Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 8, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 November 1905 — Page 2
weESycoi KU THE WEEK'S IHK
TERSELY 00TLINE0
Bfc.N :u. uofc. rubiu1.
JASPER
LMM AN.
Fftmine is prevalent in Ml diatrlctft of i Kuvuan HWlIM This mean that t.NjM0 paraoag will have to fed unt.l n. xt July
English poacher hav hak: fr wear during- busn "hey find tt makes the
fttchful pan;. V p ri
adopt oj s hours ot
-aster
Three to "-.ave i to :he d: men wh.. insured.
Sow York claim i I hOtftV ft. And to add a str. at major:t of the robbed had thetf ive
An Epitome of the Most Important Event at Home and Abroad the Past Week. NORTH, EAST, WEST, SOUTH.
Uli Ii Drarlonaneuta I " Ir.er UnldcmO. Ieth.r " HHM t Intrre.t l ulled Iron. tb Ur World.
etitutlons. it is up t I---." - 'vii v feller I Mti them a bunch for th prvvi of lh noble CaBt.
ntl n
admiralty offl In which oil bled waters " e ntl be J" perforated c: holding from
ns are given by the Br.; sh iffiee reaardiag the manner
uld be poured on "trouIt is recommended that ped overboard in mal! ire ? two gallons.
vim ov wn 0 1 1 The official report from N w Ork ans for the 24 hours envied at o P m on the ... h fhfle!. New .ase, i-f ..'.. w fetal I; total to date. 3.H89. Deaths, 1; Otal Ifl date. 444. Ca, under treatment. 28; discharged. 2.917 rill ri)H. Fa. reported, on the
tth: Ntw cw oi ewo MBdeo between th total to date. 522. Deaths, n ne; total h bofdeTi due
discharged. 3&S. The situation sLow.ct signs of improvement.
i-h.ir i Hot, i rei f Sam- ,iKKB.a item. wak. India, has Ihvn Investigating ber.- , ThjVf, lives were iost, several persona beri and has come to the cone! iftioa , -r(8 of familie driven
. i.j u a v . .
from their nomtH aau n...
as .ne resuu oi
und rgone certain
wVh
mo'd or fungus
The Russian piisu.nctain .laiaii are to te transported to Vladivostok ou board n as of i be aUiii.n wlamü 1 1 lOti and thence transferred to Kusala tn dctacnmenis Lum J Baflai . aged i. ehargi d ua the murder of Henry Toniltnson. a arawr, aged ft, ay whom he employed, near Chanute. Kits . ha cotf, , He sas h. ..s prompted to Are the fatal ahot t au iusane impulse. , . Commander inChief Tanner of the Grand Army of the Republic am . t . . liihfl
nounce trie apjx.uiuun-ui Tweedale, of Waaalagttia. D C. adjutant general, and dUUM A. t'liirk. of Oaamff Rapids, la . judge advm-ato pajjaraL A lxMiisville Southern passenger inin lir.Up throtmh a bridge seven
mltat Iran Loalagfoa. Ky. and plunged tfl feet into a creok. Twelve poraoai vert tajare. ut aoaa mm kilh a An attempt will e nuIe to carry th.. ns. o. Albert T Patrick, couvict-
,(1 f the murder of William Marsh ,
Rice, to the UniU d States aupreme court. The last link of railroad binding n. Petarabara wt,h ,he ouur w,,rUl aS broken wlun the Finland railroad bih-
tho capital an. l tue
to the strike. Con-
AUTOCRftCY DEAD: THE PEOPLE REIGN
Reveille for Constitutional (iovern-rar-nt Sounded m Russia.
