CLOLGOSI QUIETLY AWAITS EXECUTION. Only Two Weeks More of Life for : McKinley's Assassin, MURDERER SHOWS NO FEAR OF END tion That He Would Like to Make Away standing — Fruits and Flowers Seat Him. Albany, —Supt. Cor nelins V. N. Y. (Special) Collins, a request to Secretary Hay to designate an official representative of the United SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. timore gentleman that Crolgosz visited them he was the and tried to flirt that he told agent of an undertaker, with them Bessie Arnett, 15 vears old, of Fair mont, W, Va. tried to elone with a overtaken by her angry father. abducting Mabel Goodrich electrocution of Leon F. murderer of President McKinley, which time in the week of October 28. Only 26 witnesses will be present in is executed. Warden Mead, of the pris on, has sent to Superintendent Collins the requests he has received for permis tion to attend the clectrocution, 1000 in all. The law limits the number of witnesses, and the superintendent will decide who they will be, Statements to the effect that Czolgosz is in a continuous state of collapse and that he breaks down and weeps every time anything is said to him concerning the electrocution are denied. Superin tendent Collins had a talk with the con- demned man some days ago and at that time Czolgosz said he knew he had t die. He expressed no fear as to the electrocution, but said he would not care o go outside the prison, for he believed the people would kill him. Since his confinement in Auburn prison several thousand letters have been re- ceived for hin at the prison, as well as a large number of express packages containing flowers and fruit. The let- ters, flowers and fruit have not reached the condemned man... The flowers and fruit have bren sent by church societies, as have a number of letters consoling him in his last moments. Other letters have come from cranks who have written about the species of terture to which they would put him if they had the exe cution of justice in his case. It is stat ed that it would cause surprise if the na.nes of senders of fruit and flowers were made public. The State prison department has pur- sued a uniform policy in regard to Czol- gosz. An effort has been made to pre- veat the murderer from gaining any notoriety while awaiting death and to surround him by as perfect an from the world as possibl DARING BURGLARS TERRORIZE A TOWN. isolation Use a Watchman as a Shicld From Bullets Finally Forced to Flee. Detroit, Mich. (Special } .—/ the Journal from Saginaw, “Burglars who open the safe in States Graphite he cured $30 in cash and $600 in checks, terrorized the inhabitants of the village of Fosters, near here “They captured } Jones, bound and gagged him. Then they took him Harden's hardware store, where they blew open the safe Unable to open the strong box, they made the watchman conduct them Harden's home, expecting to compel Harden to go to his store and open the cash drawer of the safe. “Harden was prepared for them and opened fire. The burglars used the cap- tive watchman as a shield fire. Jones was shot in the hand, but none of the burglars was hit cial to Says ’ tO to to burglars fled.” Lieut. Williams Killed. Washington (Special). —Adjutant-Gen- eral Corbin received a cablegram from Second Lieut. James C and was instantly killed Williams was a son of the late Gen. Robert Williams, formerly adjutant- weeks ago. He was born in Kansas of Columbia many years. In August, in the 34th Infantry, and was promoted rapidly to a second lieutenancy for effi- cient service in the Philippines. Thousands Were Drowaed. Washington (Special). — The Navy Department has received a report from the gunboat Helena regarding the de- vastation by flood of the Yangtsze Val- ley above Nanking, China. e water reached the highest point in 50 years. The devastation was widespread, the flood wiping out whole villages. Ex- have been too long covered by the water to survive, scarcely any live stock re- mins, and famine stares the people in the face. Thousands of persons were drowned. Blew Open a Bank Safe. Rantoul, Ill. (Special).—The bank of Marysville at Potomac, a village twenty miles east of this city was entered by robbers and between $1200 and $1500 in currency and silver taken. To get into she safe two charges of nitroglycerin were used. A young man named Moorehouse heard both explosions and started to ascertain the cause. When he reached a point near the bank he was stopped by one of the robbers and was held a prisoner until the men es- caped on a handcar. First Elect on of Cuba Libre. Havana (Special).—The elections for all officers of the Cuban Republic, except President, will be held Pracerbe. 