The evening world. Newspaper, September 6, 1904, Page 3

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of the Evacuation of the Stronghold —No Part of the Rear Guard Has Been Cut Off, } —— ooo | , y Staff Officially Denies Reports I f' ST, PBTERSBURG, Sept. 6.—All the stories about the annihilation ‘hed Gen. Kuropatkin’s rear guard and the evacuation of Mukden were officially denied by the Russian General Staff. It is pointed out Mukden could -. have been abandoned because only the transport , of the Russian Army have reached that point and the main force Vio.out many miles to the southward, ‘ ,° According to the latest advices of the staff no Russian force was cut ¥ ef, and itis believed that there is litle danger of the Japanese intercept- * ing Kuropatkin below Mukden. The information here is that the Jap- “\ anese force at Bensihu does not exceed two divisions at the most. From this it is argued that Gen. Kuropatkin has really foiled Field Marshal Ovyama’s efforts to cut off his retreat and that the Russian army is well prepared successfully to resist any attack that may be made upon Mukden, sins RETIRING IN GOOD ORDER. bd With 170,000 men under his command Gen. Kuropatkin ts conducting the retreat in guod order, despite the terrible condition of the roads, ren- dered sorlden by the rains which fell yesterday and to-day, which mire the lumbering guns and heuvy transport trains. Long-lines of commissariat ‘\ ‘wagons drawn by steaming mules, horses and even bullocks, are straining thelr way north over the soaking, cut-up main road from Yenta!, Behind them come long trains of artillery, and back of them still Kuropatkin's V army. Tho Japanese are hanging on Kuropatkin’s flanks, keeping the Russians engeged in a continuous rear-guard action. The progress of the retreating army has been slow, owing to the necessity of first getting through the baggage ard guns, WHY TRAINS WENT NORTH. i The heads of transport trains passed through Mukden yesterday at i noon, and the fact that the baggage trains continued on their way north- ‘ } ward of Mukden, the War Office explains, does not mean that Kuropatkin ‘ fg bound further north at this time, but fs simply @ natural precautionary | measure, even it he Intendod to hold Mukden, the Russian formation during the operations of an army locating the baggage train fourteen miles and’ | the ambulance corps four miles in the rear of the main bouy of troops. The news from the front indicates that Oyama, yound Kuropatkin at Liaoyang, is pressing Kurop: power of his tired troops, while hurrying forward a column which crossed the Taitse River at Bensihu (thirty miles northeast of Liaoyang and five 4) miles due east of Yentai station), in the hope of cutting the Russian line of retreat below Mukden. This column may conslat of fresh troops in light marching order. The Bensihu road joins the main road from Yental, where the latter is intersected by the Hun River, three miles below Mukden. Onee his point is passed Kuropatkin’s army will have the Hun River between it ; and Oyama. \ "The only uneasiness {x due to the possibility that Japanese light-draught 4 gunboats, which according to reports are coming up from Newchwang, ‘ might suddenly make thelr appearance, the river being navigable to this + polat. ‘ ARMY FIFTEEN MILES LONG. ‘ As Kuropatkin waa just north of Yental when the heads of transport @mtered Mukden yesterday it is evident that the retreating column is over fifwwen miles long. PORT ARTHUR REPORTED FALLEN. % The Novoe Vremya this morning got out an early edition announcing the fall of Port Arthur, but {t was recalled before the paper reached the mreets. Buch @ report is current, but it seems to have no basis in fact. RUSSIANS SOUTH OF MUKDEN, TOKIO, Sept. 6.—It is officially announced that a portion of the Rus- «| @lan force remains at Yingshuissu, south of Yental, where the bulk of the Russian army {s assembled. HO JURY FOR (ORDERED TO BAN SEPTEMBER TEAM, BLOTS T0COURT Judge Newburger Empanels| Votes of Three Election Districts Them but Has Nothing to Call) Will Be Recanvassed to Set- to Their Attention—Charles J.) tle the Contest Between Gil- Canda, Banker, Is Foreman.) man and Douglas, having failed to sur- Tudge Newburger, acting for Judg®| ‘The contest between former Deputy Martin T. McMahon, to-day emypan-| State Comptroller Theodore P. Gilman, the Grand Jury for the Beptem-| who was elected Republican leader of term of court in General