Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
< VOLUME 3. NUMBER 56. TO SUCCEED WALLACE John F. Stevens of Chicago will Be Chief Engineer of Panama Canal. ‘Washington, June 30.—Tt is under- stood that John F. Stevens of Chicago formerly fourth vice president of the Chicago Rock Island & Pacific Rail- way, has been selce od as chief engin- eer of the Panama Canal commission to succeed John I'. Wallace. APPEAL TO THE COURTS. Chicago Merchants Ask Aid in Secur- ing Delivery of Goods. <Chicago, June 30.—A new feature in the teamsters' strike was expected to develop during the day in the filing by the Employers’ association of an ap- plication for fourteen injunctions re- straining express concerns from refus- ing to make deliveries to and from strikebound houses. - The injunctions are asked for on the ground that the defendants have violated the city ordinance pertaining to public cartage by refusing to make | deliveries to or from concerns involved in the strike. This ordinance pro- vides that licensed expressmen shall be required to deliver loads to t of the city and shall not diserim- inate agalnst any person, firm or cor- poration. Violation of the ordinance | may be followed by a revocation of[ the license of the expressman, 1y 500 express drivers are ready to strike the moment they are asked to carry goods to strike affected firms. The union officials have notified their employers to this eff s i | GOLD IN CAPITOL SQUARE. Mineral Claim Filed Covering Neva- da’s Executive Grounds. Carspn City, Nev., June 20.—Several EIGHT THOUS - MUTINY D SAILORS T CRONSTADT e e e [S€NSational Reports of a State Mutiny at the] vewo ron mmvam Idaho Land Fraud Cases to Be Taken Up Immediately.* Vashington, June 30.—Land fraud cas in Idaho will be considered at a special term of the United States dis- trict court which will be held at Lew- iston, Ida., in the first week of July by direction of Attorney General Moody and through the request of Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock. ahe special term of court and special grand jury are made necessary by the fact that the summer term at Lewiston has ad- Journed without action having been taken in the land fraud cases and that a number of cases under investigation will be outlawed by the statutes of limitation unless indictments are re- turned before July 1 Secretary Hay Improving. Newbury, N. H., of State john H fined to his bed, continues to gain steadily. He slept well during the nizhi and appears much refreshed and ily stronger. The beautiful er contributed to making the retary feel hetter. Dr. Murphy of Boston remains at the Hay residence. President at Oyster Bay. Oyster Bay, June 30.—Presi- dent Roo ed here on the yacht Sylph at 10:45 a. m. and was driven in & carriage to his home at Sagamore Hill. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. George H. Witaly, forty-five years of age, a prominent attorney of F‘re{’ moul, O., fatally shot himself because of ill health. Wweeks ago the state of Nevada started boring an artesian well in the capitol squ Nearly 200 feet has been at- | tained. Gold has been found in the sand that has been raised by the ma- chinery and A. Cohen, a merchant of | this city, has filed a mineral claim on the grounds, setting forth tl claims all the ground now occu Nevada’s chief executive building. BOTH COMBATANTS DEAD. | Italians Fight Duel With Knives Near Archbald, Pa. Scranton, Pa., June 30,—Lorenzo Lemongelli and Pictro Brunomota, Italians, were stabbed to death during a fight near Archbald. The men met in a saloon and Brunomota began taunting Lemongelli. The men walked out of the saloon, drew their stilettos and began slashing each other. The bloody fight soon attracted a large crowd but no one dered (o interfere. Not until Lemongelli dropped dead, stabbed to the heart, did the combat end. Brunomota was so badly injured | that he died later. ! the company’s plant. Lee Furman and John O’Brien were hanged at Lancaster, Pa. Thursday for the killing of Samuel Sessler, an! aged tollgate keeper, on the night of | July 10, 1904, George W. Goss, aged fifty-four} years, a partner of ll firm of William ach & Co., ee malsters, nd killed h in the cellar of A number of ntic skeletons of prebistoric Indians nearly eight feet tall are reported to have been discov d along the banks of the Choptank in Maryland by employes of the Maryland Academy of Science. BASEEALL SCORES. National League. At St. Louis, 1; Pittsburg, 2. At Philadelphia, 7; Boston, 4. At Brooklyn, 4; New York, 8. American League. At Washington, 6; Philadelphia, 3. At Detroit, 4; Cleveland, 1. At Chicago, 3; St. Louls, 2—ten in:; nings. TS TRUE that Clothes Don’t makethe man, but if you appear in one of our out- ing suits, you will feel satisfied with all the world, The only diffur- ence in one of our ready to wearsuits and one made by the tailoris in your§ pocket book. We show De- pendable goods in Shirts Ties Shoes Underwear DRY GOODS F ashlona.ble cunm.m 105 by ‘David Adier & Sooa Clothing Company Hats 0’Leary & Bowser. . regard I Yards and Docks at the Naval Port of Cronstadt. Libau- St. Petersburg, June 30—Sensational reports are current that eight thousand 1mperml sailors June 30.—Secretary | together with the workmen in the yards and docks at Port Cronstads have suddenly refused to work although still con- [and that a practical state of mutiny exists there. Wins First Two .-Races in Regatta With Yale. New London, Conn., June 30.