21, 1904. AL a J. nd Ot p gu Tw in. Ai { Line a ‘ Ak # POLITICS end GOVERNMENT Gen neral Wisconsin a National Issue. Governor La To dias de rejection of the Republica makes a tional Kooner or he state are dd NYS, make | ty it days know «dent Roos has refused show any fav llette. gov- and as to either in © ernor corpot well as the senators and and the mors Nevertheless he rs to have erful personal o zat masses on a Pla direct ation and a gr: raduated ine igeonsir Opposed to the it railway the congressmen are ation state rtant newspapers a pow on among the winding the valorem tax tform den prima: , the ad Bryan For Parker and Davis. \fter the Demo over Mr. Bry statement 5 Wall question the p was trol On the a} Parker was as thoronghly committed | to the fir rs as Roosevelt. On the rey sireet con under unde EY Le sa Conference at 3! Pr an in merger pla lepend Foreign. B pposes Custom Houses. 1 thers is and | ' : tT Colon bli¢ The | cha Com gov wer of ted a {0 Co ! cate with ernment It co of Dingley tariff mental to spirit of the cana the idera the the detri the not but treaty. Russia Offends England, Great indignation wns aroused throughout England by the action of the Russinb volunteer steamer Peters burg, which had mounted guns after passing through the Bosporus as a commercial steamer, In searching two British steamers In the Red sea. A formal protest to Russia was urged by the press. This occurred on the 11th, when the steamships Menelaus and Creweball were near Jedda, and they were detained four hours, The British fleet In the east was also belleved to be under orders to maintain the freedom of the port of Newchwang, from which a British cruiser was ex- cluded by the Russians last week, American- Russian Treaty, A treaty between the United States and Russia, providing that corpora. only against cominerce, application | otake part in d they hence ne with of board British Start For I'he rt Lassa [ Legal and Criminal, Younghusband 1 it a lemphis Rid of Gamblers resume wus of i city of neans of a safety re- : of the siiice Dy of pub pubin nun the ear ssia’s Prison Ref Ho Nonumi n the 1ukee local con- Custom Tailors Colorado Dynamite Confession. Rar ret at ' i v fel Vv i i if th + + 4 ——— RELIGIOUS Census of Americ $ The test owth of Sunday Amer entabl jean shed 1% obtained 5 3 SCHOOIs was only 57 Igorrotes Not Inde resident R not | Ean ans as nea a Ean aE Effects of the Parker Telegram Conflicting Ren a oxult fourth nt St notions of the tion and g day's session July ©, when the mat ) i in won chosen on first ballot os 1 party's candidate brief but clear ORTH that established resentment national cons the day had president friend Sheehan and irrevocably if his view was and south it promise, a bea Ana fant Louis 1h non for gent that and convincing LH regarded the and proposing to unsatisfactory to the majority like dictation. To others it con of safety, After a heated discussion fn large majority (774 to 191) favored Mr. Williams" reply to Judge Parker namely, that as the money standard was not regarded as an issue there was nothing in his telegram to prevent his accepting the nomination. Bryan said the telegram was manly, but that it would have been man Her If Parker had told his views before the convention met, as Hill had told the committee he did not know what Parker thought Thus without intending it the Democratic party enters the campaign with a leader who foreed It into a gold standard attitude The nomination of the venerable ex-United States Senator Henry G. Davis of West Virginia, eighty-one years old, but well proserved, then was made unanimously and the convention adjourned. Among eastern Democrats the Parker gold telegram has caused the greatest enthusiasm, saying he gold standard as “firmly decline the nomination in the wost of Fo many looked wins a rainbow Lioweve, THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE PA. JULY COMMERCE Rai r cou pot Kio yea mileage mil way kin 0.626 miles luded Ii lis of th Lies 1 840 801 Om and 6.053 yen tha kill Was J od jured was killed for every Cro Be Jag Phi Sensationalisn Industrial. Ilway Mileage Increase. he gain in rallroad mileage In and INDUSTRY ntry for the veuar ts the Interstate 1, wash, l ended June 50, commerce COLs SOCIOLOGICAL AX) miles, or more than in any The total June 30, 1603, nEgregate including shel, an The rallway in the report number of persons on r since 18060 track | 29,073,233 American Workers. single on The men ge wns 207.077 length of rai tracks of increase of 08 de Wis 2K corporations 2078, pay e rallways In 1908 was 1.312 100 miles of line. The amount of ral as $12 he number the way capital ARE A ren capitalization of $464.1 the Unj mber of passengers car NA per rallways in ted G04 801.535 of easy of whicl number of the umber WOrking popuis The New Charity. represented the # killed and 76.58 number above 3s