W aw aw ays Brae a ta rtaaa M a tte r
STRIKE IS
a a M ta D a l e k l a .
D A Y T O N ......................... ORBGON.
EVENTS OF THE DAT
* • I
C e lfo M I« « a<
the Tw«
President Kroger to reported to here
moved to Nelspruit.
Eight deaths Iro n extreme
reported from Cbieago.
iato
Ia a w ild plunge e l a
a gulch a t Tacoma, U people
killed and «0 injured.
Elisabeth Chapman. a Salem
81rt
of 1848, died at that city ia
year, of a complication of dii
A a explosion of flrewoiks ia Phila
delphia caused the death of four chil
dren and the fatal injury of thiee oth-
By the explosion 'of an oil tonkia
Parkersburg, W . Va., 0 »
fatally
blown to atoms and
injured.
Three men were killed; one weead-
ed ia a wreck oa the Delaware, Lacka
wanna A Western road at D arkin’e
Oat, near Henryville, Pa. — —— - -
Southern
p rovin ces
of
C h in a
are
Cahaae are pleased at the withdrawal
(Jifanimoua Choice of Kansas
of Amerieaa troops.
City Convention.
St. Louis street oar employee have
their strike-
CbÎDOM imperial troope are defend-
0 1 A F R E E C Ü I3A Ö E PLATFORM
m the fas
ia Pekin-
do not w a rt religion and no
of
W e b s ta r D a v is A rr a ig n s Ik a R r a a b lic n a
i* .
-
,
’ > -
P a r ty ta r L a a b a f Hy i,i,.a i i, r
• - ’ Vi-
f i r th e B ears.
Battleship Oregon w ill not be
to Taku again nnleee absolutely neeee-
eary.
;
C ity, July
8.— W illiam
I t to said Ameriea to to have 11.000 J. Bryan, of Nebraska, was tonight
men in the force of 108,000 to he need unanimously placed in nomination as
the Democratic candidate for president
ia China.
Tbte steamer Roselle arrived at Seat-. of the United States, on a platform op
tie from Lynn canal, with »600,000 in posing imperialism, militarism end
| trust«, and specifloaiiy declaring tor the
Klondike geld.
1 free coinage of sliver at the ratio oi 16
American trade w ill "be injured if to 1.
the powers decide to make war on the
The nomination came as the culmina
Chinese empire.
tion of a fransied demonstration in
The Oregon must remain in dry dock honor of the paity leader, lasting >7
00 days. She has arrived at Che Foo minutes, and giving uttenroee to all
and w ilt go to Japan a t onoe.
<e pent-up emotions of the vast mnl-
Id Hang Chang ia again urging the utude. I t followed also a tierce trug-
powers to intervene and establish a gle throughout the last 8G hours con
strong government in the Chinese em cerning the platform declaration on
silver and oa the relative position
pire.
which the silver question is to main-
George llo rriok, is held at North Ya tain to the other great iseueeof the day.
kim a oa a charge ot killin g a squaw on
I t was lata thia afternoon when the
H e claims self-de- convention was at last faoe to face with
the presidential Domination. Early
Ramos to current that the Chicago fit la the day there bad been tedions de-
Alton, Kansas City Southern and Un- lays, due to the Inability of The plat-
ion Pacific railways w ill ho amalga- form committee to reconcile their dif-
drifting away from the empire. L i
Hung Chang and the friendly viceroy«
are engineering the movement.
|
D r. Henry D . Cogswell, a well-
known philanthropist and prohibition
The foreigners ia Pekin w ill be left ist, to dead at San Francisco, aged 80
to their fate. The allies cannot reeoae yeais.
them on aeoonnt of the overwhelming
Commissioner of Patents Duell is
force of Chinese that oppeae them.
said to he oat for the nomination tor
The U n ite d States battle-ship Ore governor of New Fork on the Repatc
gon, which ran ashore off the island of lioan ticket.
How Ka, in the Miatau group, 88 mi lee .
Japanese laborers in H a w a ii era dis
northeast of Che Foo, on Jane 18, has
contented.' Plantation managers have
been floated.
- ~
a
j
oonceeded everything asked for and still
—The steamer Dirigo arrived a t Seal- they are not satisfied.
tie from Skagway, bringing 10 boxes o f ,
gold dust, valued a t nearly »800,000.1 The converter and billet m ill of the
Illinois Steel Company at Joliet, H I.,
The Dirigo carried 72 passengers,
resumed operations and nearly 1.000
mostly from Dawson.
|
men were pat to work.
Roar-Admiral Bare, new oommand-
Russian. French and German admi
ant.of the Norfolk navy yard, has been
rals at Tian Tain are said to have ex^
selected to
enooeed
Rear-Admiral ,
’priest d themselves as unfavorable to
Philip, deceased, as commandant of the
N eer Y nrtr n s T y y x rd r-*------ ~
, Japaato being given a free band.___ U.
