Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 14, 1900, Page 1

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\ | ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, RUB 1T INTO CHNA. THE LAST CHAPTER. Allies Insist Upon Beveral New Conditions a8 Precedent to Peacy CITY OF PEKIN MUST BE MADE OPEN PORT Inland Capital to Enjoy Rame Commeroi Freedom as Coast Towns, 1 Power in Matter of Capital Pur ishment May Pe Curtailed. Faparing (ts Effcct fu Places | Favorably Dis WASHINGTON, the points sald to be agreed upon i Vel 2 as & busls fof sotilomeat with Chian | Demand (hat the Foreigners in Rtail- #s announced in cable dispatches, it 7 3 g i v understood that al other points are British 8 Freedman's Aid Society Disousses Disfran- likely to recelve attention when the mat-| — ter is Y with the Chinese envoys. | TIEN TSIN (undated), via Shaughai, Nov One of these is an to making the city of | 13—The Russians have ordered the foreign- | Pekin for while it is not | ©T% 0 the railroad house at Tong Ku to t to extend | Vacate the bufldings and the British have on the scacost, tho purpo Yo 1t that freedom of commerce and inter- | St there w company of infantry and 10 B irse with forelxners which now applies | Fombay cavalry, ordering these troops to only to those open ports designated by | Femain and protect the property. | treaties with Chin The rug tion that | Chindss auarters and. its advisgbility s | PO 0, says that us a result of the British urged because Pekin, us the capital of the | Fepresontation to the Petersburg govern Chineso empire, 1s the center of influence | MWDt Russia 15 offlcially handing over the bt s g bl 1|.Hrn 1 between Tong Ku and Pekin to Another point which may bo proposed s | Fleld Marshal « A Nowat) that capital punishment, by beheading or | Mander-in-chiet of the Internatiounl forces, f at Newark otherwise, shall not occur In future by im- Who will give 1t up to the British owners. Far s perial edict alone, but only after a uch as fs glven in civilized countries acoused having an opportunity to be he his docs not #pply to the executions made necossary by the Boxer movement Dispatehes have been received here from | somo consic the viceroys of the southern provinces of | (o Chita, which thus far have been more | friendly to foreigners, stating that they were shucked by the exceution of the act- {ng viecroy of Chi Li and also that they teared this would have a serious effect in those localities hitherto favorably dis posed | ny I I Over Agreement. | yore RLIN, Nov. 1 The Berlin press hag# (¢ {received tho anuouncement of the diplo- | ga00 matle agreement at Pekin favorably The Berliner Tageblatt expressed a fear that rable time will clapse betore | gia; powers are able to obtain the signu- |gi00 tures of Emperor Kwang Su and the em- | ¢ press dowager, but thinks that they will |, ultimately yield. The Lokul Auzeiger says: | The powers will need planty of patience | y before the demands are ratified, but inas- | oo much as military operations will continue | ntil ratification,” the date will be hastened | P/ omewhat." 3 0; an SCENE WAS A TERRIBLE ONE SR Confirms the Times Report. and they were doing fine work, BERLIN, Nov. 13.—A semi-official dis- | struction Belginn Deseribes the Massacre of Chinese by the Russinn patch from Pekin, dated November 1 the text of the joint mot pateh, dated Pekin, November 11. Among LONDON, Nov ‘The Globe this after- | (ho additional stipulations the note requires noon publishes a letter fr @ Belglan | China to erect expiatory monuments in | gontleman who bas been traveliug to Pekin | every foreign or international burial ground | via the Trams-Siberlan rallroad. He de- | where graves Lave been profamed. south. werlbes, vader date of Septembor 6, what | St he saw In the Amus river. His accounts | Ruxsians 1 wurpass in horror those previously pub-| LONDON, Noy Tished | trom Tien Tsin, dated November 10, suys a | the speakers connecting it The scenes T have witnessed during the three days since the steawmer left Blagovet- chensk,” he says, “are horrible beyoud the power of description. It s the closing tableau of a fearful human tragedy. Two thousand were deliberately drowned at Morxo, 2,000 at Rabe and 8,000 around Blagovetchensk, a total of 12,000 corpse encumbering the river, among which were | 1housands of women and children. Naviga- tion was all but Impossible. Last week a killing 200 Chiuese und capturing a quan- | Which tity of arms and treasure Catholie Bish Hurned Alive, BERLIN, Nov nounce that the Catholic German Missionar Bishop Hammer was first horribly tortured and then burned alive in Tus Tseung. tlan and mangled mass of corpse gether by their long hair. Th lushed to- —_— were literally covered with corpses. In the | Pay By Part of curves of the stream were dark, putrid, | War Lxpenses. of the smellling masses of human flesh and boue, e part wurging and swaying in the steamer’'s wike u]'”;“""' N«ln 13.—8ir )h:l\\m! Hicks- | The captain vaioly ordered full speed each, chancellor the exchequer, spe: abead. The sigut and smell will be ever ing this evening in Bristol, sald It would s not be is privilege in the next budget to "From Blgovetchensk to Algu, forty- | FlieNe zx..-l taxpayers Ihll w.:»:{» be | toliow five kilometers, numerous villages studded ;]"“I ']“‘ “"“ 19 - WRRLAY aF 19 “"‘“I"" the bank, with & thriving, industrious popu- | {h® budget, but the government's expendi- Jtlon of over 100,000. That of Algun was | Lure had been enormous, especially in Chin 20,000. No one will ever know the number | *01 South Africa. He declared emphatic of (hoso who porished by shot, sword and | 211¥: however, that the wealth of the Trana- fire. Not a village Is left. The silence of | vaal would have to bear part of the South | lieved ath was around ue. The smoking ruins ot "f‘l’;l"“ X Afgun were on the right, with broken down, opuree | right | north an Empe Desires Mer Re-| He also emphasized the fact that the | Washington turn in Order to Deco- | maintenance of a strong army and navy | first and rights afterwards. rate Mer. | would invelve a further considerable e | penditure was very NEW YORK, Nov. 13.=According to a| Asain anpaten trom e to e Joursn wnd | BOERS ANNOY THE ENGLISH | bishon Advertiser the kalser has just given fur- | Washington did not deserve credit for orig- wandoes Acting Independ- | Inating ther evidence of his regard for Baron von Keotteler, who Was asass Inated in China ently Kee widow to Germany, iu order that he may | express to her his keen sense, mot culy of | LONDON, Nov 13.~Under date of |was right. her husband's services, but also of the | Jobannesburg, Nove displayed througbout the terrible slege of | Rundle reports skir the legations. £ Boers i the Harrismics It is said that the kalser, besides vest- | a &DDERT o bo Boting indepand the widowed baroness with the Order of | and with 1 i\u-nv‘-r oD ;‘l f- Sy s g " | anuoyance us possible to the Biritish. Our | of which the empress fs grand mis {if These shiftiishos Tars (v tresg, will offer her a pension and creat even wounde ¢ 4 countesy In her own right. It fs | rived at Ventersdorp m ity twenty-one prisoners wnd @ Guantity tho title of lady-in-waiting to the | cuttle and sheep. Ventersdorp. which his She 18 eertain to be overwhelmed | been a depot supplies for the Boers, will y court, government and the people with | "OW be cleared © tokens of kindly sympathy and re | 1 CHICAGO, Nev. 13.—A spec the | LONDON, Nov. 14.—Lord Rosslyn, in view Tribune from Detroit says: Baroness vou | of Lord R Kettel whose husband was murdered b the Chinese in Pekin, is tmprovi lowly | informed and tendering an apology in the | al the residence of her father, Henry . | following language Ledyard, president of the Michigan Co: Railroad company. When she arrived about | publication of a groundless report has | tive H five weeks ago her condition was such that |called In question, the deepest ajology and her relatives for a time were greatl : v fullest reparation. 1 offer it to you, alarmed. She Is now convalescent, Friends ' sir, as colonel-| hief. I offer it to the of the family say that as soon as she is | colonels of the various regiments. I offer able she will cross the seas enroute for the it to every office late home of Baron von Ketteler and will and man, und I sincerely tru Lo recelved by Emperor Willlam, who has |unqualificd apology will be aceep! quested her to come, spirit in which it is offered.” | bu Koverument has nformed the colonial council that = [ X wiil gladly grant pormission to 16,000 1t the Agaln Venture | Transvaal Boers to trek through the Kal- | WOUld ml Clty. | arart dese to territory im Germa outh- | west Africa | Arrangement ——e ey i - The blIl expected to taise the |‘ ue of is sald flcially Growing Helief (hat ager Will Ney In Chinw's Ca s Dow- PEKI unday, Nov e | therefore, are now being mwade to welcome the vanquished Boers as Il N Nov. 13 Another small German expedi- ! 