The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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Japs Preparing to Fight
IN DIREST STRAITS.
OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS.
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Kuropatkin at Mukden
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UNION IN A STATE OF REVOLT.
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With a young Mexican,
the boy was bunting when a shotgun
in the Mexican youth’s hands was dis
charged, the load tearing through t
■' child's head.
Gen. Oku captured sufficient timber
to, construct .railroad depots.
referendum
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could hold orft long-enough to
an intolerable i
on Russia. Russian, therefore.
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Killed by a Street Car.
Dallas: Abram Rtickasln, the little
two and a half year-old eon of H. R.
Rtickasln who resides at 215 Caroline
street,’ and who was mangled by a
street car Wednesday afternoon, died
that night at 11 o’clock as a result
of the accident and of the amputation
of the left leg which followed. It was
thought that the operation would save
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Still the Champion.
Waxahachie: John Williams, the
negro boy jjjio claims to be the cham
pion cotton picker of the South, stated
that he had picked 3,210 pounds of
cotton in five days last week, pick
Ing 844 pounds Monday, and that he
had made $33.80 during the week
picking cotton and doing odd jobs.
Williams was accompanied by B. Wil
Hams of Nash and a large cotton grow
er, who substantiated the statements
made by him
Isaac Toliver, a negro man. reputed
to be 105 years of age, died from se-
nility at Galveston Thursday.
Ed. Carter, night operator at Lang-
try for the Southern Pacific, was
drowned in the Rio Grande while fish-
ing. '
Buck Thompson and Arthur Smith
picked 1,004 pounds of cotton on Joe
Lemmon's farm in Delta County,
Monday.
Rev. George Stuart, evangffliat of
is con
ducting a revival in Dallas this week.
■He Is accompanied by his singer.
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Liao Yang
re-
ceived by the general staff, according
to the Journal's St. Petersburg corres-
7~" ’.“t. These-amount to two Gen-
&•
id jury has l»dleted Mayor
If. W. Smith and Sheriff A. D, Rogers
uf Huntsville for dereliction in duty
h» allowing a mob to lynch Horace
Maples a few days since. Other
prominent eiUffma are also under in-
ion U the fret.
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the little one’s life, but he gradually
gvow wjtm frith the result statda.
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The Grand Jury has returned indict,
ments against members of the Com-
missioners’ Court of Smith county,
charging them with collecting more
pay for road and bridge ‘supervision
than the law allows.
1tsr~-ffiirf Tbtfon gin erected, the’' first
to be built In that county. The cotton
crop in that section will be very short
on account of drouth.
./;%Rh£tc*n jSrrfy\MFffiSsF^gT6wed pur
pose is to oppose the alleged inter-
ference of the .Mormon Church in poli-
tics, was effected at Salt Lake City.
Forty-three road overseers tn Smith
county were indicted by the Grand
Jury for failure to work the roads and
to puf up signboards as prescribed by
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44
The Mexican Consuls, especially in
Asiatic ports, have been notified to
keep a sharp lookout for outbreaks of
cholera, bubonic pest, etc., and report
the same to the government. - • -
There is a story going that Ger
many means to support Russia at the
•••final conclusion of peace with Japan,
and that the whole Russo-German
scbenie is directed against England.
Prince Herbert Bismarck’s condi-
tion is most grave. His sister, the
Countess Von Hamezau, has been sum-
. moned to join the rest of the’family,
* who are already at Friederichsruhe.j
. Six masked robbers visited the Lee«
high Valley Tract km company car
barn at Soudertob, Lansdale, Pa., and
after -beating and gagging four em-
caped wtth betwee’n $700 and $800.*
At Beaumont, after deliberating for
-tyajt. an, Juuw-Uw jury- th tire f®e ot T'
John Davis, charged with the killing
Me-.- -of ~ ‘
J. S. Lawrence~fell from his horse
at Van Alstyne Tuesday morning and
sustained injuries which may. prove .
fatal. Wednesday he was at his home A
in an unconscious condition.
Uncle ’’Dad*’ Jordan, a negro, said
-to be 100 years of age, died southeast
of Denison Sunday, .dig vtas a former
slave of United States sAator Rhett
of South Carolina, before the war,
A Sranchlse has been granted T. L. ,4
Smith Jr., for a waterworks system
to extend over the entire business
and residence portions of Eagle Lake.
When complete it will cost'$15,000.