Roy C. Gage, of Company 0 , Third
Charles W . Dickinson, inventor of
the geometry C lathe, which made a regiment. O. N G ., ia their annual
encampment at i Salem, whs drowned
successful counterfeiting of bank notes
in u e Willamette river w hile bathing.
impossible, is dead at hie *- *
Many prostrations front beet in New
Belleville, N . J ., aged 77
York
city.
■ '
Jane »0 the grand staff of
elan army estimated the Chinees army | Two more British warships have keen
to number 1,720,000 men. He also ordered to China.
■aid that about »00,000 Mausers have ‘ A Franco-American atlidbce is pro
been imported w ithin the last three posed by an enthusiastic Frenchman.
yearn.
Fixe in the bemneae eeetiea of Pitie-
A dispatch from Bombay says that bnrg caused the death of four persons
ia a lf exoept three districts cholera to and injury to six others.
raging ia Bombay presidency, the cease .
reported tor the week ending Jane 38 1 F ite la the Cramp’s shipbuilding
yard near Philadelpha, destroyed prop
t u r n baring 90,680, and the deaths, 1.3,
erty to the value of »200,000.* ’’
this was ready the convention
b egu iled he time by p u ttin g forwent
ipeakere ot more or less prominence to
keep the vast audience from becoming
too restless.
Tbs first Motion, beginning at 10
o’clock thia morning, was entirely
fruitless of results and it was not un
til late in the aiternuon, when the sec
ond session had begun, that the plet-
at last aide to ro-
Already its main
features, embodying the 1» to I princi
ple, had become known to the dele
gates, and there was U tile delay in
giving i t nnanimnus &ppnoi*&l. Thia
DunsnrtXW ttAfi
aw
anerr^«
ttiw rwwv - * vnwgaew
tu n
m as
Ix»i Wav
i— - r a n
viM'H
Partick Sharkey, who died at the age
ef 88 in East Cambridge, Maae., was
the last survivor ol the tour organizers
i of the Father Mathew Temperance so-
* eiety, the oldest association of lta kind
among the laity of the Roman Catholic
-
i church. *•
The oldest living ex-senator of the
Four ship loads of American Chris
United States, James W . Bradbury, el tian Kndeavorers. 8,000 ia a ll. w ill at
Maine, has just turned hie 08 birthday. tend the convention in London from
Mrs. Kroger mid la aa interview ' Jul^ 14 to 1 ^
that she had 58 relatives in the field in '
la the fulfillment of a plan laid out
the Boer war— four sons, six eone-in- by the late Lieutenant-Coloael Jamee
1«w and 48 grandsons.
D . Miley. United States volunteers. H0
‘ W ith the death of M n . T. M . Key- Americas library has been established
worth at Lincoln, Ragland, at the age tat Manila.
of 00 years, the ll* e ST John Bunyan’s
Proai.lent Eliot, of H arvard. hns re-
descendants become extinct.
eetved Oom several Harvard alumni
serving in tom Philippines a large
No elates except Rhode Island aad
valuable collection ef native anae.
Mississippi require mere than eae
for t ho an-
for eittaaaa. Ta Mta-
iveeaity
I only four
tn,
ta.„ . .
. «. iA . J ,
B ip l e B a il to S a v e
Ska Causa «* Ska A eaM eaS -O «a
W»■ *«•»<!
ClevelandL O. Jaiy 10.— The schoon-
w v ^ M l i r w i l « t in . i w S o
1 16 mile« off this port thiY after-
noon w ith six n e r r o n l.M l n Z a b e r e of
the fom ilTof Jai^Tcforrigan, wealthy
veasel-owner of this ciUr
*
Mrs. John Corrigan wax the only
«board who wax saved. C.
H ^ i X t o , the captain; Samuel Big-
h a v e no w a ter in th eir stock
St. Lotti» Caurnen Say Corn-
patny H b » Broken Faith.
T H l BOYCOTT WILL B I BRSVMF.D
n a tp la y a e Say T k a n WIM Ba Ma L>
I m u m Mar D a m ea a tretla a s o t
V le la a e a T k la
St. Louis, July 11.— The strike
tgainst the St. Louis Transit Company
by its former employee, which was de
clared off July 2, waa ordered recalled
today at a meeting of the Street lta il-
waymetn’s Union, at the West End ooli-
senm. Tomorrow morning a t 6 o'olock
was the time fixed for .the recall of tho
boycyott on a ll tho company’s lines.
When the strike wee settled Joly 2,
there were some muttering« of discon
tent among the men over th e tonne of
settlement, and so i t ie the dissatisfac
tion has grown dally. The men main
tain that the oompany has failed to
keep the agreement and a dosen or
more instances w ere c ite d tending to
prove that there had been a breach of
faith. Meetings were held a t several
places in the course of the week, and
committees w en appointed to procure
proof of infidelity on the part of the
company.
A t a meeting of the executive com
mittee of tho Street Railwayman's Un
ion held Monday, a batch of affidavits
was presented to the effect that men
had been employed by the oompany
since July 3 in violation of the terms
of the agreement of that date. A t a
session lasting several hours, the com
mittee oalled a mam meeting of the
men for thia morning to recommend at
that meeting that the Mrike be declared
oa agata. The Central Trades and. La
bor Union mat later and indorsed the
action of tho executive committee.
The oompany, through President
W hitaker, addressed a letter to the
man, denying that the oompany had
Intentionally violated the agreement of
July 2, and declaring its intention to
live up to every condition of the agree
ment, both in letter and spirit- Fred
W . Lehman, attorney for the company,
appeared at the meeting and offered to
submit the question.as to whether the
company has broken faith to Joseph
o r o t f q ^ X by ^ ’ and know 1- ICartoli were sent asta,re by Captain w . Folk, counsel for the men, and
‘
‘ Ixmnd the oompany
‘
* to abide
. . . . by
. . M
. r.
. ” of . the
. « - i_____
i t __ ax____
O ’Brien tn
to mn
procure assistance and ‘ they
Impending
dbom.
An rvttrtan
show, before doing businem outside el i
the state of their origin, that they
an,I th a t
they have not attempted end a n not
attempting to monopolies any business
or the production of any articles of
merchandise.
We oondemn the Dingley tariff law
ae a trust breading measure.
. - We reaffirm aad endorse the princi
ples of the national Democratic pint-
form adopted a t Chicago in 1808, and
we reiterate the demand 'of that plat
form for an American financial p lat
form adopted byStbe American people
for themselves which sh a ll restore and
main tain s bimetallic prtea lets!, and
as part of such system the Immediate
restoration o i the free and nnlimited
co in a g e o f n tr o r and gout at tne pre«*
ratio of 18 to k, without w ait
ing for the aid or oonaent oi any other
nation.
W e favor an amendment to the fed
eral constitution providing for the elec
tion of Untied States senators by direct
vote of the people, and wa favor direct
legislation wherever practicable.
We a n opposed to government by in
jonction ; we denounce the blacklist
and favor arbitration aa a means of set
tling disputes between corporations ami
their employes.
We favor the immédiate construc
tion, ownership and control of the
Nicaragua canal by the United States.
We favor an ifltelligent system ot
improving the slid lands of the West,
storing the waters for purposes of ir ri
gation and the bolding ef each lands
for a c tu a l se ttle r s.
We favor the oontinaance and strict
enforcement of the Chinese exclusion
law, and its application to the same
classes of a il Asiatic races.
Speaking, as we believe, for the en
tire American nation, exoept its Re
publican offioe bolder«, and for a ll free
men everywhere, we extend our sym
pathies to the heroic Boers in their un
equal struggle to maintain their liberty
and independence.
Believing that our mort oheriabed
institutions are ia grant peril, that the
very existence o l ear constitutional
republio is at stake, and that the decis
ion now to he rendered w ill determine
whether or not our children w ill enjoy
these blessed privileges of free govern
ment which have made the United
States g n a t, prosperous and honored,
we earnertly aak for the foregoing dec
laration oi principles the hearty sup
port of liberty-loving American people,
regardless of previous party affiliations.
effort was made to take tlie infant
daughter of Mifi. R eilly out, but Mrs.
Reilly* would not let the child go.
“ I t was realiaed that nothing oould
be done to eave those in the cabin, and
attention was turned to saving those on
deck. ‘The latter, outaide of the cap
tain. mate and crew, were Mrs. John
Corrigan and her daughter. Miss Etta
Corrigan. The captain and the crew
tried to get Mrs. Corrigan and her
upon thecroes-treee in the
rigging, but the heavy sea
them all overboard.
“ For God’s mke, Mrs.
and your daughter keep ■ tight
the rigging,** we eel led to them,
" E n t 8» W2 yoifod the eea swept them
and as overboard.
Fortunately, Mrs.
Corrigan had succeeded ln taking hold
of a cork lounge. She clang to it and
was raved. ”
Aocording to the testimony of several
sailors, the topsail, mainsail and jib
were a ll set when the storm came up.
Thia is denied by Uiggam, who dedlaree
that they were in good condition to
faoe the storm. Captain James Corri
gan declared tonight that good sea
manship conld have
aveated
the
tragedy. He le almost fransied w ith
grief. The Idler was a staunch schoon
er yacht, which Captain Corrigan re
cently purchased from John Cudahy, of
Chicago. The survivors of the wrack
Wert picked up by tugs a few minates
after the accident and brought into
this port.