Of ) passen and 8,231 Injured, as pared with 345 passengers Xilled njured daring the previous fos of employ reform ti departu casuslities Indicate every 364 ge. ig t one was to foresees “ey empl every structis Of trainmen one was kill- | tive for every IL. ed and one njured yea in 23 employed and one in 106 ine 1,957 ory passenger $41 carried 84.424 car Pp Report Favorabl + 4 4 Telephone's Growth. yan's Big Beef Order, ions + +9 pounds of the Japa IRLLAXE EE y pmount being loaded | $ 5 SCIENTIFIC ship Shewmut, on HE Yokohama it the North of forty is the largest ment very at to the coast by New Facts Abc The tl ut Cancer, special trains irs each t cunned ever made | fl ifi ladelphia’s Bonds Awarded. the city of week 0) loan for awarded last ver toJ. & W the New York bankers, atl ls special Dow WHEN Seligman anoth not suare the Mra fin nd is me ho made higher bids, sell agreement, ans are to | Experin ents have ass sssssssssssshss ss afb bbb il General Strike on the Beef Trust hen the noon whistle blew in the big Chicago stockyards all the butchers’ workmen left their jobs, and at allies at St. Louls, Omaha and other big packing centers quit work alm nearly 50,000 men thus becoming idle to enforce certain demands for minimum unskilied labor scale. The strike order had been the day before by President Donnelly of the International union of the butchers’ workmen and was directed against the eight big meat packers who comprise the so called beef trust, Thus a gigantic struggle was inaugurated between combined capita and organized labor just at the psychological moment when a wave of industrial depression marked the beginning of the presidential canvass Prices of beef throughout the country began to soar, and a famine in this staple of consumption was threatened. Efforts were made at once to settle the dispute by arbitration, but as the employers were unwilling to take back the strikers in a body at the old seale pending a verdict the first conference falled Many non union men were taken on, and both sides prepared for a fight to the finish. The stationary firemen set the pace for a general sympathy strike. President Gompers was in charge of the strike Vague but persistent rumors were afloat that the packers had fixed up the strike with labor leaders to mulct the public. but both sides made indignant denials. [t was also sald that labor interests hoped for trouble so as to involve the president in the controversy. July 14 the same time then Ise of eminent which the 5 is president, A Remedy For Leprosy. I'he London Times reports that Cep- n KE. RR, Rost of the Indian medieal rvice at Raongun, Burma, has culti- the bacillus of lep and had a serum call leprolin” which injected lepers with cess, four cur#s being claimp- od of ing the bacll- § bused on the idea that all salt trient distilled and ked In a cur- ted steam. In this the osy grows freely. Over iiready in process of rosy, od been into irked sue The meth extracted from the nu xtract one lg 80g » Japanese 7 is a portable te}. As the scout ad- enemy he carries the ne and reels out behind him a tele line connected with his head- He Is accompanied by an who carries a battery. + EDUCATIONAL es toward the Anglo-Saxon Epic a Mine. In Staniey Ps) yA 4 . new work iescence,” Vers 1] X ~ nary edu. 1's ca nal value in A the grea Hall, in his of Ade dis mass litera- labora fulness had Miscellaneous = Accidents and train raliroad we rear end of a freight rain near Chicago, July 13 While going at a high speed an auto obile uck by a train the yd rajiroad crossing at Rock r, N. X., July 14, killing three killed aA Pi stern F'wents persons wer twenty-one injured when oti the Chicago and Ea lided with 11 nic was str on (‘onte ed forty-two bnildings in tion of WihHmington using a loss of about A cloundburst the hills of Maniia 14 « a flooding of the city of 1 Juan del Monte, drowning 200 of he inhabitants Seventeen persons killed and forty seriously injured Ly a rear end collision on the Erie ratlroad near Mid vale, N. J., July 11. The accident was elieved to be due to wrong display of signals. A rigid investigation was be over ily ansed were { Kun, | Mass, July 1 | Deaths. The Right Rev. Frederick Dan Hunt ington, Episcopal bishop of the central diocese of New York, died at Hadley, 2, aged eighty-five. Samuel M. Jones, known as the “Golden Rule” mayor of Toledo, O. died at Toledo July 12. He was ifty- eight years old. Oom Paul Kruger, former president of the Transvaal, died at Clarens, Can: ton Vaud, Switzerland, July 14. Philip Casey, who for twenty-five years beld the title of champion hand. ball player of the workl, died at Brook- lyn, N. Y., July 13, aged fifty-six, The Rev. Dr. Lemuel Moss, D. D.. LL. D, one of the foremost Baptist educators and divines, died at New York July 18, aged seventy-five,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers