Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 2, 1900, Page 1

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ESTABLISHED ll-\ll, 19, 1871, OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 2, 1900 -TWELVE PAGES SINGLE COPY FIVE e Ml Wilkeshree < ) [ Fieat meat contests Amone the pont. | [NOAL Tok Wibtses [FAVLL AIGILAL Ten Per " i ing Todny~Returas of Lnop- . 1 Nor y W In Biropgls Betwoen Anthracits Miners and France, Germany and .Ru sia Baid to Have osed Candidntes Chamberlain Hopes Union Between Golonies | yepmpernt TR Yo | g . WILKESBARRE Ta., 0 h Formed Diplomatic Group as to Ohina, | : S Weibutticd Mis 35 Brslint permtare at Omatn Vesterdart | Thoodore Roosevelt Addresses Himself to the Operators Takes Gloomier Aspeot. o LONDON, Oct. 1—S8ixteen English and and Motherland May Be Everlasting. r Deg Hour [ p _ perators of the Wyoming, Lackaw | 1rish borotighs elesting eightesn members i g 1Y Tillers of the Soil. TEN PER CENT ADVANCE FAILS TOATTRACT | X€UnE 1 | toon 1| TALE OF FRENCH ORIGIN DENIED IN BERLIN | 1o the House uf Commons o uolling o |\ ofFicE Fon MARQUIS OF LANSDOWNE | £ i (hob e i to of kn In6rel i A b b g bl O LS S 9 RESPONSIBILITY FOR BETTER PRICES = b 008t s bl B K 1L relgn om erizes | Churchill is among the candidates whose {10 us [ " Taver Tonli Plkded That Thir Pollowsss th ™ [ pow I he i . p-o” ot as 1 in Heve tats will be deeided todny Semi-Ofcinl Statement of Present | :‘l " o7 7 3 d a keg. W. A. Lath ¥ Particulars 1t Atother long list of unopposed return ment Adv s Higher = SSTERNENV TNy b + 86 Poople Asked to Weigh the Evidence and 11l Show Solid Front iSamp THTCERIIRE Of U ANV In Helles brings the total number of those alrsady e e | e | Divide the Credit kil AR). t aod all viron elected 30 p. m. today to 110, as covint for Mancuvers 19 W J 1 iy ipanies W resent: d foltowi: Consaivatives, §8 M¥oniety, 18 s {ACCUSED OF TAKING BRIBES | — TURNING POINT IN CRISIS NOT YET AT HAND | The whole gk s thoroug BERLIN, Oct. 1.—The statem pub- | liberals, §; natfonalists, 6. Among the can . ha "' o : ’ lished in Paris that Russia and Germany | didates returned today unopposed are: M.n LONDON, Oct, 2 10 a. m—Late last | 9alty y Asainat Cl .,.,.;(‘ON([RNING THE MAN AND THE ARMS - ein. The ¢ i ¢ have arrived at a complete understandin erialists, Lord George Hamilton, secre- | ®Vening Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, secretary in Connecti —— No Burface Signs Iudicating That Strife is | "' kil ba 1 t of ! s regard to the retention of at of state for India (Baling division of | °f State for the colonies, sent to the editor | e Sy s o of the unlon ar U pPekin and that Germany aband 1 llesex); Baron Ferdinand de Roths-|©f the Birmingham Daily Mail the follow ribute to the Soldier in Answer to Poynter's About to Terminate, wone of 1 efators were'In [ mand for the punishment of th rs [ childs (Aylesbury division of Buckingham. | N8 Message to the nation, which was con-| CLEVELAND, Oct. 1.—The " Hutlin gnizin ¢ uulon a of the outragoe before the peace negoti- | ghire); Sir Michael Hicks -Beach, chancellor uously displayed on the screen where! thus far in cour bribe . W 1o rom poom ations begin Is denied here of of the exchequer (We: stol): § ors paper was announcing the of the | was on the today e | 4 S ANY LITTLE CHANGE SEEMS TOFAVORMEN |6 b. m. This evening W. A. Lathrop.| A foreisn ofies omoin: eh s1IsW | Clotatke, L SR BSATEEE, & erse taia | BOIITHg: “BatHOtEY BUroRibolities: MRY | the eotean g iy e s W T b : e b o | AL gt 2); Willlam Lecky, the historian (Dube | the union betwee ore politics. May | the attorney who represcnts the Chicako| SPEAKS WORD FOR THE YOUNG VOTERS Lo ) am Lecky, the historian (Dub- i nies and the | Municlpal Signal company, and the te B8R ! I ; < e intimation that Germany, Russia atd | golicitor general (Dublin university Na. | be forever mainta that if money had been paid 1o se . Their e Under Saas ot |pa K b w ment | Fratce have formed a separate diplomatic | tionalists, John E. Redmond. chairman of [ Considerable interest attached to the | cy police signal system for the Game. | *°" WNO Will Cast Their Fisot bu- 1 v, to Its 1 y 1wl ady 1s | B1oup. Negotiations between these powers the United Irish parllamentary pa speech at Derby of George Wyndham last | well company the fact would not be exposed preast Ei % e s Wil ra W 1 it mine et- | continue, as with the other Germany | (Waterford City), Liberals, Sir Edw evening because it had been semi-officially | From Mr. Boyd's testimon Becktis avi Phis Year Given n Bt of e a . does not expect Great Britain's answer to | Grey, formerly parliamentary retary announced that the parliamentary under!dent that he suspected crookedness in the Hortative Advice, mine "emplo gt [ its | ber proposal for several day foreign affuirs (Berwick-on-Tweed divie secretary of state for war would outline | council almost from the time that MAZLETON, Pa. Oct. 1.—Although have. {N emi-official press uniformly of Northumberland) the governmeni’s proposals as to army | for the cont ik (e oTie sl o o Y86t Toxders s i ey Jeneral Bunebintendent redits the assertions, but a well infg LONDON, I.