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i >, Conditions Worse in Cripple Creek Dis- trict and Lynching Talked Of as Vig- ilantes Hunt Miners for Dynamite Outrage—Militia Ready to Move. \ ‘ : "DENVER, Col., Juno 7.—It is reported at the Capitol that troops from Colorado Springs and neighboring cities will be ordered to Victor to-night. Fears that the town will be burned are ertertained. Nearly 500 troops are now mobilized and can be rushed to the Cripple Creek district on short notice. \ i A despatch from Cripple Oreek states that two Uhousand persons gath- ered at Citizens’ Alliance headquarters where they were addressed by the ‘mine owners and business men. Armed squads are searching for several men and lynching is freely talked of. * ‘ Wholesale arrests of union miners are to be made. ‘Mounted armed men have been sent on a quick march to the extreme northern and sowsn- ern ends of the district to guard all avenues of escape of the union miners, ‘who are to be taken into custody. All mines except the Portland, which employs union men, are stull closed and will be until after the inquest and funeral of ‘\he victims of th dynamite outrage. 2 Company H, Colorado National Guard, is under arms at the armory in Cripple Creek, and will be called out should there be any rioting there. 3 RIOTERS READY FOR ANOTHER FIGHT. { jtft, who is.a iarge property-owner and .@n outspoken opponent of the miners’ nanion. -Lynehing Threatened. VICTOR, Col., June 7.--Another outbreak {s feared here at any moment. the troops who hold the town, swarming about the streets, being none too gentle with the mobs congregated on every street corner. Every man in the turbulent crowds is armed and only a slight clash is needed to again start the fighting. A posse of 300 deputy sheriffs armed with rifles and revolvers is now scouring the hills of the Cripple Creek district with the object of rounding up every union man and every idler in the camp. They will be escorted to the county lines and warned never again to return to Teller County. The union men are also well armed and say they will resist any at- tempt at deportation. Many of them are desperate and serious trouble may occur. Both sides express a determination to fight to the end. In Victor business is practically suspended and conditions in Cripple Creek are little better: All saloons have been closed by order of the authorities. Many merchants have closea their stores, and all who can do eo are increasing their insurance. TRACED BY A BLOODHOUND. The authorities claim to know who the persons are who planned and carried out the dynamite outrage, the clue having been obtained through the use of @ bloodhound. 9 “The dog was brought from Trinidad and took the trail of the dynamit- ers, following 1t from Bull Hill to the Colorado Springs wagon road. De- tective Sterling, of the Miner Owners’ Association, then declared that he ‘was convinced that he knew who caused the explosion and tmmediate ar- rests are expected. Almost two hundred men are prisoners in the armory under a strong military guard, all charged with being concerned in the riot inst night, and the drag net is still out. { . Fiftéen deaths have resulted from the dynamite outrage at Independ- ence and several of the injured are in a critical condition. Two men were killed and eight wounded in the subsequent rioting in Victor. ‘A thoroughly organized vigilance voiced by C. C, Hamlin, secretary of the eommittee, composed of mine-owners &¥ociation, is that all union miners and thelr employees and sympathlaers, | Grelaration thet wee Chote hee ines has taken charge of the government of] “purge the district’ 6 Teller County, and large squads of| $i the mass meetin ‘armed men are patrolling the district. | penden ‘These men are ostensibly acting under orders of Edward Bell, the new Sher- tarted the rioti in Victor, called ynamite outrage at In ce, Fighting Began, “It's up to vou to drive thi - drels out,” Hamlin had eolared, wheres upon Alf Miller, Doom sive Miller, a junion man who had deput: hi 4 WR a a zed and the shoot- tilted “in. the Jeliltn on-unlon mine his rifie referrin \ gnerit? Henry M. Robertson has re- igned under compulsion. He was for- jetbly taken to the headquarters