The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1904, Page 7

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RUSSIANS PLANNED A MAGERS- FONTEIN, BUT EVERYTHING WORKED WRONG AT WAFANGHO DERS NOT CARRIED OUT AND ORDERS MISTAKEN LOST THE DAY FOR GENERAL STAKELOERG CURACY OF JAPANESE RATTLED BECAUSE THEY MARVELOUS AC GUNNERY--RUSSIAN SOLDIERS MUST FIGHT A FOE UNSEEN WHO MAKES NO SMOKE—D OUGLAS STORY WRITES OF A HOT FIGHT BY DOUGLAS STORY | brigades to the Japanese right, and LIAO YANG, Aug. 7.—There wa: led ite atrength there, At the fo correspondent, British or Amert- | time Men poured into the Jap: can, present at the battle of Wa-| ancse left and enabled the enemy to fengho on June 15. It may be,| occupy the village of Tiantantse therefore, that account based | with a force of four brigades, which upon the statement of the man who! the ans had not prepared to planned the fight, an old comrade] mect in other wars, the chief of staff of! The Russian force detailed to ef Gen. Stakelberg, will even now the turning movement on the deemed not too late right did not leave tte tloa The battle ac wntl lock in the morn 1 was & by which time the two armies Russians asa second Mag ly engaged The infantry lay ngly , k it became apparent | ed, in positions on the ah that something ratlway. The guna were p th hia brigade on down on the ground at foot of t sent to demand an ex the kopjea in the center of the gen | planation, and at ¢ time eral posttion. . . os of re The plan was to hold the Japa-| the va 8 enge. nese with artillery and Infantry in| a withd r the valley while a strong force of | advixable infantry made a turning movement] The brigadier tn command of t on the left and permitted a general’ 35th misint these instruc sion of alm, upon the Russian guna In 15 minutes the Russlan batteries were silenced and at 9:80 o'clock were out of action then The Japanese shifting their gins to a position between the ral way and the river, bombarded the station of Wafangho and the troops | in the valley, The station buildings wore destroyed, and the greater part jof a Red Crome train in waiting | there was shattered | Gen. Stakelberg had not been idle. He had moved hie infantry from their position on the southern {slopes of the ill to the top of the ridge to the right of, and parallel with the railway line. At the same time, about 11 o'clock of the forenoon, he posted his re serves constating of One regiment of the 30th Siberian division, five companies of the Tobolak regiment and ten batteries of artillery—upon the hills overlooking the rallway tation of Wafangho and protecting his retreat by rail Freshly arrived re-enforcements » the ¢ wagons to the spure of the immediately went At 11 o'clock, realizing that he | was outnumbered, and welghted Gen. Bta « ordered th pk and heavy trans port to withdraw. The dust raised by the carts and mule teams to PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF WA FANGHO, DRAWN BY WAR CORK ESPONDENT DOUGLAS STORY attack. The cavalry were held in| tions, and eommenced af once to reserve on the right | fall bad pom his reserve position To that end Gen. Stakelberg or-| By thefige this wes corrected, the! dered the 25th brigade of Siberian | forenc Rifles to march at daybreak eaat-| the oe ward behind the first line of bills, | for the to encircle the Russian center and) it gave the highlands beyond. and so come | anese om the center fm upon the Japanese right about) “the Japanese Ba! o' the time the main attack should | tacked our positions with artillery have developed. from a point im the of the The plan was robbed of its eftt-| river considerably to ‘West and etency by the heavy re-enforcements south of the Russian maig batter recetved by the Japanese in the ies From there the enemy poured course of the night of June 14/0 terrible fire, marked by remark These re-enforcements added four’ able accuracy of range and preci Mignon fa and came igto action at Li o'dgek, when wileonie relief tothe Jap MISS MAY DENSMORE, 84 Delaware Vince CHICAGO, T Sand suffered severely formed the Japanese of the move- it, and they at once pumhed tie infantry attack upon the Russian right and on the ceater of the pc tion, The 25th Siberian Brigade withdrew too late from its danger- out position on the enemy's flank in ite long march backward under fire to re gain the main column. ‘The Japanese fores from Tiaa- tantse successfully accomplished, tp a wide turning movement. the m@- neuver designed by Gen. Stakelborg for his own left. The Russian re-|stroment constructed for the pur-| Th serves however, materially strength- WILL FORCE TRIALS fully to extricate his troapa f their awkward quarters in the val | ley At 8 o'clock tn the afternoon the engagement wan fintahed, kod the Japanese held the position The fight had an importance al- | ee together outstde of its immediate | for Infants and Children, results, because {t firmed the| pRosEcUTING ATTORNEY 8cOT nt ————— apanese® in thelr determination to BCOTT DESIRES THAT GAMBLERS The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the sig- tighten thetr » upon the Rua | BOUND OVER TO GPERIOR COURT SHALL BE BROUGHT TO nature of Chas, Fletcher, and has been made under sian forces, changing their attack) = Ui gnicge his personal supervision for over 30 years, Allow no from & number of t#olated armica . ations anil acting independently tnto one com one to deceive you in this, Counterfelts, imitations bined foree operating with a com ust-as-good’’ are but periments, and endanger the mon purpose—the elk upon] 4, . health of Children—Experience against Experiment, Liao Yang and Mukden, Reflexly| 4,rosecuting Attorney Woot has a AE TE Bae A gy we . _ decided or Ne gambling cases should X enjoined upon Genera KuroRAt| Sethe" ne gnmbia who ‘ave now |teouune te ines at the ceeteat wows | =“LH@ Kind You Have Always Bought mn the pneentration Ww . Pre bound over to the urt and | ble rent ’ | characterized hin strategy ever since | wii” push Of the three] ‘There is little chance, however Bears the Signature of other whe are now await that these case an come to trial) re of the battl, | ing preiiminary hearings before the latter part of November | mainly an artillery en | Boott hi fre uy m aceused|or early tn yecember The Civte gagement, fell to the Japanese, it] of “standing in” with the gamblers| Union has been keeping clone watch | amply demonstrated the Russian|and the statement that he is to] of these cases and has exerted every foot sold d power of re-|bring the gambling cases to trial|effort to see that nothing was left} “4 sistance and ordinary ability | before his term of office expires will | u done to bring the law-breakers - to take punishment from an une me as good news to the citi to juntice. sacmy chowering shrapnel upon his| € @eattte noe ee ae In Use For Over 30 Years. pasttiane | Am a result of several conferences | cases brought to trial before he re , It there be one thing more than|Detween Judge Tallman and mem-| tires from office im that he desires a another that militates against. the | Dets of the Union, Judge Tall-|to make a good record from now om! DEDUCED FREIGHT RATES Russian troops in this war, it ie the | Man" has stated that Scott wants the) and that he will endeavor to cor ALBERT HANSEN lenpoaetbaity ef direst enguqement fee hurried to @ conclusion, Tall ¢ the taxpayers that he has not| On houses ia goose to all casters —_o nite to th Union | been as in hie duty as a county | Qetnts, Through ears, Saving of 2 Rio) wei The men are always upon the de / 115 tnt while the criminal docket | official ae the news # have ac- | & per cont phe yy | always opposed by an u was bedly pwée we ance at - - ots my x distingulahed ofticer| "M! ios wi acd bm of being ‘The Seattle Transfer Company||_ 726 Firet Ave. to me the other day: “I _ - + = * jhave been in constant contact with nt the enemy for two months and a W k h M | f h » fhe corn ctuueeeae | W a-Win-te-pe-koet Laments the Mamaloose of the Great Indian jand hi ” the Japanese on three occasions.” . Smokeless powder, modern | pond"tolie aamtaaiee aiuiiler?.*h? eneral, C ler JOSep! | the morale of troops which are con-| titutionally brave more thi a " at of : "uen of bar 4 (Speola! to The Star.) Eagle Wing, the first war name of , ther proof of the claim that Hal-ah- drunkenness. at of warfare = et Josep! ophe ! n » | any amount of fatigue, who] NESPHELIM, Wash., via Wilbur a ey » aan Gell was @ prophet and “| . ¢ i band, 7 a, Nye 5 J -% will 8 riendly be | ie not known in Nespeltm, whiel othe — eS Wash., Sept. 27.—Par out across the| Great Almighty reach and touch| Chief Joseph was seated in his miles from a railroad and &© | Ba i, re oy av alithealt to| Dig Nespelitn, on the hilltops which |4nd warm the lone mourner koet entered miles from the nearest telephon@ | maneuver when the enemy ie bid- | OV@rlook this deserted, silent camp|*nes the untranslata funeral | with a load of wood the afternoon | station at Tipso, across the Graa® Pr m and beyond possibility of phy of the Nez Perces, a lone klooch-|*m of the New Perces and descends | of Septembe 1 coule = Ss man takes up a weary Vigil just be-| into the valley to take up her vigil 1 am going to mamaloose (die Two days out of the world is Nes ~— = | fore the break of day at the fan-like spread of ashes | quickly ere suns have come many,” | pelim, and not until the Indian rum } It in Wa-win-te-pe-koet, the aged which marks the spots where Chief said the tyee to his kioochman. “Go| ners and the young men arrive will GOES EAST first wife of Chief Joseph, who, each | Joseph’ teper stood at his death to the lodge une and bring me my it be known when the great funeral |morning since the death of the| The few Indians remaining at the | war suit that | may mamaloose as/ will occur. = | great tyee, » to lament and to|camp greet her respectfully as the|a great chief. It is believed part of the core ro defend the muntctpality In &/ pray to the Soc-a-lee-tyee, Great | ar chief's senior wife passes and| ‘The wife t was stern-| monies will be delayed three week® T ’ b cnited | Almighty, that the soul of Joseph | their Nps move in an incantation | ly suppress chief in a man- | or a month, to await the arrival @ | cane that Is to be tried in the United | Lay he given safe passage to the | over their departed tiilicum and bis| ner so vigo to dissipate the | the Nez Perce bands in the Lapwal ) re round nd his dow f the kloochman of bis im country in Idaho. | @taten supreme court October 17, | ereat hunting grounds and that his | ¥ : Ce ecation Counsel Giiliam te ge-|vones may, at the final marah-k Just sunset one or two de ath | 4 Thunder, Chief Joseph's ik the council to apptopri- | 'lahee, or burial, be laid with t | voted wers of the dead Wa-win-te-pe-koet went to the! no ew and trusted Ueutenant, is ia tent funds to send him to| OC bis father and mother and chil-| chieftain ¢ he t ara ng by the tribe as a| M 4, where word recalling bigs | Washingt he case ts ofe in | dren in the Wallowa country on the hillside and up the | storehouse and procured the trap | has n pt. | b's oh ns . “ity + trying to recover | Through the ghostly distances of | evening vigil. The program fs faith- | pines of the chief's gala dress. | The belief is that the funeral will $15,000 from David Kelleher, admige| the breaking dawn comes tb mg, | f f wed each day As oh taggered into the tepee| be held as soon as Chief David Wile vio toe of the Hill estate, which | ailing cry of the kloochman | Only one of Chief Joseph's wives) heavy burden ¢ saw] iiam and J-a-ta-ton-my arrive witht has been im Htigation for years, | Mercing, thrilling, almost terrifying with him at the time of his! Joseph lying partly on bis side near| the band from Yakima. The “pote This amount is due the city for| st times—at intervals dropping t She was Wa-win-te-pe-koet, the fire. The predicted mamaloose | latch ng ritual of death, | delinquent taxes on the property, | & low crooning vaguely heard in the sider ki man. I-a ton had come. J died as he | may be he'd a mo h later if preee- but with the ulated tnterest | stiliness, Wa-win-te-pe-koet's younge wif aecompan et © "I alone ts are followed at wi thy | 9s , ment penctrates the pine boards and | Chief David William and the bat No one here wa where the ntime Nespelim ts almost de ry : - cheese cloth Hnings of the Nespelim |into the hopficlds méar Yakima. | great marsh-kapa-illahee, or ft 1 A dozen white men, thres hotel and awakens the unfortunate) Before his death Chief Joseph or- | al, will take pla wor r Indian sub- ANNEXED tenderfoots” who are bled up | dered that both of his wives Only a few * ” 8 single beds in the attic aquaws, wer Jos Just as the sun arises the klooch the one | died The ban negation the West Heatt ea Th to Te Prot. Douthitt t @n the physical examination Op the police and fire depart will not be completed unt + ig accurately ascertained by pose Grew Miss Dens EVERYRODY CAN HAIR NOW, You wilt mm the very fret more’s Hair AND WE CAN PROVE IT. NAVE NICE and you don't have to weeks and month for see boy t application, dogan osing your Tanger! Fight on, roming ip. foat thr beats the NOW atl droge conts and $1.00 per bots To show how wo will seod © advertisement tothe Kao D Ohteage, with thetr name andadares ta silver oF 6s tof C ye It segtns to fal My bait bae grown 97 Inches singe I ne, nod It keepe 7 Ibis now ts in three sizes, 26 conts, 6O For Sale and Guaranteed by The Quaker Drug Co, 1013 and 1015 First Avenue LOOKING THEM OVER | is morning be fpmerous applicants for positions | The capacity and strength of @ man’s Jungs and of all bis muscles an solemnly « * toward the 4 t fined for the appearance of | her comes a story which is told ta} the moon and the wai) changes to a | «hispere among (he ch w wild, aad qpeeting to the sun, the) ers and od t ut one white of Soc-a-lee-tyee, to whom | man, Henry M. Steele, Joseph's clos felates the warrior deeds of | est friend among the whites, T ala keene, or the Indians the story oc creme of 15 smi » outlying @ivtrict, but the district ——_—-—- — iteelf voted 17 to LB im favor of an-| “S:/AT THE THEATERS LEARNED JOBEF HOFFMAN Seats Jonet Hofmann's recital ] tom t the Grand] ap at « premium by | | noon, as Seattle's | of the numerous and all| _— the distinguished are interested in | yee piantat, whome marvelous playing as| CITY BADS FOUND THAT PRi- it next) a little child held im thrall vast Hencen, Musica! circles wilt be went] VANE COMPANIES CAN BUILD erented and the talented young an will be warmly weloamed 4c wil be a fashionable d a soctal event ELECTRIC PLANTS IN HALF THE TIME AS CITY ap in | ro ome a THE NLL. Barbara Prietchie” has scor Fully convineted that they bad/ | hit at the Seatt eater this week, a fact largely due to the excellent | learned many things of importance! or f Edythe Chapman Bar ee ee aye Ay ia elaborately | that will be of value to theta in the 4 and the performance t# well| Conduct of the mtinfeipal Nghting plant, the members of the elty coun ) seeing ell, accompanied by Assistant Eo. week beginning with Sun tay matinee, the James Neill com-| gineers Scott and Jeffrey and Pres | pony will present “A eman of! ident Furth, of the Seattle Electric | France.” & powerful drama in eight) company, returned from thelr two . « the intrigues of days’ trip to Electrom last evening. oy the reign of the French ‘They arrived so late that they did king, Henry of Navarre. One of the not fool like meeting to take up the | tures of thia play ie a duel to city hall ordinance and other im- nthe broad stairway of! Kortant matters as scheduled last | ye Fy eee ene aa | night. Chairman Rade of the | ae me ae a ‘wits | cial committees will call the meet sas blades with an expert oppo- | !Me tonight or tomorrow, site. | The city fathers found that the Stone & Webster plant had a ca- MICHARL STROGOFF” pacity five times as great as that of | | “Michael Strogoff, the romantié|the municipal plant, the output of i ama which hae thrilled! which will be 4,000 horse power. | | os for a double score of/The Puyallup plant, one of the ] years. tor g at the Alcazar this | greatest in the west, was complet: | ek and ta excellently handied bY) 64 within 13 montha, The municipal jthe original Wiedemann company.) plant has been under cx tion . . f which have returned | for two years and is not yet com ; Reiet 4 cngagement: | dieted. very portion of the pow-| oar ering plenty of applause |¢: house and the dam was Inspect ‘ ed | | King — SW/NDLED A Se attaae! A witt| After picking out a nice suit of a srieh the reat of the | clothes, @ swindler, whose name is | oivk at the Third Avenue, a benefit | Unknown, successfully passed a ’ for the House of od check for $30.50, pocketed the pherd belng billed for Priday | change and walked out of the estab ning n Hollow” is @ rural| lishment of Alex Bridge, a Second with many attractive novel-! avenue elothier, yesterday. The . Aging and a reservolr scene | spurious paper was drawn on the ye arene reatien |Seandinavian American bank in week “For Her Sake,” & D¢W| favor of A. Widmer, It was signed 7 berian drama, will De Pre-| hy Bitel Bros, who, it has been as nme certained, have no account at the BIG EXCURSION = \""* ______ = Deputy County Auditor James P. Agnew has sent out a force of eight ar excursion train to the) oA) for the purpose of selecting the ¢zennoe ee 2 ning car~ | oiling places ia the county districts ean Bg m Beattie ara | for the coming election. The coun- t rooma Tt is estimated | tY Surveyor has also be re r t Httonal paasengers | t¢ Prepare maps showing the bound- | lulchiel @ “th tena | aries of the different precincts ot "pacied t imber of the two traing* the city which will be completed within the next woek few renega old » Four renegades from other tribes, The few In are mostly | three old squaws, 10 dogs and 18 Okanogans breeds.” Even the! halfbreed children are out in the children w where the raves revel brush, showing up in the “city” a& gular intervals WILLIAM FRANCIS GUIOM. hop fields, | labor and the} tr gambling and] fe PIONEER DEAD James Long, an olf pioneer of Floren dropped dead yesterday morning at the Providence hospital while making his will, Attorney Ia M. Stern was assieting him at the ro wof residences at 604 Third ave | time in drawing up his will. He was nue, He informed the license com- | 74 years of age, but very sctive and mittee at its meeting last Monday |! 600d health except for his heart that a license was wanted at the above location, but the proposition deferred action for a week. Now WRONG NUMBER License Inspector Marsh discov- ered yesterday that no license was/ } row of residences at 604 Third ave | Brakeman W. Steele, who met death throug \ a head-on collision Mr. Marsh has learned that the pro- on the Northera Pacific last Satar- Posed location is across the street, | day at North Yakima, wae buried ta 609 Third avenue, where there has bere Tuesday afternoon. A number already been a saloon | of relatives reside in this city. YOUR OPPORTUNITY $300.00 cash and $20.00 PER MONTH will enable you to turn your rent paying for a home. SEE THOSE BEAUTIFUL 4 and 5-room cottages on East Union, be- tween 26th and 27th avenues; all modern. Bath, toilet and electric light, etc. Open fire place, terra cotta mantles. Car =U pass door very soon. SECURITY SAVINGS AND SAFE DEPOSIT CO. 115 SENECA STREET. CHEAP FOUR-ROOMED NEW COTTAGE AND FIVE ACRES OF FINE LAND, ON CAR LINE AND LAKE, ONLY $775 of $25 down and $10 per month, Party can matte $2,000 a sand chickens, Fine view of Seattle beautiful land has been Lake Washington Gar- On term: on this pr in ber 1,400 acres of th D. Hillman's ast 60 days in C addition and moun Nd in eh: Jen of Eden City Offices, Roome 1 lor’s Sawmill, on Washington street Car Line. 2, 3 Times Block, or take free boats at Tay- Office on Grounds. | gp ice

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