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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. ESTABLISHED Ly, o 19y 1871, OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, IPTEMBER 15, 1900 TWELVE PAGES, SINGLE COPY FIVE C INTS. NOTHING TO GIVE OUT [00rs" % FREE WAND|TALK WITH LI HUNG (HANG|PROCLAMATION BY ROBERTS| [\ WORKERS \RE LEFT|CONOITION OF THE WEATHER [ IFIS [P [TS HEAD Only nil Pa. f Pekin That Has Tells Barghers of Flight of Krager | Fore t for Nebraska 8 " — Not Heen Hohhed and Out- A | and ¥ ts Out the 1In- 5 Showers; Cooler; Varia LU B JR— ¥ we Al " g vitable End, Miners' Strike is Practically On Two Days| | . - . . State Department s Buill Wrestling with rng ¥ Uorrespondent Starts In to Interview the | | Before Time Otdered. Ature mt Omaha Yesterd Stricken Galveston Finds Silver Lining to 4 by the Assoclated Pres Aged Ohinese Diplomat. | LONDON. Sept. 14—The following dis o = : T Stors Oloud | Chinese Problem, [ 1 via Taku ey patch has been received at the war office — ts Storm Clond, i el SR L i Rl STRIKERS ARE WELL FIXED FINANCIALLY 8 | nues horized and un «d. | CHINAMAN DOES MOST OF QUESTIONING MACHADODORP, Thursday, Sept. 13.- | ‘o . < { SITUATION BY NO MEANS SO ACUTE ! o housce are suardod except those oc- | Kruger has fled to Lourenzo Marquez and | _— 5w GRAIN ELEVATORS NOT MUCH DAMAGED pled refgners, the palaces and those | Wit ¥ i yiver ] Botha has been obliged to give over the| u 0 o¢ (he Men Have Just Received o :: J— n the t Almost every house s npress Was Poor . mand of the Boer army temporarily to Ay b Nav 7 ’ % Cbange of Attitude on Part of Russia te ture. General Chaffee says owers Show No Disposition Viljoen on account of ill-health. In con- | : :."r .}.’....:.“u‘.: ."1.":':.. .' b - LA Injury to Buildings and Contents Will Not sems to Relleve the Btnin he Sl T bR A DA o Early in October. - - Average Over Two Per Cent, K — | pletely to looters and he earnestly desives | " The late Prosident Kruger, with Reitz | - ANIMALS FOR UMAHA'S Z00 s the co-operation of any nation to preven | and the archives of the South African re-| gCRANTON, Pa t. 14.—Operations t0- | y o - " . NO OFFICIAL CONFIRMATION RECEVED | ini..""0n the other hand the missionaries | (Copyright, 1000 by the Assoclated Press) | public, has crossed the Portuguese frontier | 4o Nio Y ha: Sept. 14.—Operations L0- | yetlow ark Conteibutes & CARGOES ARE READY FOR MANY VESSELS g | complain because the Sacred city has not| SHANGHAL Wednesday, Sept. 12Li|ond arrived av Lourenzo Marquez, with the | il voro s fkiwanna & Western Rallway lec L of """'"“"'“‘”" b | a——— e | been 1oote The e that the royal fam- | Hung Chang informed a representative of | view of sailing for Europe at an early date. | coovune’ employing 10,000 mine workers, Other “Varmints " | United States Has Not Committed Tteclf to [ 11y and other high ced Chinese per- | the Associated F today that he will| Kruger formally resigned the position |\l S0 ) Sindatill, there beink & | wAsHINGTON, Sept. 14— (gpecial Tete- | O¢% Working Hard to Olear Wreokage g onages who were behind all the trouble, [ start for Tien Tsin Friday, September 14, which he held as president of the South |y "oy’ guthered around the mine vmv‘,“.,‘. i o A iR e from Wharves, Immediate Bvacuation, hould be made to suffer than those | that he Will go to Pekin If circumstances | African republic, thus severing his official | oo "yt none of them going to work, B Yol t rk are to be presented to - wvho blindly followed them. General Fuki- [demand it and that Prince Ching and he | connection with the Transvaal. Kruger \i""'" thess collieries, those of the “”mw;“;‘ ;\“/‘I "\ l”Y “"‘w b e hima. the Japanese leader, informed Gen- | had full authority from the dowager em-|action shows how hopel in his opinion | iy NITHGRA GombRay, SmbolHE aha Zoo on etidat ‘ongr CITY Wi GENERAL CHAFFEE HAS PLENARY POWERS | cral Chaffce that hrutal auirakes were bo- | DFess and emperor (o hegotinte a setrle: | in the war WhIch han now boen carried on | " paecrno e pond o/ IA0Y,. CMVIACOR | man Mercer. | We recently recommended | CITY WILL BE REBUILT ON GRANDER SCALE ng committed in Tung Chow. He fold [ment with the powers, explaining that | for nearly a vear and his desertion of the | o 5o oo 50 S0l e sount | b "“ H‘"“y{ ot m‘ tik “'l T % g | the American commander that he had pos ]:Y;;.vn were no other commissioners for :4v“u .‘f,‘.w‘:.":fil,lq..‘;,‘vfl::y t~‘.;,:;',:.,{:flly';,‘l Pleasant collierics, with 800 emp 8, wer® | inatructions M the decartment three Muoeh of the Wavoe Wrought by Commander Clothed with Fall Au- t stion that me ”x ”u SidIehts Thstet bk ot (it oot .”;_ shut down today, the men having decided | plack bears, one grizzly, five yout kand| wrday's Murrleane Would Have thority to Detevmi When, How hrown themsalves into wel " te e bt a8te "o S bl ndent being the interviewed rather than It s probably unknown to the inhab | one young deer have heen catpured and are . fleen Averted Had Balldings and to What Extent His Troops i it Bl oral au. | the interviewer. Li asked many questions | ftants of the Transvaal and the Orange 1:‘,‘ \.h,m i \\I:.’,;‘ RTINSO o8 RN, O TR the | Been More Substantial, Shall He Withdraswn. | thentic cases of coolies who had been Killed | About the fighting at Tien Tsin, the reiiet| River colony that nearly 15,000 of their [“Ff WOTKIWK: but with a smatl fores. By | St "““"v“‘:"" et '1';“‘ .