-Tn the ¢ |Teform. The chief points in t ecch | were opened and that he watched the pro- | HOLDREGE, Neb., Oct. 1.—(Special Te $0a8 u break in % ot the & pNote—1t i erst Jin the forcgoing | diplomat assured the Associated Pre boroughs, polled today, all the sitting Were that the home army should have a | ce much closer than anyone on ths | gram.)—Governor Roosevelt traveled over cite coal strik y were neverthe ke 2 erencs betwaen | P ond this evening that he had oX- | members wore re-elected higher training instead of being regarded | ¢ W ware of. He named the cout mile Nebraska farm land and pleased to learn that the 10 per e \ v 11 ite of $2.76 8 f | cellent reasons for believing them to be Devonport, Durham, Bxete Kings, | #3 merely a training ground for the xupyly whom he declared he had reasons for irie in thirteen counties and spok Taite sysnied B the PHUNANIAIe & Rend nt i tearing the net ad- | true. especially as the German Forcisn | Lynn, Beterbrou Presto Reading, | 9f the foreign army und that ater belisving always stood: togethier 18 VOUDE 1onnds ¢ b Deginsing S0 i Gil Thow Snany 1o e B . 10 § 1 ofce had itself admitted that Russia had | Rochdale, Wigan and the north and south POrtunities ehould be given for home | among them being Pre W8 himselt alls Clty, only & few from the Kan Mine Workers toda I redicted that [ posted by all othe Pekl unfonists secured a majority of 81, as| Humors curreht this morning that Boyd declared b b ed on the alleged | velt pecial train raced through a heavy many of the o W ted h . 8 The Berliner Post denies that the Fren N nst 1 of sixty-five at the last elec the mar of Lansdowne secretar o ooked transactions he ) ime from P fownpouring raln westw 1 toward M &S woulabe e | t ob % SGCept: the: of ' oTRIE8’ st it ed to obey Count von Waldersee until [show little change, with the exception of A% lord lieu of Ireland bribed towns along the road and then only long R os T Sy ubwritl s 2 SOEH AN ONET b iy Haadle i v ed. The Foreign office |a very significant increase in the unio A\ rowdy [ Westminster last Boyd his testimony charged that | for t v to say a few words to Selidisk o & farther ads | Gany mAde (o 18 K, su e on s |1® able to confirm the reports of the | majorities in Westham, where in the north | °V®NINg was addressed by Lord Georae amewell company pro 1 to pay $400 | 10 the gathered multitude. At every sta r i, Ml bt . vod and that the not fneresse must | 1¢ETadation of Prince Tuan, but the ads |division the union red a lead of | Ha n rd Mayor Nelson. Th nd that when the g teliv- | ¢ 1 crossing were throngs of peopie A5 Wis- exvectad i it b & 0UC BT tHE prios Bt Dowl v n is made that there has been an | 2048, against 704 at the last election, and | latter son, after efecting a disturber, ¢ off the men, who were bought with | ®4ger to catch even a glimpse of the New Silly o4 B R paTn i B M Vel skeifuae of ihe press| R ent in the disposition of Chinalin the south division a lead of 1,108, | Was savagely attacked. His head was forced | § At this, Mr. Boyd testified, some | YOTker as he passed awiftly by in his s strike, but nothing came to the surface that | committee at United Mine Workers® hen. vard foreigners. This change, the Bers | against 755 in the last election. Westham | through a gl panel and he received a|of the councilmen were | nant and were | ¢4l train and the enthusiasm of their would lead to any Indication of the strike | quarter \d he men will not return | €T POSt attributes to Count von Walder- | is a densely populated district at the e bad scalp wound eking “to throw down" the Gamewell com- | “heers a hurrahs apparently had wo peariog un end. There still is a lack ot | to work under such condition It is not | *e€'® arrival, | end of London and the result there seems | Considerable excitement was displayed | pany on the contract for th « egraph | Ml anything tangible on which to base the re-!a fair offer.’ Degradntion of Tuan Confirmed, |0 show that the liberals huve little to|A1ong Fieet street and on the Strand, es ) #ystem when it came up for | The strenuous campaign In the west has port of an immediate settloment, Presi-| The operators will make no further move| The Shanghal cofrespondent of the|Bope from the metropols pecially around the newspaper office The witness also testified that Howard H. | Bad o telling effect on Governor Roos: dent Mitchell continues to deny that until they hear from the men Frankfurter Zeitung and the correspondent On the other hand, Matthew White-Rid fous illuminated devices displaye Burge clerk of the council, had told him | Y©'t And while he is the most enthusias Xnowe anything about it Preparat iy Akeniit ed for the of the Lokal Anzelger confirm the fssuance | 1. 