TELEGRAPHERS THREATEN A GREAT TEE UP Railway Men Promise Their Full Support. MR. ROOSEVELT MAY INTERVENE National Secretary Russell, of the Com- mercial Telegraphers’ Union Says No Man Will Be Allowed to Work With a Nonunion Man, anda General Walk- out Will Thus Be Forced. THE SITUATION. Over 4,000 Western Union and Postal operators have quit. The Railway Telegraphers have placed a fund of $1,000,000 in their treasury at the disposal of the strikers. The national officers have not sanctioned a strike, but will back up the strikers. Labor Commissioner Neill, at the request of the President, is hastening to Chicago to attempt a settlement of the trouble. The officials of the telegraph companies say they have as many men as they need, and that their wires are all clear. { Special) .—The strike of telegraph throughout tates and Canada within National Sec- Commerical of America. made by Mr. after he had taken Chicago union tors will be the United S 24 hours, retary Telegraphers’ This statement Russell been informed by New York who at a meeting Sunday hold a walkout in commercial apera- universal according to Russell, of the Union was night of Sunday the action telegraphers, decided to until the union abeyance THE NEWS OF THE WEEK Domestic. Frank Rockefeller, of Cleveland, 0., in an interview in the New York World, utters bitter words against his brother, John D. Rockefeller, head of the Standard Oil Company. He sald their father is alive and is kept in hiding. In an address at the New York Chautaugua Prof. Smaller Mathews, dean of the University of Chicago Divinity School, claimed that capital is in control of the church and is being used against labor, William Ashton, a young business man, and Miss Lena Buss, planist at a moving picture show in Easton, Pa., are simultaneously missing. In New York the claim ig made that Mr. August Belmont is building the terminal under East River un- der an expired franchise. Ambassador Bryce will deliver the principal address at the meeting of the American Bar Association. Mrs. Isabella J. Martin, of New York, says the wife of the violinist Rigo, now at Atlantic City, whom Mrs. Martin has sued for $250,000 for slander, {8 the Princess de Chimay. Maurice C. Mengis has $15,000 in a suit over lands, the ac- tion being an outgrowth of the famous Western Maryland litigation, in which Mengis won $300,000, Prof. Charles Zueblin, of the Uni- recovered John D. Rockefeller socialism. dress charging with breeding Masked men bound the agent and robbed the and Ohio Railroad station castle, Pa. John Sharp Governor Varda the United and gagged Baltimore at Williams defeated man, of Mississippi, for States Senate by 64! votes. Ludwig unattached killed a burg. Thomas Morrison, wood with U. Mo. Stevenson, of Phiiadel- to be ghot sald priest, yroprietor of Sezegell, Polish hotel 1 who said Ss St. Louls, Policeman in latter part of the week. said Rus- int y Wi. “This strike movement,” sell, “has come to the | there can be no backing telegraphers have been long enough by the now that we have we are going to use all our strength to enforce our demands For al weeks President Small and : have been holding the telegraphers back and have advising ciliation; but they have taken affairs in their o to stand “No union work with our organis that Monday iness of the will bed half way in strike been men themselves sanction of the we working and anything that the offic various unions throughout try have dor meets with our This announcement Mr. Russell's ing of. held in noon. The rs WAS reonr by National S formed the zation morally $1,000,000 in ‘and It is at fight is on you until the end.” Before the mass meeting telegraphers employed using leased wires held a meeting. this gathering operators news agencies and ganizations, including yards packing houses, sented. A resolution was adopted ing that this class of labor was un- derpaid, and various firms wotnld be asked asked to sign a wage gcale and also to employ but union telegraphers. It decided | to let the private wire men prepare and present thelr schedules their employes tors will schedules at 10 o'clock Monday morning, asking | for a minimum wage of $830 a week The men associations at ployers 24 hours request The schedule call for six nights a an hour tors, eight 1} night's work, lunch. Operators employed by ciations nd newspapers for day work ask for $30 a week and 30 cents an hour overtime, eight hours to constitute a day's work, and the regular lunch hour If at the end of 24 hours the re- quests have not met with a favor. able response, the men will report to the union officials, and they say a strike will be ordered to enforce the demands. yO de trodden companies the on and mys been con- i wn i Y them ion, morniz Ome OEE has 7 sever oll are now ail the coun- strikes | wtion.” alive caning hearty co-oper Order was ail ali 320 union | companies | At | for brokers, | commercial the were Oor- | gtock repre- declar- that the none was own to The +h broker opera-| present eir emnploved pre ited o'clock by the their requests | giving em- | 1 ! | press 7.30 y comply with the g for $35 Week, 4 for to half a week. d 70 cents | n overtime night opera- | onstitute a | hour for y ours 31 with an news asso- Slipped On Leaf, Broke Neck. Jersey City, N. J. (Special). James Black, 35 years old, of this city, stepped on a leaf on a sidewalk here, slipped and broke his neck. He was taken to a hospital, where he died an hour later. For Two New Battleships, Washington (Special). ~~The final papers in the contracts for the cone struction of two battleships of 20. 000 tons each of the Delaware class, which were awarded by the Navy Department about a month ago, have been signed by Acting Secre- tary Newberry, representing the government, and President Orcutt, of the Newport News Shipbuilding Co, and a representative of the Fore River Shipbuilding Company, each of which concerps obtained a con- tract for building one vessel. and killed a burglar who halt population to tl The ac- he city's direc- tory. is 2.367 Fifty-six manufacturers formed a trade organization. Clarence Darrow, leading coun- for William D. Haywood in at B has been dismissed the srvices of the Western of Miners He will Hun S Oi8e, nor will in the event the to trial E F Darrow coroner, tried the trial is for October 1, he act latter set for Mover, ig brought will Cursing Maker n question him an jenying of H. War- who shot and killed Miss Esther John C. Wilson New arraigned before Coroner He was remanded the without bail, awaiting action the grand Mike McDon of Chicago gan former Democratie McDon broken existence ner, in was to by le {13 gr and ald's conditi heart ful wife hooting the nder » government leader of burglars, who and Long was for drugged Island for sentenced to 40 Joseph three ed the Corners, prison Alderman A and ana Sing years Former bert Sing killed fatally injur containing at Brookfield nes AS was when four probably waykeeo, passed the Hall bill state, county and city riding on railroad passes ing Robert Murdock, formerly a lieceman of Charlotte, N. C., shot and killed Mrs. Laura Ray and then com- mitted suicide Murdock had George W a bank governor of committed suicide in his effort to become Pennsylvania in in Pittsburg. the world, was by fire loss, $750,000 Mrs. Robert Arctic explorer, island four miles destroyed E at most successful surgeons of the West, dled from blood poisoning due to the prick of a needle during an operation he was performing. William P. Taggart, promoter of a coal block manufacturing company, was arrested in Philadelphia and charged with obtaining $1,600 through misrepresentation. The cannon ball train on Texas and Pacific Railroad was ditched near Dallas, Tex., all the coaches but the dining car leaving the rails. Willlam 8. Alley, a member of the New York Stock Exchange, com- mitted sufeide at the Larchmont Yaeht Club by shooting. Joseph F. Johnston has been se- lected by the Alabama legislature to succeed E. W. Pettus in the United States Senate. ————— Foreign. King Chulalongkorn 1. of Siam is to be the guest of the German Em- peror and Empress. The police found a big bomb fac- tory in the imperial technical schools in Moscow. Baron Xarl Lindeman, who sald he saw Olga Melitor shoot her moth- er, was arrested at Mannheim, Ger many, on the charge of blackmail, Miss Katherine Eddy was married at the United States Embassy in Berlin to Senator Beveridge, of In- diana. the 3 % 1 Again at Cost yecial) .