Cape May Herald, 4 April 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 2

1

SIX MEN MEET DEATH

Tea Other* Fatally Hurt in

Pa.. Steel Ptaat.

tfERE BURNED BY WHITE HOT DUST. :totUai tad Flub Ar* Baracd Oft Their Badle*—Atealicd Cnei •! the Ylctta* Are Heard a Block A way-The Accident »*« Canted by a Delect la the Eectrtcal E^nip-

meet el the PUoL

Pittsburg. Pa. (Spccul).—An accident at Furnace I. oi the Edgar Thornton plant of the Carnegie Steel Company at Braddock is expected to prove one of the worst in the history of the plant in the number of deaths result*

THE LATEST NEWS IN SHORT ORDER.

Domestic.

Governor Taft hat directed the continuance of the campaign in RiiaJ Province. l.uton Island. Philippine*. Five native volunteers w!k> betrayed the constabulary at Dos. Province of Atbay, have been sentenced to death. Two trainmen were killed and 16 persons were injured as the result of a collision between a passenger train and a wildcat engine at South Brooklyn. Ct. The New York Board of Aldermen adopted a resolution urging a legislative bill to permit the city to build and operate a municipal lighting plant. Thousands of Porto Ricans thronged the wharves of San Juan to give Miss Alice Roosevelt a farewell salute as she set sail for New York. Van Ogden Vogt, of been chosen to succeed general secretary of th of Christian Endeavor. Seventeen men were held in $500 liail ch in Philadelphia on the charge of

BURDICK CAM VERDICT Pennell the One Suspeded Sty* Jndxe Murphy. THE GRAND JURY WILL INVESTIGATE hi HU DccUnUm el tbc Resolt el the lotocst He Say* Peneell Was the Duly Min Who Had a Motive to Kill Burdick-He AUo Declares That Mrs. Hall Waa Not Prank Is Her TctHmoay.

Buffalo. N. Y. (Special).-District Attorney Coatsvvorth is authority for the statement that the mysterious Burdick murder case will go before the grand jury, and indictments are not altogether improbable, even though the report of Judge Murphy on the inqpcst has been

- *«• -

burnj. cretionary- pool. ness will be to consider the circumstan-

was caused by a "hang’ \ company of Arizona Rangers made | ces surrounding this murder,

in the furnace dropping and lorcmg ! an attack on 1 1M dquarters ot cattle j “I will consider the case in lU evwj large quantities of white hot dust down ' t j,j cvel at Black Rock and was compelled | phase between now and Monday, Disa large pipe into a pit where the men | to retirc . ,rict Attorney Coatsvvorth said, ‘and were at work. The victims were caught j F ran cis T. Ltiquer. Jr., senior mem- , when Monday arrives I will be prepared like rats in a trap, without means of ^ and preside, 0 f the firm of R. S. , to present the case in the fullest possible

cscaoc. and all were burned and blis- Liwiier & Co., of New York, com- j form."

tered over their entire bodies and large m i ltc d suicide. When the witnesses arc called before strips of flesh peeled off their bodies 1 C Barclay has been appointed as- this somewhat august body two women when they were pulled out of the pit si^iant general manager of the Western ; will, beyond doubt, be the principals,

bv fellow workmen. Union, with headquarters in New; They are: The cries of agony of the victims as York j Alice Hul

they writhed in the lava-like stuff from which they were vainly trying to extn1 ate themselves could be heard for Hundreds < f workmen from other portions of the plant rushed to th<

A ferryboat broke in two in the Del- j aware river at Raubsville. Pa., and Na- ;

t quickly as the pit and

fy h<

rue of their fellows, and possible pulled them frot

carried them to the emergency

Seven of the nen wci : when their bodies

drowned.

The Mayor of i of police and othei

icher and four horses were ' dick’s widow.

_ i The question

Burdick, widow of the

ordered man.

