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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. [ —— — —— — - ESTABL v 19, 1871, OMAIIA, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 30, 1900, SINGLE COPY FIVE CEN'TS. L()NG WAIT FOR NEWS |oisapprove kaisr's woros )llNlSTERS_ ARE HOSTAGES| PEKIN Wofirsn—fiuwsiucioz CODY'SSHOW TRAINWRECKED| CONDITION 0F THE WEATHER KILLS KING OF ”ALY Pope Leo XIII Hends a Protest of Will Kill Themselves Rather Than Forecast for Nebraska Europeans Against the Em- Fall Alive Inte Hands Falr; Warmer; Southerly Winds. ror Injunction, i o8 i i f f isi Temperat € Omnhn Yeat Aolkut Diy of Sllios rom ity Chiases peror's Savage In on Edict Urges That Viceroys and Governors o1 Buser. One Killed and Many Injured in Colligion R LW et b Ospital Passed. (Copyright, 1900, by Prows |-u|-n~mul4' Negotiate for Peace, CHICAGO, 111, July 20.—Mrs. M. & Wood Near Detroit, . o Assassin Shoots Down Humbert in & —— LONDON, July (New York World ward of Evanston, when ehe wrote the last -4 y Orowded Thoroughfare, blegram—S8pecial Telegram.)—The Kkalser's OEVELOPMENTS EXPECTED ANY MOMENT | .70, 10%ier dbeechcaused the vops to TOLD TO RESIST FOREIGNERS' ADVANCE | st armet wich o fivesnor reoover '3 [TRAIN CRASHES INTO SLEEPING COACH an enter a protest to the powers against a war o — was her intention, aces o the letter, —_— . of extermination and vengeance being pros It the Dend In. R0 (WRRLion DOTIETER Sers i 4 BULLET PIERCES HIS MAJESTY'S HEART y orced on Top of Car an « — OBl ook ¢ A couted against the Chinese. Already the hat L1 Hung Chang 18 |attacked to use the first three cariridges Bt bR R flg A ‘ 5 ashington Officials Look for Answer to | German semi-official papers are endeavoring Displenss on the Askalifeg,ORINesy. ~Thed, & with . i ; “ 2 g to divert from the kalser's words their plain » Command what other defenders were doing the Box- O Falls in His Carriage and Dies Almost meaning. The government will be asked to Hurry Forward, ers were not repulsed, she had decided to JEYEL BEPUSIed (U RETOVS CUBANS APPRGVE: . DECREE Tnmediately, | = — the Numerous Inquiries, in the House of Com tomorrow whether Kill her daughter, lone, with one of the —_— in event the Dritish force happens to be remaining bullets and shoot herselt with | DETROIT, Mich., July 20.—Section one of | PAPCER of fetund Ab SPIES GOING FOKWARD FROM TIEN TSIN | acting under command of superior German the Buffalo Bill's wild west show train sl L rtional THREE SHOTS ARE FIRED BY MURDERER — officers the kaiser's Injunctions to refuse b il te ob suffered a severe collision near Milwaukee 3 . & . quarters to Chinese will te obeyed by British | yesterday, cays This pices of news was contained in the | Junction shortly before daylight today, re-| HAVANA, July 2018 T8bscree calling Minister Wu is 8till Confident That the | co11jers The Kalser's words are considered |~ “A new imperial edict promulgated this |letter written by Mrs. Woodward on June | culting in the smashing of a show employes’ | the constitutional conveddgZnnd providing Populace is Restrained with Difficulty from Legationers Are Alive, to deprive Germany of her chance of pro- evening urgently urges all viceroys and |11, last, after she and her daughter had |gleeping car containing some forty sleeping | for the election of delegalts meets with Seeki 1 viding a commander-in-chief, which before | provincial governors to endeavor to nego- | made a futile attempt to escupe from Pekin. | inmates. One of the latter s dead and nine | almost universal approval at the hands of king Speedy Revenge. = was probable in view of the dissension of | tiate peace with the powers, whose minis- | They found when they arrived at the depot | others are in Detroit hospitals suffering | the Cuban press. The element which has — - MOVEMENTS OF VESSELS ARE REPORTED | the powers. ters aro ‘held as hostages pending the re- | that 8o much of the track had been torn up | from more or less serious injuries always clamored for Independence sees i | e was ATTENDING GAMES AT 2 sult of the overtures for the abandonment | it Was Impossible for them to depart, 0| 7The dead the convention the probable consummation ING GAMES MONZA s gl BEUEVES MINISTERS SAFE | of hostilities against China.’ they made their way wiih difficulty back 10 | EDWARD SULLIVAN, aged 37, of Bridge- | of the plans of a lifetime, Lennox, with Mounts for the Sixth “The viceroys are also commanded to | the legation. port, Conn., porter of the canvas car, who | The Cubano says that the United Cavalry, ix Stated (o Have | Shanghal Corres guard their territories vigilantly against| MF. Woodward has guarded the fetter with | dieq from internal hemorrhage after reach- | government has been “frank and honest fn| VEI® ©F the Terrible Event Reaches SRR ed ek, dupis; uha Paper Convinced at Legation- | Attack and to prevent by all means in their | €xtreme care, eayink when asked for its g the hospital. declarations that are of vital importance| ROme at Midnight a ers Are Btill Alive, power the advance of the forelgn troops, es- | Use by newspapers thac It was personal 1o | The injured to Cuba mier Sum TR B Y peclally along the Yang Tse Kiang. The | tone. Henry Eastman (nickname Nash), age 26,| The Discuscion publishes a strong edi- Meeting of the Cab — LONDON, July 30.