Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
! B Late News of the World By Wire % Domestic--Foreign--Financial--Social-Political and Commercial % i r. Spencer Onc of Most Prominel t Russlan Premier Discu: Present fIdaho Man Sends Wholesale Order for [ HUHT — Girls. | - New York, Nov. 30.—Samuel Spen- St. Petersburg, Nov. 80.—The Strana Sterling, 111, Nov. 80.—The Girls' S b PRESIDENT SPENCER OF SOUTH: | cqr, president of the Southern Railway ;| TWENTY-FOUR -PERSONS KILLED | quotes Premlergstolypln as comment- | TONS OF PENNSYLVANIA ROAD'S Matrlmon‘;' clu‘b of Rock Falls has a Railroad Men of the Country. Conditions. FATAL FIRE IN CROWDED SALVA- TION ARMY LODGINGHOUSE AT 8T. LOUIS. company, who was killed in the wreck of a train on the Southern Railway near Lynchburg, was a resident of Washington, but his business head- quarters were in this city. He was one of the most prominent railroad men of the country and for the past twen- ty vears had been at the head of one or more great railroad enterprises. At the time of his death, in addition to the presidency of the Southern, he was president and a director in the Alabama Great Southern Railroad ERN RAILWAY KILLED IN AC- CIDENT ON THAT ROAD. ing optim'wtically in a recent conver- . problem on {ts' hands. The girls or- AND HUNDREDS INJURED IN dation on’/\he Hecrease ot aliordar i SEOURITIi! PUT UP IN RE- the emplre and gs halling as a happy augury the fact that the mew parlia- 5 ganized for the purpose of voting on TUAN FOR LOAN. whom each member should marry and now comes a proposition from Hettin- ment will be of such a character that —_— ger, Ida., asking the club to send twen- the problems before the Russian gov- f ty girls of marriageable age to that ernment may be regarded as approach- city for the young men of that place. ¥ FACTORY FIRE CAUSE OF ACCIDENT| frament tiay be regard romion 1s tur. | REACH NEW YORK ON SPECIAL TRAIN.| & "°F fhe voune been received trom | FIYE HONDRED MEN IN BUILDING ther quoted as declaring that the gov- the Western state, but the last named ern]r;lent ‘would not hesitate to dissolve . contains the biggest order for young parliament even the day after its con- girls, HOUSES UNROOFED AND OTHER SooatlGntll. ft manitosted &n hutaation SHIPMENT HAS FACE VALUE OF The letter does not state, but it 18 DAMAGE DONE IN ADJACENT | of adopting obstructive tactics and $50,000,000 AND 'WAS CARE- presumed here that the writer of the GERMAN DISASTER. PALF A DOZEN OTHERS ALSO PEilml MOST OF THE VICTIMS GUESTS OF RAILWAY MAGNATE IN FRENZIED OCCUPANTS, CUT OFF company, the Cincinnati, New Orleans neglecting constructive work. - Con- letter is the captain of the men’s FROMCESCARE, JUMP FROM HI&. PRIVATE (GAR, and Pacific Railway company, the TOWN OF ANNEN. trasting the present situation with the FULLY GUARDED. “Want to Marry” club and that the THE WINDOWS. Georgla Southern and Florida Railway condition of affairs at the end of 1905 girls are to be shipped in care of the company and the Mobile and Ohio the premier attributed the wave of Railroad company. He was also a di- disorder and the armed revolt of that Lynchburg, Va., Nov. 30.—Presldent | roqtor of the Central Railway of Geor- | ~Dortmund, Germany, Nov. 30.—| year to the indecision and lack of con- Samuel Spencer of the Southern Rail- | gia, the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. | Twenty-four persons were killed, nine- | fidence of the administration then in way system, who was en route to the [ Paul Railway company, the Erie Raill- ty-six dangerously wounded and sev-| power. South, was killed in a rearend collision [road company, the Northern Pacific | orq) hundred slightly injured by an it Lawyer, ten miles south of Lynch- company and other corporations. Mr. explosion in the roburit factory near DEATH THE PENALTY. burg. The private car in which he [ Spencer was president of the Baltl- Annen. The detonation was heard v k and split open | more and Ohio Railroad company in = was riding was struck and split op 1887 and 1888 and later was appointed | through the surrounding industrial re- Py thel calliding locomotiye. ‘; ;"“"‘*I