2 . | Bra m goes morth tomorrow In wpite of the | g B¢% A0 valuable clement for the col- | today t that these punitiv ids are strof | 4 | SH A raIeR BT o ‘x”‘”vm"“““""“l"_‘ | The Lokal Auzelger points out that Bise | the stopya b ; okl | PUT | arck, in 1592, spoke encouragingly of | amount ers s acquisition fc it pa from The reports of death of the dowager [ BO°F8 83 au acqulsition for that part of | pregent ompress are persistent, th Germany's colonlul emplire ofelal contirmation of tiom with t cou There i3 a gh there s no m, communica- Death trom ion Riot, rt being very irregular.| DENVER. Nov. 14-Hampton Jackson. a | active srowing belief, however. that | colored depiiy sheriff who was shot in the | bo b sbe wil never return to Pekin, 1 the third death resulting from the riot, winding OMAHA, WEDNES MORNING, \()\ EMBER 14, 1900 -TWELVE Duke and D Last (Copyright LONDON, Nov. 13.(New York World ¢, blegram—Special Telegram.)—May Yo American singer were fucluded tn o ¥ the actress the only member of the dowager duche to works of charity and benevol- | PANY of the possibility nd duchess later by the duke of Newcastle. precate Vxed ton of Acting Vieeroy of €ht LI, | FAC SIMILE OF BRYAN'S MESSAGE TO osed. s s o | RUSSIANS ORDER THEM 0UT| BALLOTROBBERY DOWNSOUTH |- that the du chisement of Negro, much to May Yoh onclliation when officially made known BISHOP MAL’LAI.IEU RAISES heory Education Should Pr of Booker Washington that ede Right Combatted, W ot von Waldersce, com- | Ald and Southiera Educaty The Freedman's | London Journais with Bishop Ed- | tion Assumed by Audrews presiding. The fol owing | approp atral Alabama academy, Huntsville, Ala. Cookman academy, Jacksonville, $2,100; Havan academy, Wayneboro, Meridian acaden: h is regarded and the latter because it threatens to break | leding financlal int the concert | Morristown, Austin T« n, on mmrwllnx th propriations for 1t was explained that the field of | demies was among the poor whit $900¢ West Tennessee academy, There was a consideration of @ The Morning Post says: “It would bn ¢ nable for the United States to bre up the concert becauss indemnity. The pow willing to cousider America’s objections, 11| 1N I both in - the schools . glves | selves und as fecders for » of the powers to |and U Aory, | China, confirming the London Times' dis- Protent ot Biskos Mk Bishop Mallalieu, some new combination of powers, it would | he necessary for Great Britain and Germany | to agree upon a common polley to be pur- | the in talking on the sub- Ject, &poke of the effect on the aims of the soclety of the disfra ement acts of thy I hope to see the day when the flag shell The Standard, which dful, 2§ the subjoct | amiunt of f ake an Arsenal. protect all Americans on the American soil.” with & mere reference, saysf A special dispatch | This started a debate on disfranchisement, | opinion on the Chineso problem is too un- with. the ques- force of Russians has captured the arsenal | tion under couslderation northeast of Yeng Tsun with trifling loss, the work among the had passed “disfranchisement” laws should be increased rather than diminished ditor of the W v\m readily ace Levi Gilbert, Advocate, Private advices an- | gaiq the southe stern Chris. moderation. u people made no preteuse of disguising the objects of these m but that so far the statutes went, ssible to fulfill while the court is in the hands of these very officla tonstderable curlosity is felt at Tien| pDENVER, Nov. 13 s the wctual language of no disscrimi- ays the Shanghai correspondent of | youn, Times, * the country, are dis Tien Tain Referring editorially to th of the negotiations, the Times says “The United States accep note demanding the punishn Tuan and the other guilty official: strengthening bonds that banks were | Great Britain Will Heauire Losers to ’,,m,‘r b Afrlean | Dooker T. Washington for trading the rights he that education v surest ground of rights and on that the maintenance negro went enjoyment of his rights would He sald he hoped to se no ignorant of eleven offic n e the day, | | would be allowed to vote. Hooker Wash ton Critleised, cretary Mason preserving good nses. the north and south, sald Sir Michael, “we must | that good crumbling walls and ehattered, roofioss | U POl the future of the Transvual by at- | planned AL templing to tmpose upon it & greater bur- | forotell e | den than it could reasonably bear. It |paid a r T, W " - | would be cutting our own throats. There- |saying that any man who had done what ho HONORS KETTELER'S WIDOW | tore the nriish taxpayers must necessarily | had was a great man, white or black. Ne —_— | bear a large part of the cost of the war.” | ertheless REICHSTAG