Richmond Palladium (Daily), 27 September 1901 — Page 2

HTCHMOXD DAILY PALLADIUM, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1901.

HIS DOOM SEALED

President 3IeKiiileys Assas- , sin Hears the Sentence i of Death.

A WAITING THE CHAIR

Irf-on Czolsrosz Has Been Removed t Iroin Buffalo to Auburn Where He Will be Electrocuted.

The Craven Prisoner Was Smitten by Fear and His Tongue Refused Him.

Buffalo, Sept. 27. Czolgosz, the doomed asgassiu of I'resideut McKiuley, was taken from Buffalo to Auburn state prison last night to await death Ly electrocution during the week commencing Monday, Oct. 28. Sheriff Caldwell and It; men took the prisoner in a HiM-cial car attached to the second section of train So. 12, which left at 10:OJ.- Czolgosz was "sneaked" out the back entrance of the Erie county jail, surrounded by the 17 men, and vvas hustled into the ppeelal car which bad backed down on the terrace trucks a few rods in the rear of the jail a minute Itefore. Sheriff Caldwell arranged for the departure, and bis moves were kept so secret and were so clevery managed that no one but the guards, the officials and newspaper men who were on the watch knew that the assassin was being smuggled out of the jail. Czolgosz was yesterday afternoon sentenced to be electrocuted In Auburn etatc prison during the week beginning Oct. US, 1901. Before sentence was passed the assassin evinced a desire to speak, but he could not get his voice above a whisper, and his words were repeated to the court by his counsel. "There was no one else but me," the prisoner said In a whisper. "No one else told me to do it, and no one paid me to do It. I was not told anything about tl.e crime, and I never thought anything about that until a couple of days liefore I committed the crime." Czolgosz sat down. He was quite calm, but it was evident that his mind was flooded with thoughts of his own distress. His eyes were dilated, making them appear very bright. His cheeks were a trifle pale and his outstretched hand trembled. The guards put handcuffs on his wrists. He looked at one of the officers. There was nn expression-of the profoundest fear find helplessness in his eyes. He glanced alout at the people who crowded the room In efforts to get a look at him. The prisoner's eyelids rose and fell tremulously and then he fixed his gaze on the floor in front of liim. At this point Judge Titus came over to the prisoner and bade him good-by. Czolgosz replied very faintly, letting his eye rest upon the man who has been his counsel. "Good-by," he said, tveakly. Czolgosz was then hurried downStairs and through the "tunnel of obs" to the jail, where he remained until removed to Auburn last night to pay the penalty for his crime. The death warrant signed by Justice "White is addressed to the agent and "warden of Auburn state prison and directs him to execute the sentence of the court within the walls of the prison on some day during the week leginulng Oct. 2S next, by causing "to pass through the lody of the said Ieon F. Czolgosz a current of electricity of suf

ficient intensity to cause death, and ' that the application of the said current j of electricity 1 continued until he. the j said Iecu F. Czolgosz, 1k dead." i

Tey. an old and wealthy resident of this city, die! here yesterday as the dirft result of grieving over the assassination and death of President McKlnley. The physicians who attended Harvey say that he literally cried himself to death. He wept far hours continuously from the afterroon the president was shot, and while In these paroxyisms of grief his suffering was intense. It was found impossible to control or assimge his grief, and up to the bour of his dissolution he wailed constantly. Mr. Harvey was an ardent adralrr of ..IcKinley. The physicians consider the case without precedent.

J" An Aeronaut Fate. TJnia. Ohio. Sept. 27. Frank Hssue, better known as Zeno. an aeronaut, was drowned In the city waterworks

reservoir yesterday afternoon. Hague i

was in a parachute and balloon race j fkith C. M. Hawley at the county falrj grounds snd was 5X feet in the airj when they cut loose. Hawley landed iu a private yard near the reservoir. ! while Hague landed in the middle of j the big reservoir and was drowned by !

TN-coming entangled in the ropes of the parachute.

Hard Job of Fencing. Guthrie, O. T., Sept. 27. J. U. Wood, the man who drew Claim No. 1 adjoining the city of Lawton, is now attempting to fence his farm, on which are located 50O squatters. The squatters refuse1 to move. To fence the north side, one mile long. Wood must go through an almost solid row of tents, stores and shacks. He will appeal to the United States court to remove the intruders.

Schley Court Adjourn to Attend J u(I z Vilona Funeral. Washington. Sept. 27. The Schley court of inquiry was in sion for only an hour and three-iuarters yesterday adjourning in order to irmit its mem bers and others engaged there to attend the funeral of Judge Wilson. laK chief counsel for Admiral Schley. Captain Wise concluded his testimony. Admiral Cotton made a brief statement on recall, and Lieutenant Spencer S. Wood, who commanded the dispatch boat ruiont dUttug the Spanish war began his testimony. Machinist Gray, who was in charge of the starboard engines on the day of the battle off Santiago, also testified" briefly. He said that on the day of tue battle the starboard engines were stopied and the machinery reversed. Captain Wise was questioned at considerable length as to what he had done before the arrival of the flying squadron oft Santiago toward locating Cervera's fleet in

the harbor. He said that while he had

satisfied himself of the presence of the

Spanish fleet, he bad been content to

communicate his knowledge to Admir

al Schley through Captain Sigsbee, not considering it necessary to make direct communication with the commander-in-chief. Lieutenant Wood gave the particulars of his delivery of dispatches from Admiral Sampson to Admiral Schley on the 22nd of May while the admiral lay off Clenfuegos. He said Schley seemed very nervous and especially anxious to "know what Sampson's intentious were.