50n of Sir Magthew White-Ridlay, the | €lection returns that m had been paid to councilmen and energetic man aboard the train hi The strike situation in Lehigh valley | big demonstration to be his city | of imperial orders degrading Prince Tuin, | NOMe Secretary, was elected at Stalybridge, | The earl of Portsmouth, who, as Viscount | Mr. Burgess told me.” said Mr. Boyd * 1 | ¥0lce 18 much weaker than when he showed a change in favor of the men. Sev- | tomorrow but the Lokal Anzeiger's advices show that | In_the unlonist inter by & majority of | l¥mington, formerly represented Barnstable | an ting nothing out of this myself, but [ Sarted from Chicago three weeks ago eral hundred meu work on the Calvin | progig Mitchell makes the following the edicts are regarded as a sham by for. | 90IY eighty-one, as against the unionist|!n the House of Commons, ‘has formally | you know I am always on the watchout Fearing that his voice may give out before Pardee mines at Lattimer as the result of | statement to the miners of the Wyoming | ¢&n circles in Stanghai. This evening the | MAJOTItY of 632 secured by H. Side- | ¥ithdrawn from the liberal association on | the boys and if there is anything 1 can get | 'N® €04 of the campaign he limits his porsuasion on the part of the 400 mar valley Berliner Post has a leading article which | POttom at the electfon in 184 the ground that liberal unfonism no longer | for them I go § peeches to five tes, making excey sirikers, and at Oneida and Cranberry the i s e of Wilkesharre and | 1ends to exonerate the Chinese government| At Hartlepool, Sir Christopher Furness, | Means anything but conservattsm The | He further testified that Councilman | ''O"® only where there are regular afte conl companies lost additional men. No | Viefntty: I inok forward v t pleas- | from responsibility for the atrocities and al, recelved 6491 votes, as against | ©d110rs on both sides this morning express | 0'Donnell said to him that Howard had tolq | "0% OF evening meet Through Kan collierles were closed down in this region [ ire o the great demonst which will | ikes concessions in favor of the em-| $:512 cast for Sir Thomas Richardson, | StIsfaction over yesterday's returns, which | him that Directe arrett and Hyman w s he wore & large suoflower in bonor of today. Workers af the Weoriins ox e peror, ompress regent and the mandarins, | !iberal unfonist, who represented the con- | the Dally Mail asserts prove there is no| getting a “rakeoff ¢ | the sunflower state. In Nebraska he wears President Mitchell today said: “The strike | day. October The n W r which are somewhat surprising when com. | Stituency in the late Parliament. This is | “Khaki boor . [ that that he did il oo Bt o 18 practically complete and there will be n Conuet wor the respect and aiabid: | ing from a journal that has all along sup- [ liberal majority of 1,879, as against a| A recount at Oldham last evening gave|everything. Also bl resumption of work urtil there conve i of il Justice-loving citizens o the | ported the German note. The article says: | Iberal unfonist majority of eighty;ome at | Mes*rs. Emmott and Runciman elected, with | 1ing his wo rewell bbbt $5 Splieicy tion representing the collieries of the an- | United States foel axared that organ- (- “No doubt the Chinese government was | the election of 15%. Both the constrvative | Mr: Churchill at the bottom of the poll. | company ontract with | Traveling with Roosevelt irtis thracite field. The prediction made yes- | 1zed labor hux won w great victors and that | o, Cod b coniderations of self.preserva. | caBdIdates were elected at Plymouth, wh'eh | The Daily News and some other papers print | the stuf Chicago Munfcipal | Guild of Boston, National Committeeman terday that no attention would be pald 10| ki "t fifure there will be in (he homes | ITE BY eld to the all powerful Boxcrs, |1 @ double-barreled constituency. The this as the result. Corrected returns, how- | gignal anything they hineider of Nebraska, all of the candidates the notices posted by the Reading com-| happinexs and sunshine.s instead ‘of” 1 great was their hatred against foreigu- | YOURE Was as follows: H. E. Duke, con- | $¥o8 TAbled which ey Bo' soame peyutt al- | would have to go atter It with to cash b Sl pany conceding a 10 per cent increass has gloom und sadncss, 100 often” fnding 0 | ey $154" e government fonred aaniniieti servatlve, 8000; Hon Ivor ¢ con- [ ready cabled, which may be accepted as ac | teen new r correspondents and artists proved true JOHN MITCHELL, [If It resisted servative, 6,005; Sigmund F, Mend!, liberal, | “"' - | nost the entire train has been given over “Our reports from the Panther Creek | Pres ‘ The papers generally do not discuss Em- | +450; H. De R. Walker, 1iberal & mlg;:” whit ”n‘"“‘h‘\'r“m ociement i PRIEST ROASTS DEMOCRATS el oo B My i valley indicate that this heretofore impre poror Kwang Su's lstter to Emperor At Oldham, another double. barreled con- SRS FaLe WIs DOUAE: Wha: In g being sent out dally over 50,000 words about bt portion of the anchrucite resion s INDUGE MANY TO QUIT WORK | i aihouea om bovon sne orusay | stitency. o Mhtral and one comservaties | 1EI7U0AY AKing o holday. i, CHRCHIs | Father 0yam of Beisver Ammomneen | Todiy ni bis 1110 Sy of the core declared its intention (o suspend oper | that neither Germany nor the other powers | CAndidate have been elected, the, latter "','”,”’ [ BoAY SALAININOR e b LA Lo il Poptente ware RILWTRIFAL G QIHNEH the ations | NuveBors Vinst the Raststen Diststet will be so easily satisfied being Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill Parliament.” the Morning Post eket, opening days of the campaign, but de ccompanied by the national board e £k s Conntds | An army order just issued shows that|C€ld¢St on of the late Lord Randoiph [ Marke. "l obviously the right place for | A him because of greater and more members 1 shail go o Wilkesbarre to-| erable Success. Germany does not intend at present to [ CMUChIL The poiliox was as follows: | rd Randowh churchille elder son. who| DENVER, Oct. 1.