Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 3, 1900, Page 1

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901871, OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER WORK YET TOBE ])()\] |ANSWERS ARE REPT SECRET|[VIEWS OF ENGLISH PAPERS|gUR DUTY [N PHILIPPINE Army Presents n | | o Eyacunte Pekin . ¢ Nebraska AR s | 4 4 Upon with ) . | il s Roili 4 Vavor. Withdrawa . 1d United Btates Commissioner Rockhill Talke Baplios of Fowsn % Amflr\r’mv Bamisa Fpo- | LA S Amf‘rvj‘\n Troop Wonld | Thirteen Persons Are Killed in a Wreck : 5 (CopyHaht, 1 t . " posal Not Made Public, LONDON, Sept, .4 a. m.—The publica Mean Massacre of Friendly Natives, o on fituation in Obina, TAKU, Aug ghal, Sept of the test of the Russlan proposal i b by e ear Hatfield, | tearly for 11 ol of heie sovern- | GOVERNMENTS WISH TO STUDY CONDITION | e Iained 1 Englund of Ruetia «| WORK OF COMMISSION NOT UNDERSTO0D X POINTS TO THE NECESSITY FOR HARMONYM Mg AR b '.%.JQJ SLLELLL L L B U R e Mol ol ) SIS ULISTOF INJURED NUMBERS OVER THIRTY . 4 S i PRTRILY { WAL [ Heattate to State Their Fatare Pln AR sk lge pp i Along the river and the roads traveled by | ' perape oI 1 | ffer, however, as fo the way in| Gnereilln Warfare Belng Careied LG AR Serninkin Tits: SHET M Ailaie O Btatus of Foreigners in that Country Must | the foreien troops ween Tien Tein and| ™ .m‘ eiving Information on Wb the powers will now group them By the Insnrgents and Lodr | ixoursion Train Bound for Atlantic Oity Bo Sottled N Pekin an orgle of looting and destruction| ‘M Situation from Thelr Rep- | gojves. Some papers think that Great Brit Tas Effcct of Keeping @ PROBABLE NEW YORK TICKET Crashes into Milk Train. o BIwied Sow: continues, with much useless slaughter of | . aln, Japan and the triple alllance will stan. Country ¥ — | unoftending inhabitants. While the inter- | —_ together in refusing to leave Pekin State Candidites Who Are Bxp . CHANCES OF WRCURAENCE OF TROUBLE|EhticEbl fotees wars advancing the eoff-| o yurnanon, mapt. 8.~85 fas as ens be | gret thot Brecident WeKintey: ~oae con { to te at L COACHES ARE CRUSHED LIKE EGGSHELLS Japanese, American gret that President McKinley “has com- | (Copyright, 1000, by the Assoclated Press St | and British, enforced a certain degree of |d8¢ertained rl'n-n» ;\t-rr- urv‘lmlmfl.ln" devel- | mitted the United States to follow the Rus MANILA, Sept. 2.—-The Filipinos s FULGSLION LoF. BIODEILY B eded for |OPMeNts in the Chinese situation here to- |siun lead,” considers, however, that Japan, | incapable of realizing the scope and pur-| SARATO 'he con- | Bodie Vio o Ohinese Must Not Be Encouraged to Repeat 5 friesd ':H”: AL A R 19F | day. The officials maintain unusual ret- | “whose consistent policy since the war of [ poses of the functions of v|m|| Ade cons e \,I‘(»\,'r opinton tonight v:v’.r,h ; Ll mnvs' Bl by LG s Their Offenses. At that time most of the population ex-.| {¢ence. They say they have no informa- | 1564 has Ween to conciliate and effect a rap- | mission. There is no probability of separ- | the following republican state ticket to b Wreckage. ik 4 )t the fighting men had fled. But now |t'0P t0 make public regarding the replies | prochement with China,” will throw in her [ating the legislative from the executive|nominated by the convention which will the people are returning to their homes, | '© the American-Russian proposition re- |lot with Russia and will be reluctantly fol- | branches of government and, therefore, the BOXER MOVEMENT PLANNED BY OFFICIALS | onty o And s shelter me rio of oovuna: | Barding the withdrawal of the military | lowed by France. who does not dare to risk | commission’s abnouncement of its ansump. | " or sovernen Penjamin Odell, § DEAD AND-DYING TAKEN TO THEIR HOMES el tion. In the overcrowded, famine threat-|fOrces of the powers from Pekin Mr. | a divergence with Russia tion of power yesterday has met with| Orange; for lHeuten governor, T [t s ol ened districts, away from the river, their|Adee. the acting secretary of state, has de- | “Events have therefore conspired,”” says | childish comment at the hands of the| L. Woodruff of Kings: for compiroller nense Crowd of People Who Had lives and small possessions are at the[Clded for the present not to make any |the Daily Telegraph, “to throw the balance [ Spaniards and the foreigners, who sneer | William J. Morgan of Erie. for secretary | Friends or Relatives on the £ dent to the Cril and th | mercy of bands of soldiers traveling about | S'atement as to the names of the powers [of diplomatic power into Lord Salisbury's|at the new arrangements, as they are apt|of state, John T. McDonough of Albany Teain Walt nt the ant Work Remnins to | without oficors [which have answered, or to indicate | hands, for Austria-Hungary and Italy must | to do at every beneficial innovation on the | for state engineer. Edward A. Bond of Depot in Bethiehe The conditions prevailing leave little | Whether the replies are of an aMirmative or | side with Germany, who will probably pro- | part of the United States authorities Jefferson: for yrney general, John ¢ Be Finished. | yotnne. or i ravors comparison of |® MeEAtive character, on the ground that [pose some compromise and be swpported by | The commission enters upon the gove Da | civilized warfare with Chinese methods, | the publication of the attitude of the pow- | England." mental field under the following condi- | Johy Ineckel of Cayuga . t [Copyright, 1900, by the Assoclated Prese) | Robbery, ravishing and murder are so °'® WIEht embarrass the negotiations at| The Times feels perfectly clear, it saye, | tions 8o far &8 ohiainavie. tonight. Beewd "”IL“:“:M:”\ >.:w b I:h‘;xr.