—3:45 & m.—The|decree says that the officials will answer | Mr. Woodward wus out of town today, but | o¢ Rochester, N. Y., one of the processes of | torlal in favor of the convention, but ex- Shanghal correspondent of the Dally Tele- | With their lives for auy fallure to execute [ his housekeeper, Mrs. Martha Hoaglund, | iine broken off, spinal cord as yet uuaf- | presses the opinion that twice the number — WASHINGTON, July 20.—There s a|graph says he is still firmly convinced that | these orders. told of the determination of Mrs. Wood- | octed. : ! of delegates called for by the decree will| MONZA, Italy, July 30.—~King Hume growing expectation at the State depart-|the ministers are safe, but with the ex-| '‘Commands are also given that not a|ward to use the revolver on her daughter | o 5 pyurkholder, age 21, of Bradford, Pa, | be necessary before the convention is able K ment that news of the utmost importance | €ePtion of an alleged message from the | $in&le foreigner ghall be allowed to escape |And herself if neceasary, Mrs. Hoaglund | oyehed and injured very seriously inter-|to represent all the parties and there is may be forthcoming at any moment from | JAPAIese legatfon in Pekin, dated July 19 |{rom the interior, where there are still [eald: "I saw the lclier. Mrs. Woodward, | pgily, back and leg cut by window glass, |another element that takes a somewhat ajt- | M¢ We shot here last cvening byl % brought by a runner, saying that the lega- | fully 2,000 Europeans connected with mis- | in addition to what has been printed, wrote | cooovery hoped for. ferent view of the convention and the powers | ® ™A named Angelo Bressi de Prate Pekin, It was even thought that some-| (i, way gtill defending itself nothing has | #lonary work, In isolated situations. that she was armed with a five-shot revotver | "*JriTCF R 0 g \westehester, Pa., | which the United States rament seems | and died fn & fow m thing might be recelved today, but this | yet been published giving anything in the| “When the governor of Shan Tung com- [and that, if the worst came, she would use |y odelt “yriitos about fieck ) about to delegate for ouBs WS . hope was doomed to disappolntment. The | nature of proof. On the other hand, with the | municated to the consuls the imperial decree | three bullets on the Chinese, but would | " yo o u’ secann, age 23, of 66 Chambers| The wutonomists and Cuban merchants few cablegrams that were received referred | dally incoming reports of the massacre of | 0f July 4 he omitted these important pas- | #ave one bullet for herself and one for her | i penr, New York, contusion of right hand, | alike look with concern upon the prospective to minor matters and did not touch at| Miselonarics and foreigners, it leaves only | *akes addreseed to LI Hung Chang daughter, so that thcy might not fall alive |, ove cut, £ devolution of large responsibilities upon in- | 1% the evening, © murderer cynis all upon conditions in the Chinese capital. | N® MOt slender thread upon which to haug ‘It is admittedly unadvisable to kill all | into the hands of the Boxers. Noyes Mix, age of New Haven, Conn., | experienced hands, and the word has gone | eally avowed his gullt of the erime, 1t (5 Helteved: LRAt the Wealh Tor (hib. o the ministers, but also unadvisable to send [ “She further stated that the marines had | i poe injured through chest, hand | around among them to try to elect the very - Diethion 14 Che REOWIWAES en the DASt o general situation Is steadily becom- | them to Tien Tein. It will be wiser to keep | been ordered up by Miuister Conger and | e best class of delegates possible. Possibly | The king had been attending a distribue Oficiala that certain machinery hereto- | "8 darker and a crisls is said to be fast the survivora at Pekin as hcstages. You are | that news had been recelved of the 1anding | oy on gy Kelly, age 28, of No. 111 North | they will rally to the bauner of the union | tion of prizes in connection fore met in motion may result n the open. | PPFOACRINE. It is rumored in Shanghai | Commanded to burry to Pekin; you are in- |of the rellet force, thus showing that she | gy place, Brooklyn, N. Y., shoulder | democratic party fng up of communication through some | tHAt 10,000 Chinese troops have been se- | CUrFing imperial displeasure by delay. You |still had hope that they might be saved.” 