—(pecial Telogram,)—1n | ¥idespread interest in the movements an morrov o ritend w great labor demonstra reinforce hor troops in China, but she wij | Altred nmott, libersl, 1\ has achieved a success at 26 which most| g(. Leo's nhurch at high mass, before the | SPeeches of the republican vice prest tion, which Wil be partieipated fu by fully | HAZLETON, Pa., Oct. 1.—Another march, | be prepared for Al cventualitie " | Churchill, conserrative,” '12.081;. / Wajter | M98 Would count as brilltant at 0. | sermon, Father Willlam O'Ryan addresseq | 14011l candidate ! 25,000 aen.” {with the Pardee collleries at Lattimer,| The Berliner Tageblatt accepts as true | RUBCImAN, liberal, 12,704; Mr. Crisp, con- | Missing Prince Loonted. | bis congragation as foliows & Tha-igestings inday aquniiag eu) SF theds Notices of the Increases in wages and the | five miles from here, as the objective|the intimation that the anti-British eas: | *ervative, 12,5 | PARIS, Oct. 1.—Prince Ikanthor, won of | I have never in this pulpit nor fn any | {0 towns of similar #ize on Roosevelt's on- reduction in the price of powder decided on | point, took place early today. About 300 Asiatic triple alliance of 1595 has been re.| THe Teturns received up to midnight | the king of Cambodia (French Indo.China). | Other spoken of mere politics. But, if T am | {'F€ tFIp to date. At all of the stopping- by the operators at Wilkesbarre today were | airiking mi workers from Freeland \blished. show the total number of eclected to be|who was recently a guest of France at |® PFiest, I also am a man, with feelings | P/AC9® people were gathered in throngs posted tonight at all of the collieries in the | started for Lattimer at 1 a. m. and a P | 132, as follows: Conservatives, 93; union- | the exposition and who dissappeared mys- | hat can be hurt. with a mind to under. | (70 Bearby tow And 84 File ey, b Lehigh region e dater 100 sirikers set out from | DETERMINED TO SAVE CHINA | fsts. 15: liberals. 13; nationalists, & terlously, has been found in Brussels. A | 5tand and a heart and will to resent open, | *'F'ce. Crete, Hastings and McCook there President Mitchell when shown a copy of | Hazleton for the same place. The two The conservatives have gained two seats | dispatch sent in his behalf says | not liberate affrout and ult. Were the | Were speclal excursion parties from point the notice declined to say anything at this | bodies effected a junction east of Lattimer | Misslonaries at Pekin Planning for |ANd the liberals one. Hon. Ivor Guest, |sall for home last week from Marseilles, as | 41ront personal I should bear it quie SHanEysilve «1n, 100 “intles WINARASTE CHa time, but intimated that he might outline | and marched into the town at 4 o'clock ualaheanided Gl one of the successful candidates Ply- | was arranged, because he has not recefved | Put When the affront is against all that 1| *1?¢ Of the crowds today is any indication his position at the Wilkesbarre meeting to- | Bach striker carried a small American e daita | mouth, has an American wife. the French government's reply to the let- | TéPresent as an American citizen and mem. | (N NAational committee certainly made no morrow. He added, however, that there | flag. Their arrival at Lattimer caused a | Mr. Frederick E. Goodheart, who was|ter of grievances from his father against | Der of Catholie church I shall not be | (D atTABgIng A four dare il ton would be no resumption of work until a|great commotion early every man,| BOSTON, Oct. 1.—The Amerlcan hoard of | 1¢feated at Devonport, is a son-in-law of | the French officials in Cambodia, of which | SH€nt. nor lie down meekly under it Raosevelt “In the enemy's country At convention of the anthracite miners Lad been | woman and child in the place was roused | commissioners for forelgn missions has | MT- Leander McCormick of Chic he was the bearer that the only The democratic leaders in th phitty: |58 S0 09 ; e SaYMRaE Roge called and the proposition considered out of bed. The marchers adopted the received a message from Rev. G. M. Chapin, | | response he received was a telegram from | AT€ now Insolent In power. Tk onsid “""”\I Iv inted Iwm speaking by ame tactics as were employed at Hazle- | one of its missionaries in Pekin, discussing | . his father ordering him to return. But | €red.r ber, for 1 myse INE DTN | S Dy R men Wiy A luatily for HANNA ON THE GREATSTRIKE brook st week, Rolnk 10 (ho horses o | e plans of he Kroup of missiuie iine RUMORS OF SHIELD'S FATE R expinins hat he cansor o o until e | (HPUSU I pon them, it Tn the mominat o Brvan, bue’ arrin these. few dinturbers all non-strikers and quietly asking them It Is proposed to reopen the Bridgm has received the reply of the French 9. B, Johndon wnd'the actentince ‘afi| 11 SEONCE BORG (8 D S00CMRLERes A2 aF Believes that the Question Should | t0 refrain f continuing at work. They | school for eirls in Pekin, either in I,’I,',.