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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. ESTABLISHED JUNE 1¢ 1871, DMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1900—-TEN PAGES. (‘()I‘\ FIVE CENTS. CHINA MUST AMNTE l'l)IPREPARE FOR A LONG STRIKE [((KED LIKE TROUBLE SOME ELECTION SURPRISES [[\NDS POYNTER A HOT SHOT WORK FoR RELIEF COLUMN POOSEVELT IN OMAHA Committees Arranging Provide for Captain Lambton of Cruiser Powerful Tr o Sent After Shields and Party Famities of {nion at the Hottom of the List WH Stamp Out Insurrection Miners, Only Cool Heads Prevented 3,000 Strikers | in Newcastle, | Roosevelt Anewers Nebraska's Governor in Island. = from Descending on Treverton, | roxpox, o tent | with Names aud Dates, WASHINGTON. "ot 4 i | New York Governor Given a Royal Weloome o g P . by Loyal Republicans, - abiegram has been received dications Point [/ te Concert of In 7 to Gomplete Cor SHENANDOAH, Fa., Oct. 4, ~Concession Action by Powers, wnounced yesterday by the Philadelph o » show total n oiwly ; - & Read! “mg,gnd Iron company were ember department — = ot sul ji Iron compmuy Wit ourorONABLE COLLERY TO SUSPEND |5t she meiine tsensih of purion e foi:| THUMPHANT TRIP OVER THE ELKHORN “**3i\%; e ALLIES ARE GETTING CLOSER TOGETHER | wiriurs o, | gt : How : E ELKHORN | “SANILA, Oct. 4.—Adjuta el | THOUSANDS THRONG THE LIGHTED STREETS - to the collierie S - or iling 1a- | duque October 8§ on Suw — ; " i ganizer and leader of the ., o T Wage | yor 8 he conserva- | Rt 1\ Dendwood te Omahm One | (o a e Twith ¢ t ot | United States and Germany Find That They | workers, says he made a care Savings 10 A |(jves have gained altogether 21 seats and | Continuous Ovation from the Peo- :,p,,.“':t"::':“‘],‘,.lf‘;”:.‘\,M,",lf‘. o Marching Multitude Reviewed by Otkor Are of the Same Mind this town last night and found the Thousands of the liberals 14 ple Who Admire the Rough out absolutely. He will have trikers determined to remain out un s Must Have Relief, The Daily Mail describes for Rider Candidate, companies of infantry | ordered to work by the M Worke St the rout of the pro-Hoers’” and the d Andoracn’s st operatl FRANCE PRESENTS COMPLETE PROGRAM | convention or by President Mitchell acle Little Englandism P nothing. No reports since O [ pEeTe In anticipation of a long strike the local| HAZLETON, Pa, Oct 4.—An uprising of | The couservatives held Newcastle by| When Governor Roosevelt arrived in MACARTHUR ; . forelgn unions today appointed a commit- Striking miners in the Shamokin region | enormously increased majorities, and Cap- | Omata at 7:30 last night he had, eince he! The above dispatch relates to the n Btate Department Receives French Proposal | tee to investigate the cases of need among Seemed imminent for several hours late |tain Lambion of the Dritish cruiser Power: | began his campuign, traveled over 10,137 forcements sent to the IMand of Marin 4 4 otrikers' families, Organizer Pottler says today and there were forebodings of a |ful, upon whom the liberals counted to deal in Its Complete Form, the treasuries of the sShenandoah foreign ,serfous clagh between armed deputies and | @ crushing blow to the goverume finds branches of the United Mine Workers a large body of siri himeelf at bottom of the pol Great Crowds for Miles, ’LACES JAMMED WITH PEOPLE miles in nine states, visited 238 towns and duque, where Captain Shields and fitty-one | Four Largo Hulls Packed to Hear the Great tles and delivered 274 speeches. In Ne- men of the Twenty-ninth Volunteer | Rough Rider, braska he traveled 2,000 miles, stopped at fantry were either killed or caj | thirty-eight places and the insurgents. At that time Ge The Roosevelt train left Dea at! Arthur sent Colomel Ander | i.\”[LL'MS BY MANY DISTINGUISHED MEN talu atout $1,400, and while this last Prompt action of some of the cool- James Lauren Carew, Irish nationalist RUSSIA ADDS ITS FULL ENDORSEMENT | ¢, nong the str will be ved. | hended officers of the miners' union Anally [ has been defeated in the contest in th No cases of distress have yet ] ed a conflict, Some 3,000 strikers as- | College Green division of Dublin, which he [ midnight und started again for Nebraska companies of the Thirty | he say at Mount Carmel and headed by | represented in the last Pariiament, the | territ b rkt b | - en e Ab ta a ¥ . erritory, arriving at Valentime, in Cherry infant with the York v Ameriean Government Will Be Able to neral Gobin today stated that his in- (4 band of music started to march to|©opposition to him growing out of the fact county, at § o'clock this morning. From boats to the relief of Sk s | Wepublicnn Orntors of National Res rivate car he was conducted at the mand it they were still allve Questions That Enter tnt o & speaking stand at the crosiiag of (0| NOW OUT OF CHINA'S CAPITAL prin treets he was in Proposition Ad- srmation from the nther Creek valley | Treverton, sixteen miles away, with the|that he attended a levee of the duke of | pyy it Stight Modife s to the effe the collieries there |avowed purpose of forcing those at work [ York. Mr. Carew's