The Y. M. C. A. of Palestine has
received word that Miss Helen Gould,
who has done eo much for thre work
here and elsewhere, will make a visit
to the association for half a day in
October.
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■taaxner Columbia, about one hundred
miles north of Philadelphia, and eight
of the oeCupafits of the launch were
frowned.
E. J. Garver, who was accidentally
fAiot wftb a revolver on W A. Connor's
farm •••< English, Red River County,
’ « few days ago. died from the wound
Tb« Oban Republic Is to send the
Minister of Agriculture to study Tex-
as rice culture.
Fire has destroyed the Sawyer and
- Austin plant at Pine Bluff, one of the
largest mills in Arkansas. Th^ loss
is estimated to be between $400,000
and- $500,000, fully covered by insur-
■•roea. .
Important Railway Projection.
Chicago. 111.: C. L. Tallmadge of
Chichigd has returned from New York,
where he succeeded . i,n financing a
Closed to Avoid a Strike.
Muskogee. I. T.: A1J the coal mines
at Henryetta are closed down and
about 400 miners are out of work, and
most of them have left town.. Owing
to a grevfence the miners wert about
to strike, and the operators, learning
of their intention, closed the mines
down. For how long is not known,
but the citizens are anxious to see -the
mines running again, as the pay roll
ot the miners amounted to between
$15,000 and $20,000 per-month.
Japs Are Shelling Position to Prevent
“*• Retreat.
London. Sept. 19.—It is asserted in
a dispatch from Toklo to the Express
that the Japanese are vigorously shell-
ing the Russian positions at Mukden,
preparatory to a general advance, and
endeavoring by a wide turning move-
ment to cut off Gen. Jiuropatkin’s re-
treat The Japanese armies, the dis-
patch adds, are disposed in the same
relative positions as in the fighting
before LUio Yang.
St. Petersburg continues without
confirmation of the report tbaf the
right wing of the Japanese army is
advancing north of Mukden, and the
inger. -• statement U ^^f^e^oot credited,
v report* uiac there was no fighting in *
i Friday or Sat- !
urday. but notes the arrival of rein- 1
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Hunt County Fair Association.
Greenville: The Committee
charge of the Hunt County Fair and
Stock Show, to be held in the Hunt
County Fair Association Park on Oct.
C. 7 and 8, report fine progress in mak-
ing arrangements. Hundreds of dol-
lars in premiums will be offered for
the best and second best horses, cattle,
hogs and poultry. There will be dif-
ferent kinds of amusements in ths
park, including Pain’s fire works.
Horses for the coming five days’
races at the Fair Grounds during the
Harvest Festival and Kaliph.’s cele-
bration are beginning to reach Dallas.
The pecan crop around San Angelo
is now ripening. The crop Js decid-
edly short In that section.
Hl,
Deceased
was a native of Alabama, and came
here early in January. 1903. He was a
Mason in good standing The remains
were returned to his ofd home in Ala-
bama for burial
Statue to Gen. Forrest.
Memphis, Tenn.: A permit has been
Issued authorizing the removal of the
remains of Gen. Bedford Forrest, the
noted Confederate cavalsyman, from
Elmwood Cemetery to a plot In For-
rest Park set aside for a heroic eques-
trian statue of the dead leader. The
statue, which has arrived In New York
from Paris, will be put in place in
October and the remains of Gen. For-
rest and his wife will rest directly
underneath the bronze figure.
Cattle Butchers Make Grave Chargee
Against Donnelly.
Chicago. HL, Sept. 19.—Bitter
sension is tearing the ranks of
Butcher Workmen’s Union since the
faiuru df the dtrlke against the pack-
ers and the inability of many of the
strikers to regain their positions.
Various divisions of the remnant or-
ganization are flow seeking to get con-
trol of jhe machinery and reconstruct
•the union of packing house employes.
The internecine strife includes a re-
volt against the leaders and there is a
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Lightning’s Deadly Freak.
Marietta, I. T : Sunday afternoon
there was a terriffic rainstorm, during
which five boys and two horses were
struck by lightnfnfc. Tom Rose, aged
14; Ed Parker, aged 15, and BurreTl
Howard, aged 15, were all on one
horse, and. Jeff Settie, aged 13, and
Frank Kisselberg, aged 17. were on
another horse in the order named.
Both horses were . killed instantly.
Four of the boys were picked up for
dead and carried into the Baptist
Church. The other boy, vv^s .^slightly
shocked. In a short time Ed Parker
had regained consciousness. His right
arm is badly burned. At 9 p. m Bur-
rell Howard has sufficiently recovered
so that he is believed to be out of
Tom Rose died at 7 p‘. m.
with no ifrlar(ives but a sister at his
side, his father and mother having
gone to the country on a visit and re-
turned about one hour after his death
Frank Kisselberg is still unconscious
and^jjHs life is hanging by a thread.
. ay.' '■-’-.o-W Wil life * i J 1 . • ’ ” " • v .
. Robinson, Neb,, for duty In the Depart*
ShcMroodr-Jiion .C£uat&4»^^
Death frorrf Supposed Poison.
Marlin: J. W. Helms, a farmer who
resided near Marlin, died" Thursday
from the effects of poison, supposed to
have been produced by eating, pre
served fruits. 3oon after eating the
fruit he became violently ill, and i
’ grew worse until he died.
Prines Herbert Bismarck Dies.
Friederfchsruhe, Prince Herbert
Bismarck, whose degth has been ex-
pected several days, died Sunday
morning. Since he ceased to be For-
eign Minister on the retirement of bis
father in 1890 Prince Herbert Bismarck
has taken part in public affairs only
as a member of the Reichstag His
attitude has been that of a man not
appreciated by his sovereign and who
was waiting in the background for an
opportunity to rsautao bis career.
Galveston: Charles Vidor, one of
negro, i Galveston's oldest business men, was
found dead in bed Wednesday at
Printers Will Vote on Eight Hours. ,
Indianapolis: In accordance with
the resolutions adopted at the St.
Louis convention of the International
Typographical Union, a
vote of the members, to
whether the organization shall pledge
itself to the eight hour day will be
The resolutions provide that
the union shall begin the eight-hour,
day Jan. 1, 190C. The vote must be
returned not later than Oct. 21, of this
year.
held. The latter ) '
Thermopylae of Manchuria, but it
be easily turned.
Owing to the latest news from Port
Arthur the idea of the Baltic, fleet
starting appears to be quite abandon-
ed. . f
You may be quite sure neither Muk- p-
den nor Tie Ling will be seriously, held
hag been called the i,e hel(1 next weelt before judge
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•^ Y'acht club bouse, Chicago. Her iden-
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Several cars of yam sweet potatoes
are being shipped from Tyler to West
Texas. The price is from 50c to 60o
per bushel to the grower. The yield
in many instances here is from 125 to
175 bushels per acye.
* Wednesday night President Frank •
W. Wood of the Brenham cotton mills
says that the mill shipped a full car-
load of white domestic to Boston and
New York last week. The cloth was
3.00 yards to the pound, and there was
107,400 yards of it.
The Wise County fine stock show At
the Wise Qopnty Poultry Association
will give their second annual show^^T
at Joe Wheeler Park Oct. 20, 21 tnd
22. The committee has engaged a com* '
petent judge of puoltry and stock.
Howard, 13-year-old sen of J. f>.
Brown, a prominent merchant of ' '
Gainesville, was accidentally shot by '
the dlschaygg of a double-barrel shot-
gun while returning hotAe from duck
hunting. Both barrels of the gun be-
ing discharged in the abdomen.
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Late Train Wrecked in Chicago.
A through pasaenger train on the
Lake Shore and Michigan Southern
Railroad from Toledo to Chicago was
i wrecked Saturday afternoon at Root
t Street. Some of the railroad people
r claim the train ran into an opeff
1 switch, and others say the locomo-
> tive jumped the track because of a
| broken flange. Twelve persons were
injured, several of whom may die.
A British sailing vessel, supposed
fo be the British bark Lucia, struck
•a mine recently off Port Arthur,
person of those aboard her was res-
cued. It is considered probable the
•vessel was running the blockade.
A valuable collection of souvenirs
•of Count de Lesseps and relics con-
nected with the early history of the
Panama canal, has been presented to
•the American Geographical Society by
Capt. Nathan Appleton.
Samuel Slack was killed at the
Clear Fork rock quarry near Abilene
laat Monday afternoon. The derrick
fell and crushed the victim to death.
Arctic Explorer R. E. Peary has
aigned a contract to start on another
north pole expedition next summer.
A steam pleasure launch-containing
twelve people was cut in two by the
driving
cotton
motion as if to I
both I years bad bebn a resident of Galvr4
--ton He was originally from Hun-
gary.
Henry Swink Mortally Wounded.
