X - -Srfk - J -.tTr k Wg8' ,St-? -T ' l Kif: VNf ' . - "? twb 'ilWrurKi' UKEtfONIAS. THIJKSDAY, JULY 28, 1904.' Fa r i ?i& Arbitration Board Meets Packers. ARE GIVEN AN ULTIMATUM Further Agreements With the Strikers Are Not Wanted. BROKER ACTS AS PACIFICATOR James H. Walker Consults With Ueaderscpf Allied Trades Unions and Is Sanguine of Success of His Mission. ,T PACKERS' nGTJBES ON MEf. On strlko. At work. Swift & Co 5035 . 2092 Armour & Co. - 49S2 3200 XAbby, McNeill & Ilbby. . .2376 7S5 Nelson, Morris & Co 4100 2300 '.8chwarachildfc Bulxberger.1524 430 "National Pckinff Co..... -3075 3170 CHICAGO, July 27. "We had an agree Sment "with Mr. Donnelly's organization end tha allied trades which they failed to live up to, and under the circumstances We do not care to make any further agree ments with them." x This la tie statement which was signed by the representatives of the packers and banded to Iho members of the State Board of Arbitration tonight at the end of a conference between the two bodies, held at the request of the State Board, in an en deavor to bring about another meeting for tho settlement of the butchers' strike between the packers and the strikers. Tho packers received tho State Board courte ously and listened to their arguments for a peaceable adjustment of the difficulty. The announcement that the packers were opposed to any further peace nego tiations with the strikers -was handed to the board by Arthur Meeker and Thomas Connor, both of Armour & Co., who repre sented the packers. While from their statement It would appear that the pack ers are opposed to meeting the strikers again on any terms, such is not the case. Terms of the Packers. At the last conference between the strikers and the packers the latter In formed the union leaders that any time they expressed a desire to live up to the original arbitration agreement, signed a week ago, which provided for the rein statement of the 'Striking butchers Inside of 45 days and for the arbitration of all grievances, the packers -would be willing to renew the agreement. The contention of the packers Is that this agreement Is still In force, and as they are unwilling to offer any further concessions to the strikers, they say a re newal of peace negotiations with the hope of securing better terms would be useless. The labor leaders say that when the butchers went on the second strike be cause of alleged discrimination by the packers in rehiring striking employes, the arbitration agreement was nullified and that it is necessary to sign a new agree ment before a settlement can be reached. Ready With Original Agreement. After tonight's conference -with the State Board of Arbitration, Arthur Meeker, manager for Armour & Co., said that the packers "were still willing to live up to the toms of the original agreement, but that the Initiative -would have to be takon by the strikers. Mr. Meeker also intimat ed that the sooner the strikers adopted this course the better it would be for them, as in his belief if the strike should last much longer all the places of tho strikers -would be filled by new men and there would be no necessity for the pack ers to wish to settle on any basis with their old employes. Notwithstanding today's failure to bring the contesting parties together, another attempt, it was said tonight, would be made tomorrow to arrange a conference between tho packers and the strikers. James H. Walker, a grain broker on the Chicago Board of Trade, is the man who proposes to do -what the State Board of Arbitration failed to accomplish. Mr. Walker -was In consultation tonight with the leaders of the allied trades unions and sevoral of the packers. He said that he had made considerable progress toward .the desired conference, and that it was his firm belief that before tomorrow night he would be able to announce that his. mis sion had been a success. Many New Employes Obtained. "Police rule" today -was declared In the stockyards region. During the day thore were several minor disturbances In spite of the police, but when night came the Chief of Police said he was master of the situation. At least 1000 new employes were taken Into the yards and put to work. A con servative estimate of the number of ani- raals slaughtered today by the different plants placed it at about one-half the amount disposed of under normal condi tions. Union employes were reported to be drifting back to work by officers of the packing companies today, a defection of 51 skilled butchers being claimed by the packers. Of these the three plants of the National Packing Company claimed 19, Swift & Co. 11, Armour & Co. 13, Nelson Morris & Co. 8. Refuse to Handle Meat. Tonight 40 frelghthandlers employed at the stockyards station of the Chicago Junction Railroad went on strike. The men said they -were unwilling to handle meat turned out by nonunion -workmen. Should nonunion men be engaged to take the places of the frelghthandlers, a strike of union switchmen may follow. With the switchmen out, thestrike might spread to the other employes of the various rail roads. When the union teamsters went on strike the Chicago Junction Railroad was depended -on by the packers as a means of supplying their downtown customers. The strike tonight, however, leaves the pack ers without an outlet for supplying the city trade unless nonunion men can be ob tained. An attempt to- deliver meat with non union teamsters would without doubt pre- t5i1tt'Fje:.' r''''i"'V ' '"' i j iljii i I .ii ijiMwimjiJiijMJiwwMi Viniiiir MifiiatrtTriiiririiiiMi , 'BwHHra '.