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SINGLE THE OMAHA DAILY OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING AUGUST 10, 1900-TEN P AGES, N0 EXTRA SESSION NEEDED DULL DAY AT POWERS TRIAL (LTS HOTTER AND HOTTER Nearly Bntire Tmpen ESTABLISIHED P ———— HIT CHINA HARD BLOY [CHiEF comwano i chiwa JUNE 1 FIVE CENTS. |SONATION & ThE WeaTaR® THEY ARE ALL BICHT Forecast for e Temperntur, | Hour. nom o , 1871, cory Foreign United ofee Stntes wt Ve Hnx ted Sppointment Berlin Inr . Seaston I8 Devoted to ent of Testl Defense. Ao her maha Y Mo Wit tevdny Dew s~ i e " s ~1 ' | Adee's Message to Tsung Li Yamen For- TOO COWARDLY TO BE BRAVE warded in Oipher to Pekin, Exe( 0y | nt President Has Ample Power to Deal with Present Conditions, Ohicago Equals Tts Longest Torrid Spell in Twenty-Five Years, Dew a. il ' American Demands Upon China Approved by Ambassador W, 1 Marshal sinted in Ch Count GEORGETOWN 1id Aug ite teatimor will_probabl bell of the hat side & rebuital pr on each ™ Ky ude o City of Yang Tsur AMERICANS ~ PROMINENT General Chaffee Wires That ™ Will Number About, . UNITED STATES NOT AT WAR WiTH CHINA ; the na an trial ated NO HOPE HELD OUT FOR EARLY RELIEF | con P we today, but EMPEROR IS ADVISED TO ACCEPT TERMS IN CAPTURE | | | nationat by hief of a inter tion a will con " side that t n offer the evi finish sottled whether the Youtsey | will be taken up following the Powers trial | or will be laid over. Colonel Campbell | | says the prosecution will ask that the case [ (yicAGo. be taken at but the view which | oo tils the court takes cannot he antieipated. Col- | broken Campbell thinks it will not require Saturday more than (wo weeks to try Youtse aftor In the trial today the impeach hazard a giess as to the next three ment of witnesses was continued. The all of which he says will be of the prosecution asserted that it is well satisfied | game torrid nature as the last six days, and with the testimony of Surveyor Coolman ‘,,, had the weather in the more who was introduced by the nse, as 1t | gistant future claims to have proved by his demonstra- [ For twenty-five years, or | tion that the shot, if fired from the lower | weather bureau established, there bas|and resolutions presented its sill of the second window in the office of | pos term of hot in which | was adopted. The platform the secretary of would have passed | he mercury reached 9 degrees for four | Kansas platform in the body at identically the | eo The maximum | election of United States senators point as shown by Goebel's wounds. those was 92.|vote of the people; favors the ing the session the bheen on which [ and maintenance of the Nicar | were again interrupted by a s above 90, and the | the United « government war | Mr. Ow of defense and the court. | average m the six days has|pr administration; president | Mr. Owens insisted on urging an objection | heen 93.5 the hottest the | prohibiting double-headers on railr |after it had been passed on and the court mercury reaching 95 in| vors passing a law prohiblting issuance | imposed a $10 fine at 3 o'clock. On the |of free recommends the establish Surveyor Coolman, who testified yesterday brick walls and ment of state industrial schools for girls, fa- was allowed to make an explanation re- | a chance to radfate, it|vors a law creating a state board of arbitra- garding some of the statements made by | degrees lower than in the tower. | tion ditficultios rpora- him and also to make some corrections of | There four deaths due to heat and|tions and employes, and recommends the en- answers which he explained twenty-nine prostrations, three ot which are | actment of a liberal libel law on a misunderstanding of the ques- | expected to prove fatal The platform also indorses put to him The dead ministration for the iesu prosecution polman [ MRS, P. W the Waters-Plerce Ofl company | golng of the | M. O'BRIEN acknowledged victory for e e e covered The| INFANT CHILD of Mrs Bailey and bis following mistake, immediately e defense had shown by che witness that the [ INFANT CHILD of Mre, Considerable to Mudrid, e faot SR b bullet, If fired from the secretary of states| The four deaths today make a total of | ceedings tonight allowed cipher dis- office and passed through Goebel's body at | seventeen due directly to the heat. It is|arose to address one and thirtecn-sixteenths inches depres- | eetimated that 100 deaths of people | amendment he ston to the it would have entered the | have already been hastened by the weather | form. Several of the delegates attempted to ground near the fountain and that the bullet | of this weck bowl him down and for more than half an out of the hackberry tree could not The prolonged hour he could not proceed with his remarks the one fired by the sein. The proge- | effect on business who can The ex-governor perceptibly angry at | cution sought to break down this contention | ¢ity for points along the lake shore and |this treatment and became al hi and the cross-examination strung out [ in the woods are going, and many have |remarks. He sald that the who were at great length materlally curtailed their hours of labor. [ trying to howl him down were “(00 cow Prof. J. J. Rucker of Georgetown