Mrs. Maria Hull, the mother of Bur-

,_stion goes further: What will

sttle. Wash., chief ; the women tell, if they tell anything? ifficials and promi- j They will likely be given a warmer ses-

-~ A ! than they had on the witness-stand

icr officials and promi indicted by the gram

| sion than they

1 in the police court, and attorneys to guard their

cm interrogatories.

mess-stani

there will be m

ainst pertin

NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS.

Presldcat's West*in Tour. All arrangements for President Roosevelt'* WcMern tour have been completed and the itinerary given out. In the trip, which will begin April I, the President will make speeches in all the states north of the Mason and Dixon Line. M-. Roosevelt will past through 22 states and two territories and will make 144 speeches. It is probable that as many as ao speeches not now scheduled will be made during the trip. If the President’s audiences average 1.000 persons, one in 50 of the country's total population will see and hear him. In the larger centers of population the crowds will number five or ten times the average, and the carriage rides which have been arranged for him in various cities will give one in fifteen of the population of the United States a chance to sec their Chief Magistrate. Altogether the President traveled 13,761 miles by rail w back to Washington on June ing accepted an inviution to attenO tn marriage of Miss Ruth Hanna, secon nna. to Joseph F that day, his r< day or two.

h gratifying su it ol the silk ii

The bodies of the fatally burned could carecly be recognised as such. They ?ere blackened or r a redded in strips

were blackened or r .ircdde b'- the white hot "<- >wn-c< that burned into their flesh.

Ihe men had large through the flesh, splashes of molten ir

and burned through to the b

then

used on all Unit ation's blast ftu

icr’’ dust

cir flesh. Many of

e blotches burned j p ennc i), j n .used by large ; said t | 1C re that had struck , t i loug h he :

been proven, practically mell, the dead law-

WHsoo »■ SUk lodastry. 4 'We are meeting with cess in the development

dustry in this country." said the Secretary of Agriculture. "Everything connected with the enterprise is moving with smoothness, and each step has been taken in strict accordance with the system originally outlined. At the present time’s colony of Italians in Georgia has set out 25,000 mulberry trees, some of their number having come to this country for the purpose, and as soon as the trees have attained a size that will warrant pulling the leaves, the remainder of the proposed colony will come over and engage in the culture of silk. Another small party of Itaians is now on the ocean, bourn* for South Carolina, where a genet distributing station under the muspie of the Department of Agricultur- ™

••'died, and ‘ ‘• : - t

ittings will

struc

“wCiCS# SiHS!SS.5‘ ssss

- Itified

Pennell, in c conversation with them, ;

tid there was a man he could

lough he swung for it.

Forest McCord. 24 years old. killed

~ ity Storts, aged

RUSH OF. HOMESEEKERS.

I Acres of Land to Be Opened

hi Jn?.

i Chillicothe, O.

William J. Peppier was shot dead fight in New York by William

'horn he bad found

i after a fig

, Earl Dpbson. whe

his home with Mrs. Peppier. , me The Philadelphia and Reading Coal ; Qn

mt indications hold true one of the great- of ^ ccms in f hc price o( . ! est land rushes of re*ent date in the West : Mis* Alice Roosevelt ' will storm the United States Land Office with much enthusiasm every’ here in June, when the j.ooo.odb acres of ing her tour o£ Porto Rico,

lat *

.be°th!

stonger motive than

anyone else for putting Burdick out of the way. Judge Murphy says, and all the facts brought out .by the inquest consti- : just grounds 'for the issuance of a - — ■ *■ * if i>— a iivc

menl

Id

be establishes, sands of mulberry

out.”

The Department is receiving requests for mulberry slips and eggs at the mte

of from 40 to $0 a day. and

: .11 ......; v.i „ n

iices

griculture will a which thou-

Pctmel if he were

■ftened somewhat

’ennell by the statement that if Pennell were alh - / he would given the presumption cl innocence

proven guilty.