Sessions. | the Nineteenth Assembly District at the In addressing the jurors Judge New-| late primary by a majority of about 50, burger said he knew of nothing to call! and Congressman Douglas, the defeated » to thelr attention. candidate, for the control of the Bev- Judge McMahon, who was to em-|«nth, Twenty-seventh and Tweaty- pane! the jury, is away on a short va-| eighth Election Districts, in order to ob- eation. tain the delegates to the State and As- Charles J. Canda, banker, of No, 11] sembly Conventions, came up to-day be- Pine street, was selected as foreman| fore Justice Clarke, in tne Supreme @¢ the new jury, His assoolates are; | Court, } Henry 8. Kissam, architect, of No,| William 8. Bennett asked two Pith orem. Lelsden, se. 9. Wns votes allowed to Gliiman in thi + Ba ba) ea making his vote 19, as Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. 0 1%, be thiowa out as james B. Ford, Vice-President, No, 9| *#inst Dow street. Frosident, No. 9] aeked for identification and therefore B areters merchant, No. 105| invalid. This would make Gilman and ‘iflam D, Murphy, broker, No, 109 | Pouslas a tle 7 No, 10) “John Coleman and Charles 0. Ma Broadway. re. th, reat estate, No, 39| that the crosses on the ballot, which fest Tenth street. were not In the space allotted, were not Jacob Fleischauer, treasurer, No. 2a5| intended to reveal th identity of the sfenry H. Hothelmer, im ‘ on Eahee that Broadway. Porter, NO \vote for the Gilman Ucket, on. which loseph J. Slocum, banker, No. a1 Nas-| "at Written, the name of the voter, ae tireat., wi E, Webb, jr., and che word: Richard I. Brewster, manager, No, 433 | YoU the straight Republican ticket,” be Broadway. ricken out. Lawyer Maas held ‘th Joseph Gordon, coal, No. 2 East| Webb was a candidate on the ticket, Forty-second street and that his ballot, although it identi: Bidney Wright Hopkins, President, No, | fied him, was valid. U New atreet. 5 Justice Clarke sald he thought he A. Flynn, contractor, No. %| should rule differently, and added that ‘Wail street. he did not believe there w: court in William D, Lent, retired, Murray Hit|al Christendom where the Austalian Hotel. i ballot had been adopted that would not wee potinter, linens, No. 6%] hold such a vote Invalid, Maas et, said he a Robtr, Maynicke, architect, No. t%|other coneiusioe es o warrant an- ¢ Broadwa: Lawyer Ce r , yer Coleman then ask Chaune H, Hatheway, sulesman.|the Twenty-eighth Disease Denice Carnegie Hall. Where there was a tle, a disallowed Joha J. Ciltey, retired, No, 1 East) vote be given to Gilman, which would ‘Thirty-ninth street. give him a majority. Al ry Ernest Ehrmann, Secretary, No. 69] asked for an order recut the Board Liberty street. = of Blections to produce the ballots in architect, No. 16 West} court for the purpose of having th th’ street, resanvuned, Bailey, publisher, No. $8] Justice Clark granted the order and . hia decision upon ha exam- n’s rear with all the! mother. Cleveland's campaigns prompted Judge served in President Cleveland's Cabi- : J. Grossman, President, No.| counsel for Gilman, objected, claiming | “tM Walking is a delightful exercise. ROOSEVELT TOLD OF VERMONT'S FULL QUTLOOK IN EAST] VOTE BEING POLLED Attorney-General Moody, Just Fine Weather Favors All, and Democrats and Republicans) Are Working Hard for Results That Will Prove Significant. PARKER AND OLNEY PARKER EDITORS PLAN THECAMPWGK) TQ BE FETED Cleveland’s Old Adviser Goes Wise Democrats of the Pen Over the Situation During Call on the Judge—Davis Due Next Week. at State Convention, All arrangements have been complet- ed for the ntertainment of the Demo- cratic editors of the United States who have been invited to New York as guents of the National Committee to weeks ago, but business prevented him | Meet Judge Parker and lay out a gen- from making a definite engagement, |¢ra! plan of campaign. Many of them and to-day was his first opportunity to| 4re already in the city and all will be call. Mr, Olney and the candidate | here by to-morrow afternoon, talked for more than tw> hours undie-| There will be a banquet to-morrow turbed by other callers and lunched to-/ night at he Waldorf-Astoria, Henry Watterson, Herman Ridder, Daniel Mc- Lean, Clark Howell and bot! Parker to invite him to Rosemount at re Nios bene editors will his time, thoush each confesses to his oo high regard tor the other. Mr. Olney |£° ‘2 Baopus. Charlee W. Knipp, of " = St. Louis will make an address and Judge Parker will reply. net an Attorney-General in 1888-5 and as Becretary of State in 158-7, Chairman Henry W. Callahan, a member of the faculty of the University of Colorado, | Sunder, made an early morning call at Rose- mou He was formerty Principal of | greatest Schools at Kingston, N. Y., and e \. = to penew acquaintances. mente Comm! hea eireaay ented Judge Parker received a telegram to- rvations for ie oe special 4 day from Senator H. G. Davis, candi- ¥ gh aft ag the SS COMMER TO PRE TIENT FR BAOPUS. Gept. 4.