of the Owners’ Association and his res- demanded. At first he refused resign, but, when finally yops was thrown at his feet, he weak- f and signed the resignation which been provided for him. ‘The first act of Sheriff Bell was to Jake away the star of Under Sheriff Knox Burton. He then appointed , Harey Ge Moore, see five deputies, to which force order and in arresting the ‘additions have since been made, HeSoldlers ware nd later he disarnred the unton officers | opposite the hall, amd from thie wont ‘who had been appointed by City Mar- fantage fired into the door and win- Bhal Michael O'Connell, of Victor, Sore ot, ie Rad } Meantime, O'Connell had visited the wes ore q oz, bot 4Mine Owners’. headquarters, in which I xle the Woundin other of whom, J nf nor Miner, died a few notre tuter ne some one in i wed. imme. s & he Miners’ Union hall. A maa in the door of the union store, it is said, also fired into the crowd with a repeating shotgun, Sheriff Bell called on the ny of the State guard, commanded local com- cattering aides for twenty minutes, ren the miners surrende: the bodies of sever. bottom of the hole district have also of them locked up with the 200 miners who were arrested after Pao eentiment of the mine owners, as 5 HANGED HIMSELF IN CENTRAL PARK + Boily of Young Man Found Tied to Limb of Tree Near Sheep- ~fold—Victim a Russian and , Apparently Had Been Ill. Wind aad wl resigning, over the ‘murdered that he had recelved treatment at that institution. There was no name, however, on the card, nor was there anything else on the body to lead to its Identification. The appearance of the dead youth led to the bellef that he had been in ii health. In one of the pockets was found a Rus: silver coin of the value of about’ 50 cents. The body was removed tothe Arsenal, ‘There also was found on the bod: card showing the young man had heen at the Mills Hotel No. 2 on June 1. From the card of the Milis Hotel it ie thought by the police that the young man was Appo Gassey. —__ A gardener in Central Park, passing | CLOSE SHAVE FOR BIG SHIP ‘ through the trees and shrubbery near ng / the sheepfold, and but a short distance 7. Algon, Driven on the Recks, Of Without Assintance, SAN FRANCISCO, June 7, ¢ elfic Mall freight steamer Tae, ed rowly sscaped the fate of the Rio de Janelra on the northern shore of the Golden Gate to-day. Th big vessel, one of the largest on the Pacific, waa bound for this port from China and Japan. As she was entering the har- bor the strong current drove her @gninst the rocky side of the channel, dust west of the Point Bonita light- from station of the mounted po- Gees lice, found the body of a young man about seventeen years old hangiug to @ small hawthorn tree. The gardner notified Patrolman Ferguson, wo. cut down the body and called Dr. Gold- emith, the park surgeon. He pronounced the youth dead. Around the nock was @ short piece of rope that had been tied bn @ limb, of the tree, % ‘ho: young man apparently. was 4 | house. ‘Russian. He wore a blue suit and his| Several tugs were immediately sent jand hair Were. brown, In one of! to her. but the vessel | ~ committed suicide early to-day by drink. Gramercy Park place, wnich Is a fash- a long walk, returning to the house at 11.80 o'clock, when the son went to his room. Before retiring the younger man called to his father and said: — THE WORLD: TUESDAY (By T. E. ® 9929090929509 05-5-09-0999 00084004 OOO? How the man with the SUGGESTIONS TO AUTOISTS:: TROOPS TOSAVE TOWN | ~ FROM TORCH OF MOB EVENING, JUNE 7, 1904. Powers.) SEBLDEGHH LHL HOHGOEDOHESH OOOH GDGHGD CE SOTHO EHHHHH4-6O-64 HEO86-9-050-065 19684-00966 O606140OG BO EASA SAK a a, motor car may protect himself from the small boy with rocks. LIGHTING STOPS CARS AND HITS MANY HO Burns. Out Feed Wires on Brook! Trolleys and Elevated Road, pending Traffic for an Hour—Bo Stuns Family and Fires Cottage, DF F9599-80-9-6000853008 There was a complete tie-up of traMe on the trolley and elevated systems in Brooklyn to-day, and for more than an hour not a car crossed the bridge in either direction. The tie-up of both systems ix supposed to have resulted f:om the burning out of the elestric wires after the big storm of early to-day, when wires were burned | UNDE of passengers. out and cut In two by lightning. + < Bolt Hits Cottage, <5 All during the early morning hours| While the wifc, two litle children there was the greatest dimculty in get-|4"d mother-in-law of Detective-Sergssat John Milmore were asieep in Ung cars to run, {t was found that the| ome at Bay Parkway and Mighty trolley wires had been weakened, and third street, Bensonhurst, early to-day in many places they were nox charged. there was a flash of lightning, f6l- The wrecking wagon began to make the | lowed by a crash of thunder. rounds, but so many were the calls that | ning struck the Milmore house and: set they could accomplish nothing. meh fire to .t. Reports from all over Brooklyn were| So violent was the lightning that that the trolley and elevated service had | Mrs, Milmore, her mother and tae practloally ceased at 6 o'clock. At 6.30 children were sartly stunned by ‘ WW o'clock the electricity had become so electricity. The coracr of the he weak that cars could barely creep along. | 9% eeenee the; einai ing of the wi 2 Then came the breaking of the w th ponte RO ES The trolley feed wires under the bors ne |. turning in ar alarm of fire, | structure at Fulton and Court streets ran to the assistance of the Mi burst into flame; the electrical display| By this time Mrs. Milmore had | spread as far up as Classon avenue. | qclently recovered to run to the room ‘The “L" structure at Fulton and Court| where her children slept. Both chil streets caught fire aud great volumes | dren were aroused and carried of smoke aruse. The ticket agent, | safety. : Catherine Casey, fled to the street, ‘The suspension of the systems during the beginning of the rush when thousands hurrying to New York from lyn to work. The bridge was witn persons walking and across it, and the ferry-boats hardly accommodate the et closed her office H9F99 99904 Soooo aoe re TO COST $400,000 National Association. Will Soon Select Architects’ Plans for the Structure—Programme Authorities of Church Cause’ rest of Homeless Youth, Magistrate Promptly Fr 9FF9T9G596- 0F-0.9F9-5526-998-0000090003 9999 550900 TEP eWERS WIFE LEAVES HM, HIDDEN FOES MN ENDS LIFE} SHOT MAY KIL John C. Dodge, Former Super- intendent of Telephone Com- pany’s Construction Depart-, ment, Takes Carbolic Acid. Girl, Fearing Second Attack and Lockjaw from Wound, Is in Hysterical State and Fatal Attack Is Possible. Despondent over his separation from A jealous admirer, who fired a shot his wife and the severing of old busi-jat Augusta Goodman, of No, 166 Sec- ness connections, John C. Dodge, thircy- | ond street, Passaic, as she stood in her nine years old, of No. 23 Gramery Park,}room with her figure sllhouetted on the drawn shade, may have her life to answer for now, as the girl, fearing lockjaw and another attack by her hid den foe, is in a highly hysterical state, and doctors fear the disease may de- velop from a wound on her right hand, caused by the bullet, No clue to the perpetratw: of the out- rage has yet been discovered, out the police say they have narrowed the mat- ter down to several of the girl's ad- mirers whose sults have not been met with favor and that they will surely get the right man sooner or later, ‘Miss Goodman was going to bed when the shooting occurred. She stood in front of the window, the shade drawn, but with a light on the other side of her, which put the outlines of her figure on the shade, #0 that she could not be mistaken for some one else. The girl had her right hand to her hair, removing a side comb when there was a crush of glass and a bul- let struck her little finger and entered the hand. A physician was summonéd and he removed the shot, but the girl has been {n great pain since and Ing carbolic acid, Up to a month ago Dodge was super- intendent of the Construction Depurt- ment of the New York Telephone Com- pany. He then resigned, or was dis- missed, just which is not known, but his trouble, coupled with his marital dimoulties, preyed on him until, 9s he said in a note to his father, life was no longer worth living, Dodge was the son of Albert Dodge, of the real-estate firm of Cruikshank & Co., of No, 10 Wall street. He and his father had separate rooms in the fonable boarding-house. They