60,000 SLAIN IN BATTLE | "exe seer >> [PRESIDENT PLACES BUAME| >= === | DESPERATE BATTLE FOUGHT Sapir EISRE SOOn Kuropatkin Made a Determined Stand near Mukden. JAPANESE SEIZE MANY GUNS. Many Thousands Who Fell in the Battlefield Abandoned by Flee- ing Comrades. At the close of the seventh day con- secutive fighting between Muliden and Liao Yang the battle was still raging, the Russians offering a stubborn re- sistance to the onslaughts of the Japanese. The sacrifice of life has been appalling, estimates of the Rus- sian loss alone in killed and wound- ed at the end of the six days’ fight- ing being concededly 30,000, while it seems not improbable it aggregat- ed at that time 40,000. Japanese official reports estimate that 10,000 Russian dead were left on the field of battle up to the night of October 14, and claim that the Japanese losses are small by comparison with those of the Russians. Gen. Kuropatkin’s report to Emper- or Nicholas depicts the desperate character of the fighting and praises the valor of the troops, indicating, however, that he is hard pressed. with the result still’ in the balance. All hope of succoring Port Arthur this season has been abandoned. St. Petersburg has an unconfirmed report that the Japanese Gen. Nodu has been seriously wounded. A ques- tion of interest in St. Petersburg is the fate of Gen. Kuropatkin as a fac- tor in the Russian Military situation. Reports from the Japanese com- mander says that during the five days from October 10 to October 14, inclusive, our losses were about 2,- 500 killed and wounded, officers in- cluded. During the four days from October 10 to October 123, the num- ber of corpses left by the enemy and buried by us reached 2,000. The enemy's dead, after the battle of Octobér 14 were very numerous. The prisoners taken numbered 80. The principal trophies were 30 guns and many rifles, uniforms and ac- coutrements. The latter are still un- counted. WILL MAKE WAGE CUT. Agreement Will Not Be Renewed at South Chicago Mills. The steel workers employed in the rail and sheet departments of the Illinois Steel Company's plant at South Chicago have heen notified that when the present agreement ex- pires on January 1, 1905, it will not be renewed. This means that the same reduction in wages and lengthening of the hours of labor will prevail in South Chicago as in Joliet. Officials of the steel company say that they believe the men will accept whatever | We lay close, hugging the terms are given them by the steel | company, as they have had no or- ganization since 1901. While the steel workers in South | Chicago have mo union, nor are they! afiiliated with the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Work- | ers, they will maintain their local] union and meet semi-monthly. It was | said that the tonnage system is to be abolished at South Chicago and | all these men put on a flat salary | basis. Almost 4,000 men will be affected by the readjustment and the} wages of the men cut ranging from 15 to 43 per cent, and their working day increased at least two hours a day. Dedicate Connecticut Monument. Thousands of people assembled at] Orchard Knob, the famous battle- ground northeast of Chattanooga to witness the dedication of the monu- ment erected by the State of Con- necticut to the Fifth and Twentieth | unexpected blow on our | and took two batteries, | ent to judge of the situation; Connecticut. volunteer regiments by! Governor Abiram Chamberlain and a distinguished party of Connecticut. | The parade to the dedication ground | was the most gorgeous of its kind ever seen in Chattanooga. TO PROMOTE PEACE. Prominent Men of ail Creeds De- nounced Armed Strife. Jew and Gentile, scholar and teacher, merchant and lawyer com-| bined their talents at the temple of gation Rodeph Shalom, Pittsburg, to make a success of the meeting in the interest of peace. Messages of encouragement were recived from President velt, Secretary of State John Ha Andrew Carnegie. The meeting was opened by Rev. Dr. J. Leonard Levy, and Rev. Dr. S.| B. McCormick presided, having as| vice presidents John Wanamaker, Pastor Charles Wagner of Paris, author of “The Simple Life”; Prof. X. Koenig, of Bordeaux, Dr. W. Evans Darby, secretary of the British Peace! saciety; George Herbert Perris, sec-| retary of the Cobden club, of Lon- | den; Mayor William Hays, Rev. Father A. A. Lambing, ex- iE Cohen, Prof. Thomas Garrett of Har- vard university, Prof. John A. Bra- shear, Rev. S. Edward Young, Judge J. M. Kennedy and D. L. Gillespie. the C ongreg universal v and Three Men Entombed. Three sons of Rev. Thomas | Napier, of East Lynn, W. Va., while ingpecting a mine on their father's premise became impris-| in the same by the falling in of | Hundreds of oned the entrance. tons of | sarth came down the mou in side | and obstructed the means of exit. | The entire neighborhood is out mc onal the