—Richard Olney, of Massachusetts, arrived at losemount to-day to confer with Judge Parker remarding the national political sttua- tion, He was expected two or three ‘The active part Mr. Olney took in Mr. mount on Thursday for the purpose of meeting the Democratic editors. le said, however, that he would take plea- sure in visiting Judge Parker some time next week. —_——- OUT FOR PARKER AND DAVIS. Mount Kisco Democrats Organtse and Hustle for Votes, A band of enthusiastic Democrate of Mount Kiace have organised a Parkor and Davia Club which bids feir to enroll every citizen of that political complexion in the town before many days pass, R. B. Van Cortlandt is the Presifent and Rudolph #. Schirmer Vieo-Preaident, aM. honorary _ Vico. Presidents on the list are Col. Robert W. Leonard, who fought in Philip-| Coroner Scholer sald to-day that he ines; Supervisor Isaac W. Turner, of] proposed to make a thorough Investiga- tion regarding the fire at No, 14 At- fonl, and W. Bowron, Supervisor je. ¥ there will be @ banner- On Fri torney street early Sunday morning. talsing and ——a PICTURED CATALOGUE GIVES BUYERS POINTS. covered that the fire-escapes had not been bolted into the walls at all, but merely stuck there, and were therefore not competent to hold any strain, The building, as are many others in that section, was very old, having been con- cted several yeare when mortar Baumann's furniture store, Third ave- used to fasten the nue and Elghty-fourth street, has just oa nes hte Lem yap debe escape manufacturer who tells me that y vl a bas Bagh Bs ot Ad fleg Pr bev} there re in the city many other bulld- tensile, How ‘good | (ngs that are not any better protected furamare, iat gears il togdly | pea tn-any’seotton of tse ctf ue Of the} Povmne various departments seem to be There are outfits for small flats and the responsibility, large ones, From pastor to_kitchen | Distric ov: ~ HY provided for. Newly mar- ried couples Ww! wotecting ii have the work of lo gene My gh and ftur- By T. E, Powers. Tarrytown Man’s Body Found |Murder Followed Quarrel at Pic- @ carriage and the horse turned loose, ‘his father and mother, a1 employ of James Kilroe, For months paat there blood between Daley and yeung men of the town, and there have one of them, and since then he has been the German Benevol {men with whom he had quarrelled. and | interfered to prevent trouble, DODD TEE PDE THEO PPIG HS29 BIDE HE EEF FE FT DEPRESS $5 OHOTP SITET PETE TEDICOS TE | ® quarrel between Hartnett and Daley. Flocking into the City—Tam-| many to Make Big Showing from Vermont and Gives His Views and Cortel- you Presents Reports. OYSTER BAY, Sept. 6—Attorney-| WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, Vt. General Moody arrived here to-day to|Sent, 6—Fair weather, the conditions confer with the President regarding | co,.sidere* most necessary to bring cut! Government and political matters in| the large vote desired by all parties, which they are interested, Mr, Moody|came to the citizens of Vermont on had just returned from a campaign | thie, the day of their blennial Btate| tour of Vermont and Maine and de-| election, and reports from all sections | sired to talk with the President about | Indicated that the day's ballots would R the situation in those States as he had| be near the maximum. Democrats and On his arrival he was met at the station by one of the Pre dent's carriages and driven directly to boy ‘The fact that the election wae the first to be held in an Eastern State this Republicans were wor! | 'n years, while the voters generally took | ively personal interest in the day's National Chairman Cortelyou, after a night's conference with the HACKED TO EAT in Buggy Literally Chopped to Pieces—Horse Brought the Corpse Home Alone, TWO MEN PLACED UNDER ARREST AS SUSPECTS. nico—Victim Frequently Fig- ured in Fights—Worried He Might Be Killed, After having made an insulting re- mark, it is alleged, to a pretty