‘ R INE i HHEY. HacaTIaAY. Wibuelo litions. He |of Pekin, the number of tronps tellow subjects are now DEHOLOMS Of WAT. | proigent Olyphiant of this COMPARY Wb | suianss of the oty of Omate. The anfmats | i | requested General Chafr nvestiga: power in China, their disposition an not one of whom will be released until (- stinted somewhat by the Kukten ol Wis Rpenn "’ ; . \ STowatnn 7| GALVESTON, Sept. 14.—J, C. Stewart WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—There were no | qrat{Qioh eners oo him to check | 108 qualities. of the Chinese, how Pekin those now wider arms against us surrendar | L EEERIEG MOCRER B B0 aSR0 B TUD | are now at Fort Yellon Neligh, Neb, | Ne Erain elevator builder, has arrived dovelopments in the Chinese negotiations | \hece barbar i far ns possible. Gen. | W48 defended and what bodies of Chinese | unconditionall | man, the order to strike, clean up their | i SHi1akof Biliey, Neli, Jvese S, | Bttt B B -l ) today with which the public could he made | arer cpamres o Muir to proceed | fought He expressed rexret at th The burghiers must U copnisant of the | iy ooy jeave the mines 10 proper cone | i oy Satish, ta WAWIN - O, MoK ot Mannger M Balley of the Galves- acquainted, the whole matter heing still in | fi6 © R B wnd (o teport. | PrIVAtions of the women wnd children in | fact that o intervention in their behalf |Bit S LU LU Wonkon [ ton Whart company. After inspecting the the diplomatic phase and therefore Nt | ay a council of generals fo he Rus. | Pekin can come from any of the great power Wha (Hdividui. sperkYices R o e AuKOm. | grain elovat d th he sald calling for military orders. Wa Artme b gensvil. LIuviton 1 he had receiveq | DUring the interview Li Hung Changand, further, that the British empire is| o o® CEEECGRT GROTOHS SECRAC S s and Edg 4 I“ L tore the | iNal per cent of the grain elevaters officlals are alting word from the State | {ntormatton that t of Boxers, one | 88ked the correspondent it Ministers Con- | determined to complete the work which has f {TUCC (0 TR FIAES AAC BEERKEEE AEC | have been authorized to practice before the | nag been dumaed. The wheat would be partment as to the next stop expected | yuoodt 20 AR other 4,000, ware | 8er and MacDouald appeared to bave sut- | already cost so many lives and carry to a | (oW G GO TE, LRSI O O SOTS intertor department. its has HhekoN into vessels fust as rapidiy as they of tha troo, ut it w intimated that | oy, Prom i endeavor to cut | fered much and when told that Mr, Conger | conclusion the war declated asainat her by | |0/ io0n" (s vory near to & compiete shute | grar i "L free delivers O s heen | come to take it. Ships are necded here at this Bext step will not be taken immodi- | the cominun allios between | 140 108t seventy pounds he laughed merrily | the late government of the Transvaal and |40 ordored cutablished at Ame 1Y county. fonce. Mr. Bailey has pu large force bk I'ukam, and: totar was finally do- | %09 remarked that this was & “poor recom. | the Orange Free State. a War to which there (400 00 o Octeber 1 Lptliel il [en work clearing up each of th The situation has lost something of 115 | cided that the line was sufliclently guarded, | endation for horseflosh | a2 be only one ending not disturbed as vet over the means of 8UD- | paputntion. of . st ey DAY U NS | Tt g e e i apany AT BY ey acutencss, owing to the change in the atti- | ne the alifes would roceive definite tidings| 14 HUng Chang also inquired whether | ord Roberts' proclamation then polnts | o for the oty DUNER EHU. THAL Wekk '"‘i““ fon of 4 " LA S ““ AP- | for new business all along the line within tude of Rugsian government, as indi- | ot tha ap h of the RBoxers in time to | 'H® correspondent had seen much abuse of | that with the exdeption of the small tHe Workera kv reculved thele Avsukt Day 1-~‘\ v“l Sartly ervice ]\‘MH ALl | ‘\ e next eight days. The wharves have cated in yosterday's dispatche No mobilize at any given point. The council | N® Chinese or any ravishing or killing of f urea which General Botha I defending the | (0 WO SETE M TontH Kud oikeee chiy| Lo s & Linden, Dallas county ‘o been damaged very little outside of the cial confirmation has reached Washington | morely fasued ordors for increased vigi- | YOMen and children and when told that|war hus degenerated into irregular opera- | 10T 06 (he Will manth ahd ouhers onlv|on october 1. It wil coser an area oflwrockage of the sheds. With the wreck of the postponement of the withdrawal. | lance on the part of the outpe the abuses were prac ally confined to the | tions which must be brought to an Mm,‘hl Hasbitor o {100 LHGINBAY. WaK /o !'w y-eight i miles with a popula .