UNCLE SEM SENDS HIS WARSHIPS READY FOR A FIGHT. Battleship, Cruiser and Marines Or- dered to the Isthmus to Guard Commerce and Traffic. FEEDING THE STRIKERS. Thousand Families of ldle Mem- _ bers—Straw Vote Taken. Miners’ Union Now Supporting Forty ONLY ADVICE FOR BOER CENERALS CHAMBERLAIN SURPRISED. Further Concessions to South Africans Forty thousand families are now be- ing fed by the funds which roll in upon the union. That means about Refused by the Colonial Secretary. Civil War Lessons, LATEST NEWS NOTES. It is alleged that $50,000 were paid a St. Louis alderman for his vote. The postoffice at Fairview, Ky., was robbed of $84 and $50 worth of stamps. The Western Maryland railroad pro- poses an issue of $60,000,000 common stock. John W. Gates is said to have been REGION SWEPT BY FOREST FIRES. FIFTY LIVES LOST. Lewis River Country in Washington State Suffers Heavily—Charred Bodies Found. A REMARKABLE CAREER. American Ex-Consul Appointed by President McKinley Under Ar- rest in Italy. John J. Girimondi, an Italian, a nat- uralized American citizen, and former- ly United States consular agent at os 5 i bout i 1. w oy YS Santos, Brazil, but who is said to have ) people—quite an army fo A parliamenta aper issued in| Parre rom an exclusive ondon been dismissed on account of an al- A large part of the American navy United Mine Workers commissary de- p Ty pal hotel. A courier from Lewis river, Wash- leged deficiency in the revenues of his has been set in motion on account of the Colombian rebel, General Her- rar, taking charge of the trans-Isth- mian route. The situation was re- garded as so serious that orders were issued directing the battleship Wis- consin, now at Bremerton, Washing- ton, to proceed to the Isthmus at once. The cruiser Cincinnati, which has been doing duty in Haitien waters, has also been ordered to Colon. If General Herrara has not evacuated the line of communication by the time these vessels arrive, it will be the ‘duty of both commanders to expel dim. It is the duty of the United States to maintain free transit across the Isthmus. It will take the Wiscon- sin nearly three weeks to get to Pan- ama, although she is the fastest bat- tleship in the navy. Captain Reiter has been ordered to make all possible haste. The only United States war- ship now at Panama is the Ranger, John P. Debolt has been appointed judge at Honolulu, vice Abram S. Humphreys, resigned. Rear Admiral Silag Casey, com- manding the Pacific station, one of the oldest and most conservative a.d- partment to look after. Each family is given a store order of $2 or $2.50 a week, but no cash. The orders are presented to the local tradesmen, and weekly the tradesmen render their bills to the officers of the union. They are required to state not only the sums, but the articles sold. Thus the officers know exactly what every ram- ily is buying. There is no law against a miner buying whatever he wishes with his $2 or $2.50, but the rash man who ventures into the luxury of ham or delicacies or fancy groceries is likely to be called down pretty quick- ly. Purchase of a pound of steak is sure to bring a visit from the union inspector in hot haste. Little trouble of that sort is expected. The miners 1arely buy anything but the plainest flood—flour, meal, salt or tinned meats, a little sugar and coffee. And it is surprising how far $2.50 for a family of four or five will go when carefully England gives a full report of the con- ference between the Colonial secre- tary, Joseph Chamberlain, and the Boer generals, Botha, DeWet and De- larey. The Boers asked for complete amnesty to the rebels; a yearly grant to all Boer widows and orphans and maimed burghers; equal rights for the English and Dutch languages in the schools and courts; that the im- mediate release of all prisoners of war; the reinstatement of officials of the late South African republics or compensation for their loss of office; compensation for all loss occasioned by the British troops to private prop- erty; the reinstatement of the burgh- ers to the ownership of their farms confiscated or hold under the procjama- tion of August 7, 1901; compensation for the use of properties of burghers taken by the British authorities; pay- ment of the lawful obligations of the late South African republics, includ- ing those incurred during the war; to foreign countries usually take the | whole envelope for the address, leav- ing no room for the stamp, There- fore, one stamp to cover both postage | and registration has been devised, folk county, Massachusetts, has grant- ed letters of administration upon a $10,000 estate to his son, H. W. An- drews, and has thus pronounced