““l:"’}"""' Rand of na in Supposed | genoicn ol e gone to Brussels, The | Peter L. Palmer. they wera insulting you, | 1°T1¥: At Crete a Bryan man in the crowd Not Be Mixed Up in also covered all the roads leading from |or in Tien Tsin. The North China college 2THAYE Joan. Oyprabawesed | prince denfes having any disagreement | They deliberately chose to insult you. They | Y°1ed “Hurrah for Carl Schurz” and in Polttien, rounding towns to Lattimer. The strik- | which was destroyed in Tung Che, will prob bl | with his father, King Norodom ot since they had the saloons, | ALY Governce Rogsevelt, who was plbg ers assert they succeeded in getting nearly [ably be reopened in Pekin. Minister Con i ;”“ gamblers, the panderers and prostitutes | *PeAKING at the time from the platform CHICAGO, Oct. 1.—Senator Hanna, chair- | 400 men to quit, but the company officials | ger has given assurances that he will try | , MANILA, Friday, Sept. 28.—(Via Hong| Bond-Riai FRAST AN AN INANS: Denver, they « count on the papist Pped bis flery eves, opened. wide hid man of the national republican commit they not lose anywhers near that| to sec use of two or more large com- Ng, Oct. 1.)—Persistent native repoi ST. JOHNS, N. F,, Oct, 1.~The manifesto the papist w 0 cow y to resent | MOUth and showing his teeth in his char tee, arrived today and this afernoon was | number herift Harvey'of Luzerne county | pounds which have been used by the Boxers | ¥BIch are generally believed, have been cur- | Which Mr. Bond, the New ihdisad | an it too hidebound in his attachment | jy (STALY mander wud: IXes, hurrsh for closeted in his m at the Auditorium |arrived at Lattimer just as the mine |and hence are lable to confiscation, for the | TéPt in Manila for several days to the|Premier, has just issued fn anticipation of | to th mocratic party to resent the asso. | ¢ WA Who was against Abraham Lincoln! Anunex with Perry & ath, chairman of | whistles blew for the starting of work at|use of the American Board of Missionaries, | ©1¢Ct that Captain Devercaux Shields and | the & | election fixed for No er § | clation into which he was cast Hurrah for Aguinaldot “¥ell ireah for the press bureau |7 o'clock. He fotind nothing to do, how-| Eight of the missionaries, chiefly women, | O®Pany F of the Twenty-ninth regiment |8dvocated the ratification of the Bond-Blaine | “I'm a paj hank ¢ bat does re- | '1e8¢ M “Any man who would put u straw in the | ever, as all the men were conducting them- | teel that they need a furlough and sixteen | °f Infantry, consisting of fifty-four men, | Fectprocity treaty with the United es. | sent the insu 1 was a democrat. Iama | Defiex: tho I ) way of a settlement of the great coal|selves in an orderly manner. After start- |are prepared to remain. stationed at Boag Marinduque island, em- | It makes the Reld railway contract the main | democrat. I never voted at a primary elec- | Ro0sevelt spoke thirteen times today, first miners’ strike now going on in Penns. - | ing time the strikers agaln formed in line . barked September 13 on the gunboat Villa- | Issue of the campaign, calling for substan- | tion until the lust and voted then to p ot Palls Qlty and theiiak Aubury; Bectim vanla should be taken out to the nearcst|and marched through the town, atter which CHAFFEE GETS INSTRUCTIONS | 'ob@s and landed on the Marinduque coast | !ial modifications in its provisions and espe- | in power the present democratic party au- | 5¢h, Beatrice, Wilber, Crete, Fairmont, Sut- Iap post snd hanged:” This s the way | they dispersed | September 15, where 1,300 of the enemy |clally for the re-establishment of public | thority. And in the coming election I wiil | 100, Hastings, Minden, Holdrege, Arapahoe Chairman Hanoa, chairman of the national | All was reported quiet in the Panther| Designates the Tre that Are to |Armed with rifles, supposedly from Luzon, OWnership in the telegraph lines ceded to | resent the insult in the only sensible way |8nd McCook in the order named. The sp. committee, spoke today when asked for | creek valley this morniug. About fifty of | A5t 2s Esakiadn Gubras surprised the Americans and the latter | Mr. Reid and a revision of the latter's land | 0Pen to me by voting the republican ticket. | ¢/al train left Atchison at 6:35 this morn- particulars regarding the success of his | the strikers, who went to that place yes- in Pekin fought for several hours until their am-|Erant, with a view of protecting hundreds ing and for a stretch of seven miles It raced negotiations for ending the strike. 