but It In establishing Throne Will Be Co there would BERLIN, Nov. 13, tomorrow at the opening of the v r asraulting o young girl chstag o concilinto wording, Reichstag will be concilintory in wording, | Srati Gk & SOIne Bt father and brother went . but the use of the term “indem- | work on a raflroud * will be studiously avoided through- | , he did not believe with Booker T. 1f & man gave up his rights in this country, The sersiom wili begin at p. m This evening Emperor William was the | ¥ t of the the idea of industrial education whole soclety had done but the speaker was inclined to thing that his educational idea He said that he believed that nber 12, Lord Roberts any community | courage and gallantry which she herself | telegraphs to the War office s follows: |north that was n.l.u by another race by a pishes with emall | majority Reltz | point of revolution Up the }the south General von Kessel, Prof Slavy and by Inviting the ambassador's American Warfare. |that thirty years ago, Berger, the new manager of the| POPLAR BLUFF, Mo, Hamburg theater, were preseni. tlal sea e colomial budget w " rha bishop recalled a number of kindly acts on part of the s mu-l, |southern whites, some of whom had opened beir churches to the negroes when he was holding confcrences Yovembher | I tell you , “that every word of | Sbable that tho baroncss will also be | 1L fTom Zeerust, capturing during the march | war the negroes speak now ation of their race more difficu ORDERED T0 LEAVE FHANCE"‘ Authorities of wossiyn 9567 Apotons. |NEGRO TO LOSE HIS BALLOT| s denfal, hus written (o the | Georgin Democrats Prepuring Legis- prince of Wales regretting that he was mis- 1ation that Will Limit the Right of Suffrage al I owe to the regiments whose honor my | ATLANTA 12.—Representa- rdwick introduced a bill in the g | eral ussembly today providiug for an i 1 | cational | suffrage in | v, uon-commissioned oMcer [ North Caroling t that this | introduced today d 18 the | gession of the legis ar to the one | as presented at the last ature by Mr failed of passage prisoned and r of the Unlted States the state. Stock Brokers in NEW YORK Gallifet mgde in the ministry of war, esp ment wis made the & which In substunce t was due to a defalcatio 18 of @ lot of rumor that army secrety mercy of international spl 0,000 to $178,000, em will m was prominent on the me years ugc Stedman says the labilities wili )W $100,000 and probably less than hal | as of late the Grunts have been | p thelr aftairs, Stock exchan, tion rlot In this city, is dead. This i3 | that sup 1dm.n. for the legislature from Morgentheim, | rv — W of Newenstle at ize Their Soun's gy Actress-Wile, | P 100, s Publisting Co.) Points at Chicago. itto the bosom of the Newca with her husband, Lord ¥ Tho two have just feturned from | the Neweastle fami able Passing Orde shootin go of Lord Franc, Since the mari who received Lady Francls was| CHICAGO, Nov. 13 whose 1ife has been | OMCals of the Ame Through her instrumen and Lady Francis will sail on |TUSh todar. Within ay next for New York on the At- | (B¢ market opeved ov | pret t " Transport company's steamship | Preferred stock were Minneapolis and will be followed a little [0 4% The frst quota The three | PeIOW yesterday's close. pass a good deal of the winier {n|'!Me tho common sold to 0. America together and will mako an ex-|9T0P to 40 the stock tour of California. and touched 48, receding a! cis is naturally much elated at | 1050 0 45 185, This is a loss mily reconciliation, as it makes | P'ICe ou the morniug atter 50 much smoother for her gocially, | THe bottom price today ached o of Neweastle, u plilar | W85 organized. The closing | w8 pleasanter for her husband. |Preferred has re high church party, has recetved her, [O0 Was 4% below will quickly open its doors (o her. |Whei the election boom n which the duke moves, essen tarted last week. The sa serlons relig Sroax o0e would itsel? aggrega | 8. dkiug. but m-;“" cpen out the widest possible social | Al talk r ling the prospect, as well as rellef from thoso | pet byerted mdend, ug financlal cares which weighed so | whether 10 would be upon the young couple lnr\l" western director * health 1 by no means robust and | o nid” to i working on this account that a long sea | New York interests was chosen. \“';""' o WU S L FEAR FORCONCERT OF POWERS |1/ ;1\ 1 /11 yed ut Pox .lv United It What the compiny ed market is - positively. 