Ligonier Banner., Volume 37, Number 23, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 September 1902 — Page 2
Ehc( T iaant >0 u ) Ligonicr Bauner 'IGONIER., - - JNDIANA fi?&:&:%géfie%%}%‘e’;@fifiléfifié = : =1502 SEPTEMBER. 1902 3 Ff— 9% & SN xcnjmng m.jnmmi FRI. ' SAL. % 5 ———._—_’——‘ e e e $..11}12 2 &4 5 63 e i : > = 7| 8/ 9101112/13% e | 3 : | = b $14(15/1617|1819 20§§ e 1 & £ 2122|2324|25|26|27 fé §;§j2829§30’....’ l| § ] ;’3_ - e { evne ] samb e l seee | seee 1...- & Lord Avesbury, better known as Sir John Lubbock, the scientnst, has been teaching his dog toread. He hasprorressed so far that “Van” finds a card with “out” printed on it when he wishes to go for a walk, and picks out oither words in the same fashion.
Dr. Andrews advises Chicago to put 21l its bed women on an island in the lzke and quarantine them there. A woman writes to suggest that all the bad mea be put on an island also, while 8z inland town wants the doctor to adviss what to do where there &re no islands.
Sar Francisco appears tohave a master yarn spinner empioyed on one ¥ its ‘mewspapers. The story that tbe American Bankers’ association is 1o pay the notorious forger, Charles Eecker. who has just been released from prison, a salary of $5OO a month “Just 1o be good” is a sample of what e czn do. - :
The edelweiss flower is getting sczrce in the Alpsand is now not found zt & Jower altitude than 3.000 feet and wrourists have been forbidden to pick i 1 2t 21l in Savoy. But men will climb Ihe 3.000 feet at risk of life and limb =nd break the law to get it, who would Tot go ont and huska bushel of cornto save a man’s life. :
In the diplomatic coiony at WashIngton the coming winter a more than usually American atmosphere will prewzil. as in addition to the wife of the Tew British ambassadar, who was Miss WWilson, of New York, the announceswent has just been made that the wife ©f M. Jusserand was also born in America. She wasformerly Miss Rich&TCh. i
- Wjth the passing of Gen. Franz Sigel, TTe {of the most conspicuous of Ger-man-Americans, becomes a name in ouvr history. One of that splendid generztion of patriots which it was Germmzly s fortune to lose and America’s To gain through the failure of the insurrection of 1848, he won new lauTels on our battlefields and refought mnder our flag the battles of free@om.
The Alabama committee which is enfzged in a erusade against child labor states that there are 22,000 children employed in the cotton mills. All of these children are under 14 years of zre, while the larger part of them are under 12 years. They work in both <ay and night shifts, the wages varying Irom 9 to 29 cents a day. Isanything more needed than these bare figTres tostir the conseience of the Amerdcan people? ‘
In a contemporaneous book review the designation “fanatic” is systemmatically applied to people who do Tot use aleoholic stimulants and who do ndt think such stimulants good Jor people in general. The inferemce is that in order to escape The Imputation of fanaticism one mmust either drink whtisky himself or encourage other people to drink it. Xot everyvone, however, may agree with the reviewer.
. A woman in London slipped a pedozoeter into her husband’s pocket and found that he walked 20 miles around = billiard table that night. The man retaliated by declaring that was nothing compared to the distance she trav€ied 2t a dance, and he produced the figures of a medical journal which declares that on the basis that the waltz zverages 100 yards, the quadrille 1,500 Fards, the mazourka 900 yards and polka 800 yards, a ball programme is the eguivalent of no fewer than 30 ziies on the level ground.
James A. Bouty, an American traveler n Brazil, has discovered a tree growing in profusion in that country the juice of which produces a gum that promises to rival rubber. At Jeast, that is the report, but it seems rzther strange that the discovery =zs nol made long ago. With the increased uses for rubber the world Las been industriously seeking some substitute, and if it is really true %hzt one has at last been found the sncidentis of the greatest importance in the world’s commercial and industrial nislory. - .
Lezboring men are interested in Jus4ice Holmes, dppoint. ; to the supreme ench. In one of his decisions while o 1 the Massachusetts bench he said: =lf working men may combine for getting the most they can for their labor, just zs capital may combine with a Siew of getting the greatest possible zeturn, it must be true that when comBived they bave the same liberty that wcombined capital has to support their Snterests by arguments, persuasions znd the bestowal or refusal of those sd@vantages which they lawfully con4rol, so long as they dono violence.”