1 do | terday from McA » and Jeansville, re- munition was exhausted, after which they | Of squatters whose property was (nHIludh' down hill at the rate of a mile a minute. not want to talk about the s 1 did | mained there over night for the purpose of| WASHINGTON, Oct. 1.—The War depart-| Were overpowered and surrendered, relief by the grants issued to Mr. Reld by the ATTEMPTS Ar SUICIDE FAIL As the train was bounding along over the not think that ft should be mixed up in | trying to get the 220 men working at the| ment is in receipt of a cablegram from | P¢Ing impossible At st four of the|cabinet of Sir James Winter | ¥ an's splor 6f PAOKIRE Came rough road, the rocking motion of the cars politics. It 18 & bigger question than any [ collicries in that valley to quit. They | General Chaffee indicating that he has re. | Soldiers were killed, among whom accord = | ¥ Takes Horritble Method forcing’ dbbios oft the tables in the dlning political party or political question and |dld ot meet with very much success, as| celved the instructions to withdraw mos: | 08 to reports was Captain Shields. The koxkaa Welsamed to. Londan, | A e ! i car, the men in charge became alarmed and should not be discussed from a polit cal | Feports from that locality say that all the | of the United States forces from China | Americans also had several wounded | LONDON, Oct The Dafly News print & His Lite, | sent Conductor Baird ahead with orders to standpoint one should be permicted to | collieries are working with nearly the | and had provided, in accordance with those| li¢utenant Reeves and Bates of the staft | Di8 morniug an exhaustive article dealir < | the englneer ta slacken speed. As sa0n 48 use it for political capital. It is tne duty | SAme force of men as on Saturday. No | instructions, for a legation guard. The dis- | o0 board the gunboat Yorktown left Manila | ¥'th the personality and carecr of Charle KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 1,—(Special Tel- | Roosevelt heard of this he wanted to send of every man to do his utmost to end the | troops were sent there, but Sheriff Taole of | patch follows | Monday. After gathering troops at Batan- | 1~ Yerkes, who has just purchased the Char- | egram.)--L. N. Lloyd, formerly foreman of | the conductor hack to cancel the ord, deplorable trouble. Schuylkill county had deputies on watch. | Received September 0, via Taku, Ad ",,.... they proceeded to Marindique to verity | \"E Cross. Ellston & Hempsted underground | the Jobbing departments of the Cudahy After Victor we can stand anything. i A ARGl o o lroevs ool <. rsinge Ay R {General, Washington: Septemiber &b, | the reports regarding the fate of Captain |T8!Toad charter. Commenting editorially | Packing company in Armourdale, attempted { he said. *We may not have any more ex was non-committal. “The New York re. | throughout the Hazleton district show that | & cavied from o g Recelved Your | Shields and his men and, in case the na- [ UPOD the entrance of Mr. Yerkes into the f to kill himself at the packing house at 7:30 | citement publicans are wakiug up. he said, “and | Practically the same number af men were | Thid fsucdion St SILE onunth, IGARITY. | ive rumors were well founded to punish the | PUSINesA life of London it says o'clock this morning with a meat hook, in | The train was scheduled to arrivé at Falls from now on the campaign is goipg to be | WOrking as on Saturday, excepting at lm,‘rh..mn will constitute legation guard. | rebels and release the captives, News ,mm[ London need ich a man at this junc- [ a fit of despondency occasioned by the loss | City at & o'clock, but twenty-five minutes very active on both sides | timer. The only colliery where a notice- | Bl Gndeavor to Sin ‘“"‘.'lhh“l Bi/6 [this expedition is awaited with some | fiTe 7 ool LT iato { 4 ie o befors that time it rounded-thefume sne “1 am golng to do everything in my power | 0l change occurred was at that of A.|" Disiatenes Nos. 42 and 43 referred ¥ |anxiety at Manila. In the meanwhile the |Street rallway enterprise here that he has | Lloyd stuck the meat hook into his throat | ran along side of a crowd numbering 3,000 to win this clection for McKiniey and|Pardee & Co., at Cranberry, where some of | Genaral Chaftos w “‘dfln 3 referred to by | cengor prohibits the transmission of news |!5plaved in Chicago he will be a welcome | once and his nerve failed him and he pulled | The depot at Falls City s nearly a mile Roosevelt and 1 beliove we will win, too,” [ he “lokie” engineers and some driver | i, o WERS WAt those l‘nnul.l\nx 18 | concerning the affair | sojourner among us. | it out. Then he grabbed another hook which | from the city and the pilgrimage to the the senator continued, “but I will not give | PO¥Y8 struck, thus further crippling the | roons from I'n'klu‘ wiraw he American| Colonel E. W, Hardiog of the Twenty- Church is Satisfied. {had a rope attached to it and placing the | trackside began an hour before the train estimates of states or predict majorities, 1| WOTKIRg A “lok s a diminutive mine AL ninth regiment, who is now in Manlla, ad-| 1ONDON, Oct. 1.