In the opinion of Judge Murphy. Burdick had no woman guest in his "den'

of from 40 to 50 a day. and is filling would be under arrest belt ing directions for cultivating the mul- strike. They were taken

ad no woman guest

• night of the murder and the

is not the work of a burglar. He es Mrs. Gertrude B. Paine and

. . ...... ..jtchinson from any connection : with the crime, and in conclusion criti- “ i rises Mrs. Maria A. Hull and censures , Mrs. Burdick, the former for her at- : titude toward the authorities and the m-

MAY SOLVE MAINE MYSTERY.

Union. One of them from New York} ... . - ,

State requests the fullest details saying . who was caught stealing provisions from , 0 H lvt Wreck Raised

that the writer is planning to settle a col-; Earl's farm, near Norwood, R. I. ).ooo ranches on the desert if he } John E. Dunne, arrested in Tacoma, e "on the ground floor" of the Wash.,was^idemified from a

ral sections along the river.

perations now in progress, under

provisions of the National Irrigation _ . s ha* set in. Desert land, however, com- ! re0 prises the greater part of the land to be pc, opened to settlement, and it will have j £j .

is identified from a photogn . Taunton. Mass., as John E. inted in that city for the

McMahon.

Washington, D. C (Special).—Naval officers believe the mystery of the sinking

ip Ml is now about to be solved. Advices have

t for cultivating 1

erry trees and the other giving delils with regard to the care ol the

Natives Whipped to Death.

The War Department is investigating charges filed against Lieut. CoL Robert L. Howze, who was in command of a post in Northern Luzon in

1899-

ihe charges relate to cruelties to Filipinos, allegations being made that Colonel Howze was cognizant of the fact that two natives were whipped to death and that no punishment of the offenders was ordered. It is stated at the War Department that so far as investigated it appears that the alleged outrage was perpetrated by native officers while Colonel Howze was absent after hostile Filipinos. A Warraat far Ujmjm. The Treasury Department mailed to the Guaranty Trust Company of New York, as the representative of the Philippine Government, a warrant lor $3.A which at"

RAILWAY MEN INDICTED.

Official* HeM for the IUlB*t ol Ni*e

Children.

In a- battle between and officers_and citi“— suburb

bers

warship, and that bids for the work will

be called for in the near future. Since the conclusion of the Spanish

I to ply between New York and Sai . | Hook, was launched at Cramps' ship-

Newark, N. J. (Special).—High offi-1 yard,

rials of the North Jersey Traction Com- I . Thf ^Port that San MigueL the Fth-

county, sitting in Newark, for the killing ! of nine High School pupils in the Clifton ' avenue trolley disaster of February

employe*—the moto

The- steamer Asbory Park, which is of raising f am0 u5 wreck. In reply to between New York and Sandy u h communication* the department

prominent concerns in

:es have written to the Navy

The road employes—the motorman, conductor and sandman—were not indicted. Neither were the officials or employes of the Lackawanna Railroad, whose train ran into the trolley car. Beside* the members of the executive committee of the road, those indicted were

mittee of the road, (hose indicted were David Young, rice-president and general manager of the North jersey Traction Company: Charles Shipman, general superintendent; Superintendent Smith, of the Crosstown division: Richard Ijick, assistant superintendent, and R. M. Pratt,

roadmastcr.

all such communications the department has said no appropriation is available for the work and that, in any event, thi*

country would have permission of Cuba.

The greatest curiosity is still felt in t val cirdes as to the cause of the explt. ion that blew up the vessel. The majority of naval officers is convinced that the explosion was caused by some external influence, probably by a mine or torpedo. and not, as has been claimed by the

Omaha, Neb., March 31.—Albert Strohmeier, of Kansas City, aided by his wife and son. today kidnapped Lola Young, the adopted 11-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Young.

FcreigB.