‘“ age cleared away Galveston will be in as but the fact is not doubted here. Regard- | " The talegraph line has been closed against | RUSSIANS he said this was “doubtless due | conclusion and concludes The meAns 1| ewpondingly high, espocially among the | 'y, GEHIoy. o0, Benkay vasie Wiy, toe | Buod BBAKE for huElHuAN(AS (¢ Wak A" tew Jose, however, of the course to he taken by | Lroee messages because of the enormons | 1€, 14¢K 0f discipline’” and turned to the [am compelied to adopt are those which the ERWBIE 10 LU AR, A w hloy of Pennsyl rihe Was 10 yoars ago before there were any whar! Russia, it 18 noted there is nothing in the | sovarnment business | subject of looting. belng anxious to know | customs of war prescribe as applicable to | LAcKAwaDA ¢ e L h. oy nted industrinl teacher at Flan- | gpedy—even in © shaps, because there : v American mote of response to Russia | how much government treasure the allies | such ca hey are ruinous to the coun- | treau; 8. D, Thdlan school, at $800 a yea rs and better ones Superintendent Warren said the Houston n in the ¢ called demands immediate evacuati that the Russian troops ar | t " gkl it the | try. ontall endless suffering to the burghors | Wil secure early in October. and the general tekerve aksntd. kpproved loday Pty MAKE THEIR OWN MAUSERS 1;‘:;3‘”111;..mv:‘:tw \'\nm informed that the| try. entail endl WTering B Borabery | L0 ST T the Siinete and aibet ators | ol ve ag proved tod 1 jorted to have taken | and thelr families and the longer this | National bank of Des Moines for Red Oak | [m more | Dircet Navigation company was not ready ers are hetter provided for financially than 4 f al 000,000 taels from the revenue officers at | guerrilla warfare continues the more vigor e | National bank of K Oak lowa National | for any business at present as the " Instead, it is stated that the control | E B BB tiks been. Ted (o bellave ; S at present as the reme EHTAtioR ST A v Rask ot b BEate ium Are No Longer Dependent on | pogin Li Hung Chang said: “The rumor | ous must they be enforced "'“:’“"‘-‘ ."J‘“‘_( 4l 10 L \atement | YUK of Des Moines and Corn Exchange Na- | nant of its fleet is wholly engnged In the department into General Chaffee’s | Forelgn Factories for High must bave added two ciphers to the real lsxeits ‘m‘_l o "‘ et ”“ {ght hours | Lona! of Chicago for National bank of I ‘l-lu’ work. Twelve of the eighteen barges Class amiGuAt hat the strike 1s on nearly forty-e OUTS | orah, Ta.; United Stat atioral of Omaha | of the company are lost and 1 would ha for him, after conterring | Inne A ot the tnterview Lt frung chang| T TISONER IN ALL BUT NAME |in’uivince o the time set for it to begin: | sorty 1 United Staes National of Omaba | of'the company are lost7or missing with the other military commander m‘ SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14 Rev. J. F IH“' ‘“‘]‘I“"’h "“ (;'m‘_' '_‘“” '.,.,’.‘Inui' ‘L‘ | Tonight will see the practical closing of | "y “A vieaworth ix appointed stamper in Must Bulld Move Solidly. Peat and wife and four children, with Miss SORCERUN ICEAREE NEC RIINWE AT every mine and breaker in the Lackawa tent the American forces should be with one removed, by reason of his age and &1 {he postoffice at Atlantie, Ia | Congressman R. B. Hawl f determine when and how and to what ex ; storms elsewhere, atorms of more frequency and of greater inte They ‘visit the coast of wal proposal may be of significance, | | leave the country, but as they were in a| Hung Chang said he a ored the fact| ®rnor. This is at the instance of the Brit- | United Mine Workers, this afternoon is * the trouble did not begin | that the newspapers were prejudiced ish consul, who protested against Mr. Kru- |sued the following statement from head ‘ % VAb175 (h) s HGuN e e 6 IS EE SgAinat bim and asserted (AL (hls opposi: | BeF uslag Portugusse LerHtGry, aa/a bass for | quarters hera | DES MOINES SHOWS UP WELL Rev. Mr. Peat says that the Chinese were | tlon originated with the English press of | directing his executive “The situation, as we view It this after in view of the fact that it is made with the v, who was In 3. Hunt, missionaries, who escaped from 4 10 Any of His Agents region, extending from Pittston on the Washington at the time of the sto by \ in a degree his position would be stmilar | ;0 0" eaner Nippon Maru. They | gq) ,M‘mm’ T e e ~ worlings give employment to nearly 55.000 |\ iion will be taken at once by the board | mont hotel he said: “Work of vast import to that ocoupled by him in the advADCO | \ory among tho last of the missionAries {0 | ew cver Immamoie C1CePt to 8MOOLN| L,ONDON, Sept. 16.—Aecording to the men and boys, more than one-third of the | e cesure the |oommy hipment of the |ANce is to be undertaken here on different upon Pekin so far as having a free hand | oo fa U B O O e ey of 1.90g | the™ over impartiaily | Lourenzo Marquez correspondent of the | entire numuer of employes in the anthra- |.niwals now at Fort Yellowstone, Cages|lines from those that have been our habit s concerned. This statoment of the condl- | 10y ‘aurons the country when they re b 1IRA (a0 ol | Batly Telegraph, Mr. Kruger is virtually a | cite coal fields of Pennsylvania have boen prepardd at Riverview park in | heretofore, tlon governing the American reply to the | oy \no American consul's warnings to| At another stage of the interview LI |Prisoner in the residence of the district gov- | President Nicholls of district No. 1 | Wehiohi the abimAIn Wil be pikcsd [ There withdr | sty gland. They blew throughout the great lakes and along the distrit wh express purpose of clearing away an er roneous impression that has been made upon the public mind ; | hores of the Allantic on the New | raptdly arming themsclves without the ns- | Shanghal, which influenced the papers of| The French consul has been forbidden noon, Is satisfactory. Many of the col- | England coast. 