Smithville: A shooting occurred
about a mile across the .river from
here late Saturday evening, as a re-
sult of which Henry Nink is dead, and
a warrant has been sworn out against
I^ind Toxell, charged with murder.
The two young men had a fight in
town in the afternoon and had .both
been arrested and fined. Nink and
some friends were on their way home.
Nink lived until 8 o’clock Sunday
morning.
Kuropatkin opportunity to strengthen
his defense* and he has received large
reinforcements since his retreat to
Mukden.
There are indications of* revival
of the struggle for the possession of
Tort Arthur.’
Toklo, Sept. 18, Noon.—Marquis
Oyama, Commander in Chief of the
Japanese forces in the field, telegraphs
this morning that Gen. Oku -had re-
ported having captured thirteen pris
oners at the battle of Liao Yang. He
also gave a detailed list of the Rus-
sian stores which Gen. Oku captured
as follows
Thirty horses, 2,288 rifles, 127 am ,
munition wagons, 5,892 rounds of ar
tfllery ammunition, '659.930 small arm
cartridges, great quantities of. timber,
flour, rice, forage, engineering Imple-
ments clothing and accoutrements.
Oyamo also reports that the armies
under Gens. Kuroki and Nodzp made
r.o prisoners at the fight before Liao
Yang
Gen-. Kuroki captured forty horses.
&0U. riffles, 300 rounds of artillery and
600,000 rounds of . rifle ammunition,
telegraph apparatus and various mis
_q?li»atau&.hiptomeiits. - .....
Gen. Nodzu captured 800 rifles.
The P^s VaTley Hurt
third trfei of' the case. »0grapim, telephone tools and large
quantities of foodstuffs and timber.
(Ilaude Sessions of Austin, a negro
S-T* Boy, 14 yeara^old, while- snapping a
aupposed empty gun at his 8 year-old
H • "Sicily shot her and she
X • died in’a - few minutes. The ball
Hp'', struck her in the forehead.
, The tile roof of the Masonic temple
J *t Waco will be completed this week,
easily, after which the inside work
can ^e pushed more rapidly than
ever, (rood progress hgs been made,
however, in every direction and
• building can be turned over to the
* committee within a few weeks.
K Mc^eau- arb°y of 13 J'e*ra. was
E* 7 • shot and Instantly killed by accident
L | ' ■“ ^)n ^e farm. pf H. B. Leonard
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dethroned at the meeting to be held in
St. Louis Sept. 25. At. this meeting
the cattle butchers, being the largest
teff~T7en7called for the purpose of reorgani-
! zation, and will probably derpand that
> one of their number be made presF
, dent. The sheep butchers haVe held
control for many years. While they
I refused to return to work during the
> strike they declined to do anything
causing the packers any trouble, and
! for this they have fallen under the ban
, of the cattle butchers.
( President Donnelly will attend the
St. Louis meeting and exert all the
power remaining to him to avert the
! revolt which has gained such formi-
dable headway since the disastrous
collapse of the strike.
The .question of disciplining the
sheep butchers will be about thfrjOrat
matter before the meeting, and the
first serious’ fight will come on this
point.
An effort will also be made to get
the seceding New York butchers back
into the union. The general belief is
that this is impossible.
In addition 133 guns were lost. Tko
loss include fortifications
costing $30,000,000.
town. Anderson was
from the gin with the
halted. He made
reach for his gun, whereupon 1 ’
Schleln and Gisler fired, killing him [
Instantly.
They Don’t Pay Dog Tax.
Fort Worth: An ordinance was re-
cently enacted by the City Council re-
quiring the payment of1 a tax on ca-
nine's'over three months old )t is
officially given out tha£ between $600
and $700 has thus far been paid under
this ordinance by those owning dogs,
and it is estimated that there are be-
tween 2,000 and 3,000 dogs In this city
whose owners have not respoflded to
the demand for the official dog medal
issued at |1 per dog.
1
practically all the time from now until
election.
The candidate was disinclined to
-------_l on the governorship nomina-
tion, and said he was opposed to a de-
cision in favor of any candidate as the
result of conferences such as now are
in progress at the Hotel Astor, and
added that no decision would be made
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graph’s St. Petersburg correspondent I- Jndge Parker received eighty mem-
deciares that a Russian statesman . bera ot the National Bankers’ Associa-
whose name, if revealed would wing lion>. in S4?1uj1oo in this city. There
bis utterance with lightning rapidity , were n0 speeches. He left for Esopus
over t1-- -*-u- -----
It was his impression that the war I
might end .aooner than people imag |
inc. not through ‘ mediation but '
through mutual recognition of the j
•** t1 j-ji
Alfred A. Smith has lately come to , 7
Dallas and w|li make that city fata
Jioma. He la postal Inspector for tha
district composed of Dallaa, Rock-
wall, Johnson, Navarro, Kaufman,
Hunt and ’Hills Counties.