21 next, and that for President will take flay February 24, Cuba's national holi- y. a AS ABO SS Heavy Sentences Asked. Havana (Special). The indictments in the postofhice fraud cases have been sent by the Fiscal to the Audiencia, but have not yet been made public. It is known that the Fiscal has asked that C. . W. Neely, Estes G. Rathbone and W. H. Reeves, the indicted officials, be sentenced to imprisonment for terms Minging from 24 to 26 years. Each of the accused is arged with from 15 to 18 offenses. Counsel for the defense have 20 days in whith to file answers to the ments, The employes of the Richmond Loco- motive Works are excited over mysteri bullets that killed one man and Johann Most, of New York, was sen tenced to the penitentiary for one year for publishing a seditious article in his paper : Harper's nitro-glycerine factory, at Ridge Farm. Pa.. was blown to atoms, and Clarence Ward, the manufacturer, and his assistant were blown to pieces Ground for a monument to commem orate the battle between the Indians in 1774 was Point Pleasant, W. Va Wm Williams, of Lima, bbed by a negro tramp riding on a freight train Four trainmen were killed injured in a on the Great Western between tw Tams settlers and the dedicated in Ohio, was while men were and three collision ICARO Ar William Gregman, a prom mle in his ngton, N. J. shot om at the Cadillac Hotel, New York icy H. y Capt. J. B. Nielson, a sea Hed himself , who then killed himself Carroll, of Brooklyn, The biennial sessibn of the Grand of the Evangelical Church of North America was held in Lima, Ohi Mrs. Mary Ellen Grubbs, wife of the assistant postmaster of Richmond, Va, died at her home in that city ee 1 LOounc The body of Jack Haverly, the min strel, who died in Salt Lake City, was buried in Philadelphia. Lorenzo Snow, fifth president of the Mormon Church, died suddenly at Sah Lake City. Indictments were found in Grand Rap- Mich., against City Attorney Lant K. Saulsbury and Stilson V. McLeod, i ids, for violating the United States banking laws The committee on temperance PreshyterianGeneral Assembly will tinue its fight agains t army and 1 Surgeon General he canteen posts i report \ of New : $300,000 against flesex Co Jank, this being the cashier has develog ed that M Witwer, of Middletow: spected of poisoning ands, has a hith divorced H. H. Courtrigh man ern T cago of gangrene Michael F. Creman and hi were asphyxiated by escap m of Mr. Cremar Elizabeth A. Fennell Y., was married in Wir Thomas A George Dolinski. convicted murder of Anton Lisle, his br law, was hanged in Chicago James B. Greenough. professor Latin at Harvard University, paralysis. He was 68 years old Foreign. The 20.000 men of the Aldershot gar- rison have received orders to hold them- selves in readiness for active service British government being desirous reassuring the public Forty thousand French « the of yal miners against it, and 110,000 did not vote King Leopold of Belgium has decided ® editor of Tailhade, an an sentence Laurent to imprisonment for a vear and a fine « citing to murder of the Czar and Presi CS AA A A Bulgarian official is authority for the statement that the brigands now have Miss Stone on the heights of Jokomda, in Turkish territory Glavinovitch, the anarchist who was arrested in Rome, was sentenced 10 a fortnight's imprisonment and then to be deported. ussian newspapers urge that Russia pai] Afghanistan is completely tranquil- ized. The Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York arrived at Toronto, and were given an enthusiastic reception, Forty vessels and many lives have been lost during recent storms in the North Sea The German steamer Huelva, with her crew of 11 men, is believed to have been lost. More women victims of the fortune tellers Theodore and Laura Jackson in London testified as to the fantastic per- formances and vows connected with in- itiation into the Theocratic Unity, General Buller's statement that he ad- vised the surrender of Ladysmith has provoked a storm of criticism. and it is now considered doubtful that he will be elevated to the peerage. Germany has repudiated the contention of Venezuela that territory of the latter was violated in an affray between sailors of a German cruiser and the people at Porto Cabello. The new Ameer of Afghanistan has in- formed the British government that he Financial It is said the St. Louis Southwestern directors will take no action regarding a dividend on the preferred stock at the next meeting. The admision of Mr. Fish ino the Western Union board is said to be for the Harriman interests while Mr, Spen- cer's election strengthens the Morgan interests. Dr. John C. Barron has been elected vice-president of the United Railroads of New Jersey. Dr. Barron has for time been a director of that cor- % NOT YET BEEN FOUND. Sixty Thousand Dollars of the Ransom Fund Is Subscribed, TURK SH TROOPS ARE CALLED OFF. | The Missionaries Have Not Yet Been Able | to Get In Touch With the Brigands to Arrange as to the Amount of the Ransom The Turkish Commander Had Planned to Surround Miss Stone's Captors. Constantinople (By Cable).