1t w Stat ated concorniug the fted | Was until recentl J RS uthe the British Ol and oval, the for ount von Walderseo has a| pany and that the to destroy the Ming tombs, un uct ible to deliver it needlepsly vindictive, rumor s not Daily Chronlcle comments Strongly | wock. wern o “‘ i) the American attitude as a “feeble ous one regarding mpromise which 1t Is impossble to ac- LTefyrred stoclcand i 3 aifre rer it e directo advisability they do not desire | !'lyir probably would be | pri ned its ability the Unlted States have in view | has e on. Chicag deviating « bsence of & genmcral agree- [ wWar i s BrEO” | 15 Deink made than | pany Ik sald to hav wh vet 1 these An an | not old_en tean | £ e face has gone down, and inside certain (5 be coysidered serioucly.” puany Lave done part of the Morrison, wiring to the Tim . expresses the opinlon tl ede to all the terms of the note except the execution of the and officials, which it will be im-| Denver Police Hol Lynche is not known whith last Thu* present stage | pere. ‘Tne pol render hin. t » harder to secure the punish Phy 15 than of the three riginally indicated by | nj mes were ht announced that » department. Therefore it 18 dif- | say that auy of them is blood ult to see how America could justify in | police now expr a refusal to join with the | poy's guilt other powers in steps needful to secur this | W, Thompson, a new rested at here today. He has {abouts at the time s Speech from the | mitied illatory | LAWREN( K il'(wr‘hl'v the negro Wilkel { merly lived here. He fat The speech from the wis sent to v where it refers to the China ex- {BODY FOUND IN BURNED HOTEL | sed that h Larger hought. ar is Expr imperial chancellor, Count von tma Is M aeral Count von Hulsen-Haez- | First marks, of which Ge 9,117,000 marks will be given by |bas rvetarded the v | anthentically by the register contains ot ot low Stowe and Etta Nov. 18.—Cacsar Della Croce, | furles were pronounced fatal, are still alive who was naturalized in New York in 18 been ordered to leave France within | #lowl Eugene Dalton, who n was thought | twenty-four hours or be imprisoned | had lost his Nif was ge Assoclated Press and he said the It is believed that one of t for his expulsion were political. | i€ buried bereath the t L. Sawyer of St n by & representative of | located at Hot Spring Italian by birth, Croce speaks |} brokenly. He has recentiy been | here & few days ago | dependent on charity, seeking ald um. have been unable to locate him the United States embassy, consulate charitable tustitutions, thoush he contends | SENATOR CLARK he is about to come into a for ne. Lust was arrested at Toulou im- | Montana Mu ased on the intervention Connection with Au embassy here. | Monte Carlo, Secret Revealed, | BUTTE, Mont., Nov Nov. H.—The Petit Journa! de- | ot Senator W. A. Clark hay veport to be quite correct that tention to au article ret of the mew French cannon has | circulation to the effect that he been divulged. This condition of things it | with (L ablishment to the changes which Marquis | Monte Carlo at Che Washington. Senator placing the Information bureau detective d riment. Tt con: | He has ¢ BOw &t the | mand thea to start proceedin Doubt ut (o Baroa's Mealen, 0 prompty mude BERLIN, Nov. 13.—Ba n von Mittnacht . | apitites Man resigning on accou i JACKSONVILLE, | the portfolio of inin gn | Cave, Fla., today of Wurtemburg, accepted the can- | Wated Dorman Futl arreled about 40 SINGLE eferred Stock of Oil Trust Drops Five Tempernture at Omunl teen o | INSIDERS SELL OVER of exclusion, bas at last been ro- | » Reported (o Be Due to Urobe to Get Suflictent wit Which to that 1t will pass the tality the [ 1'Vidend on the prefecred stock at the quar 1ve now become friends | (OF1Y mneeting of directors with their rossible succetors to the title, | THUreday sent lins S Sown us digclosed who hithert have been hopeful of a favor- longed flines d two sisters, attendunce upon him altze the probabill a distant time self {5 uot coguizan teome of his y | onty torwards at the from the first ice of the com N guotation inflamation of the to have no relation wh Kidueys uppear f the preterred idu L common 2,611 shares through the The Tribune tomorrow family fear that hi lly enable him to subjected (o & wearlsomo dered afresh there v definite declina ble symptoms of the presi the members of the cablne » friend of th covered evidences of o e but T LONDON, Nov. 14.