Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 23, 1894, Page 1

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L JUNE 19, ABLISHED vy emees ot DEMOCRACY STILL DAVIDED | s &' i NOT SHOUTING FOR MAJORS | s saomnenemere " AL M V) | forty-eight farmers INSULTING HONEST LABOR The distribution of thousands of coples of " . Mt the B. & M. Journal In the city of Omaha Omaha Firms Repudiate the Claims of the [ 10 01 % ohe Jrort bt ittte caloainred tipon Oalamity Orusalers, by the republican campaign managers. The coples which fall into the hands of the mem- ey bers of Iabor organizations only add s to the g already existing ard th NAMES SHOULD NOT BZ ON THZ LIST Y Ay s f L on I ER(IWRLL republican candidate for governor. he B. & M. Journal is recognized as the enemy of . ; organized labor. It refuses to employ unfon Farther Evidence that the Bank Parior | printers in its own departments and pays Seare Exists Only in the Interests of lower wages than any other newspaper or Tatoooed Tom and Not to | printing office in Lincoln with but one excep ‘ | tion. Its attitude toward labor s L b well known 1l over Nebraska Speaking of the matter a local member of the Central Labor union says A strong current of protest is still ketting| It the republican commiitee think they In from all parts of Omaha and Nebraska |can convert any Omaha workingman through agalnst the manifesto sent out by the the Lincoln Journsl they are badly mit- ess Men's association are many | taken, for it is the most despised shest in Ry Sasouiatic Y omans | the stat The Journal is the r that wholesale and retall merchants of Omaba | uyies oty ail Yibor: diMeultiss with refusing to attach their signatures to the|Gatiing guns and militia. 1t w1l never manifesto, but firms and companies whose | listen o the side of the workingman, and signatures have already been printed are | the workers will consider what It mays with " 7y thi “ns 1o | ® Erain of allowance hat paper has al- repudiating the dveument. Other B 1o v e, o (DABEY t0)/ HB OoRtAuat: Tor oot the state are also moving in the matter, and | yicy the state penitentiary business men’s assoclations, having for their | editor, s H. G was the first man object the election of Judge Holcomb, are| that ever signed a bond for W. H. B. Stout de- | When r secured the first prison being formed. Retall merchants of Ne ”: ’» e hiT oA © houses | €ONtra has lived largely by subsidies braska who buy thelr goods of Omaha houses | GHITIEL 6 DA T are also beginning to protest against the| "\ prin A TRADE JOURNAL SAYS maniteato | The credit of Nebraska is just mow re. Among the firms and names that occupy a | ceiving no little attention, and up to the prominent place in the Business Men's mani- | present time the discussion has been all feato Is the name of “Plerre Garneau, Amerl- | Ubon one side. The returns from the in- scult and Manufacturing company.” | (°TeSts opposed to the manifesto sent cut by can Biscult and Manufacturing company.” | .o "p siness Men's association are coming The inference is that the American Biscuit | Gl PS8 S Amerolal (HNIDIE, 4 and Manufacturing company has endorsed the | trade publication devoted to the interests of appeal on behalf of Majors. The following | the wholesale business of Omaha, bas in its letter speaks for itself | last lssue ted October a leading e AMERICAN BISCUIT & MANUFACTUR- | {irial devoted 1o th ) UL ING €O, ) WHOLESALE CRACKER MANUFAC- sk is : another fllustration of TURERS. mage that ans may do when OMAHA, Neb, Oct. 22, | take @ hand in making a mess To the Editor of The [ce ' W, One faction of the politicians In reading your political article Saturday |of the state Is busily ensaged § ting morning I ¢ce you peak of the American | campaisn literature tending to show how Blscull and Manufacturing company as | the state will be irreparably damaged if having signed a political document now | their pet candidate for goverac being circula in thig city There |s by the ndidate of the opy Ty a mistake in regard to the same, as | I8 o be tighter than ever, b the American Biscuit and Manufactufing | Iefuse to sell company is not in politics, so no one has | i0vestments will vl com: | any authority whatever to sign any such lite generally pare An un- document. Its emploves, as individuals, | fort feature of the crusad that it have a perfect right to their political views, | 18 being waged by men whese position in no Fght whitever to commit the cc the (inanclal and business world would 1y to the same. As its manager in sedinarily lend considerable weight to thelr ety of Omaha I repudiate any such opinions on such Lopics, but when the whole ure. Yours respectfuily [ scheme is unmaskid and the fact shown L FUGGINS, Man that the triumph of a political ring is the Please publish biect sought, then alamity howl they are making Decome despicable plece of LOAN COMPANIES NOT SCARED. political demagogery (hat merits @ most stern and emphi uke at the hands The loan and trust companies are not at all | {he Husiesn mun or NoLKent the ha 80 badly frghtencd as some of the anxious | Nebraskna banker busines ht manufacturers of eampaign calamity would | (0 he in better business than ¢ have the people believe The following | credit and reputation of the state politi- letter from the president of a loan and trust | 41 PUrposes.” The Commercial Exhibit is company doirg an extensive business in this | \M1EHE H‘I":‘l' O e ‘::"‘”_“‘“l“'v"r state Is conclusive proof | aenient of the affaies of state in the hand OFFICE OF THI; DURLAND TRUST |Cf men who will administer them honestly COMPANY and upon business principles, but it cinnot NORFOLK, Neb., Oct, 22, | conscientiously fail to enter its_emphat] To The Bdltor of The e | pfotest againgt the employment of methods I write to correct a statement in yester- | {01 purely political capital that must result day’s Tee connecting me with the Busigess | i lasting damage to the business interests Men's association—so-called. I am not even commonwealth, a member of this Majors combination, an t pure rot it s to argue that business I believe that it is bad democratic policy sufter if one person rather than an- to foster it. The fact Is, I dislike the iden s elected to the position of governor of being forced to vote the republican ticket [ ©f this state. Wil people eat less meat upon_the pretense of hurting the credit of | Wrden a demacrat populist than they the state, this pretense being the expiring | Would under a republican? Would farn effort of 'a ring that has made Stout, Dor- | 80 barefoot under a populist reign, gan, Mosher. et