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FABLISHED JU TUAN UNDER ARREST Escaped Leader of the Boxers Arrested 7 Border of Bhan Si, | PRINCE SHAN ALSO TAKEN INTO CUSTODY | Y Yien is Ordered to Retum to Sian Fu, Presumably for Execution, | | DEMANDS OF POWERS APT TO BE GRANTED Ckina Likely to Respond to Joint Note| cther Christs Within & Montb, it is Believed. MESSAGE NOW ON ITS WAY TO THE COURT Slow Methods of Communication Mny Tran 0 Em Cause Some Delay In- slon of Uit Downger and mpe tandard LONDON, Trec spondent of th cember 24, says “The government has Tuan and Prince Shan on Shan Si province. Yu Yien dered to return to Sian Fu be exccuted it is supposed “It 48 | ed from the Imper! thorities concede the demands of the the punishment of the instig trouble in China.” According to news from Pekin, dated De eign ministers there the opinion that China whl accept conditions imposed by the joint the powers within a month. The started on its way to the dowager empres and the emperor immediately after its presentation, the dispatch says, but wire communication Is slow and 1t probably will not reach them unti! December BLOODY BATTLE IN CHINA The Shanghal corre tolegraphing De d Prince | hordar of been or- to arre the has forthwith, tha 1 for | 1 these r preparing int note tors of ports the | dispateh | for- | of the of a agency ember 24 unanimously re note note w of Cley, 'h MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., elal to the Times from Vanc By News of a terrible n of the reform forces in China and the be heading of twenty-seven of its leaders was | recelved hero today in a cablegram by W. A. Cumrow, secretary of the Chinese Re form assoclation in America. The e gagement took place In the province of Pe Chi LI, a porulous section of the Yangtse valley In central China. It resulted in | the killing of 1,500 men and the complete demoralization of the reform The battle, into which the reformers were brought by treactery, occurred on Decem- ber 18 and the work of the movement has us a consequerce, been dropped in all that part of the country. The Chinese he 3 loud In thelr expressions of disapprosal | of the conduct of the campaign by thelr leaders. 1t appears from in the cablegram rec Tom, the reform lad: head of a badly armed force of 12,000, paid a visit to Chung HI Tung, governor of the dis trict, whe, though an imperial officer, was believed to be in sympathy with the re- form movement. Long was invited to the governor's palace and was with his 12,000 men marched Into the city. They left all their arms outside the gates. taking the | precaution only to carry thelr loaded re- | volvers. There were 5,000 imperial troops | in the town, but nothing was feared from them and a delay of a day took place In | order that other reform leaders might be | sent for, and when the audience with the governor was finally arranged there wero | twenty-seven of the leading followers of Kung Yu Wel admitted. Then a disagree- ment arose. The governor had the leaders seized and taken Into the court yard, where they were beheaded, and, in the mean time, a strict order had been sent to the fwperial troops to descend Gipon a poorly- armed rabble of the reformers. The few well-drilled soldiers took the country peaple completely by surprise, but never- theless the latter pluckily fought their way thraugh and escaped. They carried away thely own wounded, but left 1,500 dead the Yeld and scattered in the streets the fity, The cablegram says that scene of the butchery was frightful NOTK DELIVERED TO CHINA Ultima\um of pe Forclgn \ at for, Wh large 1nto Fall 1 Dec v [0 \ssacre uver, forces. the details given that Long few of the Powers mi ek PARIS, Dec. 25,—A dispatch to the Havas agency fryn Pekin says The mitsters assembled at the residence of Senor Y. J. de Cologan, the Spanish minister ad the doyen of the diplomatic corps, and kceived Prince Ching, to whom the Spanishuninister handed a joint note of the powds. Li Hung Chang, who 1s sl {11, askec to be excused. Prince Ching | sald I have thy honor to accept concerning theye-establishment of good re lations aud wil transmit it immediately to the emperor aj communicate to him reply s soon alreceived." Leaves Isters unds | the note his Russlan Cenuy LONDON, De says the St. Petrsburg correspondent the Times, has faued orders to the men | under his comman iy China to make de- | tatled 11sts of the Ginese property, money cattle, provisions, &, taken by them, ana where such propert now is. The corre spondent also says tht detachments of Rus. sian troops in aud southwestorn Manchuria continue y pursue the work of extorminating disorgaized Chinese and brigands Loot. 1 Alex ft, | soutlip troops Detachment. French detach- n December 20 westward, to hing a village ree of Boxers pat Contal and The ench I ment of 100 men left hd for Hung Tsu, twenty search for arms. Appr wcross a frozen creck | opened fire, killing Licut wounding another officel burned the village. Nes Coke Producers War ( PITTSBURG, Dec coke have become iny over the