40, - { p From this time on those who share thess | RSHC competition, He had just entored secret but reliable channel. It is known | CTeUlY moved into that vicinity and that the have been appointed viceroy of Chi Li, be N ERIQ f P John Cusick, age 25, of Pittsburg, Pa.,|apprebensions will use their funds and in- [ b8 carriage with his aide de camp, amid that & secomd effort has been made by |CO™Mand of the Kiang Yu forts has been | cause with your military experience you will | CHINESE IN 'FRISCO QUARREL right ankle ,p.;u:..x, right side and leg | fluence to secure the full registration of the | ¢ our own government to get another mes- s red to fire if further addition is made uccesstully lead the imperial armies - bruised. better class of voters and to educate the page from Mr. Conger and that nearly all | 'C th¢ number of foreign ships ascending | 3§aivet the forelgners in Chi Li which Yu| Consul General a leatial EdItor | Goorgo Hunt, age 23, of Waterbury, Conn., | people up to the idea that it would be|DY thfee revolver shots fired in quick sug- of the powers also have resorfed to pri- | 'D°,Fiver: Rioting has aiready occurred [ Lu, the present viceroy, is unable to do, ow- int Out Faults in Bach contusion of both legs. advantageous to continue the American in- | cession. One pierced the heart of his mas vate agencles In their own interest with |t K!U Kiang, the mobs threatening death | In§ to his ignorance of military affairs.’ ther, William Gilmore, age 23, of Oskaloosa, | tervention several yeara longer. Many ob- | & Jike object. l'l“!l}!rf:'lunlrn. ' LI Hung Chang replied to this edict ask- ey Ia, left shoulder and arm bruised, skin |jections are belng made to the short time Mo’ f4dt Ban. Just been developed that | af “: the arrival of the second Japanese l.:x to be allowed to retire on account of | SAN FRANCISCO, July 20.--A fierce dis- | yorn from right hand. allowed of five duys for registration and| MiPutes. The assassin was immediately oHET 6L ARG Ikt Kite f e 1kte Colomst| L men the number at Taku and Tien Tsin | IS age pute has broken out in Chinatown between| A¢ the time of the collision the|to the fact that there is only one regis- | Arrested and was with some difficulty saved TANEE Betove his Reath At Mot Taln Wi ;:I.I V:‘:nlnhl-r 70,000. The river floods near Hnw‘mzw admits !m( he has had tel- | Ho Yow, the Chinese consul general, and | yrain, consisting of twenty wagon and | tratton place for each municipality. g 1 to undortake the dispatch of & 8py 10| It in repead Hrinishing e et Y s, mnouncing that | Tong K. Chong, edtlor of the Chinese | yiock cars, four of the show's sleeping cars| Members of the union democratic party Pekin. General Dorward, the British com- | pa urnl' l-v that Russians from Harbin Pt m|L:‘|”' lx'l o Ting Ffu was mur- | World and of the Orlental and Occidental [ anq o Grand Trunk caboose, were being |are foremost in taking exception to this ar- He gave his name as Angelo Dressi, de. manding officer at Tien Toin, Also sent out | pexin. atree ooyo oLt 160 miles north of | ferec, tciutnng fofty Britieh, French and | Press, one of the leaders of the reform | rypsferred from the Michigan Central to|rangement. They believe there will be | scribing himselt two messengers and it is belleved that the | The Shenshet eimer o in8: hawriean miselonaries, and announciug also | assoclation, which seeka to ralso an army | he Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee | 15,000 delegates in Havana, above the fig Jnpancae did the same. Up to date not [wiring yestorday, sepme O 0 T | have e yrench Jesults and 000 converts land overthrow the empress dowager and | youd, The train was belng pushed back- | ures reached at the munieipal elections, and one of these messengers has returned to| [ jearn Ilml)ll.,;”):mnu Hong and Lu|on the SebdsEsToF RRANT T',(,,‘:‘,"'fm”('f:" Ly |Testore the Emperor Kwang Hsu to the | ward from the “Y" at the Milwaukee junc- | they contend that should this be so it would | ROME. July 30.—3 a. m.—The news of Tien Tein, nor has there been o single | Chuan Lin, governor of Kiang Su, both |A majority of the consuls favor il L1 | throne. The editor devoted three pages | (jon, when it was struck by an outgoing | be impossible to enroll all who pply. he terrible event did not arrive here until . SUFONE | of his American paper yesterday to a o word heard from any of them. This fact, | rabidly anti-foreign, are advancing toward | measures against Sheng's duplicity. SonieNing ot ‘LU OIS JRRURALY St E | oy ot tetn. | T oAbooke however, has not caused the abandonment | Pekin with i e & b . ’ - -y ) after midnight. Senor Sarraco, premier, TSRS Iadlun | 6 (E000R # Youil: GHSIATE. AMAED: (hiaE . Tl h ) & n was forced on top of Buftalo Bil's emploves' | WAIT FOR RATHBONE'S BOND " of hope and this is true in particular of | advent M e L a1 hat the Itallan | 4)jeged exposure of his weakness and de- i, S = E eeper No. 56, which was filled with sleeps immediately summoned a meeting of the must scriously affect the situation | pricsts murdered in Hu Nan Wen were | contio b s e i sleeper eey the message expected from Mr. Conger. | there, Wrapped In cotton which had bee somq | cOPtion. The - comsulgeneral retaliates | b with the explanation ®hat the editor 18 | jureq me ycovered . . R e R Today the consular body decided that the | with kerosene and were slowly roasted 10 | jonay ot v e e [SCCVRTAC IO R K S bl arliest possible ent for 1 leading a revolutiomary party, which has | wrecked sleeper was chopped 1 the il possible moment for Monza. Minister Wu is perhaps the basts for | 'UAION demands the presence of a mill- | death. It is believed that all foreigners in | gigin. members in Chinatown, all of whom ¥ Acdibeida o B s v tary force in Shanghal and the consuls have | Chi Li have by this time been mmssacred; o by gk 1 | e sraduaily, gouthtiout HAVANA, July 20.