al possible, and ln its | ¥ould the dealer in boots and shoes throes digceredited some of our highest state | 4Fiven out of business if a republican fa officials, The populists are at least honest | Of election? If a Nebraska merchant ha and sincere, though badly misled in many | [he cash with which to buy kc will he directions; and 1 consider the claim of the | b 1TUsed a market in case the candidate republicans of their own superiority as not | P certain clique s d at elee prover= Very. respectfully il A e he men who making this ASSDURLAND, TRreatdsnt iy Sy ow i hsiter, andiy et thoy The McKinley-Lanning Loan and Trust | realize that they are turning the (e of company of Philadeiphia is one of the most | eseckers from Nebraska to Wyoming exteneive dealers In western farm mort- | AN Other western states by their selfish gares doing business in the west. It has a | {ime. " They Kkine trag theitis particular pald-up capital of $500,000, and maintatns | e bushicn of Svers mensin in | Haring its general western office at Hastings. The [ and Nebraska, when they ought 1o be ujie resident member of the company writes as | #Wake nights planning to help the very follows: interests they are fecpardizing * The ropi THE M KINLE AN AND | tation of “a ‘state 1s as im nt and as KILEY N R Bt ' ind should be guarded as zcalously and as tl s Jealousy HASTINGS, Neb,, Oct, 16, 1594 i A0 il ies E. Rosewater, Omaha, Neb (e tarieaop Business men alwaya gét In repfy T will say that the firm of McKin- | tike’ o' more aetive m i ogig 0L they ley & Lanuing, of which 1 am the resident | part In public affairs, member (Mr. McKinley being a resident of e e 1liinois), has been engaged e placing mort MAJORS' “FELLOW" FARMERS gages farms in Nebraska and Kansas B since In that time we have loaned [ With AIl His Taffy He Fuils to Produ. something over $10.000000, OF this amount | TcneseaniADH about s been paid, leaving about : s notaus $4,500,000 1y beoks at this tin | GRAND ISLAND, Neb., Oct, 2 owners of these loans are )—Governor Crounse through the middle and New England YATROR, S Sroun i JIn our correspondence with our peo- | a large audiene arten » \ave had nothing during the summer | bach's opera house tonight. Crouse had fhe and autumn to this time that would iny. | i i 1 AN hiadigh gate they taking any interest whateyer | Al address the evening and spoke an n our campalgn. In not a single instance | hour and @ half on republican principles have we had a line of a political NAture. | defincd (he principle of teotestion e oK I wish to emphasize the fact that investors | principle of protect lissec east, ®o far as our acquaintance goes, o | Bryan’s money policy and reviewed the work not seem to be aware that a campaign is | ©f Nebraska's congressional delegation, He in progress. We are burdened with letters [ was received with much greater applans making inquiry as to the extent of the fall. | than Majors, who spoke to his “fellow’ ure of the corn erop and the prebability of ; borrowers heltg able to meet their interost and was exeremely lMberal in tafy- payments. In my opinion the credit of the | 118 Young republicans and denouncing Rose- people of the state of Nebraska in the fu. The York Glee club and Pacific band ture will depend entirely upon their ability and Island furnished musie. A parade o pay prompily and not the political | of about 100 old soldiers was held e the complexion of their state govern e |/of hout 10070ld saldlers wis Teldi betoreth are pls s on kaod colinteral at us | . e ow @ T4 ever and find n good demand s for Congressman (ryan. for such securitics. Yours truly { R L AR W AN | NGS, Oct. 22.—~(Special Telegram.) At least one Omaha firm of loan agents | OM¢ of the largest crowds that ever gathered declines to become frightened at the almost | in this city to bear a public speaker con- cortain prospect that Judge Holcomb will be | gregated here today to listen to the oration the next governor of Nebraska. During the v : past few days they have been sending uur!’“{ Hony oW, v Buran, AL T80 M. Biyan large numbers of printed postal cards bear- “J“ escor! H‘m’ the : Hotel Bostwick to ing the following missive the gpera house, where ho, was grested with DED & SHLBY. LOANS remendous cheers. M against the e A railroads and denounced trylng to X OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 10, at the United States. ted thre In the course of vour bisiness you |quarters of an hour to the t and_ fol should hear of an inquiry for a 1oan of | jow e » with the money q hin clty property we will be glad to have the | B¢ said was t RiEt duetion of the Bl Ter B W aneiint B ug S g He wound up by giving McKeighan a to place loa this Kind at a low rate of 1 send-off. interest. Respectfully yours - — REED & SELBY. | Bryan on Nutional Issucs, REPUDIATED IN THE COUNTRY | FAIRBURY, Oct, 22.—(Speclal Tele. As further evidence that the reaction | gram.)—Hon. W. J. Bryan addressed a large agalnst the calamity war ery has set in the | audicnee here toda All parties turned out g mycsl R YOterin 8 S|t meae o . e o e e 0 OAKLAND, Neb., Oct. 22 -Oakland mer- | [W0 hours without any cessation of interest ghants tecelved an invoice of literature | HIs speech was a fair exposition of national Satunlay from the alleed Omaha Business | matters, treating of the Income tax, tariff Men's association. 1t will profit them |and bimetallism, His speech was received nothinw how:ver, “or « Very man in 0ur tows | with great satisfaction by all present, with seems o have mivde up his mind as to what | ) 93 fa f It blica is best. Many old republicans have bolted {h¢ exeeption of a few ultra-republicans wh at least the head of ‘the titket and come |are so thoroughly imbued with railroad views will vote against the whole of it. These | that they not endorse his views on the circulars will lose Omaha jobbers somo | maximum rate bill and foreclosure of Pacifie trade h for our merchants consider them | railroad mortgages an insult. 1t seems that the Dusiness Men's LU assoctation will lose more on “the 1| Tobe's Spirit on the March, Majors I8 elected than it Holcomb i | YORK, Neb., Oct. 22.—(Special Telegram.) The business men of Omaha are not alone [ _ oy s Alley spoke h tonigt In thelr efforts to save the credit of the state. | AATLADONS I8ES QKD 2D, the The Bee s in recelpt of an original peti- | “0Urt room to a good house. He had an tion circulated among the business men and | enthusiastic audience, and, although a demo farmers of the town of Alma lust week. The | crat it is thought that he did as much good heading reads: for the republican cause at this place as u..