- Clplta'te rioting, as the new man would be harassed by strike sympathizers from the time they left the yards until they re turned. Two years ago daring a team sters' strike at the stockyards nonunion men were employed to make deliveries wi der police protection, and bloodshed aadJ riots took place. GUARDS FOR MEAT WAGONS. Chicago Police Will Patrol Halsted Street. , CHICAGO, July 27. To minimize the danger of rioting, should the packing companies attempt to deliver meat to lo cal customers with nonunion teamsters, Chief of Police O'NoIll has given Instruc tions that all hauling shall be done on Halsted street, which will be strongly patrolled. While It Is said to be the intention of the packers to ship practically all the meat to outside points by rail, and make no efforts to take care of the by-products, the strikers expect to -cause them much Inconvenience by shutting off supplies as far as possible. Nino -wagons loaded with meat, -were sent out today -from the Schwarzschilds & Sulzberger plant at the stockyards. The wagons had been repainted, the let tering removed, high sides placed on thorn and covered with tarpaulins as a dis guise. They were escorted from the yards by a dozen policemen, who were relieved by another detail to guard them on their way to the north ride of the city. Eight negro strikebreakers on their way t work in the stockyards were arrested today for carrying concealed weapons. Stockyard teamsters Joined the pack ing employes today. Seven hundred of the drivers for the packing companies re fused to go to work, the teamsters' Joint council having Indorsed the vote to strike, and ordered he members of every other local union In Chicago to make no deliv eries to the stockyards. Wagons of mer chants containing supplies and materials for the various plants were turned back from every gate. Pickets guarded the barns to make suro no nonunion drivers should be employed to take their places. Practically all the striking stockhand lers roturned to their work in the yards today for the Union Stockyards & Transit Company, an agreement having been made with them that they need not as sist in wolghlng or delivering stock con signed to the packers involved In the strike. They are handling all stock for the Independent packers. Kitty English, forewoman in the sewing department of the Swift plant, was mobbed and badly hurt by a crowd of girl strike sympathizers. They beat her, tore her clothing and finally stabbed her in the face -with a hatpin. After a des perate struggle, Miss English escaped. No arrests were made. As a result of the teamsters strike, managers of several of the plants took places of drivers on the buses and speed ily tho army of workers was transported Into the yards. It was said the packers at the present would make no general attompt to em ploy nonunion teamsters. Plans have been arranged to deliver meat by rail road to packing-house branches through out the city. Despite the fact that a relief fund of JCO.OOO was voted last night to alleviate the distress of strikers and their families who are In want, there Is little change today In the conditions of poverty-stricken strike sufferers. Applicants are rare, though it Is understood that want con fronts hundreds and scores are actually hungry now. WANT STRIKE BENEFITS. Kansas City Allied Trades Will Wait for Orders to Go Out. KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 27. There will be no sympathetic strike of the Al lied Trades Unions, whose members are employed at the loca,l packing-houses, until the men are ordered out by tho International Union, -when, the men say, they will obey the order. This was de cided at a meeting of the Central Labor Union in Armourdale tonight, at which all of the Allied Trados were represented. At the conclusion of the meeting the labor leaders announced that J. A. Keeler. president of the Central Labor Union, had been instructed to notify tho International, Union that tho Allied Trades Unionists here will strike when called out by that organization, but not before. The reason for this action, it is said, was that the men here are not willing to go out on strike unless they are assured of strike benefits, and they will not receive such benefits if they are not called out by the International Union. More than 1000 men belong to tho allied unions here. The first real show of violence on the part of the strikers was displayed when Armour & Co. tried to take 30 negroes In a boxcar into their plant. A imob forced tho crew to stop the train. Then the negroes -were pulled off the car and roughly handled. Several shots were fired, but no one was hurt, and when the police arrived the crowd had dis persed. No arrests were made. Two deported Cripple Creek miners, J. M. Harris and Charles Roborts, were mistaken for strikebreakers and at tacked. Following those disturbances, an ox tra force of police "was sent to the dis trict Strikers assert that 25 of their num ber who were re-employed yesterday sought their old positions to learn the actual conditions in the different plants and to urge the strikebreakers there to go out. Today each of the plants increased their forces, all reporting steady prog ress in every department Many strik ers appeared for their old positions and were re-employed at tho plants of Ar mour & Co., Swift & Co. and the Fowler packing plants today. L H. Rich, man ager for Swift & Co., said today: "We