SINGLE STICKERS

Have a IIarI Day's 'Work for So End hi riifarurable Winds.

FARES TO BUFFALO

lnterestine If True. Paris, Sept. 27. The Tatrie prints a sensational story to the effect that a conflict has broken out between Greai Britain and Turkey, saying that three liritish war vessels have leen ordered to the Persian gulf to suppress revolts at Touet, in the British province of Bagdad, and that the Turkish government has dispatched a strong detachment of troops with instructions to oppose the landing of the British forces. Russia. Germany and France, the paper also says, have agreed to support Turkey.

Hanging Due at Nome. Seattle, Wash., Sept. 27. A special from Unalaska, dated Sept. 10. says that at a special term of the United States district court Fred Handy was found guilty of murdering, on Umanak island last June, Con and Florence Sullivan, brother and sister, of Butte. Mont., and B. J. Rooney, of Seattle. Handy was sentenced to be hanged at Nome Dec. 0.

An Old Offender. Hamilton. O., Sept. 27. James Boyd, one of the two men arrested here for an alleged attempt to rob the county treasury, has admitted that he is John Rvan of Chicago, who is wanted for robbing the Bluffs (Ills.) bank of 2,100 last Octoler. He served six years in the Nebraska penitentiary for shooting an officer in 1802. He refuses to return to Illinois without requisition papers.

Shaffer Is Willing;. Pittsburg, Sept. 27. When President Shaffer of the Amalgamated association was shown the open letter Issued by Samuel Gompers and John Mitchell, in reply to his statement charging them with the responsibility for the failure of the great strike, he said he would aett-'pt their challenge and was ready to submit to an investigation as to the truth of his charges.

Change of Secretaries. Washington, Sept. 27. Assistant Secretary to the President Barnes, having requested a transfer to the responsible position in one of the executive departments, it is understood that his appointment will shortly be announced. "William Iam?1 Jr., who recently has leen President Roosevelt's private secretary, has been appointed to the vacaut iKst of assistant secretary.

titlevetl to Death. I.a Porte. Sept. 27. Caleb Har- i

Officer Killed. Ardmoro. I. T., Sept. 27. Deputy Marshal Poe was shot and killed on a Frisco train near Ravia by one of four men he had arrested for lighting. George Yatiger," Dan Bruuer, B. W. Taylor and J. F. Brooks are now in jail at Mill Creek.

TF.HSF. IKLKCiHAMS

Mount Veeavius is Id eruption. The total rewipts from the war rerenue act alone during the month of August, ltfel. were 5.4i.Z77The signal otnVe of the war department now has direct telegraphic communication with Fort Egbert. Alaska. The nostotttce at Adalrurllle, Ky., was burglarised Wednesday night. Money and stamps of an aggregate value of 4uo were taken. Several changes in the ritual of the order of the Kateru Star were made iu executive session iy the teuth triennial convention of the order. It Is reported that Turkish and Albanian troops have come into collision at Beiopolje. Old Servia, with the result that 45 were kiUed and wounded. Six men and possibly seven were killed and seven injured by an explosion yesterday

of an oil tank of the Kssex and Hudson Gas Company at Newark, X. J. j The Russian prince. Makachidxe. and his'' wife, have been arrested as anarchists at ' Kome aud will be conducted to the frontier. ' They entered Italy in defiance of the anti- ' anarchistic regulations.

The war department Is investigating stories which have reached Washington to the effect that there is danger of great suffering and calamity at Cape Nome unless steps are taken at once to remove destitute members of the mining community. Daniel A. Ray. United States marshal for Hawaii, died from heart failure at Honolulu on the lith inst. Mr. Ray was well known in Illinois politics. He was a member of the state central committee and formerly editor of an Illinois newspaper. N-imerous wagers on the yacht races are r- i ted in New York stock exchange cir- . Most of these are at odds of 10 to S on Columbia, but as good as lo to 7 is offered at ticies. No very large bet are announced, although Columbia UiviUCf U vf 'rj in almost any aiitjuut.

COLUMBIA TAKES LEAH

The America's Cnp Defemler Frovr iu a Way that She Is Still Good lor the Triek.

First of the Series ol Big- Yacht Iiaccs Fails lor Lack of Air.