F ltte k a r a F lram aa D ied .
Plttaburg, Jely 10.— Stewart Bams,
of Engine Company No. 4, who wks
taken ont of the wracked Evans build-
in« last night, died at an early ltour
thia morning, making tba list ot dead
number five. Captain Dan Campbell,
also of No. 4, who was thought
night to have suffered the least
of any of those buried, ie tonight in a
very critical condition, saffering in-
tarnallv.
The phveiciane considered
his chances of recovery very slight.
The other Injured men are get»ing along
nioely. A1I of the wounded men unite
in saying that their reecue waa little
short of miraculous. None expected to
he taken ont a lirc . .
We B a 4 le s T e l S te e e v e ra d .
Cleveland, O „ July 10.— Nona of tho
bodies of tho six persons drowned by
the oapeilsng of Captain James Corri
gan’s yacht, the Idle». 16 miles off
this port yesterday, have yet been re
covered. Oa account oi the high sea
etill ranniqg, divers were unable to do
T lie T te h e t r i l l a S .
anything towards recovering the bodies
Kansas C ity, July 7.—'The Demo- today. Another attempt w ill be
cratlo national ’ ticket wee completed tomorrow.
today by the nomination of Adlai E .
Wash., July 6.— A »60,000
8tevenson far vice-president.
The
nomination was made on the first bal fire caused by a skyrocket in the hands
lot, state after state joining in the wild of a careless boy last night burned a
scramble to record their support ef the businem block occupied by Holden 4k
winning candidate. I t was not ae- Wilson. Randolph Gross aad Rhodes
oompauied by any so oh frantic demon Bros., on Hecond avenue. The build*
stration of approval aa had marked the tag and mort ol tho contents ie « total
lorn. A ll are believed to be fully insured.
proceedings a t previous stages.
The Utah OtSMtrrteiMB Company, ef
8an Francisco, Jely 4 - —The
Ogden, whieh was awarded the grad
port Grant, w ith General Chaffee
ing contract for Ibe extension of the
the 8ixth artillery on board, S t
valley lis t to Clifford, hav<
•ailed for the Orient at 7 o'clock fr,
■ratlene.
The oompany has
d . , rotasaed to port three hoars taker.
The cease ef the transport G n a t’s re abort 80 teams and a large force of
turning to port wee the 'n s lrla g of her men a t work, and ia the next 10 days
main Meant pipe. T h. aaamge can he
100
repaired in ebett 12 hours, after
whieh the v u re l w it. agaia pat to eon.
■ ■■■I fo
8TOKM
BOAT WENT DOWN
w.
Brussels. July 0.—'The aaeiae court
Now York. July 8-— Up to 11 o’clock
today returned a verdict of guilty of at
last night 126 Imdiea had been recov-
tempt to k ill the Prince 00 Wales
wed from tho waters of the North
against Jean Baptiste Sipide, who
river. There nre yet over 125 people
fired at the piince in this oity, April
Dissing.
it.
The oonrt considered that Sipido
A forge electric light plant w ill be acted without discernment, and sen
put in a t the Cornucopia mines in tenced him to a reformatory until he
anion ooonta, o r. The waters of Pine ■hall have attained hie majority.
creek w ill he utilised to operate the Meert, Penchot, and Melrera, the in
4
machinery. Work oa tho same w ill stigators of the attack upon the pr
were aoqaitted oa the ground «hat they
begin immediately.
conediered the plot a joke.
.
Washington, July 6 .— Five
in
10 day* foem yellow fever to Generoi
—
A report In h it
Persons Perished
Lake Erls Disaster.
San Francisco, July 11.— The
1 er Dolphin, whieh arrived last night
from New York, through the Straits of
Magellan, had a sensational trip . Ac-
cording to
t Captain John O ’Brien, the
)wing her departure three stow
day folios
aways were Discovered. But for the
stormy weather Captain O'Brien would
have put about aad landed the men.
SutMequently the oaptai£ wished with
a ll his heart that he had followed hie
ffret inclination in this rdepeot.
From St. Lnoia. be took eight na
tives to assist the crew. About a week
»«»’ »»g * * • West Indes, a native
told the captain that one of the xtow-
• ’ » F « WM • notorious bandit, and an-
•»«' “ •«
• » « » I * « 1 murderer. Edwaid Palmer,
, *
“U ’* * * 5’ • * nraB<1 “ i»dePend-
I an t atttiude before the ? ° 1Ph‘u
! I»»* «“ ^y Hook. Three days ont from
j
attacked a fireman namsd
5 X
S .*
~
r»«
in
Chief
torday w ith the family of M r
M ,. the firemen’s head. Tne West Indians
aboard and started to Cleveland
' ¡’then became friendly w ith the negro
Corrigan wax ill, and left by the train.
