Richmond Palladium (Daily), 22 November 1901 — Page 2

RTCTIHnxii II TT7V PATiTxADTTJK. fit I DAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1901.

STUDENTS RESIST

Athens In an t'proar Ovei Proisel Translation of the (Jospels.

SEVEN PERSONS K1LLEI;

Fierce Eesistanee to a Proposed Iu novation Leads to a Serious and Riotous Demonstration.

Twenty Thousand Athenians Assem Lie At the Kuius of the Temple of Jupiter Olympus.

r

Athens, Nov. 22. The agitation against the proposal to translate the

Gospels into modern Greek was con

tlnued yesterday. Twenty thousand

persons assembled around the ruins

of the Temple of Jupiter Olympus and

took part la a demonstration organ

ized by toe students. A resolution

was passed calling on the holy synod

to excommunicate any person who

translated the Gospels into Greek as now spoken. Eight hundred marines were landed and co-operated with the

troops in patrolling the locality. Sev

eral collisions occurred and occasional shots were fired. The students still hold the university buildings. During

the demonstration following the assemblages, several shots were fired at M. Theotokis. the Greek premier, but without effect. During the encoun ters between the military and the turbulent demonstrators, seven persona were killed, 30 were severely, and many others were slightly wounded. Great excitement prevails. Strong military detachments guard the palace and the residence of the premier. Everywhere anxious groups are discussing the situation. Heartrending scenes occurred when the bodies of the dead were handed over to their relatives. It is rumored that armed men have arrived at the university, but the building is still guarded by the students, who are adopting military discipline. Opposition deputies paraded the streets during the day, exciting the rioters by violent language. Among those slightly injured are the prefect of police of Athens and the prefect of Attica. A force of 800 marines have been landed to help maintain order. As a result of the demonstrations the metropolitan has resign ed office.

1 1

- V

A SKW SIOVU

f

waiting tor rwttcmns crtrwar

Bll ient In tbr tvarluixtoit District j them.

k Mobilise for Some Purpose, j rhngtcn, Ky.. Nov. 22. In the' cdtti mine regions me s.or.td are con-' Killing. All ot the sdiMug miners have been oracled by P.tbijent Jas.

PROF. SHAILER MATTHEWS. Dean of Diiinity Serool. University of Chicago.

, . .- ,.- , . .. , ?. .-- . : '. , ' V ' t ' . i ' ' . . f

II Wood oi tae LnAeJ M.ue Morkeis ; of this district to report at the Nor- j tanviile caiup at once. This order was issued yesterday aiternoou and run- i nf-rs were st m to the various quarters i

cl the disr where lne iuen assemble. Tlylfjit:aicbii;.:eJ Ust niht, obmin ja s.Va trom ail sectioiis. fhejiatUsjfLnen started out yesIay aueruotl-1 1 night trav-

Jieil over Ue tf-utl'y l Nononville. - Most oi them carieJ ihcir arms. .Men

straggled in at1 day. In the case

r of resistance on" tait of the min

ers, Adjutant Gei1"1 -Murray has two compamea of litia on hand. It is

t,l probable thatacry A of Louisville JfMid other trd-Jps will be called. If

they'c'ariu.Yisa JOJ or 40J good tried men. ,

4 a Another story is that miners will

move to a po.nt across Pond fiver, in Muhlenburg county. Jast over the Hopkins county line, where they will establish a camp. Yesterday afternoon General Murray and Judge Hall held a long conference, at which their plans were discussed. President Wood at Central City talked over the telephone last night with a correspondent at Madisonvnle. He said he had been in conference with officials of the United Mine Workers yesterday concerning a line of policy and that a decision would be reached today. He

expressed the opinion that the men '

would not disband. He says he does not look for trouble with the militia, and that he considers the general situation very satisfactory. There are at present 150 men in camp, President Wood stated, and these forces could be raised to 1.500 men within 12 hours.

Constitution Htitt"1. Montgoiue-y. Ala.. "ov. Si-Covr nor Jelks has issued a proclaaiaii n announcing the ratification of the nev constitution by 26. $79 votes and declaring that the new ins'runient shall become effective Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28.