THE CZAR ISSUES MANIFESTO
U. WUI t uniinlMlunril I'reiulcr, With aatfc!! ! 1 "", ,l,c r of i.inrrumrB( Alou Mitr.' Ilbrr! I. In.
St retetsburg. Oet 31. The aatOCraey of Um Bngiianfa ani the old order of things haa ceased to exist in
Hussia Batpcror Mihlas has surrendered "An imierlal manifesto has been 1ued anuointitig Count Witte rrime
for has rhara UrUed Mi majeetyi manlfeatoes It not only beiraya ral anttiorshii). but shows that the .mperoi
at last irretoi-ably bowed to the liievitiMfl He dm not even conceal the fact that the discontent nnd agitattoa Of his subjects has driven him to take th hten and practically yields every
thing civil liberty, the Inviolability of pan, at.d liberty of conscience, patck '' assembly He not otly aoafarta the larafaal bafarlal I uma. with only consultative powr, into a absolute legislative assembly without the a-setu of which no measure shall Decome law. and before wh.th all governmental authorities must answer, but promises iventually universal uffrage. i at ot ih- asrtaerata. The title, 'autm rat of all the Rust'.as. ' with which the manifesto begin, now takes Its p'aee with ih tltl-) of King of Jeruüal m." borue by the
king of Spain and the emperor or Auatria arid with other oaaolaf titles of
European sovereigns. J. Pierpont Morgan. Jr . and (Seorge Perkins were with Finance Mnla ter Kokovsoff when the latttr r. . .ee
SANTA FE LIMITED WRECKED
mmimter with Eteelal authority to co
ordinate and unify the powers of the th0 news. It was a dramatic moment d'fferent branches of the government. The minister was called to the tele
that the im
cau5c of
case is to oe iouuu . . -...w. ,-,.-. destnne.;
changes conneetea :.. . wtirfiffr- EiKhteen'.h and
tae uevc.opnieui uu t -
A Par'siau actor who form.-rly mad good income ta his profession is now earning h s living as a cab driver. He
Plarb Clrt.-'.H Ch.. agO.
Lieut Benj H. Poie Eighth United j
P ates infantry, has bten convictto o, court-martial at Fort Sheridan. Chicago of conduct to the prejudice of good j n ...,. iHmMIm lHause
. r :er anu nm.ii.' ----
... . ... VI. Jl
6a taken u:s step to spue u. mr .ith -hi.h he eorced wife. Wherever he went she : be left a detachment !
put a lien on his salary. The actor was
traveling, in ti oris: ar. while he
I 1. - I).. ' n fin r
found that the only occupa'am in .ook . r- llfe prltoner Ui
wh:ch h:s wite was neipies. " Ka.s . died
him was cab dr.ir.g. because ne re
ceived no a'ary
Of all the crops raised in New Ene land so.:, the one 'r.s n-irs.l by Cyrus J. Brownell. of Worcester. Mass.. Is doubtlees the mcvt unique and tho least pleasing to his neighbors. Mr Brownell is a snake farmer, and he i? rearing crops of rat'Iesnake. king snakes, pine snakes and other varieties of the reptile family for strictly com merciftl purposes.
John D. Rockefeller is the richest man in the world. The value of the securities he holds is greater than the holdinars of any other individual in the world He is represented on the boards of more than 123 corporations. His income within the !aat eight
years, ccording to this Wall stre-' publication, ha- - v- ! L Half ot this vast sum he received tn div.dends from the Standard Oil Co. The rest came from corporations in which he is Interested.
A SWct.sh correspondent writes of ho Highlands "There are
no undertakers here. A carpenter tended the ceremcnk at
.1 t. t -Vi 'nin'n onffi n T.itniv. Till ttTy. loKlO.
th nAr.'tpnt'.arV at Irnsing. Kas
from wounds inflicted with kniv by two insane convicts. Th Japanese have begun the evacuation of Man. h tria. Gen. Kuroki is expected to return to Tokio by the middle of November The Russian cruiser Bogatyr is payire a friendly vtsit to Nagasaki Japan.
Rev. H. D. Fisher, a well-known Methodist minister, died at Baidw.n. Kae.. of tuberculosis, aged 82 years. The Spanish armored cruiser Cardin-
ai c tan - which atmen a n t-At.V near Muros. province of Corunn. IB N fee? of water, will probably be a total loea. Th hiireau of stattstlca. tiepartmen'
of caaaavataa and labor, estimates the fo-. ;gn eaaaasatai of the United Sta'es for the calendar year at over ft billion Collars.