- otore this hope on our part and he maintains | ,oiined thelr governments accordingly.” and the wave of massacre s spreadi baban wetched DL ANT Semetives All the victims will recover excepting B s Uiy S The S0urt DaOtSlan toard ts Yela, yack unshaken confidence in his original asser- vhasiti i 5 o bl Aboi el e the three most seriously injure AN LD U e T A L Tipag ik VRSCER L TR Referring to a charge of Chong that Ho i of posts, was arraigned yesterday, after his Assnanin ix an Anarchist, ot Action i LONDON, July 30.—~The Shanghai corre- [ the last, o they would uot fall alive uto spondent of the Dally Exprees, telegraphing | the hands of the Boxers. bert has been nasassinated. King Humbert was shot at 1048 o'clock lnst evening an 4 at 1180 with a gyme he clhicers of the crowd, when he was struck esty, who fell back and expired in & fow rom the fury of the populace. as of Prato in Tuscany, Ministers at K a. ng tent and canvas men. When the in- or of Posts in Giv cabinet and the ministers will start at the The prince and princess of Naples are ward Ning Po and Hong Chow, from which | you" hig caused his Chong's) relatives tion that the news, when it does come, (W« ok bl § Wil ahow that the teentioncrs are arive | SITUATION ~ GROWS WORSE s ‘_,f;,:{fi{f':"l;;"“|(;“jj"'“)"}‘ pission |y China to be imprisoned Ho Yow said: | TOLEDQ STREET CAR WRECKED | 4r7ext o0 charees of traud, fssued an order | LONDON, July 30.—Angelo Dressl, the The message reported to have come e e i Rt POULE | “His relatives were cast into prison directing that the prisoner be removed this | o, = o through Missionary Wilder at Che Foo ls | Chiuese Ofictaln PRI «:::\I:\ |:x‘.' rn."rv,(“) ll(x..flz ,~u’.] Officers. !u-rr Imply because they were in league with|oue Person May ¥ Wik Mo, Ase afterncon to the carcel, but Licutenant Col- wassin of King Humbert, according to & regarded as most promising. Stricken and Refu ;I_“‘ Kl;-n" 1:”&"‘"“ r\in ,:( n]r: along the Yang |y 4o overthrow \hewpresent dynasty. Talizelliin A ibey Ace onel Scott, acting governor general, ad- peclal dispatch from Rome, dated today, Minister Wu had no cablegrams himself teet K “An ...‘«‘u.m’a.nn.; ‘:Ix‘u lcan Intrigue hae | VO had documentagy evidulite “Wgmmst cldent. % viaed. Abat he.baallawed. to semain in the |18 an anarchist. today, nor had the State department any - been revealed (o the coneuls here in the | them, showing thatlkey wore in a traitor- i) vivac until it was kuown whether bail Bapreinivn ot Bivon Ds Phve directly from China. Nothing further has | LONDON, July-30—The Canton gopre: | whara ar N e 1 B | IR 1~ 00 TGt bellEver==an wara im-| TOLEDO, 0. July 20.—Ten people were [ ¥0uld be secured. His attorneys are confi- | o " teen heard as to the JAte set for the begin- | mpumdcne vé e Laiy LeCgripH, o < | B8 AfaCoils " Pliced in the mands of an | PUEHECE I A e ung man named | fatally ana ‘WG otmiers el yane onight, one | dent O geting watisfactory bondsman to- | NEW YORK, July 20.—Owing to the late- ning of the movement toward Pekin, and | patch dated Satu ¥, ?l"! American missionary named Fergusson, who, Homer Lee, a graduate of the Stanford | of them were only slightly "sly Three | MoOrrow. ness of the hour at which the news of the it is remembered that the detalls must be| The Triads have become numerous and |although he was an active ally of Sheng in | oo oo biarted for China, presumably [names were not learned. The namef ol = sdicanieitc" S ulbHE M Rlh ; fxed by the military commanders upon the | threatening in Hal Nan. The taotal and (the latter's cadeavors to hoodwink the | ¥WRINEREE FEECR 1l per Py ™ Docu- | the injured people, so far as learncd, are | Wio predicament. =2 i weassination of King Humbert ot the local mandaring are terror stricken and | world with regard to events in Pekin, wan | 12 (A ER SO0 0T prove his mis- |08 follows: eral L i ji cate e War dej ent | decline to protect foreigners. 15- | gupported by the American officiale in his b o Mrs. Ott, face, nose and neck terribly T I suls Alberti and Burde A message came to the War department | decline to protect foreigners. All the mis- | supported h »n and to connect him with this reform s 3 from the quartermaster on the Lennox, an- | sionaries except three have left with thelr | claim to the appointment of inspector gen- e l“‘l‘\‘ln:" O 0 17, tho very next|burned. May bo fatal CELEBRATION IS A FAILURE| iron De Fava, the Italian ambassador, nouncing the arrival of that ship, together | wives and families, eral.” g Miss Ott, feet, hands, hair and face 3 r eame er the one that had carried it e, N 3, Ho) wae BUAK with the Conemaugh, at Kobe, Japan. They ‘11-.»‘ natives of ;h].-’.’ .'m‘n .\:qrm' of m‘.; ATGNCE .‘v“:m).‘r’“lx‘\:' niiiaione Guat nadl sartion | cise: ety s, ‘ 7 T LT, BN D have aboard the mounts for the Sixth cav- |island were so frighte that they a i American, Homer Lee. took | MUUE: Lol Hartiell, face burned, nec . alry, and although they wiil start for Taku | joined the ranks of the Triads. Serlous dis- ROCKHILL REACHES CHICAGO Leong Kal Chew, who, W o 1 o od. Very serlc he Associated Press that he could not give h A i Jnnl ances are expected between August 1 Wel, 18 head of the revolution, away from fnjured and arms bruised. Very serious. at one not less than five days w con hance p expected betwe A 8 " b was re- United States Comminsioner to ¢ e ehina. The| Miss Lizzie Kuhlman, badly bruised on| yjoNypa guly 201140 p. m.