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Mexican Veterans to Meet in Dallas.
St. Louis, Mo^: The national Asso-
ciation of Mexican War Veterans Sat-
urday elected the following officers:
President, Janw-8 C. Carlton, Bedford,
Ind.; vice-president, I»uia Beeler,
Baltimore; secretary, Mrs. Moore
Murdock, Fort Worth. Tex.; assistant
secretary, John A Hobsdn, Greens-
burg, Ky. The convention adjourned
to meet in Dallas, Texas, May 23,
next.
S ‘ Y-’wafe,
amfrvrry small for his years, picks 250
pounds of cotton per day.
W. F. Mallory, who was injured in
a runaway accident just outside the
city limits of Defiison Thursday morn- •
ing, died Friday inornlng of internal
injuries.
John p.‘Murphy, the railway con-
ductor who was stricken with paraly-
sis at Temple on the 10th, died Friday
’. without ever having regained con-
’ sciousness.
i
j Hon. Frank Andrews, chairman ot
the Democratic executive committee,
. sent out notices to the member* of
• the committee calling them tp meet
In Dallas Sept. 24.
j the details of campaign managements- Overton-had a hig day Wednesday
Senator Gorman, account of the.laying of the corner-
would act In an -advisory* capacity Lone *<1f the new Masonic Temple,
.which was largely attended by neigh-
boring lodges.
The Farmers’ Union ef McCoy is dis-
satisfied with thk price of cotton gin-
ning, and has appointed' a committee
to secure 4 reduction from 60c to 50c
per hundred.
Cayd, James. R< Churcfy- assistant
surgeon Is relieved from dutj-^at Fort _
Tokio, Sept. 16.—It is held hjer’e by
the best authorities that Japan, by oc-
cupying Liao Yang, has virtually be-1 Taggart,well as all other campaign
come mistress of Manchuria from a ■ managers,
strategetlpal ^point of view. Russia 1 would not be supplanted
has lost all'means of obtaining food'
for its army for the time being. It
was for this end that Oyama hasten-
may
result in
He concluded,
states,
would
Japan
place
■train
was <
bY either Japans ruin, purchased by
- Tuinrwts sacrifices, or of a treaty of Russian Lostes Around Liao- Yang,
cordial friendship’followed in the full-1 Paris: Exact fig twos of the Russian
Killed a Negro Cotton Thief.
Vlctorla-i John Anderson, a
was killed at Tucker’s gin, at Mission
Valley, 1,y Fred Schleln and W. H. Gis | the home of his son, where |ie bad
ler, while stealing a load of cotton gone to spend the night. The inquest
from the gjn. Schleln and Gisler at : was held over the remains by Coroner
once surrendered and were brought to 1 S. T. Fontaine and his verdic; was
- that death resulted- from natural
I causes. Mr. Vidor was a man seventy
years of age, and for the past forty
lay? i
4.
in the direction ot San Antonio, to
1,164 round*. •£ aztBkry 37,880 witch
of the Santa Fe now -touch Canyon
City, but officials of that road deny
that the Santa Fe has any interest
in the projected line.
He said that Mr. Taggart
I nor sqper-
’seded in any way, and that Senator
t Gorman would not be connected wit£
ed the attack on Liao Yang, which Judge Parker
despite its drawbacks, was really un-J-------- - ■
avoidable, as it was of the utmost ini j on]y antl woum rema|n jn New. York
portance to prevent the Russians
from carrying off their valuable stores
of provisions. 1
By their forced retreaj from Lian; comment
Yang the Russians were unable to
carry off any large portion pf their
stores. The supplies of ammunition
and foodstuffs, partly burned, fjf.led
seventeen' immense warehouses. Ku-
ropatkln Is now unable to rejow his'at this tlmfe.
railway ejteoaujg jpqtb and > ftll^ay ftTtha“t'purpose- Tor
tWHa nhef fr nm Pnnvnn C'lfv TnVna I ■ _
Parker's letter of acceptance is made
public.