The larrest hlnh list in tne nisior of N.w Oriaaaai was recently recorded ?A In one day. 19 of them boys. Admiral Togo delivered the oration t the Shinto rites in memory of the raval officers ar.l men who l.-st their lTa daring th- war. Thousands ftt-
Aoama eine-
frlends carry it. hip high, to its but res'in? place, mhich is duz when lha end of the Journey is reached, er. 1 having walked perhaps six miles to the chosen kJrkyard. they take a refreshment of sandwiches end whisky and walk home again. Th.- rigorous absence of pomp is maintained, but
there is the added embellishment of p pe John Henry Brodrihh. knizhtel !n l$S5 as Sir Henry Irving, made h -stage debut as the villain of a melodrama in the English provinces. Tra dition has It that in one act he appeared with a piece of raw beef concealed under h coat collar, that the fa.'hful dog of the heroine miftht a.gh'ly leap at his throat in the ir .crest of tlrtaa emlangered an 1 th Iraniatic ajpittaa. That was ag managmenv an art in which Irvine for years led hia contemporaries in the two graf English-speaking lanAs
An expr 1 Uoa in searc h of the KoTth
Pole will rtr-t from Dawson. Yukon Territory, in the summer of 19o6 if the plans of the? International Society tor Polar Research and Experiment re carried out. Gov. W. B Mclnnes f Yukon. Is one of the leaders in the movement, and Gen. Grcely. P. 8. A.. h nks the plau.,- of the society feasiole. The ma n d.fferenco between the plans of the Yukon explorers an t those of expeditions in the past Is that the Yukoners expect to utillz"
their knowledge of way 4 and means f existence and transportat on in the
A-
o- .. : ar' of h R '' n rart nr sn..
ca nftj ' ry has been solved by aatfl lLshinc -he identity of the disroemben
vi lis. Th- body was undoubtedly that of M. Susan Geary, of Camr n Mass.. member of ft theatrical
company, who Is said to have dropped
our of sieht on swember 11 ias
Tiistri.l Attciney Jerome of Nw York pays that if re-dected he alH aptn'v m rh twisrd of estimates of N w
Tora Ctty for money to retain Charles H. Hughes as special counsel to prosecut thn insurance men if they are pro-c-led aeainv criminally.
Edtrard L Pjatwai, a freshman at Ken von co'h-Le. ;ambier. 0. waa
d by a Cleveland. Akron fc Columbus train while awaiting initlfttion Into th De' Kftppft Epsilon fraternity, fast how the McMaat happened will nvT h known. Commander Eva Bo th of the Salvation rmy Is reported HI in New York. She is lmort worn out nd In need of ccmnlete rest.
Hon Grover C'eveland delivered th cration at the unveiling of the monument to J Sibling Morton, former secretary of agricuture and fath-r of ArBOf day. at Nebraska City. Neb Conditions are getting so bad throughout Russia that they could not be much
- e
President RooseveP spent his forty
.. ft . 1 . . - n ,
duions in St ivte:siurg ai accounts were pitiable. Ifarsarat ToJd. M ars of age. of Ntw York, eith.r walked from or fell from a Philadelphia & Reading train
'at the Oxford street entrance ot fair
mount park. Philadelphia, and wa Ift tallv mjured She was very wealthy
The lighthouse tender Magnolia, with PrMdent Roosevelt on board, collided with the fruit steamer Esparta. near Nairn. La., while en route to board the cruiser Weat Virginia. Both vessels wore damaged, but no one was sc.iously hurt None of the president's part suffered injury. The Harriman special, with Miaa Roosevelt and companions on board.
arrived safely in New York, and after ft night's rest ftt the home of her ftunt, Mrs Douglas RoMnson. Miss Roosevelt proceeded to Washington. The people of New Orleans tore 'he programme of the presidential reception and speech-making to shreds, and made his visit. Instead, one continuous
ovation uy awTaiiaa. wmxwm bent on giving vent to their enthusiastic admiration for Theodore Roosevelt, president of the whole United State. The president has appointed Hon D. R. Francis, president of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Co. a special commissioner to convey the nations thanks to the rulers of the foreign na
tions participating in the exposition.