A t 2 o’clock tho storm came ep. and crew and they worked only whenever
inside of five minutes the yacht sank. ¡they jileaeed.
A ll the woman, exoept Mrs. John Cor- |8 Captain O ’Brien intended to land the
steward and the natives at Montevideo,
but the United States ooneul there ad-
| vised holding them u ntil an American
i m. port was reached. The steward wax
from hlx irons and put to work
S 3 - . , ¿ d d u u u .t t .r m 1
* Corrigan
* but released
painting and cleaning ship. Follow-
they refused.
Mrs John
ippine policy o l the present administra
when the gale in« thia trouble the blacks showed a
tion. I t has embroiled the republic ia eluttg to a cork eofa
When rescued, tendency to rise «gainst the offioera and
came,
and
was
saved.
ry war, eacriflood the
I w hite men of the crew, but Captain
Btggam
said
many of its noblest sone and ,
abort 2:08 when the squall . O ’Brien and his men kept their revolv
“
I
t
United States, previously |
er« in plain view and by their apparent
applauded throughout the rtruek ue. The yacht laid down on her
, and the water rushed readiness to use th en prevented trouble
world as the champion of freedom, in
.
for tlie time being. Three days wax
the false and an-Amertoan position of
spent at Montevideo in coaling. In
crushing w ith m ilitary force the efforts
jlm e s U orikan .M i» Ida Corri-' nailing oat to open sae, in the river
Platt», a hurricane swept down oa the
r lT r > Z ^ ^ H fta » ta m ‘ YAAtaaana
falwrt
M m - DoipM a, and she narrowly escaped be
eonoZest’X o a d and^ntim idatinn aad K eillF w ,r* aM ln ***• ' “loon b^ ow ing wracked.
H m 2n. X
»>»« 0>e storm came on ue. Captain
In the Stroita oi Magellan the man-
. i
Holmes gave me orders to take in sail, eating Puegana attempted to set fire to
,7-__
^ “ i* * * 1
,
, and I transmitted the order to the men. »he Dolphin as they had done a year
The captain, before to a Chilean man-of-war, killin g
They obeyed quiekly.
W e pledge the Democratic party to
myself and the crew made efforts to and e a tin g th e e n tir e c re w . A t C oro
i unoeaaing warfare in qatioa, state
save the women, bat without suoeesg. nel, a Chilean coaling post, the ooal
d city against private monopoly in We told then» the yacht was sinking, passeis obtained liquor and went on the
rm. Existing laws against
they could not or would not comh warpath and conld not he subdued.
net he enforced " aad more bat i
on deok.
I waded into the saloon They smashed a il the fire axes on hoard
mast be enacted provid
when the water was up to n»y week, and threatened to k ill every one on the
ing for publicity ae to the affaire of
but M rs. J a m es C orrigan w o u ld not steamer. During <be trpuble, Purser
corporations engaged ln interstate com
coma out. She may have been rendered iiiunes and Second Engineer George G
M ete a, W awlA-ka- Asaaaeta.
Y le ttm a of ( la b a k a a r i f e .
An ordinary eight la Manila ie a
, Fit piao market or washerwoman smok
ing a forge cigar aad clothed ia a low
necked gown, with flowing sleeves and
a handsomely embroideried silk scarf.
Meee of
ot the United SUtee, as
sembled ia national convention oa the
anniversary of the adoption of the Dec
laration of Independence, do reaffirm
oar faith ia that immortal proclama
tion of the inalienable rights of Ameri
cans and ear allegiance to the constitu
tion framed ia harmony therewith by
the fathers of the fopnblie.
We bold w ith the United States aa*
preme oonrt that the Declaration of
Independence is the spirit of our gov
ernment, of which the constitution is
the form and letter. We declare again
that a ll governments instituted among
man derive their just powers from the
consent of the governed; that any gov
ernment not based upon the consent of
the governed ia tyranny; and that to
impose upon any people a government
of lores is to substitute the methods of
-imperialism for those of the republio.
Believing in these fundamental prin-
oiples, wo denounce the Puerto Rioan
law enacted by a Republican oongrees,
against the protest and opposition of
tnetce and Jwquirisg ell o o r p
Chicago rupture pa qeeetioos ol principle and
from extrema heat. The record for
left the way clear for the supreme
within Pekin walla, »0,000 outside.
week ia 07 deaths and 08 peoetratieos. vest of the day— the nomination of the
Admiral Kempff reports that the Ore
The total number of bodies recovered presidential candidate.
gon is not la a dangerous position. -
The vest auditorium was filled to lta
from tlie recent H oboken fire no w
The Gorman minister at Pekia has number 148, and 140 persons are re utmost capacity when the moment ar-
been killed and other legations are un ported misting.
rived for the nomination to he made.
der Beige and starving.
