LANE COUNTY LUDER
« . o. c o n n , rmkuikw.
LIBERTY VERY BRIEF.
Murderers Break Jail at Chcysnnc, Wyo.
—Fierce Struggle With Jailor.
Cheyenne, Wyo., Aug. 12.— Tom
Horn, the condemned murderer of lit
GOTTAGB GROVE
OREGON.
tle W illie Nickell. and Jim McCloud,
in custody lor postoffice robbery, es
caped Irom the county jail at 8 :40
o’ clock this morning after overpowering
OMermJ Review of Important happening* Deputy Sheriff Proctor, but were recap
of the Past Week In Brief and
tured after a brief but exciting chare.
Comprehensive Form.
The ringing of fire bells brought hun
dreds of armed citixens to the scene
General Miles declares for small and it looked for a time as though a
armies tor ail nations.
lynching would take place, but the es
Supporters of the Irish land bill be capes were hurriedly brought back to
lieve its passage is now assured.
the jail and placed in their cells be
The finishing touches are being put fore the crowds could form themselves
on Shamrock I I I prior to the big races. into a mob. The men did not get but
Thirty-three more bodies have been two blocks away before they were re
tasen from the Hanna, Wyoming taken.
mine.
The plot which led to their escape
The Casino gambling bouse, one of was well planned. Horn and McCloud
the most notorious in France, has been were the only prisoners confined on
destroyed by Are.
the upper floor of the jail. They oc
The international typographical un cupied steel cells, so arranged that
was
ccmuaratively
ion has commenced its 49th annual ses communication
easy.
This morning McCloud com
sion at Wasbintgon.
plained to Deputy Proctor of being ill
Penny postage rates between Great and requested some medicine and a
Britain and the United States ar* glass of water. Upoo&returning with
deemed impracticable.
the articles asked for, he discovered
A Kansas woman lost a bustle cn a that the men had left their cells,
tiain containing $7,500. Railroad de which were not locked, and had walked
to (he end of the (orridor through
tectives found it for her.
which they were allowed to exercise.
The Canadian Pacific railroad has When Proctor opened the door to the
< per cent lor corridor, he was pounced upon by the
declared a dividend of
the six months just ended.
two men and securely bound with a
The textile workers of Philadelphia cord which they had secured in som#
have given up their strike. Over 10,- manner. Horn and McCloud demand
ed that he give them bis keys and al
000 have returned to work.
though Proctor had them on his person,
Grain field fires near Bakersfield, j he replied that they were locked up in
Cal., have destroyed thousands of
the safe.
acres of wheat and pasture.
Proctor was then conducted to the
Three thousand men have gone on a safe and directed to open it. The or
strike at Cripple Creek, Colo., in order der wae obeyed, but on opening the
to stop shipments to smelters refusing Hale, Proctor snatched from inside a
gun and turned on the men. They
to grant 8-hour days.
wese too quick for him, however, and
The insurrectionary movement in
soon bore him down.
In the brief
Macedonia is spreading.
struggle Proctor fired his revolver at
Cruelty of nobles to their American them four times slightly wounding
wives w ill force many to ask lor d i McCloud.
vorces.
The Bhooting attracted the attention
Chinese of New York have pe of Deputy Know, who hastened to the
titioned Secretary Hay to sate the re Btene, but was met at the doorway by
McCloud, who had secured possession
formers.
of a shotgun in some manner. 6now
Senator Morgan says, Foraker and retreated and Horn and McCloud es
not Roosevelt, w ill be the republican caped through a rear door of the jail,
nominee for president.
after binding the arms of Deputy Proc
Safe crackers blew open a safe with tor. McCloud secured the only horse
in two blocks of the police station at in the sheriff's stable and mounted the
animal and started toward the west.
Portland and secured $150.
Horn ran in the opposite direction.
The pope gave his blessing to the
world from inside and not Irom the
BUTTE JAIL YAWNS.
balcony as was hoped by many.