The drought from which Australia 3== been sauffering so severely, notwithstanding that it is now the winter ‘geascon in that continent, has caused enormous losses to sheep and cattle ‘gwpers. But the most telling loss falls wpon the whole commonwealth, as this Bed mews serves to discourage immigration and keep out foreign capital, wwithout which Australia never ecan s:tain the greatness that her sons af#Fect to see for her in the near future. Xo doubt it is a wonderful country, Bus misfortuanes come to it far too gften tomeke it thoroughly attractive. e s s L e :
The Important Happenings of a Week Briefly Told. IN ALL PARTS OF THE UNION All the Latest News of Interest from Washington, From the East, the West and the South. e THE LATEST FOREIGN DISPATCHES FROM WASHINGTON., The president has appointed Commander Wainwright to command the cruiser Newark and will be succeeded as superintendent of the Annapolis academy by Capt. W. H. Bronson. In the past year the value of the gold output in the United States was §78.066.700 and silver $33,128,400. The auditor of the interior department in his report shows the amount paid in pensions for the year ended June 30 last was $137,400.741.
Lieut. Gen. Miles says his trip to Manila is merely for a visit to the army. He will sail September 16. It is held by Acting Postmaster General Wynne that postal employes may act as delegates to political conventions but must not serve as chairman of a state or county committee. ; Report of the interstate commission for the year ended June 30 shows total receipts from the operation of all railroads to be $1,588,526,037.
THE EAST.
Charged with embezzling $20,500 H. H. Brinker, formerly receiving teller of the German national bank of Pittsburg, Pa., is in jail. Miners took possession of the Panther Creek field near Shenandoah, Pa., and soldiers were hurried to the scene of disturbance. ¢
In his report oxn his part in the naval war game Rear Admiral Higginson urged the need of wireless telegraphy. The president made tjvo notable speeches in Maine, the principal one at Bangor. His principal topic was the duties of citizenship. - . Before =ailing for Europe Attorney General Knox said the people could abolish trusts if they so desire. : In a jealous rage Christian Ganz killed Mrs. Lizzie Hall and Arthur W. Campbell in New York and then committed suicide. President Rose’s address on trusts was the feature of the opening session of the American Bar association at Saratoga, N. Y. Strike of the gold beaters of the United States which began about five weeks ago has been declared off. Two young men, E. R. Parson and James Wallace, reached New York after paddling in a 13-foot canoe from Chicago. They started July 22. . At Tamaqua, Pa., striking miners and troops had a clash, and as a result five prisoners were in the guardhouse at the Twelfth regiment camp. In response to a request Gov. White, of West Virginia, ordered troops to the New river coal field, where trouble was imminent. -
WEST AND SOUTH.
The national fraternal congress, embracing 56 societies and 4,000,000 members. met in Denver.
From a kick by a horse Edward K. Pitman, one of the best-known democratic politicians in southern lowa, died at Mount Ayr. L
The reports of bankers throughout the west and northwest show that crop and business conditions are at highwater mark. L
The president and Senators Beveridge and Dolliver will address the convention of National Republican Clubs in Chicago October 1,2, 3. . In Chicago Mrs. John McCurdy, bride of a few months, fearing that she was going insane, killed herself by tying her head over an open gas jet.
In a collision between a steamer and a row boat five employes of the Battle Creek (Mich.) sanitarium were drowned in Lake Goguac. President Ashley in his address opening the convention of the League of American Municipalities at Grand Rapids, Mich., advocated home rule for cities with the right to own and control public utilities.
J. W. Woodworth, J. R. Hunter, H. P. Kauffer and S. N. Bickerstaff, of Kalamazoo, implicated in a scheme to defraud the state of Michigan in military supply contracts, pleaded guilty and were fined $2,000 each. In the Thirteenth Illinois district the democrats have nominated Lewis Dickes for congress. : ‘California republicans have nominated George C. Pardee, of Oakland, for governor. - Fred B. Wood, of Tecumseh, has been nominated for congress by the democrats of the Second district of Michigan. .