A t'rera! rik- of Krvooh miner i IliresT Yinnff y annexation i n!Kitwt K-.twerJ h prltiWlt tii mI of .t in V'uiiintier Ur the cormapion. tlTianT an t u-.ia art- tom-tbrr uv narincr ftreiMt. Two 4.tiitiinl v.. Sump of rin-t Hi.-mar t'. Thorhi and K"ni!ni4-"iH--s miv n to bo pultiilHi. A t bicKO man kiilet wif man an.! winim'.' anolhtT whom he IhouKbt ifif lriiir to ri b

An unknown man ettininiiltni Miiritle ly !

throw inx Bimwif Inii' the moiilb of a I'.u-ourit blast furnace. A fcX-mile tuunrl U u b bnilt on thp

svmthern Paciftc to rtui-f tbt- r!n aliou anil shorten the route. I The rmnl eitjr eleetion cot-t the tireater N't w ! York mini, ipaliiy frtro.mo. or 1.( for eaoli voter j that wa reuiten-!. Thuma Wallaee, a Virffnia hunter. w!k bait croKet tho line into Tem--e and a hunting on John mith' farm, wa. hot tjy the farmer. J. E.;ryon. rinnnineni attorney wan shot an.1 in-lantlr killed by i.eorxe E. ttay ne. rt. of tb waterworks at Joplin, .M.i. LKni.csttc trouble prompted tbe crtine. f Janie VV. Farker wax found icuiItT of murder in the amwl decree for bavinit killed his- son-in-law. Reward t arle. at Rn-- t ay in i., 1m. and piininliniem was tixtxi at ten year in 'ms peui;-utiarr.

Head

act

II. G. VAN TUYL OF DKTROIT. Who speake Saturday nKirairjr od tLe relation of the iLdividual

association to th- state work.

SKCL'ltINO THE DKAD

MORE GRAVE HOBBKItS

appropi la.ica tut tne lair, we win

furnish an abundance of jaooey and

Orklei Cbanied Hut Little

Telluride, Col., Nov. 22. The number of victims of the terrible disaster in the Smuggler Union mine is now known to be at least 29. with a considerable portion of the mine yet unexplored. Besides the 23 bodies already taken out and Identified, six have been located in the north end of the ninth level, but the gas is still too strong to permit the rescuers to reach them, and their identity is as yet unknown. Several members of - the searching parties were overcome in their efforts to bring out the bodies

last evening. It will probably be some time before they can be reached, or j any further explorations made.

Horritl Trade: i here"lnI9037"

Indianapolis, Nov. 22. The discov- j

Kish Wantrn In Karneat. j St. Joseph. Mich.. Nov. 22. Deputy ; Game Warden Brewster returned from j his hunt in the lake last night, having made the biggest seizure of nets and fish ever reported on the great lakes, j He captured 18 miles of new trout j nets and 5,000 pounds of fish belonging to the A. Booth company of Chi-1 rago. valued at $H),0t0. Big legal fights are expected to follow. The '. nets, it is claimed, were found in Michigan waters, having been set , there contrary to Michigan law and in ; direct defiance of the game warden ; and hi cruiser.

States, will leave tomorrow for Con

stantinople. There is obviously no prospect of a settlement with Miss Stone's abductors. The departure of Mr. Dickinson will probably have a good effect upon the brigands who have Miss Slone in their possession.

as they may fear to lose everything by not accepting Mr. Dickinson's proposals.

ery was made yesterdav that the bodv Mar I rlnenoe Itriifii1.

of Mrs. Cora Shaw. 28 years old. wife ' Sofia, Nov. 22. Mr. Dickinson, the

of Perry Shaw, who died a week ago diplomatic agent here of the United

last Saturday, has been stolen from the New Hope cemetery, north of Millersville. Jacob Sargent, son of John A. Sargent, whose body was found at the Central College of Physicians and Surgeons of this city, saw that the grave of Mrs. Shaw had been disturbed. In company with the woman's relatives he investigated and found that the body was missing. Search was made of the medical colleges, but the body was not found, and it is believed that it has been sent to another city. The fact that the cause of Mrs. Shaw's death was of interest to the medical profession is thought to have

led to the theft. New Hope cemetery j is in the same neighborhood as Eben-

ezer cemetery, from which the bodv 1 Ij- Newman

of John A. Sarerent was stolen rPfsnt. i $200,000

Iy. This with the despoiling of the grave of Ebenezer Perry makes the third case of grave-robbing within a few weeks. '

Miners Must Break Camp. Frankfort. Ky., Nov. 22. John Brasher and Representative Bradley of Hopkins county, representing the miners camped in Uiat county, who are resisting the attempt of County Judge Hall to disperse them, were here yes erJay in conference with Governor Beckham to ascertain whether the state troops stationed at Lhe mines will be used to break up the camp. At the close of the interview with them, the governor stated that the troops would remain under the orders of Judge Hall and would do as he directed. Judge Hall's injunction to the miners was to break camp by Saturday next or he would

disperse them with the aid of troops.

Holler Was Oefeetive. Verron. Ind.. Nov. 22. Charles Seegars. 3 years old. was almost instantly killed in an explosion at the Val Gruber stone quarry, eight miles south of here, caused by a defective boiler. He lived at Slate ana leaves a wife and two children.