WEEK’S DOINGS
Captain Charles J. Barclay, of the
Puget sound navy yard, is now ranking Murderers and Highwaymen Escape Eas
ily—Oct the Drop on the Jailor.
officer on the list of navy captains.
Butte, Mont., Aug. 12.— Three mur
A Hattiesburg, Miss., mob chiseled
into the jail, secured the negro who derers, two under sentence of death, a
stage robber wanted in Wyoming and
shot a jailsr, and then hanged him.
President Roosevelt ami Secretary two highwaymen, escaped from the
Root did not eulogise Miles because Silver Bow county jail shortly after 6
they felt that he was not deserving of o’clock this evening, without any diffi
praise.
culty. The men who escaped are:
A tornado swept the mining district L. L. Felker, who escaped once before,
of
Pittsburg,
Kan., killing four, Charles Lenox and James Martin, J.
wounding HO and doing great damage R. Wocds, alias Joe Rodgers, and Pat
rick
Rodgers
Frank Oestroff is
to property.
wanted in Cheyenne for holding up a
Lieutenant General Miles has re stage roach. The latter and Joe Rod
tired.
gers were caught within an hour after
Roosevelt is in favor cf a more elas they escaped. Oettroff was armed.
Oestroff and Rodgers planned the de
tic currency.
livery. Oestroff compltined of being
Bulgaria will be neutral In the Mace
sick and a doctor was called in. When
donia trouble.
the jailor opened the corridor, Oestroff
Mere Russians have been killed by dropped a revolver on Jailor William
troops in labor troubles.
Dolan, and then took the keys from
Fire at Barcelona, Spain, rendered him. Oestroff then, with the aid of
Joe Rodgres, opened the cells of the
3,000 families homeless and destitute.
prisoners, and the jailor was overpow
Mayor Tom L. Johnson, of Cleve ered.
land, Ohio, will be a candidate for gov
Oestroff kept Dolan at bay while the
ernor.
other prisoners walked out of the jail.
Foreign consuls will not allow the One of them secured a revolver from
delivery o( reformers to China for ex the jailor’ s office. Lenox and Martin
went out the rear way of the jail, and
ecution.
the others rooty walked ont the main
Cape Colony will not be represented entrance. Oestroff was run down Dy a
at the 1904 fair as was originally the horseman, and was completely ex
intention.
hausted when caught.
An insane man has been killed by
officers by mistake in searching for the
Senators on a Sandbar.
Folsom convicts.
Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 12, — When
Pope Pius gave Cardinal Gibbons a the steamship 8t. Paul left Nome 10
private audience at which he expressed days ago. United Ktates Senators Nel
his interest in America.
son, of Minnesota; Patterson, of Colo
T. A. Wood, a Portland attorney, rado, and Dillingham, of Vermont,
may be debarred for practices in prose were stuck on a sandbar in the Yukon
river, 200 miles above Nulato.
There
cuting Indian war veterans’ claims.
W illard R. Allen, a prominent Boston senators compose part of the senatorial
attorney and treasurer of Methodist committee appointed to investigate
preachers' aid society, has confessed o Alaskan affairs. After visiting Skag-
emliextling $80,000 of the society's way and Junes’ , they went to Dawson
and inspected Klondike mines.
They
funds.
started for the mining camps on the
A Ore at Fort Scott, Kan., caused a Lower Yukou on ths steamer Van Vleet.
loss of $70,000.
Broad Hint to Powers.
Gorman feels confident of Demo
London, Ang. 12 — The Times prints
cratic success in 1904.
a dispatch from Khanghai, which says
Russian troupe have whipped and that the anniversary of the capture of
otherwise cruelly treated striking labor Nut Chwang was celebrated, and that
M. Grossee. the Russian administrator,
ers.
issued formal invitations for the inaug
Lewis, the colored Folsom, escape,
uration of the Rnseian civil administra
has been retaken at Auburn, shot in tion building, and that this was inter
the legs.
preted as equivalent to the declaration
The gross earnings of the Union Pa to the representatives of the other pow
cific far the past year show an increase ers that they conld not claim a footing
of equality or rights in this port.
of $.4,574,900.
