Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 16, 1900, Page 1

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w.. |HE OMAHA DAILY BEE. e e e— - . ESTABLISHED JUN 19, 1871, OMAHA, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 16, 1900-TEN PAGES, SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. | | roSecretary of State Broderiek Blicans of Oregon Adopt Pateis | Forecast for Nebraska | Takes More Optimistic View l e Platform and Nomi | » Showers; Cooler Officlals at Washington Realize Oritical State | S Germany at Last Admits That Real Advance | bty Rt L Bl i wernture wt Omahn Veaterdwyi | London Hears That Allies Reachod Obinese ' LONDON 18 15, —William 8t Johr on Pekin Has Begun, TACOMA, Wach,, Aug. 1 Letter Seiged by Funston. Dew, Hour Dew of Affairs in China. },,, Skl ALl SRR ks [( JAcoMA, Wasn, Aus. e : Torh 0 Oupital on Monday, “ < foreign affa peaking this evening at a and adopted a platform, nor a tull : : k E | e | Primrose league fete, said the governmer KAISER'S POLICY DEVELOPS | inie 1icke adjourne ook, | UNITED STATES 1S ROUNDLY DENOUNCED Aadal - CRISIS CANNOT CONTINUE MUCH LONGER | hrimrose leasue fete, said the government | OBJECTION TO i The mAnsesrs ot 3. M, Prink, the Kisg i ey w55 L TIDINGS COME BY WAY OF SHANGHAI CABLE PR Pekin would shortly be relieved. He added county candidate fo ZOVETno) controlled » g that the. government constdered the situas | ¥es p object to ¥ e convention by a large majority and| Montague R, Leverson of Brookiyn Miveriy ¥ 4 Goneral Hope That Early News May Quickly | 1ion n istactery -..{ ‘\,’\IZ,. g tew | "l.,:.',"‘" ...'..»r, b to Disparages |0 \'m,f ,,',",f,,‘ 1 l "“-m' k- ¥ U,'“,‘ Advises b nos to Seire v b da ent of Chancellor in ( ! without a hitch as follow fenn OMcer and [ eive Present Awful Tension, men a ithout a hitch Releive Presen Referring to the landing of British troops duct of China War, ressmen—W, L. Jones of Yakima and - |at Shanghai Mr. Broderick said the gov Cushman of Plerce | DEATH DUE TO APOPLEXY ernment was ready to land forces if nece Toverno nk of King 1 SEVERAL MESSAGES COME FROM CONGER ¢ i o EITeINE. devaroeatr, 6. 1 | WASHINGTON, Aug. 15—The War de-|pantinuton's Secretnrs Deserives | SOME DISPOSITION TO DISCREDIT NEWS | #ary for the protection of British life and | pepriN, Aug The German gevern Lieutenant Governor—H. G. McBride of |Interests and adding significantly: “We (00 how admits that the advance upon | gkagit | partment has made public the Filipino cor Scenes Attending Millionnir Pekin is well under way, having received | zocretary of State—S. H. Nichols of | respondence captured some months ago by Passing Awas. . official confirmatory dispatches today. The | Snohomish Gene Funston's command in Luzon. It| Enemy Reported to Be Entrenched 40,000 Paris Has Received Roport Which is of Almost the Same Tenor, |all know that we are determined to risk Btrong Opposition, it is Prophesied, May Be | o ryining ana 1o forward all our Encountered at Tung Chow, strength and resolution hefore allowing | goroien office Is greatly astonished at the | Treasurer—C. W, Maynard of Lewis, | was transiated from the Spanish under the | NEW YORK, Aug. 15.~The body of Coll S | British interests to go down in any part | 0" tavinie of the international troops, | Auditor—J. D. Atkinson of Chelan | direction of Captain John R. M. Taylor of | P. Huntinglon, who died Monday at his Strong Near Tung Chow, | of the world . | | CHAFFEE WITHIN TWENTY MILES OF PEKIN but surmises that the Chinese will make one | Attorney General—W, B. Stratton of Pa- | the Fourteenth infantry, who is in charge [lodge in the Adirondack mountains, was The appointment of Field Marshal Count o Pk of {nsurgent records brought o this ety foday. The funeral more desperate stand before the allies reach | cific gent r rough | von Waldersee, Mr. Broderick sald, was | ;0" o0 nia) land Commissioner—Samuel A. Calvert| There Is a letter from Dr. Montague R.|scrvices will be strietly private and will be | CHINA READY TO DELIVER FOREIGNERS elcome, and he expressed the hope that it This evening the Berlin papers contain a|of Whatcom | Leverson, dated at Fort Hamilton, N 10 Friday morning ed That When Al would strengthen the ties hetween England | - " |kl statement that Prince von Hohenlohe, the | Superintendent of Public Instruction-—-|July 17, 1869, and addressed to Senor In the party which accompanied the bod p and Germany | . p esig A Srvan of Che | Apacible. It says to this city from Raquette Lake, the late kin They Mnay ¥ imperial chancellor, is about to resign R. B. Bryan of Chehalis | Ar | to this et 1 . ave Repented s Ing the general situation in China | oo 00 o fact, he has taken hardly any Judges of the Supreme Court—Wallace| Dear Sir and Brother: Our friend Albert [ millfonaire’s summer home, were Mrs, | ceive De Glers Outaide City Walls he declared that there was every Feason | ... yn Gormany's warlike China pol al- | Mount of Spokane and R. O. Dunbar ot [ S. Parson of Lexington gave me your name | funtington, the widow, Archer M. ifunting Avola N and Deserted the to hope that the viceroys in the Yang Tse [ S0 B 0 00 orms of the constitution | Thurst an one 1o whom [ should write ax a repte- | on " the adop on, and his wife, Miss « alley would sincerely throw thelt dn-for'yq empire the chancellor is solely re-| Fresidential Electors—Charles Sweeney | ‘I am a member of the Anti-Im M. Campbell, a lite-long friend of Mrs fluence against the insurrection sponsible to the nation in that connection. | of Spokane, J. M. Boyd of Okonagon, K, W. [ ledliie of Boxton, of which George 8. Huntington, Mr. Mansfield Hillhouse and WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.—The tension on - ktvee diligens | ity casond t | 315 5 6. Ooearoe ell I8 president and Trvin Winslow I8 sec- |y " piiinouse, sister of Mrs. Huntington \DON - ; er diligent inquiry the correspondent of Hastings of Jefferson and 8. G. Cosgrove of | retary. 1 have published many nrticles Mre, ise, 8 LONDON, Aug. 16 -850 a. m.—"The al- the Chinese situation has been intense | HAVE FOOD FOR FIFTEEN DAYS | ihe Acsociated Press is able to assort that | Garfield lotters denouncing the pieatical war Isaac E. Gates, brother-in-law of the de- | ol ara roported to have reached Pekin on throughout the day, for it is appreciated Prince von Hohenlohe does not intend to| The platform adopted warmly endorses |Fled on by President Melvinley against s ceased and a very close confidential adviser: | Monday,” says the Shanghai correspondent by officials that the crisis has reached an | Fremch Minister Telegraphs Condi- | oot O8 BRCEEEE 0 the administration of President McKinley | {ron; o and General Otls and il hi% | George E. Miles, private secretary, and DF. | of the Dally Expross, wiring yesterday. He acute atage which cannot be continued tons in Pekin Up to Several leading papers, however, oxpress | and declares its loyalty fto the flag, | natives. Our presidents are not n the po- | William E. Cole, a guest at the cany [ adds: “Chinese official news confirms this statement, but without details, Russin Credit A% Willing to We- exsity of ering Gates. many hours without bringing word of mo- August . dissatisfaction at what they call Emperor(for the gold standard of value [ §ition of Kings. Our presidents are not in| The party at once drove to the family mentous import, determining. either for i William's personal regime regarding China|for all our money; for protection | ihe consent of comgress me MeKinter o | residence. The casket was taker from the | = A paris message repeats this, but the good or evil, the entire course of event PARIS, Aug. 16.~The French forefgn of-| ayq the ““figureheadism™ of Hohenlohe. The [ ana reciprocity; for the Nicaraguan | doing. and all persons compromised in this | car and removed to the house statem clally as it emanated from It has been a day of extremo anxiety, of | fice has received (he following dispateh | o ageblatt says that this conditlon | eanal, operated, owned and defended | WiT Are pirates In speaking of t ath of Mr. Hunt be accepted with considers watching and waiting, with only meager | from the minister of France at Pekin, M.|o¢ things “gravely injures the fmportance |by the United States; for the election of | fu (hin: You should cotse shnn Smeia) of | ington, Private Secretary Miles, who Was | uble reserve. Other Lovdon morning pa and fragmentary information as to the mili- | Pichon, dated August 9 5 he Chabestiors o UHES. Heltx IRATY YelEkeRn o WANBHRISE " All the papers, United States senators by direct vote of | rank in the service of the United States and | present at the time, sald today tary and diplomatic phases [ We have been advised that i Hung| i, jyqing the Berliner Post, the Kreuz Zel- | the people; for the enlargement of Ameri- [ thfl tnform the foreign consuls that he was | “His death was very sudden. it was due | gigparches which, with the exception of the Oa¢ el the new developuents todny wed Is charged to negotlate telegraph-| g the Deutsche Tages Zeltung, the Ber- |can trade and commerce; foF such discrime | piracy and writo to suld consuls to hug | [0 cerebral apoplexy. Mr. Huntington Was| foregoing from Shanghai, form the latest the statement that messages are being re- with the powers. We are lgnorant ||, . rugeblatt, the Frankfort Zeitung, the | ination and national aid as shall speedily | Fepresentatives present at the council W | attucked with a severe coughing just after | pow regarding the advance, are devided in rocelved from Minister Conger which are | of the events occurring outside the lega-| g paegigohe Zeitung and the Hanover Cour- | result in the upbuilding of the American|Wd4F t0 see that'it ix legul retiving. Mrs. Huntington gave him a stim- | o5inion, some belioving that the allies must not transmitted through any of our offic fals | tton. It is surrounded by hostile defenses. : fer demand the summoniog the Relchstag merchant marine and the ri enforce Accused of Piracy. ulant, as she had done before. This seemed | pouva already reached Pekin and others pre in China or through the Chinese minister How could we negotiate without the dipl “ in extra session ment of the laws against the trusts; for Piracy wa uld be shown by conducting a | to relieve him for a moment. Then he sald ! forring to believe that the relief will not here, but directly to the State department. | matlc corps regaining its rights and the| o o510gne Gazette, in the course of an | the loyal and liberal SUPPOTt of the Da-| war and the pemof winld Lkes of civilized | to Mrs. Huntington: ‘I am very, very A1l | by accomplished until the end of the week These mensages como by the way of Tal| legation grounds belng evacuated? 1f ':": inspired article, says: “American readiness | tion's defenders—the army and navy: for | that the consent to killing defenseloss pris: | Those were his last words and he sank into | rolographing from Yang Tsun August 6, Some of them cannot be fully de- nm‘w-m.‘u.m« prevent the m‘«r‘l‘{ of the| ier the rescue of the members of the le- | the uncompromising suppression of the re. | Oners and noncombatants, men, women and | unconsciousness a moment later. The|a Dajly News correspondent says: “Sir Al ored, and for this reason the statement | allied tropps, which 18 our oniy saWAUSS | gations to intervene for peace promises | belllon on the island of Luzon; for the im- | iy aflcers and soldiers of noneomborints | 4Arm was quietly given. When I reached | frod Gaseleo hopes to keep the enemy run- cannot be definitely made that the dis-|we bk 1K 1RG0 (RIncte BARCH RO | emall success, since the powers today make | mediate rescue of Americans fmperiled in | If I were not an old man of more than 6 | the bedside of Mr. Huutington he apparently | ning and to follow him right into Pekin.’ patches sent by the government to Minis- | secilon Whe ’\’\"‘l el i e P Ve | the highest demands, while the Chinese are [ China, and for ample restitution for loss of | Jo4r 1 would willingly aid vou in knew no one. Ngan Piog was occupled without firing A& ter Conger are received by him. So far |18 occupied by imperial troops, who have| o) \iiing to grant trifies.” life and property therein; for & territorial | juo Gronse,, I tito sugkest that the Fil-| " servant was sent for Dr. E. B. Tay- | shot, according o o dispatch to the Dally as the messages have been deciphered v!u‘rt“m' i AU R, Nm.mu; i s WaAlinaas. form of government for Alaska, including | ple of the United States. 1 shall not give |10F, Who was at a camp across the lake. | Express from that place, dated August 11. 18 no indication that Minister Conger had | 10 S0BR Kolom O O een days. | Next Saturday Emperor Willlam will re- | Protection of mavigation, and oproses re- |3OU the heads of this appeal. I merely point | Dr. Taylor returned with all speed, but| It is belleved.” the message adds, “that rocaived any of those sent R | i ot bish celve st Wilhelmshohe Field Marshal Count | llnquishing soll or sovereignty of any part | once the people, "For examuin s veforni, | When e reached the sick man's bedside lite | Generals Fung Tu Sang. Ma and Chung are partment. Nothing could earned of the | o alderévs. together W aft | of that district. It favors the early con- |to the Declaration of Independ wust | Was extinet entrenching 40,000 strong at Tung Chow Pomtomia of the dispatchen received, al-| MURDER ~ OF MISSIONARIES | von Waldersee, tosether with his entire stat | of thet district. u tavors tho eonty cond |t ShaRieihilon o ocheiience, muss | ™, \ilhot more than wenty minuten at | Tha whien sy avota. Tun Chion Sursuimg Shough i e LA R o A Hoard of | marshal will be presented with a field mar- | OPerated by the federal government, con- | tha pointe | hive made above to show thai | (N° VEry most after the attack of coughng | the route northwest from Chang Kai Wan." e 14 '\mf“\“'rnl\ o ,-‘u:,‘n.v':w.:‘u-rl]\:‘ "I"n'n:n'l‘l':‘-lonvr shal's baton. All the guests of the Kaiser [ Becting this state with our islaud posses- | this war is piracy, using them to bring out started before dsath bad come, Tung Chow appears to be about twelve the consular officers and e A g o he want_o from 0 » 08 . sions in the Pacific ocean. of Christian fecling_ for the hese coughing attacks were usually ac- | miles from Pekin. A dispatch to the same Chaffee, beside those which came direct sions Reports Many Killed. WILpArinipats in e parades At be pres foldiers, , You must show that “McKinley | companied by a slight paralytic action of [ paper from Shanghai . i ; pnt at the banquet in honor of the seven- - - | keeps the people of the Unitea States. ih dated yesterday, s he message transmitted through Minister [ t o R ie I o jue t £6 CHTORL: A4 TeaDITAtIee OFEnnS, sl i oigsemhssi oy oo Wu was entirely decly N ; Have deliberately tncess Hatzfeld, the late Mr. Hunting- | hand over the forelgn ministers, their ment of commissioners for foreign missions to-| The actual dates when the additional 7,500 A o 10" sectire’ the Tatification ‘o the treaty families and servants, but will not permit A ¢ day received a cablegram, dated August|men will leave Bremerhaven for China have | Changed C oma and Rush ef | Of Peace with Spain without & clause which i amilies and servants, but will not permi Oppontiten at Tang Chow mxpested. | (MY TONV B, O CE A (O 200, in | now been fized. Bight ateamers wiil sall 08 | wor Decias Brestdeut to Fe B i T S Lt TRIRCEVUAMG 1o be, Greaeat st | T dvpArUES GE BALIYE CHHNHNE » course conver- | 1% [rO! 4 G B s : Al on o o pinos; that they deliberately led whe but being unable to be present at During the course of . (OUNT4| Which he says that a messenger sent to| August 31, September 4 and September 7 P they 8ald ‘that Agoncillo ndvised Agul | the funernl she will delay her home.coming gation between Secrel A‘:v l?;\' : Pao Ting Fu has returned and reports that | carrying also much artillery, including | naldo to fight and that a telegram stating | “The Russian Paron Speck von Sternberg, the - man charge d'affaires, Mr. Root gained considerable information concern- | + opposite was intercepted. The €| for a short time. i eRt." - cpatiibie the Presbyterian missionaries were killed [ howitzers and shells. CANTON, 0., -No_further plans | advised from Washinghen tor tocer Va8 | N ; A | this telegram, ““has notified Li Hung Chan, | from Washington to secure the| No decision has been reached as to the & P {ng the route which has yet to be traversed | by the allied armies. Baron Sternberg told June 30, and the Congregational and China | Several letters have been received here |have been made for the president’s trip to| Dassage of the trety. Do not fail 1o it | chotee of an oMciating clergyman. He pron. | 0 18 willingness to receive M. de Giers inland missionaries July 1. The mission- | from the captain of the German gunboat |the Grand Army of the Republic encamp- | SISt upon the atrociies before mentioned, | gyt B, Sl CCTRIRE FERETER FE HOPL | outside the walls of Pekin, thus avolding arles station A at Pao Ting Fu were Rev. | Iltls, describing the experiences of that ves- | ment the latter part of next week and the | Sbecally the assassination in cold blood of | 81 ) ting clergyman. He prods him that Tung Chow was a very strong place and if the Chinese army should make a stand at this point the international ton's adopted daughter, now in London, was Russin Dickers with Li. women and ¢ » Vgt el LA et A il the entrance of the Russian force. This Horace T. Phutin, Miss Mary S. Morrill|sel. One appears in this evening's papers, | return to Canton made about September 1.| erty of nuylw-'r‘rl\ll?nru:'n::'yl.-<'|l|'..u‘ eSS oR: "" l:!:, ‘:,‘(,,f‘.mf:,,:,’::,:t::lt:", AtieiBallibe independent action s calculated to em- and Miss Annle A. Gould, both of Portland, | €IVIng a graphic account of' the Taku fight. | It is expected to be a quiet rlp over a di- | CoF and woldiers, especially by ‘a captain | o dioten were D. 0. Mills dward King | PArrass the allies scriously. Japan _de- Me. The character of the messenger sert | The writer exclaims rect route and probably on regular trains. | of the genernl who not iy tock e SVe | of the Union Trust company. K. b. Albert of | MERd8 that General Yung Lu shall meet 1 |5 Pao Ting Fu is wholly unknown to the | “And what a shame! All the enemy's guns | No provisions are to be made for stops en- | for the ‘punishment o The axsassins bt | (he Central Trast compans, Edwin Hawles. | the allies outside the city gates and deliver forces would find it qute difficult to over- | oo o o ihe board, but the message in-|and the shells that killed our brave fellows | route and no speeches from the car plat- [ Who did not even reprimand them trafic manager of the Southern Becify | the ministers and all the native Chris- come the forts and walls. While 1t Is not | Jolel b %o on it ‘Fowler and Rev. Dr. | came from home. All the guns are the |form are to be made. Orgentcd demonstra- | violaied, it that alurtiy %omen hive been | (AT WARGEr Af the Southern l:f‘"""un:nu Known what Tesistance may havo been oF |yt Thoriar credit the report. tatest Krupp quick-firers.” tions along the route Will noL b €NCOUFAEA [ Alleged Atrocition o e Proweq. | the Southern Pacife: aartin Bramenn. o j--48 minister in London, Sir U R R e By TRt The Kreuz Zeltung contains a welghty |and above all mothing of a politieal flavor L offer to o Yo .| P. ‘Schiwerin of the Pacific Mail Steamsnip | Chih Chen Lo Fens Lu, In quoted as sayln: Socretary Root and other officlals would | gy ATiON MORE CRITICAL | editorial contending that the greatest difh- | will be allowed on the trip. When the pres- | 10 before b commmipslg o nene Atrocl | | pany and ¢, Adolphe Lowe, an ol frienq | ~The POWers must not press too hard an not be surprised to learn of a very seriou culty in finally settling with China's finan- | ident returns to Canton it will probably be | Americans named by the congress of ihe | of the deceased, 4 5 " Pekin. 1f you defeat the Chinese soldiers tle at ”‘“'d"':‘:"‘m German force now | Chinese Government ix Bn clal difficulty to resume about the same routine as has| Unlied es and three Filipinos nam s it will not be possible to control the sol- 1t is expected thal il G " fsters 1o “It would require a reform of the entire | been followed during the last six Weeks. | py o person DIEToRs 80U prosiaec. o diery. They may turn and rend the lega- on its way to China will 1and in the viclos o “”l';n::-:m city tax system,” says the paper, “and especially | He Will not coms hare for & front porch | by the Dietied 8ioiis-iner flation ohosen NEGROES ATTACKED BY MOB [iii "io wot welieve the legation fod ity of Lin Yu, which is directly cast o N 4 the introduction of an income tax, in order | CAMPAign, or to receive political delegations. | Englishman, for they are all assoclated in supply will be stopped as long as the Pekin. The advantages of this point 8F¢| o o iaron Aug 15.