had din- ner together jast night, and then took “I want to be up by 7.90 in the morn- ing. Call me when you go down and woe will have breakfast together.” Mr. Dodge went to his son's room at 7.3 and knocked, but got no response, FORCED 10 WED GIRL, Ht SAYS John Peebles Asserts that, at Pistol Point, Brothers of Gila Kiesean Compelled Him to Go to Parsonage. Forced at the point of a revolver to marry a girl he does not love, John Peebles, twenty-two years old, of and Marion avenue, will call upon Dis- trict-Attorney Jerome to investigate the affair, Peebles has announced also that he will bring action for the annulment of the marriage on the ground that he was forced into it and that the girl Is not yet eighteen years of age. The father of the bridegroom, John Peebles, sr., who has been in Spring- THER NFAY KILLED FAMILY After Poisoning Two Children He Shot Two More and then Committed Suicide as-Police Broke Into the House. ELIZABETH. N. J., June 7.—Albert Pouch, shot by One Hundred and Ninety-seventh street} of Roselle, aled tn the Geoerat Hospttel here early to-day. victim of the murderous frenzy of his father, who shot the boy and his five- year-old sister, just am the police broke into his home and then shot himself In the right tem- ple, dying instantly. The day previous the man had forced carbolic acid down the throat of his for Final Competition. ——— a The McKinley National Memorial As- sociation has {ssued the programme for the final competition for the monument te be erected in memory of the late President McKinley at Canton, O. At a meeting of the trustees In New York last month EP. Casey & Arthur Dillon, H. R. McGonigie and A. R. Ross, of New York, and Guy Lowell, of Boston, were selected from the hun- dred-od4 European and American archi- tects who had submitted plans in’ the preliminary competition, In’ ‘addition, the trustees have invited A. W. Brun- ner, Cass Gilbert, McKim, Meat & White, of New York; Wyatt & Nolting, Baltimore; Eames & Young, St. Louis, and D, W. Burnham, Chicago, to submit plans. é From these ten the final selection will be made by a committee consisting The boy yr tm se vrantiin. Murphy, Cometius Biles, | om eae end was homeless Aba ® !. W. Lloomingdate, . A. Lynch and} re: pis Willlam McConway. assisted by profes- atonal advisers, Wo-k will be commenced immediately after the selection. The Association already has mecumu- Him—Sexton Criticised, ~ Harry Wilson, aged e! from Chicago, was & Police Court to-day charged disorderly conduct. % Tt was explained to the that Wilsoa was asleep on the" St. Joseph's Roman Catholic C! 10 o'clock. Inst night, a through a cellar window to get novel bed on the organ bellows. was diseovered. by the sexton, Batcheller, whose attention was by Wilson's snoring, Then the. wers called tn, v ‘The sexton appeared to court to-day. 4 i ‘his man was alseep in the rae thirteen years old, who was i last night — ; “T'see.ne ut,” the sexton added, wnat toe Godegiven beivi He was the fourth snore. 1 have not loriaaiction 43 foe with human nature! Minnie, last evening ‘here Is no gor” reat should suffer for gully. He is «. vhat nto the custody of my and I wi After the boy had fpegiaizate Crane's . field, Moss. for several days, has been| two other children, Lillian and Mamie, ‘ telegraphed for and will arrive in the| respectt years and lated $500,000 entirely by small mavecries ee addi Sint) city to-day. months old, and had added to the work | tons from all over the country. e Paying: ty tb Ved te Ait a tay The young woman in the case is Miss Ella Kieseau, of No. 216) Washington avenue, the Bronx. Peebles has known her for several years, but says he never promised to marry her, He had an-ap- pointment with her last Sunday and Spent more than an hour with her in the neighborhood of Fordham and Bed- ford Park, Unknown to him the two brothers of the girl, William Kieseau, a policeman, and Charles Kileséau, were keeping wateh. Peebles and Miss Kieseau parted at the Interminal, the former starting tol} jedge of the tragedy that had been rehitects invited to compete are walk northward along Webster ave- | enacted, among the most prominent in the coun- nue, Phe avenue was crowded at the! After killing the two litt!e girls Pouch|¢ry ‘their principal works are as be- Mi y time. Peebles saw the brothers follow-] wrote a letter to County Physician |‘"*? asses He became alarmed and summoned fuantel Walbury, the colored porter of|hysterical from fear that she may the house, Walbury knocked and, get-|get tetanus. ting no response, broke open the door.