college | This Is cepecially true In the large office |ardly to be brave,” and assured the dele gave expert testlmony regarding the shoot- | Puildings. Gangs of laborers all over the |gates that he would not vote on the platform iug and in a gencral way supported Surve city laid oft during the afternoon until he could be heard. Coolman’s mathematical demonstrations the week the mortality list has s — | D. H. Sinclair, former manager of the | MOUNting with great rapidity, the inc ADMIRAL DEWEY ON SITUATION | Postal Telegraph office at Frankfort, re- called to the witness stand, denied that he War in Philippines i Rex Over, While That tn Chiy Han Just Hegu troc the n Berlin von Wal i of tor in four sume P o Be Blan- |0 | wh it 1s no ur Persons Awfal eat HBusiness is by Absene Succambed Yesterday, Belug 1 of Work the e Hong Chang Thought ing and is Expected to Down Without Mach Fuss, to w peded N b " hery 5 i GENERAL ADVANCE EXSECTED NEXT viee Lagualties Iy Arter -y his a the star Al 1 ent 1 T case due entirely Willlam. 1 shall going ably via t I am fully aware ies 1 shall have to i dire Francisco f the great | WASHINGTON n China and n.)—Assistant f my positisn there, | when asked today 1 shall do my best | sion of of the honor and of | ligh events in China me by the kaiser 1 no reason why extra will accompany me | should be called. The president has ample authority troops to China for th purpe rebellion and in rection been declared | Diplomatic tions have not been broken that Emperor William | off between China and the United s weeks ago broached the subject of the | and until there is an open rupture we have Wal person- [ no other alternative than to procced as we | ally, basing his proposal upon the condit been doing to bring about the relief of | that all the other powers should acqul our beleaguored minister and his official | in the appointment. As to this latter point, | household through diplomatic nnels, but { diplomatic ber £ O | always pushing toward Should Emperor Nicholas, | pe declared by China. then the count is an especial favor will aot aid sot qafekly o0 following ewhat It was stated by an official of the Austria-Hungary Italy department that bur nd made quickly, the mcquiescence of the | China was for the purpose of bringing Great Britaln was then | o jjheration of Minister Conger and other | Japan came last. | ¢ aigners cooped within the English 1 The ( told the Assocl in Pekin; that it is the belief of dip | ated P this evenlug that | oy,00 in Washington that Li Hung Chang | the consent of the other powers had virtually BluNSnR" wtd’ie FemNtied tor /s URItM | b ured to the to call the “bluff. The professed | The Walders commender expectation is therefore that the Chinese | again RUSSIANS FIG'HT EOR CHINA government will comply with our demand | and that before the allied forces get far | Ex=0fic rot pver Ronsts His ratic i | ine clty Hot weather rec- broken today and again Friday and again and probably for several more that. The local forecaster will Aug. 9. were | ~(Speclal Tele CELESTIALS PRETEND TO FAIR PLAY tary Meiklejohn, whether he thought an probable in the satd n Aug up at once, b for aim L of the | but 1 | rove | to the United This evening the field marshal had at the offices of the general ‘mv It som to meet will be | on | days n daye, extreme delicacy ¢ ly say that elf worthy placed In Waldersee Allles Will in Few Days Have 50,000 Men on Their Way to Oapital. WACO, Tex | state convention morning by Temporary tobert B. Prince of | permanent chair | Hamilton county Immediately after the convention met the night session the committee n o extra ses of n congress Aug The was democratic | Great Stress Laid Upon Removal of Restrio- Chairman Hicks Navarro was elected | and Mark Lo the f my Powers t e tions on Oipher Messages. session ANOTHER “DISPATCH IS SENT TO CONGER to of send e an n TEXT OF AMERICAN DEMAND ON PEKI onfer 3 suppressing War has def ! ences staft and | su "o on platform which reaffirms the | favors the | y direct construction gua canal by indorscs the favors the law ads; fa y was since the Jinister of war understood Becretary View Root Takes Optimistl Which Me On Acconnt of Unaveldable Delay it is Not Likely That s Sta report of the Sitnation, G but one weather Amertean Min- to State De- state Conslders us Havi Much i [l » [ ehiet command to Count raee through e 4 : er Can Reply Dur- | 1 procecdings between | the temperature ecutive days average Last five daye alx days has gone ximum for Today wa the mperature parg € for Severnl Days, have for afternoon Phere 10w ¥ ch WASHINGTON u Yang Tsun, the fir International for of importance I nese situation Ak objective p was the supreme elved today on the The first word of this ture, effected lust Monday, came in a briet| dispatch the signal ofice at the War department from Colonel Scriven, the signal officer at Che Koo, waying “CHE 10O, Signals August 6, Yang Tsun captured today. Wire up. Need own Al well SCRIVEN » receipt of this mes- erul Chaf and showing of woout sixty can troops. Gen onk ) Stat during the last fow days with whom the consentes luctantly ited | Unite WASHINGTON Chinese minister ns of the Aug. 9.