-ru;.il,-lqm.m business men and ¥ republican speaker this fall. He spok % of Harlan county, earnestly re- | strongly against the populists and fusionists quest all business men and Bankers, as well L A4 umar as laboring men, to vote for Judge Holcomb | Stirred Up State Otficlals, n,:”g. " wor I(u’suh u,.‘.»; ||{| l(Ih“~I te.| M'COOK, Neb., Oct (Special Tele- ho petition fs sign=d by the following | gram )—Hon. Sidney Ken ' names gram.)—Hon. Sidney J. Kent, the candida B. M. Simms, drug- G, H. Wescotg, | commissioner of pubile and build o T T A butcher. ings on the populist ticket ke here to 3, Bissell, car- D. A, ' Jandebear, | night. He abused the republican state o Denter by cksmith clals and particulatiy the state ireasurer and James Peppul, bhar- J. H. Eagan, shoe- | 81 an ) 19 ATeStUTED AR RN DA . retary of state, against whom he charged George Ormsby, ofls Seaton, drug- | COFruption of all kinds. ¥ Reed, 'dray- gist e e et lnie Allen's Flowery Speech, Russell Thomas, ment dealer | OSCEOLA, Neb., Oct. 22.—(Special Tele- hardware F. Barker, brick | Hon, W. V. Alle Charice Baddler, | mare gram)—Hon. W. V. Allen, junior senator of sign writer, J. H. Prettyman, | Nebraska, ¥poke to about 1,000 people today 3., Emersan, ator- biackamitn {in answer to Hon. E. J. Hainer's speech ney 8. Hramhall, har- ade & very sympathetic and flower. WATE Pures. boot Tk Bramh ar- | He made & v 1y sympathetic and Bowery ap and’shoe dealer. T Ashby, carpen. | V¢4 10 people to support Star Aimnl\‘uvr Biddell, g i A Cauglerty and Math Appluuted W. B Glbbons, dealer, v RUSHVILLE, Neb., Oct. 22.—(Spzolal Tele Dlastere T, J. Crum, attorney | gram.)—Hon. Matt Daugherty and Hon, T Marry Furse, printer, at V. LSauLiion, Al Deuerty Aid Hen. 7 H. L. Fox, baker. B, F.' Thompson, !+ Mithews of Fremont entertained a large B Sadaler, physi- teacher audience at the court house tonight. Their olan, speeches were well received, as was uttested In addition to the above names the petl-lb) hearty. applause. OMAHIA, TUESDAY MORNING, O OBER 23, 1894, and pol MKINLEY INVADES WILSON'S DISTRICT No Mention Made of the'Cangressman, but Differences in New York as Far from e o e e DISTURBED BY WILD RUMORS Dearth of Authentic News Tends to In- SINGLE COPY FIVE CF nent personage in Venice that condition is not very alarming. his father's | TEXT OF THE EMPEROR'S SONG | Wil Be Presented | Uis Bill Severely Criticised. First at n Matinee | Their Great Superiority Over the Chinese | Rettlement as Ever. | HUNTINGTON, W. Va., Oct. 22.—Governor crease Their Circulation, | N > it ) | Demonstrated at Every Step, | e | McKinley gave the traditional early bird a | | BERLIN, oOct On Sunday next a | tew points today. At 6 o'clock he was out b | matinee performance, the proceeds of which | DANGER OF LOSING SEVERAL CONGRESSMEN | on the plattorm of a private car bowing | CONDITION OF T{E CZAR UNCHANGED | V!l €0 (o the bullding fund of the Willlam [ALL OBSTACLES EASILY SWEPT ASIDE | B | acknowledgments to a goodly crowd of cheor- | | T memortal cathedral, will be given at th > | ing men at Mount Sterlingy Ky. There was | | Royal opera house. The most interesting Republicans Sere y Walting for Election no time for speech. At Ashland, near the ‘ Formal Betrothal of the Czarewiteh and | number on th program will be the “Song | Thelr Assnuit on Yashan at the Beginning i Duy, All Signs of Defectlon In the | giyiging line between West Virginia and | Princess Alix Will Take Place Wednes- | to Acgi the words and music of which [ Of the War and the Dificuities They | Party Having Disappeared—Hur- Kentucky, impromptu demonstrations were day—Orand Duke il L IERGEITEG L Experienced in Gotting There— | rison mads at less than thirty minutes' notice. 1ils Buccesson i}.\,.u‘ylu}‘ e A Al i L) . Istory Toid | A cannon was placed in position as the train stDarer composed the sonk Lhres Months ago | AR iSRG drew in, and several hundred men and | | while on his annual cruise along the coast | NEW YORK, oOct The —republican | woman hurrahed. The opening of the| LONDON, Oct. 22.—Today has produced |of Norway P Albert Becker arranged | SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22.—The Japanese | managers of the st ampalgn, while ac- | sohgols was deferred an hour and the puplls, | practically nothing to the point in regard to | the music for the orchestral accompaniment. | are making history—not only through thelr tively at work pushing the canvass in 41\1 waving gs and chattering wildly, came | the situation of the czar. In all the conti- | The text of the song is as foll wa troops in the fleld, and their fleet upon the [ the state, are unable to find any | trooping down to the train. A five-minute | nental capitals and in London there have S EON ) AEGIER, sea, but through their authors and pub- ing indications in thelr ranks, and|speech was m here and the t rolled | peon ateams af callers, officlals, dignitaries, | ' Whets Nice onal Nicans: . lishers, From T. Sone of the Takata Sho- in serene confidence are watch the “at- | on 10 Catlletsburs, Kyo ‘whigro |tiere Was | . jieiastionl and Humble people at the Rus- | In rosy dawn of morning, kal, which supplics arms and munitions of tempt t 1 t rles to ad- | Aother noisy cannon, Several hundred men SRLISS | The viking host doth pray t6 186 MikkG, ol " npts of their democratic adversarie | made a firm demand for a speech, which was | 8lan embassy these, however, little in- | | war to the Mikado, who is now In San Fran- Just and harm the factional differences | granted. Republicans of Huntington met | format was vouchsafed, and that little [ Grim is the feud secking | cisco, have been obtained three volumes of Wwith which they are beset on all sides, and | Governor McKinley with a band and a pro- | consisted of forebodings Prayers and | .”"