1t they build as we build DA ALL WAE REAOIInotiE ke auoFataTY SR I e b e access to Mr. Kruger, as have also the lat- [ lieries are already closed down, as the they would be down and out nearly every g the empor " i : The correspondent remarked that the|ter’s own officials. The district governor [ powder on hand is exhausted, our men are 1 position of Dr. Hill, who i sufferng from year, but they build structures to stay, and we must rebuild our city on different lines and in a different manner that will resist idiced | has notified Herr Pott, the N There are arsenals in the capitals of | Americans had never been prej | nearly all the provinces,” said the mission- | A%8inst him, whereupon Li Hung Chang | Sul, that v demanded: “Why don't they accept herlands con- | quitting work, expecting to buy it for less ). who had acted as the | than $2.75 a keg when they need it again Boer consular agent at Lourenzo Marquez, | From reports received it is our opinion a cold. The former spent some time this WASHINGT bureau announces that the population of N, Sept. 14.-The census afternoon in conference with Attorney 3 ] sis ; of state today during the temporary indis ary, “and it is of little use now for the | Auickl i minister to China, Baron | | | Des Moines, la., is 62,139, as against 50,063 gules as they do. General Griges powers. to agree that they will expett oo | 58 48 egotintor?” | can no longer bo recogniscd as a represen- | that tomorrow afternoon will see a com- | 08 (o RGR Ro B0 Ut B0 AET i, oF A% we have to continuo business through l @ SeTRsTama more weapons or ammunition to China. Tha| QUESUONs put to Li concerning the settle- | {ative of the Transvaal, which 18 now Brit- [ plete tie-up. and that on Monday every |} o ueat this port we must in our construction do PRINGE CHING 1S GRIEVED | Cuiins Wit o ow 1o ks mosern | Bt 3B (e Chisess svernment waniea i tervvory 7" 708 ¥ 727 PG Ol L il \ | S e et - Boson - weapons for themselves. at Chentu they | !0 muake were diplomatically parried o have had erview wi o Ameri- e e Topeka stowly, New- York, Buftalo and OhTokRd, the ‘ste. Thiaks the Allies Have Reen Unduly | are turning out first-class Mauser ..flu; Tnt‘”“ 'OMAl bAG 118 YIERS 86 o whkt|ShE Bithcbe who 1 helwatd hound,: evs L WIRHES T AVUID POLITICS | waSHINGTON, Sept. 14.—The popula- fbility of which was plafnly fllustrated in Harsh In the Treatment of large quantities.’ sottlement I desirable and the powers | the correspondent, “and he 16 of the opinion | | tion of the city of Topeka, Kan. as of-{some structures recently ecrected lu our Chinese Capit — have their views. We will meet and|that hostill may drag on for a consid- | pestdent Mitehell of Mine Workers | ficlally anuounced today, is: 1900, 33| community. The port is all right. The Missionaries Back from China. negotiate. erable tim ‘u; the B n-r; >| their despair | Reurets that Capital Is Nelng 608, 1890, 31,00 [ fullest of water remains. The fetties, with N - ? SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14.—~The trans- Asked whether he expected demands for | threaten to fight to the death | Made of Strike, | These figures show for the city | stight repa are ot, and because o (Copyright, 1900, by the Assoclated Preas) | ;50 Hanoock arrived today from the China | the cession of territory as indemnity Li Acting President Schalkburger arrived | & whole an increase in popu'ation of 2,601, | these 4.,,.’11\:,“,.: \\ley‘jl\l -l\hl":u\“‘lw;: :-lur PEKIN, Sept. 6.—(Vla Shanghal, 8ept. 1)} ji100 " ne Hancock brought few pas- | Hung Chang replied: “I am in communi- | here today (Friday) to caufer with Mr.| INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 14.—John | ur 8 per cent, from 1800 to 1900 | for the territory and people it serves, the Prince Ching arrived here yesterday inq|sengers. Among them are Major E. E.|cation with some of the governments. 1| Kruger, but was not permitted to see | Mitchell, president, and W. B, Wilson, s The population In 1880 was 15,452, show- | restoration will be more rapid than may companied by an escort of m.m\v: *M Dravo, U. 8. A.: Lieutenant Davidson, U.|have found they have no disposition to ask |him and he returned immediately to the | rerary treasurer, of the United Mine Work- | ing an increase of 15 or 100.67 per cent, | be thought, and the flow of commerce will Jupanese cavalry. He spent the _"“‘,'” %18, N.. from Taku, and Licutenant 8. | for land | Rransvaal |ers of America, today say they are very from 1880 to 1840 be as great, and with the courage and forti his own palace. Sharp diplomatic play fs | g P 20 from Nagasaki. Four- | The correspondent said: “There iy great| The imperial government, says the Cape- | pighly pleased with the manner in which | The population by wards in 1500 is as Anditoresight ta a6k bevend the fia expected for an advantage, but any vmll- | teen missionaries and their families from | curiosity abroad to hear an explanation of | toWn correspondent of the Standard, intends the anthracite coal strike has been re- | gallow Ward 1, 6628 Ward happy events of today, will be as prosper- negotiatlons will not take place WOUl Lol Ngasaki arrived. The missionaries in- | the contradictory edicts fssued {n the name |4t an early date to declaro a state of pence | ceived by the public. Mitchell says he re- | ward 3. 