earth to release th thprisoned men. who are probably dead. Desperate Struggle For Supremacy South of Mukden. The main armies of Russia and | Japan in Manchuria continue to be engaged in a desperate struggle for supremacy south of Mukden. On both sides there have been such loss- es in killed and wounded as mark the contest for one of the bloodiest bat- tles in history. Already the losses at Liag Yang have been approxima- ted, and the indications are that they will be exceeded, that of the Russians up to noon of October 14 be- ing estimated at 15,000. The Russian advance has been con- verted into a stubbornly-fought re- treat. The result according to the Russians, is still to be determined. Reports from the Russian left wing are lacking, leaving room for ques- tion if that part of Gen. Kuropatkin's army is not in worse extremity than the center and right were at any stage of the battle. On both sides the soldiers have shown the utmost tenacity and bravery, and whole regi- ments have gone down before the fire of the enemy. ~ In official circles of St. Peoters- burg there is a dispesition to argue that even should Gen. Kuropatkin be obliged to retire upon Mukden, his position will be quite as favorable as’ it was when the order to advance was given on October 6, and that on the other hand the Japarese power of future resistence will have heen materially weakened. There is no news from Port Arthur. TERRIBLE SLAUGHTER. Russian Troops Fight Like Heroes, Through the Night. A Russian correspondent tele as follows: “For over two days the battle has raged ceaselessly. It was close to midnight of October 19, when the Japanese attempted to surprise and attack our frontal positions in the impenetrable darkness and huried the full force of their battalions against our intrenchments. * The darkness was split by the blaze of their rifles | and answering volleys of our men. The attack never ceased for hours. entrench- ments with but few minutes respite, every man’s gun to his shoulder fir- ing at the flashes until near dawn, when the evil-boding rifle fire ceas- ed and even the distant batteries were silent. “Day had hardly lighted the slope of the two-horned mountain when our batteries began to cover it with shrapnel. Puffs of white smoke marked the landing of each shell. Japanese fell literally like wheat thrown by the hand of a sower. “From 8 o'clock in the morning the fight raged. Along the whole line the infernal din of the rifle fire continued as on the previous day, but up to] noon the Japanese batteries gave no | sign of life. It developed that they | were waiting to locate our positions | before opening fire. | “Reports of heavy losses night attack are coming in. Tha! Tomsk regiment suffered terribly. Of] the brilliant Tamboff regiment few re- | mained. The troops fought like | heroes throughout the hours of dark-| raphs during the ness, and the morning found the most of them dead on the ground | they had bravely defended. Those | remaining continue to fight. i “The Japanese to-day landed an! right flank | but we re-| gained them. It is impossible at pres-| to do} this we probably will have to wait] some days. Our men still believe we | shall achieve a final success.” PAYING OFF FEDERAL DEBT. World’s Fair Authorities Make An- other Payment on Loan. The Louisiana Purchase exposition! has made the seventh of the stipula- ted $500,000 payments one the govern-! ment loan of $4,600,000, which was advanced by the Federal authorities a few weeks previous to the opening of the world’s fair. This payment, together with the percent- age payments made previous to the first stipulated payment, ie 1 bal- ance of $691,850.45 due the United States government. DEATH DUE TO FRIGHT. Boy Who Gets a Load of Shot in the Leg Passes Away. Jacob Rutt, aged 15 years of Mar-! tindale, Lancaster county, Pa, was shot in the leg while gunning with Charles Weaver about a Sm ago. | He died Sunday evening and the at- tending physician says. his death was due to fright. The shot which hit him about the knees was a 1 i Roose- | caliber and the wound was not ous. Heart failure was the imn ate cause of death. PAYMASTER ROBBED. His Horse Shot Dead and Rider Beat- en Into Stupor. Robert Holster, paymaster for Lauer, railroad contractor, tacked from ambush near Syl cesvil lle, | Pa., and robbed of $360. He was on horseback and his horse was shot dead. When the horse fell three men pounced upon the pay-! master and beat Mim into insensibili- | ty and relieved him of his money. He was found shortly afterward by | a farmer who was driving into Sykes- ville. The police here were notified, | but have no clue to the robbers. Left His Widow $20,000,000. By the will of her husband, Henry | Grinnell Russell, who died 10 days | | ago, Mrs. Russell becomes the rich- | est widow in New England, as the estate is reputed to he worth at least $20,000,000. The