A monument to ihiam nciumwj
was unveiled a; fepnngfle.ü. .Mass., with appropr.a'e ceremonies and amid
intense nthusiasru. Seven hundred well-drilled poliOftv men. mounted and on foot, the latter armed with riot guns, the police patrol wagons, the gatoaaoaUft squad and police board In carriages made an imI -.r.g spectacle in St. Louts on their annual parade, which preceded the diatrlubtion of medals for conspicuous service In varioi- ways during the year. Henry Ton.ling?on. a farmer aged TO years, was murdered at his home
r'ar Chanute. Kas.. and Lem Rue, fei IC, an employ of Tom'.n . m, has been arrested on suspicion of having committfd the deed. Four persons were killed and many injured In a bead-cn collision 01 the K.i. k Island mal near Fairfl-id 'a
Roth locomotives wore demolished and several cars damaged. The heroic statue of Von Moltke. Germany s great strategist, was unveiled in Berhn with simple ceremonies in the presence of Emperor William and entourage and IMM troops
of the Berlin garrison. The mnnants of the Russian navy, mostly interned in neutral ports, with the exception of one cruiser, a gunboat, and the torpedo boats Ml at Vladivo-tok. have been ordered to return to home ports Ex-President Cievfland has writtea
ft letter to Mftyor MeC'.ellftn of New York Indorsing his candidacy for reelection. Baron Ilo-e;. . Russian ambassador at Washington, denies the report that he Is to succeed Count Kamsdorf as minister of foreign affairs ftt St Peterburg The so-called Lion court of Nharagria
has confirmed the decision, of the lower
Civic libertl.s are granted to the Russian peo, '. and to the national assembly Is givTa legislative power, while the suffrage is enlarged.'" Count Witte Insisted on a cabinet on the Brulsh model. With a selected premier responsible to the Imperial douma. or parliament, while the emperor clung to the appointment of the nitm-
phone nd when he returned ha wai
greatly agitate!. nd said: "Gentlemen, the old order of thing has changed. Russia has ft tonstltu tlon." Wmb pr.-d I I We II. Hire. The nens spread like wildflrthroughout the city. The revolution lata, and ftf tive agitators g.nera'.iy. de c'ared loudly that the government ! promises would no longer suffice anf that the strike must be continued. In fact, an hour after the news be came known the revolutionists took oc
casion to throw the first bomb in St. Petersburg used since llM strike heran The imident occurred near the Polytechnic school, but there was no f.itatitv aiSMilieaHw all classes, ex
cept the soclall-ts and the extreme radicals, however, read the document with delight and ruftzement, declared that It could not fail to rally the moderates to the support of Count Witte. to nr. takkm ion .tinn."
THE LAST OF THE AUTOCRATS, bers of the cabinet on the American plan by the emperor as chief of stte. The following la the text of the im
perial manifesto: The Imperial Manifesto. "Emperor Nicholas II. by the grace of God. emperor and autocrat of all the Rursias. grand duke of Finland, etc .
declare to all our faithful subjects that
rteporf Count Witt on hieb Iht Manltralo Waa Bnaed. St. Petersburg. Oct. 31 Count WitU'b report to the emperor, who Usrrlbed thereon, "to be tftken for guide." Is follows: "Your aaajaaty has deigned to lnd -cate to me directions for ft government In consideration of the actual state of Russia. "The gitfttlon of human BOCtoty i
not the ontcome of partlftl lmp rfec
Ten Persona Killed and Twenty-Six
Injured at Big blue Cut.
Th Train Struth llrokt ii Hall auft
riuuK l !...( I . i I .. u the IlinliMii L tuent.
Kansas City, Oct 31. The Santa F s California Limited, fiom Chicago, was aracaai at li a. m lle ullag east. The wrtik oicuired at Big Blue cut, where the Santa Fe BfOanaa the tracks of the Mi- ..ml Pa. .ti. Thlneen people were killed and 2; in Jured. The ill-fated train atruek a brok. n rail and plunged Ü feet down the embankment to the bottom of the cut Aa soon as the news w&s received here ft relief tram was made up and
rushed to the scene of the accident with physicians and nurs s. The wrecked train was one of the heaviest an l fastest In th service It was composed of regular coaches, chair cars, tourist aleepers and Puliti.au sie pe rs The li. .i Roy Stafford. Cleveland. O. Lftft I Montgomery. Linn us, lift James Seymour, Richmond, Mo. John M. Gregor, a Sama Fe engineer. Fort Madison, Ift Max Schneider, New York J. F. Capps, baggageman. Chicago Carl Krall Torulund, immigrant, Brooklyn. Donato D'pomazio. immigrant fr .tn Naples
Rikco IMpomazeo. Immigrant froin Naples. Luther Richardson, colored waiter, Chicago. William Harrison, colored porter. Chicago Adrian Peattent. Immigrant frro Worthing. England J. B Whlttemore. Carro'dton. Mo Mrt of the injured were in 'he smoker. The dead and injured were brought to this city with the uninjured passengers in the cars which remained on the track, and the passengers whose destination w as west of Kftnsas City proceeded on their Journey. Most of thepassengers who were going to the far west est aped injury, as few of theru were In the car which were derailed
troubles and agitation in our capitals j Uf,ng Jn tno BOCjai ami governmental and in numerous other places fill our j r,ptn.j, or Qf actions organized by the
heart with excessive pain and sorrow
"The happiness of the Russian sovereign 's indiesolubly bound up with the ha'.piness of our people, and the sorrow of our people la the sorrow of the sovereign. "From the present disorders may arlee great national disruption. They menace the integrity and unity of our empire
The s.ipreme duty Imposed upon us
extreme elements. Its roots are mucn deeper. It took birth in the violation of the balance b twten the moral aspirations and the exterior fornu of Russian FOcUty. "Believing that Russia aspired to laws based on civil liberty, the chief problem of the government consists In making effective, even before, approval by the täte douma all elemeuts of civil HI m ;n the elaboration of normal legislative measures giving equality be
fore the ia to all Baaataaa without
VICTIMS OF SAVAGE ATTACK Hear- Vrimlrat TftWlti I t an.t Ilia Son lunched hy t hi near V bile llui. t 1 1. k
by our foverelgn office requires us to efface ourself and to use all the force
. . . . ...