7101 Ward & 6110 Wanl and secure s any part of oup sroster Hung Chang has arrived and the """”"'"m‘. e I L. J. Hotveke, Rev. E. 0. Bowen, | of the dowager empress during the siege.” | in South Africa and to issue & proclama- | grats deeply that politiclans are undertak- | ga: Ward 8, 861 us country v of his authorlty shall have been disposed of. | | (U8 & o o0 FRIERE two children. | Li Hung Chang meditated a moment and | tion that Boers refusing to lay down thelr ing to make « The Japanes ital out of the strike | Rev. D. Jones, wife and two children, Rev, | then, peaking deliberately, said he | arms will be tre 1 as outlaws, I had hoped,” he sai that there would Getting Ahead of Court. . Fratng to Clear O Beaches. Nostill, stated to a represontative of thef, " iry Lol o o o o Miss O Hoden- | cmpress at the beginning was badly ad-| L : = be no political significance attached to so| WASHINGTON, Sept. 1i.The supreme | The first real attempt to clear away the Assoclated Press that o wished an n:|o )y s Tp' ' ol vised. She was told the Boxers had super-| o JSEUSSE URaWEER Remtaence. rlous & matter as this great strike, in- |court of the United States will meet for [ &reat mass of dehris piled nlong the beach vestigation to be made of Li ||u:~ b AL B st o 4i- | natural powers, that they could not P ]_'\ i s i ‘.’-'w”\_‘ f"‘;mhnm 18 it does, the very living of 143,000 the October term on Mond October 8 |for a distance of several miles was begun credentlals, as It is believed that BrNCe | oo contact with the Boxers but all have | Bjured and were able to make it very hot | Herr Potr. the consul of ihe Nethem of | wage-earners, who have fedt the merciless | When the court adjourned on May 18 today 14 Ching;weaithe only maniwith sithority 1n f SCectlihie WEA (IO EAXEHE BAL 81l ave [ o0y toreianers, Bhe bellsved thls. but (eoE Saaie SASTOONRML A0k SO NBIRMTINGRE (oo o SRpItk) to® o) dackdsd Lere were undisposed of 330 cases, of wh Advertisements appeared in the News this the pramlise | resontative saw)| (58 troubles i, China. Sama of them ‘m." aterward found it was not true horer, (0 the residence of the district gov- | OV |\ Yelegrams were received from the |number thirty-seven had been argued and [morning asking for hundreds of men and o Assoclated Press representative saw | 0 The papers are incorreet in saying she { | . N st tod. Since the adjournment of the|boys to do this work. A multitude re- courtesy | destitute; all lost more or less property | e - | national board members, Fred Dileher mi Prince Ching today, thanks to the courtesy | [/ 1 . The | | Al y \ court to date there have been 111 cases filed, | sponded. They were formed into squads h ot They were obliged to leave their homes was co Into, sl ediots. Dnolipp ward McKay, G. W. Purceil and Benfamin s of tho Japanese guards. The prince said mes in ; he 'y‘:w 4 that in the jmmediate future | 10rthern China on orders from the con: | Chinese government 18 despotism. No one | OVIDE FOR NEW LINES James, now in the anthracite ficlds. today. | makir v tatal of 414 casex on the docket, | and promptly put to work, with polico and b e P can coerce the empress. She, like all other | Mitehell is keeping informed on every move | £EAINSt 301 cases on the same day in 1500, f dcputy sheriffs in charge. It s hoped that Suargiiioge wauia he MEG) IRALIARMELE | . | rulers, 1s dependent on her advisers and | ¢ wo Board of Trade Authortzes | iy e miner G the coal operators | ShOWINK an increase of twenty-three cases. | vigorous prosecution of this work will lead ] HathouRlt fhe dreaimeat of Pekin ta: | No Definite Orders 10 Chafree, | sometimes their advice is bad and she may Contracts with Exchange | in the entire anthracito flelds. He 18 pres| winitnry WAIT BErvios tn China o the early recovery of bodies still in the necessarlly orue ||“l’\l4l ey, Py | WASHINGTON, “Sept. 14:—The ~quarter- | be misied.” exraph Company, | paring to leave for Hazlcton, Pa. tomor-| \wASHINGTON, Sept. 14—The Postoflice | " h",h‘” ‘;“1‘“ kgl ;:;.\”",'"" ”,mu, Tue us regards private prope TINStar's auppliss for subsisting the army in/| ¢ When'the corresndndent was lsaiins the | $0:108Y8 9gicRRe famonn ) NG § piesreeredaad Bl b AL LR T thankful, however, that the sacred city had | L ing the army in | h e pond aving th row night, where he will ablish head China are nearly all at Taku, but aboard the transports. unloaded because it wa of General Chaffee so rranging for an efficient mall | 1o ymagine how the half of the people that service for the army in China. Its repre. | | Qid escsape got frec of this feartul flot sentative, Mr. Robinson, arrived at Taku ¥ bl e and jeteam. | two days ago and a dispatch was received e still | interpreter sald: “The vic hopes you| CHICAGO, Sept. 14.