| Joseph Veroski, who was arrested him was because some said they had seen running away from the house, discharged from custody to-day. GIRLWHOABANDONED HER BABY RELEASED Miss Lottie Frown, Arrested for Deserting Her Child, Is Dis- charged—Charitable Women Sent Aid to Young Mother. ——— ‘Miss Lottle Frown, twenty-two years old, who on Saturday night abandoned her one-month-old child in the hallway of a tenement-house at No. 265 Firat ayenue, was re-arraigned in the York- ville Court to-day and discharged from custody by Magistrate Mayo. Agent Kelly, of the Children's So- olety, told the Court that a number of letters had been received by the Society offering assistance to the young woman and {n some the money was inclosed, Two of the letters, Kelly said, were signed by Mrs, H. 8, McLean, No. It North avenue, Norwatk, Conn. and Mrs, A. W. Cadwell, Etna, Bergen County, N, J. Miss Frown, who was crying when arraigned, told Magistrate Mayo that she regretted her act in abandoning her baby and asked that it be given back Bhe sald she did not realize oie mete Ota at che siree rt Ms the father our cl . asked the te acon ue ne | ta cay, Dodge was in bed, apparently asleep, but closer examination showed him to be dead. cae NEW BUILDING FOR MEDICAL COLLEGE Fine Six-Story Structure for Clinics and Laboratories to Be Erected at Once on First Avenue. Action of much import to the future evelopment of New York University ‘was taken at a special meeting of the University Council to-day in the office of the Treasurer, William F. Have- meyer, No, 32 Nassau street. Upon the recommendation of the nine schools of the University, the Council yoted to confer at the commencement on Thursday nearly 400 degrees. In view of the large classes at the University and Bellevue Hospital Med- loal College, and the prospect for a very large entering class in the fall, it was determined to purchase land adjoining the now college bullding on First ave- nue, between Twenty-ffth and Twentv- sixth streets, and to proceed at once with the erection of a six-story fireproof building for the clinics and laboratories of the medical college. Q ———— ing him and eprang into the autamobile of a friend and started swiftly up the avenue. Stopped by Policeman's Pintol. The machine broke down and Peebles alighted and started to run away, He fam, the policeman, drew this revolver. | As He told Peebles that he would shoot | knocking, the! if the latter refused to go with him} qoor and entered. ‘As they did so they heard three shots and marry Miss Kieseau. According to all accounts save that] qred, and on running up to th of Peebles he went willingly enough to|foor they found Pouch dyin the Tremont M. E. Church, at One Hun-| front room. He lived less than @ min+ andjute after thelr arrival, In room lay the boy Albert and his sister Minnie, Mr, Burnett} boy was alive and conscious, The officers knew other children in the family searched for them. trance to a rear room they found the white-robed bodies of the children as they had been laid out by the father. Fourth ‘The wounded boy was hurried to the hospital and the doctors after extract- ing the bullet, which had entered the right side of had & he began to sink about 2 o'clock this eS pape morning and all efforts *o revive him FELL INTO ELEVATOR SHAFT. | were unavailing. | Pouch was & the Singer factory. ried twice. divorce from him. His socond wife died “wout two months ago, and since ven tiad appeared to dred and Seventy-elghth street Washington avenue, where the mar- riage ceremony was performed by Kev. A. H. Burnett, the pastor. says that . Peebles was apparently cheerful and made no protest whatever. He even spoke of going to housekeep- ing Jn a short time, After the marriage Peebles walked to the home of his wife and left her there. She has not seen him since, Any at- tempt on his part to have the marriage annulled will be contested by