bar- maid in John Heilfrich’s road house in |Pocantico street, Tarrytown, George eed aged twenty-two, wae stabbed to th early to-day, his body is much mystery about the of young Daley. He lived with warned and threatened. Driving one of the employer, Daley yesterd: picnic outside of this pienic he met several of the young on more than one ovvasion the police Inaulted Pretty Barmaid, Leaving the picnic, Daley drove to a beer garden in Court atreet, He re- mained there until pass midnight and then went to Helfrich's road hi The police have learned that there & pretty barmaid in the hotel at time and that as she passed through the cafe Daley, it is said, made oa insulting remark to her, In the road house were Morris Hart- An ex-sergeant of police, Because of the alleged insult to the wirl there was ‘The police say that Kilday asserts he separated the men and that Daley then left the house. Shortly betore dawn Daley's carriage with no one driving was, seen in front of Farrington's drug store in Beekman avenue, The horse was led to the police station, and there it was found that Daley's murdered body lay in the rear of the vehicle, It was in @ cramped po- sition and evidently ,had been wedged down behind the seat by the murderers, Nowy Almost Cut to Pieces, literally cut to pleces. six stad wounds any one would have been fatal, and besides theso three were wounds about ;| house at No. 39 Clarkson street, Tn) | fleeing man, jumped on the nett and William Kilday, The latter ts) Daley was not seen allve afterward. be Girl Sitting on Front, and Runs Off, Shrieking Crowd, —_— FIGHTS POLICEMAN Wi TRIES TO ARREST Hi Prisoner Tells Magis Wife Is Living with, Anotis Man—She Says Baby 4s: Not Her Husband’s, ee For halt an hour last night the wets L ern verge of the Italian lower West Side thougtt it other Mannino kidnapping case oat | hands, and if tt had not teen for tha inborn respect its citisens have fot Policeman the alleged kidnapper We have met with summary 2 Lena Maujire, nine years Ung on the front stoop of her fi lap she held Frank, the child of in Amalia Cudaguonl, wno is sia the house, While Lena held four men approached, and one t Gulseppo Cuadaguonl, Amalla's 9 band, grabbed the baby out of the ms, threw her violently dowa and made oft Lena immediately raised a hye. ery and more than a hundred met women, all shrieking, followed fugitive, The man fan west U Hudson street down to Houston, he boarded a west-bound car. Mob Thee: : On the corner stood Policeman lor, of the Macdougal street who, seeing the crowd t seized him. A flerce Aight fo ft to e | the man finally submit ‘All the way over to the sta 0 , Lawior had his bands fi t & his prigoner from a mob re 3») persons. With hoots and yell Lynch the kidnapert? © ie Down with him!" the fm Italians gathered a and his charge until Lat draw his club and beat 1 w vatt, in journed the hea order that both sides may att nesses. ba FIRED AT THE BURGLARS, Your Shots Interrupted the body. legs and head. Coroner Russell found there was no ‘blood in the carriage, and It was he it to th lice that the man ha fork teased ARE en ba into the vehicle, By following the tracks of the wagon the police tracked It ty Helf- ch’e road-house, There. th learned @ heerng. The men deny Siaohutely that they had anything to do with the manier, and a clone examination of thelr clothes falled 10 find 10y ope at Daley ine come et men wta whom be had Rational significance, as of the respective Demo- cratic and Republican strength in a way to his visit to the President. would be a point for both partics, Cortetyou has received re-| | Th campaign managers in| State left to-day for New York. He gave as- surance that there was no significance @lection to-day was to choose Mcers, two Congressmen, mem- bers of the Btate Senate and House of ere! Representatives and various county of- | tetawnt* te: November: smut lent in November, sim' with the other Btates. oe the Prohibition an cialist parties both having nominated a Ntharien, Dell VU . many | Kepublican nominee for Governor, ie ratic opponent is EM H. Por- of had may ome The Prohibition is J. of the Socialist nominee is rae, of Springfield. Mr, Cortelyou would not tes, al x of Walden, is fr whom gee ary Boe up the reguiay - h had « ted | IO mAPY | Berkshire, , | Clarence B. Mo President Roosevelt at ie ser, ‘Mr. Ga te and one of his most energetic pant! ROOM IN SCHOOLS FOR ALL OVER Si Supt. Maxwell Deolares No One| sso. Will