DAYTON HERALD. BIO APPROPRIATION n o r x g z x z x z x x x z z x z z z z z z «. - ™ ». m 8 FETTERED ÖY FATE EVENTS OF THE DAY Spanish strikers nt Bilbao, now num bering 40,000, have resorted to rioting. An unsuccessful "attempt was made to assassinate President Diax, of Mex- A run on three St. Louis savings banks was started by false rumors, but a it easily paid deposits. ow Waahintgon, Oct. 2 8 .— Ganeral G il- leepie, chief of engineers, in hia annual uf report, made public today, recom mended the appropriation a t the com- er. ing session of congress of 11,760,000 for the improvement of riv e n and har- ’ bon in Oregon, W ashington and n i Idaho . • ' Three steamers have arrived at Seat- tls bringing h alf a m illio n in gold and. 1,600 passengers from Nome. The bnlk-of the money asked for is 10 needed to carry on work a t the mouth ((j of the Colum bia, to provide a 26-foot channel in the W ilbynete and Colum The president iif.tb e Armenian revo b ia from Portland to the aea, and for I lutionary Soriety in London, has been beginning the construction of the ship assassinated l»y political enemies. ht canal around the obstructions in the Robbers a t Lead, S. D ., chloroformed Colum bia between The Dalles an<l an aged couple lu r the purpose of rob C elilo. bery, but were unsuccessful. T h e old sn For the former projects »500,000 | people w ill die. ut each is recommended, and for The I id Dalles canal, »300,000. These amounts, The president of the American health n. added to the available balance, w ill association declares th a t the w ay to Ml provide am ple funds for continuing a -cure ■ n iila ry reform is to enlist the m 1 work throughout the coming fiscal year, support of union labor. ar a»d the fact th at a ll three of these I M abel H . Bechtel, aged 21 years, Was ,n works are now known as “ continuing assaulted, then murdered,* a t A lle n -( j . contracts’ ’ w ill probably mean that sp tow n, J M ., and her body put in an I i t propriations therefor w il l be made in I underground alley near her home. the sundry c iv il b ill and w ill not de- pefad upon the passage of a river and I The Russo-Japanese convention has been approved by the exar. harbor b ill at the coming session. ' I General G illespie estimates th at i t I The first cold spell of the w in ter has I (. W*N cool »2,873,608 to completa the struck. New Y o rk, Pennsylvania ami improvement^)! the low er W illam ette Massachusetts. , lan d ColumbuP rivers, in a d d itio n to T urkish ministers have advised the '■ I»168,240, available from p rior appro-1 wte to reject portions of the Maceon- 4 J priations, w h ile to complete the south I n reform plan of Russia and Aus- before Miss C lara Barton, the bend of ' I j' tty a t the mouth of the Colum bia w ill I the Red Cross society, today. Con require »776,181, in exeeel of the »1,- 260,000 s till available and unexpended. stantine Stephanov, the. special Mace I No estim ate of the cost of the new ca donian delegate, told Miss Barton of nal a t The Dalles has yet been made. t|ie urgency of the situ ation and begged Among the other appropriations recom- _ • her to take immediate action to insure i memled a re :_____ Nine thousand dollars for carrying the forwarding of Red Cross relief to I ont the revised project fort improving Macedonia. Mias Barton asked for de [th e W illa m e tte between Portland and tailed inform ation as to the character Oregon C ity , as suggested by the spec- and scope of the aidjieeded, and said: [ia l board of engineers; »10,000 for “ The Red Cross feels th at it would deepening the channel between V’ an- | couver ami the month of the’Colum-1 lie a humane and noble thing for the American people to undertake to re-1 [b ta ; »60,000 for completing *tbe ap _____________ I» » » the suffering in Macedonia. I proaches and groumls around the canal | and locks st the Cascades; »10,000 fo ri Massachusetts, R hode Ts- | * * c h a thing- W ixtld b e 1» keeping w ith [continuing clearing o f the channel of} md, O hio, Kentucky, Iow a