— Neither Mr. Baird nor Mr. Haskell, the mission- | aries, has yet been able to get in touch Stone, It transpires that Turkish com- mander had completed dispositions to surround Miss Ellen M. Stone's tors at noon Saturdav last. Eddy, secretary of the United States le- gation, however, received information that further would result in the death of Miss Stone, and at 3 o'clock Saturday morning he nroc residence the of foreign af fairs, Tewfik Pasha, and demanded the immediate retire: the Turkish troop his was out, and the Mr Bulgarian 1 v' the activity ceeded to the Ol Hnnister ent of carried followed i ¥ 1 of tie £8 bly result in her mu London (By Cable) press has received the | Vienna “Todarefi, the driver who accom panied Miss Stone when she was kid naped, has arrived at Sofia. He her captors are Turks e, who are not satisfied with his statements, are keeping him under Vetiance Washington (Special).—All that be gained from the State Department respecting the case Miss the missionary who is held by brigands in Bulgaria, is that she is alive Says poli Sur OiNicCIals of Stone, MRS, McKINLEY WILL BE PROVIDED FOR. Congress Will Take Action According to Pre. cedent-— Pension of $5,000 Per Year. Washington, D. C. (Special) When Congress meets in December one of the first acts will be the introduction of a bill by Senator Foraker to pay Mrs. Mc- Kinley a year's salary, or $50,000, on her late husband's account. This will be following a precedent established in the cases of Presidents Lincoln and Garfield. At first it was agitated to pay her the salary of the unexpired term of Presi- dent McKinley, but it was decided to follow precedent, especially as Mrs, Mc- Kinlev has no children. Tt will be re- a popular subscription was also opened, widow. It is also suggested that a pen- sion of $5.000 per year should be voted to Mrs. McKinley. This will also be in line with previous legislation in such surgeons and physicians who ness is also being mooted. the legislative experts are the precedents. President gered 80 days looking Garfield lin to compensate the surgeons and physicians in the f Howing proporuons Dr. Bliss, $6,200; Agnew and Ham ilton, $5,000 cach: Drs Boynton, $4,000, and Dr. Susan B. E $3,000 The board also allowed different parties $5029 for services and This included $1,500 Railroad of New Jersey, and to C. Jones, Elberon. Extra to certam government employes and the total ex- It SON, upplies i tral of allowed i 1,162 COMpensation was was $57,000 $1co,000 will be asked from Congress Dr. McBurney's bill is expected to be at least $25.000, and the other physicians will file cla in proportion. President McKinley's fatal illness lasted only eight days, but the legislative experts believe that the bills presented will be twice as large similar service rendered 20 years ago during a period ten times as as The officials, to indicate the nature of the measures they are pursuing to this end, still have hope of ultimate success. rejease wi Boer Officers Banished Pretoria (By Cable) .—Eighteen more Boer officers, captured since September the country nonchaient gistrate Cun Er ¥ x $v mans es or with setting yme, Twenty-first tail oped at vidence attempt ago halle YIN weeks Nm. F repeated a confes : un by and confirmed at hearing committed to prison without the ay! the girls, the Kate Wagner. Mane Ash of the bh : Magistrate Cunning han - rily after E Ahn and Annie Derr entered the institution they ording to the Hoff that would soon break out in me the nd by mma talked of a fire, ace man girl a I : zi. rem 1 ron 0! con i by that be rans crap 3, pathere appears would 1 between the rst of the ur new + fy omer Eet away un onfusion 3 On Saturday supper, the , and shortly af nignt went upstairs confused They joined the rest of the room, but had arcly seated themselves before the cry echoed through the sistant F Marshal Wilk the stand that the fire had been s In beddin nmates in the recreation building ite ins ted in five rooms two apartments and had been two others mattresses had een ignited, while in the fifth a lighted andie had been thrust into a closet full In only two rooms, how- ever—those of Ahn and Annie Derr—did the fire do any damage. He further stated that the Ahn girl admitted to him after her arrest that she had put the candle into the closet, while her up. In Emma fresses The South its third year, and full of the subject Hilversum. Nether ident Kruger now 1s received many gifts and pon the occasion of the an says that addresses i niversary $igp Bate of Hil Cres Jurgomaster o ives n i officials. From and other Middleburg. Cape war is now being prosecuted upon Commandant Lotter, most wholly of rebels, was captured by Major Scobell, south of Petersburg, carly last month. Lord Kitchener has confirmed the sentence. Five of Lot- ter's comrades bave been sentenced to th penitetiary for life. One, a youth, has been sentenced to 20 strokes with the rod, to be followed by