Driven Yway After Attack on Northern Town., The Japanese consut at Gensan reports that the first collision between Russian and Korean troops has taken place at Kankow (Hamheung), the recent center of the northern Tonghak disturbances, in which the Koreans were robbed and maltreated. Cossacks attacked the so-called eity castle, and exchanged shots for two hours with the Korean garrison of 300 men, who lost one man killed. The Russians are supposed to have retired toward the northwest. The Gensan garrison, which consists of a battalion of infantry, will not take the initiative, but will await an attack. The ounly sufferers, it is pointed out, are the Koreans. Reports 1,000 Japs Killed. The Russian Government received news confirmatery of the rumors in circulation that General Stoesse! had made a successful sortie from Port Arthur resulting in the defeat of the Japanese, with the loss of more than 1,000 killed or wounded. The Russians’ losses were 116 killed or wounded. The movement was carried out hy a combination with a train bringing in war munitions and supplies and General Stoessel’s force, communications being maintained by wireless telegraphy. The Japanese barred the route between the train and General Stoessel’s force, whereupon the Russians attacked and routed the Japanese. After the engagement General Stoessel’s force, together with the train, returned to Port Arthar. |

CUREr l < 4 Y a <\ > COMMERT NSNS NN Sentiment and Business. How littie sentiment there is in busi‘Euu.\\ is pretty well illustrated by the ne- ! zotiations for loans by the two powers now at war. Russia, it is found, can { borrow $200,000,0600 and sell her 5 per { cent bonds at 98 to 9814, while Japan, Pasking $50,000,000, must coffer her G per im-n[ bonds well below par, or down to 1 about 93 to 936, Additional to this, the zhi;.: New York banking houses haudling ilh's American end of the loan, are fully [ as tight with their money as the Euro- % pean bankers, and both insist-that Janan | pledge her custom house receipts as se- { curity, while asking no such hard terms { from Russia. Primarily the question of ?(rmlit.\' is one of facts and fizures. Re- | ceipts and expenditures relative to the size of a country. together with pros- | pective development and the likelihood of { further borrowings, are the important { things. This particular incident is prin- | cipally interesting as illustrating two { things: That the sympathy of the lingI lish and American peoples with Japan { avails that country listle when she en‘u\rx the loan market, and that the idea advanced some time ago that, because of persecutions of the Jows in Russia, that country would find herself handicapped by the opposition of powerful Jewish finaneial houses was a fallacy.. Sewnti'n'om and busipess do not mix.—Minne- ' apolis Journal. -:——:. In spite of the abundant colored population of the Mississippi valley, owners of river steamboats have long had trouble in getting men to work as ‘‘roustabouts” or deck hands. The work is }h:ml. thie men have no rest on a trip | except such as they can cateh in the { moments between the frequent landings. I All freight, even of the most bulky and flmny nature, has to be carried on the i be >k or dragged up gangplanks by hand, { eften to banks high ahove the deck. I Wages vary from sixty-five to one hunL dred dollars 1 month and boeard; and men are hired from the time a steamer { leaves her port of departure till she arrives back, which may be two days or a week. The crew usually *“‘jumps” (on arrival at port, and does not ship i again till its wages are spent. Reecent{ly steamers were detained in Neow Or- | leans several days, while the officers tried ito induce negroos to ship. The men held loss on account of general prosperity. { Steamers on the upper river are some- | times deserted in the middle of a trip. { Italinns are now emploved in the work i experimentally, and several steamers out § . of Memphis now have regular crews of “rousters” from Italy, who stay with the beat. Other river men are watching the experiment with interest. CHINA THE DANGER SPOT. !