—(Bditeq |00t any stateme nt until he had been ofe sumed in this last stage of the voyage. It |and August 15, during the festival to be Honolulu on their 4 ANILA, July {5 doubtful whether General Chaffee would W from ca - 3 N vt ally notified by ome government. held to appease the shades of the dead..The Talks the Datlen [ plan of Homer Lee and his Chincse schem- | A8 :":")h'l““hfi”“’l:li':“ T badly burmea | bY the Censor)—The (wo days’ fiesta n ficlally totified by his home goverament 18l (0 MDA gt Kbty : 000 mal-| Miss Sopl an, o it & T o | Boxers are charging large s e Chi- ers was to ralse an army of 40, 5 care to leave Taku without horses for the | Boxers are charging large sums to the ¢ i e ¢ and arm bruts Bixth cavalry, particularly as, according to [ nese for passports from Pekin to Tien Tsin contents in the southern ”_‘“L" “’l"“‘v“ Miss Abble Ruepes, face scratched, arm all reports, mounted cavalry is needed for [Lao Yun Fu, the black flag chief, has CHICAGO, July 20.—Special Commis- | the empire and march to Pekin. ‘l WS | prained, slightly burned and limbs bruised successful operations in the flat country |fused to march on Pekin, unless Vicero sioner Willlam H. Rockhill, appointed by |not long ago that we succeeded Innnlnr— Miss Mary Gousin, head slightly burned Iying between Tien Tsin and Taku. This |Tak Su will furnish bim with 20,000 sol- | the government to ascertain the real sit- | cepting at _Canton piore “""l‘ :';“'“ M‘:"“l head, face and arms bruised and burned. = v i 01 o 0 ssed 0 “hicag ended 0 8 refo y " fact alone may delay operations until late | diers. uation in Chins, passed through Ohicago | forms .intended - for O etraita| James Myers, Eim street, burned about | STRCIR BeRRl O g “King Humbert was greatly beloved by b ant week, though at least a por The Chinese authorities have Just disclosed | 0n his way to the Orlent. He arrived at|They had been manufactured In the stralts | G /% Syaq can seo 10 re 3 4 ol i Al A In the presant week, (houkh at heist & o0 | 0 e plot, devised by Soon Mun, to blow |3 o'clock and at 6:30 was speeding toward | sottlements and shipped from Singapore. e and BAnds o it edlacent drug| Judse Taftand bis colleagues of the com- | bis people,” sald Mr. Fodell, “and I canno thon of the Lerh amely, tomorrow. As- |up the Mansato temple and to destroy the |San Francisco, whence he will sall on the| <o illustrate the absurdity of the on the day fixed, namely, tomorrow. A ) the Mansato te a 4 mission felt constrained to decline to at- | conceive why any one but a crank or an sto nd physicians summoned and their | ¥ surances received here show that the Japan- | Cantonese officials while performing cere Jupanese steamer, America Maru, on Au- |clgims that this is purely a patriotic re P urances received here show that the Jap anto 4 e injuries cared for until they could be tend the banquet, as they had been informed | anarchist should wish to take his life. He ese government 18 doing all in its power to | monles in hopor of the empress’ birthday. | Bust 3. Mre. Rockhill accompanles her|gorm movement it is neces: that the speeches would faver independence | wooooid ang kind and charitable. 1 knew 1 home. The accident was a pecullar one. i | 9 ARt ¥ 4 e 0! - C ‘< der A prica protect id ey could faciliiate the international movement and |If the plot had succeeded the Boxers would | husband and will remain in Shanghai while | {5 but one among many of bome. - Tae ascldent k.8 PRGSUA SR81] unger Amerloan protestion aud they coula/| "o 870 SEC R EEEEE AR I @lthough the good will of the Japanese was | have attacked Canton, looting the city and he conducts hli»: rl‘vl\'(‘»llxullnul. n|in their prw-lumulh-n!.‘ nln( l!rn;h "1‘: "':; Tweity-second street when & blinding fiash Inul( xmw\.-l'y lend their scquioscence BY| . s b bis oldest eon, the prince of a o U o e elgne 4" all persons | When asked if he would endeavor to reach | uny one contributing $100 to the Refo bitysaccnd street when & binding BB | oy, rougn s ; ) pever suspected, as far as the United States | murdering forelgners and al d | endenvor ach > et Recncyiinaiih e ) g present, o proabily, b bis alie s, e prine o 15 concerned, the knowledge is gratitying. |friendly to foreigners. Chinese newspapers Pekin to treat with the Chinese govern-|..iociation fund shall be made a gen: rn|.. 