In a wreck on the Iron Mountain road near Illinois Statiom, I. T, six negro laborers were killed. _ The relatives of the late Mrs. Charles L. Fair, of San Francisco, will receive $500,000 and renounce all claim to the estate of the millionaire and his wife.
Maj. Gen. Young, Adjt. Gen. Corbin and Maj. Gen. Wood are in Berlin as guests of the emperor to witness the army review.
Near Jackson, Miss., Fireman Brunston was killed, Engineer John Jones fatally injured and three mail clerks painfully bruised in a train wreck.
United States Senator Rawlins, of Utah, reports that 6,000 Indians on the Navajo reservation, in the southern part of his state, are starving.
- Much needed and abundant rains—the first for thrée years—have saved the southern end of Lower California from becoming a barren waste. The president will address the convention of the National League of Re-, publican Clubs in Chicago October 1, 2 3. : : " A man named Ernest Schlaewin, who would have been 100 years old on November 28 next, died at the home of his daughter in Milwaukee, Wis, Two additional reserves in Montana, containing thousands of acres of land, have been c¢reated by the president, Fires in the forests of Houghton county, Mish., have devastated hundreds of acres of farm and timber lands.
Death claimed C. Scott Delay, managing editor of the Shreveport (La.) Times. :
At Little Rock, Ark.,, Mrs. Reese Wagoner killed her two children and herself. i
Dan Carey, engineer, and Fireman Lee, of Chicago were killed in a traig wreck on the Chicago & Eastern Illnois road, 30 miles north of Terre Haute, Ind.
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
A stronghold in Hayti, near Porvt au Prince which was in the hands of the rebels was recaptured by goverament troops after a hard fight. : English troops started for the wes?ern border of the Transvaal, where a rising of Kaffirs is said to be serious. . In a political riot at Humacao, Por{o Rico, three persons were killed and three mortally wounded.
In the island of Mindanao, in tb® Philippines, 400 earthquakes have occurred since August 21, and 20 person+s have been killed.
In a report to the state department Consul Geners# Mason at Berlin sail the iron, steel and coal industries cf Germany had combined to oppose the rest of the world.
Recently in the Straits of Malacca the Dutch mail steamer Prinz Alexarder and the British steamer Ban Hin Guin collided and 21 persons wer: drowned. :
Indications are 3trong that Mort Pelee is violently erupting again oh the island of Martinique. Spread of cholera is reaching alarming proportions on the other side ef the Pacific, the outbreak extendiry from the island of Java to Japan. Efforts made by Great Britain ard America to make foreign powers r®ceive the Chinese indemnity on a slver basis have proved a failure.
LATER NEWS,
Violent storms in France caused great damage to vineyards. Budswere killed by hail. ' Reese C. De Graffenreid, representative in congress from Texas, died suddenly of apoplexy at the Riggs house, Washington. -At Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., John Boucher, the famous Indian pilot of St. Mary’s Falls, died Thursday night, aged 80 years. He had taken thousands of persons over the rapids in his canoe without accident.
Brig. Gen. Gobin, in command of the troops now in the coal fields, has issued an order that the soldiers shall shoot any person detected in throwing stones or other missiles, and that if any mob resists the authority of the troops that they shall freely use their bayonets and butts. In an encounter between troops and strikersat Lansford, Pa., Friday morning Capt. W. H. Heim, of company K, Twelfth regiment, was slightly injured. A half-dozen strikers were bayoneted by the soldiers as a result of the fracas. .
The Public Alliance, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., which has been endeavoring to bring about a settlement of the coal strike in the interests of the business men of the anthracite region, has sent an appeal to President Roosevelt urging him to use his influence to end the strike. The final sessions of the convention of Leagues of American Municipalities were held in Grand Rapids, Mich. The next session will be held in Baltimore. Mayor Smyth, of Charleston, S. C., was elected president. : Twenty buildings were burned at Livingston, Tex. Loss, $135.000. The remains of the late Gov. Hoadley were buried in Spring Grove cemetery, Cincinnati, O. - Failures for the week numbered 173 in the United States, against 202 last year, and 14 in Canada, against 21 a year ago.
The National Farmers’ congress will be held in Macon. Ga.. October 7 to 11.
Francis Rawle, of Philadelphia, was elected president of the American Bar association. .
A number of Amish farmers have bought 1.000 acres of land near Meyer, Ta.. 20 miles south of the line in Illinois on the Mississippi river, and have established a colony. .