and rt-ast.n at our commana to nasieu tlu-r, tinn of race or relietor
in necuring the unity and co-ordination J "The government should abstain of the powers of the central govern- i rrom an- interference w.th elections to
mer.t. and to assure the success oi , ,ne douma and kep in view y im-
cere de-ire for the realization of the
seventh birthday anniversary on board court in the case of tl-.e American eltl-
Merchandise to the va uc of mor than $'.' " was Imrxtrted into Beyp last yar. ot which considerably less than Il.0o0.000 wot li w a Imirir-.-l direct from th- Unitl 8'ates It is explained that probably 10 per cent, of Egypt s imports wer if a class that could have b n sup plied from the United Stat. s. the raot aWportaal of them be ing commodities af which we re lare pr tim n Sorely Egypt is a field for latettlgaa' eo-otration on the part of American
manufacturers who are des r eis of ex-
tendina: their tt
Sea captains who have ac'usUr
Men sfti'tntt over th1 ko called "gull
trftani" hare htaa glvtSf 0W1 itatC men's of the erratic rt .. W fttft of th
t ocean r.ver. which have drawn
fir-'. t. ihiu-i ueraiU ftetn wea'.i
bsetve:s snd scientists. Aecordmit I the ia tonnen, he gulf sTeam has ia -id d to flow much narer the Amcri rati Nrh Atlant, c oast The. .fore
thl' H sert"1 to rv 'h- real r.-.i.:.
for 'he muKgy. humid, yet not anninn sean which btts just ended. The U
tn. sts. howecr. deny ha' the wti'Bi"
a dve gall at ream nfli one.
the cruiser West Virginia, at sea on hi way home from hla southern tour. William Travers Jerome was unanl monsly nominated for district attorney
by the repaaUeaa eottat) eoaveattea in
New York city.
Irr- rest has lion revived In the
Bos on suit case murder msttry by the finding of a second suit case con
taininii the arms and bus of I woman
Bai : I lonK to the torso found a few weeks aKo
Fi:e n HeorKo's Island, at the en-
tr.mc- to the harlior of Halifax. Nova
So la, destroyed, all the stor nous a, machine shops and the quarters tccupie.l by the fanillie of the garrison The magazine was save i Kini; (sr.ir of Swün has adOfttJ s bis w title: "King of Sweden and of (loth WandFrank Clyde, vice-presid' nt of the William P. Clyde Steam-hip Co., and a Billionaire tl ibman. was crushed to death by a locomotive at Philadelphia. Tl. I republicans of New York city time concluded to support William Tracers Jerome for re-eleetion to the office af district attorney. Preildent IHibrt. on concluding his Vtfttt to Madrid, proceeded to ulsboa to eall on Kini? Charles The dome of the gnat cathedral in ntasaiiaj. Ijatfaa, aatat in j .2. fatl in. crushing the church into a heap of ruins Aa far aa learned, no one waa Injured.
