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1904
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WILL ATTACK
YINKOW NEXT
JAP8 THEN WILL ASSAULT PORT
ARTHUR AND THEY EXPECT
HEAVY LOS8.
RUSSIANS STIK- ON THE RUN
FIFTEEN THOUSAND RETREATING
FROM NIUCHWANG TO LIAO-
YANG.
VLADIVOSTOK FLEET IN DANGER
PART OF THEM 8HUT OUT AND
ARE TRYING TO EVADE
JAPANESE.
Tofeto, May 11. Fifteen thousand
Russians are retiring from Niuchwang
to Liaoyang. Chinese bandits have
destroyed the intervening road to
Tashichiao and Halcheng. The Rus
sians are now building a new road
The bandits have become emboldened
and have attacked and cut the rail
Toad. It is believed that the Chefu
Port Arthur cable has been cut
Yinkow will be one of the next
points to be attacked. Dalny havinj
been taken, the electrical supply for
Port Arthur will be cut oil and the
searchlights and other lights required
by the Rwssia*® on guard will be seri
ously Interfered with. A severe loss is
anticipated in the approaching assault
on Port Art
bur.
Port /Arthur Effectively Blocked.
On Board the Chicago Daily News
Dispatch J3oat Fa
wan, Chefu, May 11.
—Return tag from a cruise in the
Ffewan through the northern part of
Lausthiegasi channel I am able to re
port that Port Arthur is now effective
ly blockaded by twelve sunken vessels
The gallant flotilla which accom
plished this feat advanced in three dl
visions under the -direction of Com
Hayashi.
—Stanley Washburn.
Dismayin Russia.
St. (Petersburg, May 11. Russians
on every hand are asking despairingly
wii&t.has become of their main army?
The defeat on the Yalu, with its sp
iralling casualty list, the evacuation of
Deng Wang Cheag, the investment of
Bart Arthur and the streaming of the
Japanese ifrom ttie sea into the Liao
tang peninsula and Manchuria .produce
Stupefaction.
It Js known that Gen. Kunopatkin
•commands an active army of .between
1*00,00.6 and 200,000 men. Intelligent
l&usBiBxis wonder why he does not use
it. it is feared cthat he has Xoolishly
scattered his lances over a great ex
tent df territory, tthus inviting the Jap
anese to cut up these small bodies,
and jfhat concentration is now neces
sary to his salvation.
I Much astonishment is expressed
mere .because the new Russian loan of
Yvg^W^OOO has not been concluded,
appears that aoe even the prelim
ry .conditions Shave yet been signed
he minister off finance. In the ab
«tf reliable news about the war
-umors of enery description are
\~The public is anxious and dis-
Vl and gloom pervades educa
s.
rs of provinces and other
tarities arc taking severe
'o preveal hostile demon
s-ship Is Strict.
x. May 11. The war
irned at a late hour
did not make public
om the Far East
an indication that
tave occurred. The
with the Japanese
-Hachments, which
movements of the
.p Gen. Kuropat-
prevented the
rs from re
and the lack
-1.
oiruiser
offi-
what she termed a breach of intern*
tional law by the Japanese first at
tack on Chemulpo, Korea, on Feb. 8.
The czar and his counselors have a
very good reason for this decision.
The reason, according to your Inform
ant is this: Baron Hayashi Informed
Lord Lansdowne, the British foreign
minister, that the Japanese, previous
to the attacks on Chemulpo and Port
Arthur, had intercepted cables be
tween Port Arthur and Vladivostok,
showing that the
Russians Were Prepared
to attack Sasebo with the Port Arthur
fleet on Feb. 13, without a preliminary
declaration of war.
The cables also disclosed the fact
that a farewell dinner had been ar
ranged for the officers engaged in the
proposed attack for Feb.
8.
Accordingly, when Count Bencken
dorif, the Russian ambassador to Eng
land, called on Lord Lansdowne to
protest against the Japanese attacks.