contracts for ro now belng elosec he first half of the new sult iy that some of the Connellsville producers nace coke as low as $Lw in the confifet over th hiefly the H Frick ¢ W. Rafney Coke o ington_ Coal” and th Bosse Frick compa minimum_ pri coke at the ov tors are quot low named, and one of the interests 1s holding to §1 o Prices, 1 price war ke, which Turl Iy fur for « and | The e TR + ol urnace | other Ympetj. | as !hn‘“ur._ whtle t rger § M ARIS, with | eause | to strug | men, | Deputy NE JOYOUS DAY IN GAY "A"'si\\'HULE(‘APERIPEFOR REVOLT rves Natal Day of | French Cn 1 in " cafes i and perse night tions un mass filled throngs | booths, whi 1ous lines which toys A roaring represent | veasonable gifis casts. Mme. Lot for the reli cumstances festive THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. pital O Church Vive in Ity “ Way. 26.—Christmastide nce with bright Parisfans crlebrated fashi All the Own P was cheertul f it A in restaurants mmed on Christmas eve . arties til edre, this with special the leading churches which orning did o8 nspecting ch had along the attractive both candies, a8 sl fancy novelties greatly in excess of alks an articles were disp t | ot previous years, was done side of the festival numbers of frec to tamilies by of of widows in nece ove litt d a ot At mid musical attrac- The boulevards today were filled with | le been erected in contin- in nd th w at as meals and and out- 7,000 francs to be used itous cir- AMERICA'S PROUD POSITION Austria, st trl LONDON ponde European des o st dn inrth, Expert Co pxition Natio ns on De nt The Time mder Allianc says tha the Eeonomical tit Pa; United Vienna 1c ul Leroy Beaulleu in the Nues Wienertageblatt after recitin wnd growin It first | dust becom The 5001 have Amcricans ropeans T will year. a me the vegetate in He point dividually to markets labor to the an economi of tariffs b mission hinks, armament Russinn ¥ ton of Clayt ST. PETE Vremya indictment its unpara Clayton-Bul The case changed an Russia affo declaring t | by her promis in the Blac The Bour “Russia lomatic vi Europe dis it de Wike dated Amer| nothing aga old sympat LONDON, dis cussing the Ej 1€ America’s {mmense & population henceforth rial nation e strikingly United States iderable are tstomed sre particularly wame light dream the past that European comparatively re and cannot carry utmost limits and he sugj cal alliance and y & permanent reso eay be and evident will cons to regard Continenta 1 Orfentals of s out state A ewar wer Trenty n% Quite Proper. SRSBURG, Dec 8 of the United S lleled attempt to overturn wer treaty,” says is not unusual d the tr orded an hat she ¥ must example was no change in 1870 k sea.” w0 Gazette says is gratified by America's ctory over England likes the Mon sires to grab territorics ican possesstons (o Am. inst the Monroe doetri hies have grown more rica, Dec. ure t r 1s, w 1 1 8 he superiority by moreoyer mercantile marine in ho n- a diviston of | the regulation European com- This commercial co-operation, he | might lead to a gradual reduction of |APPROVE SENATE'S ACTION pers Regard Abroga- —The Novoe ish newspaper ates senate for the Conditions have t00. 0, ai hi longer bouna not to maintain war vessels p- Western doctrine be- everys Russia, which has sympathized with | America in her independence, which liqui- and the cordial The Times this morn- ing prints anotber long article on the prog- ress of American steel and irqn compett tion, concly iding s follows: “How mu; ch of the world's expansion will America take from us? nations? solved far expected United St producgs i the marvele facturing ¢ 1 especis upon forei paramount efliciency of A Na ST, of Oldenbur temperance e« PETERS many pparently the problem wi How much will she leave for us ¢ over with other turing sooner than has been generally the The abnormal demand of for its own engines slackening, increase in apacity for the ally for the last 1 markets. It is a to all others, even f the navy subsidy.” o last five three to 'y BURC Dec & president of the committee, at noon 1 thus bringlog American manu- ve to bear | question rs he ing ant St Petersburg, The prince | government | today d. clared the People’s palace open to the pub- lie, prin fic along with After [t Denth, CALCUT Kedleston, 0 occurred fn Wil SYDNEY, Barton convention the inaugural ceremonies the officials, [ bonic Plague. A, Dec. ~Lord the viceroy of India, today sald ice of the bubonic deaths from the discase the Mysore state in speech that Fo N First W W., Dec Intry. has accepted t Curzon he | and twenty of the higher army of- rs, including the commanding generals, | noblemen and wo- dined side by side with peasants and illes of workingmen. of the sin, plague ha in ve —Bdmund who was the leader of the federal earl of Hope toun's offer to form the first cabinet of the He anticipates no dieulty, federation Tew VIENNA saw says t th litical consy rested CARBON gennes, Central ral and Jake volved in Prosperous Davidson shot unded m Ar Dec. 25 hat fifty Poles have ere, accused of being in