imprisonment until the close of the war.” Number of British troops sent to South Africa since war began (about), 325,000; number now there, 200, Losses up to September 1, the date of last official report: Killed in action, died of wounds, 1560; prisoners 17.006; wounded, 19078; prisoners, home as invalids, 55.485; grand total of losses, 101,079. Estimat- ed cost of war to Great Britain, from i | | i Boer soldiers in field since war be. gan (about), 60,000; number now in field (about), 11,000; Boer soldiers held prisoners by the British, 36,000: Boer women and children in refugee camps, 137.000; total Boer population of Trans. ree State at begin- i, of war, 300,000. e storm raised by General Buller's remarkable speech in which he admitted that after the battle of Colenso he ad- vised Gen. Sir George Stewart White to surrender Ladysmith, corcinues to grow. It is believed that lsciplinary will follow wunjess neral Buller himsell takes the advice of such a conservative supporter of the govern- ment as the Standard and resigns. Port Townsend, Wash. (Special) — Reports from Nome by the steamer John S. Kimball state that a reign of terror prevails at Nome. Holdups and robberies are of nightly occurrence. Men are being sandbagged and robbed in broad daylight when caught in lonely places. Sluice box robberies ate fre- quent and several miners have been rob- bed of from $500 to $2000. Business houses have been entered and even wo- men walking on the streets are made victims, On September 20 two masked men entered the store Mrs. S. M. Hovey and at the point of a pistol fore- ed her to give up $500. Discovery claim on Anvil Creek has again distin- guished itself. East Liverpool, Ohio (Special). ~A large reservoif containing 10,000,000 ont of water bursted and caused great damage. No lives were lost, but a score of had narrow escapes. The money loss will probably reach $150,000. Khe reservoir, which is own- ed by the city, and which was only com. eted a few days ago, was filled r the rot time. It was taxed to its utmost ca ¢ when the Jueskc_ceeatred, A : rs were pipes in a ditch near the wall which g way, and PETER NISSEN LIVED agara's Mad Waters, His Head But the Navigator Seems Litfle 10 Take Soundings Much Anxious Ex. citement Among the Spectators Niagara Falls, N. Y. (Special). —Peter Nissen, of Chicago, made a successiul trip through the whirlpool rapids in his boat called the “Fool Killer.” Never in the history of rapids navi- gation, it is said, was a larger crowd of delight them all. The bridges, the cliffs were e whirlpool ¢ Nissen do crowded, while down at th other masses asembled ¢ ( or die The people sta saw the boat cross the river Hs 2.18 o and did 3 1.30 to midstream in y a bridges ip near the clock it ran to the reappear m when 1t Tow SS em He $1 oe 1ONCaG about American tream * out It drawn his ded to float through under a fu he last steamboat side intil was evident fire and le tnroug { steam, t on June 6, 1861 Straight down the river | until opp two boats i Maid of the v¢ boat shot te en and his site the o Mist landing, shore and safety, leaving Nise boat to drift int) the rapids Nissen was in full view and there was much anxious excitement among the spectators. Closer and closer the cur- ds, and just as ridges at 3.40 ell and disap- peared inside of his boat, putting the when the r passed under the Two minutes later the red smokestack of the boat was licked off tv a mighty under the influence of the waters of the rock oan- and again the bright was in full view, but urn os For much Time bottom the cpening be- fore he started Three minutes the pool the daring in the open hatch remained in SIR only a to the roughness of the water, but a few min- inbed on deck and in Canadian boat swung As it ap n dropped 1 the hatch Ce 51 wes k Pres Nismo boat was stepped vage he was ailed to get u 1g in the rapids WORLD'S WHEAT CROP OF 190L boat struck wr appeared after his na E He OWiIing yment, utes later he cl the he Importaat Estimates Agree That Product Ex. ceeds 1599 and 1900, Washington (Special).—The Depart- Agriculture announces that the most important estimates of the world's wheat crop of 1901 so far made agree that the crop is larger than that of either of the two preceding years The estimates follow : Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture, 2.