the mem- hers of the girl's family, who say that not half has been told of the reason for the brothers taking the affair into their own hands. St. Vincent’s Hoxpttal Refaned Am- bulance on Citizen's Call. Larry Donell, a truck driver, of N #7 West Sixteenth Street, fell down u elevator shaft at No. 5 Bond street to- day and injured himself badly. for an ambulance was sent to St. Vin- he cent's Hospital, but the authorities | DUC there refused to send one on a citizen's | call. After waiting twenty minutes for some one to help the man, some citizens ut him on his truck and drove him to lice Headquarters, ‘There he went erasy from pain and attacked two licemen, He was subdued with dimoulty ‘Jef and to Bellevua. of the potson by choking them, as marks on their throats bore witness, When the Ittle girls were dead thelr father, who was the and had been trained in that business, laid out the bodies caref their little forms being dressed in cl white shrouds. cording to the testimony given by the boy before he died, were told by their father that their sisters were locked in a room upstairs and they had no know- taker, Westcott, asking him to come to the house, as his services were needed. Dr, Westcott received the letter last evening and he at once telephoned to Justice Willis, of Roselle, and he notl- fied Marshal Hennessy, who, with Po- was caught by the brothers, and Will-|)}iceman Kenney, went to Pouch's house. | 7. there was no response to their 2ouch's father oa in Brooklyn N.Y. He was afty- A call two years old. mye x HESS NOT SERIOUSLY ILL |. LONDON, June 7.—Consuelo, Dowager Louchess of Manchester, uas sone of acess, but there Is no adit Sorted in. the ft London yesterday soe bad CS lurgest subscriptions were $5,000, Senator Hanna being one of the first subscrib- ers, Four hundred thousand dollars will be spent on the monument, which Is to stand on an elevation in the outskirts of Canton and Is to be one of the larg- est monuments of its kind inthe coun+ try. The remainder of the fund fs to be reserved for the care and maintenance of the monument and grounds and to make it forever unnecessary to charge admission fees to obtain money for that that the action of the church ties in this case was most uncl Prepared for Burial. —really unchristian.’ n of an under- ly, ‘The other children, a low: Casey—Congressional Library, Wash- Grant Monument, W: igle—Soldiers and Sailors’ Mon- McG: jeipnna. Ce jpeg Tibrary, Washington, Cleveland. Naw York. Boston; Co- ts . and Girls’ SummerF rai Arranged as follows 200 Misses’ Dres. of Colored Chambrays White Striped Madras. 14to 18 yrs. | “"prunner—Custom-Hot Bilvert—-Cuntom-Honse, Mickim—Public Library, luevbia College, New .York. Wyatt & Nolting—Court-House, B MBurnham—Flatiron Bullding. STRIKER PAYS FOR BLOW. ee) Fifty-Dotlar Fine Imposed by Court for Attack on Union Mai Boijamin Ainsworthy, thirty-nine years old, a striking bollermaker, of No. X9 Montgomery street, Jersey City, who was arrested for assaulting Paul Danko, a non-union boltermaker em- ployed at the James Reilly Repair and Supply Company's plant, foot of Grand street, that. city, was fined $30 by Sudge Higgins in the First Criminal Court to-day. Danko, with other men, wan putting finishing touches on thi Mexican gunboats Vera Cruz and Tam- pico, Danko told the Court that Ains- aorthy eaught him on shore near the Jangplank of the Vera Crux and struck achinist and worked in} him, Ainsworthy denied the accusa- He had been mar-| tion, Witnesses corroborated Danko, His firet wife obtained alrhe bollermakers’ strike has been in progresa fqr several weeks. Only ¥ yn men are working on the broke down the front yecond in the the same ‘The latter was dead, but the : there two they Forcing an en- values $5.50 to $6.50. 500. ne Girls’ Summer Frocks of. Chambrays, Mercerised Linens, White and Colored Lawns in various styles. select from, high and low - neck styles ; sizes 4 to 14. yrs5 at $2.95, - values $3.50 to $5.00 CASTORIA | Lord & Taylo jetim Dend. the body, fair ehance’ of recovery, thought he bur be deranged. as a wealthy unde! the Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Sor engagements owing (0.1 there indication that her critical, as Rnied tates, Duchess