‘rlv n‘.p‘-‘:‘ BHANGHAL, Sept. 2. ~Mr. Willlam Wood- | common that every responsible person one | h1s time | that neither honor nor the interests of Eng A majority of the islander: sire e Killed anG oyer tuir hjured over sections of the platform there | t is impossib e ofinite bt y g | O | appalling record of rear-end collision ville Rockhill, special commissioner of the | meets contributes storles from personal| I' 18 impossible to learn definitely to |land will permit her to follow Russia’'s ex- | pe and the resumption of business un- [ deb .‘f“‘. \k,‘” excursion train and a milk United Statew government to investigato | observation. The walled city of Tung|¥hat extent answers have been received. |ample. It trusts that Germany also will re- | der the Americans, but they are so cowed | upon which will first endorse s bl - b and report on conditions in China, In an | Chow was the only town in the pathway of | Th® OPinion prevails, however, that none | fuse to leave Pekin and expresses the hope | by @ long series of murderous atroctics | the administration of Presidcnt McKines, | (/810 on the Hethlehem branch of b Interview with a representative of the As- | the international forces whose people re- |Of & conclusive character have ag yet come | that the report that the State department in | and destruction of property by their armed | vigorously upholding the continuance of 'hiadelphia & Reading railway sociated Press, emphasising the importance | mained and attempted to continus busi. |0 band, such communications as b Washiugton disapproves the Russian sug- [ countrymen that they dare not actively | the gol o 1, a strong en e f of the harmonious action of the powers as [ ness. During its occupation the Japanese|Deen received being merely of a prelimi- | gestion may prove correct | show their feclings, especially because | dorsement of the ‘government's poilcy | POft of thiw elty & measure of selt-defense, said | patrolled the place efclently, protected DATY character. In diplomatic circles the Most of the other moruing papers express | experience has taught them what such an! Cuba and Porto Rico stoment Thwt| SR NEC e MEREY. aded S St “If the Chinese government is able to | the people and prevented looting beyond | OPinion prevalls that nome of the great | similar views and decline to belleve in the | oxpression of sentiment will bring upon|the Philippines are ours by every right| 00 Bethichem Relief of Pelin in Regarded o Merely fes of Oneida: for state treasurer ite, the resolutions have been dec ing At Hatfleld, Pa., twenty-seven miles break the concert of nations and to bring | the amount finevitable with any powers have as yet reported a final de- |sincerity of Russia’s promise to evacuate |them from the mercilessly revengeful [and that If it can e lled expansion . ! N . about a disagreement on the part of any | General Chaffee stationed a guard ar termination as to the course they will pur- | Manchuria rebels. A genuine reign of terror is main- | then the party in New York stato fs for | ROBERT MILLER, aged 21, South Beth government, in such a way as to secure | the historic temple outside the wall, su It is recognized here that some of [ There is no confirmation of the report that | tained by insurgents and lehem any relaxation of the joint demands, all| bidding his troops to enter. The com- |them will want to complete communication | the Chinese attacked the mllles at Kang | peaceful country folk in order to col the foreigners in China may as well pack | manders encouraged the inhabitants to ne-| %ith their representatives in China, with & | Chung, which is six miles south of Pekin. | the revenue and recruits their operations | governor of New York: fourth, an en- [ Bethlebem. | | Various dispatches from Shanghal confirm | require and widespread vengeance is | dorsement of the legislature of 1900, IRA EHRET, aged 20, South Bethlehem. “This is the best opportunity to settle | peaceful persons affuirs from their own point of view before | the reports of the failure of he rice crop| wreaked in the, vicinity of garrisoned | cifically calling attention to the tax rate of | WILLIAM = EHRE brother of Ira, for all time the status of foreigners in| When the armies advanced, however, the |Undertaking to make any reply to so im- |in the Nankin district and assert that for ;m\-m 3 mills, the solution of rapid transit South Bethlehem. | ladrones over | expansion: third, an endorsement of the \ £ ek p ninistration of Theodore Roosevelt as| RICHARD BACHMAN, agéd South up and leave sume business, promising protection to all| ¥lew of determining the exact condition of 8D Chiva. If that matter is not settled now | guards were removed, only a small British |POTtant a proposition as thAt imvolved in |elgners are being molested in Nankin, the Officinls Put to Denth, New York, the protection of New Yor JOSEPH MORDAUNT, aged 22, South the Chinese will be encouraged to persist |and American garrison being left outside the | '1¢ American memorandum, | British consul having been insulted For example the insurgent general, | City's water supply, shortening the ghours | Bethlehen YN in their present pollcy and the powers |wall. A correspondent of the Associated | Li Hung Chang had a long conference | Callles, in the province