The firing of rifles in the Haytien. Chamber of Deputies is said to be due to the complicity of ceruin ministers who want the dissolution of the_ Senate, which opposes President Nerd's financial projects. Ambaysador and Mrs. Tower will occupy their house in Berlin Friday and hold a reception that evening, to winch the court officials will issue 1800 invita-

tions.

A brother of Emma Touret, the young woman who fired at Marcal Prevost. the novelist, in Paris, has

challenged Prevost to a <lue '- ii mc . Mr. Fairbanks was active in The inhabiunts of the village 01 charitable works. He w*s bom in Sokbalitchc. near Istib, were massacred duti Wayne county, N. Y„ in 1829, but

ffered se- jived in Chicago for nearly half a cen-

tury. He is survived 'By seven chil-

dren.

prominent Omaha people, daughter of Strohmeier l

wife. The men made the child in a buggy, meier was arrested

tempting to escape on a street car. The child was kidnapped while play-

outh Park. The three

- , by

made their escape with

Mrs. Stroh-

Terre Haute, Ind. (Special).—Judge Stimson of Superior Court derided that the boards of hedlth have no power to exclude the unvaccinated children from public school*. This is the first decision on the constitutionality ol the >**»

passed two yer

the antivaccin; be appealed.

s ago at the re ioni*t*_ The c

r Bashil tre loss-

The government of Anstria and Hungary have introduced specie payment bills to their respective parliaments.

King Edward sailed on the royal yacht for Lisbon. It is stated that he

will also visit President Lonl General Bonilla, with his an

a be sweeping every

sweepini

ported to 1

Spanish Honduras,

unusual drou

is causing I

farmers ol Roumania much anxiety.

Touret, a young woman, fired - ** * ” st, the French

Emm . . _

two shots at Marcel Prevost, the novelist, as he was entering the offices of the Society of the Men of Letter*, in Pari*. Both shots missed and Prevost then disarmed the woman. She said she

sought revenge.

The Czar, in a talk with Thomas W. Cridler, representative of the St. Louis Exposition, referred to the friendship between Russia and the United States, and said he wished to congratulate America on its ■ • ■

W»hington, D. C (Special).—John Mitchell, president ol the United MineWorkers; S C. Burdett of Charleston,

Va., attorney for the West Virs Mine-Workers, and Christopher one of the nine leaders, talked the President regarding the recent shunting ol »trikrr» by deputy

— — utmg rthaK at Stanaiord. W. Va. T bey

re*%cMtd that a very

d« ol

LM-s;

"Winter wheat U in excellent condition in the West,” says Prime. During 1902 Chinese exports to United States gained fio.socuxx* Atchison in February gained 1 than $500,000 gross and Jjo.ooo aa More than 14100^00 pounds ofjen •ere sold Friday at Boston at 15 The Unried Stales Treasury p**j

N. R. Fairhaaks Dead.

i (Special).—N. K. Fairbanks,

millionaire manufacturer and director

several banks and manufacturing concerns, died at his home here, years. He had been ill but a

aged short

Saa Miguel Killed by Scouts.

Manila (By Cable).—Two companies ol Macabebe scouts defeated the mat

iy, is re- body of San Miguel's forces of insut point in. gent*. It is believed San Miguel wa

killed. Lieutenant Reese was seriously wounded. The sconts lost three men killed and had 11 men wounded.

ARRESTS AT WATERBURY Eighteen Men Charted With Assault :

With Intent to Kill.

THE RESULT OF THE STRIKE RIOTS. SpecMclally, the Warrsot* Against tbc Men Charge Them Wiih AssaaU 00 WOllaa T. erner tod George Morrisselie Wilt lateat to Kill—These Two Meo Were la Charge of the Car Which was Attacked. Waterbury, Conn. (Special).—Eighteen men placed under arrest on the charge of assault with intent to kill wa* the record of activity on the part of the police m their efforts to discover the authors of some of the outbreaks ol violence which have 4h>rred *'mce the beginning of the strike of inotormcn and conductor* of the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company eleven weeks

ago.