‘ il ’“"K“\‘ T awt i Biflows, | war history, put In Japanese, by the clally in this city. Ex-President Harri-| cession escorted him to the hotel. He was [ oo (F B 000 B o om St | Lead us to glorious fray, 0" | Hakjubun-Kan Publishin pany of Toklo. it Vi i the week to| €Scorted from Ashland, Ky., by a reception | 7% = L | Mr. Sone 15 on his way to London and Ber- Il arrive here later In the week to]conmitiee from Huntington, headed by Mr. | Petersburg to Viadivostock, from Rome 0| yupon Njek, g chl: Aot mvedhen | A : 4 attend to rome private business, and while | f\ L. Doolittle, and upon his arrival at tho | Buenos Ayres. The wilderumors reported | When faiis this thisty ah ‘ in. He s on private business, but arms 2 is in the city It is Chairman Hackett's | hotel spent the morning receiving callors yesterday from St. Petersburg were repeated Thy flaming eye may guard us; | 4nd munitions of war are to be obtained in [intention o arrange, i posible, o’ mam- || Several thousand were in the audience that | ioday in still wilder forms. From Moscow | SRR LI oL se capltals 10th meeting at which the ex-president will | yeitel 1o, Governor Meiuiey as o $pOKE | ooq ' report that there are people there | As Evithiof on Bilido Following the story of the Corean rebellion | whdth: 4" ok g e e e e e e 0 eIy ke Wbt hacan || A AN Bt T wave, |1m the sending of Chinceo and Jupaness mate, Mr. Morton, now the republican candi- |Ohio river brought in excursionists No [ the throne, and that tha czar, in order to | And us, thy sons, we crave, | troops Into the hermitdom, is the following speclal reference was made to Congressman el hin do s prd 1 b ne- | account of the land battle date for governor, will be present | 81 compel him to do so, has ordered his imme- | Sheh TR AHe tart | Wilson, cont 0" SONBFRT BXDIOLA L0 I hen in the ba fury, shan was not the first blo ator Hill spoke at Yonkers tontght. | ilonen' e fariy Tak ot whieh o o g | dlate marriage to Princess Alix. The Mos- | AR ‘Btee) on at Hdn b n ARG el Reatibiocdnimeaticl s . Rt J 1€ | covites fe: th ghould e rumors prove Dene dea stroke, of e nations. Spears and swords "] He will speak at Brooklyn tomorrow after-|author was vigorously assalied. The gover-|COVites fear that should the rum Prove:| Id foemen meet thelr death stroke, | °of L pears and 1s were " true, they will have to face the gravest peril alkyries they cling drap with coolie g before that san- noon and at New York and this vieinity |hor frankly ctated that there were unques- | [R%, | While the people crowd the| . wilhisy Feagel frst real NEntiofliy until Friday, when he will return to the | tionably mistakes in the tarift law of 1890, | PUVILIS | NBUeE NG DO CTGWR NS Then may our song be wafted | L 8 st real fight of the but insisted they were all on the side of b A Through clash of swords to sea; | war was at Anjo Ferry, on July 20. Captain nterior of the state. A great deal Wil [ ayiar The Wilson | e onf | rumor has bred give fervor to the petitions. o honor thee, O mighty God 3 n law' is found to con LRkl ottt seiiite arHi Fatere . U God, Matzsaki and Captain Tokloyama were n the result of his visit and the | tain more than 600 errors, but mot one of [, ThC Cologne Gazette prints & St beters Jke far off storms so frec Killed The Japan lecMad to attack o has W h te a ocal | them is in the interest of Amer! They | Dur gram stating the ¢ as gi ) e 3 Japanese decided to atta h with t el QoSal |t e flate - T A RE s ‘“"[_ ders for a settlement of the succession to th WOUNDED JAPS AT CHEMULPO, the Chinese by night, but only the officers leaders. In so far as the W York and e e (A inperfal council. He has advissd that Grand et knew the orders. The soldiers wore or- Brocklyn candidates for congress and assem- | CHARLESTON, W. Va., Oct. 22 —After '_"”j"' ';v' “. ym\lc’mwrl sor v.»\lmld‘w A€ | Hundreds of Soldlers . There and at Other |dered to prepare for service and rest on thelr bly are concerned, the situation is very criti- | the afterr i5e4thealS GOSN MR oy || SOl of IR HRSU e BEELARIR Polnts—Peaco Negotlations |arms. The night of the 28th had begun and cal, with county democracy candidates op- [ and party were taken to Charleston on the ! (o™ lent"to take the oath as heir pre.| CHEMULPO, Oct A detachment of | e clouds covered the skies and the dark- posing the Tammany congressional and as- | Chesapeake &L, Ohlo fast train. The party | gumpiive to the throne | 1,800 wounded Japanese has arrived here and | ness was like a wall sembly candidates In this city, and Shepard [ jyoit Hel At the depot by “"‘}";’ “|" the o Berliner Tageblatt published a tele- | there is a large number of wounded at Seoul At midn'ght the Japanese force was or . TR L oG t 7 Mok ’ hotel amid | gram from Livadia asserting the betrothal | In addition, 1,200 wounded Japanese hav ered to advance to the attack Absolute candidates running against the regular nom- | great enthusiasm le cevening meeting > ! N 3 B meeting | of the czarewitch and Princess Alix will| peen sent to Jay P llence was enforced. At 12:30 the army. Wl the Brookiyn districts, save thai|was held In the large opera house, which | formally ocour tomorrow and that the mar - Japan. At Ping Yang there | noyed, the left wing leading, When neag represented by Mr. Coombs. —There are|was packed with.3,000 enthusiasts. Hun- | rlage will be celebrated \Wednesday. This|8T¢ 1,200 wounded Chincse 1n the |the Chinese a line of battle was formed sod nine congressional districts in this city and | dreds were unable to gain admission. hastening of the ceremony fs said o be Qua | hospitals. The rebellious Tong Hals | the Tight wing began the engagement. The five in Brooklyn opposition of the The appearance of Governor McKinley on|to the rule of the Romanoff’s requiring any | of Southern Corea are restless and | Commander of the right wing was Captain unty democracy candidates jeopardizes "““un stage was the signal for a great demon- | heir apparent to marry before ascending the | only the fact that they are not provided with | Matzsaki 0 point of his d.vision left elect of from one to four Tammany can-|stration. His speech was a strong plea for | throne, and to proclaim his successor. On | arms preve them from breaking out into | S0¢ and within a half mile crossed a river didates In this city, and the Shepardites | protective tariff principles. = He spoke about | this account the proclamation of Grand Duke | revolt and moving upon Seoul, for which, | knee deep, and after a like interval waded endanger four in the tricts in Brooklyn. lan hour and a half, and was followed by | Michael as the ultimate helr apparent is|by the way, many of them have ted. | another stream, shouller decp and soft at As the margin by which the mocrat ex-Secretary Elkins of West Virginla. ‘L‘ nerally expected Another rule in corn Four hundred Japanese soldiers have been | !he bottom, twenty-five feet wide, ov which managers hope to carry the next house of S il g tion with the accession requires that when [ stationed at the king's palace at Seou), | 'Mere had been a fine bridge, which the representatives Is very narrow, the situa- FIGHTING FOR A NOWINATION, | the oath of alleglance to a now czar Is ad- | owing 0 the fast ther the Lincre brothee s | Chinese in rotreating had half destfoyed, tion i regarded as extremely grave at demo- S ‘wn stered to the troops and officials, an ¢ | believed to be leagued with the g Hais. | ‘‘Beyond the river the encmy had cratic headquarters, — All cfforts heretofore | police Board in New York o Tie on the Le- | Of fldelity to the heir apparent must 'be taken | The Chineso ara mobilizing a force at Kiren | SMP. but had not felt secure and the mady towards harmonizing differences 1o Faticy ot s NoAdbatian at the same time, and are also gathering a strong force at | Ul Sentrics gave the alarm, when the vent the possibility of republicans slipping | Npw YORK, O 29.