~~John be Biggar, Cleveland, | D. | than + i Rockefeller will to more ninety-four, physi athlete in the family ian the [best trained old class in “Mr. Rockefeller has twice phyiscally, and fourteen years old now again scientifically, muscle, his lung fa AB 1 ov the world today. been born up his heart i fresh ing to to i every breath Forest makes ower with he takes on drive he air avery club.” cost and wit} the golf And G00 000 his wise Hox Mr. Rockefeller for this life These own It happened in Biggar: kefeller ame to Cl it second to Mr of $5,000,000. unt of situation disap igh aAppoin doctor davs oO went 0 talk- 1 aoc » Were ‘Troc- in the Next For 1 dipt int the future, far as ht Saw the v {ston Pilots of the purple Great War. man eye could see uld be, magic sails, ving down with costly bales; ¢ Far along the world With the standards Cable) Now Clemenceau the Minister riding around in airship Patrie, one dreams of Jules realized and of Tennyson ago of "airy {By Minister General Picquart, have been military that the have been poetic prophesy written many Years Paris A ana Ol the new realizes on the earth below will soon be a matter of fact and not a mere fig~ ment of a poet's imagination at home. the recent maneuvers the mifltary airships demonstrating the fact that it can carry a number of people, to be duplicated in the United States, would mean that See retary Taft and Secretary Root would find it both safe and feasible to go for a sail around the Monument from the grounds of Fort Meyer, beyond Georgetown, D. C., or that things were in such a shape in the United States that President Roosevelt would sail from Oyster Bay to New York on one of the War Department's new engines of death The fact is that the day of the airship ia so assuredly at hand that the Peace Conference at The Hague will pass upon the regulation of Tennyson~—Locksley’s Hall airships to certain military them fields action. The commission dealing with manitarian usage in warfare the other day to frame regulations for balloons and other perial ad- junets of warfare Russia, Belgium and Italy had proposals which were formulated eventually by Count Tornielli as follows: “Any balloons used for destrue- tive purposes in warfare should be { dirigible and be named by regular military crews.” will ¢ Ol and restrict hu- met The vote on the proposal stood 8 | to 6 in favor of it. Eleven delegates abstained from voting. France head. jed the objectors, maintaining that | the best course would be to simply {apply the rules already existing on | bombardment and the use of mines. Germany shared in this view. | A sécond proposal forbidding the | dropping of projectiles on undefend- | ed towns and villages or the dis- charge of deleterious gases thereon, {but permitting the dropping of pro. | Jectliles over regularly beleaguered | garrisons, was carried by a vote of 130 to 2. There were three abeten- | tions. Nine delegates were absent. | which means that they had received no instructions from thelr govern- ments. ! Earthquake Shocks, Santiago, Chili (By Cable). — Earthquake shocks, prophesied in Uruguay Saturday, were felt Mon- day at Valparaiso. No damage is reported. Trieste, Austro-Hungary ~The in- struments in the marine observatory recorded heavy earth shocks about 2.5600 miles distant, The beginning of the disturbance was registered at 7.52.26 o'clock. The maximum shock was reported at §.08.51. The movement ceased at 8.36.59, — ———— IN THE FINANCIAL WORLD. — The pig iron market fs dull for current business, New low price record for th for Cambria Steel. 8 yaa: The shipping of copper bars to Russia, which had been small of late, Is being revived. The directors of the Manhattan Trust Security Co. have declared a dividend of 2 per cent. This fis their seventh quarterly dividend since organization in 198085. i | i } i : i i 1 i i 1 Lives Lost and a Village is Bwept Away. Mason City, Ia. (Bpecial).— Three persons were killed and four in- jured and thousands of dollars dam- age was done through this section of lowa by a tornado. Shipping at Clear Lake and many cottages were destroyed. A half dozen barns and four houses, near Rockwell, were de- molished and the roof was blown from the Catholic Church at Rock- well. A special dispatch from Albert Lea, Minn., half way across the south border of the state, says that a tornado {8s reported to have de- stroyed the village of Jolce, Ia. in Winnebago County, about 15 miles southwest of Albert lea, and one known dead reported, while many are injured From Winona says that 20 or more for manufacturing purposes warehouses were unroofed town was darkness fing to wires being down, street cars were