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Murphy, aged 75 and 74 respectively, were asphyxiated by gas in Minneapolis, Minn. .
MINOR NEWS ITEMS.
A Cuban senator proposes the removal of all United States flags in the island.
The Pressed Steel Car company of New York has orders for over $20,000,000 worth of new cars. ,
Luther R. Marsh, once Daniel Webster’s law partner, died at Middletown, N. Y., aged 89 years. John W. Gates predicts prosperity such as the world has newer seen for both laborer and capitalist. The German consular system is being rapidly extended both in number of consuls and in efficiency of agents. The powers have surrendered to the Chinese control of the city of Tientsin, captured in the Boxer war two years ago.
Two of the old war governors are still alive, ex-Gov. Ramsey, of Minnesota, and ex-Gov. Holbrook, of Vermont. ]
Surveysarebeing made for determining accurately how far below the surface in the western country water can be found.
A mortgage for $15,000,000, covering the property of the United States Shipbuilding company, has been filed in New Jersey. . Rear Admiral Taylor reported that unless pay of certain classes of warrant officers in the navy is increased the service will suffer. Mr. Palmer, who is fifer of the drum corps of Joplin, Mo., plays on a fife which was used by his grandfather throughout the war of 1812. The greater part of Andrew Carnegie’s $10,000,000 university endowment will be used to prosecute research into the origin of life. Three natives of Norway have been elected governors of South Dakota, Charles N. Herreld, the present executive, being the third of his line. W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., at one time a most enthusiastic automobilist, has given up the sport, and New York and Newport leaders are following.
The board to select the site for the naval training station on the lakes has completed its work, and is expected to recommend a location near Chicago.
The immigration bureau is to keeg records of arrivals and other data fol the purpose of assisting courtsin the work of naturalization of foreigmers and to prevent possible frauds.
AN APPEAL IS MADE.
President Urged to Use His Influence to End Strike. :
His Intercession Is Sought by an Association of Business Menw— Gen., Tobin Orders Sol- - diers to Shoot.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Aug. 30.—The Public Alliance, of this city, which has been endeavoring to bring about a settlement of the coal strike in the interests of the business men of the anthracite region, has sent an appeal to President ‘Roosevelt, which says in part: “We had hoped for much upon J. P. Morgan’s return. But now, after a struggle of four months’ duration, a period of suffering and progressive business paralysis, when it seemed to us that the time was propitious for a settlement of some kind, if not as a matter of concession to public opinion, yet as a plain business prop osition, Mr. Morgan has met with his henchmen and the edict has gone forth: ‘There will be no settlement; no arbitration, no conciliation, no mediation, no concessions. The fight must go on.” Mr. Morgan has placed a ban upon us which means universal ruin, destitution, riot and bloodshed.
“Representing the interests and sentiment of nine-tenths of our people, we appeal to you to use your in: fluence to stay the juggernaut which crushes us. Encouraged by your recent utterances, relying upon your judgment and patriotism, confident of your moral courage, we appeal from the king of trusts to the presi dent of the people.”
Soldiers Ordered to Shoot.
Philadelphia, Aug. 30.—Having exhausted every othér means for preserving peace and in protecting the nonunion men from violence on their way to and from the mines, Brig. Gen. Gobin, in command of the troops now in the coal fields, has issuedd am order that the soldiers shall shoot any person detected in throwing stones or other missiles, and that if any mob resists the authority of the troops that they shall freely use their bayonets and butts. The Panther Creek valley has been in almost continual turmoil this week and the troops stationed there have had a difficult time in protecting the lives of workmen. The situation in that valley has, however, improved considerably, and it it hoped by the military authorities that the lawlessness and abusive language directed toward the soldiers will now cease. The other sections of the coal regions are comparatively quiet. The general strike situation remains unchanged. There is some coal being shipped, but the quantity is so small compared with the normal shipment that it has little: or no effect on the market. The fuel now coming to market is principally washery and loose coal. i Strikers and Troops Clash, i
Tamaqua, Pa., Aug. 30.—1 n an encounter between troops and strikers at Lansford Friday morning Capt. W. H. Heim, of company K, Twelfth regiment, was slightly injured. A half dozen strikers were bayoneted by the soldiers as a result of the fracas. Maj. Gearhart, in command of the troops here, says that he will appeal to the military authorities to put the town of Lansford under martial law.