—Pol | BULLETIN| SATISFACTORY. Pow Ting Fu. | nese were scen some distance away 1 through demoeratic divisions have thus [ (o5 ““' ":'MH“ ‘;"“ : _”"" The Standard’s Petersburg eorrespon- | . The son of the king of Corea left here on ',"“ W gave the alarm by shouting The far proved ineffectual | ) 3 7 congrensinl gisteict ooou- | . The Bindarda Ok, bteesbur e | October 15 s a special envoy to the mikado | JAPAnese soldiery would not denied, but nator Faulkner, chairman of the demo- | Pled the attention of the pallce commission Usfuctory. natare 88 the former emee |In order, it is supposed, to return the visit |TUshed eagerly 'into fighting distance and cratle congressional’ committee, Will be here fers today, sitting as a board of review (0| Evarvbody s surprised that no tion fs | Of the Marquis Slouoyo of the Japanese ¢ plled thelr rifles with skiliful and deadly again tomorrow to witness the result of the | pass upon the regularity of two conventions. | made of the pulse or fe S short, | The King's sord took him a quantity of effect y present eff Richard Croker and Perry |y % e 4 ity made of the pulse or femperature; inshort, | o ¢ 1! ¥ | “The old feud with China was remembered, Bl et Rlotand COtiRE aup Sparty hen, tw rs ago, Timothy J. Campbell | there is no clue as to what the disease M Tat s 1 and every soldier of Japan fought as though. Spain, wero at the demoeratic headausrters | W08 Eiven the Tammany gomination in this | from which the czar s sullering. Medical | MANY lettors to Buropeans In Carea have |ho'wag alone 1o answer for (he rebuke (o the regarding this question. Senator Hill, Mr. | district, it was with the wnderstanding that [Men are unable to form any conclusion as | g tp S8CIT L HE SPEiese AUHIPNEES, | T | encroachment of the Chincse empire. — The Croker and other leaders were said to be | at the end of his term he ghould step grace. | 0 the premis It I8 rumored that an | oiish cons | Japanese were few, but they were brave, and advising & pollcy of concession, but Lieuten fe and permit Henry C M ner. a | operation is contemplated b b GRS S i l‘y\h- vast horde of Chinese 1 coolies met ant Governor Sheehan said this evening that pwery theater manager with political as. | Das [t that the malady is expected to reach | | N SCuECo Y thatinugntAtISHN IS Basotil L fore the onslaught Hardly ons of the no basis of agreement had yet been reached. | pirations, to succeed to the plac When |8 crisls within the next day or two, but as |, ob “ahice iy Tt ke FoNIDEoas el hincse forces made a fair resistance, and Lieutenant Governor Sheehan late this | the time came, however, Campbell repented |t0 What the operation or malardy are, even | .\ gooh g the petty band of Japanese swept over the afternoon gave out an interview in reply 1o | of his agreement and inststed upon just one | the best informed are ignorant. | LONDON, Oct Inquirles made at the | Nel: maiming and_killing in the flush of the charges of colonization of votes by the (term more in congress. The Tammany | The OMcial Gazette announces that Prin- | quinotXWN: Dele 82 —Inauiries made at the | victorious effort. The Japanese knew they republicans in which he makes counter | managers, lhowever, were inexorable, and | cess Alix arrived at Livadia this afternoon, 1 Have 0o nows o the meblen. i aeht | were gUing up to Yashan. - It was dark, the chirges against them. “David Martin of | Miner was put in nomination, ‘Then Camp- | but does not publish a word about the mar- | do not belleve I probable that such | ooy UikROWN to the assaulting party, Pennsylvania,” he said, “is a constant visi-| bell rallied his Bowery cobagtuency and had | riage. “From what I can learn, no mar- | negotiations would be eondneted at Saoul [0 and snsrahes ware Around, inky wiileh tor at the republican state headquarters. | himself nomihated by petitign, and subse,|.riage is likely, but there will be a species i e « 2 the soldiers sank, and some were drowned, Personally I desire to say Mothing against | quently by d so-called. republican conven- | of foFma) batroftials™ whith wil' receive the f Koumania s the Drofbond. Captain Tokioyama and thirty of his men Mr. Martin and would not like to charge him | tlon, which the republicans of the district | benediction of the czar, and which, under the | PARIS, Oct, ¢ he Figaro makes the | TCCURE, that fato like brave men and Japa~ with participation in this business, but I allege was Irregular. The protesting re- | circumstances, will effectually bind (hl‘rzu‘u-lmm, iRt A ADIAE heaary [ nese Those whe were not mired down or will say that if the same proof Is obtained | publicans had a convention, at which John | witch and theé princess until there can be & ‘ narkadle assertion that Rou- | drowned, hurried forward, carrying all before against him this year that we obtained in | (or Johnny) Simpson was nominated. The | wedding ceremony with the pomp befitting | Mania has joined the triple alliance, com- | them, until a troop of Chinese cavalry was 1862, 1 will not be the man this time to stop | question as to which of these conventions | the wunidn | posed of Austria, Italy and Germany, and d encountered Captain ~ Mutzsaki tried to | the execution of the warrant. —Democrats [ Was regular was submitted to and argued A MQispatch to the Times from Peters- | Clares that the visit of the king of Servia | fOrc2 a Way through these troops. He drew cannot be too strongly urged to be on guard | before the Board of Police Commissioners to- | burg says that baeides the offering of prayer |0 Vienna and Berlin was in contemplation | NS sword and was in the lead when a buliet for this sort of work. | day. The Tammany members of the board | for the recovery of the czar all the |°f & still further change in the dreibund. ,M-r\'ull him in l'll- rlug)..‘ He did not lose At democratic headquarters today it was | supported the claim of Stmpson to be the | churches, the Holy synod has ordered that T = | heart, but using his sword as a probe. he ex- wnounced that Phillip Wissig, Tammany |8imon-pure publican candidate, while the ‘rl::u_ .I“:.Ww 1 [:r \fHodsl | f\lu Strickon With Paralysis, | tracted the bullet and rushed on in the fight- | democratic candidate for the assembly, had | republican members of the board held to the | the army and navy and on board squadron LONDON, Oct ugenee Oudin, the | ing. Another ball pierced his head. He omplied with the mayoralty —candidate, | proposition that Campbell’s nomination was | Arehbishop Maghileff has ordered prayers in | $IN8er, has been stricken with paraly cried out and fell dead under the hoofs of rant's, demand that retire from the | regula As the board is equally divided |all the Catholic churches. i | R » horse ticket, Charles (Silver Dollar) Smith, the | the question will probably have to be passed | princess Mestchtersky's Citizen is the first | IRON WORKERS CONFER, His soldiers went to avenge him, and aldermanic nominee to whom also Grant | upon by the courts { nowwnaper Lyl Sl dni i % I neither men nor horses, but slaugh- took exceptions, says he will not withdraw. | g = — flicted on the press by the censor concerning | EOTt to Get the Different Branches ot the | 1 aliks, until twenty Chinese had been A conference of democrallc managers will FEX SIMERONION@ROAIoKETS S8 |8 e ke ottt ceirk tl Industry Together. n down. Fighting began at § a. m be held today to consider the situation in A et PADEE giver &' Eraphic an»‘ INDIAN AT oct One hundreq | 404 continued for thirty minutes before the | those congressional distriets of New York i Judge Hazen Makes a Docislon Which Win [ {00 et BEPSE & Ve pathetic service of [ and fifteen thousand Iron workers of the | G0 Of Chinese disappeared before the sol- | City and Brooklyn in which there are two | Have an Important Efect. | prayer within the anclent walls of the cathe- | United States have sent delegates to the | | oY, 0f the Mikado. When the command | democratic candidates. Senator Faulkner of | TOPEKA, Oct. 22.—Jerry Simpson will go | qea] ottt hiithe s Keemnll = BR o0 1°| had ben gathered, after the skirmish, it i el 4 | Y Simps 0 |dral of the Assumption In the Kremlin at | confercnce which began tolay at English's | iarted 9 West Virginia,chairman of the congressional | on the demoeratic 2 LR arted on toward Yashan, and marched In [ campaten® commitiee, and Senator 1, | on the demoeratic ticket s well as on the |Moscow. It'adds these prayers will be con- | hotel. Various branches of the fron indus. | peaca unth July 39, whos the eararched in Fe by e s L L xpecte | Populist ticket to be voted next month nj| L 4 until God listens to the Muscovite | iry are represented. Among the organiza- [left wing, commanded by General Oshim fto attend. the Seventh congressional diatrict, and there | SUBPHcatjons. | tions which have commissioners at the con- | went up against the right wing of the Chie | | The Times Vienna correspondent telegraphs = o =i p 0 N | COLONEL STRONG ACCEPTS. will be no initiative and referendum ticket | (pac it fs announced from Sofia that no ape- | forence (i I',':',, machiniels, Chg kel 1“}’: A7y, which was entronchod In the Hort | Colonel Strong was this afternoon waited | uUnder any name whatever, | cial services have been held there for the | smiths, the moulders, the metal polienees | ond et T frod on the e upon by the notification committce of the | This is the opinion of Judge Hazen of Y of the czar. = The clergy appear to | and the “sheet iron ' workers. About ten | Bullets same lie flosepd, With small arme, New York state democracy and wa { (e dintriot o e been instructed from headquarters. men will come as delegates. Those who | a ce floating stars, covering the AL LG o Iy | the district court today. and it amounts to a | NAYE DE i T : nave nrrived fre dames O'Connel af RyC | 8K%s and making the noise ‘Shen Shen.’ ndered the nomination for mayor by that | decision as well as an opinion, as the sec.| The Times has a dispatch from Paris | have afrived are James O'Conng Xeh- | Both parties fought very hard, The Japans oreanization. =~ George Green, chalrman of | retary of state must send out the forms | StAin& that Baron von Mohrenheim, Russia | WU Wilkes of Pitisburg. Tt Ui | riEht wing coming from the Anfo f iy ate that organization, was spokesman. In repre-| for (he tickets tonas s the last ons | ambassador to France, this evening received AR A B R Rt [ S 8. Anjo. forry Sl You are a republican, we are democrats. | Jongth, but the substance of It fs. “No|improvement in the condition of the czar. |pose of the kmthering of the delcgates, hald | yine of the brties s b e e But you enter this fight not a artis Y5t b i Lisasl) ilobe ernoo: publishes | one of them, is to bring the iron workers 3 i Ll ot the leader, but ah the cChamplon of all ‘nonent | Lidiction” the beard ol reviewers uction |, U, Clobe tbia - afternoan, | publiches | ot of, thetm, s Lo brin the Iron, workct | cager ‘scldlers, Johica wih the ot of . | citizens under whatever flag they march | fyo8 final - Judge Hazen, however, goes into | {0 00T U4 o baa attack of | If the general organization can be effected | KeUrY. were like the noise when the moun- | against the hordes of corruption, mo matter ,”’“ merits of the case and sustaing the hysteria yesterday. The dispatch adds that | the workers will ‘be benefited and their and hills are rolled together and de- under what party they masquerade iard, 5 her majesty never leaves the sick room of | *'rénEth increased. e apancas Iatiliv b e o To religious bigotry unde ater guls T and th he hardly be induced 5 " X ) e Tef g be 0 use ""To religlous bigotry under whatever guis Women Kegistered in Bulk. the czar and that she can hardly be induced OLD BUILDING COLLAPSES. field plece and 41d not Once fail o LIt the you are and always have been an avowed | DENVE . to take any repose. It is reported that 3 DENVER, Oct. 22—The' registration of Yy rey — fort of the Chinese, who criecd £0 much and open toe. For this we honor you. To | the czarina will lose her reason if the anx- | s e much that [the widest rersonal iberty under ihe la’ | YOmen in this city in alibost as large as | Ne €22 Drotracted for any considerable time, | >'* Men Buried Gencath the Debris aund |the assailants knéw great exccution was you are and always have been the fafthful, | that of men. The total number of mames| A gispatch from Warsaw says It s b -| g1 P Rerousix Ln Jured, :;‘ o ,“',‘.”“ ,Ab-the same time the Chinese fearless friend; for this, too, we honor and | entered on the books, which are now closed, | lieved in that city that the disease from | ST: PAL Oat. The building on | o & REARY Shapon ::.“l.w» JInpribep) but. admira you. is 61,400, The registration this county | which the czar Is suffering originated from | Bridke square bemg demolished by the |4 net kiow how to shoot and some shots Colonel ‘Strong. in accepting the nomina- | Will exceed 70.000. Shon'd 70 per cent of | the railroad accident near Borki in October, | Pabst Brewing company for the erection of | $&76 Short, while others = passed beyond. tion, said the cltizens of New York for the | thess 1cgistered vote the vote cast atb the | 1858, when the imperial train was wrecked | the ™ warehouse, fell shortly after g| cioke SHaly velled the earth and the Japas last six years have been governed by a cor- | next election will be considerably more than | while his majesty was returning from the | O'ciock this afterncon. Six men were buried | ShLE ayonets ran into the fort Ix b v I DL d a under the debris, fivé of whom 'h been | and began to pierce their enemies, who could rupt ring of conspiralors that had brought | tWice as great as it was two years when | Crimea to St. Petersburg, killing twenty- | {uken out badly Injured, one pon tally, | not fight such ficrce foes, and fled i (U[lm B unst mil pal govern L-wrl v)\', ugh- | the total vote was 22,975. one people and \m.xll‘lmu thirty »»],I,,n.qw e sixth b still ur apile of bricks, plas: [ was well fortified, but the Japanese reduced | ou An he exposition made by the ™ e 12 among whon as e czd 2 The czar | ter anc abers and can be heard groaning by e fa d 2 1 A i L S - a suffered severe Co E N h | the flre [ reckage. | | second line of entrenchments. The Chinese committee has awakened the good people TOPEKA, Kan. ( A telegram from | gjjes of the body, which may have caused | 'tcovered from the ruins are Milllam | rought hard and held their ) 4 ex-Speaker T . 9 \alen Ire elso cob Schm ught hard and held their ground, but were the city, regardless of party affiliations, to o | €-Speaker T. B. Reed recelved today, in-| some futernal injury, s he has never | \Whalen. Andrew Nelwon, Jic b o SCRmIAL | forced: back toward Yashan. Toward this the | determined effort to eradigate «orruption. | forms the republican committee that he will [ been quite well s It Was| “Phe building was' one of St. Paul's his- | Japanese —troops with General Oshima [ want to xay that my convictions are | ot be able to speak in Kansas this campaign. ['reported at the time of this accldent that it| torical structures, located on the bluff at | proceeded and destroy 1 all the lines be- clear that all oath-bound political organiza- | e had been booked for speeches in half a | was due to defective rails, but the popular | Bridge square |tween them. The Japanese lost six officers tions a €0 ntrary to the spirit of our in lozen points in t stae. belief is that the wreck was used by nihil- | - S— killed and wound and thirty-two soldiers stitutions that I do not belleve any political 2 P sts. The car in which the czar and the| SANFORD BALDWIN'S CRIME. killed and drowned. The Chinese loss was party can continue to exist when in one of | Kyle tiefonds,krie Wool, | imperial family were traveling at the time about 500. When Salkan was destroyed its cardinal principles it is opposed to| HURON D, Oct. 2 —Senator Kyle | was constructed of steel, and to this fact w o s with 1118 Wife, Kills Her, and Then | the Chinese ran away from Yashan and left frecdom of thought and the worship of God | sPoke to a large audience at the court house | due the escape from death of Alexander and | « miits Sulelde. [all their equipments and munitions of war, | according to the dictates of oue's own con-|in Huron this afternaon.’ Much of his talk | bis traveling companions HANNIBAL, Mo., Oct. 22.—Sanford Bald- | Eight cannon, sixty flags, provisions and ARiRn0,; o———— | was given to proving himsell right in voting | The Daily News as il 1],- m its Vie nna | win m\lxd-'m’l hia wife In this city early this | ammunition wiere captured. n Y’mhnn. R .K0ADD, SE ‘ | for free wool, which the predicted would | Correspond “A clpher telegr eccelved | morning and then killed himself. ~ The | riumphant arch was erected two miles ADDAKIRES AN HAMILEUN OLUIE| S0 ok o in iriod here from Russla yesterday decl t was | weapon 1 was & double-barreled shot- | from the south gate of Scoul and (he Japa- | . — & impossible to send news except by letter | gun. Hoe was 50 years of age and ‘e | Nese army was received there in the presence [#ori.e igk Pammisions te 4'-"*""“‘ Allison in Sonsr Dakotu. ASrres the trontlar (A VISAOA ORIT ROSELS | B Bt had Dt af 84¢ and bie WG | op Cl myrind 0f Corsans, whe nesbsred & et SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., Oct. 22.—(Special |the *czar’s illness Is the consequence of | ynfon, last August, the woman having f of beef and wine for the soldicr, | CHICAGO, Oct Thomas B. Reed w Telegram.)—A republican vally was held here | arsenical polsoning. children, one “of ‘Whom Ialdwin did not [ On Augu 3 a hundred Chinese soldiers tonight the honored guest at the banquet at | tonight. After a torc hlight . procession na The Paris correspondent of the Daily News rvk“ Quarr Ne.Qver this one were frequent u“wh““'\‘ |"\.lmg stopped to loot the town of the annual banguet of the Hamilton club, | tor Allison of lows discredits the report that the czarewitch has | Haldwin yesterday, in one of his outbursts, | Chin Sen, Corea urt of a Jupanese army | Allison of Towa addréssed the main meet A threatened his wife's life She, much er corps, five In number, were work | which is one of the leading republican organ- | 108 and Hon. W. B. Sterling of Huron the jsencunded fhe Auccesson. b\ none e | alarmed, went with hér ‘ehildren’ to" the | constriiction of n telograph 1ne, and izations of Chicago. The banquet was at- | OVerflow meeting, ees true,” it s added, hat the czar's | ho f a neighbor. This morning she re- | when they saw the dalis [eecasa's b e (0 RGHe i brothers, who now have been summoned to | turned al the quarrel was renewed and | e, 1eY, $av the vandallsm of the hundeed ended by a majority of the more prominent Tolior Jnipeseny e e snmes, ivadia, came to France so as to be out of | the tragedy 'followed. mnese. ‘the englncers drew thelr swords | Tepublicans of the city, many guests from [ PUEBLO, Oct. 2.+F. B, Hegwer, state|the way during a possible crisis about the | —— ana went right among the Chiness and fought ther cities also belng present. Tt was fully | boiler Inspector, was bopsll pver to the (is. | order in which the present succession should | John Jumes Howard's Case. et et e D ,”', he. bl 11 o'clock when Mr. Arthur Dixon, the pres- | trict court today by Jystoe ey to an. | be transmitted.” | NEW YORK, Oct. 22.—The examination in | tectors and gave the engineers the liberty of Ident of the club, In a neat talk Introduced | swer to the charge of Baying Issued a cer.| From St. Petersburg the News hears The | the case of John James Howard, Levi P.|the town." ‘l"" sy 'i"""l"’ the evening “'mr\ws to ad- | tificite of examination of the Pueblo Gas |latest advices from Livadia are that despite | Morton's employe, who was ordered sen ‘ i dress the club on the subject of Al der | company’s boilers withqut even the fact he Is out of bed the czar's case 18| back to England, was continued today be Con i Humiiton. looked at them. Thera hre sev hopeless, The doctors have discovered he has | fore a .fl\'“‘l oand of ing e '\, '(‘.,; CHICAGO, Oct 1"‘ "'f"'"l‘l Mr. Reed delivered a glowing eulogium on | CATEes against T4 in wnid that at one | "CUICE 10 (e last ton days he has lost | the purpose e Bilis Tsiahd. Dr. Senier. | oo oo ay' at the the m whom he styled the father of ths | PI4ce he said to the forgman: “If the boiler | & CAT . A | commissioner of immigration, sald Prentiss aped club, the leading Catholic org | Anerican system of protection, and declar g | Suits you it suits me'" amd dssued a certifi- | Lwenty-three pounds Tie sxcilament Hars | €. Dodge of Burlington, Vi, ‘who made the | 124tion of the west, was the occasion of a [ ke prospersty of the ‘repubiia wand declared | cate without exgmining the: bolier. and in Moscow Iy indescribable X | arrest, was the only witness examined and | briliant banquet tonight, which about fidelity with which the people of th * s # 1l CZAR SLEPT FIVE HOURS. his testimony was practically the same that uests sat dowr The club bullding was fidelity with which the pecple of this country Flood Jury Could Not Agree, o R e un | he gave before Judge Lacomb. Inst week: | beantifully decorated win g fi ‘ni had followed the principles laid down by SAN FRANC 5 o ST. PETERSBURG, Oct The bulletin 4 L e ek, ! p Ith flags of all na- . Y | SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, The jury be No other witnesses will be examined. Thé | tions. The speakers were: Arcehbishop Fee | Hamilton, and that the financial troubls | g ). 1ssued tonight by the physician in attend- | 30 Ohe Wltnesses will be examl Sy v ¢ e Al D - | 8 | fore whom John W. Flood was tried for th saye His majesty slept ; omory ) he | han of Chlcago, Hon. T. 1. Tarstey of De. Which of late had come over the country had | the embezzlement of S164000 of (he fund ance on the cear, say His ma PL| testimony sent to_ Becretary Carlisle, to- | troit, President Harper of the Chicago unie arisen because the nation had turned its back ent of L0 of the funds of | five hours intermittently. He rose this morn- | g with Dr. Senle ecommendation. | versity, Judge Thomas A. Moran, Rev. J. J for a time on the rules which Hamilton had | {he bamehiie Kelly bank while employed as | jng as usual, His appetite has lessencd. [ The decision wili rext entirely with the sec: | Agnew and others. The featnre of the ooe evolved for the commercial prosperity of his | (iechirked (hie mornie Cpieres and was | is strength s not incre retary of the treasury | caslon was the notable address by Con- country, The upeaker closed With cn earn- | nine for conviction and threedor acquittal, | ., Frincess Alix arrived at Livadia tonight. | e — | ressman Tarsney, taking advanced grounds | est appeal to his heazers to work for two "4 | The czarina accompanied her to the chapel | Desperate Fight in Jall n the subject of church a Blute things, honest elections and good governm.nt Shot Himself wna His Child | of the castle, where both prayed carnestly | TAMLEQUAH, L T., Oct. 22.—A desperate ————— —— in the chief cities of the country, Mr. Reed’'s | CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Oct John | that the life of the czar be spared @ oceurred here In the jail building be- | MBoth Held for Murder. speeech was followed by an address by A, B. | Walds, an old resident of Cambridge City, | ¢%arina looked careworn, but she walked | \woon"a)i Levy, Chule Starr and Hob Dal.| ALLEGAN, Mich, Oct. 22.-Mrs. Ira Hurd Cummings of lowa and by a number of local | shot himself und his 3-year-old son today | ¥1HoUL assistance. All statements that her | (o, “any of whom are under sentence of death, | A0d O. W. Ludlow were both held for trial speakers, . SR et T Pinis baotbie ta w““\ uu.-.‘ul |\.:~ :,. 1'. stricken with paralysis | y e\ ot possession of a ragor and made up tor the murder of Mrs. Hurd's huse Benjumin Harr a8 the cause In each fheteMullet || ST ARURIERT WS JAM. issault on the other prisoners, cutting The fustice remurked that the - Hamiamia Haysiea's Nea MR | HEriEd the Whdomen. “hh Nadkani andiet | " PARIS, Ocl. 22.—The Galignani Messenger | Btarr faghily. When he wits Kecked ser Gt Ak aironaly NDIANAPOLIS l 22.—Bx-President | have heen separated for two weeks saye Grand Duke Vladimir, brother of the | less by Dalton, who used a chair, fracturing | (he palr. ol re visibly affected Benjamin Harrison will not start for New | - - czar, telegraphed the following message Levy kull and otherwise injuring him York' todar as has: heen sia He will Eloped With Auother Man's Wif, Livadia this afternoon During the %0 he cannot recover Fiy oo gy : e CHICAGO, Oct. 22.-Mrs. € F., Hartley, | itWo days there has be an amelioration e -— . wiom - e po, Hkely, howsver. g (o that olty the latter| wiogooSey Tt CiCm BRTRINIE R ave SEAFEIOY. 1 {0 the ‘condition of his majesty, His con:| Cleyslund Wil Leave Grazr Oabies Toders WICHITA, Kan,, vernor Law part of the present week. It was authorita- y P ‘ lon Is always very grav BUZZARD'S BAY, Oct President Alling I8 confined ¢ bed here snd Sy tively given out at Mr. Harrison's home this | !h¢ Bolice today that her husband b, 3 ¥ K Limg A - sident and | o conpelled to cancel some of his cams o ey e i A B RN eloped with the wife of Vietor D. Mudge, a e papers publish optimistic reports con- | Mrs, (1) And will leave Gray Gables at 8| pajgn dates. His condition {5 not thought to | N ey 10 cast was to be one of | prominent attorney. ‘fhe whereabouts of | cerning the czar. The Journal des Debats | o'clock tomorrow by special train for W be serfous and he expects to be up again in priva ness. He will make no specchies | the couple were unknown to Mrs. Hartley | says the czarewitch telegraphed to & promi ston | & counle of duys,

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