estate wil >vent- ually revert to the Goddard and Brown families, and young John Ni- cholas Brown, “the richest baby in the world,” will be on the list of fu- ture heirs. | aid the crew of B. & O. Negligent Steamboat inspectors Wili Be Removed. REVIEWS CAUSE OF TRAGEDY. Findings of Goverment Commission Score Owners and Officers of Vessel Recommended New Laws. Investigation of the General Slo- cum disaster by the national com- misgion created for the purpose has been completed and the report of the commission was made public to-day. In connection with the important findings of the commission President Roosevelt, to whom the report was submitied, has written a letter to Secretary Victor H. Metcalf of the Department of Commerce and; La- bor, briefly summarizing the report and directing him to carry into effect the recommendations of the commis- sion. He also directs Rodie, . supervising Second district, tion service, and and Thomas H. that Robert 8S. inspector of the steamboat inspec- James A. Dumont Barrett, !ocal inspec- tors in charge of the port of New York, be discharged from the service, the commission hokiing them direct- ly responsible for laxity of the steamboat inspection to which the Slocum disaster was directly at- tributable. The report shows that tions of the steamboat service at New factory, many respects. The commission recommendations, technical laws and steamboat the tne the opera- inspection York were unsatis- inefficient and negligent in presents many principally of a character, relating to the regulations governing the inspection service; laws regulating the construction of pass- enger steamers and laws giving authority to the Department of Com- merce and Labor to enforce absolute- ly its orders issued to vessel owners and to the officers and crews of steamers. These recommendations will © be transmitted to Congress at its ap- proaching session and legislation will be asked along the lines of the report and recommendations of the com- mission. TWELVE LIVES LOST. Schooner Wrecked by Storm Chatham, Massachusetts. A small part of the forward section of the hull and a slanting foremast stood as mute reminders of the ocean tragedy enacted off Chatham, Mass. when ihe three-masted schooner Wentworth of Moncton, N. B., struck | on Chatham bar during a raging northerly gale, and all on board per- ished in the terrific 8, Of the 12 persons who were on board the stranded vessel not one reached &he shore alive, although two bodies were rescued from the surf this morning, one of them that of a woman, believed to be the wife of the captain. With her three children she was accompanying her husband on a trip from Hillsboro, N. B., to Newark, N. J. Little could be done in an effort to the disabled craft, as the Cape Cod life savers from two | stations were unable to launch their surf boats in the tremendous seas. SEVEN HURT. Passenger Collides Freight Train in Chicago. Seven people were injured when a passenger irain on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad collided with the rear of a freight train on the Pere Mar- With quette road, at Seventy-fifth street, Chicago. None of the injured is seriously hurt. Among them are Mrs. Ella Miller, of Wheeling, W. Va. and Elizabeth Petterilase, of Germantown, Pa. Fire broke out im the demolished freight cars immedi- ately after the collision, and several cars were consumed. TREASURY REPORT. Revenues Decreased and Expendi- ture of Funds Increased. Ellis H. Roberts, treasurer of the United States, 1 submitted to Sec- retary L. M. S the annual report on the transactions of the Treasury during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1%04., The net ordi y revenues been $540,631,749, a decrease of $19,764,925 as compared and’ are shown to have with 1903, the met ordinary ex- penditures 3582,402,321, an increase $76,303,214. In the receipts the principal falling off was $23,205,017 in customs, while in the disburse- ments the important increases were $11,423,446 in commerce and labor, | $60.78.580 in Treasury proper, and $20,338,067 for the Navy. Unusual expenditures were $50,000,000 on aec- count of the Panama canal and | $4,600,000 loaned to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition company, which | latter has now been nearly all re- paid. But for these the recorded | deficiency of $41,770,571 would have { been changed to a surplus of | $12,829,428. Coke Production Gaining. Production increased in the Con- nelisville region last week, nearly | 5,000 ore tons being made. Ship- ments of coke fell off to the West, and the increase in shipments to the Pittsburg dis‘rict was small. Pro- duction exceeded shipments by more than 27,000 tons, and many ovens probably will be blown out if this sur- plus cannot be got rid of. Henry Musser was killed by an Erie freight train at the Exchange street crossing at Akron, O Near | | | Contents