Tecelver for the Richmond and Dan- | £lon, which in thickly settled. All the diately caught flreb nnddthel °t>’ b" ville Raflroad company and for the | windows in the adjacent town of An- Mr. Spencer was burned almost be- | pagt Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia | nen were destroyed and many houses yond recognition. In the car with him | Rajlroad company. He was a member | were unroofed. The explosion oc: ivmrphy, who have been on trial here 5 5 K for several days charged with holding were Philllp Schuyler of New York | of the rapid transit commission of this | curred at 8:30 p. m. An hour earlier up a train at Logan, N. M., in July, city; Mr. Spencer’s private secretary, | city from 1891 to 1894, fire had broken out in the factory,| 1904, have been found’ guilty ’hut clem. Merrill, and his private dispatcher, D. Mr. Spencer was born in Columbus, which is a part of the Krupp estab-| ency was recommended. The robbery W. Davls of Alexandria, Va. Operator gfl‘i’ i lltS“ tngd wais edl;cfiedl}n, the | i hment. The fire brigade arrived at| was committed by three men and the Davis was crushed and dled in fiteen llll ve;sv}l' o‘ i eor‘g 31;‘;2 h s viel; 8 o’clock, but was obliged to retire be-| two Black boys and Murphy were caj minutes. Mr. Schuyler was instantly | &Y OF G e T0 PAT2 B TR | cause of the danger of explosions: | tured in Oklahoma and returned here killed, but his body was not badly | . * | The neighboring Krupp factories were/| for trial. Two mistrials resulted. The burned before it was rescued by pas- [ —_— slightly damaresl. theory of the prosecution was that sengers. Engineer Perry, who was on [ NOTABLE PRELATES ATTEND. Roburit is an explosive of high pow-| James Black, John Murphy and Tom i Vi er, composed of saltpeter, ammonia, | Boswell, who was later shot in at- the rear train, was killed. Private S o s it 66 ‘brosk fafl ltted th Secretary Merrill was injured. Twelve [ Magnificent Cathedral at Richmond, sulphur i\fld‘l"her l“gledi?flls» ::1 ii 51;111)7 ng to t}:ea.]j;n‘flclml:(m e R g or thirteen passengers, most of them not easily exploded by a blow, an robbery and that Jol ack conspire: Va., Dedicated. r one of. can be burned with safety in the open| with them. e ohe b Do ey e Richmond, Va., Nov. 30.—With dedl- | 4y g power is second to that of| Train robhery is a capital .offense ‘whom is thought to be fatally hurt. B v Fisher of Gilt & Fisher, commission lates in this country the Cathedral of Exploslnn»Felt Fen: Miles. ;‘j“f‘““;‘s' PM“T?'J:;::“%{L\;Q the Sacred Heart, the gift of Mr. and| At the time of the explosion 600 Bodies were recovered Iater, Mrs. Thomas F. Ryan, took its place | boxes, each containing elghty pounds| sghameq to Stop in Street and “Hitch” : gs one of the greatest institutions of | of roburit, were stored in the factory. Up Her Stocking The great force of the explosion was e Phillip Schuyler, among the killed, | ji yinq 1o the United States and a was a retlred capitalist of New York. | p,onyment of the church In the South. | felt as far as Dortmund, ten miles| Philadelphia, Nov. 30.—Everybody His residence was on Hudson river, he cer i nning with the | from the scene of the disaster, where| In the City of Brotherly Love is dis- The' car_next/ ahead of. My Spen: :u:sef;:;fi;naisvs b:.gimf‘ angd followed | a large number of windows were| Cussing the problem in ethics involved cer’s private car, a Pullman sleeper, | 50 11" yclock by pontifical high mass, | broken. On the main road to Annen | in the sad adventure of Miss Marla H. was destroyed by fire, but all the Pas- | atracted a large crowd to Richmond. | all the houses were razed to the| Carmack, who lost §106 because she sehgors escaped, Mr. and Mrs. Ryan came from New | ground, the bodies of the killed being| thousht it would be wrong to stop in Collision Foliows Breakdown. York to attend. Not only were Car- | terribly mutilated. Surviving parents ::g street and “hitch” up her stock- ; dinal Gibbons, Apostolic Delegate Fal. | dragged their sleeping children from | 1og. " 2 B O e o et sain | confo and many archbishops and bish. | thelr beds, collected their portable e don” e aalh, S 1 No. 37, the Washington and Southern | OPs from all parts of the United States | possessions and fled from the col- Stockl (;t g[’ Tl ll:)mdest pthac vestibule limited. The Jacksonville | conspicucus figures in the service, but lapsing houses. Among the killed 8. was y vl state and city officials, including Gov- | were the burgomaster and police in-| kept me from it. Il never carry h 2 ltmlect‘:\?y sgt:;)g:da D;u::h:utgg gf! l?avgxer:i ernor Swansgn and the mayor of Rich- | spector of the town of Witten, in the| Inoney in my stocking again nor put lington. Traffic affairs, particularly | “mpe attitude of the audience was ac. | S10thes closet to get some wearing ap . ” the rccent readjustment of freight ’ parel for several of the men who were depot to Tepalr @ slight breakdown | mond and a host of prominent laymen | vicinity of the roburlt factors. Thol faith In an elasc 8a6on” |\ | rates iavolving schedules from the | e vimdtontion. - eher o gy & PU | practically without clothing end upon | and before, it Is said, a fiagman could | Were assigned special seats In the | manager of the factory Wwas woundef, which dropped from Miss Carmack’s| TWin Citics and Duluth to the Dako- | speculation as to how the singer would| OPeRing the closet door a sheet of get back to protect the train the At- | Cathedral, admission to which was | but was able to direct the work of stocking had been drawn by her from | t2s, occupied the whole attention of | pe received and some little gtear o g {oname belched forth, purting oft his lanta train dashed lnto it. By yiaton: e e o S oomth Of Soaitt| the bauk to buy Christmas presents, | the rallroad magnate during his short | postile. demonstration. To quell tne| L3I 81d eyebrows. The watchman = The heavy engine of the train| The church is a magnificent edifice | long range, as 200 pounds of dynamite 0 DUy ATSHIAN L " | stay in the city. Mr. Hill repudiated | Iatter it develoned the howse Lot b | Was unable to shut the door and the plowed Into the private car of Pres- of Italian renaissance architecture, | was stored in the powder rooms. SHOT BY WOULDBE ROBBER his’ reported connection with the mer ohaten i police Rt 0| whole room was quickly filled with ident Spencer, in which he and his|OCCUDYIng a picturesque and com-| Experts declare that considering the ; puLlea "] ger o Western railroads traversing | bf which, howeser. war not roantied | f2me and smoke. O'Connell gave the guests are supposed to have been manding location, embracing an entire | great precautions with wl:flch the ex- Oklahoma Storekeeper Thought Hold- the country between the Mexican and ) l0wever, was not required. | sjarm and hurried around waking up Sleeping. Immediately the private car | block in the heart of the fashionable plosives were stored the disaster could oz Canadian borders and denied: that: he SrokeRs. REEUAED o woRk the sleeping inmates. The closet had jcaught fire. The wreckage was piled part of Richmond and facing Monroe | only have resulted from some outrage. D 2 was ever offered the management of formerly been an old elevator shaft .y laround the engine as though placed park, with its acres of grass and trees. | Emperor Willlam has directed Gen- Oklahoma City, Okla., Nov.: 80.—W. | tne railroads said to be included in the M,"ufly e Crutser| 21 d with the door open a draft result- | there by human hands to be consumed. eral von Scholl to visit Annen and| P. Dilworth, proprietor of a hardware| jang of the, proposed combination. 5 ed that quickly spread the fire Every plece of woodwork on the en- ANNOUNCED IN COMMONS. Wltten‘x and has subscribed $6,255 for| store here, was shot anq probably fa- “I do not conslder the plan feasi- ‘ennessee. throughout the building. |gine was burned and the monster ma- — the relief of the sufferers. tally wounded by a man in an attempt | pje» gaid Mr. Hill, “and while I have| , Newport News, Va, Nov. 30.—Blue- Leap From Burning Building. lchine stands there torn and twisted | Treaty Guaranteeing Norway's Sover- TO CREATE L—AN D COURTS. to rob the store. The robber escaped.| peep incorrectly quoted in the state Jackets ashore from warships in the Gk and will have to be turned down the eignty Under Discussion.” _HA " | A stranger entered the store and asked | montg attributed to me in remarks be | Darbor say that about sixty stokers ar¢| At every window could be seen the e embankment, as it is useless. It was London, Nov. 30.—The first local Senator Heyburn Has Bill Ready for to see a revolver. hI-Ie thejn askgd for| tore the Minnesota railroad commis- in the brig aboard the armored cruis: | forms of half naked men calling to junder the locomotive that the burned | announcement that communications cartridges, which ‘he:put.into-the re- firemen in terror and a few moments sion I don’t mind saying the plans do| F Tennessee because they refused to body of President Spencer was found. | were passing between Great Britain, Intiodisction, volver and turned it on the clerk, tell | 1ot appeal to me. However, I feel ob- | WOTk When that vessel was put under sator-leaping from; tholbumig bulld: It is evident that Mr. Spencer was | Germany, Russia and France looking ‘Washington, Nov. 30.—Senator Hey | ing him to hold up his hands and turn ligated to deny that I have had any forced draft Monday while the Tennes-| ing to the sid_ewalk below. Lifelines, killed instantly and that he did not |to the conclusion of a treaty guaran- | burn, at the opening of the session of | over the cash in the drawer. Mr. DIl gonpection with the merger plans. 1| 5@ and Washington were convoying fastena ot wWindowsgbrovides means suffer the tortures of being burned. teeing the neutralization of Norway,| congress next Monday, will introduce| worth, happening in at the moment,| o too much Interested in the welfare | the battleship Loulslana, bearing the| Of escape for scores of the 500 lodgers. Dispatcher Davis was alive whon he | in place of tho agreement of 1855, by | & bill creatlng land courts in each of | was also told to hold up his hands.| of the Great Northern and the North. | President home from Panama. Of:| Terror took possession of some of was taken from under the wreckage. | which France and Great Britain guar- | the public land states, in which an ap- Thinking it a joke Dilworth laughed at | erp Pacific and the development of the | 8¥S ashore decline to discuss the mat e He was crushed about the lower por- | anteed the integrity of the Scan-[PeAl may be taken fromany final de:| him, when the man began to shoot.| Northwest to undertake any such en.| {oF @nd it 13 impossible to get aboard | fo run through the streets as soorf as tion of the body and was conscious | dinavian peninsula and which lapsed | ¢ision by the register and receiver in| Two shots took effect, one in Dil-| terprise at this time.” the Tennessee. Another report is that | they escaped from the building. Thinly until the end. He asked that word be | with the separation of Norway and | TeEard to the right to enter the public| worth's wrist, the other in his side. He refused to discuss the possibilt. | the trouble occurred on the cruiser | ¢lad the frenzied men ran madly until sent to his wife and child. Sweden, was made In the house of [ 1ands. From these courts an appeal : tles of goverament ownership, saying | Washinton, which was supposed to| theY were pursied and caiEht and One of the worst phases of the accl- | commons during the day. Foreign | Will lie to a national land court, to be PULAJANE CHIEF KILLED. | guch a step on the part of the govern.| have dropped behind during forced | taken in umbula;x cte; o Dace ot | dent was the heartless mannmer in | Secretary Grey informed the house | Provided by the bill, with headquar- - s ment would only serve to perpetuate | Gratt.run because of the accident to| Warmt Mflnyho o5 : e which a few passengers and some of | that the government was considering, | ters at Washington, and consisting of | Desperate Fight Occurs on the Island| the power of the moneyed interests of | Tachinery. o0 entg'l o Dl;“ o o the attaches, especially some of the [In conjunction with Norway, Sweden | three judges. Mr. Heyburn thinks * of Samar. the country. oy of poke porters of the Atlanta train, ran-|and other powers, that steps should | this will relieve the general land-office| Manila, Nov. 30.