* '
»
Not only were the uanal facilities af
A cyolone, acoompanied by a cloud
The cruiser Philadelphia arrived at b un t and hail storm, swept over Kale forded by tickets taxed to the utmost,
Astoria to take part in the Fourth of maaoo, Mich., resulting in damage to bat the doorkeepers were given liberal
instructions, under which the aisles
July celebration there.
- f property of »100,000.
and areas and ail available spaces were
The steamer Danube strived at Na
On June 17, the Cbieago A North pecked to their fullest lim it. When
naimo, B. 0 ., five days from Skagway, western railway opened for traffic their
the cell of states began for the puri>oee
with 40 passengers and »70,000 ia new line fropi Belle Plaine, la ., to Ma-
of placing candidates ia nomination.
gold dust. •
| eon C ity; also their new Fox lake Alabama yielded Ito place at the head
As a last hope of saving foreigners ia branoh. The length of this new line of the list to Nebraska, and Oldham, of
Pekin, the powers may now threaten is 188 miles, which added to their mile that state, made his way to the plat
to destroy the graves of the imperial age gives them a total of 8,462.86 form for the in itia l speech, placing M r.
■ m il« , the largest mileage of any ra il- Bryan in nomination for the presi
1 road in the world.
Fire destroyed the large soap and I The dock laborers’ strike at Rotter dency. The orator was strong- voiced
and entertaining, yet to the watting
fertilising plant of the Walker-Htrat-
man Company at Plttaburg, causing a dam, Germany, ia aaauming threaten- delegates and spectators th*re was but
. tng proportions.
The carmen have one point to bis epeeeh, and that was
loss of »76,000.
| now joined la the strike, and the polioe the stirring peroration which closed
A scandal in Klondike. Gold Com and marines are guarding the street«
with the name ol W illiam J. Bryan.
missioner Senkler ia charged with il in order to check disturlances. The
This was the signal for the demoli
legal grants to persons with whom ho strikers have picketed all the ap-
tion of the day, and with a cOm-
was partner.
I proachee to the town, so as to prevent
»n-porpoee, the great ooaourse joined
Lou Cmmer, of Independence, Or., non-unionists from entering. The la
a tribute el enthusiastic devotion to
. a pioneer of 1882, committed suicide borers of Rotterdam w ill hold a mam tits party leader. A ll of the intensity
by hanging himself.
No cause ia matting to disouss the beet means of ef former demonstrations and much
known for the deed.
siding the strikers.
more wee added tp this final tribute to
The fonr-oared race between Penn
The orders recently issued for the re the leader.
sylvania, Columbia and Cornell crews moval o( a large number ol troope Iro n
When the demonstration had spent
was won by the former. Theresa took Cuba have been gladly welcomed by itself, the speeches seconding the otni*
place at Poughkeepsie, N . Y .
| the Cubans, and General Wood ia in nation of M r. Bryan were in
"der.
A t Chester park, Cincinnati, W . A. receipt of many letters from various Then came the voting. State after
Ruts and F. Hausman, of New Haven, municipalities offering thanks for what state xeoarded its vote la behalf
the
Conn., on a motor tandem, made a they call his disposition to trust the Nebraska candidate, giving hii. the
mild in 1:20 4-6. Thia gives them the Cubans, and declaring that the entire auaaimoua vote of a ll the states
world’s record for a cement track.
| island is in a state ot absolute tran territories. The convention man
By the bursting of a reservoir of the q uillity. The Tenth infantry, it la be had already agreed that this waa suffi
city Water works of Grand Rapida, lieved, w ill leave the island shortly af cient work for tho day, and the vlee-
Mich., 100,000,000 gallons of water ter the departure of the regiments now preeidential nomination was allowed
was precipitated upon a thickly popu under orders to proceed home.
to go over until tomorrow.
lated district of the city, doing dam- J James W . Porter, of Chicago, has re
N ext to the demonstration for the
age estimated at hundred^of thousands ceived a cablegram from Che Foo, an- party candidate, the greeting ol the
of dollars.
_
I nounclng that bis brother, the Rev. announcement that imperialism waa to
at Henry J. Porter, and Ms sister, Miss be the paramount ieene of this cam
- The strength of the foreign foi
present in China are ae follows: Ger Mary H . Porter, missionaries of the paign was tho most spontaneous and
many, 44 officers and 1,400 men; Giant American board of commissioners for significant of the day.