—Archbishop Ireland "m,h,”. tha hoie "‘“' Y FAaRe 1y s throat | ENAR YOrDoE. Raossveit had fhes fo T B N et g o. | locomative mits 1t s possible that the native reports | wis has S A and, | and his foot In a loop in the rope was pre ed dressing when he heard the crowd speeches owtside of city. Here, h w- | Markle was asked how many returned - Way 18 quoted as saying: o V€W | stopped by employes in the packing house. | Fefused to be satisfied with the explanation over, 1 may nddress the laboring men sev | 10 WOrK In his collierien today the only | PAFtY Of Twenty-Six Misstonaries and | The first news of the dissster to Com- | "ory ™% dUCte i Alsner . wh Dr. Fairbanks w mmoned and ordered | ! he governor did not wish to speak el aas e alk to the workine. | TeP1Y he would make was Al the mines | Others Who Suffered at ¢ ands pany F of the Twenty-ninth regiment was | granted me the pope sald: W which ""“"M wounded man sent to St. Margaret's cfore breakfast and kept up their calls. men. They can under me wnd 1 un. | 47 WOrking.” o of the Boxers Reach 'Fri recelved by the Associated Press from | pieased with tho relntions of tho American | 'J?]) v BT « ke Hstore Hauktast s hen the strike leaders were asked Vashington September 25, the censc . and he may die from it has b overnor R Gaiang them about 1t Markle mines they said ':Pk‘l SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1.—The passen | Manila “n\ sh ]nl\ ‘l:l ’lh- d ~) ateh " ‘V. ‘h.yr Jevarament ‘”vjh.. oburg In Cuba and the away fr the lant th‘ '\\Iu weck d ¢ "v o Y yolt Spaliy.appesred on 41 s . AR cRAM gers on the steamer Coptic, which arrived | Associs ; Poteh, g Philippines. The American government | | e ; : : | Platform with his coat huttoned up and h WILL NOT GIVE TEN PER CENT were very few men in the works | ® P \ssociated Press from that city, having | gives proof of good RYSrAN eturniug this morning foun b Bt drsws: down oyer hiv exs T firm owns five mines and usually ¢ s| from China last night, were released from | refused to permit the transmission of the | . : (o &ocd will and exBibits a|pag been filled. He was given & more|crowd contin ) Al $ - e warantine this afternoon. Amonk them | news by cante. divect y torion Of the | apirit of justice and respect for the Hber- | pumble nositi and mu bagun work £.oankinuod to oall 19r Rosseralt. it Independent Operators of Serant STk & [ALR blelatt 4 BN Ak 1% Abd 116 : [ were twenty-six who passed through the | pre v St lo ociated | tjog and rights of the church.' it . . 10 WOUS | fore he ¢ peak Milt Musselman 1t A SR O . Th arkle ibervale colliery ! Lot ng bois e T Pross onsequently the correspondent of o when he attempted the trage Lloyd re- | man of the recept mmittee, ellmbed A 18 Do ESAD {n' Oneration alabs tha striks ekin e include Miss M he Associated Press was evi g AR YA Ao cently come to Kansi from Omal ¢ 1 rr ed Raise st st b Narawn, B M ORaRin wite and theer| 0. Ass p nt m x Sall, " naba. | upon the platform and announced that the e gy losed. Sherift Harvey is | ARARNN: S0 M, Chapin, wife and three| pelled to send his message by hand to LOURENZO MARQUEZ. Oct. 1.~The|He llved on Wroadway near Thirteenth |man beside him was Governor Roosevelr SCRANTON, Pa, Oct Scranton's | SULROTILY for the story ihat most of thef pooPPiny s M et H.| Hong Kong. from which point it was cabled | Austrian steamer Styria Lloyd has sailed | Street, Kansas City That started the crowd and the New Yorker independont operators cune back from the | LreOIand men who marched to latumer | 740 400 it and iwe ehlidren: Dr JoH|to the Associated Preas hers trom here, having on board 400 Transvas was given one ef the warmest receptic Wilkesbarre conference with blood in thelr | \'\* MODIDE intended to stop at the Markle | (IKFA and wife and two « g —_— - refugees, part of them being Irish-Amer! | he has received on the trip. He spoke for even"Thy dociare they Wil ot o 1 th | oy, sedne BBe on theie way hame. | (U5 401 o chliren, Mws Ceclle Pavne | |MMENSE CROWD AT FAIR| e, Al their exoenses have been pua| 016 STOVE - TRUST FORMING |.c, . 'ibs 2ha"vas Gnowea - e proffer of & 10 per cent increase unless the | oy a( the outskirts of Jeddo. He fonnd | A2d daughter and Dr. W. G. Becker by the Transvatl government. Each man|soee Than 200 Concerns in Diferent | U5 Guild, Charle trich and Charles ::ul carrying comy nies ssree to reduco | Gherin Harvey with the marchers ol It in Estimated R ;l’v”“‘“"l‘l"’"'“:;" be TI’""“"‘“ Parta of the ( try to Enter “"'I"‘]"‘ of Xay Bpriogs. Before the: train elr tolls, or, to be exact, allow them 63 | oo & marchers and tc a ) shilliogs on landing at any port which P SRR | pulled out Roosevelt went down to the B e T ot 80 e et e M e Servlees wert oot s o 1S NOT AFTER TERRITORY HES AN iy be siected by hem Glantic Combinati | Fi it eenel s R Sav g WMeF Selling brices for their product, They | inem 't s school houss nsar the Russian Officral Measenger Denfes Re- ~Powell C PITTSBURG, Pa., Oot. L—Repressniativon | scruguied Lo vescs mte b cos ar e cad are not making 10 per cent on their fuvest- | (oyiic, ® () SUAGL house bed - ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 1.