A Quiet Day.
Charleston, W. Va., Aug. 30. — The troops in the New River gorge had a quiet day Friday, though a busy one, and there is nothing apparent to the naked eye that would lead the observers to think that any necessity for military intervention existed there. Gov. White, when seen, said he had received nothing from .Thurmond that was not of an entirely satisfactory character, and he expressed the hope that any trouble that might have threatened has been avoided by the presence of the troops. The number of troops, rank and file, is about 300.
VICTIM OF APOPLEXY.
Sudden Death at Washington of Congressman Graffenreid, " of Texas,
Washingon, Aug. 30.—Rpresentative Reese C. DeGraffenreid, of Texas, died of apoplexy at the Riggs house in this city shortly before 11 o’clock Friday night. ‘ Mr. De Graffenreid had been suffering with a bilious attack Friday and it became worse in the evening. During a severe vomiting spell a blood vessel burst in his brain and he sank back on his bed. Death ensued instantly. Only a newspaper correspondent, who was an intimate associate, and a hotel bellboy who had been called to his assistance, were with him at the time. He leaves a wife, who is now at their home in Longview, Tex., to whom a telegraphic notification was sent. No plans have yet been made for the funeral. -
Mr. De Graffenried came from Longview, Tex., and represented the Third district of Texas in the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth congresses and in the present Fifty-seventh congresses. He was a lawyer and a democrat. He was born in Franklin, Tenn., in 1859.
Big Mortgage Filed, “New York, Aug. 30.—A mortgage for $10,000,000,° made by the Bethle: hem Steel company, of Pennsylvania. was filed with the county register ot Hudson county, N. J., Friday. It is in favor of the Colonial Trust company, of New York, and is to secure an issue of $10,000,000 of 20-year 3% per cent gold bonds.
Troops to Be Withdrawn,
Tientsin, Aug. 30.—Aecording to the military commanders all the troops with the exception of the legation guards will be withdrawn from China next spring. ; ,
One Man Killed
Steubenville, 0., Aug. 30.—A 50-foot scaffold at the Lia Belle iron works, on which six men were working on new stacks, gave way and all were hurled to the ground. William B. Walker, of Steubenville, was instantly killed; George Miller, of Youngstown, received fat«i injuries. The other four were badly injured.
Famous Mare Sold.
New York, Aug. 30.—“ Lucky” Baldwin, the California horseman, has sold tolsaacLabold,the one-time great race mare Los Angeles for $lO,OOO. She will be used for hreeding.
MICHIGAN MOB SLAYS.
Would-Be Eloper Printer Run Down and Killed by Frenzied Crowd at Monroe. .
Monroe, Mich., Aug. 30.—Joseph La Barge was killed here Friday by a ‘mob that chased him through the streets and finally rounded him up in a cornfield, where he was given the wounds that caused his death. La Barge was running away from a policeman and some one raised the ery of ‘“assaulter,” and in a moment a crowd of men were in frenzied pursuit of the supposed criminal. : . La Barge, who was 24 years old, was a printer, living at 319 Cherry street, Toledo, and was employed by Joseph Willetts. He came to this city Friday morning to see Mrs. Walter Lemerand, whom he had known for five yearsand who lived in Toledo until last spring. After spending a couple of hours at the home of the woman the pair reached an agreement whereby they would elope to Toledo. Just before 12 o’clock Lemerand came home and immediately got into an altercation with his wife's admirer. The woman interfered, and La Barge ran out of the house and got away. Shortly afterward the husband went in search of an officer. At the corner where the man and woman were to meet he ran across Officer Beaudrie and La Barge. To the policeman he said: *“I found that man with my wife a few minutes ago, and I want you to arrest him.” The officer started for La Barge, but the latter ran. Deaudrie fired two shots over the fellow’s head, but he kept on running. The chase continued’ through back lots and streets, and in a few minutes.a crowd had joined in the chase of the supposed assaulter. The man was chased south of the city through vineyards and fields. He turned north through the cemetery, and was finally cornered by two men who had revolvers. La Barge flashed a razor, and instead of heeding an order to drop it made another dash for liberty. Both men fired a number of shots at him, but he kept on running until he dropped on the front porch of Mrs. La Salle’s house. La Barge had been shot in the left side near the heart and died just after reaching the office of Dr. Dowe.