zen. Albrrs. and ca- fixed his sentence at .12 months' imprisonment. A! ber will appeal to the supreme court of Nicaragua The supreme co-irt of Illinois decide that a municlpal ty can no' lawfully authorize the vacation or obstruction of streets or alleys for the fse or benaflt of private individuals o." rorportions. Tb warden of the federal penitentiary at fatl lav-n worth. Ka-e. has leen dir?cted to deliver Frank C Bipe1 . . I - - I IIPH.Bi.L.. r n V.
i Vk TO tl .ITC IM .I .'.T. -v vembrr jk tnere to tes'lfy as a government witness In the Mat aga.nlt Henry Q Coil. A total of 4.9-'. 2i bctca of cotton (OOaattll two round bales as onet had l.etn ginned of the IMS crop up to
October 18. according to a bulletin lrued by the census bureft'. Oov Pecnypac k' r of Pennsylvania wants the government to make ft thorough Inveftigati. 11 of the affairs of the Enterprise atfltatl bank tf Alle-
pheny.
The manufacturers or rail luvet Mass . have evinc ed a des're to compromise with tho textile optratlves and a strike may yet be averted The strikes On the Rus-ian Mllroads are spread r.g !n all direcions In addition to Mocow ftnd St. Petersburg, Yftrsolftv Nlhnl. Novgorod. Klmtiirak, Sftratoff. Voronex. Kharknff. Simperopol Kkaterinoslav, Kl ff and 3mo eosk
rc affc ted
measures for pacification in ft'.l circles
Of public health, which re essenti! to the Wail being of our people. "We, therefore, direct our govern
ment to carry ou: our inflexible will in th following manner: "First -To extend to the population the immutable foundations of civic liberty, based on the real Inviolability of person, freedom of conscience, speech, union and association. 'Second Wl. hi at suspending the ftlready ordered elections to the state douma, to Invite the pirtit Ipation In the douma, so far as the limited time before the convocation of the douma will permit, those cias-es of the population cow comple'ely deprived of electoral rights, leav'ng the ultimate development of the principle of electorlal right
In general to th- newly-established legislative order of things. "Third Ta establish as an urn hange-
ab'.e rule thr.t no law shall be enforceable wi'hc.ut, the approval of the slate doumft. ftnd that It shall be possible for the elected cif the people to exercise real participation In the supervision of the legality of the acta of the authorises agaotataf by us. "We, appeal to 11 faithful sons of Russia to remember their duty towards the fatherland to aid In terminating these unprecedented troubles and to apply their forcaaa, In co-operation with us to the restoration of calm and peace upon our natal soil. "Given at Peterhof. OetabCT 30, in the eleventh year of our reign Signed NICHOLAS"
Hi 1 11 1 1: is sol ROCOi 11 ...ir t niieii I ssa t gvaalsa t t ti fiat 1 1 u t laj aa I t.o. ern meut. St. Petersburg. Oct. 31 A simple p.Tusal of the manifesto shows howcomplete Is me emperor's abdication of Ms gaaxiatta power. The very style of the document Is dear and direct and d void if the verbose, vague and aaaaJaaatk fttiraseology which hereto-
i.kae of Dec ember lt"'l It must maintain the pres'iire o- Ike I ataaa and have confldenr in Its lab'sr., and in no way raalftt its decision so long as they re not Inconsistent with Russia' h.storlc greatness. "It is necessary to re-pect the ideals of the grat majority of society, and not the echoe of noisy groups and
factions, too often uns able "It Is especially Important to sect re the reform of the council of the eu-
plre on an electoral principle "I believe that in the exercise of Uie executive power the following prin:lpies should he embodied: First Straightforwardness and s'tcerlty in the confirmation of t ivfl lib rty and in providing guarantees for Ms maintenance "Second A tendency In the dire :i)n of ihe abolition of exclusive laws "Third The co-operation of the -tlvlty of all organisations of govcil ment. "Fourth Avoidance of repreealfft measures In re-pect of pr. ': .r which do not openly menace society or the state.