American’tradition in other exigencies. the Snake fiv e r between R ip aria and | [>pi w ill elect fu ll state I The-situatlon, in view of the approach Im naha riv e r; »10,000 for dredging | be others m inor officials *>n ter, would seem to require a sys- the T illam ook hay; »2,000 for Coos I - ,a r r - u _____ .sulm Untisl and immediate effort on the part of the people general riv e r; »60,000 lor producing a greater| ly. D iplom atically the problem would depth ovYr the bar at the entrance of Coaa „ B a y ; »30,000 for C oquille rivqr, J An attachm ent has been imned be an extrem ely delicate one, and and »600 for Clatakaartie river. ain st Dowie for »1,060 on the claim would require discretion and experience For atric tly Washington improve- J for its successful solution.’ ’ ments, the following amounts are) K I. top o f D arrel e directions, one wad domain th a t ■e of Roger D a r- r fath er h ad/died. Before and a fte r ig man bad trs v - nowu world, hut ing. he had come , and once more R*d been in the Roger D a rre l should h a re been the happiest of mortals, as, standing in God’s temple, the forest, he and Carol plighted their troth; in the sweet, hopeful fu tu re it should be ’’each for the other through time and eternity." , Although he had decided that the f a i t must not come between him aud Carol, yet there were times when a fea rfu l dread seised upon him w ith such force as to make him shudder. W h a t If she should learn the tru th In some w ay; would she not h ate, despise and loathe him? W as ever man place»!" e seen the broad in such a fearfu l dilem ma? D u ty lay on that called h im one side, lore on the other. H e etese.1 ] t o f elms of the his eyes, and bliudly rushed on to his rhmond T errace, fate. >— _ inhered spending I t was in the la tte r part of July, and in the stratige f<y the tim e of year the weather was tr and Law rence delicious. Kogey and Carol were seated om friends, and on an old log m the picturesque forest, ued until Roger watching the antics of little Kido, and of age. Then looking through the green aisles o f the out a boundary romautre woods ng men o f pas- T hey had been engaged over a week waxed w arm er now. pnd on thia very day Roger had report ions o f a j decided to disclose hfe personality to his betrothed. T hey talked of the future, rated, and neser and how happy they intended to he, lit- I IU r r v l set foot tie knowing or realising what a ahadow W hen his rath- was hanging shore them, even a t th a t ire bridged o re r moment. Lawrence Rich- W h ile Roger and the girl he lored w ith or else refused heart and soul sat thus npoh the old log. f e r never knew the sound o f heavy footsteps close nt I hand came to their ears. T he two losers I young man had sprang like frightened deer to 'th e ir feet. >f Richmond a add as they did so Roger heard a fierce I way by a pesti- invective uttered in a low, deep roice. l, aud th a t the Standing w ithin ten feet o f the two it himself up in losers was a n e ld e rly man, one who had re any one nut evidently reached the age o f three-score J ' year», as was Indicated by hia iron-gray 1 1 lew Roger D a r- hair a n d beard, the former, o f which fell 11 onae o f hia an- “ P»n hia abouldea: yet it was plain to be « lm still to be ’ e m that hia iron constitution had re am! the young slated the ravages o f time, and that he mdeceire them. ..waa as hale and hearty ,aa moat men at 1 W H Y Y O U N G M E N G O W R O N G . *•*« H « ;C le iS iit aau Moro K raktnrl O s V -y Bourbon K eat W lieoa fe haatko • « a a . MOHLgjk, S;M a.w S:SS a w 1 tilit.» t : U » .■ I S S .5 L I l i * .