of Laguna put to| of labor, reform in tenement houses and [ CHARLES M'FONIGLE, Allentown will have ‘the whole trouble to thresh | Press, returning from Pekin, found Tung| Owing to the interruption of telegraphic | YeSterday with - Mr. Willlam Woodville | death 'the president and officeholders of |sweatshops, the ercction of a consumptive | FHOMAS DAY, Allentown L Sy il iels e o st he ' fornbld st ok | communtention Serenpn T ot | RoOkbl, Uaind Saien spocia commin: | he Tow. of By, on TAgum- do ay, of. | WATUA rotecion of (s v | IS MANIE KNBLIN wees 1. Tifrs | asshoppers. Everything portable, of | Pel § ol sioner cials who had been installed by f of the agricult ¢ th, af @ ? A ather of e O i e SRR ?:.,.":{:,,,'f,.f,l e I', i "',\'“ ik b ,: Fekin It 18 belleved here that some days |yl 1) 14 satd to have been jubliant | icans, Hiig 2:\1.' andure yml‘l‘v‘ '~.:|I|Im: fat Mo dommitiat N.Z.\’i."fi ‘lml.- e “tanate. | WILLIAM BLACRBURN, Ambler. fmpramset wich (e (rh At 1 Bee e masonaity wocd | oot o oy Somme P, ah 1T (Ssried that Prive. T s with (he | (e Americen cuuae: M alp ordered {ha | FAIIRArY sy muchoried b 1he ACKERAN. Pisiconia permanent settlement of ‘the status roaming about unrestricted and presumably | pross, as indicating the sentiment prevail- | ©MPress dowager on the borders of the |all Filipino soldiers who sold their rifles | legislature for the purpose of accurately List of the Injured. z:-:::;::: e Utishment o free- | Were doing much wanton destruction, in the | ing In the varlous Europenn countrles. province of Shansi and u.:;‘ h‘.‘-‘ was re- | to the Americans should be killed determining the cot of their enlargemefit| The injured dom of trade are more important to them | *PIFIt of deviitry smashing furniture and| . No cablegrams from China were given to |SPOnsible for sending ( Imv{\ e Any change of policy Involving the with- | and that the republican party will not fa- | engineer of mow than the acquisition of territory | slassware and trampling books and pictures | the press by any of the departments today. | President of the Board of Punishment, to drawal of the United States troops with- | vOr any large expenditure unless it is cer- . been a deliberately ' planned [ Under foot. Most of the Chinese were sub- [ Acting Becretary Adee was at the State de investigate the pro foreign ten: 1m-;.~.«unr out substituting for them an adequate de- | tain tha a result of the enlargement of m(,;r..h,:,‘.,n:“:,‘n the part of the Chinese gov- | MILUNE to all this in abject fear, The few | partment during the day, but he said tonight Li Kun Yi, the viceroy oyh. .n:km The | f |]\».n‘|' force s certain to result in fear- | thelr capacity the condition of all classes ernment to expel all forelgners. The de- | Who dared to protest were kicked about. | that mo telegrams of consequence had been [Shanghai correspondent of the Dally News P At the expense of the|of people and all sections of the state will crees printed in the Imperial Gazojte prove | Several bodies lay in the streets, ap- | recelved. The interruption of communica- |*4¥8 Barl Li's manncr hus become "*ob tleadiles approaching patriation of | be materially improved; sixth, an endorse this. The movement has been practically | PATently those of non-combatants. The in- [tlon with Pekin is presumably responsible Jectionable and blustering. E | the volunteers tends to influence the sit- | ment of the national republican ticket =8 every foralgner in the in. | Babltants, without food or clothing, were|in part for this some days have now| According to a dispatch from Tien Tsin, | uation unfavorably. In northern Luzon| It Is intimated tonight that there will it """”L‘ ;‘,"_“m e retue 1n | huddling in backyards in a pitiable condi- | elapsed since any word was received from | dated AURUSL 25, (o the Standard, an epi- (the statu quo is fairly well maintained |be an unanimous endorsement of Mr S5 thectybuki. The. SHIBEPIAL fevarns | o Ms. Oonger demic of suicides has broken out among|and the people in that quarter are quiet | Woodruff for a third term as Heutenant|yem leg and thigh injured and hurt in ;‘l‘t:mlr"“zl’{wxu:lrlflwd 8 "l:mm" :N pet The villages to the southward are even| Sr. Wu, the Chinese minister, still re- f'“' l'hmw:n- in ¥ Ln\,.»\ln-rv entire L\n\vll(-s‘nl:lt‘l engag ,I l\y .Mnm.uu: except in- the A::»\*“\f_'{‘;r \"" It he fails to acquiesce prior | tarpally, not serious; Abraham Trausue Catilint (@ ita ncBemes, The teliet of Pe- | Worss despoil One week after Pekin was | malns at May, but at the legation it are killing themsclves o i .‘::;:”.h,']“, Mt euva Eolpa and Bulacan, | to Wednesday jr.. South Bethlehem, deep scalp wounds Xin is merely an incident of the crisis. | 'aken the traveler to Tien Tsin was seldom | was said there had not been a dispatch re- | The Shanghal correspondent of = the | where there has been a recent outburst of { | contusion of back and internally injured The really important work remains to be Ut Of sight of burning he ires are | ceived duriog the day. The latest word |Times, wiring yesterday, says: “Li‘Hung | rebel and ladrone activity |WELCOME TO ENGLISH SHIPS iriowe: e wWilliam Burkhart, South done. Marquls Ito, probably the best in- | started daily, although the shelter will be | concerning Li Hung Chang's whereabouts | Chang has received a telegram from the| But in southern Luzon conditions are | | Bethlehem, injured internally; Miss Ger formed man alive in eastern politics, said | MUCh needed if the troops are to hold the | was contained in the Associated Press cable | Chinese minister in Berlin asserting that ';\;""“"' satistactory. Life there is not | Bar Harbor (s Preparing to Recelve | o4 Burkhardi, South Bethlehem, both 10 me thAt the present was the greatest|CCUDLrY during the winter from Shangbal tonight, stating that he was | Germany is prepared to act in concert sate outside the garrisoned towns. Tray- | Y . | Yoxa bnkes: B, 3, MeManon: South Bathie erisis in the history of China and that all| The soldlers are having “fine sport” in|still the The report that the forelgners | With Russia, with a view to a settlement, .