-Mr Vil tonight that he received information from = China elght forelgn legations in Pekin r to their respective ernmonts. This was permitted in cordance with the imperial edict of fmperial government, allowing all the forelgn ministers free communication with their in clpher o Ll Bl intended for nce of a charter to | Spanish government was inadvertently Wu, the had that sent ent state news Chi- | e » present spell the Auditorium strect wher were walks given two d France 0! re- con- Stat upon about | ’ had we passes; pitiR b, s . don: level . side : b . ne the to ates and t ved rece and the assent of correspondent to settle between o " A were 00, rman Ferelgy t man For ion some made tiops were Aug. 9. Washington T transporiation e a st respective governments is the sent cipher telegram selection of Count in-chief. Y. vou | grates cross-examined ¢ the greater part by him on yesterday PIKE of Fort Wayne, 1nd and is is over prl had that send their home offices opinfon, that his government is living up to the imperial edict permitting the ministers to have free communication with their governments. Mr. Wu says the consuls’ cipher dispatehes, which also were yorted having been held up, have n forwarded Mr. Wu tonight his government he memorandum addreesed to him by Act ing Secretary Adee and demanding the fw- | mediate cessation of hostile attacks by fm perial troops upon the legations and urging the fmperial government to enter fnto com munication with the relief expedition for the liberation of the legation. The minis ter with an explanatory statement, in which he gave the reasons why, in hig opinion, a compliance with the | representations of the United States would | be for the best of all. He ex pects it will take several days for the mem- crandum to reach the imperial authorities The latest message sent to Mr. Conger in veeponse to that received from him on Tues- day afternoon wae filed for transmission last night. State department officlals estimate that, allowing for the interruption of tele graphic communication, the time required in deciphering the message and in forming a reply, at least five days will elapse before an anewer is received ANTI-FOREIGN FEELING GROWS H Hix Half an hour after t sage came u cablegram from ( fee giving additional de that it had been the casualties among the Am eral Chaffee's dispatch is as follows “YANG TSUN, Aug. 6.—Yang Tsun occu pled today. Wounded: Second Lieutenant | Frank R. Long. Ninth infantry, moderate. | oo ' (i b, the teamer Empress of J Casualties about sixty men, Ninth United | o500 Rt Lo SULES IMRnLEY) RUUS AN | column ix reported to have stated on hiy re- infantry and Battery F, Fifth United States | (o5t S St s Were more arms artillery. Nearly all from Fourteenth in- | oot e (00 i Hel Kiu artenal fantry. Names laer. Many men prostrated | upured by Seymour than in the whole of from heat and fatigue CHAFFEE the United States Soon to Have O Men in Fleld, According received by the Em. Hardly less important was a dispatch from | press of Japan one European who was serv- General Terauchi, second in command of the | Ing the Chinese was killed in the recent Jupanese staff, sent to the War office of | fighting at Tien Tsin, and two men, sup Japan and transmitted to the legation here, to be Frenchmen, have b taken stating that the international army would ers by the allied forc aggregate 60 000 men on August 15, at which A remarka was brought by the time the real advance on Pekin would | #am mer to the effect that a number ot begin. General Terauchl’s dispatch stated [ Russian ex-officers and privates from Si- that on August 4, when It was forwarded, beria had joined the ranks of the Boxer the advance had not yet begun. This was | #0d that having reason to suspect the fide at first incomprehensible, in view of the ity of their Chinese transport :(mHt 8, the fact that fighting had sctually ocourred. | Russians had killed 200 of the Chinese and But later the statement that the interna- | then loaded their bodies into a junk, which tional force would aggregate 50,000 men they set on fire and sent drifting down |Im‘ on August 16 appears to make clear General | Pél Ho. The story is published with a num- Terauchi’s meaning and to reconcile it with | Der of corroborative details in a number of | General Chaffee’s dispatches. The present | OT'ntal papers movement of some 16,000 men doubt Many Chinese now aver that Prince Tuan, Sibwodsli the: Lakit et 18 Feconnolesdns the rebel leader, is not a member of the fm- the main movement of 60,000 to follow on | Perial clan at all. He is supposed to be the August 15, This makes clear the meaning | *00 Of the Afth prince of the line of Tuan, of General Chaffes’s dlspatch that Yang | DU ¥t I aMeged kit Rarts a aupposititious | uloo be established August 15 at Belleville, Teun was the objectiye polnt. The Was| 0% his mother being a nurse in Prince | Kan.; Hennessey, Okl; Waconda, 8. D.; department here has been considerably puz- Tuan's family. By collusion with I’:rhw | Aledo and Panola, I1l.; Concordia and Abi- sled over this statement of an objective | ruch'® Wife. the child, who is now Prince | lene, Kan.; Tarkio, Mo.; New Boston, Tex., point far short of Pekin. Tuan, was introduced as the princess' son. |and additional service at Edgewater, Colo 1t would appear, however, from General | Teranehls dpach i e et toree o | GERMANS EAGER TO FIGHT | AFRAID TRAIN WOULDN'T STOP 16,000 men, having opened up communica- tion to Yang Tsun, brought forward sup- | More T Al plies and established there a base. the way | Vo would then be clear for the advance of the larger force on August 15. The capture of Yang Tsun is, therefore, an important strategic point of the fast maturing mil ftary plans. The place is about eighteen miles beyond Tien Tsin and little less than & quarter of the way to Pekin. Wires Up Colonel S contains as showing Hon. Joseph ground Rosle Crabble Is John Hendricks. zest was added the ex-Governor to pro when Hogk the on an wished embodied in the plat on their way to Pekin arrangements will be made to deliver the ministers to eral commands now operating together one common cause. The First National bank of Lincoln was | today approved as a reserve agent for the | First National bank of Loomis, Neb. Also | the Continental National bank and Commer- clal Natlonal bank of Chicago for the Cedar alls (la.) Natlonal bank he contract for carrying the mail from | S. D., was awarded to H. P. | |are being to patches Mr. Wu's ) b % from Sibe Boxer in sev in o shows, In to convention 5 ik foot - cpartmental Note . VICTORIA, B. C.. Aug. 9.—Arrivals from cut be | heat Al is having a serious asea leave the was an an b ns States ¥ men in | e be was Roy to Harrold, 8 % Hanson of Roy The postmaster general today notified Con- | Thomas that rural free delivery has been ordered established at | Sheldon, O'Brien county, Ia., on August with one carrie Samuel S. Thomas of Corning, been appointed a railway mail clerk | Postmasters appointed: lowa—Kanawha, Hancock county, B. C. Ellsworth, vice T. C Perisho, resigned; outerville, Mitchell county, Willlam Thykeson, vice H. Man- deville, resigned. Wyoming—Verona, Sher- idan county, J. H. Field, vice Richard Far- n resigned. Richards and Albert Enders have been appointed carriers for the rural free de- livery route ordered at Ponca, Dixon county, Neb. They are to cover an area of seventy- oue square miles, scrving a population of 1850 Rural ftree delivery service will o news been ase | being attributed entirely to the heat. There were 465 deaths last week, and at the pres- ratio of increase there will be 690 this week. The ratio of deaths, cording to the coroner, will increase steadily as long as the hot weather continues NEW YORK, Aug. 9.—The that arrived here several tinued todgy and the loc no promise of early re tonight the temperature degr two degrees higher than ever n, gressman 3 service posed had ever sald to Dr. H. 8. Kellar at Frank- | fort “that he and his wife had demanded of | | Justus Goebel that the latter fulfill his promise in regard to a position, and that if he did not, he intend to go with the de- fense nd help them to break down the prosecution.” | Dr. Kellar was then Introdiced for the | purpose of contradicting Sinclair, but his testimony was ruled out. Nonkes' Impenched before recorded here on this date. At 6 Robert Noakes, recalled, denfed the sub- | 0'clock this morning degrees was stance of a number of alleged conversations | Feached. At 10 o'clock the thermometer with B. A, Rice and J. H. Wilder of Bell | Fegistered ten degrees higher, but the county. On cross-examination wiiness said | humidity, which had been fearful early in he told 0. T. Herndon he was going on the | the morning, had dropped to 57 per cent. witness stand to tell all he knew and Hern- | From 1 o'clock until 5 o'clock the tem- d0a urged him not to do it. K~ Ald not say | perature steadily rose to 95 degrees. That to Heruaon that he ouly fnwnded to tell | Was high up in the weather bureau offi what he was forced to tell but on the street it was five to ten de. Herndon and B. A. Rice were introduced | grees hotter. to prove that Noakes had made certain| PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9 statements to them in variance with his [and twenty prostrations oc city today from heat. testimony. It was intended to prove by Rice that Noakes sald to Rice: “They have | The maximum temperature was reached more evidence against me than you think, at 4 p. m., when 94 2-10 was registered on but before I go on the witness stand I in- | the government thermometer on the post tend to make them give me a contract not | office building, On the streets it was much to prosecute me." | hotter and thermometers in the sun re The couri excluded it istered as Righ as 120 degrees. At moon Herndon stated that Noakes told him he | the temperature was 90 degrees and at § was only going to answer such questions as | o'clock tonight 83, Reports from many his lawyers told him to answer. parts of the state tell of numbers of pros- Attorney St ir on Stard. | trations, PITTSBURG, Aug L. F. Sincl one of the attorneys for are reported tonight. They are Mrs the defense, testified as to an alleged con- versation with Wharton Golden fn April In | Scholls, the wife of a prominent business which he said Culton and Youtsey were fools | man, and Bryan Lynch, who has served to have confessed, as they would get nothing | lunch to the newspaper workers nightly fo for it. Witness said he was in the hallway | years. of the executive building when the assassi- [ The maximum reached today was 96 de- nation occurred. The shots sounded to him | rees, making the third successive this point has been reached as if fired from the step of the buildiug. He PEORIA, 1Il, Aug. 9.