Another stirring event of the day
Britain, 184 offlers and 1,700 men; foreign missions, stationed at Pang
Austria, 12 officers and 197 men; Chuang, 200 miles south of Tien Tain, wax the appearance of Webster Davis,
Amerioa, 20 officers and 820 men; had arrived safely at Che Foo. July 6, ax-assistant secretary of the interior
Franoe, 17 offioera and 887 men; Italy, coming overland from Chinan Fa, cap ender M cK inley’s administration, in a
seven officers and 181 men; Japan, 110 ita l of the province. They were accom speech severely arraigning the Repnh-
offioera and 8,700 men, and Roaeia, 117 panied by the Rev. H . P. Perkins, an iican party for its lack ot sympathy for
officers and 8,817 man, w ith a total of other missionary stationed at Pang tho Boers and formally announcing his
Chuang.
tllegiance to the Democratic party. *
68 Held guns and 86 maohine gone.
Germane naturalised in Ameriea are
In disfavor in the fatherland.
The wall pai>er trust, one ot
earliest aad beet known of the
binatfona, has asked for a receiver,
Since January 1 174 national
have been organised. On June 0 (here
were 8,764 national banha ia the ooea*
toy.
Carleton college at Northfield, Minn.,
has received »06.000 from Dr. D. K.
Pearsons, of Chicago.
» .— Following
the platform ae
> a r.
Tfc* Bal
A Taaaa T r a g e d y .
London, July 0. The oolonial office
Vernon, T8x.,* July 11.— John
has recai veil a dispatch from Govranor. Edward Brewer, wealthy cattlemen,
Hodgson, of the Gold Coast foolony, I
and instantly killed near
saying that owing to the non-arrirel ol here by N . K . Norris. The tragedy oo-
the relief column a t Atekwarte, June enrred >ver business affaire. Norris
2«, ami th e r ed u ctio n of th be
e food
food sep-
sop - wi
w as srreated.
through the
T h . ^ b n a l i i S i T . , » « tt.,
t
t n e n ^ n y r a -'ih ?
jji:
I. The col-
nmn eofferod greet prlrations, 4mt tho t b ^ a tu c k .
The o ^ T fe a r
foes w m only six men killed »ad eev- „ .’ ¿ng v , th e
Of
eral wounded.
wea regarding the food supply.
A rra e ta d t e r f f a la a y .
London, July M .— As Lord
81. Looie, July 10.— Percy Young,
dispatches reveal, the Boera
who olalme to be a follower of tho tarf,
* ■ « * pacified
Orange Wast-
River
wee arrested tonight I L r t t i f o
»to n y aad the so-called
hotel a t the Union
nolice „ of lkm *“ - n o , . , ---------------
without producing
gram from the chief tof
of police
Termlimi
atte
« F rarioue impression upon the British
thet h e i i w i t o d ' X r a ' w t i i
b“ £ * * l*r' *» »««• Cepe
r t fo fo ^* “ ounw wta?
« ‘««H »« »heir boycott of British
rived from ClAeego w ith hie’ w ife Sat- g ^ o o c ^ p t u i * h a £ ™ F“ 1“
urday, eaya that be is not gailty of any
■ T* .
*< <« « « 0 0 0 Mnr*
Î crime,
S Ï Ï and
m asked
î S J to Î be
Ï Ï sent
’ X Immediate-
Ï Z Î Ï t t g 1? * »
Admiral a
vine
Folk’s judgment in tho premises. The
proposition was ignored, and by a
unanimous vote the strike was re- 1
newed.
—
A member of the ekeortive ocntmR-
tee today said that thia waa the second
tim e the eompnny had broken ia ith
w ith ita employes, and no agreement
would be accepted in the future thfit
did no« provide for tho reinstatement
of a ll old employes in 94 hoars after
the execution of the agreement.
“ There w ill be no lawlessness or
demenetntione of violence tbie tim e,’ *
he continued. “ By means of a vigor-
one enforcement of tho boycott we hope
abrotatoiy to firttroy thoearoing capac
ity of the company **
The whole trouble
upon a few of tho men violating ita
agreement, while the company, on tho
other hand, emphatically deniae that
snch ie the ease. The men claimed
yesterday that a verbal agreement was
entered into concurrently w ith the
written agreement and under the ver
bal agreement the company had agreed
to re-employ a ll the old men in 80
days, seniority in the services deter
mining the priority of re-employment.
I t was claimed that the Rev. D r. W. J.
Boise instructed the men that such
MORE BODIES FOUND.
an agreement existed, in a speech at
the West End coliseum. The olfioerr
« T otal o f K O R a e e v e ra d » r a n t th e
of the company declare that there was
H o h e k e a » Ir a .
no such verbal understanding and that
New York, July 10.—-Three more
the only agreement made by them was
bodies were found today on the Seale.
.This makes 00 bodies that have thus the written agreement, which waa
far been taken from the wreck of tho published at the tim e.
Saalo since the tire, and 146 bodies in
W E E K ’8 W O R K IN L U Z O N .
all recovered.