operated in the day owing to the tr being down and the blocked by fallen trees The damage was straight blow The i blinding sheets, the business part from curbing hard 1 a special buildings and for in at night ow- and until late f Wire } ny Leing of the the over the several never this, or low any that lasted which but 44 did age All Mii south 1 5 af Osrey » = $3 ress A the storm Rallroad Is wus ded i BU : pends wire 148 tre OW Outs Green Wir A on the wall of ed to escape the ertheless two Coa sf vs Ad wid ing, cars DEFY THE POLICE. In Ordinance, Flags Kept Flying Spite Of City was at } partment Washington an der Aap Nowlin flag flying re mon the um pen keep for flag is three alty rit hoisted jurisdiction OPERATED ON UNDER WRECK. Brakeman's leg Amputated While Under Locomotive. New York (Special) neath a locomotive, ley, brakeman on New York, New Haven and Hartford Rallroad suffered the amputation of a leg before he could be extricated from the engine, which run over him in the railroad in the Bronx The operation pers formed bLy an ambulance without the use of anesthetics, and frequently Shudiey gave suggestions to the surgeon during the operation When the operation was: completed Pinned bde- Charles Shud- a the had va rds Was ous position he was taken to a hos- pital, where it is said he may cover, Dies At Age Of 118. TiMin, Ohio (Special). Jefferson Scott, the oldest man in Ohio, is dead at the Seneca County ary. Certificates issued under the seal of the State of North Carolina show that Scott was born on July 4. 1794, in Halifax County, that State Four Trainmen Killed. Dalton, Ga. (Special) Four train- men were killed and three seriously injured in a headon collision between freight trains on the Western and Atlantic Railroad, one mile north of here. Fireman Suddeth, who es. caped by jumping, sald that the col- liglon was caused by the failure of his train's crew to read their order Bitten By Child With Rabies, Chicago (Special) —While nursing her dying son George, who was suf- fering from rabies, the result of a dog bite, Mrs. Charles T. Davis, of Danville, Ill, was bitten in the chin by the child a week ago, and Vance Davis, a brother, was bitten and scratched about the face and hands. They are now undergoing treatment in Chicago. The child died in great agony a few hours after Mrs. Davie wae bitten. : —y — BIG PACIFIC FLEET The Orders Said To Have Beem Issued. A LARGE ARRAY OF WARSHIPS. Plan Bald to Comtemplate Bringing the Entire Asiatic Squadron Across the Pacific, Bo That There Will Be a Squadron of Sixteen Fighting Ships Off the California Coast. D.C. revelations (Bpecial). made hith Washington, Burprising were through the erto well-guarded ministration disclosure of the - ad- the PLT i ¥ plans of 1h« to begin at once mobilization Coast waters the most in Pacific | of powerful cruiser fleet ever assembled. Orders have BUT £ ¢ strength ued entire or be In ough ¢ Ty CW HOE ith Dake {or LE aking hes ri , and the and So y n gee will efore thie 1 accords ter batt ni Admiral Dayton In Command Th § _” ie ¢ # have a and a four n aggregate nl tota inches Admiral Evans’ One of the of Ambition, song ascribed by Navy Departmept officials for the 1obiliation the two big fleets in ithe Pacific is that it will give oppor- {tunity for Admiral Evans to realize !a desire he has cheriched for a long time-—to go through battie tactics | with the largest possible force of modern warships This will give {him opportunity to see what the big {armored cruisers, which are larger than any of the older battleships, lcan do against the biggest war dogs {of today. Aside from this, the flo- tilla of torpedo craft which will probably accompany the battleships, and the several submarines which { will be shipped across, with the few | gunboats now on the Pacific, will | make possible maneuvers of two big | Reets- cruisers pitted against bat- i tieships—to display properly the | qualitios of each type of vessel arma- ment and turret and gun arrange- ment. ron of EE a a EE AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL Some Interesting Happenings Brielly Told. BR ni James Ciscle, who was doorkeep- er at the White House for 30 years, is dead. The first meeting of the new Philippine Assembly will be held October 16. ' Mrs. Nancy Miller was released from Columbus Penitentiary, where she wag serving a 10-year sentence! for murder, :