—At a special meet- They have not been | will not give a bad mpression of him to|ing of the Board of Trade today a resolu s expected the army | the American papers. He says he is a|tion was adopted authorizing the president | would be on its way | very old man—the oldest to take part in|and secretary to execute contracts with the been preserved. He had come to Pekin. he sald, with full authority from the emperor fi “ {o obtain peace by any necessary sacrifice, but he felt sure the gencrosity of the | quarters. Thomas D. Nichols, John Fahy nd Thomas Duffey, presidents of Anthr cite districts Nos. 1, 7 and 6, will also re- direct to Mitchell, oking for Missing Homes, g ‘ 2 .. | from him today saying he was only walt N ete would not exact anything degrading | (2 the Philibpines. Ne definite orders have | these negotiations—that he has had much|Exchange Telegraph company. The first | | special organizers will probably | ;no" Genoral Chaffee's orders to establish | AR Assoclated Press representatives trav- i " encronching upon Chinese ter- | e 8¢t to General Chattee. He has been | experience in these affairs, that he ia the|of these contracts provides for. the com- | b ppolnted to work under Mitchell's di- | 5 | iy ersed the beach for some distance today and on China lml ] SRR R told to hold himself in readiness to exceute | only man who can help the foreign gov-|pletion of a comprehensive telegraph svs | rection and other national board member the stench at different poin was abso o) and e hoped wi ke 2 O orders to w Iraw 3 ] 1 | 1 ’ ) ‘ y B “;, A‘A;m ¢ athared Rad homen reliully | 2F98TS to withdray ””""“;“ Ak “'\” as the Chinese and that | tems reaching important centers on or be- | wijl no doubt be sent to the anthracite re- cder to Surrender Honds, utely sickening. Everywhere ltile groups See the - | he will try and arrange a settlement fairc | fore December 31, 1 upon completion of | Mitchell prope to hold many Ww HINGTON Sept 1" Assistant | of men, womer A-chilAre ? th prince Ching thinks a great blow has been 4 4 I o | ion chell prog g > an wen and children, some of them "“\‘r‘" o Chinese commerce, but does not | WAS SENT TO KILL LOUBET | to all sarties which line the Exchange Telegraph com- |y wcetings and his policy, he says, as (Treasurer Spalding today gave notice to | poorly provided with raiment, were digging r e, for | e | pany is to have exclusive telegraph space | well as that of all other leaders in the | banks having old 2 per cent bonds on de n the ruing of their homes for what little volieve the loss to the city is irreparable, fo | J g ! well a 4 9 hat 1 & ore mugnificent one may arise from the | Poliee tnterrupt the Misston of o |MOB LYNCHES THREE MEN |in the Exchange hall and Board of Trade | {(iike will be to persuade the workers to | posit (o secure deposits of public moneys | houshold property they conld savo. 1 many ! ashes. wiss An hist W Recently | bullding In Chicago, | remain away from the mines. | that these bonds must be surrendered at |cases those seeking thelr former residences . S The Russians expect Li Hung Chang to Left New ¥ ‘\‘ roes Are Taken fro | The second contract covers the dissem- | i | once and other bonds substituted or thelr | were utterly unable (o find a single rem- T Missinni ination of Board of Trade quotations IR | deposits will be correspondingly decreased. [ nant of them. so hopeless is the contusto {ve here within a few days. They \hv‘ RPN REE A ‘ s S| nt ¢ A R0 Hogklene 18 the. oantikion ! ot want to commit themselves in any way | (COPYFIEht, 180, by Press Publishing Co.) | Hanged. ) |throughout the territory cove b . BAD DAY FOR Y | These bonds on deposit amount to $2,188,- |of timbers and household furniture. The until be comes, though they say they are[ PARIS, Sept. li.—(New York World ( I i — lines of the Exchange Telegraph company, | (100 wing and Dust Storm Does |50 exodus from the city was heavy today and Willing to bear what Prince Ching has to | Plegram—Special Telegram.)—Upon infor-| ST. LOUIS, Mo. Sept. 14.—A special to|With the exception of the city of Chi | R . ‘ e RUndredn.Wars aakelifo kb Bt wa s dhabis 4 mation cabled to the French secret serv-|the Post-Dispatch from Memphis, Tenn.,| The contemplated contracts will be | ARG gy & Erle Shows Substantial Grow(h. o s tEARoration AlSTe ey 84 ice from the United States, the Paris police | says: A masked mob of between sixty and | Signed not later than tomorrow, but it is the A WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—The population nt there were scores of families with de jected faces pleading to be taken from the stricken city, where, in spite of every effort to restore confidence, there is a universal teeling of depression Piling Withst of the city of Eria, Pa., as officially an nounced today fs: 1800, 52,733; 1890, 40,634 | These figures show, for the city an increase in population of 12 per cent, from 1830 to 1900 R requested the Spanish government to ar-|100 men broke into the jall at Tunica, | Dot the intention that the Western Union early today and took out three |and Postal Telegraph companies shall be he has just becn secured at San Sebas- | YANKTON, §. D., Sept. 14.