“Fi;.:htiug Bob* Evans Talks of the | Crisis in the Far East, ! Rear Admiral Evans, who lss been | on a crinise in the Far East, returned to { this country the cther day on the battlegship Kentucky after a record breaking { trip around the world. Perhaps the fact | that he had been at sea and did not know | of the strict nentrality order of President !Ruosvwl( accounied for the frank talk ;the admiral gave on the war between | Russia and Japan. He was asked: l “Is there any danger of the Chirese taking up arms in aid of the Japan- | ese?t”’ { It is the most probable and at the ! same time the most terrible thing I can ithiuk of,’' he replind. “Just that. There is a feeling of unrest among all classes. It would need but little to make those people rise up against the Russians, “If that should occur Russia at once would march an army down into Pekin, which would probably mean the beginning of a great European war. It is to ‘the best interests of the world to confine the fighting to the two nations in- | volved. For the present, at least, it is l a toss of a coin which is on top. But if i the Chinese mle a move it would draw at least three other nations into the war. Nobody then could prediet the outcome.” | S T L T b A Well Which Spouts Fish. The Grant artesian well, situated near Iroquois, S. D)., is 850 feet deep. With the water which it spouts in great quantity are a great number of fish which average about two inches in length. The fish are not blind, as are the fish of underground streams and lakes, so that it is certain that they come from some surface body of water which is tdie source of the well's supply. This source is supposed to be in the Black Hills, over 300 miles away. l A New Railroad Economy. James J. Hill has introduced a new !oommmy on the roads he controls. Each { engine has a tab kept on its daily em- | I‘a]n,\"mi'm and against it is charged every cent used for oil, fuel, repairs and operaltion. If engine No. 200 is found to be | costing more than engine No. 250 the en‘ginem' of the former is asked to explain. The same plan is to be extended to every car on the system. Then the conldm'turs and enginemen who make the bast showing are to have bonuses

“‘ e T T — L . RYPAERCIA| F (Lo Sg e s g e 2 N M OAND sO, A, (2\7 - ;nj,lm?\i;,_;;(, :3{@;.}? 1 2 s = Be. ; <5 INANCIA ~ - ol el L i o . | Advices from special ¢ F’:C-l' }Erff i correspondents of the In- £ = g 3 ¢ ; ternavtonal Mer ¢ a ntiie Agency indicate that there has been 1'111'l§:v;- ilL“lE'tx‘;('!“u”l tl:is week in distribution of merchandise at prominent Western centers, and generally Letter jobbing trade at Omaha and similar points of distribution, where sales are being pushed successfully. Uncertainty has given piace to comparative as- | surance in quarters where new ven- ! tures could scarcely obtain a Learing a few weeks uagzo. But merchants evervwhere are conservative, buying cleser than a yeap ago. In both lines indications point to heavy trade in fall goods. Roots and shoes are passing quickly iunto the hands of consumers, returns in this line being for the nost part abnormally heavy. Enlarged distribution of foodstuffs is noted at Chicago. Tie-up in lake traffic is becoming more serious, with no prospect of lessening the congestion and little relief from the railroads. Rail tonnige, in - fact, shows a smalil decrease in terri- . tory where the roads might he expect- [ ed to benefit as a result of the water i blockade. New England advices sug- | gest serious interference with general | trade unless idle longshoremen resume work at the piers of Sound steamers. Other than this, the labor situation is less troublesome than a year ago, although the laying off of many thousand employes by the different railroads involves complications which i cannot be accurately reckoned with at | this time, 4 The weather during the week has been favoruble for crops throughout the West, Southwest and