‘.. T, aui subject to mm....cn by guerrillas. Ihem, ankle broken: John Reichley uth receding eastern questions sunk ifto iwe | 181D natives who creep back to their|(here generally discredit him was read with [and that therefore it is probable Ge! tarely does a day pass without an en- 3 | Bethlehem, internally injured; Mrs. George B ot et I ats “alvirised m‘rihmupu oF attempt to ork In the flelds as | intorest in diplomatic circles, The suspicion | Will follow Russia and withdraw her troops | counter between the United States troops | BAR HARBOR, Me., Sept. 2—The United | gunictt (UETIRRE BEREEE RR (TR Hietiatdd ¥Iela o i (lmncne concelt of | tATKets. The sight of‘a farmer Iying where |of his motives there seem to be shared by |from Pekin, Two American correspomd- | aud the Insurgents or ladrones, resulting 'i'fr"'; ot New ‘l";"“ fRe "’""""'l" 'l" I"" |body; Irvin Newhard, head badly cut thelr own superiority?’ he was shot with a basket of grain or arm- | many of the diplomats here, efits, who left Pekin August ¥ with a party | In casualties. There are 15,000 troops in | N merlcan squadron, Rear Admiral|yj,py Newhard, South Bethiohem. crushed ful of other vroduce nearby fs quite com-| An Interesting bit of information regard- ©f forty American missiomivies, wrrived district, Genersl Bates commanding, | Y0 men 1. Farqubar, communder-ln-chief, | 1yt Migs Carrie Bachman, daughter of mterrupt ‘Oficinl Message mon. The Russians are the chief actors m\mg the empress dowager came to Washing- | here yesterday. The British residents, at ' and in three regiments over a third of the | Anchored in the outer harbor west of Bar| pipurd Bachman, who was Killed, chest Mr. Rockhill and other officials In Bhang- | this style of conquest, but the French are |ton In a roundabout way today. It was to the time the Americans left, wero preparing men are sick, Harbor at 1 o'clock this afternoon, after a| ‘.. yed. serfous; Miss Brennan, South bai, like the public, are utterly ignorant|remarkably conspicuous, considering their|the effect that the British government had In @ leisurely manner to proceed to Tien | The activity of the enemy increased last |4Y and nleht run in clear weather from | poeyionem, arm broken; L. R. Hartzog of the course of diplomatic and military | small numbers. The Indian troops and the | received word that the empress was going | Tsin. Fighting had entirely ceased and month. There is evidence that the insur wport. The flagship was accompanled by | gouch Hethlehem, arm broken, Harry events In Pekin. The consuls of the vari-| Japanese are participants only when hu,uud from Tynan Fu in the province of Shanai, to hardly any Chinese were met enroute. gents have come into possession of new |the auxiliary gunboat Scorplon, Lieutenant g yioy south Bethlehem, leg contused ous governments have sent frequent tele- | tho ken of their officers which place she had fled after her escape| “An official telegram from Chi Tu Fu | rifles and that they wish to annihilate | COmmander Nathan Sargent. The other pjward Reese, Allentown, contusion of grams to their representative govern From the beginning the conduct of the ! from Pekin to Hsinan. Tynan Fu is further orts that Kwei Chun, viceroy of Sze some small American garrison, | ships comprising the squadron to arrive to- | o iier aud legs: Mrs. 8. Haber, Allen ments, but have been unable to get re-| Russlans has been a blot on the campaign. | west, indicating that she is moving still fur- | Chuan, and the Tartar general of Sze| Conditions in the Visayans continue vip- | WOTTOW are the Texas, Indiana, Massa- | (;on “hoin jogs broken; John Schantz, Al piies. It s suspected that official mes- | The recital of notorlous facts speaks more | ther from the capital. The dispatch says|Chuan have both been dismissed by im- | tually unchanged. The lack of troops o | Shusetts, Kentucky and Kearsarge. = The |jopigwn, toes crushed, Willlam Schan sages are tampered with between Shanghal| torcibly than could any adjectives. When | nothing of the emperor's movements * | perial edict, showing that the empress Samar prevents aggression. cgros, | Jatter ship arrived at Northwest Harbor (hoicown S iniured: Miss Schaeffer and Che Foo. | entering Pekin correspondents of the Asso-| It is suggested as a possibility that he dowager is still guided by vindictive re- Romblon, Masbate, Sibuyan, Tablas and | ¥°Sterday. The Dolphin, which is on survey | yponiown' log broken; Mary Koch, frac The action of the southern viceroys In|ciated Press saw Cossacks smash down|may have left her entourage and may have |actionaries Bohol are tranquil, all desiring civil goy~|1Uty off Lamoine, the new coaling station | ;o) legs: Lewls Knecht, Bethlehem protecting forelgners commends faith in| Chinese women with the butts of their | either decided to remain where he is or to| News