the captain dead. Millions for Locomotives. Railroad and steel men are again trying to find a steel substitute for the wooden tie. Judge Chytraus, of Chicago, in a de- cision puts an end to all corners on the board of trade, Secretary Shaw announces that $4,- 000,000 will be released to relieve the money stringency. The new building of the Ottawa (Ky.) university was burned, entail ing a loss of $50,000. The Colombian government is rush- ing reinforcements to the isthmus to save Panama and Colon. Secretary Moody sent three more warships to the isthmus of Panama to protect transportation. The congregation of a New York church demands recognition of con- sumers in the coal strike, The monthly crop report shows that The Society of Old-Time Telegraph- ers, in session at Salt Lake City, se- lected F. J, Fry, of Milwaukee, presi- dent, and decided to meet in Mil- waunkee next year. The large factory of the East Lake Woolen Mills Company, Bridgeton, ington, states that not léss than 50 persons have perished in the forest fires which have been ravaging that D. L. Wallace, his wife and two children were burned to death. They were camping in the woods when caught by the fire. found burned up, the charred bodies lying near. A 12-year-old boy of Mr. The wagon was Polly, her baby, and a brother, name unknown, and Mr. Newhouse and Mrs. Graves are dead. were found without clothing, except Five logging camps are Fifteen survivors spread from Lewis river north to the Kalama river, and 50 sections of the finest timber on the coast have been It is impossible to give any estimate of the amount of the damage done to property. Oak Point, 20 miles below Kalama, on the Colum- office, has been arrested at Oneglia, Italy. Girimondi, when he returned to Italy from Brazil, pretended to have been appointed a United States con sul in Persia, and asserted that he also was commissioned to inspect the whole United States consular service in Asia. Later he acted as a priest, and had been daily celebrating mass. When arrested he was about to leave, accompanied by two Italian girls. The facts reported from Italy to ‘Washing- ton as to Girimondi’s arrest have been known to the State Department for some time, although it is said upon the point of his separation from the United States consulate at Santos that while a complete adjustment of Girimondi’s accounts may yet show some irregularities, the principal cause of his removal was the fact that he spent the greater part of his time in saying mass at various churches and almost entirely neglected his con- $300 property limitation retained. If involved, can be taken to the supreme court on error. COLUMBUS IS CHOSEN. There were four cases of cholera the House makes this bill a law all | ang three deaths from that disease cases, without regard to the amount | gp the United States transport Sher- man between Manila and Nagasaki, Japan. She had been quarantined at Nagasaki. Mr. Reitz, formerly State Secretary which is a small gunboat, and not con-| used. A straw vote, it is said, has|the rescission of the decision to add | there is every prospect for a record |bia river, has been destroyed. There | sular duties, causing the lodgment of sidered sufficient to protect American | been taken among the striking miners | a portion of the Transvaal to Natal; | year in all cereal crops. are no reports of lives lost, but loss | many indignant protests at the State t interests under the existing condi- | of District No. 9 at Mt. Carmel for| an extension of time for the payment The board of directors of the United | to property is estimated at about $300,- | Department by the commercial inter- stipas tions. General Herrara, the insurgent the purpose of ascertaining whether | of all debts due by the burghers to States Shipbuilding Company at New 00 A great fire was also raging on | ests. Girimondi is said to have had a Ayer leader, is between Panama and Colon | or not they favor returning to work. |the late governments of the South | yor elected Lewis Nixon president. |the Coweman, in the northern part of | most extraordinary career, and has i with a force which will soon have a The report has it that while the ma-| African republics. Mr. Chamberlain 4 Everything combustible | succeeded in attaching himself to Em Do : Three miners were rescued from the strength of about 10,000 men. Four jority was favorable to a continuation | expressed great surprise at the num- Trion collins ro tershire, Eng. |.R its path has been consumed. The | many persons of great prominence, Want revolutionary gunboats are off Pan-| of the strike, yet in some sections of | ber and character of the proposals, nd