Navy yard officers refused to eat with
Meteor's Blaze of Light.
a colored officer, but were not tracked
Chickasha, I. T., Aug. 1*.— During
up by the officials.
a heavy thnnder storm last night, a
Beattie thieves took a safe from the meteor fell here with a hlsze of light
Washington hotel ami blew it open in and a ahower of sparks that lit up the
country for mile* around. The aerol
the heart of the city.
ite struck the earth in the back yard
Fifty Filipinos have been sent to of Mrs. Sarah Sibley.
Mr*. Sibley
prison for long terms lor participat was severely stunned. A terrific ex-
ing in raid* on towns.
ploeion occurred as the meteor struck
General Mile#’ desire for national G. ami incandescent fragments flea in all
A. R. honors is causing great discord directiona. The telephone system was
•recked.
and may disrupt the organisation.
WRECK IN PARIS
Fire at Once Breaks Out and
Great Panic Ensues.
THE OFFICIALS
LOSE
THEIR
WITS
Firemen Unable for Hours to Reach the
Victims, Until They Finally Succeed In
Flooding th* Burning Mass.
Paris, Aug. 12.— An awful catastro
phe o. curred last evening on the Met
ropolitan electric railway, which runs
mostly underground, in which 90 |>er-
sons are believed to have lest their
lives.
£igbty-two bodies have been
recovered and the search continues.
One of the trains broke down at Menii-
montant, which is a poor and populous
section of the city.
This train was
promptly emptied, and the train whf. h
followed was ordered to push it to the
repairing sheds. On the way thi se two
trains caught fire, but the employes
succeeded in escapiDg. Meanwhile a
crowded train reached Les Charonnes,
the preceding station, and the officials
seeing smoke pouring out of the tun
nel, gave the alarm.
A panic ensued,
the passengers struggling to escape.
Amid the increasing smoke many at
tempted to return along the line towa d
Belleville and were suffocattd.
The
officials seem to have lost their heads
and are unable to say how many pas
sengers went out. The firemen for sev
eral hours were unable to enter the sta
tion or the tunnel, owing to the dense
smoke, which poured out in black
clouds. Meanwhil“ tens of thonsands
of anxious people gathered about the
station. A ll the police and fire engines
were on the spot and the excitement
was intense.
CZAR UP IN ARMS.
Says Turkey Must Punish
ConsuL
Slayer
of
St. Petersburg, Ang. 12.— The czar
has demanded the exemplary punish
ment not only of the murderer of the
Russian consul at Monasfir, who was
killed last week by a Turkish gend
arme, but of all the m ilitary and civil
officials in any way responsible for the
crime.
In reporting the occurrence to
the foreign office, the Russian consul at
Constantinople telegraphed as follows:
“ The Rsusian consol at Monastir has
fallen the victim of an atrocious crime.
The grand vizier and the Turkish for
eign minister have come to me with ex
pressions of regret in the name of the
sultan. Ferid Lesha, the grand vizier,
informed me that the assassin was a
gendarme named Halim, and that he
will be subjected to the severest pun
ishment, and the vali of Monastir will
be removed from his post ”
In reply, Count Lamsdorfl, the for
eign minister, telegraphed to the am
bassador :
“ His majesty has received a telegram
from the sultan epxressing bis deep re
gret at the death of the Russian consul
at Monastir. When I showed the tele
gram to the emperor, his majesty gave
orders that yon should not confine
yoursell to receiving explanations from
tiie grand vizier, but should make the
most energetic demands on the Turk
ish government for full satisfaction and
immediate and exemplary punishment
both of the murderer and of all the
military and civil officials on whom re
sponsibility for the audacious crime
may fall.”
ROOT NOT TO RESION.
Secretary of War Will Remain In the
Cabinet.
Oyster Bay, Aug. 12.— The attention
of the president tonight was directed
to a circumstantial statement, pub
lished today, that Secretary Root ex
pected soon to retire from the cabinet,
to be succeeded by Governor Taft, of
the Philippines. It can be Baid that
there is no denfiite foundation for the
story. The president, since the first
intimation many months ago of Secre
tary Root’ s possible retirement, has
hoped, and still hopes, that he w ill re
main in the cabinet for a long time.