Th

M*'

night of February 26, with intent to kill These two men were the non-union employes of the trolley company whe had charge of a car which was attacked

at a lonely spot on the Water "* 1 Both were assaulted, and one t into insensibility and left lyii

rails.

This occurred a little more than week prior to an attack of a similar nature on a car at Forest Park, when Policeman Paul Mendelssohn was killed by "mllet from a mob of masked me-..

GERMANS AGAINST DEWEY. His Remarks Thai Their Navy Caatda'I Whip

Ours Cat*.

j Berlin (By Cable).—The German For-

■ - Office officials s:

rign

lieve that : suit from

say they' «k> not bc-

diplomatic incident will rethe recent interview with

Admiral Dewey, published in American

newspapers the German

ning reference* to German Emperor.

arrested arc charged in the

irrants with assault on William T.

and George Morrisette on •*“

iary 26, with intent

attacl

iterville li

beaten

on the

a bull Since

■a mob of masked 1

murder was committed detracted by the large rewards

tectives, attracted by the large n offered, have been quietly at work While the arrests are nominally for the assault of February 26. the officials do not deny that they hope from this action to learn something that will clear up the mystery of Mendelssohn's death. CoL L. F. Burpee, attorney; for the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company, said in an interview that he had strong evidence against the men arrested for the Wmcrville assault and that he felt quite confident of tracing out the murderer of Officer Mendelssohn. Cow onel Burpee added that warrants fot

twenty-tw that lie e:

irpce added that warrants :wo men have licen issued,

cctcd that the whole 1

wey,

and contain!) Navy and s say they believe that the Admiral was correctly quoted, ''especially in view of the good

will

iould the interview turn out to Ik-

*• aid pi

it h "wouli States.** 1 No official f"r^l

thal

turn out to Ik- true

irovc somewhat disturbing to t relations jvith the United

_ he recent American naval maneuvers in West Indian waters, ihe officials of the Foreign Office say they “appear to have been ill chosen, since Germany has no interests in the West Indies, and it would seem that the maneuvers could with greater aptitude have been alluded to as being against England, because England, on tbc othei

hand, has territory there. The interview with Admiral Dewey

s here. Even

refer t<

has angered the newspapers those of a usually moderate tone •• - bitter manner. For instai

r to the

r expected be under a

statu whoi

begun.

PresMent of Spaaish Sentte Says United

Stiles Waited Sack Indemnity.

Madrid (By Cable).—Senor Montero Rios, President ol the Senate, has brought upon himself the condemnation of the Spanish public press by a speech which he made at Campostclla, Galicia. He referred to his work ;

president of _ the Spjmish

violent criticism. I con*

ity of Paris to be my life’s greathonor. We lost our colonies, but did not lose any part of our national territory. 1 was able to save the integrity of onr peninsula. I was also able to avoid the payment of the war'* indemnity, in spite of the menace of the North American commisstor which demanded $250,000,000 frot

Spain. Therefore. I th my country's gratiti

Ratifications of the Cuban Reciprocity Treaty, were exchanged by Secretary Hay and Minister Qucsada at the State

ing of the court-marti Lieutenant Ned

Army.

" ' lent

F ^

Prominent members of the Red Cross

ive unit '. Foste

Navy Department e been improving

in representations to John irging a reorganization of

The President selected Wayne MacVeagh to represent the United States at

The Hague tribunal. Reports made to th show that the tars hi in target practice. One soldier was l jured by an accident

at Fort Mycr.

Judge Daniel J. McMillan, of the Supreme Court of New Mexico, defended himself before Attorney Genera' Knox against charges of immoralit;

preferred against him.

Extensive preparations are being made by the State of Indiana for the

dedication of 10 battlefield of Shut—

The War Department is investigating charges of cruelty on the part of Lieutenant Colonel Howze toward F

ipinos in 1899.

Arrangements were made for the exchange of ratifications of the Cuban

treaty.