ofan Ty anes pl od 120 | air is thick with smoke and falling | and using them to secure his advance- beaut ama also. It is thought that Herrara the district the men voted in favor | Pointing out that the conditions agreed houts g boe ashes. Three lumber camps are re-' ment. He was appointed to the con- can stop trafic between the two | of accepting any proposition which | OR at Vereeniging were duly accepted : ported destroyed or badly damaged. | sular service, it is said, upon strong places at any time, and a simultane- | woulg enable them to return to work. | PY the burghers and the British gov-| John Lomax was hanged at Mont-| mwg men from Barrs camp are report- | representations from the Pacific eoast ous attack on both is likely. The Wis- This, it is said, is especially true of | ernment, and that they could not be] ross, Vt, for a henious crime and made | oq missing; people are panie-stricken | people to the effect, . consin carries a full complement of the Mt. Carmel miners. District Vice reopened, or could proposals rejected f a confession before he ascended the and crazed over the loss of property. _— frocts.o marines and is amply able to look out President Pulaski denies the rumor. |at that time be again discussed. On | gallows. Cowlitz county thought it was going WARRANTS FOR BOODLERS. en for American interests if the occasion There are many indications through- the subject of martial law Mr. Cham- Two children of Louis Moritz, at St. to escape, but reports come thick and : ariset lor 2 ad of force. Thel ut the anthracite region that the | Perlain said it would not be continued | pay], Minn., were burned to death in| fast, each worse than the last. Five | Murrell Reveals Plot to Extort Money NEW’ ngt of errara surprises this strike will soon end. The empty cars | uch longer. The Colonial secretary |, fire which destroyed the Moritz | people are dead and two missing, with for Legislation. Fovernment. Only about a week ago which four months ago were sent west | Fefused to recognize as burghers for-| home. only partial reports from the burned From | the Colombian government solemnly by the railroads are being rapidly re- eigners who had been naturalized The price of bottles from the fac | district. Abou 300 people are left Warrants have been issued at St. assured the State Department that - | during or just before the war. Mr. ee . : hl ii 3 Louis, Mo., for the arrest of 18 mem- Herrara would be suppressed in short turned. All along the Lehigh Valley, Chamberlain said we have undertaken tories from Indiana, with a possible honieress In Multnomah ang, Siac bers and former members of the® Trave order. It was Colombia's intention to Pema voni 2nd [Beading Yaliroads already more obligations than have SS eehulen ot one, has been increased Spas Sonniien, Siam of the for- | House of Delegates on the confession Eng., treble her force of soldiers in the in- e sidmgs are hi many con | ever before been undertaken under per cen a wide tretel > t Urneq over | of Delesate J. K. Murrell, who fled ‘which surgent country and a gunboat was| CaS, even on the loading SWYichosi similar circumstances. 1 recollect| Secretary Shaw thinks the country Hl ree 0 oat, but the |, yrozico after being indicted fer China, brought from Costa Rica to destroy ing under breakers. At EY oz} very well the great civil war in Amer- | has outgrown Wall street, and is not a SE mn S Se © ADDPeATS | hrihery in connection with the alleged and Ji the advantage of the rebels on the Pa- leries the mules which have been ica. In that case the Northern side— | inclined to help speculators with gov- > ha : iy ty aes9 Wo counties. boodling operations of the municipal is likel cific side by having four gunboats in | 2WaY in pasture since the commence- | 4) is, the victorious side—made no | ernment money, Pal © ire tha " 4 Foye the town of assembly in granting street railroad Mail, w the harbor of Panama. The troubles ment of the strike are being Sought provision whatever, either by way of| 71jcutenant General Miles has left oa Tria os L vo boys franchises, and who unexpectedly re- onstrat caused by the insurgents now is con-| Pack preparatory to going to work. grant, pension of allowance, to the| fo. the West and will sail from San The ti 2 : oh were burned to death. | yyrned to ithe city 2nd Surrocdered. throug] sidered a fair sample of what may be So A side that had been conquered. They | Francisco on the transport Thomas | ¢y 3 im do osses In Clackamas cour: | poliowing are the names of members United expected after the canal is built un- OIL FLEET ASSEMBLING. gave them their lives and their lib-| t; the Philippines. y dave immense, and the whole! 