- ment of three des Halles of Paris, 2.790.310,000 Win- chester bushels The American Agricultural Depart- ment withholds its opinion as to the de- gree in which the world’s crop has been approximated in any of these estimates until a considerably larger number of official returns is available The official Hungarian estimate says the crop exceeds last year's by 200881,- ooo bushels of 60 pounds, or by 212.430. ooo Winchester bushels. According to Beerbohm the excess over last year's crop is 200,200,000 bushels of 60 pounds, is the excess 136.777.0000 Winchester The principal increase is cred- though various countries are credited with larger crops than they had in 1900 _ : PAT CROWE TIRED OF BEING JIUNTED He Offers to Surrender 'v the Award for His Captur: + Withdrawn. Omalra, Neb. (Special) —Chief of Pe- lice Wonahue has received from Patrick orowe, through a friend of the latter, an offer to surrender himself and stand trial in the courts if the reward of $50,- 000 hanging over his head for the alleged kidnaping of Edward A. Cudahy, Jr, is withdrawn, Chief Denahue did not accept the proposition, but made a counter offer, to waive the reward himself, saying ne- body else could secure it. The chief says Crowe is tired of being hunted, and is willing to take chances of a if the reward is withdrawn. He says Crowe is less than 500 miles from Omaha and is not with hi Altoona, Pa. (Special) James H McCullough, the alleged defaulting Blair County Tax Collector, who was arrested in Baltimore and whose alleged stealing are estimated at $120,000, was sentenced to pay a fine of $5,000 and serve a year, less one day, in the county jail. As Mo Cullough is said to be unable to pay fine, he may be forced to serve a day cach %0 cents, which would make sentence 28 years. Robber Band in Harrodsburg. Danville, Ky. (Special).—A band five robbers robbed She Dostoffice at re rodshurg, 10 miles dis securing and a attempted to effect am entrance to the Moyer red eT ace officers, cove fire on them. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS, To Prevent Explosions. Rear Admiral Charles O'Neil, chief of naval ordnance, in order to prevent further explosions of semi-armor-pierc ing shells in the 13-inch guns on battle ships, has directed that all semi-armor piercing shells under manufacture shall be made with thicker walls and with a gas check Rather than have another premature explosion, he will probably request the department to order that these piercing shells be used charges, in target In regard I the forward i3-inch guns of the ship Alabama recent gun test off the Vir Rear Admiral i said Jury 1s not a will not have to be and contemplate mak gun at impaired, Ad shell explode and } SETIOU without the powder practice 1 } wyort that of * cpu that one o hattle in the capes the in gun disabled ginia fiat that the that at presen all, as it run 4 Uncle Sam's Wireless Lines. Willie 1 Tre of Sp States Weather 1 red W ashington Weather Bureas betwees “The « Xperiment the Bureau been highly said halistac which is different fron far been exploited the world will not say. 2 ducted secrets between Cape Henry More Males Than Females census bulletin just issued mtereshing G. 112.588 ¢« ~Niates f of negro de Japanese and 266.560 11 Exports for September. ¢ of the nited 5S 1001, issued by 1 shows them 1 $20,432,480 Septembe $1.600.000: cotton $1.700.000; miner $280 on Fe ed September 230 i these articles w inst $550,658 184 ng period in 1900 McKinley Memorial Arch The organization of | Kinley National Memorial ciation, whose purpos 000,000 arch erected 3 £ William subscription to Presu placed at the Wash the proposed mem nect Washington wi ing rapidly completed Maciarland of the District one of of Columbia The President and will be honorary vice-presidents Postal Receipts lacre: sel The gross postal receipts for Septen, ber at hity of the largest postoffices were $4.225.752, a net increase of $323 over last year. Re sociation viz: Jersey City, N. J. $3750, or a little Mich., $263, or over 1 per cent. Colum- bus, Ohio, showed the largest increase. 29 per cent. a close second. The re- ceipts of New York were $881.511, an increase of 8.2 per cent, and Chicago $607,120, an increase of 1.2 per cent. Our Philippine Forces. It has been determined at the War Department to send troops to the Phil- ippines to take the places of those whose term of enlistment expires. Where the re-enlistments are not large in any one regiment their places will be filled by separate detachments of recruits [If any considerable number of enlistments expire in a single organization nt is probable that the organization as a whole will be returned from the Philip. pines and another regiment sent to take its place. Advised to Wait »8 to Cable. Attorney-General Knox had a long conference with President Roosevelt re. rding the 3p fication of the Pacific ommercial Cable Company to lay a cable from the United States to the Philippines by way of Hawaii an Guam. Mr. Knox advised the Presi. dent to await farther information as to the purpose of the company after its cable is completed to the Philippines, EEE The War Department made public the report of Major General Wood, 3% the manding the t of Cuba. President Roosevelt purchased a nom. ber of horses and carriages for his stable in Washington. ‘ The final census on lation shows that the pol i gh I de per cent. of te tat population, Capt. . Carter, formerly of Win- chester, Va, was made oh of the Eighth Federal District in the