¡1 . lit t am ». A B a asta, fetporlatoadoaS. Salt Lake City. Leadville. Pueblo. Colorado Springt and Denver. H is countenance would have been a T a o M n e h P s c g s t M a a s r W k « a T o w n s rem arkable one a t any time, but seen l a (>■ • Cewaa. just then, contorted w ith the feeling of W illia m J. Sutherland, vlce-prealdcut anger tfiat seemed to possess hia soot, .ft of th e -Mooney A Boland d etectiv e was a face that Roger would never fo r agency o f Chicago, speaking from a get to bla dying day. crim inal Roger D a rre ll had not seen him for long experience w ith ■ the more than fifteen years, but some Intu i classes, says th a t too much spending tive power seemed to tell him th « t he money In boyhood starts more young was now face to face w ith the man who men on the wrong road than any other had ref«w*d to forgive his father, even cniise— perhaps than a ll other cause« on his death bed—Law rence Richmond. combined. This conclusion la the .-re T he tableau remained unbroken for sult o f years devoted to the profession- J al probing of hundreds o f cases o f com- | m erctnt d tah on rsty. BtSCh MB MpetlSUCS j compels the conviction that parents [ are generally more responsible for the [dishonesty o f th eir, boys than are the | boys themselves. This cannot be le g itim ately construed into an excuse tor [ the hpy who goes wrong; but it should | show the w ay to prevent fu tu re m oral I fa ilu re from the same cause. <- I I t la not the yo'udg mAn wfco h «« a W . C. McBRIDB, O m . Agt. hard boyhood who goes wrong. More J embeaslera and defaulters come froW [ the kindergarten o f lu x u ry and extrav- The robbers who looted the Bufrton, K a n ., bank have been captured and the | sgance than from poverty—ten times San Francisco, Oct. 29.— The last over! holt has been driven in the big dredge I W ould yon give yonr boy the beet The RnBao-Austrian reform plan for | G rant, or rather Chinook, aa she is J possible safeguard against the tem pta the Balkans contains several proposals [ now called, for the gigantic craft was objectionable to the porte. tion to become dishonest? Then keep | remarried to the deep seas yesterday his fund o f spending money down to S ir H e n ry M o rtim er, B ritish ambas- w hat he would have fo r the little per [ and w ith the ceremony came change of Bdor a t M ad rid , has bean appointed to sonal luxuries o f life I f he had to earn [nam e. --------- - All the vacant poet a t W ashington. his own liv in g and supply his Indul Captain Sanford, of the U . 8 . A . en F u llin g rock in the New Y o rk sub gencee from his surplus earnings T h a t way caught about a score of workmen. gineering corps, has arrived s t V allejo [ London, O ct. 28.— Special dispatches w ill start him on the right basis. and w ill superintend tests to ba made fro m .S t. Petersburg report a growing A t least 17 are believed to be dead. M any a sober and n atu rally honest | on Han Francisco har before taking the ill-feelin g in Russia against both Eng Senator Fulton favors dropping the young man has gone wrong by assum dredge to the Coluhm ia river, where land and the U nited States, in conse | -------- g g j j L g g P P g g j f t * 1» V ^ E IK D A P P E A R A N C E S T A R T L E D R U G UK. Panama canal route and taking up N ic ing. early in life, responsibilities beyond lie* her special field of duty. Them quence of the supposed sympathy of aragua w ith a view to expediting mat- | tests w ill he made today and if the hl» powers. O ur great m rtropolltau these countries for Japan. This feel H ^ 1^ J r? r h P* rfOrD,i.n i i ? U lln "’’r ®f «»• | ■ > « * than a full minute. , nd tb ea it commercial houses are filled w ith tb ? v,ream ’ ' ,h *' BOBtleman Who made The , Chinook is pronounced satisfactory she ing finds expression in the Novoe V re young men who receive salaries of »10 I Indeed, the first intimation he had of I move. The converted transport G rant ia w ill im m ediately proceed to the Co- in ya, w h ich , in commenting on the de her presence was the girliah laugh, ao or »12 a week. They m a rry w ith this “ Aha!” h e e r r l . i m . d - i ____ _ u , . completed. She w ill test her pumps l.im bia river. T h a t she w ill work w ithout a hitch I cision of the Alaska boundary trib u n al, I n e a r and silvery, like the note* o f a m e Moran rnrouga I um clenched teeth meager Income on the hope that tw o on the San Francisco bar and then | says i t hopes