The bodies reoovered
xxiiy were ^ a n d in .the second uabin
n the after |V rt of the ship, and they B te v e a A m e rte a a s W a r e K i l l e d a a d
B la ta a a W a a a d e d .
were horrible eights to look upon,
rhey had very tittle clothing on, and
M anila. July 11.— The part week’s
were all victims of fire.
They oould scouting in Luaon resulted t a l l Amer
aot bo identified.
icans being killed and 18 wounded.
Chief Officer Henry Schaeffer, who One hundred and sixty Fillpinoe were
was in charge today, said he had no killed daring the week and eight Am
idea who tba men had boon, bat, judg ericana who had been prisoners in the
ing from the place whore they were hands of the rebels were surrendered
found, he thinks they were stewards.
and 100 rifles were turned over to tbe
The body of a man badly scarred and United States officials. Tbe enemy
burned was found at Rockaway Beach ambushed a wagon train between Ind-
this afternoon and taken to the morgue ang and Naie. The Third infantry
there. The body ie supposed to be lost nine men w hile on an expedition
that of a victim of the Hoboken dis- to punish tho Ladronee in tba delta of
u te r. Dynamite waa exploded on the' the Rio Grande.
river bed about the wrecks of the piers
In the Antigua, province of Panay, a
if the North German Lloyd lino today
running fight of three hour»’ duration
without bringing to the surface any resulted in tbe k illin g and wounding of
nore bodies.
70 of tbe enemy. There were no cas
ualties among tbe Americans.
A a e tk e r T e a ea u ela K a v a la tla a .
The insurgents are slowly aoceptiug
Kingston, Jamaioa, July 11.— Gen.
Tortira, the Veneaoelaa minister to the amnerty provisions. In some lu-
Oolombla, strived here yesterday, oa stanoes Americans are suspending oper
bis way to Caracas, to report to hie ations in order to give the rebels an op
lovernment specifically on the Colom portunity to taka advantage of the
bian situation. H a said another revo- decree.
lutipn ie impending in Veneanela,
bended by D r. Petrie. A private ca
A general movement of Boer settlers
ble dispatch received b e n announced in Gesaland, PortugnsM territory,
_
_
that starvation practically axlvte nt
to be in contemplation. Large
0 ar, agena, Colombia, and that the
have been driven aero» the
rebel general was recently near Bogota, border. The Portuguese welcome the
rebel
the capital o f Colombia.
movement.
loot no time in finding the men in au
thority. The nearest troops wete lOO
miles away, hut n" special train was
vent after them by the government. I t
developed that Humes and Carroll were
no better on shore than they had been
on the Dolphin, for in so out of the
way place it was aeeleee to
tempts to get back to the ship.
“ When we got hack to the
mid Purser H u ro n , “ the mutineers had
life craw ep in the rigging and were ln
fe ll peeeeenfon cf the v essel. The sol
diers had a quieting effect on the ne-
The striking firemen were tak
en ashore in irons and next day the
held on the
oonrt oi inquriy
The cour t — taneed the tix
Dot
e'ta~ifo>ne morthe each in tho
ring
calabooee. ln the crowd • were the
steward and the three stowaways from
St. Lucia. You can l»et we fort no
time getting out of Coronel as soon as
sentence had been passed. I would
not want to see my worst enemy in
prison in Coronel. I t is a desolate
place where only leprosy end crime
seem to thrive.**
The Dolphin ie on her way to Sent*
lie, where she w ill go into the Alaskan
trade.
________
r
r
i
a
s
- " H
" ?
ia e p e a d a .
Chicago, July
U — The Chicago
Democrat (tho Chicago Dispatch), ru .
afternoon newspaper, founded in 1802,
suspended publication of its daily edi
tion today. I t w ill be continued aa a
weekly. Nathan Eisenlord, publisher
of tba paper, states that the disooutin-
uanoe waa because of tho lack of pa
tronage.
r ..... ................
Two persons were killed and three
injured by a runaway at Indianapolis,
lud.
Botte« »amity » •!• • « ed.
L ittle Rook, A rk ., July 11.— News
reached here today that an entire fam;
ily of nine persons died near Calico
Rock, Marion ooouty.from eating pots-
oqoue toadstools, supposed to be mush
rooms. Tbe victims are: W . J. Fink,
aged 40; M n . M ary L . Fin k, aged SO;
John E . Fink, aged 1»; Keakle Fink,
aged 18; Sigel Fin k, aged 1|; Veil
Fin k, aged 0; Boee Lee Fin k, aged 7;
Melon Fink, aged 8, and an infant
ehlld. The fam ily ate a hearty dinner,
which included the supposed mush
rooms. A ll were taken violently <U
■nd none raarrcroiir—
-
- -*