has been recdived in London that | ernments. Mindanao is also trauquil, ex. [1Y€ Wiles north of this place. also may join | (i woinds: Mrx. Alfred Schmoyer, Beth their relations and negotiations will proba- | guns and pound their heads until they were return to Pekin. His return to the capital Sir Robert Hart, director gemeral of Chi- cepting the districts of Teagayah ana | 'N® Sauadron here. Rear Admiral Farquhar |, 00500 g Jacerated: Annie Miller bly be begun with them | dead. The Cossacks would pick up chil-|city would probably change the situation. nese imperial maritime customs, was still | Surigam, where occasional encounters with | 111 order all bix vessels to anchor outside | gouin” pathiehem, hips crushed: Wiliam There 13 g financial panic here. Proba-|gren barely old enough to walk, hold them He belonged to the progressive party before in Pekin on August 20 the Filipinos occur. The en BAR Tlah¢ ving the inner harbor Clear | \iinavar, South Bethlehem. badly la v's fighting bt Nt DBly an important factor is the money rate. | by the ankles and beat out their brains on |he was compelled to sign the imperial| “It is not doubted here,” says the Vienna force there is limited, but it for the guests. the British squadron. which | giaq. Mry. Wilmeyer, legs ¢ 9 has a number which is 36 per cent per month. The mer-|the pavement. Russiun officers looked on |rescript of 1898 and it restored to power correspondent of the Standard, “that Rus- of rifies. The surrenders, although they | 'S XPected to arrive Tuesduy morning at 10 chants are trying to get the ear of the | without protest | pe negotiations would undoubtedly be sia's proposals will in the end be accepted have noticeably decreased since May, con- | ° C12¢K ¢ Py "“"" ok ‘Nf"‘ " officialy, | While General Chaffee was watering his | facilitated. The powers would have more | by Germany, who cannot but shrink from | tinue The reading room, hotels, stores and cot-| The wrecked train consisted nl ten 1'1,1\ L4 Hung Chang still remains in Shanghi. | horse at a stream under the wall of Tung |confidence in him than in the reactionary |a single'handed war with China. The rin Show Increase, tages are gay with Britlsh and American | conches and was rllw first sec |..I.\. 9 a Mo in thoroughly discredited, but i3 Chow the Russians found a foeblo old man | party. Despite the empress' coup of two | Austrian newspapers, though at first in-| The experlence of northern o L UL I T T oot oy b P R Intriguing to got the forelgners to quarrel | niaden 1n the mud, except hifs mose, and | years ago diplomats here familiar with Chi- | dignant, are now beginning to realize the | that the American oo tired) and th sident committee are ¢ Reth -yz'-n. r Al 4nl wn ‘l'}‘ v'n‘l unding between themselves. \Today he told Amer-|gragged him out by the queue, shouting |nese afairs say the Chinese people regard | possibilities of an acceptance of the Russos | cality tends to its pacificution -and well- BIsIng. prrangemanta 102 the refoption. to | towhe. to \l il |”y‘ H. ‘m"”' ‘,‘-I, loan and English diplomats that the RUs- | gjeefully. They impaled him on their bayo- [him as their rightful ruler. American solution.” being. © An unsettled the oMoors of both squadrons. On account | rled only those persans who lived I Bobi American policy re- lot nd Allentown and left the unlou slans had promtsed to withdraw from Pe- | ot g LY ol arked i of the small quarters for the ball at the |lebem an entown and left the unios ets era affee remarked Nat R oksisd Goissi Aow: tards, the investment of capital. Never- | i » { depot in Bethlchem at 6:0: pxactl Kkin regardless of the poliey of other na- |y (e o e 3 » R YA : Kebo Valley elub on Wednesday night the [ depot in Bethlehem at 603 a. m., exac tions. - His statement is not believed. On|'* vow M 1018 brutahmunder” - .| The overnment offcials apparently are BOER WAR NEARING THE END the imports for the 1ast quarter | runciion will not be public. Only those in. | thirty-five minutcs behind the milk train the comtrary, it is thought he is simultan- | . and a half were greater than during any R not concerning then ves over the situ D K a vited will be admitted The latter train consisted of two milk Jars as she aw i o Ste « Barberton Arve |equal period of B Bnaniah inagione s | eously assuring the Russians that the fighting was finished, saw Russians | 5ijon 4t Am notwithstanding the press | 'STuser nu e g 1 perlod of the Spanish regime. No| ‘There has been a thick fog off shore all [and two pascenger coaches and had ) bayonet children and throw old men into | ... . LAy ~ y Believed to Be Prepari doubt the needs of the army of occupa- o 11 Americans and British have promised to| o 0 A A | reports timt great numbers of Chinese ar S > 4= | day and this may delay the arrival of other | stopped at every station on the road from Sy o "y e {3 1, St b v bcatie o th Tar ot Impening " i Har T o8 Sry commerss| o G S e ey tried to swim. The Russians killed LI Hung Chang visited the French con- troulile.. (Conaul* Gensrat 'Goodnow, ‘at fraction of this. The internal revenue col- S At 6:34 the milk train drew up at the women who knelt before them and begged sul this morning and had a long interview John David, Fhiladeiphia excursion train, skull frac tured; Albert J. Wagner, Philadelphia, flagman of excursion tra ntusions of | chest and legs, serfons; Wilson Crosland South Bethlchem, baggagemaster of milk train, head lacerated, serious; Michael J Tighe, Allentown, legs crushed and burned, serfous; John Gorman, South Bethlehem foot crushed; John McHugh, South Bethle Luzon shows pation of any lo PRETORIA, Sept. 2.