Examined by Czar's Sea- men, Who Re-Seal and For- ward It. It developed that a pouch contain- ing mail for the United States cruis- er Cincinnati, then at Nagasaki, Japan, which was aboard the British steamer Calchas, when that vessel was seized by the Russian Vladivos- tok squadron, had been opened while in the possession of the Russian officials, subsequently re-sealed and sent on to its destination. The information came to the Post- office department in a communication from the Japanese postal administra- tion, in conformity with a practice al- ways followed when there has been any mishap in the delivery of mail pouches. The matter will be referred to the State Department for action, as was done with the case of the ordinary United States mail on the vessel at the time she was seized. This latest phase of the seizure of the Calchas mails has caused a pain- ful surprise in official circles, and if the art of opening the pouch address- ed to the Cincinnati was wittingly done, the probability is a strong pro- test will be lodged with the Russian government. It is stated at the Navy depart- ment that the mail pouch referred to did not contain any official communi- cations, simply mail for the men aboard the ship. SETTLE DIVORCE QUESTION. Episcopal Convention Decides to Leave Laws as They Are. The house of deputies of the Epis- copal general convention in session at Boston at the close of a four days’ debate, rejected an amend- ment to the divorce canon, which sought to prevent the re-marriage of divorced persons by clergymen of the denomination. While the house of bishops may yet act on the matter, it is certain that no change will be made by the present convention. The present law of the church, which has been in operation since 1859, allows the remarriage of the innocent party to a divorce granted for infidelity. At several conven- tions, attempts have been made to repeal this law, and when a vote was taken to-day by the house of depu- ties sitting as a committee of the whole, on the question of reporting the proposed amendment to the house itself, the reformers were suc- cessful by a vote of 214 to 191, and this vote was regarded as represent- ing the actual strength of the con- tending forces. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Fire in Winnipeg. Manitoba, caus- ed a loss of $700,000. The police at Barcelona, Spain, have been implicated in a plot to assassinate King Alphonso. The first snow of the season fell at Albany, Schenectady and a num- ber of other places in New York Wednesday. Walter Woodbury, 22 years old, committed suicide at Appleton, O., by hanging himself. He was despon- dent because of sickness, it is said. An earthquake shock, which was felt by vessels 15 miles at sea, is re- ported from Honolulu. The Empire State express on the New York Central railroad collided with a light engine at Albany and A. W. Parsons, fireman of the light en- gine, was killed. Fire destroyed three buildings of the plant of the United Zinz and Chemical Company at Argentine, Kan., a suburb of Kansas City, caus- ing a loss estimated at $100,000. Thousands of fish in the Kaw river were killed by chemicals that es- caped from the plant into the stream. The Japanese government decided to float a domestic loan of $40,000,000 representing the balance of the amount authorized by the diet. The emperor has decorated the Ameri- cap nurses with the order of the Crown. At Montgomery, Ala. C. J. Cassi- mus, a wealthy retired fruit dealer, was run over and killed by a street car. Eye witnesses say the man de- liberately walked upon the tracks. Dr. Leo Vogel, a lawyer and Secre- tary of the Swiss Legation at Berlin, has been appointed Swiss Minister to the United States. Nick McIntosh, a negro, was sent- enced to the Georgia penitentiary for life for trying to wreck a trolley car. A terrible storm swept the Hon- duras coast for three days. The city of Puerto Cortez suffered great dam- age and the banana crop is reported ruined. The gross earnings of Louisville & Nashville for the first week in October increased $36,000. For the same week Southern Railway re- ported an increase of $59,000, and Missouri Pacific an increase of $47.- 000. The sole survivor of a Chicago yachting party of four, Harry Gray, clinging to a spar half a mile from shore, was rescued dying. He stated his sister, Nellie Gray, Walter Ken- nedy and Donald Campbell were com- panions. The yaeht sank. R. M. McFarland, Vice President of the defunct national bank at Hold- enville, I. T., has been arrested on a charge of misappropriation of funds of the bank, which suspended last June. Express Wrecked. West-bound train No. 9, the Pitts- burg express on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad leaving Washington at 9:15 p. m., and due in Pittsburg at 7:15 Thursday morning, was partly derailed at Garrett Park, Md. Six persons were slightly injured. The accident was caused by a broken rail. Admiral Dewey has again offered to assume command of the combined fleet in the Caribbean sea and direct the winter maneuvers. . Heiyen was announced. Japanese Take the Offensive After Falling Back. JAPANESE LOSE TWO VESSELS. The Gunboat Haiyen Struck a Mine and Nearly all on Board Were Lost. A dispatch from Mukden, dated October 11 says: A bloody battle is now raging about six miles north of Yentai railroad station. The Japan- ese on Sunday fell back along the whole front and the Russian advance crossed the Schili river, (about half way between Mukden and Liao Yang), and came within three miles of Yentai, but yesterday the Japanese received strong reinforcements of in- fantry and artillery, and not only held their positions, but even as- sumed the offensive. The fighting lasted the entire day and night. The Japanese directed their artillery fire with great skill and searched the Russian positions so fiercely that the Russians fell back north of the Schili river, which crosses the railroad seven miles from Yentai. The Russians this morning resumed their advance, once more crossed the Schill river and engaged the Japan- ese two miles south of it. A terrific artillery engagement is proceeding along the entire front. The result of the battle is still undecided. Severe fighting north of Yentai has resulted im a temporary check of Gen. Kuropatkin’s advance guard. The latest official dispatches to St. Peters- burg indicate that the whole army is not yet in line of battle. The present engagement may therefore be regard- ed as the result of a counter attack which an enterprising foe like the Japanese might be expected to make, but without any calculation to pre- vent the Russian advance. Gen. Kuropatkin’s present superiority in numbers, it is held, is bound sooner or later to compel the Japanese to fall back upon their strong positions within the triangle formed by Yentai, Liao Yang and Sykwantun. The Japanese gunboat Heiyen struck a mine in Pigeon Bay, west of Port Arthur, September 18 and sank. Only four of her crew were rescued. The Heiyen was of 2,067 tons displacement, 2,400 indicated horse power and can steam about 10 knots. She was captured by the Japanese from the Chinese at Wei- haiwei during the war between China and Japan. The Heiyen carries a crew of 250 officers and men. The loss of the armored gunboat The Heiyen struck a mine off Pigeon Bay on the night of September 18, and founder- ed. Nearly 300 persons, her entire Interfere and Make Sev- eral Arrests. Rioting occurred in connection with a strike of baggagé wagon drivers employed by the Frank T. Scott Trans- fer Company at Chicago. Attacks on wagons were repulsed by a squad of policemen at the barns of the com- pany and by a force of private de- tectives employed to patrol the dis- trict. Attempts to send out wagons met with determined resistence by pick- ets, aided by sympathetic teamsters. As fast as the wagons got a few blocks away the drivers were stoned nd attempts made to cut the hors- es’ traces. At Vanburen and State streets a non-union driver for the company was attacked by the driver of an ice wagon and threatened with an axe. While this was going on, Sever- al men, supposed to be pickets, cut the harness. The baggage wagon driver ran for his life, leaving his wagon in an alley. Four arrests were made. One prisoner was J. W. Young, business agent of the Van and Baggage Teamsters Union. Trouble was also experienced about the Auditorium hotel where the bag- gage handlers had gone on a strike. A crowd of 20 men attacked one of the Scott wagons at the Polk street depot, while the driver was attempt- ing to deliver baggage from one of the hotels. CAMPAIGN FRAUD. Police Man Who Solicits Funds Turns Out to be Impostor. John Heatherington. of Pittsburg, who thought “John D. Wilson” would be a better name for Cleveland use, some time he had been going about among the leading firms and business places soliciting campaign contri- butions for the “Central Republican Roosevelt and Fairbanks club.” He victimized several large concerns, among them M. A. Hanna & Co. A detective was put on his trail, and after he was arrested, it was found that the political club with the inspiring name existed only in the mind of Heatherington. On convic- tion he admitted that he had work- ed the same game in Pittsburg, but had been caught and served time for it. FIFTEEN HURT. Express Train Ran into Freight Near Camden, N. J. A Pennsylvania railroad express train, bound from New York for Cam- den, N. J. ran into a freight train in the Bordentown railroad yards, 27 miles north of Camden, and about 15 persons were injured, three of them seriously. Isaac Wurts, engineer, Bradford complement, were drowned. The Heiyen was engaged on guard duty! off Pigcon Bay and was blown up by a Russian mine. 19 PERSONS DROWN. Small and Passengers Lost. News reached Halifax of wreck of the little New London, Prince Edward island, during last Saturday’s gale with the loss, it is believed of all on board, some 19 persons in all, of whom 14 were passengers. Among the steamer was the son of John Fagar, of this city, one of the princi- pal owners. The steamer was bound from Tra- cadie far up in Northern New Bruns- wick, to New London, on the North- ern coast of Prince Edward island. It had been the custom of the Call to stop at the numerous little ports on her way down the coasf, and it is thought that her passengers were nearly all fishermen. the Owing to numerous vexatious strikes of megro roustabouts on the steamboat wharves at New Orleans, the experiment was begun of replac- ing them with white laborers {rom Western and Northern cities. POLITICS CAUSES MURDER. Aged Man Resents Slur on Friend, H. G. Davis. Resenting a remark intended as a slur on his friend of long ago, Wal- ter Fremont an aged man, shot and killed Solomon Dishner, at Fort Gay, W. Va, a little town on the Sandy river. Fremont's ed age is alone what being roughly Big handled by an excit- ed crowd which surrounded him after | the shooting. The quarrel arose during a debate over politics. Fremont worked with Henry G. Davis when the now presidential candidate was employed on one of the local railroads. Dur- ing the controversy Dishner made a remark derogatory to Davis and Fre- mont at once shot him dead. Loss Causes Suicide. Harry Allshouse, a young man re- siding at Lowellville, O., while at- tending the street fair held there lost about $400. He boarded a street car and went to Struthers and on ar- riving at the station deliberately shot himself with a revolver, dying in a few minutes. Pittsburger Gets $800 Prize. The officials of the Pennsylvania railroad, after making their annual inspection tour, have awarded prizes to section supervisors for meritori- ous work. One $1,200 prize, two $1,000 prizes and four $800 prizes were awarded, George Ehrenfeld, supervisor of section 7, Pittsburg division, and W. W. Courts, of No. 10, being the recipients of two of the fatter prizes. Steamer Wrecked and Crew | steamer Call of] those on! fishing | Old | advanc- | saved him from | vice | Steelman, fireman, and James Zane, an engineer who ‘was on the passen- gr engine to familiarize himself with the road, were caught under the wreckage of the locomotive. Zane was taken to the Trenton hospital and the other two were brought to the Cooper hospital, Camden, along with 10 of the injured passengers. The freight train was crogsing the main line tracks when the passenger train dashed into it. Boston Wocl Market. Increasing strength is shown in the local wool market from week to week. Recently there had been a heavy demand for almost all grades I of wool, a condition of affairs which if it continues will mark the season as unique. The price of domestic wools in this market as based on actual sales is about as follows: Ohio and Pennsylvania, XX and above, 34@35c; X, 30@31c; No. 1, 33@34c; 3. 2, 33@34c; fine unwash- ed, 24@2 1%, 3% and 1, blood un- washed, FNS unwashed delaine, 26@27¢ fine unwashed delaine, 351s w3be. Maoime X and above, 26a 27c; No. 1, 30@31c;: No. 2, 29@ 30c; fine la 21@22¢; 4%, % and 1% blood unwashéd, 28@2814c; unwashed delaine, 25@26¢; fine wash- | ed delaine, 32@33c. IRISH EVICTION RESISTED. Police Assailed With Hot Boiling Water and Stones. At PFellsport, near Cork, an at- | tempt to evict a tenant named Ed- mund Murphy for unpaid rent of six years, led to serious fighting. Fifty police found the place barricaded. A crowd assailed the police with red- | hot irons, boiling water and stones, compelling them to desist. The con- ! flict continued all day. With the arrival of reinforcements the police charged the mob with fixed boyonets and many on both sides were injured. Late in the even- ing, through the meditation of the parish priest, Murphy was induced to surrender. Altogether 30 arrests were made. Lord Milner Resigns. Lord Milner has resigned the high commissionership of South Africa on account of ill-health, brought about by the prolonged strain in grappling with the situation, which is daily be- coming more difficult, owing to the financial and radical troubles of the country. irons Rhode Island Ticket. The Rhode Island Republican state convention nominated George P. Ut- ter for governor and candidates for the minor state offices and president- ial electors. The platform jndorses the national platform and the nomi- nations of Roosevelt and Fairbanks and pays a high tribute to the ad- ministration of President Roosevelt. The number of students registered at the University of Michigan for this vear is 4.100. will spend seven months in the Cleveland workhouse, a victim of too much political activity. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers