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THE SAN FRANCISC O CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1903. FRENER I RHIFS 61 i STRIKE in Chiczgo Sariously Com- plicated. N Allies Reject Agree- Join the Carmen. S SR h One Line Is Operated All t Hindrance, New Con- ns May Render Arbi- Necessary. 1t an PROPOSED. fort was DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery CURES Weak Lungs. $3,000 FORFEI7 Will be paid by the World's Dispensary , Proprietors, Buf. falo, N. Y., if they cannot show the orig- 1 signature of the individual volun- ring the testimonizi below,and alsc e writers of every testimonial among ousands which they are constantly g, thus proving their genuine- commenced taking medicines, s ago, my bealth was compietely - writes Mrs. Cora L. Sunderiand. ®At times I room without Best make mont ther p o fu life more comfor: le and t better. Moneybacl, ke grocery busine 'TURKEY'S . REPLY IS PROMISED — POLICE KEPT OFF. WANT Strike Leaders Will Submit Requests to Chicago City Authorities. cages £ 2 3.—Organiz escent is made on the t their dema sked about MINERS TO GO TO WORK. Operators and i-:;ployee Come to Terms on Eight-Hour Schedule. should e-hour day The commit- is proposition it for a ref- it is be- =d by the will return e men work Monday elght-hour of several confe: ver by the operatars of the Coke Company and John F. Ream hio, 2 member of the National Exe- cutive Council of the United Mine Work- d Natlonal Organiger . Tepresenting Presi- This Ream said the men would agree t reduction of wages if hour day. FRRGG St OPERATORS OFFER TERMS. | Miners Insist That the Union Must Nov. 13.—For the time since the strike of the coal miners in this district was declared on Monday, J. T. Kebler, general manager | of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, |18 said to have made advances to effect a settlement. To-day, it is authoritatively stated, he requested the striking miners to appoint a committee of five men to confer with him in his office at Trinidad. This proposition was rejected by the men, | |who say the United Mine Workers of America must be recognized before any settlement can be made. The proposition is said to have been made in both Stark- ville and Engleville, two Colorado Fuel and Iron Company's mines, which have HANIY CHIEFS -~ WAR AMONG THEMBELVES ‘Trouble Brewing on the General ch to The Call Nov. 13.—Brigadier er of the general staff w temporarily ap- 4 it was organ- rstanding that he was ppines in December in own request made has asked that in- ad of bei ct to the archi- pelago he t to make an exten- sive tour to study military problems. st was made directly the head of Lieu- hief of staff, and a smoldering but he general staff. rbing element in His amended req harge has soon became too orbin and he got out then com- ent of the East, who hief of staff. d would consume several be on easurable jaunt to the s Root is mow con- It is strongly sus- purpose of General e his arrival in the al Wade, now In Heved 15, INDIANS WERE T0 BLAE Governor Reports on Recent Outbreak in Wyoming. 13.—In an in- Chatterton of his investiga- recent trip to Central regard to the responsibility outbreak. r ascertained that shortly reported te Sheriff that a band of Sioux the border of Weston and es, but were also slaugh- raj en. These re- thentic that the Sheriff of six men and started he Indians, meeting them the Cheyenne river. st reached the Indian of the Indians were will- y were under Char- Feather, his Sioux e deflant when the Indians were 1 to take them. He to break camp. the Sheriff and his posse some distance, urging er and submit to the law. Speriff retired and men to his party. The overtook the Indians on ay after about sun- was made upon the Indians to halt and surrender. This was repeated three times, when the Sioux opened fire, the officers replying immediately. The Indians fled a&s soon as they saw that some of their party were shot. e Governor states that there can be no question as to where the responsibil- ity lies. The Indians were violating the laws of the State of Wyoming—knowing- Iy and wil | were martyrs to their duty. The Governor declared that he would insist on a