—Har- vard won in splendid fashion the first two races of the annual Yale-Harvard regatta on the Thames, these being the 'varsity four-oared and the freshmen eight. Both crews rowed magnificent- play every muscle that her men had trained for this particular test of speed. . The four-oared race of two miles declared to be a length and the fresh- men race went to the same crew hy an oflicial length and three-quarters. Cashier's Defalcation Grows. Terre Haute, Ind., June 30.—Though the first oflicial announcement placed the shortage of Cashier Conzman of Four thousand mutineers at Libau have been surrounded in the woods near town and one [ [he Viko County National bank at thousand of them have already surrendered while the remainder are standing at bay. The situation at Odessa is still critical. tle to the mut'nous sailors. $16,000 it is now reported all the way from $50.000 to $100,000. Later re- The black Sea fleet is expected there today to give bat. | ports increase the amount of worthless i baper held by the bank, went to Harvard by what is officially’ | Depew and Hill Cut Off As Attorneys For Equitable Life. New York, June 30.—Charged with conducting a poolroom in a synagogue in Grand street, of which he told the police he was the rabbi, Henry Jacobs .. has been held for trial. It was al- Jeged by the police that after having been refused admittance on the ground that religious services were going on they broke the door. The walls of the synagogue were, they said, adorned with racing charts and other parapher- ly and Harvard had to use every! Dalia used in poolrooms. Four Thousand Mutineers Surrounded in the Woods Nearp| cuwce of ber vover ana bring imio! One Thousand Have Surrendered. Notap1és rn vacnt Acclaent. Menominee, Mich., June 30.—Former Governor Hood, Congressman Jenkins, former Congressman Isaac Stephenson and other notables were slightly in- Jured by a boiler explosion and fire Stephenson’s yacht Bonita. The fire- man of the boat was badly burned and may die. lowa Man Suicides in Chicago. Chicago, June 30.—A man believed to have been Thomas J. Meehan of Clayton, Ia., throwing off his coat and poising himself on the highest point of the “jackknife” bridge at Harrison street, plunged fifty feet into the rives, The Dbody hu Dot been recovered. TWENTY OTHERS INJURED IN DE- STRUCTIVE STORM NEAR PHILLIPSBURG, KAN. Phillipsburg, Kan., June 80.—Six persons were killed and twenty in- jured, sixteen of the latter seriously, In a storm that struck here and in this vicinity during the night, The destruction to property and crops will run far into ghe thousands. The dead are: irs BN A inor s e daughters, aged two and fouf years; Mrs. Jane W. Alexander, Elmer Lan- man and Daniel Weaver. DEPEW AND HILL GUT OFF. Will Secure No Further Retainers From Equitable Life. New York, June 30.—~Chairman Mor- ton of the Equitable Life Assurance society announced during the day that United Stales Senator Depew’s re- tainer of $20,000 a year and the re- tainer of former Governor David B. Hill of §5,000 a year, both as attor- neys, have been discontinued. George H. Squire, a former employe of the society, has been notified that his pension or salary of $1,000 a | month will cease July 1 i HER IDENTITY GUARDED. Mirneapolis Girl Burglar Said to Be! Well Connected. Minneapolis, June 30. — “Mary Strong,” the young woman arrested | last week in Highland Park Presby-! terian church and accused of burglary, ' has been sentenced in the police court after proceedings conducted ~ with much sccrecy and under mysterious circumstances. The woman was brought into court closely veiled. The proceedimgs were conducted in sub- dued tones and as the prisoner plead- ed guilty they were brief. When the woman was first ar- raigned in court on the day following her arrest she was charged with bur- glary in the third degree, but in the meantime there has been prepared a new complaint alleging only a minor offense. When she had pleaded guilty | to this complaint the prisoner was; e sentenced to the House of the Good | Shepherd at St. Paul and then she was quickly taken from the courtroom. This disposition of the case, it is understood, was arranged by friends of the young woman and was consent- ed to by the police authorities out of the relatives of the pris- oner. Suine of the members of the police department say they know the true name and the history of the girl ™ burglar, but they will say nothing ex- cept that she is highly connected in the Twin Cities, that she has been a member of the state examining board for teachers, has served as a substi-| tute teacher in the Minneapolig schools and that she has a sister whol is now a teacher in Minneapolis. I I Two of the Crew Drowned. Constitucion, Chile, June ' 30.—The British stcamer Tropic is ashore fl(—j teen miles north of Constitucion. It is feared she will become a wreck. Ten of her crew haye been landed, two were drowned and the remainder are on board the steamer. Fourteen Indictments Voted. Chicago, June 30.—Fourteen indict-} ments are said to have been voted by the grand jury in strike cases. The fourteen indictments, it is understood, include persons both inside and out— side the ranks of labor. Henderson’s Condition Improves. 4 Dubuque, Ia, June 30—David B. Henderson, ex-speaker of the nation house of representatives, who suffered | | & stroke of paralysis, is reported to be resting easlly and oinh‘h gtn@. Biggest Celebra.tion Ever Given In Northern Minnesota At BEMIDJI=— Civic Parade! Boat Contests! Races of All Kinds! Don’t Miss the Ragmuffin Parade! 3P.M BASE BALL! Bemidji vs. Big Duluth | | Grand Display of FIREWORKS The finest display of Fireworks ever seen in Northern Minnesota will be given in the Evening from a Floating Platform on the Lake. The Display Will End with a Magm cent and Spectatular Plcture in ~ Fire of Chlef Bemidj el