AGREE ON A SETTLEMENT.
Terms Reported Made Between Helrs of Mr. and Mrs, Fair—Denial by Interested Party,
San Francisco, Aug. 30.—8 y the terms of the agreement made between the heirs of the late Mrs. Charles L. Fair and Mrs. Herman Oelrichs and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, JT.; the former are given more than $l,. 000,000. Of this sum $300,000 in gold coin has been paid by Herman Oelrichs, on behalf of his wife and sis-ter-in-law, to Mrs. Nelson. The money was deposited in the First national bank, where it now stands in the name of Mrs. Nelson.: Within a month the balance will be handed over to the heirs of Mrs. Fair, who will have in their own right more than a million dollars. This is the settlement made by the Fairs, as stated by Charles J. Smith and Abraham Nelson, brothers of Mrs. Charles L. Fair.
New York, Aug. 30.—William B. Smith, a brother of Mrs. Charles L. Fair, who was to have left Plainfield, N. J., for California last week, but delayed his departure, is quoted as having said that any settlement of the case which may have been reached at San Francisco has been without his authority as an interested party. :
TRADEE RVIEW,
How the Business Situation Appears to Leading Commercial Agencies,
New York, Aug. 30.—R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Review of Trade says: ‘‘Gradual resumption of anthracite coal mining is encouraging, although the output is not yet sufficient to have any commercial value. Business conditions are unsatisfactory at the strike center, but reports from all other sectionsindicate unusually prompt revival after the summer vacation season, with exceptionally large operations among dealers in the agricultural regions. Notwithstanding some bad weather, large crops are now practically assured, although the most sanguine results may not be attained. Manufacturing plants are now fully occupied as a rule, the least gratifying reports coming from furnaces that cannot seecure coke owing to railwdy blockades. The transportation problem is becoming serious, as the factorof crop moving is about to be added, and, moreover, much coal must be moved by rail that usually goes to consumers by lake and canal. Failures for the week numbered 173 in the United States, against 202 last year, and 14 in Canada, against 21 a year ago.” .
Jumped from a Train.
Hutchinson, Kan., Aug. 30.—Harold Pierce, arrested at Sylvester for forgery, leaped from a train near here wkile it was running at the rate of 40 n.iles an hour and escaped. He was being brought to Hutchinson for trial. ‘
Prominent Ohioan Dead,
Mount Vernon, 0., Aug. 30.—C01. William C. Cooper, for many years prominent in Ohio politics, dled Friday night, aged 71 years. Prior to 1884 he served as a member of the republican national committee, and from 1884 to 1890, inclusive, represented this district in’ congress.
Score of Buildings Burned.
Livingston, Tex., Afig. 30.—Fire of incendiary origin Friday destroyed 20 business houses, causing a loss of $135,000, with insurance of 30 per cent. Gerlach & Bro. are the heaviest losers, their losses being $40,000.
Deadlock Broken,
Fond du Lac, Wis., Aug. 30.—C. H. Weisse, of Sheboygan Falls, was nominated for congress Friday by the democrats of the Sixth district. The nomination was made on the twentysixth ballot, breaking a deadlock that had lasted three days.
Elect Officers,
Saratoga, N. Y., Aug. 30.—The American Bar association elected the following officers Friday: President, Francis Rawle, Philadelphia; secretary, John Hinkley, Baltimore; treasurer, Frederick E. Wadhams, New York. fiEa
KING VISITS EMPEROR.
Victor Emmanuel of Italy Is Cordial1y Welcomed on His Entry to Berlin.
Berlin, Aug. 29.—The entry of King Victor Emmanuel into the city Thursday and his drive through the Unter den Linden was advanced purposely half an hour ahead of the published time as a precaution against possible disorder. Consequently the great erowds which were packed into place an hour before by the police at the Brandenburg gate were astonished by the arrival at a brisk trot of a gorgeous cavalcade, surrounding a sixhorse carriage in which sat Emperor William, a small man in dark uniform, pulling at a blond mustache. The carriage stopped and the crowds ceased cheering in order to see what would happen. The chief burgomaster, Herr Kirschner, advanced and read an address of welcome from a parchment scroll. Behind the burgomaster stood bareheaded a hundred representatives of the city in evening dress. ThereadIng was over in less than a minute. The Italian king then returned to- the German emperor and asked him if he should reply. The emperor shook his head negatively and the king thereupon shook hands with Herr Kirschner and thanked him.