—The London morning | 0f Deing long on the cro, are agnin ag flax. us has been Intimated frequently, "\hu‘hh\ arrived today and corroborated the | stabllity of the concert of powers in China. | conipany has be attitudo of Germ, & meets with disapp but one doubtful factor in the torney fax at $1.40 here from last bere he helieved t for recovery He iy not so sanguinc il L ISPLIT IN KNIGHIS OF LABOR ves and Par- ol MR credited o Teports of diss BIRMINGHAM, . both claiming to be t glven to him. He sald as much | :.ml way at the last cab the member sevel catiered by polit gether for he first | him upon the lay the president evidently had prepared for the o preferred stovk at this tin ] Knights of and Canada outcome of Labor of th f flaxseed. yet k of working capit discussion by suc o the high peic 0 selling during tockholders of | pany. who' are many The Parsons wing of the order, sons of New York urs . as officials claim of the stock m hand today of this eity, w member of the national exc tatements the stoui|© faction headed alo arrived " | 18 IN JAIL FOR FROTECTION faction composed of the delegates of this Chamberlain his unnual address | tion was effect | tion settled down to work s faction met th Murderer to Prevent y Girl's Friends, Hix Being Preliminary 1, after which the conven- clection was an endorsement of his ministration, it was no less an endorac ment of the men who had etood by him in the time of stress and adversity. The | creait for suceess, ho the heads of afternoon in 1 to order by Parsons, who de & negro of Lawrenc to the whereabouts of the | pected of having murdered Jupunese forces, which, though not leaving | the 11-year-old girl who was terribly mal- pearing from Pekin | treated and then killed . who 15 sus Grand Maste: livered his annu Committees we ppolnted and adjourn- ment taken until tomorrow morning bitterness between tay, Is still 1e'd at depertment e Livcoln cd the German |yntil his guilt is tully ent of Prince | would certainly be lynche and it | the scene of the erime. who have legged blood stains on Porter another four y 1t taken now |NEW CHICAGO-OMAHA FLYER | knew that in [ Rock 1ain him there was ¢ o without some sac | | money, leisure or { the sam happler it wll of them could gratify h wishes Part of Overland M, | make its first move to capture | profitable over cratches on bis body | *he QPENS TODAY |«na teils conflicting stories of his wher the part of the 3lizabeth, Colo., and was brough ew mall train to be operated between | afternoon of thi H| replace the train now the same hour would sever without regret, and even then only in cas of the most urgent reasons for retirement. rting from Chi Colorado for assuulting T reform school for stealing and reformatory He got out of the establishment * will also mean anot | son, Attorney Qg waster Goug and in Root was the only absent member from the meeting, having leit for Cuba to look over military affairs there, and, at the same (ima Lo try to recuperat long and serious responses, therefore, was «ll but complete . a8 it will make quick with the Omaha-Denver train, le and arriving in | between Chicago and Denver G0 TO JOIN THEIR HUSBANDS Wives of Army Officers in the Philip- pines Sall for Manila on much th eral Griggs, holdiog his p widerable sacrifice, but willlng at the same time to sacrifice a good deal to comply with the expres h of the rulns of show a total ot | ford house was made toda ho burned Gif- but only one an East | unidentified body was recovered, calle for 12,349,000 marks., Of this | bris is still burning and the lutense heat ork the empire It is now considered certain that five more | The budget will also show that an exper- | bodies lie buried be fment is to be made in the fmportation of [ the nauseating odor of charred flesh comes East Indian ryots for rice and cotton cul- | from five different spots. Night Clerk every one of the forty-five 150 were occupied on Sunday night, ~Among those who Manila werc the Sixth artillery | tollowing ofcers and thelr wives Fourth cavalry; Godfrey, asslstant surgeon and his wite, and Captain H following officers cunce Ave Suapi |..n,>lr is sald that the management Della Croce, an Italian particular in having Nuturalized in New York, Licutenant ¥ en they came fn during th The rest of the injured recovering | Bell in the holocaust, will submit (o congress Jumun 0 Individual F COAL INTERESTS‘ Operntors of Propertics Will Selt roud Companies, | nazLETON. Va £ Nov. 18.