a piracy ted at Warsaw, two on " the this county, t brothers.” becam irrel with Heary Fo rmer, during which x {0 the ahd « which p. fa DAL small i i ¥ s fre 1in 1 dema A run through 1tV infured, whil din the she d tonght place that en will die 1t least e, MAYFIEI dead of u traged Ell Bowline. a Birch Hilly A bullet v ind fired room and heart, and 1 Douthit Hillyer wa ory 1o the Dix ROSTON champlon Jimmy Da eric club pointment agreed to f A [ but Davenport came le! Dixo; &0 on ing 1154, not at featherwelght, was substituted, Davenport fought a draw, Sheriff Killed, D, Ky. Dec. 9 inother ‘wounded | vy that ocourr erify and Kiiled the head Ithit wont (¢ 1 upor ured ' a live ran through Bow the rev 1t int was in th when the lattar irrested (oday murder of Usher, Disg Ints o Crowd, Dye « Dixon, featherweight venport - of Chel tonight. to the of & blg erowd Nght at the featherwol to the 135 pourds, n was at th and Andy st be A dispatch from War- n po- x " t Tl m a a brothers wer a i three of th. Charles Usher line: s Ia oly. the Usher's of shootng Sher- hot him dead acces- But il | steamers to Manila of Malde, | sentative Daly Alndl | is stin [CARS ARE RUNNING AGAIN OMAHA, WEDNESDAY Dutch Residents Will Join Boers if Their Ammunition is Bufficient. KITCHENER IN HEART OF DISTURBANCES in it Are Trembling e Lost Not Mur- Resene, | | British Fortunes | ¢ Halunce and May forcements Ar ried to the LONDON, Dec The Colony Is hanging in the Ing to the Morning Post's Capetown corre | spondent everything depends upon the | quantity of ammunition in possession of the disloyal Dutch residents, 100 of whom have | joined the Boers in the Philipstown dis trict alone. Energetic measures hav Leen taken to stew the invasion, but there unquestionably danger that parties of Boers will get through inta parts of the colony and gradually raise the whole Cape | in rebellion. Reinforcements can arrive none too scon. Most of the dispat from Capetown describe the raiders doing littie harm and as being rapidly enclosed Lord Kitchendr's command Lord Kitchener is in the heart of Gisaffected districts, He has the tage of being personally acquair couditions. March he vised the suppression of the rising occurred then. He bringing thousands of troops from the north The ard’s Capetown correspondent | ays the loyalist mand that martial shall be proclaimed throughout Cape but adds, “such a step is now im owing to lack of sufficient troops to enforce it The ccrrespondent apetown say he pro-Boer press is singularly quiet. | They have been made uneasy by the | promptness and thoroughness of the miii- tary action, but reports from various paris of the western provinces foreshadow perti- ous possibilities YA respensible made a position of Cape balance. Accord- as the advan- 1 with super- which down 1oc Last the of the Daily Mail at | recontly eclares that simply wait- resourceful colonist, who tour of the colony, per cent of the Dutch a ¢ for the appearance of leader to rebel Civil railway trafic has been suspended | largely in all parts of the colony and the movements of both the Boers and the Brit- 1sh ar: almost unknown in Capetown It appears that one Boer column tacked burg, but was repulsed and fled, entrenching ftself in the mountains Another Boer Commando captured a party | of poilce at Venterstadt Mounted colonial troops eurprised 300 Boers fifteen miles from Burghesdorp on December and after a brisk interchange of volleys retired with a loss of two men. The Capetown correspondent Times telegraphed that scarc Colonists have joined the invaders. NO SIGN OF DESPONDENCY Christmas Editorials Preas Recognize So in Measure LONDON, Dee. 25--1:25 a no sign of the despondency acterized “blak December the same time the Christmas find little cause for supreme tion. All express regret that the nation at war. Some take the trouble to remind their readers that there are four times us many troops in South Africa now | the were twelve months ago and all | engaged in the monotoncus and wearisome duties against n ever-cvasive foe anl | needing the sympathy of friends at home | at this festive season | The Standard, which says that Christmas | finds the British people in chastened mood, moralizes on the strange lack of | political foresight regarding the char- | acter and the wisdom of the Boers. It| confesses that everything has long since been done that would have been possible to end the war it we had been contending | apainst European powers.' It is confident, however, that the settle- | ment is only a question of time. Lord Kitchener's departure for De Aar would be sufficient to explain the absence of official news Elaborate preparations are being made to give Lord Roberts a popular welcome on January 3. Ten thousand troops will b | gathered in London to line the route to | Buckingham palace | of of the Lo th Af m.—Thers is which whar- last yaar. At ditorials satisfa as CAPETOWN, Dec. 24.