The Secret Service announced the cry of two counterfeit notes, tblegram was received from Rear

Wm4 Not to Succeed Tdft Washington, D. C. (Special).—It was stated at the War Department that General Wood is not to become Governor General of the Philippines as a successor of Governor Taft, even should the illness of the Utter cause his resignaThit statement i* made because

‘ e govern - I General

‘. n disci ir- A had posi

is in Hon itonio Gt

Rican, was appointed examiner in Spanish in the office ol the Ciail Service

__ cablegram was received Admiral Coghlan saying the revolutionists had possession of all the coast

s state

•float — : Philippines

Wood's o Aackaa Cycle Wwks Baracd. AVroo, O. (Special).—The explosion of a can of at the plant of the American Cyck-f in the destruction by fire of the entire . and also the plant of the India

The

a Porto in Span-

londnrar.

Antonio Gonzales Kianes,

Rican, was appointed

C M. Waters, of Denver, Col., * appointed chief of the salary and allc ice division of the Postoffice Dep* Second Lieutenant Edward O. P kins, Fourth Cavalry, is to be dropi

the rolls as a deserter.

tssistant Secretary Miltor the Treasury, has given

irom

Ati hL

nation al attorney general C °Colontl Bingham has received complimentary letter* from Preside nl Roosevelt and Secretary Root upon hi.

retirement from the post of superin-

lore momii

Union, now on

lice

to the police

and the hunt for others against the warrants were directed was

DEMANDED?

it in a bitter manner. Ft

fering from a disease of infancy—lack of modesty. Its leader evince* something unspeakably immature. One can onl* ftand amazed that such intensified *elfcomplacencv should take root in a people of Germanic origin. Such behavior would not excite wonder if it had occurred in some Central or South Arocri

-nv imiutoi

of Captain (now rear admiral) Coghlan. who at a New York club gave a boastful toast bristling with insults to Germany, and warmed up the exploded story that Admiral Dewey compelled the German fleet at Manila to lie to when it refused

to respect the blockade."

Dewey Explains to th; President.

Washington. D. C. (Special).—A* the instance of the President, Admiral tion of a recent newspaper interview, in which the Admiral was quoted as saying the Caribbean Sea maneuvers were "an object-lesson to the Kaiser, more than to

any other person.” -

The Admiral aqgered the President j that he had no intention of reflecting if ! the interview upon Germany, her Emper — of her navy, and that while the 'talecredited to him were substantially

Spanish commission

to Paris in 1898 to conc'.ude a treaty of peace with the United State"

and said.

11 Paris'

. . ^n*part:

"Though I have sheen the object of inch violent criticism. 1 consider the

. 50,000.000 I think 1 de

I tide."

WUtor Bag’s Bite Dtagersat. Mend on* Mich. (Special).—Prol. De >n Olinberg, who came here from Wheeling, W. Va., to obtain kpecimens winter bug. and was bitten on the ic, is somewhat improved, but r from being out of danger I not yet become insane, as did Oscar Newasaky, a young Polish farmer, who died as the result of being bitten. Newasaky’s farm is in lowiying ground a few miles from here. A win ter bug bit him a few days ago. ano 'thin 24 hours his body swelled tc ghtful proportions. Physicians conic t help him. He became a raving maniac, and remained so until death re lieved his sufferings.

Cost ol Strike CommUiioa.