—(Special Tel- | | negroes, whom they strung up to a tree|ousted from the Board of Trade building rd Expedition Agatnst | tan on the frontier | | egram.)—This was Sloux Falls and Sioux City day at the state fair. ‘The attendance was reduced by the violent wind and dust storm, although there was a fair erowd in the afternoon. There are still hopes that v & & whole eneral Dorw Boxers D Gra within 100 yards of the Jail. Not a shot | immediately, Such a ) will not be taken troys Villnge on Morlatt left New York a month ago. | was fired mtil such time as the Exchange Telegraph | 1 Cannl, Papers found in his possession confirm the| The dead negroes are pany shall have completed the entire iginal suspicion that he b rank Brown, w $ been in. | shot Frank Chesire. a urosper 1 the Waves, tnl Ommel I Remove 3 S M s S | Shipping men say today that the damage 5 | rous plante em which it will have bound itself 0| iyg air will succeed in paying out. The| WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—Walter M. | (o the wherves | 110/ TARDS AL wepians o TIEN TSIN, Sept. 12, via Taku, Sept. 13. | trusted with a mission to assassinate | at Oak Landing, six months 1go; Dayid| construct wind tipped over one of the cattle stabl Da nssistant postmaster at Kansas i 1. The chiof i —The expedition under General Dorward | President Loubet at Rambouillet, the pre Moore, who shot Dan Boswell ten doyvs ag 1 Manager Crawford, of the Bx- |, 1iled fo heep and. caus Er o opopaipltlige oot it ol L ¢ he chief damage has against the Boxers threaten Tien | jent's summer residence. After his are | and Willlam Brown, who, with confeder. | change Telegraph cor aid today e ! g 14 Lhe PostimAs cen in w.'v ‘ apenof ’ Irl‘ };nu! the Tsin region reached Tu Liu on the Grand | rest Mor mi por revel 1 | at hot aud cu leath a vou hite| “The Excha T h pany, will | = Gogrge McEathron of Huron took first|getion will be confirmed by the postmaste an be quickly replaced. The piling for a canal without opposition and the city was |about the anarciist plot to kil every [man at State Levee, one month provious. | begin work as soon as the contracts are | o o foe jrvatord cattle. His herd was the L [i#as:ihe o : o accupied without a shot being fired. Th European ruler within the next twelye| The lynching I8 a climax of the nten and will disseminat P N R Ul e B LB A ,m,xu:‘“\. 4.‘;”:“ , Mlon vht-Hlmy front Ko ere yesterday afte onths. | teeling a st desperate negroes ns to su f t SN AN, o . gkl iy illy withstood the ponnding it got columns converged ther rda r | month: feel gainst despera negroe Which | “ * 1eh il reaches ir 4s awarded premiums for ort Horn ¢ New Governor of Gua { from the wind and waves and business men a two days' march and found that the | has been brewing in the neighborhood of process of comple stem. The | purham herd | WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—Ti avy de- [yt 1 r o LSRR surrendered to one officer | T for months. ent svst W I t urbam " | 5 t R nid a4 measure of consolation in this. 08 had 8o surre PRAREHN Bne AR BORROW IN UNITED STATES‘ Bigica: fob magth HEY ERAD Wil s about 5,000 al ovents this evening included | partment today recelved from Commander |y o"yonarul reports were recelved today I n C.rasdl atiar it kas Ra blsa’ i Okl RS iwosn AE.G0h oth A 47,000,000 nea ek oLy pArMden, N UDer Hore Ot I | et B3, 1000, i had Tormally. relisved | (9UcBIng the water supply.” C, H. MoMastar ward or 03,10y town, ad | gy [ DRLAWARE: O Rest it oo Lwomn 48 and §7. an will ¢ i, including Knights of Pythias, |on March 22, 1 ‘n‘ had formally relie #4 | 5¢'the Ghamber of Commerco has charas of lw”\ i ”H“_':‘ At tadls TAAOS. BRAT | over the race troubles still continues y'.,“ |‘» o ‘l‘ el i w'v"ml Indi- | Madern Woodmen, Degree of Honor, Macca \: aptain Richard P. Leary as governor of |, "o o ehioe work. The company 18 pla e ad e tts Wile (MR Stithon | Threats are freely made on both sides and | i ity Mibeesroiis Iy b Omahs, | becs, etc. A ceremonial parade and session | Guam | ing men all along the mains, plugging the erous negroes have been ordered out of | 4 P aukee, | of the Shriners was held broken places and thereby assisting the flow harently, the Boxers have disbanded in S Co i . aumerau ¥ It of | roledo, Cinelnati, Detroit, Philade 4 Apparautiy, e Boxers bave alsbanded 0| pERLIN, Sept. Tt is oMciily an-|Ton The mon ek entn sk et | 100 it Detrit, Pililuhia Bar | aces revaye on foiows: STORM BLOWING GREAT GUNS | iI"\t Lot o o s i hat - re : nounced by the board of directors of the | prevented serious trouble imore, Boston L ew York Trotting, 2:35 clasa: David Crockett won ‘ | and hopes gradually to increase the service quiet S lconte ‘Gesellschat that, with ‘the co-| — — T tn tho fotention that se much of e Monkey Miyers second, Norwa Many Lives and Vessels Loat UVS | The water continues to run by gravity pres operation of the International, and through ovements o ean Vessels Sepr. 114, | 510 of the company 0ssible sha L Rur 2. half 1 re t ‘ That Lashed the Shores rhe o De > o v Chang on Looting. 