consider the strike nearly over, as far as this plant la concerned. To day -we took back perhapa 100 of our old men, six of whom were cattle butch ers. We now have 1250 men at work, only 250 short of our usual force. We are killing more hogs and as many cat tle as during June. We are killing 2000 hogs a day, against 1250 In June, and -we are slaughtering 650 cattle a day, -which was the average of June." INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Swift Refinery Afire Negro's Nar row Escape Stray Bullet Kills. CHICAGO, July 27. Fire, tumult and picketing contributed to "stirring scenes at tho stockyards today, while tho pack ers, firm In their stand, went ahead slaughtering stock and doing as much other work as possible In tho circum stances. Convinced of an Improvement In the situation, as- far as available non union help and capacity otherwise of tho plants were concerned, the packers had sent word to shippers to be somewhat more generous with their consignments,, and as a result the receipts of cattle, hogs and sheep wore considerably larger than had been the rule during previous days of the strike. There were more men working, accrraing to the employers, and more work for them to Jo. The chief excitement of the day cen tered about Swift's lard refinery, far in the interior of the stockyards, almost a mile from the main entrance. Flames were seen bursting from the upper floors of the building, .and before long the whole of packing town was in a turmoil. There was a wild rush from all dlreotlons, and, despite the efforts of the police, the fire engines found great difficulty in making a way through the crowds. Naturally the rumor spread that the fire was the work of Incendiaries, but this was later declared emphatically to be erroneous. A feature of the blaze was the tem porary Imprisonment of nine women stenographers In an elevator shaft In Swift's office building. The cage was causht between two floors, fiend the young women were In a panic Office employes put up ladders, cut the wire rwork of the elevator cage, and carried tnem out to .safety. HIS WORDS ARt CLEAU (Continued From Page 1.) one accord, nominated you as ,tne candidate of the part for President. I am sure all RepuBllcaas and a multltudo of good citizens who do not call themselves Republicans said "Amen." , In pursuance of the usual custom, the con. vcntlon appointed a committee, of which it honored me with the chairmanship, to wait on you and inform you of Its action, which duty, speaking for the committee, I now cheerfully perform, with the hope and the confident ex pectation that a majority of the people of .the Republic will in November next approve tho action of the convention by choosing electora who will assure your election to the Presi dency as yaur own successor. Mrs. Roosevelt, surrounded by her chil dren Kermlt, Ethel and Quentln stood facing Mr. Cannon almost In the center of the crowd. Mr. Cannon was frequently interrupted by applause. His thrusts at the Democratic party, his references to the tariff and to the gold standard and to the construction of the Panama Canal aroused much enthusiasm.. Mr. Roosevelt's Acceptance. President Roosevelt shook Mr. Cannon's hand heartily at the conclusion of the no tification speech, and then mounted tho chair to deliver his address in response. So cordial a reception was given to him that it was some time before he could proceed. He was in excellent voice, and. though he followed the printed text of his speech, he seldom referred to it. The ad drees was punctuated by applause. The President said: Mr. Speaker and Gentleman of the Notl ncatlon Committee: I am deeply sensible of the high honor conferred upon me by tho representatives of the Republican party as embled in convontlon, and I accept the nomination for the Presidency vrlth a solemn realization of the obligations I assume. I heartily approve the declaration of princi ples which the National Convention has adopted, and at some future day I shall communicate to you, Mr. Chairman, more at length and in detail a formal written ac ceptance of the nomination. Three years ago I became President be cause of the death of my lamented prede cessor I then stated that it was my pur pose to carry out his principles and policies for tho honor and the interest of the coun try. To the best of my ability 1 have kept the promises thus made. If next November my countrymen confirm at tho polls the action of the convention you represent, I shall, under Providence, continue to work with an ee single to the wolfare of all our people. Party Stands on Its Iteeord. A party is of worth only in so far as it promotes tho National lntorest. and every official, high or low, can serve his party best by rendering to the people the best service of ivhlch he is capable. Effective government comes only as the result of the loyal oo-operatlon of many different persons. The members of a legislative majority, the officers in the various departments of the Administration and the executive and legis lative branches, as towards each other, must work together with subordination of self to the common end of successful government. We who have been entrusted with power as public servants during the past seven years of administration and legislation now come before the people content to be Judged by our record of achlevoment. In the years that have gone by we have made the deed square with tho word; and If we are continued In power we shall un swervingly follow