—A dispatch re- | to raise the money necessary to strengthen |1t 18 known to be the president's desire to| {in ‘ot this tetiny iy GaU00 of any por- | Friends of ¥ powers refrain from attacking Pekin and found In tho fact that lce will not Inter~| oo/ liorany’ by the State department | the central government, to allow the carry- | avold such demonstrations as not in keep- | cin | but 1 think 1t would be mope| Stabbed to Death Att negotiate for the surrender of the minis fere with the going and coming of & ""1 trom Consul Fowler at Che Foo was badly | ing out of imperative public work, to dimin- | Ing with the dignity of the office he holds | lent to keep It secret. Do not forget to | ance on M | ters with supplles. It also Is sald that the road | L5 gmission so as to be almost | ish the power of the viceroys and to enable |and, besides, the great amount of ofclal | Mocicuden vour annie ™ piudron which The Times has the follpwing dispatch from Lin Yu to Pekin is better than that | Ll fi ol on ™ ipher experts of | China to pay easily the heavy indemnity | Work makes it fmpossible for him to engage | Without wirniuk {0 the nonco barding them | NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—A mob of several | from shanghat, dated Tuesday o T 'C.'Ifl"'.fii,"‘"L\’f.'.‘:i,"\‘, the department worked on It last night |now steadily accruing. This solution is the | In such a campaign | pencerul towns where war would never have [ hundred persons formed at 11 o'clock to- | wqne viceroy has withdrawn his opposi- 1s higher and the country more e and today. So far as made out the dis- [only feasible ono if the partition idea is to | SRS Al | been, thought lof, but of which now the | night in front of the home of Policeman | (jon to the landing of Rritish troops on oo came Sarty - e day to the Navy | ESGD SPOCLEL 10 Son & esb o | Brahes Amser GAGE ON GOLD MOVEMENT | formerisfelcuta o che {hiivd séhica Rave | RODert J. Thormp. Thirtyseventh sireet | congition that this docs not entail the Word came early In the day fo the NEW | iy or Conger transmitted to Che Foo | Bishop Anzer of the locese of Shan Tung e | iakmere foients of the Linted miaten B | S50 N oty avemus, 1o wreak vengeance el Maiow, v twe f“":'" ":’""' by courier. The gist of the Conger mes- | has set out on his return to China, after | Exportation of Yellow Metnl in Only rv-\y\y":\"|“'|1ni‘.”.'x”.\'x.(}-h-“.P;.'v‘i"n"(.”'r“|'f'. refusal | upon the negroes of that neighborhood be reached Matow, about twenty i ‘: dny | sage contained in the cablegram is that the | receiving secret instructions from the pope & 10 Adiust & Natural Fanounes Hed, Stutes and Great Britain to | cause one of thelr number has caused the Pekin. ~This occurred Friday or SeIWr: | yiuation fn Pekin is more critical and that | relative to the attitude which Catholic mis- Equilibrium. was decided ur conference of the | policeman's death. Thermp was bruised sent through 4\||\mr].|| l‘(m::l' r‘:j:.«‘n‘(::":un”(,.r.o the ministers to leave the imperial | the hostilities. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.—Secretary Gage | thelr use was denounced as hasbarora 51 | trying to arrest a negro woman and died ficently definite to locate the c s The public, oficial and uvoficial, 1s unan- city under Chinese escort before the relief was today asked by a reprosontative of the | N Other commissioners at The: Haguc the following day. The man who inflicted | ;e 010 the opinfon that withdrawal at any event, three the people of the United Stite i " reaching that place. But in any event olumn arrives. Beyond this poiat the dis- Assoclated Press if the outward gold move- | tres® thoek tok are Oheltian most of the injuries is sald to be Arthur 3 » de ‘N 5 ce . a gol¢ ey th Rt By ate a i this stage would be deplorable and would or four days have elapsed since then ah‘| patch is unintelligible BOERS ANXIOUS FOR PEACE ment was adversely affccting the treasury | ask them naty H (AL L Harris, a negro who came here several | beigice the worst results, thero bus been timo for a sl further ad- aes neral Prinslos @noted ms Smytmg | PSS 0F wan likely to trouble or tmpair | UEion WIth 'their present Conuct oward | weeks ago from Washington. 1n a fow mo & ance toward the imperial city ] ihh 2 e SR 90 A ] adarcimey \is war. This horrible war ments the mob tonight swelled to 1,500 per- v v T o MANY MISSIONS ARE PILLAGED They Are Disgusted with the Kold reserve = The secretary replied |is i nightmire for me. 10 may be folly for | e oy e a1 e vttt o | GENERAL MA NEEDS NEW FLAG Fauing A0 4 — Kroger. at he was suffering ne anxiety at all on | me to permit myself to be aftected by i, | * ! Ly 3 The fecling among offctals was shown In | preneh Connul Wires Regarding Con- that score it its horror, the ‘eternal Infamy of fi fof | negroes fled in terror into any hiding place — it . my country whose people are prepuring 4 | they co the extreme circumspection thrown about a » in Province of CAPETOWN, Aug. 15.—Commandant The movoment,” he sald, “is entircly | state of siavery for amoihor: prevents me \‘h"r} N|“l;l\ n"f' erves from f: tatl L he police re vy rom four stations, all messages relating to China, and it was Swatow. Prinsloo, who surrendered to General Hunter | Patural and nature always tends to adjust | from sleeping | announced both at the State and War de- ik July 30, has arrived here. He says he s |®uilibriums. The negotiation on this side | I Qh Al ;"'I‘“”n_u more, but that it would | bumbering 400, were called out. The mob partments that any communcations from | PARIS, Aug. 15.—The following dispatch | heartily tired of the war and welcomes the | O 50 1ar&e a part of the English loan fully |are heing taken b "'”:!::"hffl:;;n'l‘lll;.llg',:l‘- 1% | of white men, which grew with great rapid- Minister Conger or the United States con- | has been recelved from the French consul | prospect of peace. The commandant added | ©XPIAins the movement. We have gold to | the United Sates, some examples of which | 1Y+ Faged through the district and all ne uls concerning affairs in China would Dot |4t Canton that a majority of the Boers wero “disgusted | P2re and it will go, and ought to go. where | 11,18 AhOWH, from the conduct of General | &Foes were attacked. Scores were injured. bo made publics 1t was explained that this| Al js quiet here. 1In the district of | with President Kruger.” it can be most profitably employed 7 L MONTAGC T 1?'“1‘]"\ Girson, | Clubs w ed until the policemen were was in no way due to a desire to Keep|Swatow the agitation against the Christians| james G. Stowe, the United States consul | th® moment that place of the most need ap- Dewey Drusasd 1 "“”|‘ ©+ |almost exhausted. Revolver#”were emptied from the public information of an important | and missionaries is alarming. Many mis- | general, has returned here. Only ten Boers | P?ATS o be Great Britain and the continent. i L ABAIE | Into the air and in one or two instances character, but was based solely on the fact|sions in that region have been pillaged and | were in the body which attacked his train, | V© have a large supply of the yellow Another letter, dated Singapore, June 24, | fired at the upper stories of the negro ten- hut the crisis involved so many possibili- | burned. The viceroy and myselt have de- | The remainder of the command was com. | Metal—an increasing supply when our do- | 1899 from W. C. St. Clair, editor of the|ements, from which the negroes throw ties of extreme hazard to the legationers in | cided each to send a delegate to make an|poced of forelgners. Mr. Stowe says the ma~ | Me5tC production is considered. Besides | Singapore Free Press, to Howard W. Bray, | bricks, paving stones and other missiles Pekin that the greatest caution must be ob- | investigation and re-establish order. With | jority of the Boers desire a cessation of | 1% W€ are buying at our assay offices on | discusses conversations which the writer| The trouble cxtended over almost the presence of other forces, but instructions ave been received from the British gov rment that disembarkation is to await | turther orders. The fact is generally known that Great Britain Is hesitating Chinese Commander in Hix Pagerness 10 ¥ Leaves Standard Behi LONDON, Aug. 15.—Rear Admiral Bruce, telegraphing from u to the British admiralty, says “Have received the following from the | general at Ho S Wu, August “*The troops are distant about twenty- seven miles from Pekin. They experienced Iittle opposition. A position had been pre- D by the enemy, but as the allics ad- vanced they fled. The Tartar cavalry was sorved agalnst disclosures which would fur-|the view of giving weight to the mission | hostilities. the Pacific coast almost the entire product | ¢/4iMs to have had with Consul Pratt, who | whole district inciuded from Twenty-ninth | pareed by two squadrons of Bengal ther fmperil those in danger. The actual de- | and to show that accord exists between the i Juelis of the British Klondike reglon. With our | W8 succeeded about that time by Consul |to Forty-second street and from Ninth oy ers, Many of the former were killed.' " Nelopments of the day consisted of the |mandarin and the consulate, the commis-| Hoare v Stil Holding Out. BTeat resources we can, as long as we main- | MOSClY at Singapore. There also was some | SIxth avenue Abres ANV oULio M ERAD Y4B BUIAIE Temey dispatch heretofore alluded to and | sion sails on the Froach war vessel Comet.” | llr\l':u"r;r\\x Aug. 15.—A megsenger for | tain the gold standard and keep the public uskestion that Pratt favored the Filipino | The policeman’s hody was brought 0 his | andards of Generals Ma and Sung were Consul General Goodnow at Shang- ‘olonel Hoare, commanding the British gar- | credit good, retain for our own use o | cause and the discussion related to conversa- [home tonight on Ninth avenue between | oqpiyred. The troops are much exhausted B s S England Replies to MacDonald. | rison at Elands river, who reached Mafeking | 80ld we necd.” ML 418 {lons thiat Consul Pratt is sald to have Had | Thitty-sisth and Thirty-seventh strect, At |y oocreat wut ere hoalth kad spirils are bl 5 LONDON, Aug. 15.—The British foreign | Y declined to make | 0N 18, 10.--the Britlsh forelgn | Tuesday, roported that the garrison was still — with the Filipinos. St. Clair takes little |once the house became a sort of shrinc [T a e axaaiiant s The ‘Bale depariment deoling office, replying to the latest cipher dispatch follasy o it therwlse excellent | public the contents of the Goodnow dis- | OMCe. TeplyIng to the latest cipher dispatch | holding out when he left, aithoush Colonel | MAY BE BANKERS TO ENGLAND |*\°C% i that, but pins bis faith to what | A second dispatch dated Ho Si Wu, Au- patch. This opened a wido feld for con- | !F Bitish i) d It | Hoare has sustained sixty-seven casualties Admiral Dewey might say, and writes HUNG JURY IS LOOKED FOR | gust 11, says: “The advance may be some Claude MacDonald, tho wording of which | General lan Hamilton, with a force of cay- | Labouchere Regards Sale ectures ot widely accepted beliet ‘ faotures, 1he mos 4 p was almost identical with the message from | alry, has been sent o relleve the garrison e being that Mr. Gooanow had advised against | F88 AFRORH LEREER B e e f s (o United States nn Indioat= | o ':f:‘.\‘\"n m resident on naval and | People of Georgetown Netther [ LONDON, Aug. 15.~The Chinese minister ;.lm delivering of the legationers outalde of | b 100 "0 "the Daily Telegraph and pub- ITALIAN SLElfiHs Ing Latter's Great Prospert did ke place’ and L BRACK WS Convietion Nor {in London has informed the British forelgn ekin. Tet s ALLkTaE 10 bn 3 which wat trstmaitted COMING 6 wuld know it he had any ground io think Powers | oMce that the foreign legations at Pekin The cipher experts were busy with & W00 e e Ty the Chinese minister LONDON, Aug. 15—Truth, Henry La- |l the slightest promixe wax made by | were safe on Monday, August 15 Rispatch from Consul General Fowler at Che ."I _'“']' 'l;" gl Chinsss misistar ctives Will Dog Step bouchere's paper, replying to some of the | wiiherized S mein Youd declate it un- | GEORGETOWN, Ky g 15.—Three| WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.--The Bureau of Foo, which was %o unintélligible that it had | here. DUs LA Brif e Apluar o “‘“ ‘;’ “";“‘_ stx in United criticisms upon the placing of a large por- | Certain Pratt reported what he supposed 1 | speeches have been mude and a fourth is un- | Navigation has m public the following to be returned to the telegraph company to | Cheer and gives the progress made by the ton of the exchequer loan in the United | i Piace accuratels way In the Powers trial. All have been | dispatet o repeated. So far as It could be deol- | "® States, says | 1 what Dowey miid nd ai whi e o e peeches. The jurymen have been s TAKU, Aug. 12.-Just received an un phered it appearcd (o repeat & messaRe SeNt| gy e GGl e MacDonald to| - FONDON. Aug. 15 fifteen Ttallan| We 5 o | met Aguinaldo. That fs th iy by Minister Conger to Fowler, telling the |, A MRS B 0 O Hated Dokt | detoctives, according to the Rome corre- | the mpty wind. The sole thing 16 have Im been able to discover the drift of their no consequence, yot terrible heat Jatter that the situation was becoming more | (i (Y HEETH 1% | spondent of the Dally Mail, will sail for | M*"} od public in A ' W bi eritical at Pekin and that the Chinese au- Our situation here is desperate, In ten | MY York to shadow movements of | surprized if ther irticipators in common ' tor Bradley will conclude hi Ay r REMEY." thorities were seeking to compel the lega- | g0 "oin fo0d supply ends. Unless we are | “PATCRISES In the o | perit N Vi purely comprehend what this means. | tomorrow, followed by W. W. Owens f Matow is about eleven or twelve miles be- tioners to leave the city under Chinesc o R T P R | v AL ok LR Aguin. AL means Suceess | egense and B, B. Golden for the prosecu- | yond Ho St Wu. The road between Ho i cort. It is possible that the message, which |y Fens o Big L ort Uk to Tlen Tsin My 5 | only lost, but does not gain much sympicny, | tion and J Tinsley for the defense. | Wu and Matow is indicated on the War de In quite long, will convey additional infor- | niv Goen mw'r':“; to cacort Ul to Tien Taln, | LONDON, Aug. 15.—~United States Ambes expecially’ this critieism of the eanduct of | Colonel ! on I'ri- | partment map as the worst section of the mation when its complications unrav- | 2ot idy - | sador Choate, attended by the full embassy Down. Amerleat troaps, “Things miy bo true that | gy moy follo nor | road between Tien Toin and Pekin. elled visited the United States The nut an ) sy, 8ink everything offer. There are over 200 European women | staff, yestorday | v ) ; 36 ¥ L) d and children in this legation Srtilian: Battioior ol ] [ boit dey : Nt and inte Dewey-Aguinald co-operation. © That | Brown and Commonwealth Attorne i inister Wu, who beside being the Chi May Find Pekin Deserted City, 2 N eriead T i SERARMIEN. e DATIN | sens o A Confe T | s on both'sides honest, even it It did not | lin will ciose on Friday night or Saturday | nese minister here also Is the accredited . gyt e . Batialln - ¢ . as received by Re dmiral Watson and | bolt miker D the 15 per | IMDIY any actual arrangement, which mornin ha he plan tonight and the | representative of China to Spi ecelves With the army at Matow, it is folt that nttn ves for Ching Captaln Forsyth, and the guns that did so| ‘ent reducti Ak on the 15 0er | oolirke, Dewey himself could "not mike, | MOrBing. That s the y ght and the | rey f China to Spain, received “ Wy e e el tomorrow floen 1red “men Wil e | Here You have the facts, undenfed, incon- | Youtsey will be called and the selec- [along with the Conger mesi of yestorda ontod (o the near future. The Chinese of- | ion of the Eighteenth infantry, 325 ofcers | '} 8t Manila boomed out over the Thames | idie. ‘The reduction 1 offeet no other | tFovertible her & y e | tion of a Jury will begin on Saturday A cipher message from the Spanish minis ficials here concurred in tho belief expressed [48d men, left St. Paul today under com I8 "v"‘m"y"l’;‘“ ‘:“"”‘V""”"“ | Aepartment and then but twenty boit] Dewey will i fimerica insist on this 00- | “mne 1arge majority of people Georse- | ter in Pekin, which Mp, Wi forkardad to R e e s ltar e fanicn 'tha: |mand of“Majer Pitchers. bound for th atson expects o o to Belfast | Makers “The Rey d Bteel com. | \ortunate effect of 1 vent of | town still believe it will be a hung Jury. | Mad 1t t mad bl o 2 2 5 Friday, and fron at p o Ne v 1 U ghinet | Unfortunate eft f the advent of Amer L i W ing ju Aaric was not made public there there would be & specdy and sudden change | Oient and probably for China. They will M that point to New York, | (e Ama’ amated Work owns (h | fean militarism—a wedge between hin Sir Claude Machonald's dispatch to the 4 3 s which will be the cruiser's first appeara | Filip Dewey wis helple o r s # ol reach San Francisco by August 19, The [ " ruiser's first appearance | lant U i v it oreign office, evide « 1 and a peace within the next few w Toash San JTARGAES B SURWEE Sk T |y ioes waisrs §inos the hattis of Manils o of the action of God. QOMAHA MAN UNDER ARREST #ritish foreign office, evidently of the same the other hand Baron Speck Von Sternberg at at he weln Aug. 15, | reaily look with faver or w vin the fwo other dispatches re regards Tung Chow, midway between Matow | (Fansport leaviug the following day. Wale oes to nhar. | Arrived—Noordland, from | FeEFet on his iphireseion of Genseal M Rohert B Hall ix Tak from the [ferred to, also was withheld from publica and Pekin, as the real battleground and | Bienaten B ey PP, LONDON, Aug. 15.—The Halserin uiuria There from - TH i s s ot rain at’ Sae tion. This is taken as a fair indicat Secretary Root is inclined to accept this| (\wASHINGTON prince and | fire 1 ol s TR with Aguin AU, 15— dispateh has | PrIRcess of Wales lett London last evening | L Hrotag Mt e | power in” colonial affairs fs coming, | be Calitornin that negotfations of importance are gn view Some of the Japanese officials be lleve that when the allics reach Tung Chow or Homburg Genon, et , {liove. 1 must not tell you what he told m ! : " been recelved at the State department | OF Homburg. Immense throngs awaited | {in0 ; ] i S ke : 16 tald fool, but their nature is entirely apecula they would find Pekin a deserted city ahead of them, as it was recalled that these tac- of Beitsh | Admiral Dewey goes home, it is belteved what delayed, as rain 15 falling, thing. Al el ssive that the el observers have |dated dispatch from Chaffee, Matow; op i United Bt Y chaining of Dewe 1 Aguinuldo y prostrated, Please inform sot any one of several conditions might be pr ST. PAUL, Aug. 15.—The Third battal rom Consul General Goodnow at Shanghai thelr arrival at the Liverpool station and 1 f W ¥ | ellintion and an adjus nt that will reall ACRAMENT ! tive relates largely to questions of policy through which they passed thither. They | ' f ork. Salled—iriedsichs d '| Depends on Hryan's Party, his city today upon arrival of the train from | preparations are being pushed for the win tics of withdrawal had occurred in 1860 when | {niarnational affairs, and it is stated that | 47¢ expected to return September 1 . rom Breme ¢ Cherbourg and [, (00" aci o0 paris, June 23, 1899, from | the east. Hall is accused of having stolen |tering of the American forces in China the British-French expodition reached Tunk | uoining rexarding such questions will be | wis - Rotterdam—Arrived —Maasdam """‘l""""" Akoncllo to (. Apaciblo and 1. Santos, | 1ar&e sums from firms for which he had | Roth the commissary and quartermaster et e NiAqTindaw ¢ York, via Bou t Houg Kong, savs that all Europeans feci | 40te collector. He admits having taken | departments are ready to purchase and 1o what the allied armies will do, these con window glass manifactirers of he 1Liy uperiority to t vellow races and for | the money and s he fled from Omaha to v supplies for the Chinese expeditionary jectures from the best posted sources serve roops Leave Suelling for China. ‘,‘-.,‘... and the Plate Glass Jobhers iverpool reason there can he no autonomy be- [ Cheyenne, where h J to en f uch as would be needful in & winter to show the various serlous possibilities| FORT SNELLING, Minn., Aug. 15.—The | clation met here today. Over 100 M igust 1 e T D t nd the Il — There re certain supplie 5 eading firms in " 8 Vet wee he United States . pino - - h " Ain ppli forming a part of the presont crisis lepot battalion of the Eighth infantry, |} K firms in the United States we m New York Hail Kutus Much Gral The message of the French minister at [ United States army, started for China vie | outut was determined upon. 1t was de. | N r Hambirg, via Cherbourg “lipinos was to prolong tte war, avolded | storm night i o speedily, unless there was strong Pekin, M. Pichon, to the i'rench foreign of- | San Francisco today under command of | clde “:;:ll:"u}:;‘xh"-*x‘n‘. price of plate glass | 3 o Arrive Maasdam, from | qemed intervention and ‘“‘foment the ac the fir T KT St the Ameriian ArmY Wanld: he out -— ———~ | Major W, L. Pitcher. There were 500 men d per cent, All orders | B rdam & year, even . MContinued on Second Page.) in line, | 1ts contents will not be made public, as it ered them along the thoroughfares 5 pton-Arrived—New York, | satisfy the Filipinos Hall of South Ombaa, Neb., W It is considered significant that no Chow. In the absence of all information as Hoxton-Salled Er resented. The regulation of prices uth - Arr Patricl rom ays that the itical tactics of the| gp THOM D 5 would have to be taken and that ade after today are subject tg the ad At Hamburg—Arrived--Deut and, from destroved Y @ [of China be the gulf of Po Chi Li freezes vance, New York, via Flymouth and Cherbourg. (Continued op Fifth Page.) from t {over, which us happens about the Arst

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