A deputation of young ladies &d--vanced on the other side of the carriage and gave the Italianking a bunch of roses. . He smiled, bowed, buried his face in-the blossoms, handed the bouquet to a lackey and the cavalcade and carriage swept through the gate and down Unter den Linden to the castle, three quarters of a mile away. On one side of the thoroughfare cuirassiers, dragoons and lancers lined up two deep, made a glittering barrier of color, while on the other side the people’s view was unmolested except by extraordinary numbers of police standing with their faces towards the spectators. The cheers of the people were spontaneous and really cordial. They seemed so to Gens. Corbin and Young and their party, who had a row of good windows. The American officers admired the splendidly horsed cavalry more than anything else. The show was over in a -few seconds. Shouting and the successive crashings of bands placed at intervals between the squadrons of cavalry marked the progress of the king and the emperor down the avenue. Their majesties later drove to the Italian embassy for breakfast, and then again to the castle in order to receive the diplomatic corps. :
SENT TO THE PHILIPPINES.
The Pope Names Mgr, Guidi as Apoxtoile Delegate to the Islands,
Rome, Aug. 29.—Mgr. Guidi has been appointed apostolic delegate in the Philippines. . : Mgr. Guidi is expected to hasten his departure for Manila in consequence of information received at the
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vatican of the organization of a schismatic Catholic church in the Philippines. The vatican professes not to attach much importance to the movement, and declares it “cannot develop under the leadership of persons whose sole reason for organizing is becauses they are excommunicated from the Catholic church.”
Honor to Dead Heroes,
Helena,\Mont., Aug. 29.—After lying in un%‘arked graves for 25 years, the bones of 21 soldiers who fell in the last battle with the Nez Perces Indians, near the Bearpaw mountains, are to have reared above them a suitable monument, and the spot will become a national park. Gen. Miles communded the soldiers, and upon his request the interior department has withdrawn the land about the spot, from entry. The next congress will be asked to create Bearpaw a national park and erect a monument.
Engineer and Fireman Killed.
Terre Haute, Ind., Aug. 29. — The north-bound passenger train on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois railway was wrecked at Cayuga, Ind., 38 miles north ot here, about 12:30 o’clock Thursday. Engineer Dad Carey and Fireman® Lee, of Chicago, were instantly killed. The passengers escaped with a severe shaking up.
Pioneers Drowned,
Galesburg, 111., Aug. 29. — Oliver Hunt ard S. C. Wood, two pioneer resjdents of Galesburg, were drowned Thursday evening in a shallow creek near nere. Their horses became frightened and backed off a high bridge. They were pinioned under the buggy in one foot of water.
Seized with Cramps,
Dover, England, Aug. 29.—Frank Holmes, of-Birmingham, who started from Dover at five o’clock in an effort to swim the English channel, was seized with the cramps and abandoned the attempt when six miles out.
Urges Issue of Cnrregey.
Washington, Aug. 29. — Secretary Shaw invites bankers to deposit governmeat bonds as security for an issue of currency needed to relieve the threatened stringency in the money marka%, due to the demand for cash to move crops. ,
gfiipeets Arrested,
Spokane, Wash., Aug. 29. — Three men, suspected of being members of the band of robbers that held up the Northern Pacific passenger train near Sand Point Sunday night, are in jail here. They deny all connection with the robbery.
A DAY IN THE FOREST.
President Goes Hunting Near Newport, N. H.— He Kills a Boar,
Newport, N. H., Aug. 30.—President Roosevelt was on Friday entertained in a manner to hisdiking. Instead of making numerous addresses, meeting committees and indulging in handshaking. he plunged into the forest of the Corbin preserve in the Croyden mountain region and hunted big game, and just before dark succeeded in shooting a boar.. In a few remarks preliminary to his talk here, he had disclaimed any intention to go hunting, but Senator Proctor, who, like the president, is a good shot, induced him to alter his determination.