thorough trial, if for no other reason than to vindicate the dead officers and present their sacrifice in proper light before the people. @ i been closed down since the strike was de- clared. A number of miners were taken to Primrose this morning in a caboose of the Colorado and Wyoming Railroad. Several armed guards went with them and they were taken to the mine under guard. PR TR SYMPATHY FROM FEDERATION. Convention in Boston Adopts Resolu- tions Favoring Chicago Strikes. BOSTON, Nov. 13—A mass of resolu- tions was delivered to the secretary of | the American Federation of Labor to-day and In order that varlous committees might consider them the convention was | adjourned until to-morrow, one hour after | the delegates had assembled. The busi- | ness of the convention was in grave dan- | ger of being seriously biocked by the reso. | lutions, which number 281. The feature of the brief session was the adoption of | a resolution expressing sympathy for the streetcar men of Chicago in their strike, together with the hope that an early set- tlement might be made. Secretary Morrison telegraphed the action of the convention to the strikers. Motions that a speclal committee be ap- pointed to consider the matter of State federations and that the constitution be amended to provide for a regular com- mittee of this kind, was adopted. Joseph Valentine of California, vice president of the Federation of Brass Molders' Inter- national Union, was appointed in Mr. Mit- chell’s place on the committee on educa- tion, from which the latter was relieved. g B Strike in New York Urged. BOSTON, Nov. 13.—The board of gov- | ernors of the National Structural Bufld- | ing Trades Alliance at a secret session held in this city have decided that a gen- eral strike should be inaugurated in all | the principal building trades of New York unless the existing difficulties between the Building Trades Association and the Iron League and the Bridge and Structural Iron Workers are speedily adjusted. A committee has been appointed to attempt a settlement, and a conference was sched- uled to be held in New York City. e day it was or- | been freely | eral Carter’s bicker- | | the order of | others were not, the | and the murdered officers | WILL FIX PLACE OF MEETING | | | st REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COM- MITTEE CHAIRMAN WHO HAS CALLED MEETING. ator Hanna Calls Committee To- gether. B TR ST INGTON, Nov 13.—Sena- a, chairman of e Republican National Com- to-da; iled to each of committee a 1 to meet at the Arling- 'Sen l | m: letter ca ton Hotel gton, on Friday, De- cember 11. The call is signed by Perry S. Heath, secretary. The committee will meet on Friday for the purpose of ap- pointing sub-committees who on Satur- day morning will hear the claims of the cities aspiring to be selected as the place of holding the 194 convention. committee at a dinner at the Arlington on Sat call follows e members of the Republican Na- tional Committee are hereby called to meet at the Arlington Hotel in the city of Washington, D. C., at 12 o’clock noon, Friday, December 1. It is expected that the session will con Saturday, cember 12. The business before the com- mittee being to decide the time and place | of holding the next Re convention and to trans: c as properly come before this meet- FATHER'S oD SENDS SN 10 PRISON ublican national s 1Opie Read’s Cousin . Figures in a Sensation. BEMIDJI, Minn., Nov. 13—William Read, cousin of Ople Read, the novelist, and a son of Colonel Read, who is prom- inent In business and social affairs in Minneapolis, was arrested to-day on com- plaint of his father, who charges that the son has violated the conditions of his pardon from the penitentiary, where he was sent for grand larceny in 1901 Young Read is 39 years of age. He is chargsd with being a victim of the mor- phine habit and being dissolute. He came to Bemidji more than a month ago to begin life anew. None knew of his past record and his father’s indorsement | got him an introduction to the best fam- | ilies. He Is handsome in appearance, well educated and of pleasant address. | He soon became a favorite with both | married and single women and was cut- ting deep into the affections of all when | the father was informed of pending dis- | turbances In several familtes. He visit- | ed Bemidji and after investigation caused | the arrest of his son and will have him | returned to the penitentiary, expressing | the bellef that at least he could do no E damage there in breaking hearts and dis- | turbing family ties. 1 —_——— Big Fire in a Mine. SHAMOKIN, Pa., No¥. 13.—A flerce fire | 1s raging in the No. 8 vein of the Enter- Jprise colliery. The fire started last night { from an unknown cause. The colliery is | owned by W. L. Connell & Co. and em. | ploys 500 men and boys. Employes are fighting the blaze. ———— Funeral of Admiral Beardslee. WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.—The funeral of Rear Admiral Lester A. Beardslee, U. S. N., retired, who died in A | Tuesday night, was held here to-day. Ga., The remains were cremated and the.ashes de- posited in the National Cemetery at Ar- lington. N R ST S i ! [ | | Senator | Hanna will entertain the members of the | day night of December 12. The| h business | # dum, THREE FORM OF MARRIAGE NOWIN UTAR Mormon Leader Says Polygamy Is Practiced. { SALT LAKE, Uta 13.—Polygamy | in one form is being practiced continually | with the sanction of the Mormon church, { according to the sworn testimony of one of its leaders to-dav. Elder Charles W. Penrose, editor of the | church organ, the Desert News, declared | “celestial marriages” are being performed | daily by church authorities and that co- | | habitation under these marriages is not considered unlawful. According to the | laws of the church, as expounded, there | are three forms of marriage. The first | is for both time and eternity, the .common | | form of wedlock. This is supposed to last | | during the existence on this earth and i throughout the life in another The second is the marriage for time only, lasting for the life on earth and ceasing | with death. The third is the *sealing” | | for eternity only. According to the teach- ings of the church a person may be aled” to one mate for “time” and an- other for “eternity,” the second rejation- ship beginning where the first leaves off | | —at death. But Elder Penrose testified that the celestial relationship cften be- came of a decidedly earthly character and that pairs thus joined some times even now live together on this earth as hus- band and wife, regardless of other nup-i tial ties This and similar testimony is likely to be used in the Senate’'s investigation of the aualifications of Senator Reed Smoot | to occupy the seat to which he has been elected. The facts were brought out during an examination in the case of Mrs. Annie Armitage Park Hilton against W. 8. Me Cornick. Mrs. Hiiton was once sealed for | eternity to Dr. C. H. Park. She afterward married Willlam Hilton for time. On Dr. Park’s death she sued for a widow’s In terest In the estate despite her second | marriage. The property, amounting to about $40,000, had been bequeathed to the | Untversity of Utah, but the Supreme; { Court decided that “sealing for eternity” | | constitutes lawful wedlock and she was { entitled to her dower right. The suit "nga!nst McCornick, a trustee of the es- | tate, is a sequence. Elder Penrose was | placed on the stand by N. V. Jones, a | Mormon, attorney for Mrs. Hilton, to ex- plain the rite of sealing and its signifi- cance. YOUNG BRIDE (LS HERSELF | Wife of Tucson Mining | Man Swallows Car- | | bolic Acid ov. | | | De- | TUCSON, Ariz, Nov. 13—Mrs. Cora Casey, wife of Alexander Casey, mining man and capitalist, owner of the Willard | Hotel in this city and rich mines at | Gleason, Ariz.,, commNted suicide to- night by taking four ounces of carbolic acid. She died in great agony. | Mrs. Casey placed a note between the | leaves of her Bible, which was found be- | neath her pillow, reading as follows: “I am out of my misery. When I am dead I hope Mr. Casey will be happy. I want to die in Tucson, where I was cursed. Had not others meddled there would not have been trouble between us. I have always done right. God will right things some day. Iam not afraid to die.” Mrs. Casey was 23 years of age and bhad been married to Casey eleven months. Casey fought a duel with officers a few | weeks ago and frightened all of the| guests out of the hotel by shooting through the walls. He was crazed by drink at the time. ————— MINERS ARE ENTHUSIASTIC. Colorado Strikers Confident They Will Win Eight-Hour-Day. DENVER, Colo.,, Nov. 14.—Colorado | | unton miners are now very much con- | | cerned over the outcome of the resolu- tion before the American Federation of Labor asking that body to appropriate $1000 to assist the miners in carrying on the strike. The following telegram was sent to the convention now in session at Boston this afternoon: | “Frank P. Morrison, Secretary Conven- tion of the American Federation of La- |bor: In the interest of organized labor | waste no time in your convention discuss- ing appropriations of $1000 to the Western Federation of Miners. The metalliferous miners under the leadership of President Moyer and the coal miners under Mother Jones have joined hands in battle for an | eight-hour day and we are going to win. “W. D. HAYWOOD, Secretary Treasurer Western Federation of Miners.” Governor Peabody to-day ordered that the number of troops in the Cripple Creek district be lowered to 200. The cavalry has all been ordered home and in a few weeks the guard will be reduced to fifty or seventy-five men. S gl Serious Strike Is Imminent. PITTSBURG, Nov. 13.—Officials of the Builders’ Construction League announced to-day that the lockout of all the building trades in the city affiliated with the Bullding Trades Council will go into ef- fect to-night and will continue indefinitely unless all sympathetic strikes are called off. About 10,000 men will be affected. ———— CENSUS REPORT ON MINES. Statement Shows Auxil- iary Products to Be Valuable. ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—The Census ‘Bureau to-day issued a preliminary re- port showing that during the calendar year 1902 there were mined in the United States 4211 short tons of emery and corun- valued at $104,335: 335 tons of gar- net, valued at $132,829: 12,439 short tons of marl, valued at $12,741, and 6240 short tons of infusorial earth, tripoli and pum- ice, valued at $54.558, exclusive of 31435 in value mined as a by-product of soapstone and talc. —————————— Self-conceited man looks upon every rosy cheek as an invitation. | sphere. | | | conditlon of Lord Roberts was quite sat- | steamer which has just returned hers | the sallors believe the party perished. A | tribe of Montagnis Indians that has been | trapping in the interior recently visited | the coast and say they saw nothing of ROBERTS YIELDS TO GENERAL TRADE ILNESS [ JEPRESSED :} Conditionsin Northwest and South Brighten Outlook. | Business in General Has Been | Greatly Affected by it Strikes. S —— NEW YORK, N morrow will say Quietness a general trade a ing pessimism can some really ible. Taken as a w this week is rat! pansion in retail where it is favored by weather, and at the So | mous quantity of cotton | keted at excellent | trade ts still quiet as a whole, awalting | developments in price and demand. Ex- | | | port trade seems to be at last expanding. | Exports of leading products aggregate the second largest total ever recorded i Oe- —Bradstreet's to- tober. A fact that has not been given full weight is that there Is now here such ulations of stocks as fhreaten great accum ryr and steel come COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF GREAT BRITAIN'S ARMY, ‘WHO IS ILL. | — m fact o British Commander| Has Contracted Pneumonia. ave checked de- iron and face: essions are made and are calculated more effectual, mot- n earnings tem= ONDON, Nov. 13 —Field Marshal » fall Lord Roberts, commander in et for 8 chief of the forces, 1s suffering aggregate 3,850,- from pneumoni contracted at 0,251 bushels last the unvelling at W on No- s last year. vember 6 the memorial to Prince the United States Christian Victor. He is not, however, in the week e: danger. against 206 la: week of 1%2 and 208 in In Canada b ber 13, as agair Lady Roberts said this morning that the he week nume t 19 last week and 10 last isfactory and that he was making favor- able progr B3R G Dun & Review of Trade will say to-morrow: Readjustment of wages and abnormally calcula: to merchandise. Sev- BELIEVE PARTY PERISHED. No News Received of Hubbard Ex- pedition to Labrador. ST. JOHNS, N. F., Nov. 13—The mail from Labrador brings no news of the ex- n to explore the interior of Labra- aded by Leonidas Hubberd Jr. of New York, assistant editor of Outing. All and several mi: pew struggles streetcar lines and coal the Hubbard expedition, although the In- dians went 150 miles inland. —_———— OW’S LIABILITIES GREAT. WINSL ners may re in stri e S event was the resumption of work in the Bank Closes but Auxiliary Enter- | coke ov After the shock of new prices was over prises Will Continue. - i the tron and steel markets became mors ~WOOCESEED.. Mass.. Mo, active. There is more satisfaction ex- though the doors of the bank of the house | pressed than otherwise over the lower of Winslow & Co. are closed and probably will never be reopened under the old name, the business of the Samuel nslow Skating Company will b n tinued by the receivers who took of both concerns to-da; at the liabilities will reach nearly $500,000. | figures, since they are calculated to stim- ulate activi Failures this week numbered 253 in the United States, against 241 and 27 in Can- ada, compared with 24 a year ago. —_——— OF INTEREST TO PACIFIC COAST. Postal and War Departments Order Changes in the Service. WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.—The depart- ment at Washington has ardered the fol- lowing changes in the postal service om the Pacific Coast: Posetmasters commissioned—California— ———— Whitaker Wright Case Removed. Nov. 13.—The Lord Chief Jus- tice to-day ordered the removal of the Whitaker Wright case from the Old 3ailey to the High Court of Justice, so . owing to its complicated character, | it may be heard by a special jury. ! Benjamin Paul Nelson Point. Wash- Conspiracy to Be Probed. ington—Ole B. Nelson, Pateros. PARIS, Nov. 13.—After an extended de-{ Fourth-class postmasters appointed— California—Ar C. Harvie, Ryde, Sac- ramento County, vice William A. Kesner, resigned. Oregon—Mary E. Middlebushe: Trall, Jackson County, vice Sareptas Inglow, resigned: Mrs. Tempa M. Hardy, Trail Fork, Gilliam County, vice Nancy | M. Mattingly, resigned. Army orders—First Lieutenant Robert K. Spiller, Twenty-sixth Infantry, relieved from further t tment at the hospital, Presidio, San Francisco, and will join his company. —_—— | Passengers Injured in a Wreck. —_———— - o BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 13.—A Pennsyl- Guinness Will Not Challenge. vania passenger train which left Buffale LONDON, Nov. 13—The Hon. Rupert|at 11:45 for East Aurora was derailed a Guinness telegraphs from Valence, | quarter of a mile east of the city limits France, in response to an inquiry as to | at midnight. Four passengers were in- whether he intends to challenge for the | jured, two of whom may die. The en- America’s cup: gineer is missing and it is feared that he “There is no truth in the statement.” is under the wreckage. bate the Chamber of Deputies adopted a resolution by M. Berry (Conservative) creating a committee to investigate the alleged political conspiracy in connection with the Humbert affair, } ————— New Railroad in China. SHANGHAI, Nov. 13.—The Internation- al Eastern Company has signed the con- tract for the conmstruction of a railroad from Kair Feng Fu to Ho Nan Fu, with a probable subsequent extension to Hain Fu. | ADVERTISEMENTS. A MILLION HAFPY AMERICAN CHILDREN are kept bealthy with CASCARETS Candy Cathartic. Good words spoken by their mamas for CASCARETS to other mamas have made CASCARETS successful until the sale now is OVER A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. Why do little folks like CASCARETS? Because they are a sweet, palatable, frag- rant little tablet—taste good, do good—never grip nor gripe, but act gently, naturally, positively. Med!- Cine that a child dislikes widl not do it much good. Children are always ready to take CASCARETS, THE PERFECT HOME MEDICINE, ask for them ard are kept healthy al- ways and safe against the dacgers of childhood’s ailments. Best for the Bowels. All druggists, 10c, 235¢, 50c. Never sold in bulk. Genuine tablet stamped CCC. Sample and