th a t Canada w ill now [ true bell, w ith which the had greeted while his hand tightened its grasp upon can lir e in a home o f th e ir own as oome to the Colum bia bar for active is the opinion of Captain Saaford, who [aome escapade of the little aniin.nl. sever the ties connecting it w ith Great his cane. “ « light break* in upon me h cheaply aa one w ithout a home. I f the 1 w ork. • looked her over ra re fn lly and * ex B ritain . A fte rw a rd , when be looked back to 1» ea»y to nnderetsnd now why your a f young w ife la in the least inclined to ' pressed the belief th at she is adm ir [ this time, Roger D a rre l realized that hia The V rik in a maintains a bellicose at-1 Both Russia and Japan are steadily ably fitted to perform the task laid ont titude, expressing the opinion that | heart had gone out to thia girl thSn nnd ternoons have lieen so well taken up that extravagance or Is a “poor m anager,” preparing for war. I there, even before be had exchanged a }on have had no time to spare w ith me. the one who earna the liv in g finds him for her. neither G reat B ritain nor the United And you, a Richmond, betray the trust W illia m R. Lscky, of London, a The Chinook has been already a bet- I States self hard pressed. H e (- , nDOt get more w ill interfere and Russia was| word w ith her. \ ,o n ’ * h* Iur. Carol, for noted historian, is dead. H e had aeen much of life, but w hat salary and be js tempted to take w hat ter invesvment than the government better prepared for war. This paper ever strange may have befallen him, Rog T he young girl tried to stammer out w ill not tie given him aa hia due. M any ~ Nicaragua has appointed a commis- figured on, for estimate« show th a t a urges th at Japan had better be crushed | er D a rre l had never loved before. It some excuse, but he would not listen to State prison cells have beeo filled from large pnrt of the sum appropriated for w ith o ut delay. eion for the St. Louis 1904 fair. was a long time before he would ac her. the work of reconstructing her w ill be | this cause. knowledge the tru th , even to himaelf. bnt « Oaptain E. M . Johnson, of the regu-1 returned to the navy department. Envy of an employer’s success In the I it seemed that from the very minute h e las arm y, w ill lik e ly be detailed to in-1 [gased upon that face, the m i/an th ro pir field of speculation la another prolldc struct the Oregon national guard. R a ilr o a d s W o n ’ t C o t Wages. ideas engendered by a lonely life vaniaii- •d as if touched by a magician's wand, Dowie has left New Y o rk. H e and I New York, Oct. 29.— Em phatic de- and all the earth appeared beautiful. | nial ia made here by representatives of hie fam ily departed in the n ig h t for T hey soon became friends. There was several im portant Western railroad« to Boston w ithout making any announoe- [ aomethiag Intensely attractive about widely circulated rumors th at a con j ment of hia leaving. Roger D a rre l. H e waa strikingly band- nor what they naed certed effort was to be made by West some, talented, and. besides, had an a ir held yonr bead low Land frauds w ill prom pt President I ern rosda to reduce wages. The opin of sincerity about him that must have cgniaed the wrong Roosevelt to ask congress to give con ion was generally expressed th at qo canaed respect from every one who was my daughters fa ir trol of reserves into tbs hands of the such plan was under consideration, and • deadly foe. destine meeting* ,n ,e r nnoa that be ia caught in aome quarters .t h a t - such a move forestry bureau exclusively. for margins which he can put up only I t is said th at S ir H enry Durand, I ! would not be feasible. Reduction in «»y stealing from bla employer He B ritish ambassador a t M a d rid , «rill he | expenses are tteing made by the West promises to replace the money as soon ern roads in common w ith thode in appointed to succeed the late Sir M ich other i»" the deal Is carried th ro u g h -s m i parts of the country, bnt by re- j ael H erb ert a t Washington. awakens to fln<1 him self In the hands iluction in »hop expenses. of the law . A New Y o rk street car jumped the I receive h im . 