Kalal Kail t-'t-om h Vmcoi Martinsville. Ind.. Nov. 22. Daniel C. Hadley, south of Monrovia, is dear! from injuries received from falling from a load of fodder. He was severely bruised and the tendons of the hip were severed. I.nl rntnllv HnrioMt. Mitchell. Ind.. Nov. 22. Robert. 10 years old, son of Charles Lewis, while standing before a grate in his night clothes, was so badly burned that death resulted.

Sick headache, nervous headache, tired headache, neuralgic headache, catarrhal headache, headache from excitement, in fact, headaches of all kinds are quickly and surely cured with DR. MIL.HS Pain Pills. Also all pains such as backache, neuralgia, sciatica, rheumatic pains, monthly pains, etc. "Pt. Miles Tain Piil are wrth their weif ht in cldV s!"5 Mr- Kreamer, of Arkansas Cite, Kan. They cured my wile of chronic headache when nuthics else would." "Dr. Miles Pain PiHs drive away pain as if by mafic. I am never without a supplv, and think everyone should keep them handr. One or two piils taken oa approach of headache will prevent it every time." Mrs. Jcdok JoHNsoit, Chicago, lit Xhrough their use thousands of people have been enabled to attend social and religious functions, travel, enjoy amusements, etc., with comfort. Asapreventative, when taken on the approach of a recurring attack, they are excellent. Sold by avll Prusslata. 25 Daaaa. 23 cents. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.

Unlocks the pates of bappice?; makes the music and taws the wood; lifts one up in the suusbine of life. That s what IJoeky Mountain Tea dof s Ask your drugeist.

DON'

Knstiie Taken a Tumble, Pine Bluff. Ark., Nov. 22. Near Goldman, about 30 miles north of Pine Bluff the encine ofa Cotton Belt fast freight jumped the track and turned over yesterday afternoon. Conductor Walter Noble of Jonesboro was killed and a brakeman. the fireman and engineer were seriously injured. Six cars were demolished and the track blocked for several hours.

Itijr Ken I in Cattle. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 22. A cattle deal was concluded in Kansas City yesterday, whereby J anes Bros. & Brown of Aniarillo. Tex., sold 11.000 head of Hereford and Durham cattle to J. H. Nations ( a prominent member of the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange). John T. McElroy and EI

of El Paso, Tex., for

Itevolut ion Nipped In Butt. New York. Nov. 22. Gonzales Es-' teves. consul-general of Venezuela at j New York, received the following ca-' blegram yesterday from Torres Car- j den&s. ceneral secretary of the renub- i

lie: "The revolution headed by Gen ! locked up.

eral Matos. which was ready to break j ers and s!x workingmen in jail out. has been crushed and its leaders j on account of the one rabbit.

are now in jail. country enjoys peace." The cablegram was sent from '.

Caracas.

All On Account of Itiimiie. Alexandria. Ind.. Nov. 22. Three Alexandria men. two of them friends and one a brother of two of the three men serving out the 42-day sentence at Anderson for killing one rabbit, for which they were fined $12ti. went to Anderson to intercede for their release. They became intoxicated in the course of negotiations and were

This makes three broth-

all

. M urtlerer's Keieret. Oxford. Mif.s.. Nov. 22. Will Mathis. charged with murdering the two deputy marshals and burning their

bodies, and who surrendered himself to the authorities Wednesday, was a witness before the coroner's jury yesterday. When asked if he was sorry he had killed the two men he replied: "I am only sorry that I burned thcni."

Killed By trolley tap. Springfield. Ills., Nov. 22. Captain Antoine Neustadt of CoIIinsville, aged 78, one of the oldest attorneys in southern Illinois, and for years law partner of former Congressman F. W. L. Hadley of CoIIinsville, was run down and almost instantly killed by an electric car at Edgmont yesterday.

One Is Convicted. Ithaca. Mich., Nov. 22. Elmer Quimby. who was charged jointly with his wife for the murder of Mrs. Quimby's children on the night of May 19 last, was found guilty of murder In the first degree by the jury late yesterday. Mrs. Quimby's trial is now in progress.

Kiob Mineral Kind Knoxville, Tenn.. Nov. 22.

lea.l nrp has hMn made near Friends I American Oil

I M ill Have to Answer.

j Marion. Ind., Nov. 22. Deputy State

Gas Inspector Kinney made the first ! arrests in the new Lafontaine gas field What is j north of Marion, yesterday. Tobias

of Miner and c t. Martin, both of the

company, are charged

ville. Tenn.. where it is said a vein, j 22 feet in thickness and of an undetermined depth has been uncovered. The

vein has been traced along the side j of a mountain for half a mile and is j

only six inches below the surface at places.

with unlawful waste of gas. Miller is

an ex-county commissioner of Wabash county. Both men gave bond.

