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AN FRANCISCO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1900 PRICE FIVE CENTS MINERS MEET TO CONSIDER OFFFER OF INCREASED RATE Rally of the Strikers | ! in Convention at |+, Scranton. —_— | 'Mitchell Makes an . Address Predicting Bright Future. | Probable That Matter Union Officers. ST LA LXXXVIII— CHINESE MINISTER | DOUBTS STORY OF FRESH UPRISINGS, ' |Boxers Not Powerful| : in Provinces of the South. Vicerogs Competent' to Cope With the | ‘ Rebels. Reports to Attract| 1E +—————————=| Attention From Von | Waldersee. - —— —— ! Sl s . s s he Minister is con- | I | CRANTON, Pa, Oct. 12 to o Jer serious n r e R ed troops of th | hundred and fifty-seven s of th . = difficulty in restor- | S ald e 3 - .'. | ie reports that it | power to end or to contl e . B 2 re | t | antharicte coal miners’ . s rn China T VERY | | which has been in progress for m « » gy i e ] b smuous.i | three weeks, met in convention here to- . a Cities in Six Districts in the Hands | | or the purpese of considering the 10 = PR . Bt of the Rebels. 1 per cent net advance in wages off - . - conss- | TONDON —The Times has the| | the operators and ed t from . kong, dated yester- t taking any actl g rs’ propositi to-day’s sessions were devoted to ing the convention and to spee many of the delegates on tI owners’ cone n. It was not expected the Wel-Hal-Wei ix districts nds of the rebels. | r in Canton its is by | side of a general exchange of vie o ntic after was per that nothing of a suggested which wo to a N of what is, to the miners, 2 knotty prob- | pp. firet business of t n ses | lem. s From the trend of the remarks of the 12.—The reformer, | g to dispatches urled the reform | portant town of Welchou, | given rise s | THE RIDDLE OF THE SPHINX. of be is believed the ob- n raising thelir flag e Canton of troops, | | e the city. O s o or emoms ROOSEVELT REPLIES TO THE I e SRR T IR QUESTIONS ASKED BY BRYAN &iiiiiis & Copyright, 1900, by Keppler & Schwartzmann, and reproduced from Puck by permission. | the Havas agency from Tientsiir say: avices from China, s ' Justifies Acts of the Administration and Then » ‘ i of Labr s o e e < Interrogates the Democratic Candidate. Procedure Is in Doubt. ot wemenky. oatever s also had a t . e the city t blic haill by S num. As a full of red fire an of mar night, The ) parties re Admiral Ho Pursues Rebels. fl and | v e = e 3 S majority | b legat were ver - S 0! attended nor so demonstrative r of the I and I is T frem z s s of last week. Ratf: eate A ¢ ng the G r greater part of the d nd this circum- 3 s ance s ha dampening influ- i = ? | ence on the ardor of the crowd well " | v " as upon their attendan Government he poltticlans whose | 1 a EN I ANGLED lN A BALLOON'S Governor Roosevelt's address at Evans. | sisnee Mr. Bryan is, t : When Mr. Bryan was Introduced at ville follows he v 1 Springfield, where he had one of the best s be aske ¥ Repub! becau crowds cof the day, some en astic ad- Festerdzy at Nashville, Mich Mr. Bry v el is et satiode : i“‘" fled tn the days coln the farmer President.” s heil | because it R 1 X | 52 (QOWENE 46 g Olfe ] Lo AN TP The exclamation attracted Mr. Bryan's "'"‘;“"’ the | do what yo | Did you buy him or did you get him by strike h ven e 1 2, 0w 3 Re i you & 8 attention, and he sald: The conve Luckless Spectator Rescued by an Aeronaut When a A. There. is, of course, no (tle to the Fil-| .y g0 not wapt to be elected under faise Advance Not Satisfactory. session and = s - evils o ca or of the Hawatian Islands, | Pretenses. I am not a farmer: I am an| “For Thousand Feet Above Terra Firma. | i coma o o e e aoind~. | agriculturist. You know the iffefence be- | operators Deputies Hurried to Scene. sensible man : ; ¥ HAZLETON. tween them. A. farmer is a man who | for better ¢ is now Mr. Bryan's own State of Nebraska, | makes his money on the farm and spends | have offered an Thomas Jefferson. The Phil. | it in town. while an agriculturist is a man r wages dor Erddas kes his money in town and spends ance is not satisfactory y and purchased exactly as | it on th farm." have felt. and with justice. istana terrifory was acquired under | This definition pleased the audience, and | Period of time should be n Jefterson, Florida under Monroe and all the | all lstened attentively to his speech | Which this advance shoul | force. e | in the Louisiana territory, including what Special Dispatch to The Call. 'were b | an corporatt an | modern irdustrial developme: oked below, and saw his| 2 (0)If the trusts are a bad thing, wh He wered | 2ia the Rex administration rged him to hang |trusts to be organized than during all pre- to repal ers to be ing made them from proceeded to were acquired 12.-Yanked a tk low more | trapeze, he could | vious history of the country? Test of the territories Which we have ac- | tnroughout. At this point Mr. Bryan de- _ o him ot He Bicikas 1 4 uSe okl can administration did mot | T2ired | voted his principal attention to the trusts n %0 un- | fearing tro s G0 450b5 Drpmsteed Then Mo ] - SO DOC NI, ERini yos oyl buy the right | 4nq his arguments were along the usu Harvey and t be made. Hoft haa | allow more tr ] hute Jump, byt | 8l Previous history of the country. Incient- Z wages | ried to Der: 1 also believe | the mean to govern peo; A. This | in time the striker has already been answered In my re- ,;,: .r H. Machad young m meant the| ally, the Standard Ofl (‘nmr‘nm', the American i 86 a6 S Thotoks - ToNe acts At Dayton the meeting was held at the preparations w ¥1 Dorado County. at the falr gromnds to- | death of both. Hoft then fet the £as out | paccizdna B A o 0ha X0ro | tlomait shat T soulabuy the' sizhe to; govele | SR EIoURas And M| Bryan: spoke:trom s, il chilaren to shrick 2nd faint | he had with i The orters croorkT | fore the present administration. But . Mr. e m;,np::hff“:‘:;n ::: gm.m 2 th, you reserving | abandoned. Whe oo s o e g =03 rr;*nurmrfi powers the organization of these trusts and T CRPR L L Coing 10 o with the e it o Gaciteng WG, sithier Vhether it Is believed wise at this| The Governor's troc B 3 ncouraging | that §t was the action of his own party asso- " . either ds | .o to insist upon a compliance with | to-day, and is still there. The horses are Filipino when you get him? Are you golng to | Republicans or gold De: Kill him? Mr. Bryan's election four A. We are not golng to kill the Fiiipino_un- nsion by Pro- on was being 3 for a number of assist- ocrats, opposed ears ago. One of them was an ex-Mayor of the city. % man and the later | clates in Congress on June 1 last, which pre- | as though paralyzed. | vented tne passage by Congress of a consti- on drifted to the southwest of | tutional amendment which would have given all your demands is a question which | quartered in the company’s stables and you, as most interes re called upon | the men in smali hotels at Shep | to decide. Personally, I have hoped we | Derringer. ants ahl Biaada e ot o e 1R : . 1l our soldiers, a vil ‘ Sashals of those wh rk half a mile and made its descent | the national Government the power sought tor, | U he fries to kill our 13: ™ and he will | In introduelng his speech at Dayton Mr. | & © "0 oo a¢ this time to establish ed forward. He held on to the ropes hout aceldent. 2 (Q) 1 some trusts are good and some | 107 tr¥ING to Kill our soldiers very soon after | pryan charged the Republican party with | o D had of ah b A e Treated as a Trus self usefyl. When 0 touchea earth again he | bad. can you teil the difference between a he becomes convinced that he Wil recelve 10| using speclous arguments -to catch par- | B ookt e e | W ARBEMOYON. O took his posi- state of total collapse, anq | §°0¢ °0e and & bad one? | porther £id from the parey of el M- Bvas | ciular clasege of votere. “Asito the ciaim | ToooT S0 ST SR et ninous | ctood that A ¢ seemed more dead than alive. Hofr | 4. @) Do you know of an¥ =0od monopoly tn | Bt g ‘h o ‘n i e| ‘K‘ 08 o do with | 13104 the interests of the soldiers were | 5 : ,r s a0 jp, "e,”. andi o o some o = Sl S e Sonss Brden sroemiite Ut} ivate hands? | him. the answer ls simole. We are £oing to | sater in the care of the Republican party | TINers: Oeleme ic T o o o et | American cooies 3] o gl around him and assisted | 7. (@) Do you know of any man good enough | civilize him and give him the peace, order and | no“ Broan’ sata: convention and like prudent, sensible by ety S . 