The president arrived shortly after ten o’clock Friday forenoon, and after being driven through the principal streets, delivered a short address in the public square. The town had an air of expectancy, since the president’s coming had been looked upon as the most notable event in its history.. No sooner had he.concluded his address. than rain began falling, and the president and -those of his party got a thorough drenching. The president refused all offers of umbrelas. saying that his mackintosh would be sufficient to protect him. , ? The drrangements included a visit to the Corbin mansion, where Mrs. Corbin, widow of Austin Corbin, received the president. After a short stay the long procession of carriages moved over to the home of George S. Edgill, who, with Mrs, Edygill, entertained the party at luncheon. The president was given an hour’s start ahead of his party, in order that he might visit the ¢clubhouse and don a hunting ccstume. Several times the party caught up with him. and finally he and Senator Proctor entered the woods and became lost to view. Darkness was coming on when the party returned here. and <oon after theirarrival Secretary Cortelyou telephoned in that the president had shot a boar. Upon their return from the woods they spent the night at the clubhouse, and it is not improbable that the president will again try for large .game early this morning.
ENGLAND’S LAST MOVE.
Is Said to Have Purchased Delagos Bay Among Other Portuguese Possessions,
London, Aug. 30.—1 t is asserted that the purchase of Portuguese possessions in East Africa, in¢luding Delagoa Bay, will be announced when parliament meets and that it will be followed by German acquisition of a portion of them, in accordance with the secret convention with Great Britain. There is no direct confirmation of this story from authentic source, but there is circumstantial evidence that leads close observers to credit the Tumor. Lord Milner’s recent visit to Lourenzo Marquez has never been satisfactorily explained, nor have the proposed annexations of Transvaal territory to Natal any significance unless the intervening district "adjacent to the Portuguese frontier can also be added. Shrewd men not often deceived on South African questions are predicting the speedy purchase of Portuguese territory, the extension of Natal northward and material compensation to Germany for the neutrality maintained during the Boer campaign. The war was rendered difficuit for th= DBritish at the outset by the neutral base of supplies which the Boers had secured through the complicity of Portuguese officials, and the preparations for the campaign were greatly facilitated by the Netherlands railway leading to the coast.
It is assumed by well informed men that Great Britain will purchase this Portuguese territory in order to have an adequate safeguard against the secret purchases of arms by disaffected Dutch.
FINAL SESSIONS HELD.
Convention of League of American Municipalities at Grand Rapids - Comes to a Close,
Grand Rapids, Mich., Aug. 30.—The final sessions of the convention of Leagues of Arjerican -Municipalities Friday were the busiest. Important papers and discussions, elections and incidental business took up the time of the delegates. ' The conventi(mdosed Friday afternoon. Next year’s convention will be held at Baltimore. Officers were elected as follows: President, Mayor J. Adger Smythe, Charleston, S. C.; first vice president, Hon. M. M. Stevens, East St. Louis, Ill.; second vice president, Mayor Richard J. Barr, Joliet, I 11.; third vice president, Mayor-J. M. Head, Nashville, Tenn.; treasurer, Hon. Thomas P. Taylor, Bridgeport, Conn.; secretary, Hon. Jo‘hn M. Macvicar, Des Moines, la. .
Well-Known Pilot Dead.
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Aug. 30.— John Boucher, the famous Indian pilot of St. Mary’s Falls, died Thursday night, aged 80 years. He had taken thousands of persons over the rapids in his canoe without accident, and was well known by many tourists.
One Life Lost,
Bay City, Mich., Aug. 30.—One life was lost as a result of the fire that destroyed Wood’s opera house here Thursday night, causing a loss of $lOO,000. The badly crushed body of Eugene Caremba, aged 22, a spectator, was found under some fallen walls early Friday.
Youthful Countefeiters.
Dubuque, la., Aug. 30.—Clyde Ellis, Roy Gregory, Willie Edson and Frank Quinlan were arrested Friday, charged with making and passing counterfeit dimes. The boys confessed and gave up molds crudely made of brick.
Automobile Accident,
New York, Aug. 30.—A heavy publie automobile fell into the Rapid Transit subway in Broadway between Fortythird and Forty-fourth streets, falling 30 feet and flinging the chauffer, Edward Morris, into the trench. Morris was internally injured and will die.
To Build New Flying Machine.
New York, Aug. 30.—Santos Dumont, the aeronaut, will, according to a dispatch from Paris, attempt the construction of an aerial vessel to carry eight persons. He plans to begin expériments with the machine in two or three months. R ;
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