—Regular railway | service between Capetown and DeAar has | been restored. The report of the destruc tion of a bridge south of PAar turns out to be incorrect; only a culvert was dam- ed. Trains are running from DeAar to Kimberley irrcgularly. There are consider- able delays elsewhere as the result of heavy rains. BOERS FORCED TO FALL BACK try Oc- Show LONDON, Dec. egraphing to the Nuauwpoort War December rhorneyeroft’s mounte occupied Britstown The Boers returned to tion of Prieska. Lord Kitchener, tel office under date of 9@, m., reports infantry b, without opposition he north in the i They will be followed Ve up Cape to ¢ LONDON, Dec ban to a news agency the Cape to Cairo telegraph line is In op eration fifty north Kasanga and 100 miles beyond the sou end of Lake Tanganyika iro Telegraph Li A dispatch from Dur here announces that | to a point miles May Have i Blinkey Mo PITTS} 25, —Wh i imy, was gheny Clark were aharge and was poss A, search of diselc fact that he rested Louls on charged rder. It real O'Nefll. and was one of the notorfous Blinkey Morgan who operated so extensively In this sectfon a number of years ago. Clark and his wife are about 42 y ald, and the police think they wanted In - othe made and of hi shopliftine und - thelr | Clark's o had been October e lic arrested on onsiderable loot o nis with m name J i, ar —— New Steamship I PORTLAND, Ore., Deg steamers between Portland and will be in ation by February Oregon and Orlental ~ company to imodate the growing between the ports, has declded to into commission the steamers Monmouthsair and Caermarthenshire, The steamers will be used exclusively In ihe rerviee and make regular trips.” For the past the sbbers of Portlard have been 10 e the “establishment of a f They sent a repre. there to inquire into the trads conditions and the new steamship line is the result, order trade ar trying line | l \ ; \ [CAN GROW SUMATRA TOBACCO | The | profit of | imported Sumatra | churches holding special ! with having robbed the | “Perr | simulta MORNIN( T Heat All Othe City o the For! of the Chinese, WASHINGTON, 1 ~Some contro versy has arisen over the question who among the Amerfcan forces are e a the credit for first.entering the Fourbi den City of Pekin, China, when the moved from Tien Tsin to relieve th tions. This honor seems to attach to the | Ma cory according to the official | hes on file in the Navy department, | the report of Captain Long of the ine corps, which follows, appears to bear out th hat the marines were | In the Forbidden City, as they were | on Cuban soil, when they landed Guantanamo in June, 1808, Tie following is the officfal tain Long of the Iirst regiment he fol1c 1 respectfully subm port on the duties perfobed by ( D United States marinas, at Pekin on_August 16, 1900 tine the Forbldden City had entered by any of the allied 3 fOUr gates between nd the Forbidden « the previous day by but then they haited and to the first gate, wnlch Recetving an_order from the officer of ‘maines to enter n City and sefze such buid uATters might be most ad- for licld and oc mediately with my ¢ s urth “gate and entered th sentries “obfected our ot consider their claim that poing. On enterl ton, the C'h ha ing thele tents and ban. boxt col minstra my belief upition of the allied remained m.. when woand to Aptal United Com- allies lega- | claim first first s ¢ at port of Cap- smpany China, [ [ t lly withdrew held mmanding the Forbj 1 | | b i v t | ® [ [ about I At the fou Lieutenan were the officcrs in Very respectfully CHARLES G LON United States Marine ¢ o Commuanding Officer, First Iment, United States Marines 1. Respectfully forwarded the mander-in-chief transmission to commandant of the Marine corps 2 The incident described her known to me while in Pekin and 1 helfeve | Bas not been mentioned thus far in report of the campaign in China HENRY CLAY COCHRANE, United Staes Marine Corps, fved an @ guard itthews and marine D with me withdr hgite Litt « [ S, Reg- com (Im“ « in_ became | [ I Colonel « P t REMEY, |t Navy, Come |y AVITE, ) mander: t b the Ralsed Valley. W [ o b ed Or- Iy in the t LINGTON, Dec. 25.—The following notice was posted today by the secretary of agriculture “Milton Whitney, chief of reports a successful termination of experiments conducted in co-operation With the Connecticut experiment station in the production of Sumatra tobacco near Hartford. Onc-third of an acre was planted under a cheesecloth shade nine feet high, and cultivated and fermantsd under the direction of M. L. Floud, {obavco expert of the department. The yleld of cured to- bacco was 700 pounds, making an estimated yield for one acre of 2,100 pounds. T lost about 10 per cent the fermenta- tion. The crop has just been sold by L. Haas & Co. of Hartford, to Michaelson Hibbard of Kansas City for $47; , making an estimated for one acre of $1.421 ost of production, including the whole cost of the shade, the frame for which will last five will not ex d $500 an acre, leaving a net profit of over $400 per acre. This an ge pric 7| a pound The grown the field withou and fermen 1 ame way about the same nd br a pound, or | ate of an Deducting would leave a profit The crdinary