New York, Sept. 27. One of the biggest crowds that ever put to sea went down to the Sandy Hook lightship yesterday to witness Sir Thomas Lipton's second challenger. Shamrock II, and th white flyer Columbia, which successfully defended the old America's cup against his first trophy hunter two years ago, struggle for the yachting supremacy of tie world iu the first of the cup races of 11X1. But the excursion fleet returned disappointed. The great single stickers went out fresh for the battle, but the sea refused them a field of conflict. The wind, never more than nine and sometimes as low as three knots, was too light and shifty to carry the contestants over the 30-mile course iu the time allotted by the rules. At tue end of

live and a half hours, the prescribed time, the race was officially declared off and the yachts were towed back to their berths inside Sandy Hook. When the gun aboard the committee boat was tired to call atteutiou to the signal declaring the race oft the American j-acht was still seven miles from the finish line. The Englishman vvas hull down astern of her, the experts estimating her distance behind the Columbia at over three-quarters of a mile. Americans will have reason to congratulate themselves uion the result of the first trial. The yacht which carried J. P. Morgan's private signal, a black pennant with a yellow Maltese cross, to victory two years ago, was headed hut once in the 23 miles covered, and then the Englishman showed the way for only five minutes. In windward work the Columbia beat the foreigner seven minutes and 13 seconds to the outer mark and Increased her lead somewhat in the broad reach for home. While the test was unsatisfactory, the yachting sharps who have been skeptical up to this time as to the ability of the Columbia to successfully defend the cup are more confident that It will remain on this side of the Atlantic yet a while longer. Certainly Columbia's suiieriority in light airs appears to have been demonstrated. Shamrock II did not in fact niiake as good a showing as did Lipton's first challenger in the half dozen flukes that precede! the actual races two years ago. What Shamrock may be able to do in heavy weather Is of course proliteinatical, but Columbia has leen tried, and all her admirers insist that she is distinctively a heavy weather lioat. Two years ago Sir laomas prayer was for wind, but when he got a smashing 2-Vknot gale in the last race Columbia's victory was even more decisive than iu the first. Since then Columbia's ability in heavy weather has lieen proved again and again. The harder It blows the faster she goes and better she liohaves. It Is not strange therefore that the patriotic skippers and spectators who went down to Sandy Hook yesterday with misgivings, returned reassured and strongly disjiosed to wager that the pretty wreaths of shamrock and white heather from the oldest yacht club In the world which Sir Thomas is treasuring in the cabin of his champion, will prove no mascot after all.

Lincoln's Secretary Dead. Washington, Sept. 27. John George Xicolay, private secretary to President Lincoln and widely known as the author of several works on the life of the great war president, died yesterday afternoon at his residence here, aged 70 years.

base: ball.

Result or Current Giidm and Stand Irk of the Clubs.

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs. Pitchers.

Pittsburg. Chesbro .............. Brooklyn. Newton Cincinnati. Hahn Boston, Dineen Chlcaeo. J. Taylor New Vork. L. Taylor St. Louis. Yerkes Philadelphia, White

I'layeo. on.

nttsbure Philadelphia .... Brooklyn ........ ft. Louis loston . ...... New York

Chicago

...131

...13 ...130 . -.131 ...131 ...1.2 . . . 134

Cincinnati l"ti

73 73 i 7 50 50 43

R. H E ..483

..3 8 .. 7 14 ..2 5 ..17 .. 5 ..4 3 . . 6 15

Lost. Pet

43

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of the Pennsylvania Lines and eon nectins? railways.

Fares from Richmond, Ind., are as

follows: Tickets ood returning ten days, 12 65. Tickets good ret urni ng fifteen days, 115.55. Season tickets with return limit until October 31st, $18. Special coach excursion tickets, pood .eaving Buffalo up to midnight of Thursday follow ing date of sale mav be obtained on Tuesdays at 3 20. Tourist tickets at special fares may also be obtained for trips to resorts in Canada. All tickets to Can ada and eastern points, including New York, will be good for stop-over at the Pan-Handle Exposition o; payment of $1 extra at Buffalo. Stop-overs at Chautauqua Lak will be allowed on all tickets to Buf falo and eastern points, without ex tra cost. For schedules showing convenien through passenger service to Buffal and other information, please appl to C W. Elmer, Ticket Agent, PucL. mond, Ind.

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53 55 -4 7S

AMERICAN L.EAGCE. Clubs. I'itcliers. R. Boston. Lwis 3 Chicago. Callahan 2 Washington. Mercer .............. 3 Detroit, Veacer 5 r.ltiBior. Karns .. . ......10 Ciertland. McNVal rhiladWphia. Flunk 3 Miiwaakrt-. Beitir ll

Played. Woo. Lost.

Chlcasro ........ I'M 3 53 BoCusi ........... ....133 76 57 LVtroit 133 73 Philadelphia 133 71 Baltinnw m 67 R4 WanhiE2TQ 133 1 72 Cl-Telan-J 13-1 5-" ?. UUTskee ....123 47 6tl

.Odi .527 j m .373 i .Sal !

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PENINSULAR

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