—Governor Curry of P T T WOMEN FIGHT A BURGLAR. |and gasu aeh. t mni:l %o mmenn.g sacked the wrecked cars for plunder. | be taken to substitute a new treaty | 2nd the.interior department of the ne-| the Jsland of Samar reports a despe TWO SENATORS ACCUSED. e ngarfin y; o o il, warel;: b F. M. Curtis of Jamestown, N. Y., who | for the treaty of Parls of 1855, which | Cessity for deciding legal controversies| rate fight between Pulajanes and vol- ; o One “of TherAlmost: Killed by ‘tha| SbIceLy 2nc Tiete hotbic to toll what | was a passenger on the Jacksonville | was necessary owing to the changed | affecting the entry of public lands and | ynteers near Albalate Nov. 26. Pedrg| WYoming Solons Charged With Cover- Robber. waAsberm;l h:r: 2 | train, saw one negro porter go through | conditions in the Scandinavian penin- | Will greatly curtail the expense and| go 1a Cruz, an outlaw chief, was killed ing Up Land Frauds. Hot Springs, Ark, Nov. 30.—Mrs | .4 h‘nu tehg by> sk mtenlwex;a cra;vd— | & lady’s grip. He saw him throw away | sula. delay incident to such contests and at| gnq twenty of his followers were| Salt Lake City, Nov. 30.—Serious | John Sims, the wife of a prominent the m: w:s :;zl:::‘_e: eeghneg ‘;ei: { such things as were of no value to FAILS T, BAVE LIFR the same time secure judges who Will| wounded. The remainder of Cruz'|charges against two United States | merchant, and Miss Florence McKee- [ oy 1€ WE8 CERVEIEC floz,. e him and appropriate those things he JL . be appolnted for their special fitness| pang were dispersed. senators and the commissioner of the | han fought a negro burglar for twenty nppnrent]yslocked' Their eries at- e wanted. Mr. Curtis declared that he | o 0o Risid el and ability to handle such cases. Cruz was second in command of the | general land office have been made | minutes. Mrs. Sims was ohoked al'| i octed the attention of policemen and l would have certainly killed the porter [ © "YSiclan Performs Rapld Operation EIGHT THOUSAND PRESENT. | Samar bandits. He was recognized as | before E. E. Clark of the interstate | most to death and beaten until her |4y = cor P00 D Yroken. in ~ 1t he had had something to do it with, With Penknife. “ | a desperate character and had been | commerce commission In his investi.| clothes were covered with blood. When | {1 S e DO ] captain. The girls maintain, however, that they did not organize to be New. York, Nov. 30.—Fifty million | shipped out of the state and married| St. Loufs, Nov. 29.—The Lighthouse dollars in bonds was unloaded at the [ by wholesale. In fact, they maintain hotel, a th;'ee story structure on the French line pler during the day and at | that they are getting entirely t00| porthwest corner of Ninth and Market X once put aboard the Provence of the [ much publicity at the present time. | prcets utilized as a Salvation Army French line for shipment to Paris. barracks, was dama; d The bonds flled 140 mud splashea| HAVE RIGHT TO STRIKE. | ATP0RS Wes ameesd by fre canty { boxes and furnished loads for twelve o less men were lodged within it. i trucks. The shipment consisted of Six lost their lives and probably Pennsylvania railroad bonds covering Milwaukee, Nov. 30.—Judge James| thirty-five were injured, about half a loan to the railroad taken by Paris J. Dick of Beaver Dam, Wis,, has| that number being seriously injured, some Dot being expected to live. Four { | | — | | | i Three Men Convicted of Train Rob- bery in New Mexico. East Las Vegas, N. M., Nov. 30.— James Black, John Black and John Wisconsin Judge Says Action Is Not Conspiracy. investors. Shipment of these bonds| handed down a decision that men. may was by the Adams Express company | organize and form unions and that| were burned to death and two died from the railroad treasurer’s office in |-such unions as a body may strike with-| from injurics received from jumping Philadelphia. A special express train | out the action being a conspiracy and | from upper windows. Six others of bearing the bonds was guarded by | that sirikers may use persuasion in an| tygse who jumped are lying uncon- thirty secret service men. eu;\d‘eav;)r totprevelnt others taking In all there were 400,000 bonds of | their places of employment. expected to recover. 500 francs denomination and 20,000 of | Z:::;;i fi;e;‘:’;tc‘;i:!fg;i‘:?’:f ‘g '}l)‘he fire started on the third fioor 2,600 francs denomination, 'The issue Humphrey and three local molders'|and swept through the whole building required for execution 1,260,000 signa- [ ynjong charged with ignoring an in-| rapidly. The men' fought at windows tures and the afixing of 1,260,000| junctional order of Court Commission-| to secure lifelines and slide to the seals, ten speclally appolnted assistant | er Ryan restraining them from inter- | street, but so great was the frenzy : secretaries having continually signed| fering with nonunion men employed | with which the lines were seized and their names each day for two months. | by a local foundry. held that they were of no avail and If the total number of sheots in this | Judge Dick was called to try the| iy e yl & issue were laid lengthwise in one con- | case after afidavits of prejudice had those who_could. not. escape by the tinuous line they would reach 296% | been filed against three local circuit | St2IrWay leaped from the windows. A miles. - The total weight of the bonds judges. -~ large number of those who jumped ‘were caught in nets, but many jumped was fourteen and a half tons. PR W B TR R before the nets were stretched and were injured. There was but one stairway and the panic stricken men surged down this ‘stairway to the street only to find the door locked. A jam resulted and probably a great loss of life would have occurred had not firemen promptly burst the door open, permitting the frenzied men to pour out into the street. scious at the city hospital and are not " WOMAN LOSES HER ROLL. GIVEN A CORDIAL RECEPTION. Caruso Makes His First Public Ap pearance Since Conviction. New York, Nov. 30.—At the Metro politan Opera House at night Enrlcc Caruso was given a cordial reception reiterated his predictions of an era of ;:s Ir“eie::szo::;?fima?: Za;illl&ee 3:‘0; unprecedented prosperity for the en- on the ch £ tire country after a conference with C‘;ntr:lcp:'?: OT::naozi:rga w:;l;enuli: ‘Watchman O’Connell, who was sta- George B. Harrls, president, and Dar- | Bonome” and Ca B 2| toned on the third flor, discovered fus Miller, vice president of the Bur- | to Madame Sembrichs ‘f?;;fmi_fi"d"““ the fire. He said he had gone to the FOR THE ENTIRE COUNTRY. Hill Predicts Era of Unprecedented Prosperity. Chicago, Nov. 30.—James. J. Hill, ploneer railroad builder and president of the Great Northern railroad system, ! Chicago Newsboys Enjoy Annual Thanksgiving Dinner. Rescuers Save Number of Lives. New York, Nov. 30.—Dr. P. J. Barry fighting since 1896. He refused to sur- | gation of timber and coal land frauds | the two women were exhausted Sims ;‘;]':: l‘_::: ff:;r:d;:; of 3tlo banemant. $is; Gurlls, who ‘vasion his way b performed a quick operation on the render to the Americans. His fellow- | in Wyoming and other Western states. | arrived and the negro fled. Every The firemen called to those in the i h.P i 'N . o y throat of George Becker, thirty-eight ers believed him to be invulnerable. Michael Myendorf, special agent for | policeman, deputy sheriff and con- windows not to jump until th ts gh Point, N. C., on a business mis- | years old, with a penknife in an effort Chicago, Nov. 80.—An army of 8,000| Governor Curry-says that the end of | the land office, who began an investl- | stable in the city is searching for the 1d be stretched, % . S sion, was the hero of the hour. It|to save the man's life. Becker was & | newsboys attacked 500 turkeys, chick- | outlawry in Samar is near. gation of alleged coal land frauds in | negro. Sowd fo fuctcha, bue allfo littte was claimed by some of his fellow | partender. For eight months he had | ens and other good things at the twen- _— Utah and who, before he had com- Ayl foranfo o e Dameg roeret passengers that to his work and gen- | heen suffering from a tumor in the | tyifth annual Thanksglving dinner| EXCLUSION OF JAP CHILDREN.| pleted his work, was transferred to Immense Contract Made. nearer o tho. windows, men yuiupel = eralship belongs the credit of the res- | throat, being unable to speak above a | given by & down town clothing com- iy Los Angeles and then to Portland, pre.| Victorla, B. C., Nov. 30.—A contract| 224 ‘Were. picked up -njured and un- X cue of a dozen persons who might | whisper, During the evening, in an | pany. The bill of fare in bulk was as| American Consul Says lslanders Are | sentea his affidavit, in which he told | has been entered into between the 00;?‘0"5‘“]‘;", ed | have perished but for his eiforts. Sev- | ingensible condition, he was carrled | follows: Two hundred and fifty tur- Highly Incensed. of efforts made by Influential men to | Canadian Pacific railway and the Van-| ., e“ae;‘ B“su};l nju; twwel:i ul:in o I eral persons mot seriously wounded |to Dr, Barry’s office. He had stopped | keys, 250 chickens, 1,500 loaves of San Francisco, Nov. 30.—H. B. Mil- | induce him to cease his investigation. | couver Island Development company T: - { ;oil;d 3 S ed n?o e& i were taken out from the two cars that | preathing, bread, 1,500 dozen cakes, 160 bunches | jor ynited States consul general at| He named Senators Warren and | to clear 150,000 acres of land in the do;seo:‘:he] tel"mfi T :_: 5 ;i" 3 were burned and six negro passengers | With no other instrument than a | of bananas, 2 barrels of cranberry | Yokohama, is here investigating the | Clark of Wyoming, Commissioner [ Esquimo and Nanatmo railway grant| Swe Of 17€ Hotel and 84 others, e wereh t;!.ken from the combination | pepknife at hand the physiclan made | sauce, 25 ten-gallon cans of. mashed | matter of the exclusion of Japanese| Richards of the general land®office [ On Vancouver island, recently acquired jumped terro;n\l:wneg w‘o:le i !l)i = ]cl.:::nuo the rm(‘iwnr‘dhh:in. They were | an incision in Becker’s throat and in- | potatoes, 1,000 pies, 25 boxes Of | gchool children from the public schools | 8nd George F. Pollock, chiet of de-| by that railroad. The work will cost ,m,}:,mg at u,;’“,,;. nl:x ?,:fi._,z :.l:t hioh s rec with heavy Daggage, | serted a tube. He started artificlal | oranges, 25 barrels of apples, 25 boxes | prior to his return to Japan. The con- | Partment B, Interior department, | In the nelghborhood of $15,000,000, | (PPEP S 35 08 ROSD Which had been thrown through the | regpiration, but after a few minutes | of celery, figs, dates, raisins and nuts Washington. He alleged that'in Den- e D 2 sul, who has been on a visit to his § S T Sl ;l‘ghtth ept[t:;t:t;ond l::t‘:veen thelr portion | the lungs became clogged and Becker | unscheduled, bestdes _ten barrels of | nome in Oregon, l: quoted to the effect | ver Senator Warren told him he ought {“BRIEF BITS OF NEWS, SAVED BY CHANGE IN WIND. nd that set apart for the | gieq, lemonade. that the people of Japan are highly | Dot to go after the Union Pacific and T baggage. They were badly hurt, most It took fifty men to serve the dinner and twenty-five women to wash the incur the enmity of that company. He | Jennie Yeamans, popular as a singer. charged that the land department at| 8nd actress a decade ago, is dead in incensed at the proposed establish- 'of them having broken legs, some of | JUST TO KEEP HIS FEET WARM.| Forest Fire Threatens President’s them both legs, and one or two with oy 7 2 ment of an Asiatic school in San Fran- $ Summer Home. ractured skulls, ALl of thers have | Aged Man Tolls Court His Resson for ;Iahies.ARev. 1‘:}01? Fo:“ot tlhehCnI:‘ cisco. The question, he says, is one Washington had suppressed evidence | New York city after a long illness. Oyster Bay, Ti L, Nov. 20— Preat- humerous cuts and bruises, but the Marrylng [/ Brofionean the Javecation 4 ¢ o 1o dationts ipiules undl theliactlon [18 secured by him. The negotlations for the transfer of| o |5/ covelts summer home on 9 3 pronoun nvo n. St s : hysicians attending them belleve all | Wilkesbarre, Pa.. Nov. 30—Although el de looked inpgn a8 an aftront (o the n&- | yyry FINALLY. 