Be Denied Admission}. When School Term Opens—| #2" Increased Registration. was a visitor on Sagamore Hill t an old personal “it na latut will vote for Uni comt 4 that both branches and that Senator District-Attorney Will Aid Scho- ler in Investigating Fatal Blaze in Attorney Street—Fire Es- capes Merely Stuck in Walls, ere is nO ques will be Republl- ing out by the farm- ers because of his policy while Cattle Commissioner in ordering the slaugh- many cattle in that county on prevalence of tubercu- big political rally. Thechib} ‘he Distelet-Attorney,”" he sald, “will now has a membership of forty, aid me in my oMicial investigation of the fire, I personally made an examina- tion of the building yeaterday and dis- he Republican ticket, as the so-called independent Mepubli- cans, who were dissatiafied with the Ke- publican plank on the loeal option law, wi rting the fusion candidates, Aside from these instances the Repub- w Neans were votl j their ranks, In strikin, election of two years ago, when there was a division over } The Republican oMicials for a final vlurality in the 8 more than 25,000. clined to give an estimate ——aiiieenrene COLLEGE MAN A SUICIDE. Clarence M, Lines, a Long Islander, Shot Himeeclf in Ma! PHILLIPS, Me, Bept. &—Dofinite in- |! formation reached Clarence M. Lines, of “Long Superintendent of Schools Maxweil said to-day indications show that the registration of public school pupila this year should be about %,000 more than the registration on May 1 last time the registration wag 629,64. Commencing next Monday, Mr, Max- | well aaid, no child over six years of Age Will be refuted admission to the Me added that he wished to deny most emphatically that children were refused fast year ‘ne comes, he said, will be accommo- The registration on the firet school bg Hd year was a¢ follows a rifle of W-call » the right breast. No | und to indicate a reason for Lines’ wae unmarried, about thirty. |cures old chronk cases as well as & slight Ba dcarecben oe the Hing and Aghting tha Serie ron iy ate aaa es Th'tody wee Dut back into the vehicle, ing. Mise Maria Ducharme of Montreal, who eed treatment and I tried with douches and to cure myself, but finally my "ee attention was called to an adver- tisement of Peruana of a case sim- iveitatrial. My improvement Peruna and soon I was a well woman. I feel that I owe my life and my health to your wonderful medicine and greatly acknowl- edge this fact.’’— Miss Maria Da- charme. Female Weakness Is Pelvic Catarth. Always Half Sick Are the Women Who Have Pelvic Catarrh, Catarrh of any organ, If allowed t progress will affect hole bod: without nervousness Is very rare, catarrd What halt pelvic catarrh? She does not co her Peit ii! enough to go to bed, bu far from being able to do her work without the jaustion. This ls 4 very common almost always due to pelvic tare. women to suffer year after year with @ Aisense that can be permaneatty cured Peruna cures catarrh permanently, It difference being tttack of time that it mech be taken to an cures catasrh of the peivle organs er] front of the ofhce an GRATEFUL, HA Thank Peru-na for Thelr Re- covery Alter Years of Suffer. Deere tere for years, ‘been a great ou MS, grateful and gracious letter a8 “(Tam satisfied that thousands er with troubles pe- liar to their sex because they do mt a ot realize how Dodly thee. really, delicacy in consulting a physl- felt badly for years, had ter- rible pains at times and wae un- | able toattend to ally dati ilar to mine, and I deoided to gan as soon as started to use he many almost unbearable ermpioms of ide it is worse than foolish for so many) Robbers, Who Kecaped in (Special to The Evening World.) . > WHITE PLAINS, N, Y., Sept. 2 police throughout Westeheater © were asked to-day to look for lars, who, while attempting to. h aon Post-OMice arly. | ae j driven away by Ernest +4 fired a fusillade of shots at them. 4 burglars broke a plate-«iey window | ‘ho lives opposi rd | 4 crash Of glass 204 shouted at the Fu bere. When they «id not reply ha four shots at Lge Bos he a aroused |] iormed, hut oa eee Ry | police believe they escap thr: mobile, boa in neck at $A. M. A hore ands which was ‘olen froin @ sta! Post-OMlee alght, PPY WOME : | surety as it cures a has become . af itive cure for temole "suse the ailments are Catarrh is Mj cause Belva Lockwood, W: Fs rk tah, ‘ouncth of Women . Roach, wite of late Ne Dir Mra.

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