55 igh heneh warrants wore is- quickly less the United States is given prac- : erties, and after a period of 10 years “Bad Jim” Wright, ontlaw terror of ongth of Ie Clackamas river pre-|gueq, E. Murrell, John H. Schnet- traffic tically absolute control of the terri.| Twenty-Five Steamers to Transport | gave them votes, but did not give th tat 1g’ surroapded b sents nothing but vistas of ruined set- tler, Charles F. Kelly, T. E. Albright, Northw iy oi » proves that on account Texas Product. { them any money compensation. But HY id es ajar on ye George F. Robertson, Louis Decker, that th o e State Department will insist ' . : low | We have gone a step beyond that, be-| Po 4 : > Thr nares ‘John Helms, Charles T. Gutke, Adolph terior that the measure of United States iL envoy od oma Xow | cause we have contributed in addition | Killed ffrer 2 battle! BOND ISSUE DECIDED ON. Madera, H. A. Faulkner, Julius Loh nations control be made very large or have the difficulties ne pe hid to all our own enormous expenses a| J. Pierpont Morgan Informed P. A. 7 : mann, Edmund Bersch, Otto Schu- ing car the canal negotiations come to an end. ping Vossole ToD carrying it in Eup very large sum to relieve those who | B. Widener for Gov. Stone, of Penn- Western Maryland Takes First Step macher, John A. Sheridan, Charles J. Arthur — Within the course of a fow months are really destitute in our new colo-| Sylvania, that he will not interfere in Toward Making Improvements, -~ Derny, William Tamblyn, J. J. Han- railway Coke Jumps to $12. there will be engaged in the trans. | 2i€S- We have done more than I think | the anthracite strike. ’ It is announced that the Western | Digan and Emile Hartman. Warrants weekly . The price of coke in Chicago has | portation trade between New York, | Vas expected, and we have done all| An estate estimated to be worth $4, Maryland Railroad Company has de- | Jats were served on E. E. Murrell, Train-c Jumped to the unprecedented figures Philadelphia, Baltimore and Texas | (Bat we can afford to do, and I think | 000,000 was left by Bradford McGregor, cided to issue $25,000,000 of bonds, | Schnettler, Albright, Robertson, tween of $12 and $13 a ton. Small foundries | about 25 steamers, with a capacity of | it would be undesirable for the gen-| who died at Mamaroneck, N. Y., after This issue is part of a total authoriz. | Helms, Gutke, Faulkner, Schumacher ing Wa are threatened with ruin, or at least | nearly 600,000 barrels. This is exclu | °FalS to press us any further in this |a surgical operation. ed issue of $50,000,000 of first mort-| 20d Hannigan. Albright and Faulk- nection with being forced to close down until | sive of barges, of which the Standard | Datter, either now or in writing. Mr.} gy, New Jersey vice chancellor re-| gage 4 per cent bonds, which will | Ber were released in bonds of $20,000 press | prices shall drop. | Oil Company is using a number with Tromperiain made Bo further Cones |. over Nic decision on the case of | cover not only the Western Maryland | €3Ch. os 2 +i . s % ai " . Toa Tah. ed te eet or AT THE NATIONAL GAPITOL. |G he Seaman which | | SAVED FROM LVNGRING, | | Btls Sp thors asain ho Tait riven vat" est Visgr. Co SABLE FLAsriES. bt bor | have been chartered for this class of : The steam barge George H. Hough- | 100,000 acres of coal land and other . Jjourne The navy department has published | freight have not only to be equipped | Sheriff Hoon Defends Butler County |ten sank at her BE Detroit and | properties of the Davis Coal and Coke! The Bank of France has been rob. across a2 resume of foreign naval progress | to carry oil in bulk, but their boilers : ili | Company, which is a subsidiary com-| bed of $44,000 in gold, evidently by and or last fiscal year. : | and furnaces must be fitted with ap- Jail From Angry Mob, hmm bre ang Rawary Gloss, LL pany of the West Virginia Central. | persons having access to the cash via the Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. who has|paratus for burning oil, which is more| Jeremiah Bennett, aged 27, was ar- : . Of the total authorized issue $25,600, | vault. cific a been in the West on a hunting and | economical than coal. rested at Butler, Pa., charged with as- 4 The pana! Senjention x the Masia 000 will be held in the treasury to pay Experts in England estimate the Railroa : fishing trip, has returned to Oyster | — = saulting Thelma Wagner, aged 7. A | Car and Locomotive Painters’ associa- | o' = maturity the underlying bonds | damage done to the Kentish hop tal tra : Bay. HOODOO THIRTEEN mob attempted to force the jail with |tion is in session at Boston, Mass., of the Western Maryland railroad and | growers by the storm of rain and hail lished . Mr. Squiers, United States it [ZEN STAMP. the avowed intention of lynching { With 200 delegates present, the bonds of the West Virginia Cen-| at fully $500,000, cently, i at Havana, telegraphs the department | Latest Stamp Escaped Issue on Thir. | UM: Sheriif Hoon and his deputies An unknown man was killed and | tral. The object of the present issue Felipe Cuevas, of Porto Rico, has of Sibe £ resisted the mob, beating them off. | Engineer L. W. Rodger probably fatal-|{ of $25,000,000 of bonds is to supply much # of state that the Cuban house passed teenth D f h been nominated for Puerto Rican 4 the Sails Drie ol een ay of Month. Several of the attacking party Jere ly hurt in a wreck on the Chicago, Mil- money to finance the purchase of the commissioner to the United States by being 1 § : : e is i ; ded. Sheriff Hoon receiv a | waukee & St. Paul near Milwaukee. roperties and, with the $20,000,000 > < The President has r : Several thousand clerks in the post-| woun X D > y Wi UY the American Federal party. a liam Vaughan United Save) ib office and executive departments ex.| bad cut, and two of the deputies were | Rumgrs that Charles M. Schwab | underwriting syndicate to furnish Th 5 D 2 y. ¢ Hol Balti ig ; a erienced a decided feeli ief | injured. The residence portion of the |} 1d hi 1 i d- | funds to build termirpals in Baltimore © Dbremier, Dr, Kuyper,. of ipl : Attorney of the northern district of |P Selling of relies| 'n) had sold his Steel Corporation hol i land, paid a long visit to the Boer gen- will be ie Alaska, for neglect of duty. hen they learned that Postmaster jail was badly damaged. ings, and would resign the presidency and other improvements. eral Botha DeWet and Delarey four of a ene A ———————————_——————— i jo Tr a - 2 . : : Pena A, Vies Corn Bengal 3 a vi nn 1 MILLIONAIRE STRATTON DEAD, | 272, Zutharisiively | pronounced gb GOV. NASH DISREGARDED, after a grrivel from Aopen 40 Pieris : e ate epart- | gat, : > 4 —— A syndicate with a capital of $50, : i Agus Dulce has been sur- Serie Tern Ba] the Unites Sate Discovered the Cripple Creek Bonanza OL Louse Sods Commitee of fs Royer Bill Passes Senate Without | 000,000 is being organized in England The 7 e Vv \ . i: : » ~ 3 tes on 20 a forces. | of issuing the 13-cent stamp on the That Brought Him a Fortune. administration municipal code bill the Chief Executive's Amendment. by he oon! fone a nase with a cured in the recei : oo he OC | 13th day of an unlucky month. There Winfield S. Stratton, the millionaire | basis for such legislation as may be| The Senate at Columbus, 0, passed ® PUR Biiaca shore postoffices in ts pe at i So argest would have been no antidote for the mining man, is dead at Colorado | enacted. he Royer bill, sdntroduced at the be-| P oh —_— © hited States last! poison of such a combination. The Springs. He discovered the Independ-| 7 Bizzar h titioned at |8inning of the special session to cor-| ¥mperor Francis Joseph and Fred- month as compared with August, 1901. | plat ’ . Laura Blige aS beuoned a : i erick William, Crown Prince of Ger- 7 : : use plates for the 13-cent stamp are all| ence and Washington bonanzas at Freehold; N. J., that the will of Henry | ect the Royer act passed last winter (Eady s From information received it is pos-| ready for printing, but before the | Cripple Creek in 1891. ' The Independ- | M. Bennett be set aside alleging that | at the regular session, the effect of | many, arrived at Sasvar eptember sible that certain defects in the Pana- | presses start the the Postmaster Gen- | ence yielded him a great fortune, and | she is the Pittsburg millionaire’s | Which was to deprive the supreme | 11 to participate in the Hungarian ma Canal Company's title render the |eral must see the proof of the plates | in 1898 he sold a portion of it for $15,- | lawful widow court of jurisdiction over 95 per cent| @rmy maneuvers, - sale of the company’s rights to the |and approve the issue. This will be og 000 2 , of the former business, while it was Patrick A. McHugh, member of Par- United States doubtful. done as soon as he returns. The new YY The court procecyings at Tronsen the author’s intention to widen the | liament, from Ireland, for Leitrim, It was announced at the navy ge.|Stamp will be the first of that de- : | d. Norway, sustained € claims of |scope of its jurisdiction by removing | was released from Sligo jail at the ex- partment that Rear Admiral ies nomination ever issued by this gov- Gavia fotrows Ds Bred en Evelyn B Baldwin, leader of the Arc-|the $300 property limitation. The bill | piration of his sentence of three Rodgers will turn over the command | ernment. It is intended to cover the =BDIRIN |W, 5 3 Tews, I on tic expedition, against those of Cap-| passed just removes the property | months’ imprisonment for contempt of of the Asiatic station to’ Rear Admiral | cost of a registered letter to points an gy > Wee rad © | tain Johansson and William Zeigler, | limitation. The action taken by the | court. He was accorded a reception, Robley D. Evans at Yokohama, Japan, | outside of the United States, Canadas |: anie i goat ime oane i ale, who cabled Baldwin to return to New | Senate was contrary to the wishes | in which the mayor, the town council- about October 29. '| and Mexico. Persons who send money ne BX ner ld ip one York. of Governor Nash, who wanted the |ors and 2,000 Nationalists took part. . — mirals in the navy, has been orderng| VANDERBILT-P. R. R. ALLIANCE. | to Panama to keep an eye on the men Tr | The Pennsylvani i ' . . ts: | sylvania railroad has Who are expected to protect American | NeW Combination Will Have Capitali- plac /i i iv rs zation cf $2,000,000,000. placed with the Baldwin locomotive works the largest order ever given The President has appointed Rep- N. J., of .which J. Edward Addicks, of of the Transvaal, will ,sail from Am- Delaware, is the head, was destroyed | G¢ts the Offices of Federation Window sterdam, Holland, September 25 for by fire. Loss, $100,000. Glass Company. New York to lecture both on behalf A Baltimore story alleges that the of his own finances and for the benefit resentative George W. Ray, of the Twenty-sixth New York district, Unit- ed States judge of the Northern dis- trict of New York, vice Alfred Coxe, who has been appointed United States circuit judge. Bids were opened in the office of the It is given out that a financial alli- | by any railroad company to a single ance has been formed by the two great | railrcad factors in the Rastern field, | the Vanderbilt interests and those of | the Pennsylvania system. The work- | ing agreement has been close in the! past, but it has never come to an al-| lotment of territory and division of locomotive plant. It calls for 250 high-class freight locomotives, aggre- gating in cost $3,250,000, all to be de- livered within the first six months of 1902. Whitecaps at Bloomington, Ind. roying millions of feet of timber, Goulds and the Pennsylvania have reached an agreement that will pre- vent the Wabash from building east through Pennsylvania, The St. Paul railroad plans to give President Roosevelt and his party a touch of fast running when the Pres- At a meeting of the stockholders of the Federation Window Glass Com- pany, Columbus, O., was chosen as the quarters of the newly-organized sell ing company by a vote of 384 pots to 760 pots in the United States, and of the Boers. The Soir says the condition of Marie location of the main office and heaq- | Henriette, Queen of the Belgians, is hopeless, and that King Leopold will probably be obliged to shorten his 362 pots. The company now controls | visit at Bagneres-de-Luncheon, France, in consequence. or , ip > : property between the two big cor- { : ident’s train is brought from Chicago hopes within a couple of weeks to in- United States Minister Leishman at So tu ony hotationt a: the now ary eh Maj Speen, i his wife, | to that city, on September 25 : crease this number to 800. The Co- | Constantinople has informed the State = Pres! at the New York navy yard. The ma. | t21lS. The new combination will have | DNCar - Tu : ~ ‘were visited _ Hugh C. Wallace, at Row Lo, son- lumbus office will handle the entire | Department that during his leave of # ° terial comprises 7,466 tons of ship|2 Capitalization of $2,000,000,000 and| PY 2 OBR Lo Be aps and Yosged in-law of Ohleruntion hs on of the | production of its 37 plants, whose total | absence he has placed Spencer Eddy, adv plates, nickel steel plates, steel cast.|? Mileage of 30,000 miles. The aim | With switches. oan oo left on the | United States Supreme Court, denied | output fer year is over 2,000,000 boxes secretary of the legation, in charge of ys i hull riv : vas the organization is to dominate] 400r of Rolla Sturgeon warning him | the report that the chief justice con- of glass. American interests. next a ill ively, 5 Chics n is | and his family to leave before the! templates resigning next winter, a Official ; ; Pink] The Board of Commissioners of the | trafic between Chicago and St. Louis, ool ah an Stowe. ot Piisbare hands - cial reports show in Russia that change District of Columbia have notified the | the Great Lakes and the Ohio river | Week wa oo Juige one inion iin 0 Resp Hungarians at Home, there have been 4,043 cases of cholera of heal G. A. R. Encampment Committ and the Canadian boundary and the . 