crop of brings the farmer or $360 an acre, and leaves a division of [ N solls| t W t in v B[t o. & value | years, ¥ t I 1 | cents » in shade viel ht $307.87 same in the quantity it the r cost of cultivation t of about $300 an acre Connecticut valley bout s a pound, uct of $200 an acr obacco grown under shade itted to New York and Phila business men and has been pro {stactory and fully equal f{o These facts, taken in award at the Paris ex- points for the Florid v over that given for the Sumatra show that we can grow Sumatra tobacco of the bighest quality in this country d our farmers be- tween $6,000,000 and £7,000,000, which is now | sent abroad annually for the foreign-growa leaf. work is the result of the sofl survey made in the Connecticut valley two years ago, A4 similar results can pected orly from similar where soils and climatic conditions are to those in the valley and Flori acre t t 1 bout & cost expenses, The has be delphia nounced imatra ) sub connection with the position of grown Sumat huported S save t v T I 1 t be ex the flar in areas sir Connecticut at the White I, SHINGTON, Dec generally observed Christu w. we. Christmas day here, all of the ervices. At the and Mrs. M ts at dinner nberg, Dr Hiestand, and Mrs. M was i White e Kinley Surgeon and Mrs neral Cortelyou The p House the president had with them as gue General and Mrs. Ste Rixey, Mrs. O, Corbin and Secretary sident did not go to church, he and ) McKinley took two drives into the country during the day. Secretary Mrs. Hay, Postmaster General and Smith and Representative Payne of York called on them R ——— CATCH AN OLD-TIME CROOK but out | [ s and Mr New ¢ Burglar Don Inve Who Has i Jail D Philndelphin, PHILADELPHIA, Dec venty-year old Gustav Kindt, an ex-convict, said be known to the police of many citles of the country, was arrested y charged in the whole John Sloan at Callowhin in th clty When caught he was equipped with all the tools of an expert cracksman Chlef of De tectives Miller recognized b as “French Gus who had served terms in ma states of the union. According to the criminal records at police headquarters Kindt came to this country in the early He born in Belgium and is known to the po lice as “Frank Lavay,” “Isador Marshall,” | Marecall” and “French.” While || #erving a term in Sing Sing prison he in- vented vice for and usly all vice i [ to t i safe sale T re of street liquor st { to 1) I ¥ 6 was a i closin, tier vernor to th pardon doors £ the in a interested the g Kindt offered it they would of w York authorities, providing him, but the offer was not accepted. Th prisoner, however, finally escaped and wa arrested here in 1892 and sentenced to five years in the e rn penitentiary for for Bery. He has been held without bail, pend- 1bg @ further examination, u | says the race small station mi| | te within doors to avoid groes while he Sheriff Rave was scen gan shooting into the mob. his store and came direct to this city sheriffs sworn representatives States, near Frankfort, built FRANK RICHARDSON Prominent son son stomach T services \ hi W 1 v T [§ i} N 1900-TEN PAGE: | WAWINES FiNel 10 ENTER/RACE WAR ON IN INDIANA Drunken Negroes Institute a Reign of Ter- ror at Cementville, WHITE CITIZENS DRIVEN OFF THE STREETS Sheriff Goes to the Scene and Suce cedw in Patehing Up Temporary Truce—Renewal of Trouhle Jxpected So INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Dec. 25.—A spe- {al to the News from Jeffersouville, Ind., war is on at Cementville, a on the Panhandle road, five north of this city, and serious trouble expected at any minute. The negroes are well armed, and the whites are kceping them Thi outbreak began yesterday after- noon, when Lee Ranger and John Redmond negroes, both very drunk, started in to in- imidate whites. When their insults were resented other negroes jumped in with the razed men and captured Sam Ken. saloon. Nearly twenty shots were fired. but no one was hurt. An appeal by elephone made Sheriff Rave for help, and he drove out to Cementville In a JugEy iquor tall's was to wis present After his de Jlace and message after message came 1o he local police to send men to the town in asked to go to the but lined to do last night in addition to his saloon, conducts o Kendall a dry goods store, which was being att his wife, and into this the locked after the firlng at the saloon Mra. Kendall was badly frightened and hor husband ran into the place and bee Ranger was shot known, as he w ay and 1 by his com Kendall's life was threatened, but about midnight he was able to escape from walk- ning Prosccutor Montgomery and begging him to warrants and have depu in to serve them. It was daylight when the town becam the negroes having everything the own way. So far today no outbreak has aken place, because the whites are In imidated to such an extent that they are using every possible precaution to prevent colliston with the blacks. It is believea he &l quarrel will bring about a bloody There 1s no direct telephone connection with the place, but a private line, owne the railroad, is being used to ke officers posted. If trouble begins this will be cut out by the rioters. Y negroes not ut how arried badly is issue Almost quiet, test riot a q ARMENIAN APPEAL FOR AID Revolutionary Federntion Assen At Washington Invokes Inter- vention of United States. Dec. 2 At a convention of of the Armenlan Revolus lonary Federation the following resolution, which was telegraphed to President Me was adopted BOSTON, Tiec, 25.