friends selzed upon|pead re work s usual and no trouble is |At the North Franklin collicry to quit and [ the opportunity of John Howard Parnell anticlzated, joln in the strike brother of the late Charles Stewart Par-| Collteries Remnin Closea. This was the only mine in operation in | nell ¢ his seat at South Meath, to| pute Address the Citl (he ention in Made Present Campalgn. troduced by Judge Kinkald to an assem ‘ bla people, the largest gath | angered at the refusal of the men thore, edge South Meath, and, owing to a|er 8 in the aity. Among Bis Army Has ried | ADDRESSED 1Y ROOSEVELT. to atop work. The marchers were in wn | technl e was clecied without op-| hearor everal hundred cowboys, and from Pelin. | P smei excited and wrathful state of min When | position, Carew may now reconsider this govers The SHlate departme 1 collieries into operation they had Ll ; Roc propositions today by delivering a respor 1ga colllery the region and the strikers had become rew forward without his knowl That the Greater Part of {.—Proposition SCRANTON, Pa t.—In spite of ter concerning Chi preparation he Delaware are belng pre in rapld succe kawanna & Western company t f : 1t h Lsuth velt at once recoguized them. Look N emt S dye covered three miles of their ofter n South Meath in favor of [ 1o out over the erowd he sald o Cretahion Wall. ... Ceel 1000 march they were met by officials of their | I know that manmy of you come from The withdrawal of :: "‘""""" o Hall.... cens LOOO ons were be etting the 1 oo b et b nscrvatives have captured another| ¢he heart of the cattle country in this the United f trom Pekin will by o creesinnsasaeenes $000 tronted. by &N GVeR i work gotting the men back | induced the men (o abandon their proposed | seat rland, from the liberals e L e . 0P Hov. ERbaty The |tep. The strikers then turned back,| The reSults of yesterday's clections an oposition submitted by the French gov 1 : B dod w nounced up to 1:52 p. m. are as follows seconded by the K ernt W 6. R b - sl g sredi th )97, G. Renwick, conserva 14,7 foct of s i » SOME DOLLIVER DOCTRINE. T O e SOME ROOSEVELT GEMS. il » known that the United to the German governm state. It 1 couldn't see you I w 1 know gin mext Wednesday, October The ma Total es e . oo you were cattlemen, anyway, just by your| rines, Major W. P. B inding ceesee i ate last night s ety with monstoer cotings by & temonstration in orm of an reception at 1 and e to hi t meeting place testececsctstscsttcsssssscssses sanen . S L s 1 nt tnstructed Minister Conger along t These In: Ma nan Barry, conservati 2,0 — “If ol Noy - soh. hind reatcted » " College Green—J. P. Ngalttl, independent ’ KM |""|w“t" o '\“""‘j” ).' '{“"‘ B e s e ot o aatlonaliat, 3,467; Jamos Laurence Carew “Wo stand on the gold standard, and we stand on ft on the Atlanti n system of irrigation instead of building an ark, he Irish nationallst, 2 bonrd and in the Rocky mountains, anywhere, We are fortunate in would not more thoroughly have disappointed his relatives than has Mr Sunderland—W. T. Dodtord, conservatiy \ y “l‘\:f“ ".Hn lammed his supporters all over the country. 456 \]\,:k‘,lfiw\':y“:::l‘\‘f‘_» S TR o1 don't wonder that when a man feels slek and doesn’t know what In republican times the problem of American lat is to get more The capservatives suffored defeat in the i the matter with him and cannot find out that he sho 14 try quack med In democratic times the problem which Ameriean labor has to solve fs St. Stephens Green division of Dublin, the {cines. but 1f he tries 1t again 1 qupstion his tutelligence.” Low to hold on the miserable remnants of what it has left,” polling being as follows McCann, in i dependent nationalist, 8,431 Campbell, “Common sense, courage, honesty conservative, 2,533 any nation and no natlon can succeed without them any more than (he Humina had don, r-Ben's royal entpy a week go wore again called into play’and thou ands of cheering men and women welcomed the distinguished guest as he rode in h rriage at the head of a procession of puggested by German Jook toward securing the names of t sons deserving chastisement, also wh the punishmen rd with the gr of the crimes committed and finally in what manner the United States and the other having issues that don't wear thin in any purt of the country powers are to be assured that satisfactory punishment is inflicted. Aside from thess gpecific pur ¢ of the note it is regarded horsciuen, torch-hearer ambeaus wield ors and plain warcher required nearly a half hour to pass a point very s tmportant chiefly as cstablishing th most satiafactory rclations between the governments at Washington and Berlin The Franco-Russian proposal takes a b broader scope and submits & pro gram under which the negotiations for complete settlement can be carried for ward. The French charge, M. Theibaut handed the proposition to Se ary Hay ghortly after noon tcday and held a briet these are the qualities needed in where were throngs of cager speciators anx t the famous Rough Rider with frequent outbursts of applause and cheers “1 belleve that the whole future of society fs wrapped up in the sue cess of organized labor in shortening the hours of toll, t A more gen ! The total number of returcs up to date is private individual can without them mcet suceess that Is really worth erous leisure may be given to mankind for intellectual und moral cul 200, as follows: Ministerial 0; 1ib ture,” erals, 54; nationalists, 5 § Edward Blake, Irish nationalist, has been wihe host of legislation cannot bring success save to those who la returned unopposed for the south division bor. but that bad legislation can make it absolutely fmpossible for the your family, shoes and stockings for your children, books for their of Longford, which he represented in the schooling and a winter overcoat for yourself than it is for Senor Agui last Parliament “w The countess of Warwick h intervened in behalf of a liberal, J. U Stevens, who sessssssssssssssessssss srssns e g ecsee® nmont and Blair and the hosts “The only army that this country has to fear is Coxey's army, a o oust Sir John Stone, conse F r irth | Were ready and waiting when Governor : 5 $ » L i trylng to oust Sir John Stone, conserva- | |\ oiae ug though you hud como { will march from Tien Tsin, and the Fourth & strictly populist institution, tive, from East Birmingham. Her lady e irole’® infantry regiment will follow them closely ship's telegram, which 18 placarded today, | !B from the long circie The American garrison at Ho St Wu and | &t the station. As the governor wijeared sayE Points Out Their Prosperity. e o1l ihraws on the platform he was welcomed by Mayor svee - oo - secce ERRRS ccscee . ang byt i | Moores an *reside oward Balldrt o sovece i 050 S SHS65:5:9-0-09- e ] 1 do mot participate in party politics, jovernor Roosevelt next spoke of the | Most of the allied Renerals arc opposed to Moores and President Howard Baldr t A | the Douglas County Central McKiniey and | Roosevelt club and excorted to his caryiay drawn by four glossy black steed Edwarl achieving.” publican candidate Late hut Wel Ever. Let me tell you that it is more important for you to have food for Roc 1 v into the the scheduled hour More | time been ouchsafed at Fre ablest labor to produce any result conference concerning it. Halt an naldo to have the immediate benefits of the writ of habens corpus later M. de Wollant, the Russian ¢ arrived at the State depariment handed to Mr. Hay a note expressing slan approval of the propositions just mitted by France. Mr. Hay gave no formal answer to tho (wo communications, w8 . ey Wil g0 frst to the president at|same experience was met with at the Belle- though many did so reluctantly. Mean but as au indignant protest agaiust tho | prosperity of the farmers amd cattlemen b campalgn of revense which i 1s sip Canton. | vue workings, which have figured exten-| while several hundred deputies had been slighting remarks of a minister of the |apd said: “You can borrow money for 1088 poged the Germans have In view [ 3ively In rumors of resumption, and at the| rushed to Treverton on special trains and | SFOND on labor ropresentallves, and, as a|than you could four years ago. You et The Germans planuing w movement . sixtesn other collieries of the company the | a serious conflict could scarcely have been ""]‘““ h';nm in the l‘r:-m 1a Ihlnr cause, 1| pigher prices for the products. When cat- | gust of Tung Chow to capture the arsenal ur.“ ‘;",.”.'4 G QBT e e conditions were exactly similar. The strik-| avolded had the excited strikers arrived |83¢ You 1o convey to Counscllor Stevens |qjomen prosper it means that business mcn cort for fenatop Dolliver aul edfoin ora will pay no attention to the proffer of | at the sccne and endeavored to carry out | MY best hopes for his sucdess.” e Gome people scem to think that | PROSPERITY OUT IN WYOMING | of New York. Governor Bhaw and Sher' 10 per cent advance, which the company | their threats aguinst the workmen. Later Lady Warwick's reference 1s to the re- | (ho banker and the business man may H. Diotrich were in charge ot Charles J e o iy 6. men Who would. re. | It was announced that the offclals of the | marks made by Mr. Chambetiain at Bir-| prosper while the farmer fs down. [t|Bunking Repurts Show That h - |Greene and Congressman D. H. Morcer turn to work today North Franklin, to prevent trouble, would | MIn€ham, September 29, when he attacked | would be Just as impossible for one of the ple Have Plenty of Money aud ;n urtis Guild and Committecumnn Schneidor The Delsware & Hudson company and the | mot oporate the mine until the strike was | the labor members of Farlinjpent, a08e of | giamese twins to be. up and the other Much Business. were conducted by J. C. Wharton and W o Penneyivania Coal compaay have not yei| setiled whoni, he waid, in twenty-ee veurs, had | qown.” He next said It was the inailenable ummers. The path lay botween flles of Fourth—Sufficient guaranties for the fu-| PeRBRYAVERE Ot e other big con-| Gensral Gobin, as & result of this new | iBitiated legisiation for the bemslt of the| right of every person to make a fool ef| WASHINGTON, Oct 4 (Speclal Tele- | Sbectators banked (h;. and the sircet out- l""" dition, n.suggestion ia made for tho | CGFRS here in poatiig wage advance notices. | disturbing element, rescinded his order for | WOrking classes | Bimself 1€ he wanted to, but he thought | ram.)—The report of tho coudition of the | aido was & mass of hoacons, ‘kr”;“'\‘“rll‘\‘“ll' n addition, a suggestion I8 made for the | o 7 il 0 onerators say they can do | Battery € to return home tomorrow. At = [ that this year, after the demonstrations of | national baoks of Wyoming at the close | meh on [0o1 = A1 orseba ioverno establishment of & permanent 1egation| ooy pps el the coal-carrying rallroads | fairs were quiet in all other sections of me CLOSE AFTER BOER FORCES|ine ropublican sdministration duriog the | of business on September 5 was today mado | lloonevelt acknowledged the first of four guard at Poking for the razing of the Taku| oo By pougile for them to act fleld today und the strikers scored impor- last four years, no person could vote the | public. Compared with the previous state- | hours' continuous Fhoerii forts and for the maintenance of @ line | | tant gains in the closing of additional col- | Pispateh from Roberts Detalls Move- | democratic ticket and say afterward thatucnt ia June individual depostis have in He who came in for a distinguished mark of communication between Pekin and the| R TALK 0 STRIKERS i {n" th Sch iy | 9 P g , of honor, however, was Jesse D. Langdon, \ os e Schuylkill district ments of British in Soath he didn't know any better. creased from $3,854,941 to $5,948412; loans rea ‘ SHERIFF ST Afric Then pointing at two ex-soldfers of the |aud discounts aggregate 3,180,802, which Troop K, Roosevelt's Rough Riders, who | Roosevelt arrived. There was no parley Proposals Made by Vra The Franco-Russian proposition fs under Cowlin acted as an es four heads, namely First—Punishment to the guilty parties. | Sccond—Interdiction of the shipment of arms into China Third—Payment of indemnity to the pow sat beside the governor's carriage on a half b n mustang. As the horse plunged beneath him young Langdon introduced himself to his colonel. The tired look van om the candidat face and he h real pleasure. He grippedt band hard The impression here, in advance of ac NaE Fakian preInarsang. regular army who were on the platform the | is a gain of about $25,000 since June. The Mon on these propositions by our govern ranades Them to Kee, “""': the | Not the slightest notice has been tuken| LONDON, Oct. 4.—Lord Roberts has| goyernor i average reserve 18 8123 per cent against ont, o (hat (hcy contain nothing casen: | kaw wnd Not Treapunn o Fri- | by e iriklug miners of the 10 per cent | wired us follows (o the War oftce | " 'Please stand up; 1 want to show these |a7.85 per cont mlly unfitting the n; to "" ‘u‘J'-Vj““f m:: | vate Frep L4 ; ered to the ployes :v\ | everal n(lrhv ”)I,\}H retury 4"; I\r’mwvhluu\ October 1. | people two of the $15-a-month hirelings | Rural free dellvery service was sideration in a final settlement. The ¢ Sy g arger coa! companies. As far as is defi- | He has been thirty-three days from his | Governor Poynte spoken about,” and |ordered established at five points in culty which is likely to arise lles in th ‘ HAZLETON, Pa., Oct. 4.—The only incl- | njjaly known not one striking miner has| bitse. marched @il miles, was In contact Governor Poynter has spoken about | ordered established at five pol , : 14 Husle y s | e ey e fiinict | urniug next to his hearers he continued: | to take efiect on the 15th inst, as L ey proper limitations upon the | dent of the morning in the Hazleton reglon | yocepted the advance, but on the oth ¥ i an placing proy I Koo A R il [ er | unknown number and captured ninety-six. | “Here, gentlemen, are two minions of des- | Ames, Story county, to embrace scope of each head. This is particularly [ Worth mentloning was A @ hand more have quit their places, notably [ The British lost three killed, three prison- | potism according to the popullstic id 16t tont R g g Greetings with an Old Comrade, B e mubjent of guarantios and, per. | 200 mine workers from the Diamond, in the | i (he Schuylkill reglon, where three wd- | §68 A1kl {WenivcEour wonds 1. Hart brought | P08 A¢¢ . B " L S LR g i ) ¢ th ¢ indemnit n |- | northern part of the city, to the No. 4 2itional: coliieris ’*") Bt 4= Fhack leind of eattle and 5081 shewp, | sk you, do they look like tyrants of im-|tjon 75, . O. Stillman | “I'm mighty glad see he suld waps, of that of indemnity. Still, as al-| 4 city, to ditional collieries of the Reading company | Bu has returned to Lydenburg from | perialism?’ | eritory of “tWhere did you get that nice horse?’ The cveated. ench is -undoubted shaft of the Lehigh Valley Coal compaw S iasat ekl s s e armine Jisk, rotitnals 3 m | periall Ida county, territory o T v ready suggested, is undoubtedly a | SOMPAUY | were shut dolvn. The United Mine Work- | Bpitskop wih ep. There are skir- | Immediately the crowd yelled “No, no,” | milcs, with a population of 774, I al- | animal was making an amiable effort to de- DO ubjact for discussion when the | 10 the eastern section of the town, Where | ery officials are still hard at work trying mishes with the Boers dally, but they ar . i b 1, th | they expected to get more men to Quit.|tg close the few m b small affairs and the governor proceeded with his epeech, | yort carrier; Holstein, Ida county )it its rider on the depot roof. final negotlations are reached, and, t | . oA Bh 9. U] su.cloe the' faw mines that continue in op- [ The Dublin Fuslleers made a night as-|at the conclusion of which people formed |tory of forty-eight square miles, popula “1 just brought him over from the stock- fore, M. Delcasse’s broadest propositi heriff Harvey, who is in close touch eration. All the organizers and national | sault with the bayonet on a Boer luage | A Akt [aaiit it wger | 1n line and with a band at tho head | (fon of 702, A. K. Judiesch carrier; Osage, [ yards this week,” responded the Rough while 1ikely to consume some time in every section of Luzerne county, wWas early | committeemen were in some part of the | between Pretorfu and Johannesburg and . g ; captuired nine men, mostly tmport ' | marched along back of Roosevelt's Mitehell county, territory of thirty-nine | Rider rather breatblessly. “He had ncver Jucing them to ultimate aad binding form, | informed of the move and Was Waltlng for | ieid during the day, only President Mitchell | who have troubled the distr AT O | e t0 the tratn ve mil opulation of 630, W. B 5 tidden when I got him."* There was no may be said to have a falr reception await- | the marchers at the shaft when they | heing on duty at headquarters. Mr. Mitch-| A party of Boers has penctr quare NIee. ) Paul O'Arlen | county for moic words and the Mexioan bit ing them | reac hed there at § o'clock. The sheriff had | oI did Ilittle else than attend to his cor southern part of ge river Democrut Affords a Show, Tucker carrier, aulina £ o ¥ ‘; » t ¢ 8 Int I bet 1 A& to the interdiction of arms, the State | With him several of his deputies and a half | respondence and answer telephone calls te “I:L 'j’.-:”.)ffl‘;";;.“,’,‘,' Wepener The only disturbance during the day wa forty fl\u 'w‘u . n:ln‘l_' , population of 618, I y u.:l,‘.' wm- lous stee o line behind department already. has Intimated that |dozen of the Lehigh Valley coal and iron | trom different sections of the reglon. When at Alpsworth, where Frank Gillette, B A e e Mt at. | The march began and Governor Roosevelt ey be o question as to 1ts wisdom, | police. They were kept In the background | he was asked what was new in the strike No Treaty with Yaquis, democrat, showed the effect of his inspi- [ MI8 Clava Aanis of Mounl BIAIARN | o A e ¢ AarRIneg * neusad b IIIEn e iars 1u reabon 1o, ballove, also, that | while the sheriff roasoned with the men in [ituation hebriefly repited HERMOSILLO, Mex., Oct. 4.—Negotiations | ration by interruptiug Governor Roose- |l% bas beon appointe 4t Hh,l, in y:. . ‘”‘.‘: ng in tho carriage, e fatouih Germany will not view that particular fea- | an effort (o induce them not {0 §o on the | " \o are watlug on the operators.” between the five Yaqui Indian emissaries | velt with the remark Figsstone (MION) l0dian setincl at A SRRl BEE S e &l Sle ture with approval. But there appears to|company property. He told them if they | Ho says he had no information today as and President Diaz for the settlement of | “I want to bet $10 to $1 that Bryan will [# Yeur g \ . astern Nebraska and ward marching corps be govd reason to expect that & middlo | placed a foot on privato ground he would | (o the movements of the mine owners other | hostllltles now elsting botween the Yaguis | carry the state. 1 waa & republloan once, Tts: conirast fony eanstrustiog: the < pibs | MALOTE NRUERTER BPC RASY UHALES RRIEEAS D e b e it "t | bo. compellcd to arrest them for trespass. | than that printed in the newspapers. Ho[4nd the Mexican government have failed | but I am a blankety blanked blank now and Lo butlaing et BN, Neb. was today | WIEGH \RRESE & g% GOSN BT of s 1o s oceified meriod. | The strikers took the county oficer's ad- |algo remarked that the call for an anthra- | {© sccomplish anyihing and the peace en- |1 want evorybody to know it.” |swarded to John 8. Ketterman of lda |stretched west on Webster to Sixicenth and possibly to be fixed by the time required | vice and dispersed without even sttempt- | cite miners' convention ia not yet in sight. | VY8 hitve arrived hero on thelr way home| Governor Roosevelt stopp i speaking |Grove: Ia., at $27.240. . et A4 1n s halin AL AAYLEN D ina witnin which to pay the iadem- | 10g to carry out thelr plans. Sherift Har- | When the conventlon is called, however, | from the City o Moxico. They report that |and then looking out over the crowd, in _Harvey L, Hunt of Burlington sad Harry | prsssd o6 SERSUCUR © 0 B (000 parnam Blty. The chiet objection o the proposi- |vey's mild method of treatiug with march- [ Seranton will probably be chosen for it be- President Diaz retused to consider their | the dircction from which came the dis {©. Douglen of Cadar Ranids, In., are ap-|bright cavalonds Joursevel SO B8 ST tion 18 in its being permanent in its pres- | ers bas won for him the confidence of the | cause of its availability for convention pur- | Proposal for peace, as he looked upon it as | turbance, said pointed railw mall clerks. | str At the turn to the s k v 1 m Octobe ) rura ee delivery s R glght of sparkling towers aund towering ent form men. He makes it a rule not to command | poses. But It Is too early yet to say that a | Eranting too many concessions to the In Tat the backer of Agulnaldo talk,” apa| OB October 15 rural freo dolivery service 18 slght of =y g 0 ¥ » be established o elie cke | wa o take the visitor's breath; every No Permanent I 14 0 Chiw the strikers to disperse, but to gently plead | convention will be held there next Wednes- | 40 addressing ‘his remarks next to the dis- |18 to be estsblished at Montpeller, Blacks i m' v 4 ‘f' ; 1‘1] ; BT AN with them to commit no violation of the | day Theas emissaries belong o the peace fag- | turber continued: “You would mot fight; |fcrd county, and Wall Lake, & county, on the great build ie hil What the United States government par tilbuted to brilliant illumination, uring the sixteen days o p! by ors for .t | tlon of ti e & hey hope to se ou are perfec rmles! la | tribute “ ticularly desires to avold is entering into During the sixteen days of the strike | Applications by striking miners for reltet | tlon of tae tribe and they hope to secure | you are perfectly harml The column procceded west to Nine to has faced & number of crowds of march- | aro beginning to be received by local unions | @ modification of the original proposal that| Men in the crowd shouted: “Take him § an agroement that leans in any manner to- | . | ha e teenth street and countcrmarched to Fif- ers and has succeeded e 2l neo o 8 ) fleld ill be acceptable to the Mexica ke . va 1ea | WORK 0 H COMMISSION | teonth » ward the maintenance of a foothold on | 809 I ucceeded {n keeplng them |in several sections of the anthracite feid. | Wil bo acceptable to the Mexican authorl- | away, take bim away.' uattl @ friend lod R F THE 18I | teeath. Then the marchers turaed north e 1t the other propositions | MithIn the bounds of the luw without pre- | President Mitchell said tonight that whe tles and bring about & termination of the | him off & hundred feet and attempted to L i PR e 1900, 801l 850 JEAINISTIAT DEORCHIMUAS [ clotiating sny disturbans | ever applications have been mada for re- | disastrous war. Fighting stil continues and | quict him. ~Again he shouted ’ B i Yl o O L e o vaen Dekis | Coxe Bros. & Co’s Beaver Meadow col- |lief necessary supplies were furnished the government troops seem to be making | ‘Hurrah for Bryan; he's our man. We Govern I# ¥ dowi %as IkiRe iRt lan S the sas. and to the lemation, suards,| 1arY: the only eperation on the south 8106 | Miners in Need of Relle slow but steady advances into the Indian | Want Bryan and we're golng to have him | No Aceld o rruption, o e e as I the diraction of tom: | ¥hich bas not been tled up, is reported by | SRR e e T [ The man thew singled out a republicam and | o s : . In spite of rearing horses, soaring rock- porary expedients, they will be more likely the company today to be working full- ’: re l‘“lf Was recelve L ad A “j":"': ARy Py TR | attacked him in this fashion M LA, Oct. 4 o new BIIPPINES' | oy gnd broadsides of crackers there was porary expedients, they will be moré Lkel¥ | banded. ‘1t is sald that & now set of work- | today that e ahort Toeus | DARIS, Oak. toritonyy France, I know that man; he's a poker playor | COmmisslon today appropriated $281,000 | ot an accident to mar the success of Lhe R Rt Wy | omawhio employed in the Coleraine | tWeBty-three 11060041 m "":;"“K““v”" S el HIIIY 8105 through- | and & gambler. I've scen him play poker | (Mexican) fo "' payment of sundry ex- | gocaglon. Mike Dempsey and Peter It 1o apparent from the complexity of the | mine when it was shut down lust week miners, woul oonter v iinnationat| QUL-BIRROR BaTA Gons wuch dawage 0| whea he wouldn't pay his debts.” penses Incurred by the military for the ben- | Jorgensen, trusty detectives, who walked Iatast Frauso-fusslan propossl that the | ihrough the efforts of the sirlkers are work- | Diteldent ever the balop ioag abaut meliad, | BIOROTY AL HA ik Man of the riv-| " Governor Roosevelt paid no further at.|®ft of the lnsular government during Sep-| euch with @ hand upon the governor's car- PR P A ing in the Beaver Meadow colliery. One | DUt up to tonight this hac ARER pianes] 08 EEIARSAR I S SATAR 'Ing wide | tontion to the man except by asking what tember, and also donated $1,600 (Mexican) | page door, felt that the post of danger of the Markle mines, Jeddo No. 5 is re. | About elghty men marched from Freeland | tracts. The v rowing Ticts are | pis hearers woull think it republicans | 10 tho widow of the loyal and efficient Fil- | ywuy far elsewhere. The squad of mounted American Keply fo Germany. Otried further crippled by the defection of | t0 Pond Creek today for the purpose of | the Ereatest suff e vine oen | e to populist meetings and cheered fo | WINO Dresident of the town of Santa Cruz | police in the van had much to do in keep Following is the text of the American|some men who had worked there up to this uring forty men employed by the Pond | ! i ‘:““1” ",]"\’ many cinos the crops | Moiialey | who was revengefiilly murderod by the I0- | ing a path open. In the depot Chief Ll hiaty (Hir i Barn b ‘;\' a1 anrnio join the strikers. The marchers reached |Pyrences amounts to a r. The situa- Cowhoys Dida't Like It e e ) bt $ha ¢ ,H“,”'M’,:‘,‘,. m,,:‘ :“-w .”