—Mr. Kruger and Mr. [ jections are s Shanghai, has reported to the State de-| g o S BT St R A{m‘“h_ N m-t third greater than those| RAILROAD MAGNATES CONFER | wilk platform at Hatfield and in less than & . 4 This is due to an honest t inutes the s 1 tr with him. The subject matter of the con- |'f y partment that the incident, referring to | "' . 4 SR T | two minutes the special excursion train Bverybody was disposed to be friendly | leved that they are preparing for Might. | syutem of uccounts, to a lack of favorit v o en divulgec iy the landing of marines by the Japanese, 8 ack of favoritism running at the rate of thirty-five miles an ference has ngt.béen divuiged toward the Russians in the early days of A sghl ey @ general opinion is that' the war is now | * anforce! v. y i pnee b fvrdperh Dhes i gomeag b I nll plalont !n‘ 16 war it and to impartial enforcement of the law. hour, crashed into the rear of the milk | the fighting at Tien Tsin. because of their y near the end, but should the Boers | The military authorities will turn over | train, The locomotive plowed through the SURPRISE AT RUSSIA'S MOVE | bravers. bt such incidentn. as the foge. | 120 the oficials bere. Te gunboat Castine, | LCL TUCL stronghoids i the bush on' the | 30000000 Sexlesn vo tha oo, Over Folng have been %0 prominent n feature | (e Nave deparient. 11 s eenmcr iy | V1AL or elsewhere and begin a system of | (his will atement that Army Wil Be A T T T 3uD" | not turey long there. Ity destiuatioe. it g | 72108, the British would require further from Pekin Causes Astonis | posed to report important facts can ignore | giuied, was the Cavite naval station and | ™TEC Supplics of ho 3 : ent at Shanghal. them. 'r:w\- are ;n nvl]m: rous s8o compsl | ine State depsrtment. taking gdvantage of | o oonerel Buller moved fourteen miles | the conclusion tims they are not fsolated | iy had orders given that It atop ut Amay (Copyright, 1000, by the Associatod Press) | episodes, but the ordinary practices of | on she was daws to reart wpas vendit i SHANGHAL Sept. 3.—The reports from | Russian methods of warfare [ Furopean capitals that Russia has decided The Russians on the walls of Pekin | to leave Pekin caused amazement herg|would apparently shoot every Chinaman | p o™ oaad AT RLtian ol OaamAY when first heard through Chinese sources. | within range ouiside. A correspondent of | (uiiain Wilde commanding. which has just OMclals were especlally inclined to treat | the Associated Press found newly killed | them with incredulity, inasmuch as every |in the fields outside of the city wall. The | s | two passenger coaches and crushed them probably be expended in publie | WOOD SPRINGS, Colo., Sept. 2 as though they were eggshells. The milk improvements, notably in harbor develop. ay's session of the conference of rail-|car immeditely in front was also ) here for sev- | wrecked. Four persons, Godfrey K eral days discussing the outlines of a trans- | his daughter, Mamie Harold Landis continental passenger association was onfy | William Blackburn, on the passens: one hour in length. The committees at|of the milk train, were almost instantl work upon a plan were not ready to report | killed ortunately there were very few ments, the need of which is greatly ham- | road officials who have be ) lien 80 S | pering the shipping industry northwestward along the Lydenburg roud| ™ ppo commission will first orgar and crossed Crocodile river to Badfonteln. | FAUise. M nicipalities in the provinces, notably in He found the Bgers concentrating in th L "¢ | Pampan ! panga province. Subsequently it wil Crocodile mountains ! N | | Word was received at the Navy <h-p.|rv-} A tbnin ot Biare Sinner Gofiftatnabt [ turn its attention to needed reforms in the |and the meeting adjourned until tomorrow | persons on this train mhevan. through the British lines| (V1D and criminal codes, passing in due [at 10 o'clock. Discussing the question of | The excursion train was a picture of in spron and burned a supply train | M 0 other features of instruction, with | handling government troops and the recent | describable horror. The locomotive was a ome out of a Japanese dry dock, where it | Klin river station. taking thirty-five | N0 14e@ of establishing a central civil gov. |order of the quartermaster general of the | mass of bent ahd broken iron and firmly 1 has been undergoing repairs, had )«mln-\l-‘wl.;,,“p‘r. Brabant's horse proceeded ernment during the next eighteen monthe, | United States army to the effect that all| held the bodies of its engineer and fireman step hlndrnum'«lln‘n 'unn R':x’»mnhnu"u[m- bodies were those of women and none | (rom Nagasaki for Wu Shan, the man-of- | inither. recaptured all the prisoners and| T"eIY® Americans, including two cap- | troops to be carried to the Pacific coast|beneath its great weight. Behind the en tion had apparently been taken with a view | seemed to be the bodies of combatants X 0% THCARINPS: 5 soners &nd|¢sins and two enants o e g0 via the Southern Pao! ¢ . zine 8 cars e also s 1o permanency. The theory was that in the | Several were killed. while trotting along | " s oo rorak® at Shanghal drove the Boers into the hills Sl S 16s I:"l": ity ",,'_‘.f"‘ ".'I. B [ A YA 'l"m"\"':":“',' 4 l"l"“l”*""y”‘l‘,',"“;“,"“\"l'u'" LI SR T """‘,;‘: oo railrond Russia held the key to the situ- | the