2 down sweeping opin Eclaring ai : The Hungarian government is tak- | and 2,556 deaths from that disease in foe 11 . Sommitiea ro : : i Gould Buys Trolley Lines. acts of W. J. Diehl as “de facto” |ing radical steps to regulate and reo. 1 1 the East Chi i nr hat the proposed automobile race on! Potomac river through to the Atlantic 3 no tect and void, os 8 iL ae 8 2 places along e Eastern ina rail- “ We one of the public streets will not be | coast. . Samuel Thomas and Edwin Gould | Mayor are of tod irda March 7 Ya? strict emigration. The ministry. of | road since the outbreak up to August Vegeta permitted, owing to the great danger | ———— ee are said to have purchased the North | Such title sri Uniter States A. the interior has prepared a bill which|28 The spread of cholera is abating. work, it would involve, The Commission. | Get $9 a Day but Strike. Jersey Street Railway Company, the Hophee i es I 2 a i will be introduced in Parliament, The volcano on Stromboli Island, ) mother ers are in favor of a floral parade as| Three hundred bricklayers em-| Jersey City, Hoboken & Paterson Trac- | bassador ie Ag pn me whereby an Shiga of men Is for-| Ttaly, is in full eruption and is throw. ? self an a feature of the encampment pro-| ployed on sewer work at Chicago | tion Company and the Central New SorneY ens Deélonsss. Peon on an bidden hd Biler e performance of { ing up great volumes of fire and tor- such ti gram, | have gone on a strike. The men, who! Jersey Traction Company. dience hs! n rs 2 Ch min- | military service. rents of stones. The island is shroud- ve of President Roosevelt returned to | are paid $9 a day, quit work without ’ =r ister of Orem = = 1 ) Way Bosin Ri hi ed in smoke. Mount Vesuvius is show- #ndors Oyster Bay and will make no more ap. | Botice. Unsatisfactory shifting of Returning to Work Slowly. The Republic Ton and Steel Com- nine ! g s. ing signs of activity, yourse! intments to receive visitors ore | men was given as the cause of the There is very little change in the pany has a large force of men at work Judge Woiss gsgided at Harrisburg, Willi Toll, ali 6 men. "- in on iS Bor a Joined walkout. i strike situation in the Kanawha and | getting its mills in Springfield, II, | Pa, in an, injunction proceeding om ham love, 2 nuts Los An To. Se will devote the Ay er —————— { New River fields, West Virginia. Bach | ready for starting. The company will | brought by the Pennsylvania Tele- Sopot of the Bedfordshire regiment, 2 Goioe now and then in preparing for the | Leaving Martinique. | Gay there have been some accessions | start the mills on January 1, with phone Company, to restrain Charles who recently surrendered to the po- wh trip and in disposing of accumulated | isotch has been veociv i to the working force, but not as many | about 1,000 men. Hoover from interfering with the con- lice of Colchester, charging himself ; holpft business. | A dispatch has been Yegoived from ,o was expected. Luther W. Shear, the district agent struction of its line, that telephone with the murder of an unknown man | Kr 8 A telegram from Batopilas, Mexico, | M. Lemaire, governor of Martinique, | er a f the Northwestern Mubusl Lite io companies have the right of eminent | at Kansas City, Mo., has been dis- for nc announces the death there of Alex-| saying that measures have been taken | Flanies on Cascade Range. 2 ik YU ne % domain in Pennsylvania. charged from custody in consequence } exper ander R. Shepherd, vice president of | to insure the evacuation of the north-| Forest fires are burning over the |Surance Company, manent oouron v icances In Ac Rr of the receipt by the authorities there } » Mass. the board of public works of the Dis-! ern part of the island. Posts have! Cascades coast ranges from British | Dan and Soglery lend 2 Susheam, 5 olcanoes in. Action, of a letter from the United States em- you a trict of Columbia dur | been established outside the zone of| Columbia to the California line, de- Mich., Who isanpenred eo pay rassengers on the steamer Bertha | bassy announcing that the man's ex. | foolis; torial government in 1 danger, and the cremation of the dead | o ing behind him alleged forgeries and | from Alaska say the volcanoes Re- years later governor of He was 67 years of age. | at Morne Rouge and Ajoupa Bouillon { is progressing. i | | of | many houses and barns and much live t stock. debts to the extent of $50,000, gave himself up to Sheriff Payne. doubt, Iliamna and Augustine were in active eruntion. tradition is not desired, his story not being believed.