960 orles of injured passengers os they| Senor Paterno, forescelng the suspension l 6 4 young ¥ years Secretary Long had a cable message to- [assert that Prince Tuan offered rewards | ment direct, he replied: any one contributing $1,000 shall be made f the banquet without the Americans, fran- | old.” ere t bled into the street, attracted the o A e commander of the Buftalo, at | for all beads of forelgners brought to his| “I think not unless circumstances War- |, yiceroy and any one giving $10,000 sball | Mere tumbl skt tcally appealed to them to attend, promising ay fr 3 ander o st 5 " attention of belated i Hong Kong, stating that he has salled for [ yamen in Pekin. The ¥ s, finding it | rant it and the court Is quiet enough to |y, e a prince of the royal blood. oo fnguries aro of such & character that |that thero should be no speeches. The | FALL BACK T0 PRETORIA Manila organized by Senor Paterno and his King ¥ i s Successo political followers to commemorate the am KANSAS CITY, July Jerome Fedoll, nesty resulted in a flasco. The people were | passive, unenthusiastic and not even inter- | oo g ben” Chon he learned of the ase ested. Failing to perceive any tangibl effective remults of amnesty they sy they | Sassination of King Humbert of Italy, talian vice consul in Kansas City, was ; alo is taking out much |difcult to get enough of these, decapitated | render possible the success of such an ex- — Lt O Istance extremely pain- | PTOVOSU'S precautions were extreme. The ::Ih.‘ll‘-.l ,1..§'...r 'x‘x‘llnnu";urllhn N1 drawn Aud (A1 Chinese having high noses and deep | Pedition. In the country's state of fer-| npeTACLES ARMY MUST MEET "::,:‘ AT8 i eyecy g ¥ Kuards were doubled both days and the | Lord Roberts ¥ R Uselasdith 1ot of stores aboard for the approach- | eyes, and in this way they presented wo |ment the journey of & party of Europeans duleid 4 he car was provided with the usual two | AUthorities forbade the display of Filipino Nt any pretended forelgners' heads that |Or Americans to Pekin could be accom- | . James Wilson Pointa Out e flags and of pictures of President Me- ng campalgn. 'I‘ v 'T“u",! ‘exchequer suffered a painful | Plished only with frightul loss of life, it “""'I"mm“:".‘ s Navee light circuits, but the .;um_\ ml. of |",.'-h:.||‘)m PPN G A L i i Report from Coolldge. etrain, at all. e ment to Pekin, ":" '_‘,:":h':":,‘,',':‘ T T "Thi | The fiesta is generally considered to have | LONDON, July 30.—3:34 . m.—Operations The War department recelved a cable- “I shall make my headquarters at Shang- b Teft but one circult unprotected with the | been premature and unfortunate, In South Africa have again arrived at & gram from Lieuenant Colonel. Coolise, | REPORT WHOLESALE MURDER | 10 investisate conditions as far n0rh- | B YORK,-July 29.—General James H. | conncting wires subfect (o a cut out or an | DUFINE last weck's scouting ten Amer. |sort of stanastll, Preloris telearame ans o a4 command of the Ninth in- d cumstances an bled | D Pl plaigtoga . Bugpe e the ex. | Icans were ed and fourteen wounded. [nounce that Lord Roberts has rel :.l:.:r;“;‘r‘:-m Im. death of Colongl Liscum, oo condition will permit. My sole "‘”’, ““' '." ;‘,::f‘;,'"‘1;.‘.”;:‘,:e:..:::rl:h;nm;u:::l‘flr.n:nlq‘r.:‘.‘. ;’]:“;‘“’:\..:.mnrf xluh!(l:'::sim;:':“ ‘:}'&‘: “):'" o] One hundred and eighty Filipinos were | there with his ataff, apparently finding it '-r"::::m';::"n‘::wl‘wx-(:; 'fi’:\\‘:v\:lf 5 of’ Converts, that T am not empowered to do anything.” | He was accompanied by his nll|lm;‘ l.:«u(-l instantly filled with the lurid flashes of gent rifes were caplured. somiiantly, retreating G Somostadads One | FooCorbln, Washington: 8ix — You'are ot imvested with plenipoten- | tenant J. H. Reeve and Major Soulard| ihe subtle electric fluid and cries of vain | OUIET T|N NEW ORLEANS | Boers. like General Christian Dewet, has companies af the Ninth infantry, under| TOKIO, Saturday, July 28.—Tt s reported | tlary power, then?” irner. s and u:flmnrlhm: ok ot followed by, man and fhita 81uda0 Lord RoBatat sraig Liscum, with marines commanded by Meade, | from Shanghai that the Boxers attacked the “No,” he answered, “my orders can be When asked It Il‘"‘llll( Sk aniie women falling over each other out of he o Man = General Delarey 18 besieging General Joined British forces under General Dorward | miselonaries and native A'hrls]vl.lu«lm\lihn }mnlnu] ul|v in (vu,|\\(ml ‘Inve uln.- te vrr ,;, 1nr"h(: hvr:;y" l\‘:: ‘\‘I|::t~(;,h“m'|l(n| Ria 1 oAk £ \.a g Il ’owell at Rustenburg, in wr-ua’rn Co netiol *renc and Japanese | Ting Fu on July 8 A foreign physician | ditions. n case the governmen! ur- | in a homogeneo h e al s — nries, ransvaal. The relief force sent to Genefal S lj.l«lll(I‘:.t”‘,ul\xlhu“; Dart of the | and 2,000 converts were massacred. ther orders for me they undoubtedly will | that such a thing was possible and that It MINE HORROR IN MEXICO| e P Baden-Powell's assistance under Colopel walled city at daybreak July 13, The Ninth The Chinese general, LI Ho Keh, Is now | be cabled depended largely upon the ),‘klf” .ll‘H .‘:l:(- N . NEW ORLEANS, July 20.—The city s Hickman, proved too weak to be effective L e Tht were cast of the south | marching on Pekin. 'Ho bas ordered his | Mrs. Rockhill does not fear the prospect [ of the generalissimo. In view of the pross: | Many W Entombed Be- | very quiet and most of the precautionary | ang wan obliged to fall back on Pretorla, gate protecting the allied forces from flank- | troops to exterminate all Christians. Al- | before ber. ing needs of the situation he sald ‘x;x n‘r— low th E measures have been dispensed with. Neurly |“fpa aperations nave been hampered with fug fire. After belng under fire for fifteen |ready one French priest and from 2,000 to —r felt sure that there would be no great dit. all of the 1,500 militiamen have been re- |yaq weather, thunder storms, accompanied hours they were drawn to the other mud 3,000 natives have been slaughtered. SYMPATHY WITH THE BOXERS | ficultics in the organteation of the allied | /oo o\ ot g The govern- | l€ved. @ detall of twenty men being Ieft |y jntense cold. Lieutenant MacLaren and wall at night. The Ninth infantry had 4 forces ment authorities have been notified of a |t the parish prison with Gatling guns. The | (yreq Highlanders have dled of exposure, sixteen killed, sixty-nine wounded, one ! ry Detalls the He sald that there would be much § terrible catastropho at Matehuala, & thriving body of Charles was taken out to potters’| .o ool ag many horses and cattle. missing, out of 420 engaged at this point.| SANTIAGO DE CUBA, July y aration required forthe advance on account | U Rl o Monteray, in the state | 1614 before daylight and burled before th A afspatch to the Daily Telegraph from Company A, posted at the railrond station | ond battalion of the Fifth United States in of the scarcity of forage along the route. | Yl b L poion T aire broke out fn the | PUD!S knew anything about it This ev Lourenzo Marquez says that President enst of the Pet Ho, was exposed to heavy |fantry, Major Borden commanding, will “It will be necessary,” said he, m‘ an | O O hefore. (he miners could | 1K the cltizens’ police disbanded, fitty men | i¢ruger iw now at Watorvalonder. Hq adds shrapnel fire, losing two killed and seven | leave temorrow for the United States by the | o wone 00T p 0 A ooan py. | army to take great quantities of supples | oo %y oy face many of them were en- h«-'l‘.;x. m-:.ulmq a2 an emergeccy .nplml o | that @ ik fight 15 expected and tha 1t tho wounded in addition to the foregoing. On [ transport McPherson. The compantes at (. FCC 5 SOR BRE NG T om Charles ; tombed and either burned to death or suf here Is conslderable dispute about who | poerg are beaten President Kruger will trok the morning of July 14 the Japanese blew | Guantanamo and Baracao will be taken | /@ FoCmy AR HECe HEt & e e ein, dated | most devoid of vegetation. There are no | ooy Ty are raged flercely for several Killed Charles, principally between Dr. €. | il h" s Wiiland to Delagon bay and take up the south gate enteriug the walled city. | aboard en route. June 4. Mr. Gammon, sfter detalling the | trees of any’acceuat which could be used iy Y A. Noiret, a medical student, a member of | ;" coivior for Europe The allied forces entered the town. As The officers have received instructions to " - " or wood The ives even scrape the b the citizens' police, and Private Anderson 0 | \vents up to the date of the letter, includ- | for firewood. The nat v Eleven bodies have been taken out and slgned the southeast quarter to the Amerl- | prepare warm clothing for a hard winter ng the ing of the English missionaries, bark from the trees to get fuel. They burn othars a¥e known to be in the pit It is of th First regiment., Six b el ‘,‘H! sITUATION IN TRANSVAAL cans for police and protection, guards |campaign and to be ready to re-embark o5 TR cays weeds and ricestalks. TThere is little to be | &/ces ATE KOOWA 58 0 T8 PAC B lars in rewards hinges on the decision. Tie ere established e American quarter, | shortly after arriving at New York 41 - Vi . got by foraging, and there is practically [ IHOVE e money will probably be turned over to were established in the Aw an quarte ) . missionaries at Pao Tung Fu have | 8 Y There is great excitement in the town and | ) 1 which 'was already on fire. Thq British | Al the men are enthusiastic at the pros- | The missonaries at Fao 'fung ¥ Ba%e | o ing to plunder, and an army would have | Fhere 8 SEPRT TRELEREnt 0 o eter. | thete two men and by them donated to the ommander highly praised erlc pect of active service in China, . e $ = s o take supplies of ery kind, including Hisang atel) fund started by Mayor Capdeville for the oom L. A Amerlean sol- | § there. With the railway destroyed and | Py mined. When the fire was discovered Ra- | widows of murdered policemen diers for arduous work and gallantry in bont travel certalnly fatal, they cannot leave | tuel and water. The.question of supplies ows of policem communication to Meade, COOLIDGE." Hancock the Third, o with the goverament so utterly helpless | i 1n fact, the prisdigal one mon Gomez, the foreman, descended the| Mayor Cupdeville has rigidly enforced 9 q "y 9 o shaft and went foto the burning chamber | hig order to keep saloons closed today, The SAN FRANCIS i T | A B kbl [n’ Eracathy rther than that it is difficult to say THREAT TO KILL MINISTERS | treerort, Hancock sailed at 10 o'chock 19" | yith the Boxers, there is cause to fear for | much, and 1 A0 Wot wish (4 ho placed in | {00 the DUTRORe of WIIDE the uBlomasie| results of the week's sysats whll probably|gensral #lo-Carew with the Guarde he RS | iuy for Taku, China, via Nagasaki, with FID the Rosere, SRARS 18 0AUS 40 (AT SO0 100" conliion b j0dRing fhe Miuatin Lefore| BIBMS: Ho YR QYAEMS | v smoke and | be the reorsanization of the police force. | gado has arrived at Brugspruit, twenty Nvoxd Srbm FokTo Bazs Advanss of | 1007 Datterian of the TOIN REGlisry hum rned the oMelals to give them protection, | I 8m thoroughly ‘familiar with it. There | PETIeY s body haa heen ve od. B miles west of Middleburg : " 4 ering 475 men, under command of Captain [ ¥2rne . 