A representative of the Associated
Press waa received by Judge Parker,
who said that Senator Gorman had
consented to take an Important place
in the management of the campaign,
and that this decision was at the
earnest request of National Chairman
_ . -7^'i
—
EVENTS OF EVERYWHERE-
jit Terrell a colt kicked Carl Mor
ria a ten-year-old boy, breaking hie .
Judge T, W, Morris of Brenham, a
leading lawyer of that section of the
Qtate died Thursday.
Streams of strong salt water struck
4n deep wells at Lampasas have put
parties to figuring on a salt plant for
that place.
L. V. Wharton, a cattleman of Mot-
ley Codnfy, was stricken with paraly-
sis Tuesday night on a train en rdute
to St. Louis.
A nude man was arrested walking
■the streets of Oak Cliff Sunday night. ’ W
He was a stranger and offered no re- >
Blstance to arrest. ..
the
cf|y of Pittsburg d*ctded--t<>‘ hffiie .
-- e . I. ..." ------a gyg_
Ammunition Gone and Diack Bread
the Dally Diet.
St. Petersburg, Sept. 17.—I hear
from well-informed sources that the
situation of Gen. Stoessel at Pqrt Ar-
thur Is considered excedlngly critical,
owing to lack of ammunition. The
fact cannot be surprising to any one
who has noted the terrific output of
vhot and shall since Jan. 1. Gen.
Stoessel. according to the tenor of my
dispatch a few days ago, has full lib
erty to surrender when he finds the
situation hopeless. Indeed, he has in-
structions to do so.
Independent and apart from scar-
city of ammunition, the garrison for
some time has been reduced fe a diet
of black bread, while the masses of
unhurried bodies which the Japanese
refu’se to allow to be burled cause ter; gjgp
being made to provide the same. An
Judge Parker's Visit to Gotham Has
Simplified Matter*.
New York, Sept. 17.—Several im-
portant questions were settled by the
v(sit of Judge Alton B. Parker to New
York, and his conferences with Dem-
ocratic leaders. ’It was determined
that Senator Gorman should have an
active place In the campaign, but that
Chairman Taggart was not to be su-
perseded.
The conference of Tammany lead-
ers with Judge Parker resulted in the
settlement of differences in Greater
New York, so far as they relate to Na-
tional and State Issues.
The selection of a temporary chatr-
mkSi df the Democratic State conven-
tion was made, and his name will be
officially announced tomorrow. The
| itotli|u£ itellllltn as tothe selection of Jvjhde xXiO c* wk Win of
candidates will be determined upuii waterworks there,
until next week aJ Saratoga. , A J . ,
official order has been issued relieving anr'.har mattrr left open Is ^xhcthw
1 . _» . ... mill"
roof speeches during the campaign.
Other conference^ similar to these
.‘.J yesterday and today will proba-
'ould wing tion.. in session In
ipldity , were no speeches.
the globe, asserted Friday night j ghortly aftcr o-clock, . .
c H t a I m r* rnao izxvs ♦ Vi at ♦ L a x»’«» v* I ___________ , . .
The Korea Off the Pacific Coagt.
Victoria^ B. C.: Members of the
. crew of H. M. S. Grafton report the
ruinous nature of the conflict which t'pre®ence Russian ariped auxill-
lead'to negotiations which would ! ar^ cDiiser Korea in the Pacific off
a Russo^panese alliance '1he northprn of Vancouver Isl-
the- correspondent and’ southward. They ex-
that although the Russians Pect that the Koroa will come to Es-
in the end crush Japan. yeti^u'ma^ or ietoria. She is described.
’ 3 as a larger vessel than the Lena, and
and’ useless *” romtnan,le<i by an officer of high
rank in the Russian navy. The news
confronted with the alternative ^laR ,ause<1 Wfe excitem«nt in Esqui-
, T,iait- ...
Loaves Around
ness of time by that offensive and de- losses In killed, wounded and missing
tensive alliance which for years con in the opc.ratlons before
stltuted the Ideal of the Japanese Gov- from Aug 13 to Aug. 26 have been
ernmant
The same woman who rules her pondent. ’
household with a rod of Iron wonders 'orals. 256 officers and -21.800 soldiers,
why her husband is always broke.
The-man who puts off enjoying life material
until to-morrow never lives until then
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Stanberry, William M. The Arlington Journal. (Arlington, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1904, newspaper, September 22, 1904; Arlington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313596/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Arlington Public Library.