out the groat lines of pub lic policy which the Republican party has already laid down; a public policy to which we are gl!ng and shall glvo a united and therefore an efficient support. Democrats' Record Against Them. In all of this we are more fortunate than our opponents, who now appeal for confi dence, on the ground, which some express and sbme seek to have confidentially under stood, that if triumphant they may be trusted to prove false to every principle which in the last eight years they have laid down as vital and to leave undisturbed those very acts of the Administration be cause of which they ask that the Adminis tration itself bo driven from power. Seem ingly their present attitude as to their past record is that some of them were mistaken and others insincere. We make our appeal in a wholly different spirit. We are not constrained to keep si lent on any vital question: we are divided on no vital question; our policy is continuous and is the same for all sections and locali ties. There Is nothing experimental abqut the government we ask the people to con tinue in power, for our performance in the past, our proved governmental efficiency, is a guarantee as to our promises for the fu ture. Oar opponents, either openly or secretly, according to their several temperaments, now ask tho people to trust their present promises in consideration of the fact ,that they Intend to treat their past promises as null and void. Wo know our own minds and we have kept of the same mind for a sufficient length of time to glo to our pol icy coherence and sanity. In such a funda mental matter as the enforcement of the law we do not have to depend upon prom ises, but merely to ask that our record be taken as an earnest promise of what we shall continue to do. Administration lias Been Clean. In dealing with the great organizations known as trusts, we do not have to explain why the laws were not enforced, but to point out that they actually have been en forced, and that legislation has been en acted to increase the effectiveness of their enforcement. We fio not have to propose to "turn the rascals out," for we have shown In very deed that whenever by diligent in vestigation a public official can be found who has betrayed bis trust, he will be pun. lshcd to the full extent of the law, without regard as to whether he was appointed under a Republican or a Democratic Admin- lstratlon. This Is the efficient way to turn the rascals out and to keep them out, and it has the merit of sincerity. Moreover, the betrayals of trust in the last seven years have been insignificant in number when compared with tho extent of the pub lic service. Never has tho Administration of the Government been on a cleaner and higher levol; never has the public work of the Nation been done more honestly and ef ficiently. Assuredly it is unwise to change the poli cies which have worked so well and which are now working so well. Prosperity has come at home. The National honor and in terest have been upheld abroad. We have placed the finances of the Nation upon a sound gold basis. We have done this with the aid of many who were formerly our opponents, but who would neither openly support nor silently acquiesce in the heresy of unsound finance; and we have done it against the convinced and violent opposi tion of the mass of our present opponents, who still refuse to recant the unsound opin ions which for the moment they think it inexpedient to assert. Money a Question of Morality. "Wo know what we mean when wo speak of an honest and stable currency. We mean the same thing from year to year. We do not have to avoid a definite and conclusive committal on the most Important issue which has recently heen before the people, and which may at any time In the near fu ture be before them again. Upon the prin ciples which underlie this issue the convic tions of half of our number do not clash with those of the other half. So Ion? as tho Republican party Is in power, the gold standard Is settled, not as a matter of tem porary political expediency, not because of shifting conditions in the production of gold in certain mining centers, but in accord ance with w,hat- we regard as the funda mental principle of National morality and wisdom. Under the financial legislation we have enacted there is nqw ample circulation for every business need; and every dollar of this circulation is worth a dollar in gold We "have reduced the interest-bearing debt and in still larger measure the Interest on that debt. All of tho war taxes Imposed J during the Spanish War hare been removed with a view to relieve the people and to pre vent the accumulation of an unnecessary surplus. The result is that hardly ever be- Xor have the expenditures and Income of the Government so closely corresponded. In the fiscal year that has Just closed the excess of Income over the ordinary expendi tures was $0,000,000. This does not tak, account of the $30,000,000 expended out of the accumulated surplus for the purchase of the Isthmian canal. It is an extraordinary proof of the sound financial condition of the Nation that, Instead of following the usual course In such matters and throwing the burden upon posterity by an issue of bonds, we were ablo to make the payment out right, and yet after It to have in the Treas ury a surplus of $101,000,000. Moreover, we were able to pay this $50,000,000 out of hand without causing the slightest disturb ance to business conditions. Prosperity Under Tariff lJUvs. We have enacted a tariff law under which, during the iast few years, the country has attained a height of material well-being never before reached. Wages aro higher than ever before. That whenever the need arises there should be a readjustment of the tariff schedules Is undoubted; but such changes can with safety be made only by those whose devotion to the principle of a protective tariff is beyond question; for otherwise the chances would amount not to readjustment, but to repeal. The readjust ment when made must maintain and not destroy the protective principle. To the farmer, the merchant, the manufacturer, this Is vital; but perhaps no other man is so much Interested as the wageworker in the maintenance of our present economic system, both as regards the finances and the tariff. The standard of living of our wageworkers is higher than that of any other country, and it cannot so remain unless we have a protective tariff which shall always keep at a minimum a rate of duty sufficient to cover the difference between the labor cost here and abroad. Those who, like our opponents, "denounce protection as robbery." thereby explicitly commit themselves to the propo sition that If they were to revise the tariff no heed would e paid to the necessity of meeting this difference between the stand ards of living for wageworkers here and in other countries; and therefore on this point their antagonism to our position Is funda mental. Here again we ask that their promises and ours be Judged by what ha3 been done In the immediate past. We ask that sober and sensible men compare tho workings of the present tariff law, and the conditions which obtain under it, with tho workings of the preceding tariff law of 1804, and the condi tions which that tariff of 1804 helped to bring about. Reciprocity With Foreign Nations. We believe in reciprocity with foreign na tions on tho terms outlined in President Mc Klnleys last speech, which urged the ex tension of our foreign markets by reciprocal agreements whenever they could be made without injury to American Industry and labor. It is a singular fact that the only great reciprocity treaty recently adopted that with Cuba, was finally opposed almost alone by the representatives of the very party which now states that It favors reci procity. And here again we ask that the worth of our words be Judged by comparing their deeds with ours. On this Cuban reci procity treaty there were at the outset grave differences of opinion among our selves; and the notable thing In the negoti ation and ratification of the treaty, and in the legislation which carried it into effect, was the highly practical manner In which, without sacrifice of principle, these differ ences of opinion were reconciled. There was no rupture of a great party, but an excellent practical outcome, the result of tho harmo nious co-operation of two successive Presi dents and two successive Congresses. This is an illustration of the governing capacity which entitles us to the confidence of the people, not only In our purposes, but in our practical ability to achieve these purposes. Judging by the history of the last 12 years, down to this very month. Is thero Justification for belietlng that under similar circumstances, and with similar Initial dif ferences oZ opinion, our opponents would have achieved any practical result? Equal Rights to All. We have already shown in actual fact that our policy Is to do fair and equal Jus tice to all. men. paying; no heed to whether a man Is rich or poor; paying no heed to his race, his creed, or his birtbplace. We recognize the organization of capital and the organization of labor as natural outcomes of our Industrial system. Each kind of organization Is to. be favored so long as It acts in a spirit of Justice and of regard for the rights of others. Each Is to be granted the full protection of the law, and each In turn is to be held to a strict obedi ence to the law; for no man is above it and no man below it. Tho humblest individual Is to havo 'bis rights safeguarded as scrupu lously as those of the strongest organiza tion, for each Is to receive Justice no more, and no less. The problems with which we have to deal In our modern Industrial and social life are manifold; but the spirit In which it is nec essary to approach tholr solution Is simply the spirit of honesty, of courage, and of common sense. In inaugurating the great work of irriga tion in the West, the Administration has been enabled by Congress to take one of the longest strides ever taken under our Government toward utilizing our vast Na tional domain for tho settler, the actual homemaker. Honesty in Canal Transaction. Ever since the continent was discovered, the need of an Isthmian canal to connect the Pacific and the Atlantic has been real ized; and ever slnco the birth of our Na tion such a canal has been planned. At last the dream has become a reality. The Isthmian canal is now being built by tho Government of the United States. Wo con ducted tho negotiation for its construction with the nicest and most scrupulous honor, and In a spirit of the largest generosity to ward those through whose territory It was to run.. Every sinister effort which could be devised by tho spirit of faction, or the spirit of self-Interest, was made In order to defeat tho treaty with Panama and thereby prevent the consummation of this work. The construction of the canal Is now an assured fact; but most certainly it is unwise to trust