"Fifth Resistance to acts whi'n manifestly threaten society or the sta't, such resistance being ba-ed upen lf.w and moral unity. "Conficlence must le plact cl in the n-
Htleal tact of Russian society. It Is impossible that soc iety should des rea condition of nnftrchy which would threattn. in addition to all the horrors of civil strife, the dismemberni' t.t of the empir.' "'
London. Oct 31. A dispatch to the Evening Standard from Shanchai M that Rear-Admiral Train comman 1 I in-chief of the American Asa' C squftdron, ftnd hla son. Lieut. Train, have been victims of a tavag attack by Chinese outside of Nankin. The Amerb an offic ers were ph- aantshootlng when the admiral accidentally .hot a Chinese woman, slightly Injuring he-r Hundred of villas- r I thereupon surrounded the officers te ok away their gun, knocked the admiral down In the mud am' held Lieut. Train as a hostage. Forty American marines, laml-d as . . 1 I mm Mm
a rescue party, were aim. he 1 uj n mob of Chinamen, who tried to pttf b fork the? ofaoffl The marine- w.r obliged to fire twice. The Chinese officials refused to restore the offlu fa' guns, and wipport the villagers Nankin has been active In the- movement for bocotiing American faoda, and Is the center of tivlty on the part of the Japanese students. OWESMORETHAN IT EVER HAD The r.nternrlae Nallemal nnnh
rriL nt V l it he n j , Pn., he W rat ten llee.ir.l Pittsburg. Pa . Oct. 31 - The Post sas "If every penny of the ISf per cent assessment gainst the stock of the Enterprise national bank Is paid, the depositors will not get more than p. cert- on the $1 That j the opiti OB ef the government officials at Washington, to whom the corps of federal xperts at work hereon the bank's condition have reported. "Startling facts as to the extent of the fail ire have developed The deparement offic ials brand it a 'the w. wreck on record ' Not only does it ap pear that every asset of the institution was borrowed or stolen, hal tl ro-igh the n hypothecation of notes sr.d securities the bank owes tn excess of eve i thing It ever had "
MOUNT VESUVIUS CRACKED c.rent I laaure Mnle In the I me. Ihrnunh Whleli I ui-n mlea-e nl I a . .1 la I'ourlna-
Mnrmiin to eitle In Meileo. Mexico. Oct. 31 Mormon agfts from Utah have purchased OO.ooo , n of land for colonization purposea in t ie siate of Caxaca. Oenth of J.ielue sum ford. Calesburg, 111 . Oct. 31. Judge P M. Sanfctrd. of Knoxvllle, ex-membe r l the Illinois house and senate. Is eleact.
aaaftOe athlete Ilend. Mon'real. 'n . Oc t. 31 U M Resmnrtrau. the famous thie'e of the Montreal police force, d;f,i h.re of typhoid fever. 1 e smarteau. who was only 2 years old. wan the Olympian championship at St Louis for throwing the Dt'.-pound weight l.leut. II ran ill m - .leide. Buffalo. N Y.Oct 31 Ptrat Uaa) George V . Brandle. tif the First I nited States Infantry, stationed at Fort Porter commit'ed suicide In his room by abootlng. Ill health was the cause
Voted I r Seventeen Pr eal.t . n I a. Evnnsvllle. Ind.. Oct. 31. Ce-.rge S
YanNada. said to he the aidatt repuhlitan of I'lke county, has Jut asja hrated his eighty-seventh birthday snnlversary. He has voted for 17 presidential candidates in his day. His first vo'e wa ca-; f..r W'.i .a-e 1! rry Harrison In IMA l.ah t nptnln Shoota Ilia VV I Im. Chicago. O t 31 latliea p Cum. mings. c.tptaio cf the atsaaahaf Itaaff owles. shot and praawMy fatally wounded hla wife in a j'-alous quarrel.
Naples. Oct 31. -It Is re.-rted from the obseivftiory of Mount Vesuvius that cen,taut exploslc have shattered ihe cone of the summit The explosions occur every half minute, and are Increasing In volume. A constant stream of Incandescer t lava Is pouring through f lateral flv sure In the tone. Sapa Wlfe'e Hair la ViliiaMe. lola. Kns, Oet, 31 - Mar ? 'blard's husband ha-c brought suit of repl-vin Pftinst Levi Harrington to secuta a lock of Mrs Godtlard'a ha r which, It Is alleged. Mr Harrington seeun4 by sualth. C.oeldard also asked that he be awarded damftges a the rate of $2 jer hair
ftU.iMio.tMM Ifrldae to nno atvtah petroit. Mich . Ott. 31 - The Detroit. Toledo ft Ironton rftilroftd w ill hui'd a j bridge across the Ohio river at sahland. Ky. The contract l as been le: to the American Bridge CO,
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