'COMPLETED, |/ NSVCLVALE Iromithe Janancse to 'f“: Sagamore Hill was seriously threat- lHl r;cnver w‘lith the W“llzble excep- | elghty-one years old John Davenport, MANY. ARE IMPLICATED. 3 SRRt e Sl 4 2 -I—- G | pleted 01" | ened with destruction during the night on of an aged woman, who may be charged by his thirty-year-old wife T Murder Suspect Arrested. ix Thousand Veniremen Examined in | o+ by a forest fire which swept over Cop- {:m"iyt hurt. These were brought to with assault and battery, declared that Huge Graft Conspiracy Unearthed at ;1umpus, 0., Nov. 30.—Patrolman Shea Case, | e de?l:;‘;l:zr‘::::;; :-:::orlaofle:l. n:; Darbifl; | A (Orinace shaugs In ia ; % Ych“l’ifl;l i, | he only married her to keep his feet Pittsburg. Willlam Smith has arrested Willlam | _Chicago, Nov. 30.—The tweltth firor | Marshalltown, Ia, He was sixty-elght Ying, Mowsroldnined: o IRtes 1 © cause of the wreck cannot be 'warm, The case ended in thelr kiss- ' Pittsburg, Nov. 30. — Forty-seven Shellenbarger and he is being held at | in the Cornelius P. Shea ‘consp 2 another, direction and they were Jearned now, but it 1s understood that ing each other and beln; yenrs Gt all, bdued by s g reconciled. members of select councils and twen- the city prison as a suspect in the | case was secured during the day afté recogn! @inally subdued by the combined ef- 2 z’;c:l;:":“g‘ l"“ 01;“‘1135 71‘ the block ' It was during the woman’s testi- ty-five members of common councils Dona Gillman murder case at Dayton., over 6,000 veniremen had been’ ThEa':\r:;lg;in‘: "ll::;n }arl:len'.ed :m;:r:: Zorts of a large force of men gathered pice at 1 u"g ox:i, "4: rAmI es north of mony of how her husband neglected are said to be implicated in a huge’ Shellenbarger’s face, head and neck | ined. The trial began Sept. 13 an: photograph of Mmselt to the Amer- from the several big estatgs which » allowed the Atlanta train ta her that he interrupted with the ex- graft conspiracy. The police have the are covered with scratches. He tells surround_ the, president's ‘home.. Cop- the firat juror was accepted Sept. 2 = e?ter the lblock before he hdd been clamation: “Well, I only married her names of these men and are keeping conflicting . stories as’ to his move—' Shea iy president of theplnte nl:jon;'l dcanichurc at merlinl .| per bluft is on the estate of W. Emlin glve: “t "‘e"" track from the mext to keep my feet warm.” them under surveillance. ments and how he recelved the ' Brotherhood of Teamsters and was in. ' Charles H. Chamberlin, senior coun- | Roosevelt, a cousin of the president. ock statlon at Lawyer depot, five g |- According to the evidence sald to be scratches on his face, dicted by, the grand jury on a number SelloF Of the United Commerclal Trav:| . S miles below. Mayor Schmitz Welcomed. in the possession of Mayor Guthrie ¢ - o of counts in connection with the team- °l°" {pr i Sl BodnoH GF WiRCa ""'m"" Store for’ N""’“' : : No. ::3, the Jacksonville train, came ' San Francisco, Nov. 80.—Mayor Ei. the councilmen were to act favorably For Selling Military Secrets, aters’ strike in this city, ' , dled suddenly. A e 29—The buildings hZa:I:g:m atd the cr:;t of one of the gene . Schmitz, who cut short his on-the ordinances desired passed by Lelpsic, Germany, Nov. 30.—The fm. : e r Gen rge: ‘at the northeast corner of Eighth ave- ° o nchbur‘m ;sDOn “e Toad between European trip to hasten home to face the Tube City railroad, The railroad perial law court has sentenced an . wnet tired, 'ta’ Asheville, nue and Forty-sixth street have e e o oy le. If the trains the charge of extortion and graft in was to distribute $70,00 Italian named ‘Lanzani, convicted of & L rn in Con- | bought by a corporation controll by i i ’e tige er a mile further office, on which he was indicted by $40,000 to sixty-nine councilmen, while - high treason, to thirty months’ penal | . He served hich will open a de it south 1t 1s belleved that hardly a per- the grand jury during his absence, the remainder was to have been glven b i t ‘! on lored son on either train would have eome | [ Son on Sitner eln wt ;1::.' wnnyly Welcomed on his arrival to three other couneflmen Wwho acted rig