He believes that the secretary will re
main throngh the coming winter, and
probably a much longer time.
Want Prices Raised.
London, Ang. 12.— The Dally News
this morning prints a dispatch from
Warsaw, dated last Friday, which says
that an American association, said to
contain 37,000 farmers, has addressed
itself to the Rnssian ministers of fi
nance and agrlcnltnre, requesting their
assistance in raising the current prices
of agricnltnral produce, particularly
wheat, an saying that the association
projects a great union between the
wheat growing countries of the world
for the purpose of fixing an annual
minimum selling price.
Pope Aging Fast.
Rome. Ang. 12.— Pius X had «noth
er fatiguing day, as he re eived all the
delegations which had come to Rome
to attend the coronation ceremonies.
The pontiff allowed all the members of
the delegation to kiss his hand, and
called by name tho’ e whom he knew,
just as he had when he met them for
merly when in Venice. His old Vene
tian friends agree that the pope looks
ten veers older than he did before his
eieetion.
Japanese Desire Pease.
Tokio, Japan, Aug. 12.— A number
of public men, including Prince Kon-
ova, president of the house of peers,
end Counts itagaki, ex-minister of the
interior, and Kama, have formed a
non-partisan association for the pur
pose of urging the government to in
vite Russia-to terminate the i-anses of
the present international complica
tion*.
FALL IN MASS.
Walk at Baseball Park Oives Way, Kill
ing Four People.
TRAINS COLLIDE
POPE IS FOR PEACE.
Vatican Officials However, are Slro—
Opposed to His Policy.
Rome. Aug. 8.— The attention
Rome is now centered upon the
*
coronation ceremony, which istoomi
on Sunday, and for which great
arations are being made.
n ,8
THE ROAD BLAMES THE ENGINEER of St. Peter, which Pins X will-’oeS**
will be mounted by a canopy ‘ 40 P*
He Says Air Brakes Refused to Work— high. Tbe function will cousnma (
hours.
The pope has informed tc
Train Was Carrying Circus—Number
Vatican officials that lie wishes to 1»°*
of Animals killed.
ceived on the threshold of tbs bssii^
by Cardinal Rampoila, who, as
Dutand, Mich., Aug 10.— An air priest of the church, will address tU
foimal greeting to him.
brake refusing to work on the second
A t the conclusion of the cerea»,,
section of Wallace Bros.’ circus train
the pope w ill confer bis blessing upi.
caused a rear-end collision with the the people, but it has net yet been
first section in the yards of the Grand cided whether he will do so inside |U
Trunk railroad at an early hour this church or from tne balcony looking^,,
upon the piazza, where manv hoped^
morning, in which 23 people were
would bestow his benediction on tu
killed outright and more than a dozen day of hi* election.
injured.
The coroner’s jury today
It is said that Pius is favorable to
viewed the remains and adjourned un the latter plan, but the influence 0! tb*
til August 14, when the inqnest will Vatican officials is against it, on tt,
ground that it might be interpreted «,
be held.
a recognition of the present state [
In discussing the question of respon affairs in Italy.
sibility for the horror, the railroad
The holding of the coronation cen.
officials unhesitatingly lay it to Engi ! monies in 8t. Peter itself represent««
neer Probst, of the second section of concession, as in the case of Leo it ot.
the train. Probst says the air brake curred ia the Sistine dispel. Althona
on his train refuseo to work, but the it is expected that 60,000 tickets till
officials declare lie could have stepped be issued for the event, the demand lor
the train in time to have avoided seri them is already very great.
ous consequences. The official report
In the consistories to b* held Moo.
on the accident declares positively that day and Thursday next, the pop* «¡||
the air brakes have been tested since confer the red hat upon Cardinals id-
the accident and found to be in perfect juti, Taliani, Katchthaler and Herrsro
condition and there is evidence that y Espinoza, who were raised from tit
they wcie not applied.
purple June 25. but who have not r«.
One of the officials in discussing the ceived these symbols of rank beacuisol
aci ident and its cause said that he be the illness and death ol I.eo
It is be-
lieved that Engineer Probst had ex lieved that the Rpanish Cardinal Her.
hausted bis air in checking bis train rero will not he able to be present it
several times between Lansing and the coronation ceremonies.
Durand and failed to charge bis tank.
WAR TO COME SOON.
The bead brakeman and fireman, who
were on the engine, hear out Engineer
Probst’ s statement that the brakes re Macedonians Have Fixed Dale of Oescnl
fused to work.
Uprising.
The cars standing stationary of tbe
London, Ang. 8.— A news agency dis
first section were telescoped and the
patch from Vienna says the Macedoni
engine and five cars of the moving train
an central revolutionary commits«hu
were demolished. The rear car of the
OCEAN TAKINQ ISLANDS.
fixed August 31 as the date for t gso-
first section was a caboose in which the
eral uprising, and that Boris Sarafofl.
trainmen were sleeping and the next
one of the leading Macedonian agitat-
Tuamotu Group Is Destined to Be Re
two were tilled with sleeping cirrus
ors, has been appointed commander ol
claimed by Waters.
men. The greatest loss of life was in
the revolutionary forces, with Alexieff
Papete, Tahiti, July 26, via San the caboose.
as his principal lieutenant.
Francisco, Ang. 11.— It wonld seem
The London papers print mail let-
that the islands known variously as the
CONVICTS AGAIN SEEN.
ten descriptive of the Macedonian sit
now Archipelago, or Tuanaotu group
are destined to be reclaimed by the Pa Men From Folsom Are Fired Upon, but uation and dated ths latter part of
July, which indicate that tbe commit
cific ocean. Last January they were
Escape Unhurt.
tee wav vigorously preparing for an up
swept by a flood composed of high
Placerville, Cal., Ang. 10—Great rising at tbe close of the harvest. Tbs
waves from the ocean and lesser ones
from the inclosed lagoons, and in con excitement was created in Placerville members of the committee, according
sequence nearly 600 of the inhabitants shortly before midnight by the sounds to these advices, have been vainly bop-
ing for an outbreak of war between
were drowned and property to the val
of shooting on a hill jnst west of town. Turkey and Bulgaria or someotherwn-
ue of $500 000 was destroyed. And
now, six months later, fierce gales John Wittmer and Sam Martin, who sational occurrence, such as a tnasitrt«
from the southwest and southeast have had been watching tbe ridge all even of Christians, then give them an open
again caused great surging crests to ing, saw two men break from tbe ing, hut nothing has happened and «1-
sweep over some of the inlands. So brush and run through an orchard. together the situation is critical, it is
far only four persons are said to have The men fired at the fleeing figures bat just possible thnt the committee miy
perished, but the fear is great that did not bring them down. Several still further put off the date of th*out
when all the islands are heard from more shots were fired into the brush break.
there may be a distressing list of fatal- in which tbe fleeing men took refuge,
COLORADO SWEPT BY STORM.
itias.
but without resnlt.
A score of citizens from town gath
The steamer Excelsior suffered much
damage during the series of gales while ered on tbe bill, and again the fuge- Chunks of Ice Fully Ten Inch» la
Length Full.
she was on her trip from Tahiti to the lives were seen breaking through the
Marquesas group. Three of the Tuam brush at the 1 wer end of the orensrd
Denver, Aug. 8.— Details of the
otu islands were undr- water to such Shots were again fired, but ail trace of storm which prevailed along ths east
an extent that the ;nh ibitants had to the men was lost. A small armi of ern slope of the Rocky mountain« ia
cliuib cocoannt tu ts
for
safety. men is now gathered on the h ill, and a Colorado and Southern Wyoming last
Houses and stores, c^pra and finally watch will be maintained all night. night show it to have Deen milch more
the coeoanut trees were destroyed, It is thought one of the men is Case severe than at first reported. In son»
while the inhabitants had a close call who is trying to get into Chinatown for sections the hail fail was unprecedent
to death.
opium. A man supposed to be a con- ed. In the neighborhood of Grrely
passi-d through Eldorado today beaded and Eaton, in the northern part of Col
REBELS ARE ACTIYe.
for this place.
orado, chuiiKs of ice measuring in son»
instances ten inches in length fell, ami
Mac» Ionian Uprising Affects More Cities
the damage wrought was immenw.
HAY EXCITES COLOMBIANS.
— Dynamite Being Freely Used.
Sheep were struck dead io the corral«,
Constantinople, Ang. 11.—The in Retaliation Is Hinted at In Case Canal and cattle and horses were severely
hurt.
Farmhouses and barns ant
surrectionary movement in Macedonia
Treaty Is Lost.
wrecked, and crops utterly wiped cot
appears to be widening. Bands are
New York, Ang. 10.— Advices re of existence.
reported to bo active in the Ranjak ot
ceived here from a prominent member
Near La Fayette, Colo., Iher* were two
Uskub and the district of Krnshevo,
oi congress in Bogota, state, according
storms, the second following ths first
where the government telegraph offices
to the Herald’ s representative in Colon, within 15 minutes and with greater
have been dynamited, while in the dis
that Secretary Hay early in July lacon
severity. Th* streets of the town wei*
trict of Dibra four Bulgarian villages
ically ca- led the United States min
flooded, cellars partially filled with
have risen, provoking a corresponding
ister, Mr. Beanpre, telling him to in
water and trees and shrubbery stripH
rising in tne neighboring Albanian
form the Colombian government of the
of foliage and crops destroyed. The
villages. According to the statements
probable action of the next American
damage in and around I jv Fayette i«
of the porte, however, the authorities
congress if the canal treaty is not rati
estimated at $200,000.
In Southern
have succeeded in calming the Alban fied.
ians and induced them to return to
Colorado the rainfall was very heavy,
The reading of the communications
their homes.
approaching the proportions of a cloud-
from Secertary Hay in secret session of
burst in several places.
the senate, caused vehement protests,
King in Fear for His Life.
Cologne, Asg. 11.— King Peter of they being considered an indirect threat
Prejudice Against New Coins.
Servia is being openly terrorized by of istaliation in case the treaty failed
Manila, Ang. 8.— The effort of tbs
'
bis eutorage, according to the Belgrade
United States government to introdnt*
Declines the Judgeship.
advices of the Cologne Gazette. Most
its new curency into the Philippi"«
of the present court officials who par
Denver, Colo., Ang. 10.— A special islands has not met with the snrMff
ticipated in the mnrder of King A lex i from Santa Fe,. M., says that Clem that was anticipated.
Although »
ander and Queen Draga appear to have ent M. Smith had rent a telegram to large quantity of the coins h«r*
objected strongly to the appointment that city from Hssti'gs, Mich., todav resrhed the islands, there exists cos-
of Colonel Leischjanin, the Servian at faying he had declined to accept the siderahle prejudice against their nw.
tache at Constantinople, to the post of appointment as chief justice of New especially in the provinces.
Yht
coart martial. The official gazette yes Mexico. Mr. Smith was appointed to bankers of Manila, having become coo-
terday contained the appointment, but succeed ex-Chief Justice Daniel H. Mc vinced of the necessity of action in ths
shortly after its publication all copies Millan. Mr. Smith gave no reeson for matter, held a conference with Gorer-
of the gazette were called in.
his action, bnt it is believed here he nor Taft, and after a full discos^"»
! was influenced by the sentiment exist- promised to render all the aid possible-
irg in the territory against the ay-
Urges Brazil to Increase Navy.
New York, Ang. 11.— While discuss pointment of a non-resident to the
Cuba Ejects Them.
ing naval estimates in the chamber of chief justiceship.