—To His Excellency, MeKinley, President of the Unite Washington, D. C.: The commi ces of the American Revolutionary F ation of this country in their annual con- entlon assembled in Boston imously ongratulate you upon yoar r he presidency of the United your excellen Kkind 1 deplorab’ ndit as our Armenia hing and will' xoon b xterminated if a powerful hand does not 1e to the rescio of such a nation, which has been the mplon of civilization for enturies n Asin Minor. In the present complicated situat suropean diplomucy the United States is he o n that has been unselfish and ieutral in Oriental affairs and yet a friend or suffering es—the only nation who i terrorize the great assassin and his sloodthirsty fanatics to save the remainder of their victims from imminent bloodshed Our_fathers and brothers gave their o8 for the sake of oar country and w e all ready to fall in their places but in his utmost struggle have we not the 0 expect assistance from this great re ic, which founded its existence upon rev- Lition und which has the inheritance of iberty from Washington and Lincoln Pleise o wishes led BOSTON, ntion to people in of surances Discovery Near ¥ Occaslons Surprise in Milwauke: MILWAUKEE, Dec, Surprise was oc- asioned in this city by the report of the iscovery of the bones of Father Marquette Mich. It has been gen- ally supposed for the last twenty years hat the body of Father Marquotte 1s in possession of Marquette college, this city other relics were located ther Jacker, an Indian missionary, in t St. Ignace, Mich,, on the site of 1 of the Mission of St. Ignatius ch ather Marquette founded in 1671 ther Jacker found the ruins of the chapel nd, digeing beneath the altar's site, dis vered the relics. They were sent to iette college, which was then being A celebration was held at 8t. Tgnace n 1879 on account of Father Jacker's dis- overy, he Wy I 878, bones and SHOT Busin n of St. Jo- ST. JOSEPH, Mo, Dec. a wealthy busine vannah, Mo, in Savannah Tonight it 25.—Frank Ric 8 man of this city was murdered at his last night about 9 was discovered that ardson and home ' clock tranger followed him from town and shot | pim in the back of the juarrelled, and Mrs, tranger say “Well, has it come to this?" She heard a pistol shot and her husband tered the house and fell dead. Richard- was the brother of John D. Richard the general manager of the biscult rust. The dead man was a stockholder n the trust head. They haa Richardson heard the JUMPS ON DOCTOR'S STOMACH WICHITA, Kan Ponca City, O. T., formerly of Knox, near there. Death Cowboy Hamm of him down and dancing on his The doctor was over 60 years 1 recently saved the life of Hamm trouble arose over a bill for medical digpaten Dr. 1 L Mo., is dead ot is sald to be Moody's ranch rom {fawkins Ralston, lue n, cking old Pitieide on Christmas Day. AT FALLS, Mont e toduy and "fatilly s won John. = Werten had. tr wifo badly and the son intcrfered to pro- ect the moth he father drew a olver and fired a ball Into the boy's nec 'he s paralyzed and will die. Wes. el surrcndered RE h woundad ited his and to some extent quieted the ne- | arture another outbreak took | SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS CONDITION OF THE WEATHER for Thursday. Forecast and ALVORD TRIAL BEGINS TODAY Amount of Restitution faulting Cashier is Be Brought « Vade by pected to ut. W YORK, Dec. 2. —The trial of Cor- nelius Alvord, jr., defaulting cashier of the First Nationul bank of this city, is set for tomorrow in the United States court. The amount of his defalcation was $600,000, o tri of Al and the Interesting features of the which in all probability will be ught out th United States district attorney in his examination, fs restitution of the stolen funds ma ) this time, The officers of the Fir tional bank have been reticent upon point ever since Alvord's arrest he his effects in his h » at Mount Ver umounted to very Httle Where the bank really made good part of its loss was, it 1s in the turning over of Mrs. Alvor jewels. Thelr value has been estimated ot not thun $150,00 and the story that were taken to the ba placed in the custody of one of the Wwho locked them up In o strong b they be appratsed and long gems were In the Mrs. Alvord 18 not known has had them for thr that they were presents from her husband, The whole story I8 expected to come « before the prosceution closes its case by the amoant to up t Na this sald loss o8 Kk and officers x unti [ possession I they could wold these s sald she or four years, and and Another MUSKOGEE, 1 full-blood Indian, at Kansas river, two mile went there with his wife this