‘l.\.« ‘: Stornberg, the German charge d'affaires Only Une Colliery Working. there at noon, just as the men were leay- | 8tion 18 8o critical In Burguady, Auvergue, | The remurks of the democratic disturber | tect its friends and faithful servants, the people with thelr el ALl were good The secretary of state to the impe PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 4-—According te | ing the mines the Rhone and the Saune vine s that in | nearly incited a riot and probably would | Iioilos, Panay island, and Its civil govern- |, ured, however, and did what they could to lend a hand—when the inconvenicace Don German charg Geueral Superintendent Luther's report to | The strikers were met by J. Latrobe, [ Fesponse to the nest request of the [ have done so had there been more dem- | ment Memorandum in res to the In rios | President Harris of the Reading company, | president of the company, and Superin | Browers the minister of war, General Am-|ocrats or populis in the crowd. The Monday night, October 1, the rebels killed made ; \“” secret f ate, October | three additional collieries of t company | tendent McFarland and explained to the drew, is sending troops to ald in the har- | sentiment of the gathering was overwhelm- | Lieutenant Max Wager of the Thirty-sixth RialiRlbak” taiohing the Chinses’ mbseiel |18 l]vln start up today ||u; v]h\\.;‘ but \nlmh n‘..u the company was qulv u.\ vesting y m.m‘vln.. Al ““’1‘“1“ @ small | rogiment volunteer infant edict in regard to P nent of Prin one colliery in operation out of the thirty- | veloping the mine and would send no coa ne sy “ towt it its entire population was out | gland of Panay. Tuan upd other hizh Chinese officlals nine the company was workiug previous to | to market it the strikers would mot ash BHoxeps' Altaok Gep {bis morning when the traln arrived and stachment of the Forty-fourth regt The Chinese minister communicated to the | LONDON, Oct. 4.—A spec dispatch | A detachmer b C the mine workers' stri the men to quit work. The marchers |y . P secretary of stute on the 2d inst - | trom Shanghai, under date of Wednesday &ram recelyed by him from Dir The single property that 18 producing coal | agreed to this proposition, and Mr. Latrobe | ocroper 3, says the Chinese AT | eral Sheng, conveying the fmpor Im- | today is the North Franklin colliery at Tre. | took the Freeland men to the village &ro- | s oo o : report that parial “cdiot, dated Boptember orton, in the upper end of the Schuylkill | cery store aud treated th ! 5,000, Boxare atadked two batialins of which the degradation and puriishme vorte e Ul A4 af the Hebuylkil 1070 ADQ FpM Aol o erackse rmans at Kau Pri noand other high Chile region. 1t employs about 700 men and boys, [ and apples ok ficlals is decreed A wostly American citizens. Many of them,| The United Mine Workers are making Ihe goyernment of the . Pt ot Lo et AT PRI, T L A TS R the official says, own their homes and they | extra efforts to get the men who are still was not their | "'The participunts “in the parade were ear Pavia, | prayely appareled and mounted, some on | tamily reliables and some on livery steeds | which they manifestly mistrusted. T signs displayed bore all manner of pa otie sentiments, one of the most sig WS | cant being the phrase: “You cannot cr wealth by law, but by labor.” The Rough | Riders' suits were particularly decorative, farwers were there from points twenty- | ment at Bohol island, one of the Visayan s distant. A troop of cowboys | group, has encountered a force of the enel the Rough Rider costume par- | killing thirty of thew. One Americ ated in the reception and as the train the town they followed it ove the - ¢ pupopars prairie for nearly a quarter of a mile, all of Ocen wneln Oct, 4 NOW | ghouting and waving their hat New vk led—1.'Aquitane, for| Cheered by Walting Th nds. of the desire imperis eteEovt | have expressed a determination to remain | Working in the Panther Creek valley to At Bussett the governor spoke to 1,000 L ivernool=Arrived—Helgeniand, from | When the carriages foally reached the ernment 1o satisiy able demdiiie | at work. To this end the company has pro- | strike and join the union. More organ reons. James Brighton presided over the bdei b STatentio, from New' York. (Capitol avenue tent Governor Roosevelt and of the foreln powers for’ the IJry nd | vided a stronk guard of police, who are pro- | fzers have been sent into the valley with Discover Unknown ( eting at that place, The train stopped ed=commonwealth ' (ew for {on} | his escort