the carrying out of so momentous a policy to those who have endeavored to de feat the whole undertaking. Our foreign policy has been so conducted that, while not one of our Just claims has been sacrificed, our relations with all for eign nations are now of the most peaceful kind; there is not a cloud on the horizon. The last cause of irritation between us and other nations was removed by tho settle ment of the Alaska boundary. Monroe Doctrine a Living Reality. In the Caribbean Sea we have made good our promises-of independence to Cuba and have proved our assertion that our mission In the island was one of Justice and not of self-aggrandizement; and thereby no less than by our action in Venezuela and Pan ama we have shown that the Monroe Doc trine Is a living reality, designed for the hurt of no nation, but for the protection of civilization on the Western Continent, and for the peace of the world. Our steady growth In. power has gone hand in hand with a strengthening disposition to use this power with strict regard for the rights of others and for the cause of International Justice and good will. We earnestly desire early friendship with all the nations of the New and Old Worlds, and we endeavor to place our relations with them upon a basis of reciprocal advantage Instead of hostility. We hold that the pros perity of each nation is an aid 'and not a hindrance to the prosperity of other nations. We seek International amity for the same reasons that make us believe In peace with in our borders; and we seek this, peace not because we are afraid or unready, but be cause wo think that peace Is right as well as advantageous. American Interests In the Pacific have rap Idly grown. American enterprise has laid a cable across this, tho greatest of oceans. We have proved in effective fashion that we wish the Chinese Empire well, and de sire its integrity and independence Government of the Philippines. Our foothold In the Philippines greatly strengthens our position In tho competition for the trade of tho Far East; but we are govern ing the Philippines, in the Interest of the Phil ippine people" themselves. We havo already given them a large share In their govern ment, -and ojir purpose is to Increase this share as rapidly as they give evidence of Increasing fitness for the task. The great majority of the officials of the island, whether electlvo or appointive, are already native Filipinos. . ,We areow providing for a legislative' assembly. This Is the first step to be taken In. the-future, a'nd It would bo eminently unwise1 to declare what our "-next step will be until this first step h&s been taken and the results aro manifest. To have gone faster than we have already gone In giving the islanders a constantly increasing measure of self-government would have been disastrous. At the present mo ment to give political independence to the Islands would result in the Immediate loss of civil rigjits. 'personal liberty and public order, as regards the mass of the Filipinos, for the majority of the islanders have been given those great boons by us and only keep them because we vigilantly safeguard and guarantee them. To withdraw our govern ment from tho Islands at this time would mean-to the average native the loss of his barely won civil freedom. We have established In the islands a gov ernment by Americans, assisted by Filipinos. We are steadily striving to transform this into self-government by the Filipinos, assisted by Americans. -. Duty Una Not Been Shirked. Tho principles which we uphold should appeal to all our countrymen, in all por tions of our country. Above all, they should give Us strength with the men and women who are the spiritual heirs of those who up held the hands of Abraham Lincoln; for we are striving to do our work in the spirit with which Abraham Lincoln approached his. During the seven years that have Just passed there is no duty, domestic or foreign, which wo have shirked; no necessary task which we havo feared to undertake, or which we have not performed with reason able efficiency. We have never pleaded im potence. We have never sought refuge in criticism and complaint instead of action. Wc face the future with our past and our present as guarantors of our promises; and we are content to stand or fall by the rec ord which we have made and are making. Grouped Before the Photographer. After the Informal reception which fol lowed the address Speaker Cannon sug gusted that all the visitors assemble on the lawn at the foot of the veranda steps, "In order that they have their respective shadows secured ere the substance fade." As the President descended the steps to face the photographers he called for Gov ernor Pardee, of California, and W. S. Simpson to stand near him. These two, with Speaker Cannon, Chairman Cortel you, Governor Odell, of New York; Cor nelius N. Bliss and Frank S. Black, were grouped about the President as the photo graphs were taken. A buffet lunch followed. The President's children, nephews and nieces served the guests. Joke on ex-Governor Black. Early in the afternoon WHUani Barnes, Jr., of Albany, pinned a campaign button on the coat of ex-Governor Black. While Mr. "Black was conversing with the Presi dent, Governor Odell approached, and, see ing the button, inquired: "Black, when did you leave the Repub lican party?" "Haven't left It," was the reply. "Then why are you wearing that button around here?" Glancing at the button and discovering that it hore a fine likeness of Judge Par ker, he remarked: "That proves absolute ly what sublime confidence we up-state Republicans have in one another." During the afternoon, before the de parture of the guests, the President had conferred with several of them. Tomor row morning at 10 o'clock President Roosevelt will start for Washington. He expects to arrive In Washington at 6:15 P. M. It Is not unlikely that he may return to Oyster Bay In two weeks, thus short ening his proposed stay at the National Capital. THREAT OF MULOWNERS. Operatives Will Take Reduction or Walt Long for Work. FALL RIVER, Mass., July 27. "Unless the operatives agree to come Into the mills and work under the proposed 12 per cent reduction, It Is doubtful whether any at tempt will be made by the manufacturers to run the mills before October." This statement was made tonight by a prominent mlllowner in reference to the cotton mills strike. Involving 20.000 men. In explaining this attitude the man quoted said that to continue operations under the old wage scale would mean a loss of money. They prefer, therefore, to have the mills closed than to have them run at a loss. No attempt was made to open a single mill affected by the strike today, and tho striker' ranks remain unbroken. FRICTION AT PANAMA. Right of Port of Ancon Is Under Dispute. PANAMA, July 27. The establishment of a port at Ancon under the control of the authorities of the canal zone has cre ated considerable friction between the steamship companies and the government at Panama, the latter asserting that the companies should get their clearance pa pers from the Panaman authorities. A conference was held today between the Minister of Foreign Relations and the American Minister. As a result It was agreed that the steamers can go Into An con, the Panama government simply filing protests, but not imposing any fine on the steamship agents, pending the final settle ment of the questions at Issue. Value of W. C. Whitney Estate. NEW YORK, July 27. According to the schedules of the estate of the lato William C. Whitney, which were filed today, the estate Is valued at $21,334,101. In health just as does the city-man, and he fails commonly from the same cause, stomach trouble." The farm ia a wholesome place to live; the farmer's life is a healthy life ; but no external ad vantages 'can overcome the effects of a diseased stomach. When the stomach and. its allied organs of diges tion and nutri tion are dis eased, the- food eaten is imper fectly digested end assimilated, and the conse quent loss of nurtition results in physical de bility. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, and enables the per fect digestion and assimilation of food. It guilds up the body with sound flesh and solid muscle. I used ten bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and several vials of his 'Pleasant Pellets' a year ago this spring;, and have bad no trouble with indigestion Sncc." writes Mr. WT T. Thompson, of Townsend, Broadwater Co., Montana. "Words fall to tell how thankful I am for the relief, as I had suf fered so much and it seemed that the doctors could do rae no good. I got down in weight to one hundred and twenty-five pounds, and fill not able to work at alL Now I weigh nearly one hundred and sixty and can do a day's work on the farm. 1 have recommended your xrttA dnc to several, and shall always have a good word to aay for Dr. Pierce and has jaedlcnes.' The pole motive for substitution is to permit the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritori ous medicines. He gains; you lose, therefore accent no sabtitabtf oc Goidc I Medical Discoroy, IMS 3YAN WILL GO BACK Agrees to Face Charge of Grand Larceny at St, Louis. ATTORNEY- FOLK INSISTENT Refused tV Accept JaroIe of Horse man Who Was Arrested at the Brighton Beach Race Track Tuesday. NEW YORK, July 27. After an all day conference between his counsel and representatives of the Circuit Court Attorney's office at St. Louis, John J. Ryan, the turfman who was arrested at Brighton Beach racetrack yesterday afternoon on a charge of grand larceny to the amount of $800, 000, today consented to return to St. Louis In custody without further pro test. Ryan had been released on bond last night and presented himself at the of fice of the District Attorney here early today. In the meantime, however, his attorneys had prepared to resist the St. Louis officers. They contended that Ryan already had been put In Jeopardy on the same charge; that he was not the person described in the complaint, and that he would be subjected to great financial losses In consequence if forced to leave New York at this tlmo. The attorneys explained that Ryan had arranged to sell his horses here to morrow, and that he desired to be present at the sale. In view of these conditions, they doclared that in the event of the St. Louis officers' motion ing for action, they would ask for a writ of habeas corpus for the release of their client from custody. On the other hand, if a little time were al lowed Ryan, he would agree to return to St. Louis without trouble. When this was explained to Circuit Attorney Folk at St. Louis by tele phone, he at first consented to parole Ryan upon the Jatter.'s promise to pre sent himself at St. Louis after the date for his trial had been fixed. Later in the day, however, the Circuit Attorney Informed his representatives here that such a plan would be impracticable, as the law would not permit Ryan to give ball in this state on a warrant