afternoon and whi'e Intoxicated met L. B. Roper and threatened to kill him. Roper immed ately struck Tiger with a board, no further words passing. Tiger went to buggy, got a rifle and came back, failed to find Roper. wged, he pro ceeded 1o fire at everyone he saw, shooting Beck through the hips and killing himg shooting and killing Dave ter, nephew of Chief Porter, and mover named Johnson, on his way Missourt In a covered wagon with his family, Bud Taylor, aged 18 years, a boy, was shot through the shoulder and I8 not expecte to live. Tiger fmmediately fumped horse and tried to escape, but was chased three miles, when he jumped oft his horse Bot behind a tree and begun shooting, Deputy Marshal Johnson, who returned the fire, struck Tiger in the arm. The murderer surrendered and was brought to Eufaula. Tiger's arm will have 1o be amputat Jo Bmith, who lives two miles Checotah, became invo'ved in a quarr with T. Thompson over the shooting ut Eufaula and began shooting, Thompson being mortally wounded. | TWO CARS RUN AT SCRANTON Strike, of t ohn Tiger farm on the Ar south of Pufaula t from Work. | SCRANTON, Pa., Dec Owing to the | successtul work of the scouts of the strik | Ing car mem ten of the thirteen men | brought frem Syracuse, N. Y., to take their places, were sent home today and two | others were induced to quit and agree not to go back to work. Only two cars were | county today. One of these, Superintendent Patterson was motorman, ran off the track at 11 o'clock and was so [m.nv damaged it had to be taken to the barn. No other car was sent to replace it and at 1:30 the other of the two cars was taken in and housed. Thirty-one men arrived tonight from New ! York Clty to take the strikers' places, but | seventeen quit at the railroad station at the solicitation of the strikers' scouts and promised to go back to New York., They say they were recruited through adver tisements in the papers to come to Scran ton to work on a mew road and that none | of them had any idea there was a strike | in progress here. e run in the whol on which | IMISS HOEL STILL MISSING | Belter Wa in Puchlo that Girl Left Voluntarily n O to Bireak O ending Marringe. PUEBLO, Colo., Dec The police have led to unearth any clue to the where- nts of Maggle Hoel, the yvoung womar mysteriously disappeared thre day ago from her uncle's home near this ¢ty The Impression 18 growing that she left | of her own accord, One the is that the girl fled to avold fulfilling T marriage | engagement, which was set for two or thre months ahead. There is a probability that wh | was in that white vielnity In & coach drawn by the morning previous to her disappearance had some connection | with the mystery, though the strange woman gave a sharp and repelling rep! to Miss Hoel when the girl inquired If she | could assist her. The house Is in an | lated placc In the river bottoms, surrounded | by thickets and the presence there of a fine richly dressed woman 1s some 1al IS STILL OPTIMISTIC Fusion Leader Dee! ciples of His M lowing Are 1 horses on thing very | BRYAN | i y=Taile nrtal, Kan LEAVENWORTH, lam J. Bryan today, Neb., to the | following: | “Please present greetings to my political | friends of Leavenworth and of Kansas. The { principles of democracy sthil live and the | policies for which the fusion forces fought {Will yet be vindicated. We can enicr the twertieth century with the confident he licf that the people will soon return to the | teachings of the fathers and to the | tions of the republic.” Shaw ( tn Suicide, PHIA, Dee W. Irving who had been filling the position of | United States consul at Barranquilla, Co. | lombia, and who was recently appolnted consul general to Singapore, committed | suicide in a hotel here today. He opened | a femoral artery and slashed his throu and wrists with a knife. 11 health is sug posed to have effected bis mind Mr. Shaw was 88 years old Clearfield county, Pennsylvania vived by a widow and two sons, Dec wil- venlng Standard, sends the tradi « | PHILAD Shaw & native of He 1s sur district | DRUNKEN INDIAN RUNS AMUCK | the unknown and well dressed woman who | wiring from Lincoln, | ULTIMATUM IS ISSUED | Pat Orowe Must Either Surrender or Prove His Innccencs, POLICE WATCHING SOUTH OMAHA HO USE Impreesion Gaining Gronnd That Suspeote: Man is Hiding There. HIS ESCAPE DECLARED TO BE IMPOSSIBLE Man at Pacific Junction Holding Pony ata Big Figure, DEMANDS FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR IT in Ranning Down by Amatear De- ves, Who Are Su They Have a “Ti It is said that Mr. Cudahy has given Pat Crowe until midnight of Tuesday to either prove that he had nothing to do with the kidnaping or rrender an that Steve is here to deliver the message to him. The will mot deny that such ultimat been issued, but they fuse to give 1y details It it is true ‘.Ill edfet f this kind has | ms to imply (hat the police | exact whereabouts of Pat Crowe that, in al Crowe in hiding th Omaba and that for fear of being police m ha an i that forth it do not know but their some gone the