road with their loads and farmers try« | o oo * SDMENt (0 that place |3 supposed | Colonel Plumer dispersed a small com- | omcir ‘covorty of th $8: « Thal 0 BARLEIAUAINN0, WP (GRCERS, NIahaIA00, 1B | heoke i the other five oy iy e R Tl el a to have been made by Admiral Remey, | mando, under Commandant Pretorius, west| . . e _encounters in which | resenting the Santa Fe railroad at the meet- | was broken and the other five cars wer ation n:\ he A0 thie TRk Rathor o | 1ag to gather in their graiu. but the reason for sending it there is not | of Pinaars river pturing twenty.six | Nese casualties occurred are meager ing, said that that matter would have to|thrown on their sifés, completely demol closed by the ico the other powers would [ ¢ er, capturin enty-s s hhmn At e Y e bl | stated here. In that vicinity, however, it | | SEair troace.1n Fakic }CHING APPOINTED REGENT ! will be of assistance in landing marines | of cattle and riffes LETTER CARRIERS MEET 2 »”vl b X ,'“| mter Into any. ugrer Seax 04 | it for any reason the necessity for this| LONDON, Sept. 2.—It Is reported that ment that would bind the Santa Fe people The officers of the armies have | 4 Sept. 2 i por ha N , At Iy bredioted Riinaians e In Reported in But | should arise Lord Roberts has issued a proclamation The report of one of the largest | heve | arg and the others in those coaches were vopstantly predic ussians in - stated emphatically tonight that he helicved tended to keep the railway and hold the Afraid to Retar | formally annexing the Transvaal to the L - 4 badly maimed. As so0on as the crash came fine of forin wn srsepals o Vokin. thus | [MINERS TO BE BROUGHT HOME | tominions of the nitisn crown or | (e Badia Fe would yoe Jls way cior. to hae | "SAlT, mAImed. A% soon an the crash came [, Boers, a number of wagons and a quantity | { be submitted to the headquarters of his com Nine persons were killed in the first twe securing the strongest foothold of any na Qeneral Christian DeWel Raoording te i b AP b n . | ana t 3 1 5ot basn: Injured auiokl | liha Tatte AEANItG nanet " The Santa Fe has a complete line from Ve ' thia tion PETERSBURG, Sept. 2. ~The Ofcial | Transport Lawton Will Go Aft oot L e RRSSQRD ARY/OR; I 2 ROIT, Mich., Sept ome 400 mef Chicago to San Fi » and could handle | ooy o 0 hed (1M LAS CarR: AU Nabs The assumption is not that financial rea- ported to have appeared again along the P me 400 mem iicago a By L Messen, publishes the following dis- | Seel at Oap otk b e iy ~ - hers of the Natlonal Assoclation of Letter | the troops without a break from Chicago to #ons influence Russia to its present decis- | patch, dated Pekin, August 20, from th No railway near Winburg road 2 J r s rom & airriers had arrived this evening to attend | the tidewater The government's order de fon. It has its hand full to maintain its | Russian minister, M. de Giers freed by the liberal use of ax the annual meeting of the association to be | prives the Santa Fe not only of the through |y (peee o0 conr excentions f troops | “There 1s an unconfirmed rumor that| sAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 2.—The United| OBJECT T0 SACUIMATION | It 500et mosusg Sk €1 Awacibties came [ haul, but even the haul over iis prairie ith the ir exceptions the dead Prince Ching has been appointed regent, | seates transport Lawton | were killed i itly. the others dying on States 8 B which arrived to from | Uite largely from the east and middle west. [ lines and forces business to which the Santa | nei COE RIS R ORRTE FHERE O UNITED STATES MUST MOVE |but is afraid to return here unless the | gay in ballast from Seattle, is to be sent " | The presence of the letter carriers will re- | Fe is entitled to go to northern routes. Mr BE 19 H0 [ | the 1njired | torelgn envoys will guarantee his liberty were first taken to a shed at the Hatfield | ! to Cape Nome to relleve the destitute . sult in two Labor Day parades tomorrow Nicholson can therefore not be blamed for | Jii0 B B G T 3 iermans Formally Demand the Camp dignitar remaining in Pekin | jyiners, many of whom have petitioned Officers of the assoclation announce that it f claiming some restitution through the asso- | | “' G886 ore. Iemoved th Ocompled by Americans at [have consequently resolved to petitlon the | through General Randall, for transportn- | puotin sept. 2.-Owing (o the unusually | Bd8 OW & membersbip of 16,000 with 745 | clation for this loss of busiue [ SNEPRRRES RIS AGNE A0 ka0 AANLRY Tien Tain, idn»\nm.u in the interest of an unulml-- tion south before the hard Alaska winter |, S5 ”"“!] o ”w_“u - - “I‘{“ local branches and that all the government | yahie -t ""I" ‘i"" "‘ """“m """' ‘“f;‘:' tion of the situation, to Invite Prince|sets in. The Lawton will sail for the| v frovard passenger traffic as well as | o s In the country the e | was telegraphed for frum Bethichem th [Copyright, 1900, by the Assoclated Pross.) | Ching to return to Pekin and o gIve ox- | north as soon as she can be gotten ready, | (0 (e Interruption in sailings owing to the | 700 PEACER B TR0 ORI _?."‘," ,"‘” 1 PRISONERS AT ST. HELENA | fitieen doctors and halt a dozen nurses, a TIEN TSIN, Aug. 20.—(Via Taku, Aug. | planations. s probably within » fow days. Bbe has ac- |lloPoken fire and the charlering of padsen- | O vin ™ag tsual in the annual meet Captur | wpecial train was sent rom Bethlehem, bu 0.)