~A report | ‘ nt here tonlght | IS ANGRY indigna he Leligh Val- | gpun oy | obtained before the war granti praspective operators hereabouts anything of the Movements of Ocenn Vessels, | Philippioes and that this monope Ruilroad company, tie only r Philippines, set up & claim ired his western attorn Immediate retra COrY FIVE CENTS. MAY YOHE wms THE FAMILY) BOTIU\I 0T OF LINSEED. counmou or THE WEATHER ALL INVITED TO STAY President Anxions That His Official House- hold Contiznue as it Is, | HIS WISHES ARE MAJE KNOWN TO CABINET McKinlay Pays Tribute to the Wisdom and Faithfuloess of His Counselors, NONE SIGNIFY INTENTION OF RESIGNING | fecretary Hay Responds on Behalf of Hic Fellow Members, GR GGS STAYS ONLY AT GREAT SACRIFICE Absen e at Yesterday's Meeting Was Secretary of War Root, Who in Sic nted Similarly (o (he Attors General, WASIINGTON, Nov. 12 ident M Kluley today aunounced clearly amd for bly (0 the members of his cabinet bis degire that they should a1l remaiu with him durlug thu four years of his coming administratic His wishes were wade known in an extended speech at the cabinet moeting fn the Whit of the members present and whilo there w they would accept the portfolios thus tor on the other hand no Today's proceedin s sot forth the wishes nt in the matter and relieves of the customary tion of tendering thelr resignations end of the term, uules de an irrevocable n that it will be tmpossible for them to continue iu ofce. 1 also sets at rest all speculation and ela making of tho country’s political prophets, for it is understood generally that there is homogenity f the prescnt cabinet. That factor is At eneral Griggs, s he holds his pros ent position at a great faacial sacrifice Still, Mr. Griggs replied appreciation to of the president and ve | retiring from his prese n terms of warm complimentary remarks ed 1o intention of position Mis is not th apliments Cabinet. first time that the presi | dent has expressed 1o the members of the abinet his pleasure at the support they had a gen ot meeting, when al of whom had Leen mpaigeing, got to- and congratuia of the election. To ute asion and his address reviewed the work of the administration i the last four years—~four of the most exciting years the country has knowi iu threa decs rather a sur) bers preside | quence of eveats and how calmly Lo re- Inquished the present credit for successtul | strokes of policy or prudence and atiributed tho hon family in whose imv ! mat ew. 1t was 130 even 1o the cabinet mem s to note how acourdtely the had fixed in his memory the se- themsel to the m mbers of his offclal tiate department the in question had arisen, He sald that if the result of the recent ald, he lald with various departments and ink from entering n ars of office unless he could should sb be kesured that he would have with him ajority at least of the men who form prosent official household. Ile safd b (ing them to rema with coly on who could do fice either of time or personal inclination. At time, he ald, he should Seeretary Hay's Response. Sccretury Hay was the first to respoud He sald that for his part he deeply ap preciated the complimentary references by his chief and that he thought theve not a member of the cabinet who h pleasaut official relations Secretaries Gage, Long, Hiteheock, Wil- eral Griggs end Post- nith each spoke In turn ame vein cretary ich th rom his The lst of is known that Secretary Koot is in me position as Attorney ition at ed wish of the president The meeting, which had developed into real love feast, then returned to the more commonplace affalrs of routine busi- ness and the discussion of the sallent features of the president’s coming mos- sago to con loft W | The meeting markable cabinet sesslons on record AFTER GOOD AMERICAN MONEY Hrltis ress, after which the members newed expressions regard. ands as one of the most r and Ja Corporations Claim Do from (he United States, WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.—Tho president the approach- ing sesslon the clalms for fndemnification 1 for other substantial recompense of the British cable corporation, which suf ercd a6 a result of the Amerlean occupas tion of the Philippines. The corporation ms dumages for the int o i cable business by the forces, This claim was reduced low flgure. but was disallowed East ern Extension company claims has & from the Spanish governmer it u opoly of cable business throughout the ha been invaded by the action of the Usited States government At the same time the Manila & Dagupan road in the pensation for the use of its property by the United States wnd second for the con yance of on a ibsidy of £4,600 guarantced by the Spanish government t the Philippines’ revenu contention that the subsidy in the opoly of the Tastein iug been legally of zed was felt to be o the attorney gem 8 (o the effcct thut

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