issued in St. Louis. Troops to Protect Murderer. FRANKFORT, Ky., July 27. Upon receipt of Information that an attempt may be made to release Custer Gard ner, to be hanged at Munfordvllle, Hart County, tomorrow, Governor Beckham today ordered 50 men of the Louisville Battery to be In readiness to go there tonight. Gardner assassinated Squire Osborne and his son. Escape of Mexican Murderers. EL PASO. Tex., July 27. Three Mex ican prisoners charged with murdering and robbing American prospectors in Sonor.a have escaped from Jail at Agua Prleta, a border town in Sonora, oppo site Douglas, Ariz. It is said a woman liberated them after giving the guards liquor, "with which they became in toxicated. FUffSTON GOES TO ALASKA. Department Commander Will Visit Northern Posts. SEATTLE. Wash., July 27. General Frederick Funston, commanding the De partment of the Columbia and Alaska, accompanied by Major R. K. Evans, his Adjutant-General, and Lieutenant B. J. Mitchell, personal aid, arrived last night and will leave this morning for Alaska. They go on a tour of inspection of all the Army posts In Alaska, a Journey Involving The Kind You Have Always in use for over SO years, and 7S I 'aa sona supervision since its infancy 'C&c4S( Allow no one to deceive you in this All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good' are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. hat is CASTORIA Oastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. 16 contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Harcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It ,destroys "Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. T QENUIiKB Bears tlie CkfiaMk Kind You Baie Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE OZMTAUR COMMnV, T7 HURRAY STacrT, NCWVOa CRY. g Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year, g I Ijj gP111 Th BEST H0T WEATHER MEDICINE uA Wk ! I HL PREVENT AUL SUMMER BOWEL THCHMMLEft M H 1 fL rjijlu t TIRELESS WORKER A Victim of Nervous Debility, Now a Wonder of Vivacity, Explains the x Marvel of the Change. Mrs. Dora B. Frazier, of No. 140 AI thea street, Providence, Rhode Island, Is today the very embodiment of viva city. She Is an energetic forewoman In a large laboratory, and shows no traces of her recent long struggle with ner vous prostration succeeding typhoid pneumonia. "My illness began in 169S," says Mrs. Frazier, "and lasted for about three years in all, and for three months I was confined to my bed. I made occasional attempts to work, but Icould only manage to put In two or three days out of a week at the very best. Several times I was actually at the point of death. 'I had a good physician, but he could not succeed in getting me out of my weak state. It was hard for me to re tain any food and my weight dropped down to seventy-five pounds I had a great deal of dizziness and suffocating spells. One of my legs was swollen so as to Interfere with my walking. I could get scarcely any sleep, my color was very pale, and I suffered from Ir regularities that are very painful and depressing to women, "I dragged out month after month of such an existence. Then I read of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People In a Providence paper, and I thought I would just try them. Before I got through the first box I said to my mother, 'Why, these pills are certainly doing me good. We both grew hopeful and I kept on taking them steadily for six or seven months and then occasion ally for some time longer, and all the time my troubles kept lessening until at last they were gone altogether. I got rid of indigestion, headaches, nervous ness, sleeplessness, dragging sensations and Irregularities of every kind, and my weight ran up thirty-two pounds. "It is more than a year since I took up my full work, and in all that time I have not lost a day through illness. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have made me a well woman, and I have no lack of strength or cheerful spirits." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a specific for all diseases of the blood and nerves. Their power has been tested in the most extreme cases. They are sold by all druggists throughout the world. thousands of miles of travel, from the Canadian boundary line to Cape Nome. The trip will occupy all Summer. On his return General Funston will go to New York to take command of the De partment of the East. Foreclosure in Ship Trust Case. HARTFORD, Conn., July 27. In the United States Circuit Court today Judge Piatt signed the decree of foreclosuretand sale in the case of the Mercantile Trust Company as complainant against tho United States Shipbuilding Company, James Smith, Jr., as receiver of the Ship building Company, and the Eastern Ship building Company. A mortgage toT 516.000,000 was given In August, 1902, to cover an Issue of 5 per cent bonds which were taken by the com plainant. On June 30, 1903, interest was defaulted, and then action for foreclosure was taken. Disturbances at Sioux City. SIOUX CITY. Ia., July 27. Disturbance in the stockyards district continued to day. The situation, seeming beyond con trol of the city -police, tho Sheriff took charge. He announced that he would swear In deputies, and, If necessary, would call for the mllltla. Manager Wat son, of tho Cudahy plant, claims that tho plant is being operated. 1 Bought, and wnich has been, has borne the signature of has been made under his per ALWAYS Signatur of -t tilt'iPfej3g? BHBWaBffi5j'iMjPSW