Northwest. Although reports of crop damages come from Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Oklahoma, other sections, notably the Missouri Valley, Rocky Mountains and the Pacific coast, have experienced satisfactory temperazture. The weaither has been rather unfavoralle for new cotton in parts of Texas. The situation in other sections of the South is, however, satisfactory. Corn and oats are being harvested in some sections of that State. Rice and sugar !v:mc are in good state, and business governed by crop conditions shows up } well in all branches. ' : Duon's review of Ohi ‘ Cmcagfl l«-;a-;u trade for the past week suys: Disparity appears in the movement of heavy manufactured products, and there are indications of further conservatism in industrial branches due to lessened demand and difficulties presented by new symptoms of labor unrest. The delayed solution of differences responsible for the tie-up of lake commerce occasions serious interference to business, besides occuasionin finanecial loss whl'ch cannot be fully rs gained. Against these unfavorable factors there are various gratifying developments. New building operations are assuming prominence and require increasing forces of workmen at good wages. Weather cenditions remain eminently seasonable, and while beneficent to growing crops, are aiso an encouraging factor in the distribution of necessities, Country merchants report enlarged consumption and show more confidence in placing orders for fall supplies. Local trade exhibits steady advance in both leading retail and jobbing. Sales of staple gcods were strong, especially In dress wear, footwear, groceries and clothing, and the demand was well sustained in paints, vehicles and sporting goods. Mercantile collections were uniformly steady and defaults decreased, l Grain shipments, 2.744.919 bushels, compare with 2.742.345 bushels last ‘ week and 3,759,106 bushels a year ago. Dealings in flour were rather limited, i and although cash wheat held strong, there was little demand. The coarse [gr:lins made the best showing of ac- | tivity. Prices contrasted with Ilast week's closings have declined, in cern seven-eights of a cent, in wheat half .2 cent and in oats one-quarter of a | cent. Receipts of live stock, 266.586 | i head, compared with 239,754 last wank izmd 269,542 a year ago. Hogs closed i 715 cents per hundred weight under a week ago, but increased values sp- } pear, for cattle 35 cents and sheep 20 | cents. I"ailures reported in Chicago district number eighteen, against twenty-four | the previous week and twenty-eight a | year ago. 1 g UGS [AARRETS, 4 v N ; - }l:.h i".\ '% .'.r‘.\\ | RS s e : e- et L 0 5 J Chicago—Cattle, common to prime, 1 83.00 to $5.60; hogs, shipping grades, | p 4.00 to $4.82; sheep, fair to choice, £2.75 | t 0 $5.75; wheat, No. 2 red, $1.03 to $1.06: corn, No. 2,47 cto 48c; oats, standard, 40¢c to 4de; rye, No. 2. 72c to T3c; hay, ' timothy, $8.50 to §15.00; prairie, $6.00 to $11.50; butter, choice creamery, i6c to 17c; eggs, fresh, 13c¢ to 15¢; potatoes, 35¢ to sl.ll. . St. Louis—Cattle, $4.50 to 85.65: hogs, $4.00 to $4.75; sheep, $3.00 to £5.65: wheat, No. 2, $1.06 to $1.08; corn, No. 2, 17c¢ to 48¢; oats, No. 2, 40c¢ to 41¢; rye, [ No. 2, 88c¢ to wlo. - Cincinnati—Cattle, $4.00 to £5.00: hogs, $4.00 to $4.85; sheep, $2.00 to 9!3-1.25; wheat; No. 2. $1.09 to $1.10; | ! zorn, No. 2 wmixed, 52¢ to 53c¢: oats, No. -1 2 mixed, 40c¢ to 41c¢; ryve, No. 2. TB¢ to ' i 20c. Detroit—Cattle, $3.50 to £35.10; hogs, 84.00 to $4.20: sheep, $2.50 to $5.00: !'\\'he:\t, No. 2 8110 to $1.12: corn, No. 2 gellow, Hlc to H2e; oats, No. 3 white, 43¢ ! to 440 rye, No. 2, Tlec to T2c. Milwaukee—Wheat, No. 2 northern, Jic to 98c: corn No:. 3. 44c¢ to 45¢; sats, No. 2 white, 48¢ to 40c¢; rye, No. 1, | 77c to T9¢: barley, No. 2, 63¢ to G3c; pork, mess, $ll.OO. Toledo-—YWheat, No. 2 mixed, $1.07 to p 1.09; corm, No. 2 mixed, 52¢ to BH4c; IJ:xts, No. 2 mixed, 42¢ to 43¢; rye, No. 2, ] 3lc to 73c¢; clover seed, priine, $0.235.