11 M:«S Oitaaona it.-M a.at Ism „O regon (ggy S hort 1** ne a » U nion P acific M R TRIM h lit EUT MIT OCEAN AND RIVER SCHEDULE __ _ _ _ yaoss re ttT iA xn._ _ _ _ In much the same w ay he Is le i Into playing the races and other form« o f straight-out gam bling—am ) w ith the same disastrous results. M akin g expensive presents and ca- ronslng w ith gay companions Is an other common p itfa ll, although very many go down In the race before thia track sn a carve and caught fire from the th ird ra il. A ll of the 60 passeng ers «rare severely bruised bnt escaped « fatal Injuriee. Ruaeo-Japaneee negotiations are again « a t a standstill. |, Tbs umftira in the Venesuelan arbi- I ’ tration case has decided th at th at coun try has no rig h t to collect local taxes Russo-Japanese negotiations hare taken a leas favorable ta rn . One re port goes so far ta to say war has been declared. Yellow fever ia spreading in Texas towns. Tbs state and federal au th ori Cape H aytien , H a y ti, Oet. 29.— The ties hare taken charge of the situation Dominrian eruiaer IndcpemieaM'ia ap at San Antonio. peared off Puerto P la ta , th e 'p o rt on Three bamdita broke open the bank the north coast of Santo Domingo, safe st Burrton, K an., and secured be w hich point is in the hands of the rev tween »1,000 and »2,000 in currency olutionists. today and prevented the Cuban m ail stremer M aria Herrea from entering th at port. The Inde- Six Wisconsin desperadoes stole an pendencia then left Puerto Plata, tfoing engine near Beloit and when discover towanls the American m ail stntmer ed shouted defianca. A ll tVBflte «ran Cherokee, coming from Monte C hristi stopped on account of the w ild engine to prevent her from touching By the president and hia cabinet the SIM.OOO nre la Naw V w k . Alaska* boundary decision to regarded New York, Oct. 29 — Twenty houses, aa the greatest diplom ktie snocesa for a including stores and private reswienevs. were destroyed tonight - in a f ir e th at •wept over two "efty blocks in Kings Bridge, a t the upper en.1 «f Manhatten island. Tbs Kingnhridge hotel, for merly a famous road house, was des troys. I. Total property damage. Through I*allm an Standard sod Issptng C a n d ally to Omaha, Chic« ano; Tourist Sleeping Car dally to W i Through P ullm an Tourist Nsopti mrsonally oondu>'tod) weekly to C ansae C ity, St. Luuls and Memphis; Ih hair Cars (seats tree) to the Eaai dally D ry Deck N Needed. W ashington, Oct. 28.— I n hia annual report to Secretary Moody, C h ief Con- strector Bowles, of the n a w . Indorses a ll reconunendations for new work at the Puget Sound navy-yard, which were suggested by the chief constructor (of the yard iq his report. Among other things he recommended the con-1 struction of a new drydock, a umrine railw ay for hauling out small craft, a f i t t i n g derrick, dock crane and an ad ditional w harf and ara w all. Washington, Oct. 26. — Today's meeting of the cabinet waa b rief. O nly Secretaries H a y and Cortelyon, Postmaster General Payne and Attorney General Knox were present. Post master General Payne announced th at tbs rep ort of M r. Bristow on the post- office inveMigatioo would be placed in the bands of the president today. It «ads Yacco Is a ebarmin actress, who la not only pn delightful, bnt In private 11 sctly w hat she thinks In a offends nobody. Not long ago, says the Sun, she was honored, dnrli In P s ria by a request to a private entertainm ent to bi Monsieur Ixmbet. President Every one was delighted recitations, and the Preside o"t and presented to her . " * y r’ r*‘ Tfiit*sble 6ev The little lady was Dies a . f w th at reason did she Ignor Deal side of tbs question at him w ith that beaming like smile only to be attain Japanese. b r o k l? ^ " 7 ; broken French. take vase to B. GABRIEL, j Daytoo, •" ••» •■ a m ,, u ‘ •nrsxssytBaaday. child • fi? » *"*0»'»! "he- ,n "V e ry an Too diaapi those bleaaii