—The Germans have formally demunded ommodations for about 700 men Kar stenmars by the demman govbenment for| i Sutes P o e e diacusslon Te PR | before it reached the scene of the wreck for themselves all the bulldings and grounds [ Will Bar Chinese, | use in Chinese waters, many Americag citi- (AR the PrEcInel sblevts of discussion re e & [ 1t was signalled to return to Bethlehem, as of the camp of the United States troops LIMA, Peru (via Galveston, Tex.), Sept. | Start ¥ d tor Memorinl, zens have recently been compelled to taki RSy g el Lo "\_ | n special carvying nearly all the injured had ;e de 2—The Peruvian senate yesterday had un ASHEVILLE, N. C.. Sept. 2. George W. | steerage passage in returning to the United | fCtIng letter ¢ icreases of salaries 2 3 g started for that place explaining that these will be needed by |2~The Peruvian senate yesterday had un rbilt his start i t 5 K to o te for carriers of both the YORK, Sept. 2 Britigh | 51! or that plac the large German forces soon to arrive. As | der consideration a proposal for prevent- | YANderbilt hus atarted an endowment fund | states. The physicians of the North German | !0 @ uniform rate for carriers of both tr v the American camp lies in the German con- | Ing Chinese immigration in view of a possi- |yt Baltimore he hospital will be forma ok 2 s | three of the injured died. Great trouble L & 4 . Balti ; 0wl QRARY. BV, wuirer | Tiers of postoffices of the Arst-class now re- | &an line, arrived today from South Africa cesslon, the demayd will be probably comy | ble exodus from China as & result of the | opened next Fussday. It was erected in | vaccinating all these to meet thé require-| 1 ° e SO ™ b o8 (et B CORCtr | i onning on the way At 8t Helena and | was experienced in keeping the relatives plied with, and a new camp for the United | Present disturbances 2 e Vanderbilts by his sis s o [ St Lucia. The Masconomo took out fto|®Wa¥ from the injured on the train so that Btates troops will be established outside the - g i R T Barmd | an American filed strong objection with Mr. | What the men desire 1 a uniform salary of | 8t. Lucla. The Masconom k out to b So rlc Carze apiaiinoile | the doctors gathered from nes ol ety Train Runs Down Carringe. Hacon Heory W. Diederich, United States consul at | $1,20. uth Africa cargo of supplies the| Hatfield L r | could attend to the wounded SYRACUS 2, - pmen hin The question of pensions for infirm and | British army from St. John, N. B. and| ‘%% Orders received from Washington direct | SYRACUSE, N, Y., Sept. 2-The fast Bremen, who wrote to Washington for in 1 i an | matl train die b this city from the west | Movemen, f Ocean Vessels, Sept P DA htis farniaQing disabled letter carriers, which has been dis- | has been engaged ;about three months in Relatives Walt ot Bethlehem, that the 5,000 American troops be divided | i 540 b m. struck & \arriage eontaming | At New York—Arrved - La Touraine strations, meagwhile forbidding the physl xit e leR e . cussed for some years, has resulted in|that service. Returning home the Ma The special train arrived at Hethlehem at between Pekin, Ten Tsin and Taku for the | four people at Oswego Junctio Havre: Clty of Reme. from Gresnock 1uestion nate Americans In < e motat T at St hishery » 5 P 5404 1 waut ot hete toniaHl Parmaty v R B2 stasiat he ground that the law | PTeParation of bill providing for payment | conomo stopped a Helena to make a|11:30 and was met by fully five thousand winter. Abungant supplies are now arriv- | SVRlce: Kilan Folcy of Spit HIE SR a Kattarda ol et e athont Lt i il oI ot such pensions by a spe y appointed [ few repairs to its engine. , While there | persons. all clamoring to get a bit of news 4ng and all that s necossary is belng rapidly | sister and Josephine K. Blanchard of Syra- | Genon ) officer of the postoffice department out of a | Captain Mann visited the camps of the |of the wreck or trying (o learn whether Soruardsd o Pakin cuse were killed and Michael Maroney wa At Queenstown- : 0 X h Th nje | loved ones were among the victims. The use were illel and Michssl Maroney was| At Qu L, New Cunt Sehedute eru, ind ralsed by assessing each carrler 1 per | Boer prisoners. * He saw General Cr It is understood here that United Stutes | Hiiured, The party was ob @ pleasure ari | BINBRRROL R NaR OV e | (LIMA. P (xla (alvastan. Tax: Baot | oant of Bk sty b Eill vides for | am! Colonel Schiel and other notable pris- | news of the wreck had reached Bethlehem at Mpotster Conger insists that Li Hung Chang | ton and a freleht Train standing i e | vork : é 2.~The government publicly announces to- | administration of the matter by the depart- [ oners. Captain Mann says there are 4,000 |8 o'clock and spread like wildfire, All tha shall be allowed to proceed to Pekin for & | Aok RrVE o e B O e e | A o e AT Ived i moenised | duy that the new Peruvian customs schedule [ ment without any furtber expense to the | Boer prisoners at St. Helena. They are | policemen of the tawn were gonference « la sveed of forty miles gn hour l,,...‘.;.‘h‘;, . J sid | Uil come into force January 1, 1901, goverament. I well cared for and are made comfortable, | station, and it to the assistance of the injured. Many were pinned down by wreckage and had to be X 8 e e [P e e e R e On the run from Hatfield to the hospital Lloyd Steamship company have Insisted op | TSt and second-class is to be urged. Car- | Steamer Masconor n f the Ho 0 ments of the United States laws. Recently | gathered at the was with great diiculty that

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