Santiago, C ut*, Ang. 8.— Some en
deputies, Thomas Cavalcante has. ac
gineers who were surveying a site for*
Honolulu Baggage Inspection Off.
cording to a Herald dispatch from Rio
terminal of the Cnbsn Eastern rsil**T
Janeiro, wited the mem tiers of the pos
Washington, Ang. 10.—The treasury on the United States naval reservsti«»
sibility of foreign aggression and plead | department today revoked its recent
at Guantanamo bay were warned off by
ed that Brazil should place herself in a order for the examination at Honolnln
the Ameriacn officers there, but rein*"
position to oppose the attacks of a of all baggage of persons coming to the
to go
Admiral Coghlan thereupon
European country.
Particular stress ) United Ktates from the Orient, and
notified tbe Cnban government, **“
was placed on danger of agrgsesion by hereafter examination will be made st
President Palma sent a revenue cutter,
Germany, and the deputy urged that the port of destination. Proper exam
which forcibly ejected the tre«pasrefj-
Brazil build np a navy at once.
ination at Honolnln wonld have neces The railway, having acquired tbe laad,
sitated a large increase in tbe force of claims heavy damages.
Fleet Not Off tor China.
customs inspectors. Fnrthermnre, pas
Washington, Ang. 11.— The nary de sengers object to being detained on the
Firemen Overcome by Os"-
partment today authorized a denial of steamer during ths investigation.
Tiffiin, O., Aug. 8.— Fire Chief * « '
the report that the Europe-n squadron
mer. Captain Grogg snd four firem«»
is destined to Chinese and Japanese
Mexican Volcanos Again Active
were overcome by carbonic acid r» " 1 '
waters. It is stated that the citiise of
Meixco City, Aug. 10 -R e p o rts from day while investigating a supposed •
the squadron will probably be confined
various prints in tbe sonthwestern in W ilson’ s cold storage plant. J .
to the Mediterranean until December
part of th« republic, »how that earth* men wer# rescued by the crowd •**“
next, when the entire sqnadran will
sail for the West Indie* to take part in quake shocks are again heing felt. Tbe ing tiie dense gaseous vapor, which *•
volcano of Colima is again active enopnsed to he smoke, rise fr°™ * _
the naval maneuvers arranged for next
U rg e column# of gas are passing over bn riding. A ll the firemen are in|ff,h
January.
the city of Colima.
oua condition.
Philadelphia, Ang. 11.— Four per
sons are dead, st least 12 are thought
to be fatally injured, and fully 150
others are hurt, some seriously, as the
result of an accident which occurred
t slay at the Phi adelphia National
league baseball park. A board walk,
which overhung the field bleachers,
loll to the stieet, carrying 200 epeca-
tors.
Two games were schednled be ween
Boston and Philadelphia this afternoon
and the attraction drew over 10,000 per
sons to the ball park. The accident
oo nrred at 5 :4U o'clock and was indi
rectly due to a quarrel between two
drunken men in the street. The Na
tional league stands are built of steel
and haick, the brick wall extending en
tirely around the grounds.
At the top
of the left field seats, and extending
from the grandstand to the bleachers,
there waB a walk about three feet wide,
which overhung the street.
It was
this walk that gave way under the
heavy weight. Men who were stand
ing on the walk were attracted by a
disturbame la the street. They leaned
over the side of the railing to see what
was the trouble, and drew the atten
tion of the other spectators seated on
the top rows of the bleachers. Then
occurred w hat is seen almost every day
at a ball game— a rush to bee wbat the
other spectators were looking at.
The walk became overcrowded, and
without a moment’ s warning 200 feet
of it lell to the sidewalk, 30 feet be
low, carrying all who were on it.
There were probably 3,000 persons sit
ting on the left field bleachers and the
roar made by the falling timbers cre
ated a panic. Instantly the spectators
rose en masse and made a rush down
the stand and into the playiDg field.
Men and boys climbed over oneanother
in their effort to escape from the
grounds. Notwithstanding wbat had
occuried, the bail players and others
tried to stop tbe mad rush, but they
were swept aside in their unsuccessful
efforts, and several persons were badly
hurt in tbe crush.
Twenty-Three People are Killed
and Many Injured.