alighted, while the others s have suffercd at the hands of evil | Yide r any emergency. The ordinary |the hope of swingiug the 1500 men still| COPENHAGEN, O 'he ater at Atkinson and the governor N kel e Manitesli HU- | teed ta the varieus balis i3 healtr. Blu o8 persons i China, although 1t has | capacity of the mine is about 000 tons a | Working there into line. President Mitchell | drup Greenland expe shook hands with over 100 school London~8alled—Montevideun, for | conts cleared a way and the guberpatorial thought weil, in view of the vigue- | week, but just now it Is turaing out con. | 8aid today that the strikers of the Lacka-| here on board the Autarctic Vel | ciidren, who gave him cheer after cheer [ Montreal; Minesota, for New Vork party passed to the platform, Senator Dolli Ment which ‘some of the unculpated per | siderably more than that wanna valley will make an effort to outdo| of the expedition explored and he aguin entercd his car and disaps | e, S o New Yoyl Ocrmanic, fr vor following close bebind. ‘FRe thousnds sons are to recelye, to siEnity to the - the Wilkesbarre demonstration at Scran- | hitherto unknown stretch of land extend- | ¢40 At Yokohuma — Arrived — Previously, | Stood on chuirs und waved and cheered & Chinese mintster the president's view that | Smith Talks i Ku Men, near Pekin Boxers, it is added, lost 400 men and the Germans fly The latter are sald to be byrning the Box Vil around Pekin mapped a e L Sl R g SR A o Democrats. ton next Wednesday. It is the intention|ing from latitnde 69 degrees 25 minutes While making the run botween Atkinson China, from Bun Franclaco, via Honglulu, | frantic w lcome. The applause continucd who appears from th eurring tontimany | WYMORE, Neb., Oct. 4.—(Special)—A | to have a big parade of miners from tho north to Agassiz Island and €7 degrees 22 | and O'Neil Governor Rooscvelt was glven and p i "I‘W‘I‘“"'"i._ fsuini "'KH‘W for such a space that President Baldrige of of the legations in Pekin to hav en one | Mr. Smith of York addressed a small crowd | entire Lackawanna valley. A mass meet- | minutes north | a newspaper containing an interview with | Kong. "8 | e MeKinley and Roosevelt clubs, the pre of the foremost in the proccedings com- | gt the Bryan and Stevenson headquarters | ing will follow, at which President Mitchel} Governor Poynter, in which the latter de Japanese Port—Arriy viously iding officer, rose to secure quict, for the plained of, should escape such full meusure Jumaicn to Make Exnibic ? voric, from rH of exemplary punishm e \ in this eity last night from a popu o |and other mine workers' ats at Bu@alo. | yied that he had ever referred to 80! v ¥ I‘rancisco, via Honoluly, | goyernor had far to go and much to s ™ f exempliry. punishment as the facts war rom a popull 8 ther & orkor lals will| T INGSTON, Jamalce, Oct. 4.—It has be the sol- | Khunghat and Hong Kong nor h g much to say b (o0 If Kang Yi and a0 Shu Chino | standpoint. The meeting was a very tame | speak 3 ‘ ; n | dier of the regular army as a $15-a-month At Rotterdam—8Sailod—Amsterdam o | fore the night was done 110 Teceive other thin their Just deserth, | affair and few people knew it was in prog- | - decided to make immediate arrangements | pireling. In his speeches on the Nebraska and New York When the tumult and the shoutings had Wish o view to forming a judgment ¢ 10 enable Jamaica to take part ), y I 5 b 8 View to CormiRg 8 Judgment en | pegy Ofcer Cummings Hurt, | ko sRARLO JABRICH 14 1AKS Jatt 1 the Pan- | trip the governor has several times used NLDUREIRQITITeS = hier ¥ o & measure censed Mr. Baldrige uddressed Bkin has been instriicted (o report whether | , Officer Cummings, one of the | uch a quotation from Poynter and at| At Hoston—Arrived—lvernfa, fr ' « and introduced the guest of the edict completely names the persons | Beatrice Issncs Refunding Wonds, | Mounted sauud which wis escorting Gov » o ke P O'Nell he read the denial to 3 gathe pogl i DAL comblaialy BAue the: Jerscns| Mestuios aanve Refupding Bonga: | §ino ' Roossvaltahiadia severe fail an the . YEARERain Aheliskes Wap Taxes. 7 A ot yantge | ments proposed accord with the gravity e | return trip to the depot. His horse f=ll | CARACAS, Venezuola, Oct. 4.—(Via Hay- | of 3,000 and then asserted that several of | 5 o o 4 ' Parade 0 Surprl » Preamete the erimes committed and i what man. | Erem.)—The city council last might passed | at Sixteenth street and pitol avenue \ Y- | San , for Hamburg | 4R AR A Hoy: | the men traveling with him heard the re- [ VAt Imard-12:% n. - Passed-La Gus- | T ; - nai- | 1 ordinance 1ssulng $19.000 worth of ad- | Lhrowing him to the pevement, and 4 | ”:'l‘“ it ,“,:“u“‘:‘:n“:x,'". 0B 1mporis £ eisd v'n\‘ln A o lireitad=in, i The purade itaslt exceeded the ho (Continued o Fourth Page.) | ditional retuading bonds, jirother” ofjoer _rade aver IMm. Hip vight bk ol i B L e ¢ | " . D e from New Yok, for Southamptan | It8 promoters and about 8,000 marchers |leg and wrist were painfully bruised, | rogated. (Continued on Seventh Page.) and Bromen. “ were in lige. A‘ the forefront proceedcd