Washington, D. C (Special).—Assist ant Recorder Moseley, of the late Anthracite Coal Strike Commission, is engaged in figuring up the expenses oi that body for submission to the Presi dent and the next Congress. "Althougl Congress appropriated $50,000 for the use of the commission," said Mr lev today, "the total expended will me within $10,000 ol that. The cos the investigation^o^the country wil

inch su

dertaking ever

•. Mosi will n<

SS-

small expense, nor h jg ever been conducted business-like and ecoi

Oat Fkeoen KiBtJ and Three Is Jured. Pittsburg. Pa. (Special).—While an vering a fire call one fireman was kill

ed and three others badly injured. Theit names are: Robert H. Wilson, drivet of the hose carriage, killed almost instantly; Capt. Sanford Thompson, back sprained; Lieut Harry Weaver, bruised face and leg injured; Adam Ruppert

■ions wound on head and back sprainThe firemen were on the hose

what he said, he neglected to caul interviewer against quoting him miral Dewey- drove to the White House

him were icglcctcd n

_ st quoting him.

wey drove to the White Hi

n carriag

- ief of the Capt. William S. Cowles. At the dose of the interview the Ad miral returned immediately to his Rhode Island avenue home. The Admiral de dined to make any statement for publication. At the White House it was stated that the Admiral's explanation was satisfactory to the President. Hither Pay on Coast Line. Savannah, Ga. (Special).—It was announced at Way-cross that General Manager J. R. Kenly, of the Atlantic Coast

Line, has a|

.f the

agreed to an increase in the p

of the engineers and firemen of the system of 8 to to per cent. Committee* of the first and second division engineers

and firemen had whh Mr. Kenly ar dent Deni" : —

vision engineers

been in «>n«u!tntior ind General Supcnntcn

Monday.

SPARKS FROM THE WIRES

A break in the levee of Hymelia, La., ha* resulted in the partial submerging o? the richest sugar district in that state. The break south of Greenville, Miss., wil' likely cause a suspension of the Illinois Central's traffic over the Mississipp 1

alley.

The minority of the Foreign Relation!

.‘ommittec of the Cuban Senate pc’stf in opposing the elimination of the condition regarding the limit of time in which

the treaty is to become effe**” *

The mineworkers have

M.-.rkle ft Co. and A. Pardee & C dependent operators, that they insi?

lifted C B * Co, its

1st upot lion be

the award of the Strike Commissioi

ing carried out to the letter.

A sensational raid was made in Nev York on a poolroom which was abund:xtly provided with protection against police interference . The alleged proprie

tor was arrested.

Miss Helen Gould will send Dr. W. H Tolman, the social economist, to Europ* to make a study of the great movementi

for social betterment.

Three passengers were killed and s number injured in a collision betweet the Sunset limited and a passenger trait

on the Southern Pacific. I-ondon '' ’ ”

comm: -- __ — Army, a magnificent welcome home. It his speech the General said the Salvaikn Army had made-great and real progres!

in the United State*.

The Austro-Hungarian government L* supporting a syndicate to establish at Austro - Hungarian - Chinese Bank ai Tietsin. whh a capital of $4,800x00. Count von Revcntlow gets back a' 'Admiral Dewey by declaring that Ger many's first squadron "could smasl Dewey’s heterogeneous assemblage.'’ A British force commanded by Gen Sir Frederick Lugard occupied Sokoto the religious center of Mohammedanism

in Northern Nigeria.

There wa* a serious engagement be tween Dominican government troop? am revolutionists at Juan Calvo, nca; th«

jabon.

SE.«r^‘': n ’,o h ;£ ^ o’ „„ o, Etejabon.'

it at the corner ol Park avenue. Wil | The remains of Major Gen. Sir Hi son was unable to check bis team in MacDonald were buried at 6 o’cloc

son was unable to cbecl

time to prevent a collision, and all o' the firemen were thrown to the ground.

Mall Robbery m tbc Wabuft.

MacDonald were buried at 6 o'clock the morning in tbc IVan Cemetery, a-

Edinburgh.

government'^ intentior provision 0/ the law s from Germany, an

Reich 1.tag recently b> Chancellor von Bneluw, will not be tea

The German gi lo abolish the [

ding Jesuit* irom ' red in the Reich *taj

Anna Rot he. the spiritualist, tried w Berlin on the charge of swmUmg not ed people, including the conn chap lain, was sentenced to 1* m-aths' im