Lansdowne advised him not to preBs
his objections, as he had Information
that Russia had intended to attack in
a similar manner, but merely had been
forestalled by the Japanese.
Japs After Them.
The Daily Telegraph's Seoul corres
pondent says:
"It 1b believed here that a portion of
the Russian Vladivostok fleet has been
successfully shut out and is now in the
sea of Japan, trying to evade the Jap
anese."
The Daily Telegraph's Tokio corres
pondent, telegraphing under date of
May 9, says:
"The Japanese have requested the
United States government to inquire
into the fate of forty men who were
missing after the blocking of Port Ar
thur. It is believed that several of
them were captured. It is reiterated
that the Japanese have occupied
Dalny."
A dispatch to a news agency from
Liao
Yank dated May 10, says:
"An accident to a train from Port
Arthur to Harbin occurred May 8 neai
Tieling. Thirty passengers were
killed and fifty injured, and the perma
nent way was greatly damaged."
ENDS LIFE BY STRANGLING.
Man Makea Noose of Neckties and
Hangs Himself to Door Casing.
St. Paul, May 11. Bartholamaus
Pechmann, a cooper, strangled himself
yesterday afternoon with a black silk
necktie. Pechmann had taken hi?
necktie and nailed the two ends of the
tie together upon the door casing in a
small bedroom upon the first floor
thus forming a noose. He then appar
ently shoved his head through and
lifting his feet from the floor, slowly
strangled. When the body was found
the feet were touching the floor and
the head was bent upon the chest,
held fast by the noose. Coroner Miller
was summoned and the body wa»
taken to the morgue. Family troubles,
it is said, were the cause of Pech«
mann's act.
LAKE TIE-UP MAY BE LIFTED.
Settlement of Differences Expected by
the End of the Week.
Cleveland, Ohio, May ll.—Upon the
reuest of representatives of the Mas
ters and Pilots' association, a joint
conference between the executive com
mittees of the Lake Carriers' associa
tion and the Masters and Pilots' asso
ciation was held here yesterday after
noon. President Livingston of the
Lake Carriers' association, who pre
sided at the conference, was seen last
night, and beyond expressing a belief
that a settlement would be reached
probably by the end of this week and
that he thought it would be satisfac
tory to the Lake Carriers' association,
would make no statement as to what
occurred at the meeting.
NO HOPE FOR MINERS.
Burning Mine Will Be Flooded to Ex
tinguish Flames.
Shamokin, Pa., May ll. All hope
that the five men who were impris
oned on Thursday last in the burning
Locust Gap mine are alive has been
abandoned and the mine will now be
flooded to extinguish the flames. A
fierce fire is still raging in the mine.
James E. Roderick, chief of the state
bureau of mines John Fahey and
Miles Dougherty, officers of the United
Mineworkers, officials of the Philadel
phia & Reading company and relatives
of the five, men in the burning mine',
agreed that the missing miners were
dead, whereupon Chief Roderick gave
permission to the company to flood the
mine.
MURDER IN ALASKA.
4
Vry Superintendent Is Killed by a
Drunken Native.
Wasl!., May ll.—:
from Alaska on th
-News was
the steamer
fyty ci tlie murder of a can
yitendent, Karl Johr, by an
Vji
as "Shorty" on May l,
The native was drunk
censed when ordered
i mse. He procured a
N
4
early blew the top of
The Indian was ar
V In jail.
a Robber.
i,
May ll.—J. W. Good
of Ravalli county, has
the authorities, stating
^?d William Parks upon
Y?r rifling his cabin.
town
character. For
tome
one has been
\bing Goodson's
vekly
visits to the
Vibly
starting on
Goodson made
found Parks
shot the
ktly.
Good-
IN A WILD PANIC
PA88ENGERS THROWN INTO A
FRENZY BY COLLI8ION ON
ROAD.