—Today was the no de clse in the hall or at the door Witness then passed into the governor's re- [ hottest day of the year. The thermometer the lower bridge, the coolest point in ception ro nd met Governor Taylor, the city, stood at 95, but on the streets who was standing in the door of his office. | He was very much excited. Witness pushed | the mercury registered as high as 10z There were two cases of prostration and a him inside the office and pulled the door shut. Governor Taylor had a pistol. Wit- | little girl was found in a vacant lot in sensible from the heat. ness and Taylor walked to the window and saw the body lying on the pavement. Wit- | CLEVELAND, Aug. 9.—Though the tem- ness recognized it as Goebel. On cross-ex- | perature did not exceed 86 today, the hi amination witness admitted that he testified | was depressing. There were four cases of prostration. W. H. Flynn, a painter, suf- before the April grand jury at Frankfort, ol but did not upon that occasion tell of things | fered a sunstroke while at work and will | probably die. he had related on the stand this afternoon, | - e He denied that he had told certain persons | MILWAUKEE, Aug. Two more deaths TO FIGHT FROM AMBUSH |in this city that he saw Goebel fall. He did | rogulted today from the intense heat say, however, that he was told by a witness | Alpert Koeveki, aged and a boy name | 1 Bewten in Open Wartare Boers Will Rewort o accompanied priso; s story ste Ia., has WASHINGTON, Aug. in an Interview today eign complications in ates I8 engaged sald I regard the news fr particularly encouragl tenants are surre Whatever show « ity there 1% at the time will be kep up until_after our election fn November The Insurrection fs kept alive by the lead: ers, who hold out to the soldiers the hope of Bryan's election 1 regard the situation ceedingly grave. The difficulties (hat our soldiers will have to contend against are many and varfous. The conditions that exist thers are much the same as those in the Phlippine fslands. When asked whother in his opinion there was really a condition of war now exist- ing between this country and China, he sald T should say most are killing our people and our soldier 9.—Admiral regarding the which the U Dewey for ited hot wave Interests days ago con- 1 forecaster gives lef. At 5 o'clock had reached 9! 5 m the Philippines as after anothe | es, Veracity fn China as ex- tertaing Fear for Own ad in View of Changlog Sentime n Three deaths urred in this assuredly They WASHINGTON, Aug An important Hentine Nard: he navy will be. oF ltitle | dispatch has been received in diplomatic ure. The ships can keep together at Hong | Quarters in Washington, forwarded from the | Kong and Sh; Our naval mmanders | foreign office of one of the powers taklng | cun do dust as © did at Maniln when ARU | part in the international movement and 1 sent him word that {f he did he woul ziving with much detail conve ion by not find one brick on another and tod LI Hung Chang, in which he expresses his Oy Ee e ave” e, Sfond, ahis 1| despair over the condition of the Chinese Sisted In his purpose. The war ships of (he | government and his fears thut the anti-for allles ought to be able keep things | eign element has gained complete ascend et In those cltlex within the reach of | yney at Pekin, The conversation was with Tt is very signiticant, the sending for i |the consul of the power receiving the dis i | pateh, and intimate friend of ¥ | long standing with Earl Li, the latter spoke [ unreservedly of the deplorable condition of ves 120,000 of Reserves Have unteered Their Serv for Chinn Corp hama Leap Farmer, from Two Wife and Cars and Are Killed. Cuild First a BERLI Aug The number of vol- 8 unteers from the army reserves who have signified their willinguess to go to China is ald to be 120,000. From this number it Is inderstood that a corps not exceeding 20,000 will be formed. A portion of the corps will leave within a fortnight, or as soon as the cabinet meeting called for tomorrow | shall have given consent to the project The government received another telegiam from Herr Buelow, first s of the German legation in Pekin, not dated, but says “The French legation building aalf destroyed by the Boxers, flords she.ter to the membe legation, who are all In good health, but to the members of the Austrian | who sought refuge there aft tion of their building. The bullding is surrounded by Herr Buelow does not mention the glans, but it is supposed that as took refuge in the Austrian legation e now in the French. Tenn., Aug. 9 Commercial-Appeal from says MEMPHIS, | the Ala Washington Turner, a young farmer slding near Anniston, boarded the Southern rallway train at that place, bound for Mec-! Fall, twelve miles away, where he was reared. With him wel his wife and baby They had never ridden on a railroad train beto and as the