the inference | optnton, Pat where fn Omaha or he emerge | arrestea it attorney this fsn't true follow sked a well 1 the case why should demand his surrende It would be ridiculous for the police to de- mand the surrender of & man unless they were In a position to enforce their de- mand. In my opinion they have got IPat Crowe cornered in South Omaha, that they have him in a state of siege and that thess | terms are named before they cloge in upon | him.» It Is well known that there are certain hous in South Omaha that are under | constant police survelllance night and but the police will not admit that Pat Crowe is suspected to be in any of them. et Over Pony. A curlous complication has arisen at Pacific Junction concerniug the proprietary rights in the matter of the little bay pony which it is believed was used by the Omah Kiduapers. Joseph Goedrich, the Burling ton englncer who now bas the animal, re- fuses to permit it to be breught to Omaha or to relinquish control of it unless he is pald §5,000, so Detective Heltfeld, wha was sent down there to bring it back, was compelled to return empty-banded. An other phase of the situation i3 that Mrs, Bertha Mack, who lives next door, also claims the pony. She says that not only the bridle and saddle, but the pony as well, were left in her barn last Friday night fang that Mr. Goodrica’s Mtde son opened her barn door and let the pony out, after- ward driving it into the Goodrich stable Mrs. Mack adds that unless Mr. Goodrich will turn the pony over to the Omaha po- lice she will have him arrested, charged with the theft of the animal, but there is a doubt as to her legal right to do this. Frank Glynn, the 14-year-old boy, who aw the pony ridden by the bandit who used his (Glyno's) father's telephone Wednesday morning, has visited Pacific Junction and has seen the pony now being held there, but failed to {dentify it. He says he Is positive it s not the pony the bandit tied in front of his father's livery stable last Wednesday morning. The po- lice, however, are disposed to think that | the boy 1s mistaken. The antmal at Pa- {cific Junction certainly has all the general | markings of the one which has appeared several times in the use of the kidnapers. “If the pony at Pacific Junction {s not the ed by the kidnapers,” sald Chlet Donalue yesterday, “there is certainly somethi crooked in its history some- where, s otherwise why should it he aban doned in o private barn under such pe- cullar circumstanees?” | The Pacific Junction pony is described as | a dark bay of uncertain breed, welght 80 | pounds, 8 to 10 years old, white star In | forehead, heavy mane and tall, three white feet, hind feet white above the ankle, small lump on back made by saddle, nerv- ous about head and ears, four feet shod, front shoes with side and end corks. The suddlo 15 of the kind known as the cow- boy's saddle and fs worn, but n good condi- tion and is fitted with a double girth. Upon the left stirrup is carved the letter 3" with a jackk The number *204" is pressed into the leather flaps Mr. Greevy Saw the Animal, One of the persons who will bo compg- tent to pass upon the identity of the pony and upen the identity of the slender bandit | with the long, blonde mustache as well, is M. J. Greevy, whose name has not here- tofore appeared in this case. Mr. Greevy, manager of the Lemon Gold Mining com- pavy, has this to say on the subject “On the afterncn of Saturday, December 15, I saw a man who answers the deserip- tion of the light-complcxioned bandit, rid- ing a pony which answers the description of the one now held at Pacific Junction. I | 1eft my home at Twenty-eighth and Hick- | ory streets to go to the branch postofice at_the northeast corner of Hanscom park, when I saw a man who bore a striking re- sem! Pat Crowe come out of one the nelghboring stores and mount a pony with a white star in its fore- 07 course that was before the kid- at that time I had no special Pat Crowe, but my attention to both him and his mount that the apimal shied and him to the ground as h» was In the act of vaulting into the sad- [‘u:. 1 ched him as he rode away ind observed that instead of following the | paved street he struck through the park taking a westerly course. I thought odd nd after all this talk about complexioned bandits and bay pomles 1 | have often thought that this might have [ been the man and this the pony for which the police are now lookiug. I could reco | nize either the horse or the rider It hould ever see them agaln.' | Mr. Greevy may go to Pacific the pony and attempt known who ha closely « { | ance to bay head nay inter and t in attracted by the fact \Imost threw that light- Junctlon to tdentity her |GERTAIN HE IS IN ST. J0SEPH at City Says I Crowe Mon- ne Policeman Palked in with dny Alte JOSEPIH, Mo )—Pat Cro hiding in 1 dete Dec ST 26.—~(8peatal Tele- much-wanted man, city and the whole force 15 hunting him. Crowe 8 & frequent visitor to this city, where he has many and influential friends wnd 1t 18 from the latter fuct that bis cap- th | police a