'hr’gir o A fn ~|~ % Te shortly recovered and | 1o stand at the head of a monopoly and de- | individual lberty and gradual increase of seit- | = PO T e iness men mutually agree upon a scale | = T2V - \ ground was taken back to the park, where the | termine the price of that which others are to | Eovernment of which Mr. Bryan would deprive | e soldler is In more danger If his| . w,ceq which remains In force for one | \1¢ MeaN ; ; could discern | crowd deluged him with congratulations. | use? | him for all time by turning him over to a syn. | INterests are left to men who stand at| .. tnus removing the causes of strikes | 2 3 fTust fund of wh . n a cry of | Machado could not explain how he came | A Mr. Bryan's terminology is here so loose | dicate of corrupt Chinese half-brecds and fe- | the head of the great monopolies than he | 17011 1 oo "and even yet T belteve thag | 'S the custodian. u rr crowd. Then. | to be caught in the ropes. He said he djiq | that it 1s @ifficult to know what he means. If | roclous Tagal bandits. | is if he leaves his Interests to those who in the future the anthracite operators will reached as to its stillness of [ not relish his trip and.had had all the | he uses “trusts” in the sense of large corpor-| Mr. Bryan yesterday attempted to answer | belong to the common people. I will go accept this humane and progressive meth. > e ors as they | pallooning he wanted. Hoff sald the ropes | 81008 an% intelligent man must know that| what I said about his attacks upon the United | further than that. I will say that the | . o ' _.tinc with thelr emplos 5 > Official Contradiction. they believed | were wourd about Machado's arm. shoul., | theFe. ar® ¥ood_corporations and bad corpora- | States army. He says that the Presigent in | welfare of the Union soltier and WS pen- | *..y apor orsanizations, like o S e e e unate man. | der and neck, and that it would have been | 1™ and the difference between them can be | his message of December, 1835, asked for an | Sion are safer In the hands of a Confed- | s - afie-Revd 1o '!m E ( -saving | diction has been issued of the reports of his situa- | impossible for him to have fallen. The | told as readily as the difference between two | army of i00,000 men two months before there : e€rate soldier than in the hands of a great | :8 “m; .r‘c-!uu\ ) )l.h a‘,’na} may | that an invasion of the Sh ng province loop arose he | seronaut said the balloon had reached g | ToUY Private tndividuals. As for mo- | was any war in the Philippine Islands. He| monopoly, for the Confederate soldier -°F # i with them: may, | 1s contemplated Wi DRt o 200 act ” @ | nopolies In private hands, patents are such | asks: ‘‘Does Mr. Roosevelt know this of | knows something about the sacrifices of | "“"‘“?Ie n‘j A ”:: a” power, retard the e s;—‘u“ Cuar s to 0l “Bevs | Mechado 1 B yoais ‘ot 4 3 monopolies, and if Mr. Bryan means that all | course 1 knew this, and let me also add that | war, while the heads of syndicates only | 5‘;“’"} th v h ; ons for a time, but Sane te Sy gy e e > Saat” R by ge and had | monopolfes are bad, he means that patent laws | Mr. Bryan ought to know, what every well-in- | know war as an opportunity for the ac- | e Grath craried 0 eSOy ‘onl| 9T, PITEREDUNG. Oct. B-The OM- | come here from El Dorado to attend the | should be abolished outright. Does he reaily | — R e Sttt o e T T e T N Gdfenge | 4 Miar Reve Mas St s L It i The aecronaut, seeing that the balioow | fair mean this? If not, his words mean nothing. (Continued on Second Page.) | People’s sufferings.” inr‘-;\':\v’io::n?x:mgg‘wpf:;:i me to admon. :’l::ec“::r.he N the r