3 3 8 A4 tunning, ha e and repea | ire. The only difficulty the people are hay HONOL LT St "% O San Francisco, | e intermediary of the Disconte Gesell- | New York-Arrived—Lu anta, from Liver. | s0ld to men of the Board of Trade, in | won, Lorett second, Lizzie Rt of New Foundland. e i AR e e oMbt RARA S A aaltod bo | Bohefly this “Nord \Daytsohe ‘banki ot Hamy | Pish J¥is usensiowr urst Blsmarck, f the determination that w close, indissolu- S Blandraay Idiane andig | or places of business. The ice supply con Joaguin Milier, In an interview n the Japs vg,-the M. M. \Weldburg company of Ham- | _Hamburg— Arrived—Protorfa, from w|ble alllance shall exist between the tel- | gyils, *Won by Indians by score of 4 to 6 | ST. JOHNS, N. F L. 11— Tales of | yinyoq hountiful and at many corners lem .r:vunu cotved here today, with saying |PUTE and Kubn, Loeb & Co. of New York, | ! N R egraph system and the board so that it fded the champi the state|a widespread destruction wrought by yes- | ,.0q iy being served at 5 cents for as many 10ee, e had been known (bat there was | 808 In conjunction with the Natlonal City | can "*§ONC-ATHIVEdTNorweglan, from F will be impossible for quotations to be ob ndpeau. dames wi 01 bY | terday's gale ocontinue to pour In, BIx | glasses a8 you cun drink at one time ihas. it l,' 1 "'",,,"“l‘ ‘:l s allied forces | PaBK of New York. have taken over 50,080.- | Moville Parlsian, from Liverpoo | tained for illicit uses | *he-same issma Ratur anas essels were wrecked near St. Plerre and | . s A /t D o e beon 1 such a hurre to]000 marks of 4 per cent trensury bonds of | o Montreal i ey o . | Lightning Destroys Barn, ix in Placentia Bay. It is also reported ust Work « 87 AnAr. would not bave been in suc " 1 the rman empire, falling due in 1904 and | bampton--§ - —Ka Frefdrica Print Bih Under Contrnct | BEATRICE, N Sept. 14.—(Special Te hat four were lost In Renews harbor, two More effective measures were taken today get there. Miller met the old statesman - ¥ rom Hamburg for New York via Cher 3 € ! Xee got e ) e vith | 190 With the approval of the Imperial | bourg | NEW YORK., Sept. 14.—The | Hible | egram.)—One of the largest barus In Gage | n the Stralts of Belle Isle and four near [ 10 keep undesirable people off the island Al‘y Canton and had a long interview w bank, th tasue will be placed on the mar- | V0 Bracraar, from Hong e at irth aveaue and Ninth street~ | county situated on the Vambuskirk stock | Cape Bona Vista ll\hm ¢ Datrolled w;‘ W n.h. front and chal him. Sbas | Kone an Ore 4 o M ociety ¢, N P " v ¥ | leng: 11 who could not show roper re ket in the United States 3 th nearly ffty years—is to b | \ farm near this city was struck by ligh Thus far fourteen lives are known to |!enged all A proper rea > 1ol The » Adise " 28 1 s Sci ithwark from New 1 na t | helr ting I’ Th looting at Tien Tein was discussed | NEW W K. Sept. 14.—~The New York| York Bre ¥ establishmeat of th 0 ning this morning and fired The barn | have been lost nd it is feardM that the on for thelr landing, or who were unwilling And the poet expressed a hope that the val- | o0 tnsyupance company today closed ne B ed—Kafser Wilhcim | Eol ey el And the bibls | gng” contents, among which were several || lite will prove to have been muen [0 Work for the privilege of coming into uabl m‘)|’l\~‘~ .l.ll~| art treasures .\" n'..- HIRHa R aking $5.000 of the imperial | $om O nd Gibraltar for New | b A h ttion of he | horses, were destroyed g r when full ion is at hand. |'OV" Sacred city would be saved. To this the | Gernian government loan of the $20,000,000| © Beisbane—Arrived—Aorangl, from Van. | OXfor International Bit ampanies | surances b heen received from th viceroy replied that the ailied forees ought | peooin oA B. .. via_Honoluli, for Syd i Eng German Methodists Choose St Louis, | ¢ . for mercial Vuseum railroads that they will do all in their power to be informed that there is no loot in W Sulled Mirowera, ‘from Sy dn - BURLINGTON, la. Sept. 14.—The Ger-| & FRANCISCO T 11| to reopen communication and their present Pekin, Tien Tsin, he declared, was a very Mo Ml e . : W, for Honolulu and' Vancouver! | Many Cascs of Smallpox. | me; Methodist conference of the St. Louls | Fraucisco commiticy ropose | ( plans seems to b to concentrate all forces < vich city, but Pekin was the poorest city| VI A, Sept. 14.—An lmperial de es—Arrived—Ems from New York [ of Wheelinig, hear the Grant county line, | d18trict, composed of adjacent portions of [ (%t Wil g bRy on the work of the reconstruction of ope in the north. He thought that it this fact | tsued today admits women to practice as| viy Gibraltar, for Gienoa. nd procceded " | Realth ofigsfa.tnday Tound Ueton tises ¢ | Towa. Missourt and Ilinois, tn session here | come of 82§ [ unl its [ bridge. Crews ure coming down the San'a ! Bt D ot Pl e B T Y B e ton.| _St. Vincent, ¢ rriyed—Luxor, from | ¥maupcx, the school and whole community | joday, decided o hold the next conference | c-tal I wi ) SRR e A known there would not be so much | physicians and chemists ou the same con- | gob WIRee S SRTNGCS VEnr fhem | pmapiex, the school and, whole commugity | today, decided to hold the next couf : 0 o e | o railrond from Arkansas and St. Louis to aualely Lo enter the cupitak ditions as wen. ~ | burg. waludy was belng tieated us chickenpes. |4 St Louls | inilade estore the line. Local veprescatatives of