M0T0RMAN KILLED MANY INJURED
CAR8 HANG OVER 6IDE OF STRUC
TURE WHILE PEOPLE FIGHT
TO E8CAPE.
BOTH TRAIN CREWS ARE BLAMED
CORONER ORDER8 ARREST OF
CONDUCTORS AND 8URVIVING
MOTORMAN.
New York, May ll—A rear-end col
lision between two trains on the Third
avenue elevated killed Motorman Kor
nell of the rear train and seriously in
jured five passengers.
The accident was caused by oi
train coming down town stopping ci
account of repairs being made to
rail. A second train was coming down
town and it smashed into the rear ol
the standing train, telescoping the two
cars. Several of the passengers weie
crushed, while the flames shot froin
the third rail and set lire to the can
The passengers, in a mad panic, foiigli*
wildly, struggling to reach the street
With such force did the rear train
ram the one in front that the car:'
were lifted from the tracks and then
settled down with a crash.
Tottering on the Edge
of the elevated structure, the two cars
hung out over the side at an angle ot
about 45 degrees, but the coupling
held and they were soon propped up
by firemen.
Coroner Scholer last night ordered
the arrest of the conductors of botlt
trains and the motorman of the first
train. The coroner declared that a
man should have been sent back to
flag the second train when the first
was held up.
When the firemen arrived the pay.
sengers. many of whom were wo®pn
were
Running About Wildly
on the elevated structure or werc
struggiing to get out of the cars. Sev
eral were injured by leaplbg from tbr
windows. Ladders were run up at
once by the firemen and the majority
of the frightened passengers were tak
en to the street in that manner.
Traffic was blocked on both tracks
for an h'our and a half, and at the end
of that time the po'wer, which had
been turned off when the wreckage
caught' fire, was turned on the north
bound track only. So great was the
congestion on the Second avenue ele
vated line that women fainted, and the
trains were delayed at every statiou.
Traffic was blocked on the Third ave
nue line by the great crowd that gath
ered at the scene of the accident for
an hour and a half. i
CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH!
Explosion of Gasoline Stove Sets Fire
to Pitch Laden 8cow.
Alexandria, Va., May ll. Two
children, Robert and Carrie Harper,
aged 8 ^nd 2 years, were burned to
death on a pitch laden scow while
helping their sister, Mabel, aged 12
get their father's dinner. The gaso
line stove exploded and set fire to the
scow. Mabel was rescued after being
seriously and perhaps fatally burned
[t was impossible to recover the bodies
it the younger children.
TWO MEN KILLED IN WRECK.
Engine and Two Express Cars Topple
Over an Embankment.
New York, May 11.—Two men were
killed at 1 o'clock this morning In the
wreck of a south-bound Adams ex
press special st Portcbester, N. Y., on
the New York, New Haven & Hart
ford railroad. The engine and two ex
press cars left the track and toppled
over the embankment.
JAMES GILESPIE ON TRIAL.
Alleged Crime Was the Murder of His
Sister.
Rising Sun, Ind., May 11.—The trial
of James Gillespie on the charge of as
sassination of bis sister Elizabeth,
and of Myron Barbour, Mrs. Carrie
Barbour and Mrs. Belle Seward
charged with being accessories to tbe
crime, began yesterday.
FOUR MEN DROWNED.
Small Boat Capsizes While Crossing a
River.
Louisa, Ky., May 11. Four men
were drowned yesterday while trying
to cross Big Sandy river near Zelda.
twelve miles north of Louisa. A small
boat containing them' and two other
men capsized.
Kills Himself in Jail.
Terre Haute, Ind., May 11.—Within
half an hour of having been locked up
for alleged borse stealing Henry
Quick committed suicide last night in
jail. His body was found hanging by
a handkerchief from the top bars.
Alfonso Will Settela It.
Llmi, Peru, M».y 11.—Foreign Min
ister Pardo and Colombian Minister
Tanso yesterday signed a convention
by which all boundary questions will
be submitted to-the arbitration of the
King of Spain.