—The fortieth an-| PRETORIA, Oct Bad " ) % ey | struggled to reach his hands or bis cloth. ments, they declare, and if they have to in- | e persuaded the strikers port Deslgns Upon K, s ortieth an 3 k: aden- | of some 200 stovemaking concerns scattered £ IS IAEBAAR SAR ILRAT BAYR 10 I0: [ 10 g5 Homme R g nual 8t. Louls faif was inaugurated today [ Powell has arrived here to take charge of | throughout the country are to meet at the | At Auburn Roosevelt's train was met Wipe out their margin of profit and they | . Fretident Mitchell was very much pleased ) with the largest opening day attendance | the police In the Transvaal and the Orange | Auditorium, Chicago, on October 18 1o take |a crowd of 500 peonte and Homeerensty ! Rlpe o0t islr Naelh ot prodl o |t hearing the news from the Schuytkil ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 1.—The Official | !0 Its history. Men accustomed to handling | River colony, where it is intended to main- | definite action on the formation of the \‘ 8. srand ot 00 paoiin, aBd. Hgpaanel .‘n.. A committee of the local ifdependent ope- | |o* 1o, ‘At fewer men went to work today [ Messenger today declares the tenor of the | SToWds and to judging them estimated that | tain & ferce of 12,000 men, all under General | tional Stove Manufacturing company, which | Armstrong, chalrman e e Pators Teft tonight on the midnieht sl oy | 2 the Reading collieries than ever. He | Goverament's official communications In re. | 135,000 people passed through the gates. | Baden-Powell will be capitalized at about §80,000.000, uaide county central commiites e New York to protes bolan foran fOF | sald the action of the men justified his|€4rd to Russia’s tasks in the far east|Thi8 year the live stock exhibits are espe — from a possible large fssue of bonds. I'lm to a crowd that completely XD Tk to protest against being forced by [ faith in them aud he ey Loiined B learly demonstrate “that the recarte. of | clally 1arge, and the cattle pens were (he| G°FMaR Jows to Fight Anti-Semitism, ., a crowd that completely filled the bulld the coal carriers iuto an agreement which [ the verification of his predict *the | the annexation of Manchuria are 8 of| center of much interest today go | BERLIN, Oct. 1.—The papers publish re- | PrOMOIAE of the vast eoterprise bave 18y, He refermed to the inerspsed. valus moans their undolug unless the carriers Kive [ posting of the offer of a 10 per cent ad. | all foundation AAChuris are Qevold of | . nderdilt has 1n competition a herd. gt | POFL® tHat a1 organized Jewish movement is o e kA LR e [ 95 Dagiee aaq a7 19848 ADd 1he BedLS them better rates. | vance on the part of the Reading company =L | twenty fine Jerseys from his Biitmore | °® 0% vm{d It is intimated that a vational | o e ::' ':1 Delaw Ars and something like [tion of mortguges in Nebraskn wnd cau Laborers Let € | would have no effect on the strike, as t pllerman Minister at Tiem Totn, | estate in North Carolina, Many_Holsteins | M*0IB8 Of the Jews will be held snnually [ oo B0, /00 HOve fwanutacturiog companies | tioned the people not to tear up the raily ",,'\T'\N['”\' § D9t at Ggivesien | men had other gricvances that must " TIEN TSIN, Sept. 30.~The G FmAD miD- | and Shorthorus are wlso to be lolsteln® | 1o combat anti-Semitism IS0 a0 Aoy b Ehalr rapark : 1 AL "I”;.“"“‘I““ but to stand by he laborers employed In removing. debris | adjusted ou Mumm Schwarzheim, has ar- | hog pens are well fllled, sheep of ¢ ) s o ceds had AR 006 FRALSH 4 e wes In the Wi B R Dot ZHHHH,W ’Ll‘ <~] rivad Bare and Setabiisned bisast oo \:r: 'shfmnr““d "h‘_”NI”“b” ‘rxl'u;‘r:vlhl\\xl.hy .Hn"fl,l(l lia T ls(lllnlnl.ndr fnancier of Philadelphia at the head of | middle of sentence the whistlc blew gumciontly progrexsed to varrant i ey Jore Troops Sall for Manila isionally, at the German consulate the lurgest the fair has ever had. The | plosion occurred at :( E .”.n( 1—An e “;A enterprise ¢ | sharp blast and Koosavelt stopped short corporat ) the laborers they noee 4 | or SAN FRANCISCO, Oct Over 80 m Baroness von Ketteler will start for | exhibits of agricultural implements and )n it hl vy dl s Uml‘ '”E'" ¥htle ihs ieeatars pt the Fliishurm Rigve 4id Banne |Aud. was huatied onf by the reception sem 10 continue the Festoration of their pi antry (negr Ted for ManidYohfth in- | Japan soon om board the German steamer | farm products are very « Y FOEIOR NALY S0sTOXINg the Boor. samigie] 3, the Lavms Be country, have | mittee into & carriage sud then of te'the o.oan fantey (nekro) satled for' Manila today on | yAPeR doren ntates are vopery complete. Over a|tlon, resultfag in the death of tweaty uf | wuthorized the delivery of an option on their | platform of his car © represented. ihe Gordom Highlanders. extensive properties, | Atter leaving Aubura the traim ascom

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