cars sped along at a fast rate of speed they watched nxiously for their destination Half a mile from Me- Fall the whistle blew and recognizing thelr whereabouts, Turner and his wife hurriedly left their seats and proceeding to the plat- form of the coach, made a leap for the ground, the wife clutching her baby in her arms. As the train had not siackened its speed Turner was killed most instantly | and his wife so badly injured that she died The baby has a broken leg. The only explanation advanced for the conduct of the couple Is that they we unacquainted with traveling on a train, and | | tearing that it would not stop, jumped A special to Birmingham, Two more deaths Annie i o Yaong criven's statement, much meaning, as it that there is graphic communication with the army in the field. Aside from the assurance this gives of u speedy transmission of news from the front, it gives the additional assur- ance that the line is clear back to the | first base of operations. The capture of | Yang Tsun on the day following the bat- | tle at Peitsang Is regarded as a highly successful military achlevement, espe clally in view of the fact that it w looked upon as @ stronghold, whose cap ture might the forolgners considera ble trouble " “Wire up,’ is accepted direct tele a8 he is an which to although saw not only s of the French | Hung Chang by the dowager empres this day of dire distress it {s not surprisi that such government as there it Peki should turn to the only great man of the "“‘” ;'l‘ k th m tot | k airs among his own ople. The dispatch think the allies are doing well to keep ! 3 gton I8 quite lengt e O where he e N1 peftel | as received in Washington is quite lengthy our peaple to have him under their eyes | and quotes Li Hung Chang saying that day 1 at Pekin, | he is satisfied that the conservative or pro- —— | gressive element which he helongs no | | WILL CARRY NEW YORK SURE | ionker has any influence at Pekin. Tho as- cendancy of Li Ping Heng, the intense anti on enth Says There in No Doubt | foreign leader, is referred to, and it is stated Success In that it was due to his proposition that the a two conservative members of the tsung If yamen were beheaded. The names of the beheaded ministers are given in the dis patch as Yuen Chang and Hsie Chin Chang This last event appeared particularly to de press Li Hung Cheng, who regarded it establishing that the progressive element | tavorable to the foreigners could expect no mercy. He even expr the belief thut he would he among to suffer. ie stated that, although summoned to Pekin | he had asked for twenty days' delay on the ground that he was not able to travel The substance of the foregoing dispatch has been communicated to the State depart ment. 1t is not strictly offictal, as the con | versation was to tain extent confiden 10 | tial, but none less is considered » throwing light the sliuation from the standpoint of the noted Chinese statesman EXPECT A BREAK WITH RUSSIA Indications that the Bear Will Drop Franee for Germany and Austrin. LOUISVILLE, Heath, secretary tional committee, accompa Heath, arrived in Louisville | Mr. Heath comes to Louisvil mother of Mrs. Heath Mr. Heath says Governor Roosevelt will start in September on a swing for the F cifie going through West Virginia | Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky in the orde named. Mr. Heath that the r publicans feel certain they will carry New York. He said that within weeks | the preliminary poll of ihe United States would be completed and the repub- liean mansgers would then be ready say what states they expect to carr PROCEEDINGS IN GAYNOR CASE De ALl € 9.—Perry republican na- nied by Mrs, at 8 o'clock o to visit the Ky, Aug s of the Sive Boxers." I as Text o Aside’ f the day, crisls was Adee's Command. om the military developments ot the diplomatie aspect of the made more clear by the pub Meation of the demand by the United States on the imperial government China and transmitted to Minister Wu last evening. The document is as follows We are avalling ourselves of the oppor gunity offered by the imperial edict of {n Bth of August allowing o the forelen . 9 ministers free communication with their [ WASHINGTON, Aug Acting Secretary Tespective governments in cipher and huve | Adee of the State department tonight m rent & communication to Minister Conger, | public the following cablegram from Cousul to_which we awalt an answer vaste ety e We are already advised by him in a briof [ Fowler at Che ¥ hich reached the dispatch received August 7 that imperial | partment at 11 o'clock troops are firing dully upon the ministers | “FROM CHE FOO in Pekin, We demand the immediate cossa- | g, . o tlon of hostile attucks by imperial troops | State. Washington upon the legations und urge the exercise of [ Braphed governor every power and energy of the imperial |against Nmiting correspondence government for the protection of the legi- | gar wid reauesting tlons and all forelgners therein Eer and requesting We are also advised by the s Pekin. ~ Governor telegr from Minister Conger that, in Received note from t for the foreign ministers to | ferbrysorese i g ting ministers to hav aphic communications tries. Al proposed in the ‘edict of he certain death. In view | krams for transmission { ments. 1t s proposed the imperial tr e n legations, and View same to send originals | fication they ssed |MORE OF CHINESE FAIRNESS & those 3 N coast of Allows Min but e Li Yamen declares that Goebel appeared to be in great agony | Cieslik. The thermometer continues and wriggled like a hog that had been | yegigter 4in the 90's stuck. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Aug. 9.-—There were | STRIKERS MEAN TO GET EVEN { tour prostrations from heat today in Louis- ville and Jeffersonville, Ind - DUBUQUE, la., Aug. 9-Edward Quin Former yen of St Louis Str L] Rulio Railway Company Propose to was overcome by heat tonight and will die. Several prostrations were reported during Start Competition, today, MILWAUKER, three whole the on BERLIN, Aug | reterring today envoys and Dr. the delegation capacity and The to the Leyds in Forelgn presence of Boer Berlin, sald that was h in an unoficial Aug Secretary of | it was not likely that any Morning eighth. Tele- | power would endeavor to secure favorable yesterday protesting | peace terms for the Boera in the final set with Con- | tlement to forward | | mittes Dr. Leyds and the delegation, however, | un following A ung It yamen dated had a conference with Herr Dondertheral, | y privy councillor, who is representing Count issued edi:t permit- | von Buelow during the nce of the min peaceful secret ister of foreign his with ir ter in the d Fischer Pekin delegation said t the Associated Dr. Leyd | "The Burghers of the | public do not intend to g ofce nxe Attempts to ¥ " Were Frog ndorse Counnel fo that Aug. 9.—Another death from heat resulted tonight, the vietim b ing Albert Kadecki, 32 years old. Thre prostrations were also reported TOLEDO, 0., Aug Hannah C. Goss | school her, aged 30, stepped from her wheel Into a store here today to take refuge from the heat. She suddenly became nsane and was so violent that it required the combined efforts of four to hold her 8T. LOUIS, Aug. Resolutions were adopted at a meeting of the executive com- of the Street Rallway Employes' today appointing Messrs. T. B. Ed- 0. Colline W. . Benson ittee to or pany and enter ss for the unicn in | governor 0 dispateh his opinion. ave Pekin as August 2 would f the fact th w tring upon the of the doubt ex government in ity its power to wbsolute safety b phs 3 NEW proceedin and B. H licted for v YORK 9 the T Aug, The hearing in alust John ., Willlam ynor and Henjamin D alleged conspir with Captain roto d the Georg w resumed befor John O 1e and a | NEW | Jonrnal YORK and Lam, ter Aug. 9 Advertiser lorft's appointment by the czar min of foreign afairs has created omething akin to a panic here in political nd financial circles The count has always le in favor and here | comn anize busin to the ays A dispatch trom P « s Abram the n . e raflway th have their is tele coun tele govern Afler watehing to consuls for vorl FOWLER the vl vacation of th pondent ot presence ot | svernmen h A ’ the Jur for | v, chief clerk | re office at| cedinge sev- | identified a nun tion with harbor Gaynor's coun he on h conspiracy le it mer ministers at solutions provide that the proposed » its earn pressed by he imiper edict of August 2, i store order and secire Pekin, {t 18 evident thut this apprehension s well founded, for It your government cannot protect olr minister in Pekin it will presumptively be unable 1o pro \im ) v v t hi They will continue guerrilla warfare, split SEVe arerors Aran e nne const _ MORE ARMENIAN MASSACRES 1k up into small hands. and they | P the >mpany shall ings to the carnings during ributed franchise the the road prohibited other road T, B, B that the o a city r el 1902 shall be fund; that itration : more strongly tanding with Germa Austria than with France 18 kn rid's fa ds today the United Savannah, a witnes uth 1 | African up the fight re to th of an under shall 5 Ny " MALATESTA GETS SARCASTIC .. in th day conne Gaynor and ary hall and from S wn the A before pro at ty the right a adver Franco-Russian alliunce The latter has become very ined wince Parisian financiers declined to have anything to do with floating the last Russian loan, and the sudden recall to St that f Annrchists Detectives Pays His Re- of Europe America. to pur y shall | any | eral 1 t t work dan sel att tract ber wi o the t government RUEKCAL with ) um by the ed to p therefore urke upon the imperin that it shall adopt (he eour | ceaselessly disturb the British, inflict Ing in the aggregate more damage in th third clause of the letter ne way than they could in a big war consolidating of the to his majesty, the en peror of China, of July X 190, wnd ent i nto communication with the relief expedi tion ®0 cports fr Slaugh that whi Iwards, LONDON reet who I8 chairman of the Aug. 10.-Malatesta, the an in question upop n's grievance hist that cosoperation may be secured between them for the liberation of the legations, the protection of forelgners and the restoration of er. Such action | the part of the imperial government be & satlsfuctory demonstration friendliness und desire to attaln these ends. ALY A ADEE, ry, Department of State, | on would of s Acting Secre Washington, Augist 9 Wu Forwards De Minister Wu worked assiduously on the message during the day, translating it | first from the English to Chinese and then | from Chinese into the cipher code of China. Owing to the gravity of the doc- | ument this work required scrupulous care, | but is s probable it is now well on its | way to the Chinese government | The various forelgn representatives in the eity showed keen interest in this latest move of the United States end called at the State department to Inquire cernlng L. They were furnished copies of the demand and in an informal manner expressed their approval of what had been done. This action by the United States (Continued on Second Puge.) con | massacred in the CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug ceived from Bitlis, Asiatic Turkey, say tha 200 men, women and children have been Armenian village of Spag in the district of Sassun, by troops nd Kurds under Ali Pasha, the command- ant of Bitlis. He is also sald red the villuge to be burned Advices re hank, is to to have or New | MANCHESTE ngland, Aug Chair- | ! man Bythell of the Manchester Ship Canal companys, at & meeting today, informed the shareholders that Manchester, after the y 1900 would cease to be u free port, that ship would be vied on moderate scale | that ship owners would be obliged tar berths for their ships. f b Aues and pay New n's Strike s Yot Over Aug At a meeting beld today | of the representatives of the 4,000 cabmen who have on strike in Paris since Sunday it was decided to continue Ihe‘ strike. been v York Glasgow ¥ 1 1 N AL At fver At Pl rom hours. Hong ¥ \ pr M At At )" At coma At pool. At Be Boulogne aud New York. striking stated ar tee hat the committec he of i roces Inst from Anchoria K CONDITION OF KANSAS from under X1 ailed ur H and for Ma from Mon ork: Rhy Dominion \SEOW Yand for Arriv n Yot Very win Hig, but Wh Record (0 Any Stute rk ueenstown - Salled for New York Philadelphia Arrived - | fa Cherbourg ymouth—Arrived—Kuiser WY for Hamburg Arri TOPEKA of the Kansas crop 4 per cent. This returns from every dated Augnst suffere hot best the Kas ). —~The given Germar Aug Pennla s o r estimate is Alatia, from school distri Since th the con half reasonably al report Agricu i re This grown The may ¥ric A has nd 1 from 50 that an he offic ( yield bushels K some ther hat i Kong we fro ke i Arrived previous Nippo Franciseo, via Honoluly | the By via Pl Hoa Safled n—Saile the total wheat horte | crop of wheat American over and the figur Ia correct, r Oak Branch, for . L ever aston Arrived—Saxonia, from 1.0 any whe by Rotterdam--8ullod—Bpasrndum, i : n the in any mmit three will ructions In CROPS Marvest condition Meially as based on ot in Kan tinued dry 1 18 xpected crop’ issue o tonight 1 oMcially he lar year harve e acceptea corn | who of Rome to conspiracy, | He is considered by the be the leader of the was Interviewed in is represented as having said Signor Sirraco (the Iallan premier) is {our best friend. He pays the detectives | such small salaries that we can buy them cheaply. A few francs and & bandful of cigarettes and you cau buy an Italian de- toctive. The Spanish Itallan come American, French order. The German the dearest, because they stupid. With all their ar not arrested any real revolutionist hall short establish in Italy econol equality social brotherhood the wholo will follow the of Italy Tribuna regicid London. police aro next and the then and cheay er, the R English detect the the the slan, that in are m have We 1 Then example are ts nd world New P Mee WASHINGTON, Aug, goneral has appointed (' York and Samuel E | unitea States postoftice Luspectors, The postmaster R. Clarke of New | rly of Kentucky | inspectors, | of the or of out the fact rection tri of materials work neers and 1 all chief of he re he United . er elthe Statew engineer He also hrough ain Carter's af the quality progr ! the sl g the tar that un nonthly used required inspectors se war r Cap reports 1 the of all Money WASHIN departmen AD Irders ITON for China So Aug. 0.—The announced the completion whereby remittance troops operating who will hereafter be locality. A mone roff established at Mili Postal Sta No. 1, China. Its Id 15 at pres undecided, but intending remit pur and th notwith 1 @ ery namely tofic rrangement the n China to ay be made or that boen tion to in those ent wtion ent er 15 above r for pay nding vided be o I thi Chin w e the 1o rate for $100 harged 30 cents e r order on the points in the United State heing Poters burg of the Russian generalissimo, Dragomiroff, and the chief of the general taff re in consultation with the department, followed by appointment, secms to alllunce, for the made such big rupture {INDIA TROOPS FOR CHINA who French Count indicat which were b war Lamsdorfl's that the France has the eve of ake acrifice ot I8 on of | Great Fac ritain ix N inive of Ko A0 ing from Simia, rth Wrigade, M han | | siMLA brigade the e to China s 4 omr the Fourth Aug Excluding strength of the i Britigh cMeers, 1,064 non and pative off 7 ir forces | issioned ¢ men 11,550 followers, 1 1,400 ponies and teen Maxims and tmperial it have onth, the the is expected that alled before entire fowce of will middle Bext