5 are no mountaius or other natural obstacles. ‘ R aa has reseivad s ‘discata - 3 The raflway authoritiee are fghting hard 2 Seaches L) TRISRAASIRRRY- NREEPA NouRs Charles Humpbrey, to Lm.:x‘:n:\‘.?mmu:mmm.m Stk Pekln (the | There are no strong fortifications. It is KILLS HIS WIFE AND ESCAPES ow Japanese minister to the 1 mited | from Lord Roberts explaining thatsonly one b | Ma ol heads of the department being British), but | €asy, of coursé, to throw up Intrenchments. - Blates, urrived here today on his way 1o | train was captured on the night of July 23 Twelve Min cads of the depl > . ) = L " | towa Man Prevented from Murdering | Washington, He s accompanied by his . 4 BERLIN, July 20—The Chinese legation | poNpoN, July " apeclul " Giapatch | the line 1s daily interrupted by the burning | The Chinese will have the same difculties A T e e Washinglon, He by accompinil v and | between Kroonatad and the Vaal, and that in Berlin has recelved _message from |from Shanghal, dated yesterday, says that |of bridges and stations, and trains are fre- | 10 contend with, as far as supplies are on Strugsle, i number ‘of Japica Fesidents of *h l‘x““( .';x:j.m-;ul‘l:u‘u‘r_li;:h l:\,\ll“‘::xu‘ officers and Sheng, director general of railways and tele- | (ne English mission station north of Ning |auently returning, belng unable to get cerned, as the allies must un:mmur ’.r eity e pen of graphy, saying that he has received a Q18- | po has been destroyed and twelve mission- | through. The Chinese troops, sent to guard | will be impossible to maintain great hordes | ELDORA, Ta., July 26.—In a fealous rage ew Against the Boxers Are Sald to Have Killed ¥ he country is poor. It is a low plain, al War Depart July 29.—General French has 4 Middleburg in the Transvaal and Mevemenis of Oeean Vesseln July an, | A dispatch from Fourlesburg, dated July patch from Pekin announcing that General | aries have been murdered the 1it6, have falled to accompliah any- | of men without something on which they | Otto Pennington at Owasa today shot and | XV St Michacls-Pussed—Ems, . (rom | T, says that the capture af Fourleeburg 3 Pug R & . y 5 . v feed Killed his wife in the presence of thelr| New York Niples and Gihral- | was preceded by heavy fighting to force & Tung Fun Siang threatens to kil all the i {hiug and even if they were not in sym- | may f New van pre » . : membere of the legations if the interna- A T pathy with'the present antl-forelgn move- | “In theso military operstions the great | two chiliren and scverul members ot M hE A—-Parisian from Mon. | PSSRMS of tho piskes, which was stubboraly v ol ; X h e |base will be the pen. Bupplies can be | Pennington's family and was prevented from | gre ‘ 4 fo ¢ jenera tional forces advance on Pekin ME /" 20.—The OMC sroal | ment ana largely members of the Boxer so g ek A t j 4 Evidontly the leation is embarrassed by l‘u';m‘:; R ‘,‘.‘.r::“pmh“,,:'f,lm Journal | Clety, there la every reason to believe that | brought up the Pei Ho river and ita branches | taking the lives of all thoke about him only stownrArrivea at Servia from | forces bad the hardest work in forcing Res the receipt of this dispatch, as the Chinese | portation of arms, ammunition, or other mu- | they have secret instructions not to resist | to within tw@lve miles of Pekin and then | by a severe struggle, during which he emp- | 0 o, e T i AT nek, bls casualties amounting to aboul winister has not communicated it to the | nitions of war to China. A OF punish the Boxers. Meanwhile the pow- | thero I8 thedraiload. Bven if it is torn | tied his revolver at the objects of bis | Monmouthshire, from Portiand, Ore., via |100 ; Getman government e PR ers have been daily landing sailors and ma- | up soon it will net be so difcult to get it [ wrath » but his wife, however, was "”\kx”hn'l‘:."\l:n-‘ B R e Upwards of 6,000 nr»rx with u‘\--r,y ’(““ The legation has cabled the viceroy of Prospeets for Crops in Tndia. rines, and Tien Tsin {s one great military [ into opcration. nit St Moytile—gaty amber of wagons, & laree uaniity of stares Nauking requesting Bim o try 1o get in-| BOMBAY, July 26.—The raintall in Guze- | post, full of moving patrols and with guarde | “The Chinese have only a vague notion of | Penninkton had been separated from hiv | At o sy mpania, - from | aud many catte, have been driy ne e tian s to whether the widow of |rat is good and gemeral prospects have |stationed at every vulnerable polnt. Twenty | western tactics. They have had German | family and the tragedy wae the sequel to o N . (oo | MOIITAIN passes, where they are watched Baron von Ketteler, the murdered German | greatly improved. The crops already .o.\ul nen of war are now at the mouth of the | drillmasters, but generally they have been |long story of domestic uuhappiness. The Matselling. Ganon ‘etcy for Maaadam, ot | by British trcops. Thelr ssave from thed miuister, 1s otill alive, will be saved. . river and more are comiug. arilling only when they felt like It murderer 50 tar bue eluded capiure, terdum wid Boulogae, polnt will be ditlicults H