Hrenvries Vaj the Penalty. . Dallas, Tex., Nov. 22. The Fort Worth brewery at Austin yesterday afternoon pleaded guilty to the charge of violating the anti-trust law and was fined $5,500. The other accused breweries will do the same, but will be fined in proportion to their accrued penalties.

Kumnr Ienied. London. Nov. 22. There is no confirmation of the report circulated by a news agency in the United States of the death of Count Tolstoi. A letter to the Times from Odessa dated Nov. 13 reports that he had quite recovered frtm his illness and resumed work.

Traffic lHfoited

New Haven. Conn.. Nov. 22. Be- j eausi; of the s .vitchnen's s'rilvi on the j New York. New Haven and Hartford ra'lroad there is hardly a foot of j avtilaMf track in the freight yards I

here, ond thousands of cars are s!a!ls?d

Hood's Pills Do not pripe nor irritate the alimentary canal. They act petitly yet promptly, cleanse effectually and Give Comfort Sold by all druggists. 2o cents.

TOBACCO SPIT and SMOKE Your Lifeawayl

You can be cured of any form of tobacco usinir easily, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor by taking MO'TO'BAOr that makrs weak men strong. Many Rain ten pound! in ten daya. Over B OO tO OO cured. All druggist. Cure guaranteed. Hooklet and advice FREE. Address STERLINU KlCMtDY CO., Chicago or Mew York. 4J7 $1,000 will be paid to any one who produces as ood an all-roui d life saver as Rocky Mountain Tea, made by Madison Medicine Co. 35c, Ask your druggist. EDUOATI T1UHB1HVELI ITU C4SOARETS. Canay Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c 25c. If C.C.C. faU, dramatists refund monev

they Stand (be Strain of Hctlve

Service if

U C7& V

Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.

His Own Kr-ulioner. Junction City. Kan., Nov. 22. W. D. Buchanan of Troop D. 14th cavalry, located at Fort Riley, near here, whs killed Policemen White and Cooper on Tuesday night, was found dead la his cell yesterday. Buchanan had committed suicide by hanging, bavins made a rope of a toweL

The Jury Aeqult. Seattle. Wash.. Not. 22. The jury ia the caae of John Consldine. accused of the murder of ea-Chief of Police Meredith, yesterday afternoon, returnabl aV lerAJfia oX acntiiftftl. .

Criminal Assanlt Is fharced. Marion. Ind Nov. 22. Roy Duhadaway, aged 22 years, of Matthews, was arrested and brought tr Marirm ml

placed in jail, charged with criminal! centers of France is again apaasault nn Mi Flossie HnwarH . ! proach:ag a climax. The next day

All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes.

i ne Kidneys are your blood purifiers, they filter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are side or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheumatism come from excess of uric acid in the blood, due ta neelscted

kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady h:rt beats, and makes one fesl as though thsy had heart troabie. because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidusypoisoned blood through veins and arteriss.

It used to De considers;! mat only urinary

t fl tew

f mm

9 3 liM?rrW

1 IB "iHl

9 l I 1

Setved l&ith Double-Strength Silk Buttons Strongly Fastened- Lining Quality of the best the

new Tall Itlcde! trousers

rt txnth the Stylish Carves of Leg end

Hio, ltirpr:sent a ft.Kl-t.1

H r are Showing a Cumptetm Astonmeaw

3

1

i i

23 years. Duhadaway's fa'her lives at Elwood and is quite wealthy.

Indiana Will B There. St. Ixtuis. Nov. 22. Governor W. T. Durbin of Indiana arrived in the city yesterday to attend the banquet of the Indiana Society last night. During the day he inspected the world's fair site, which he declared magnificent. He said: ''Indiana will b represented at the fair, of course. Tha next legislature, which meets in mtr. lwjll make a suitable

Climi Approaching.

Fans. Nov. ". lhe situation In the i troubles were to be traced to the kidnevs.

! but now modern science proves that reariy ) all constitutional diseases have thsir begin- j

n;r.g m luaney trouoie. i If you are sick you can make no mistake j by first doctoring your kidneys. Tr.e miid ! and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's i Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is j soon realized. It stands the highest for its I wonderf ul cures of the most distressing cases j

and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty-

cent and one-dollar si:-1

es. You may have a

sample bottle by mail Ham of

free, also pamphlet teilir.g you ho- to find out if you have kidaey or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghaniton. N. Y..'

TiieGLOEE One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters.

803 Main20t.

WIDUP & THOMPSON.

or two will see a definitive decision

upon the question of a general strike. Spanish Assaaatns. Madrid. Nov. 22. As Senor Romero, a Journalist, was leaving the chamber of deputies yesterday he was fired at by three men. He received two bulIeta in the head, and ia dying.

Lady Sneervreli Have your aaognters accomplished much in music? Unfortunate Father Yes. The tenants below have moved..

ant