Washington Weekly Post. (Washington, DC) 1900-10-30 [p 3]....Berlin Oct 29 Referring to a report...

1
THE WASHINGTON POST TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 1900 3 ti I II INDEMNITY ASKED The Envoys Ask China to Pay 200000000 IDBEIGX CONTROL OF CUSTOMS pfmn a for Prince Tunnn Head Modified Imprisonment Llfe Tlenuln In irBgiianal Territory and Open floor Irivilect nt Other Center or Trade rorch e or Wnr Material Abroad to tie rBbltiIi d Ituaftlafc Ueply to Germany London Oct at The Chinese pleniDd- ttRtitri op n 4 negvlhutem my th Shanghai cormpWMlent ot the Dally Kx- pr s by propMtog that China tthevkl piT an indemnity ot IMG U09 sterling In zty Installment agreeing that the likin- nd the cuntooui rvie HewM be under joiviirn Control wntfl the obligation should b discharged The al o agreed that Prince Tuan b far life that Tien tsin tbtM as an International c i and that other place should be op T l to foreign trade Vn undertake te abstain from pur- ru i war material In order to raj the Indemnity to double the import duties 1arlinl Acceptance br Ilunnln- I ndon Oct RuMia says SL imr correspondent of ir H kn wldKlng the AngloGerman art MTnnt unretorvedly accept the two rauaea as eatabltehlng principle had already advocated Concern nit clause 3 she simply refers the two contracting to the Russian circular of August 35 saying that the would modi- fy h r attitude according to circum itanres The very curtly dismissed that it not rail for comment Lord George Hamilton secretary of state for India has received the following lispatch dated October 22 at Paotlngfu from Sir Alfreii Oaseleo I have appointed an international corn to inquire Into the murder of the Tnissionarie and railway official with a view of fixing the responsibility Itt a diapatch dated PaoTlngFu Octo ber 24 Gen nays that In pursu- ance of from Field Marshal Count von WaMernee the British troops will return to Pekin and Tientsin reach- ing thHr destinations about November 6 Afir reporting regarding the expedi against the Boxers Gen Gaselee includes with a statement that he ex- pects to reach Pekln himself October 3L On Iliiili of French Note Parli Oct The Havns agency has Twelved the following from Pekln Th foreign envoys have held further nvellngs and the French note has been cepted in principle as the basIs of dJs rurclon LI Hung Chang has informed tho legation of the poisoning of Yu llpien The Austrian Minister has ar riviHl A company of French troops sent for a days march west of Pekln to rid a di- htrit that was reported to be Infested vlth Boxers killed eight rebels took one prisoner and captured a mitrailleuse The international column now return ing from PaoTlngFu Is purging the vil- lages en route The armed population is ting punished and all arms arc de- stroyed The Chinese Minister here cabled to Em peror Kwam Su yesterday urging his majesty to return to Pekln pointing out hat his so doing would very greatly la- cilltate the peace negotiations An o the Third Article Berlin Oct 29 Referring to a report cabled from Washington that the United States government would agree to the first two paragraphs of the AngloGtr man agreement regarding China and would make a reservation regarding graph three a foreign oflice today L the United States will accept the frst and second paragraphs there will be no necessity for a separate understand- ing regarding the third since the first and second logically cover the third The Berliner Neueste Nachrlchten says eemlolllciolly It was to be anticipated that the Unit ed States government with Its declared disinclination to acquire territory In China would not accept the AngloGer man reservation If all the cabinets wouid follow Americas example and pronounce for freedom of trade and against terri- torial acquisition the reservation would be needless The foreign envoys In Pekln said a foreign office offIcial today are still holding conferences but they communi- cate to the Chinese commissioners only such decisions as are unanimously reached DEATHS OF THE DAY Gen Pasiencer Agent of II O Stricken wIll Apoplexy Baltimore Oct 29 J M Schryver gen- eral passenger agent of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad died at noon today of apoplexy He left his desk In the Central Building Saturday afternoon In his usual good health and spirits and was taKen suddenly ill late last night the attack coming on while he was at home with his lit and three children Mr Schryver- was about fifty years old and had long been connected with Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Mr Schryver was born on December 20 1M near Circlevllle Ohio Ha spent his firly life In that section Mr Schryver siudiMl law but gave It up to enter the railway service In October 1S73 ho ob titineti a position with the Baltimore and Ohio as voucher clerk While serving In this position he gave such satisfaction that he was to rate and division clrrk then and assistant gen- eral ticket n he was appointed as fcistam general passenger agent with tiitdiiuarters in Baltimore Upon the res IKH ition of General Passenger Agent iiarl s 0 Scull In 1 7 Mr Schryver was slfoted to fill the vacancy His jurlsdic- t n extended over the lines east of the Oh River He was popular with his fellowofficials f the Baltimore and Ohio and news ot hi Middrn death caused genuine sorrow it the Baltimore and Ohio Central Build iiK t day Trenton X J Gen Wlll- n s Stryker of ths New Jersey Nt nal Guard died at his home on West te xtreet this morning He had 1 n ailing siaee last Thursdny with a plication of acute indigestion and Gen Stryker was born Jn Tr sixtytwo years of age HP graduated front Princeton College in l and upon the breaking out of the r he assisted In organizing the nth New Jersey Regiment He was br v tod lieutenant colonel for meritorious Mrvioen during the of Charleston hfr he wa wounded Con Stryker was a Uwy r but sorer followed profes n He leaves a widow and throe dren- Aln ana Pa Oct 28 Rev Martin Luth r my r preidin eider of the Metha lit Church district was found vsa a guest Htrwas to hav preached litre last not feeling he retired to Heart trouble was tl au Dr Sinyser was ilftynine- ars old He entered the ministry in in the East Baltimore Conference Smynrs miectwtor will be t luctinc of the bIshops at Trenton N J next Philadelphia Pa Oct 20Dr Matthew J ri r the pioneer specialist on ijervou- d ii first physleian in this city to j l electricity as a remedy for narv- ournti last night at hi BIG t or f tko I imp abC h tie p the frt nit forth claW doC 111 lon Gale par t the 0 promote agent f y Oct t hart trouble Four- t chi Alto ti at a house where night well J Jr Went f y 011 I W r c renrs old 114 4 parties tin 1s I Adjt s1ee thIs ho but appointed a t and > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > > > = < < THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION BY PRESIDENT OP THE UNITED STATUS OF AMERICA- A PROCLAMATION It ka pl J Almlthty led i trUc our U in uT r B4 hotter through another Tk of rellcion and charity h r everywhere Our country through tit Ms tot h i Meued with abundant btrrMU Labor and th Icdnitrle of P hare prospered beyond all Our eeramere kai iprtad orer war id Our p r lofiueate ia Uc freedom tad e OT r a 4 1 4 llrta f our oficUl repreteau and na r of In China hue m mtaalr preserved VT been ge raHr exempt from pitt ace and other treat ealamltl sad etea tke tratfe tlilUlUa- wMeh orenrktlmtd city GaiTcaUa evMtet the Mfitimeata of sympathy and eaaritr by vlrtua of which wa art U He4 pe ple yew therefore 1 William MaKlaley Pratt ef the da hereby aw I t and tH lh of Xartmber neat vs by all the peapta of the Waited at tarns r abroad ai a day at Thanks 5l ta and if M to Him who held the ta Xe Iwilav f life hand I reaatn i d tkat they gather In their neTeral pta a ot wanMp and deratiily glee Him thanks the preteortty wherewith He baa eadawe- dfemton and bMMBlty ear armlet ned no and far all Hta beaeSta to ua aa IndlTM teals sad aa a tMtion and that they humbly slay tor the eMtlattaaee of lila Divine fur fir Mcent and amity with other nattMi and fir rlghteeuMwaa and peace In all a r ways I wittiest I have hereunto set ray band and cawed the seal the United States to be aSied at the city of Washington this Xth day et Oetefcor In the year of our Lord eae thwi Mae beaked and of the Mtp leMe ef the United States the one hundred and twmty- ttth WILLIAM MKIXLET Dy the President JOHN hAY Secretary of State PORTO RICAN CANNOT REGISTER Junrbe Neither n Native Xor a Naturalized Citizen of United State New York Oct 2y The application or Frank Juarbe a Porto Rican for a per- emptory writ of mandamus directing the hoard of registry to register him as a voter on the ground that he became an American citizen by virtue of the cession of Porto Rico by Spain to the United States was denied today by Justice Freedman in the Supreme Court Justice Freedman In his opinion cites Article XIV of the Constitution of the States stating that all persons naturalized in the United States mId subejct to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State where they reside The moving papers he says show that Juarbe was not horn in tne United States and do not show that he was naturalized SETS ASIDE VOTING TRUST American Distilling Company Stock Combine Declared Illegal Chancellor MagIc of New Jerner Rules Any Irrevocable Arrnnceiucnt or Ex- clusion of Other Stockholders Acniust Iic 1olicy Trenton N J Oct 29Chancellor Magic today rendered a decision in one of the suits brought by Philip Kreissel against the Distilling Company of In the decision the chancellor grants injunction restraining Au- gust Belmont John L Cadwallader the Jefferson College William F Harrlty and Alvin W Krech trustees from voting 64000000 worth of stock of the company which they hold as trustees in pursuance- of an agreement entered into in June last The agreement provided that Will lam I Bull William F Harrity Rudolph Kepler Alvin W Krech and Richard Sutro a committee of the stockholders should Investigate the affairs of the com- pany This committee did investigate and furtherance of the agreement rec ommended that the stockholders deposit their stock with the Mercantile Trust Company for surrender to the trustees already named who for a period of five years should hold legal title to the stock and have power to vote It in the manage- ment of the company The agreement also provided that the stockholders who should not deposit their stock with the trust company or trans fer to the should not partici- pate In any benefit of the plans adopted except on such conditions and penalties as the committee and trustees should de- termine Kreissel In his bin charged that the trustees were about to put Into operation the plans for the management of the company that had been recommended by the committee of stockholders including the election of officers and he asked that they be restrained from doing so The chancellor In granting the Injunc tion that the voting trust that had been In pursuance of the agree- ment was Illegal He recognized the rule of stockiiohlers to delegate by proxy or otherwise the power to vote stock where that authority was revocable but he held that stockholders were entitled to have other stockholders exercise and express their Judgment In the manage- ment of the company except where by legislative authority stockholders may delegate that power and added If stockholders combine by confer- ring power of attorney or by creating a trust with voting power to formulate and execute a plan for the management of a corporation and exclude themselves by an act irrevocable for a fixed period from exercising their Judgment or If they reserve to themselves any benefit to be derived from such a plan to the ex- clusion of other stockholders who do not come Into the combination the agreement- to so combine is contrary to the duty due other stockholders and against pub- lic policy STUDENTS LOST IN UNEXPLORED CAVE Experience of Two Sjrneiine UnIversity llojH CaveriiH to He Explored Syracuse N Y Oct 2S P M Helper and K A Holmes Syracuse University students discovered a cave near James vllle this county Friday They crawled into it and finding a passage leading downward they entered that also and soon wore In a second cave Another pas- sage leading downward was entered and tho boys found themselves In a third cavern They had only a few matches and when they tried to retrace their steps could not locate the opening After searching for more than two hours found a small hole In the roof of cave By alternately standing upon each others shoulders they managed to dig away the rock and crawl up into the cave by which they entered finally roach inff the open air An exploring expedition will soon be organized MOSQUITO FLEET STORMBOUND Cutter No Reported 31i lnc in u Gale Ve el Im Our In Search Wilmington C C Oct 29 Four of the vessels of the mosquito fleet Nos 7 S 9 and 11 bound from Trenton to Cuba by the route to do revenue cutter duty the island put in at Southport yesterday morning on account of rough weather reported having lost No 10 In the vicinity of Frying Pan lightship early Sunday morning The revenue cutter Algonquin stationed at this port loft immediately In search of her little vessel Is of very light draft a crew of captain and six nun TiE te- e of hue hue of made ole del Vale apr the na- t far Tr of ef Unit Ame- rIca in trust hell tHY 0 lan and The year weeks been manifest been great the and seas CIlgte41neat distant The tires our people been the Chris- tian aisles 54 fer seedthee and harvest fir the Ifs Disc lied es I ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ± BRYAN WILL OBEY LAW As to Payment of Government Bonds in Silver or REPLIES TO SERIES OF QUESTIONS Withdrawal of Army from the Philippines and Declaration of Their Independence aa Soon na Stable Government Caa Be- KatnblUbedIn Turn Asks a Number of Questions for Some Responsible Itepnb to An ver Tlic lloaroc Doctrine Wilmington Del Oct 24The of Mr Bryans night meetings In was held in a big tent and while the meeting began much earlier Mr Bryan dW not appear until 9 oclock He had a long and busy day and found It necessary to take an unusually prolonged rest after his arrival In this city The tent was Crowded to suffocation and there were far more people on the outside of the tent and In Its Immediate vicinity than there were on the inside of the canvas The great crowd yelled itself hoarse when M Bryan entered and some time was required to secure quiet After In- troducing his speech by expressing his gratification at being present Mr Bryan took up the Issues of the campaign He took cognizance of a series of questions propounded to him by John P Nleids of this city These questions were as fol lows I Will he if elected President as commanderInchief Immediately with- draw the army from the Philippine Is1 ands 2 How soon does he contemplate that a stable form of government can be given to the Philippine Wanda 3 How soon after a stable form of gov- ernment is established does he propose that Congress shall declare the indepen- dence of these islands 4 How soon after a stable form of gov- ernment Is established and Independence is declared does he propose that the Amer- ican protectorate over the Philippine Isl- ands shall continue 5 Will he pay the obligations of this government in silver gold if elected President Mr Bryan read the questions and re plied as he proceeded to each of the In- quiries He said In effect that he would get the army out or the Philippines as soon as possible and with reference to the payment of the national debt that he would obey the law his Iolicr Iii the Philippines Introducing the subject Mr Bryan said If I were to permit a Republican in each town to select the subjects which I to discuss I am afraid that every- where some Republican would avail hlm sell of th opportunity in order to prevent my discussing the things Republicans did not want to discuss And when I heard that some questions were to be asked I suggested that It was only proper that the Republican committee should back the questions so that there would be a re- sponsible party known in the transaction I have not heard yet whether the Repub- lican committee was willing to ask these questions on its responsibility or not but- I thought that I would make an excep- tion of this case and answer the live questions and then ask some He then took up the questions and re to them seriatim as follows a reply to the first question he quot ed from his speech of acceptance saying I stated that if elected President I would Immediately convene Congress In extraor- dinary session and would ask Congress- to declare the nations policy to be to es- tablish a stable government in the Phil- ippine Islands as we are now establish- ing a stable government in Cuba to de- clare our purpose to give independence to the Filipinos as we have promised to give independence to the Cubans to de- clare our purpose to give protection to the Filipinos as we have promised to give protection to the Cubans and have for seventyfive years given protection to the republics of Central and South America Time Than Required in Cubit On the second question he said No one has attempted to fix the number of hours or days or weeks or months neces- sary but I will say this that I believe that we could establish a stable govern- ment in the Philippine Islands in less time than the Republican party has estab- lished one in Cuba and that I think I can promise you that our officials would not embezzle as Republican officials have embezzled Cuban money To the third question he answered that in his speech of acceptance it was pro posed to give them Independence as soon as their stable government is established The phrase and as soon means imme- diately in our language I dont know what It means In Republican and answer- Ing the fourth question he said If the questioner had read my speech he would have seen that there was no limit on the protectorate and we believe that this nation can assert the doctrine that when this nation helps a republic to stand upon Its feet the ground whereon- it stands is holy ground and that no king ever set his foot on It On the fifth question relative to pay ing the obligations of this government In sliver or gold if elected President he saidI want the Republicans who want that question answered to first find out what the law requires and then I want them to know that If elected President I will enforce that law just as I will enforce the law against trusts and put striped clothes on big thieves as well as little thieves But if you ask me to construe- a Republican law I reply that I shall not construe a law until It becomes my duty to enforce It 3Ir Rrynn Questions In Having replied to the questions Mr Bryan then propounded some of his own He said Now I want to ask five questions and when I ask these questions I want some responsible man to answer them It is hardly fair for a man who has no respon- sibility to place his responsibility against that of one who has responsibility placed upon him by a party and I want your party leaders to answer the questions that I am going to Mr Bryan then from the Presi dents message of December 5 1 83 rec- ommending the ncrease of the army to 105000 men and asked If the Republican party through authorized to spook will declare that Republican suc- cess this fall means a standing army of 100000 in this country His second question was If the Dec laration of Independence Is true that governments derive their just pow r from the consent of the governed I want to ask how you can buy the right to govern cttu r ui question was Is the Filipino the fourth question Can you purchase trade with human Monroe Doctrine In the Pacific The fifth question related to the estab- lishment of a protectorate In the Philip- pine Islands concerning which Mr said Republicans that we protect the Filipino without a great deal of trouble We protected the repub- lics of Central and South America for seventyfive years and we have had authority In those South American re- publics We have never governed but we have protected them from Interference It has never anything but It has been valuable The Republican doctrine Is the doctrine behind which the monarchies of the Old World have bidder when they have want ed to plunder people under the pretense- of protecting them Ours Is a different protectorate Concluding kid presentation of these In quiries Mr Bryan said When the Republicans get through ar- guing those five questions I will have same more for them The trouble la that the Republican party Is not attempting to meet Issue campaign Mr Bryan then took un oth Gold len frt r was pled Jell ask anyone people or to by to be a or a Bran no tem cOt shall Asks Tote title forcer citizen subject say have ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ er questions the campaign and on subjects Alter concluding his at the tent Mr was driven to the Grand Opera House where he made his last the night to a congregation composed largely of ladies some of had their there for or four TAGGART CLAIMS INDIANA Democratic Chairman Alio Predicts Gala to Washington Post Indianapolis Ind Oct 23 Democratic National Committeeman Taggart gave his first authorized Interview today on the Indiana outlook claiming the State but giving no figures He claims seven an increase of three and both of the State legislature He In- sists that the Republicans will use an Immense corruption fund on election day Senator Fairbanks also gave an Inter- view claiming the legislature as well as the Republican national and State tickets He expects the heaviest gains among the fanners He insists that his party will gain two Congressmen In Secretary Hawkins of committee gave out the following At this time of the campaign In 1895 we could feel the ground slipping from our This year we are holding our ground gaining I had expected we might lose in the closing weeks on account of the use of Republican but we have gained Instead and late to change the tide Senator Beverldge Is the most optimistic Republican He tells his friends that he thinks the party will carry Indiana by 40000 Conservative politicians place the Republican majority at 12000 The betting today reached as high as 3 to 1 on Dur bin Republican for governor The Christian minis era of Indianapolis met today and a poll showed twelve for Woolley Prohibitionist one for Bryan and 3 noncommittal with none for Mc- Kinley The canteen proposition Is los ing the President many votes among the Campbellites- The talk of trading Bryan for Kern it Is believed is responsible for Bryans re- appearance in the State next Thursday and he will make a number of spe hes In Dubois County Democrats are send ing canvassers abroad among the numer- ous German voters taking names of able bodied men between the ages of eighteen and fortyfive These canvassers affect much mystery as to their purpose but leave the inference that canvass is made in contemplation of a draft for an Imperial to serve in foreign lands This has created some little panic among the German farmers CLEVELAND ON EXPANSION Ills Views Clearly Defined In Connection with Nicaragua nail Hawaii Mr Clevelands Ironical and sarcastic observations on Republican policy In the Philippines expressed in January 1890 and reproduced in The Post yesterday are only consistent with his whole record as a public man In his first annual men December 8 18S5 Mr Cleveland in Congress of his withdrawal from the Senate of the FrellnghuysenZavala treaty negotiated by his immediate pred ecessor President Arthur with the gov- ernment of Nicaragua for the construc- tion by and at the sole cost of the United States of a canal through NIcaraguan territory and in explanation of that first official act Mr Cleveland defined his po sition in these words- I do not favor a policy of acquisition of new and distant territory or the Incorporation of remote with our own The are vital and organic and we must be conscious of that Irresistible tide of commercial expansion which aa the concomitant- of our active civilization day by day la being urged onward by those Increasing facilities of pro- duction transportation and communication to which steam and electricity have given birth but our duty in the present Instructs us to address our- selves mainly to the development of the vast re- sources of the great area committed to our and to the cultivation of the arts of peace our borders though Jealously alert In preventing the American hemisphere from being Involved In the political problems and complications of distant governments Therefore I am unable to recom- mend propositions Involving paramount privileges of ownership or right outside of our own territory when coupled with absolute and unlimited engage- ments to defend the territorial integrity of the State where such Interests He While the project of connecting the two oceans by a canal Is to be encouraged I am of opinion that any scheme to that end to be considered with favor should be free train the features alluded to Eight years later on the fifth day after his Inauguration for his second term as Mr Cleveland turned down Important acts of his immedi ate predecessor Harrison by withdraw- ing from the Senate the treaty nego- tiated only a month previously for the annexation of Hawaii to the United States Having withdrawn the treaty he dispatched the Hon James H Blount of Georgia to Honolulu as a paramount spe commissioner to make investigation the circumstances and conditions Surely said Mr Cleveland in his sub- sequent special message to Congress un der our Constitution and laws the en largement of our limits Is a manifestation of the highest attribute of sovereignty and if entered upon as an executive act all things relating to the transaction should be clear and free from suspicion Additional importance attached to this particular treaty of annexation because- It contemplated a departure from un broken American tradition in providing- for the addition to our terntory of islands of the sea more than2OCO miles removed from our nearest He Instructed Willis to advise the deposed Queen LJHuokalanl of his Mr Clevelands desire io aid in re storing her to her throne a If such restoration could be effected upon terms providing for clemency as well as justice to all concerned The conditions that the past be bur- led and that the restored government should reossume Its authority as If Its continuity had not been Interrupted These conditions did not acceptable to the Queen and thereupon Cleve land submitted to authority and discretion of Congress connected with our relations wail LATEST LIST OF SOLDIER DEAD Cotcalty itepnrts from Manila Taku and Nnsnanki Gen MacArthurs weekly report of deaths from disease is as follows Manila Oct 2J 1SOO Adjutant General Washington Following deaths have occurred since last report Dysentery Ocuber 2 Company E Serentfnth Infantry Albert W FrUby October 24 Company M Twentyflm Infantry Patrick J Martin Com- pany I Thirteenth Infantry Dennis Murphy Oc- tober 51 Company G Thirtyeighth lafaatrf George P Thornton Tubereoleeis October Tro p K Car Fred P SullIvan Company P r Infantry Charles T Stearns October 3 Company C Seventeenth Infantry William Gross Odder 7 Company 0 Thirtieth Infantry Login B Malarial fever October 52 Company A Forty ninth Infantry lUbert I Baker Company f Signs Corps U S A John Taylor August t Company B Twentyeighth Infantry John Engel fever October IS Company K Twenty seveath Ufaatry Charles E Lenox Meningitis Oeteber 4 Company H In- fantry William H October F Fortyfirst Infantry William J Miller All other eaiues Oettber 21 Trap L Third Cay Alien J Rnmery October IT Company C Infantry Douglas Abten October 21 Company I ThirtyserwUk Infantry John J Eng September 24 Opatpaay C In Vernl StottoUli October I Thirtyseventh Infantry William Chatmaa Surgeon Parley in charge of the hospi- tal at Nagasaki cables the following list of casualties Following have occurred since last re pert October SS nephritl Kathan HoSmaster Company II Fourteenth Infantry October S6- myeHtli Charles CrtsUr Company G Fourteenth Infantry One tins Killed ned Two Wounded Gen MaeArthur8 latest casualty list if as follows Killed October it near Bankuad texan Com- pany I Thirtythird Infantry S rgt Vincent Burg sutler Wounded Thomas Tucker w cnde4 la shoulder Thomas B Davis wounded ta thigh Involve mtUn set tree hour of Three CORcresalcs Co- nge men Indian feet mon arm sage Interest chare genera President cal coast pate Ur maters 4 Four air IL hart Eight air lan Port h rat presented Special The Jackson Phelps deaths madarala ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ SOUND MONEY PARADE- Six Hours and a Half GREAT CHICAGO DEMONSTRATION Holiness to Enable Republican Voters of All Branches of Trade to Join In the Prosperity Parade Reviewed by Senator llanna and Ills Committee Collcacncs A Lively Clash with Bryan Miontcrt Line of Jl arch Chicago Oct 27 For six and a today workingmen every i of industry in Chicago lawyers merchants railroad men financiers marched through the downtown districts of the city in the parade of Republican voters which was planned as the culmina- tion of the national campaign in Chicago Between two solid lines of spectators stretched from the starting point of the long march on Michigan avenue to its disbanding place on Jackson Boulevard near the river and underneath of flags and banners the big ofile buildings and waving from the windows and roofs the paraders tramped from 10 In the morning until half past 4 In the afternoon The day was practically a holiday In Chicago The Board of Trade the banks and many of the big downtown stores were closed and tbe residence districts were deserted for hours while themselves along the miles of the tortuous line of march and applaud- ed to their hearts The day was a Hardly a cloud flecked the sky while a cool breeze from Take Michigan tempered the warm rays of the sun and kept fluttering the flags and streamers which decorated the line of march and lifted high In the air the scores of Immense kites from which were suspended McKinley and Prosper- ity barners Along the Line of Itlnrch Promptly at 10 oclock the head of the parade composed of a double line of po j lice and followed by Col E C Young and staff chief marshal moved from the starting point at Seventh avenue and Randolph street and from that time the with scores of bands playing of music good bad and tramped steadily over the granite pavements past the reviewing stand on Jackson boulevard to Jackson and Mar ket streets where they disbanded- At nearly every point along the line of parade the marchers cheering waving flags blowing horns and singing palgn songs as they flIed by were cheer ed In turn by the densely packed masses on the sidewalks but here and there a counter demonstration in favor of Bryan was made by the throngs and in one in stance almost a riot took place in con sequence In front of the City Hall on Washington street were gathered a crowd of enthusiastic Bryan shouters all waving pictures of the Democratic Presi candidate Some one in the crowd sidewalk threw a potato into the ranks of a West Side marching club go Ing by The potato hit a marcher in the eye and forced him to leave the ranks Another marcher plunged Into the crowd and forced his way to the thrower In an instant there was a freeforall fight Three companies of the marchers broke ranks and with uplifted canes rushed into the struggling shouting mass on the work by over thirty po- licemen before things were quieted down and In the meantime black eyes and gory noses had accumulated to an alarming Features of the Display The parade was replete with unique features Well up toward the head of the fphrade and1 preceding the members of the Marquette Club who were In tallyhos two elephants lumbered along bearing on their huge sides banners inscribed G 0 P These were the contribution of the Marquette Club Close behind the ele phants came a diminutive donkey This was labeled I Am a Sound Money Don key The Hamilton Club contributed a float bearing a stuffed elephant appropri- ately decorated and bearing various leg ends Furnaces In full blast with rows of perspiring workmen caught the fancy of the crowd as did an enormous dinner pail mounted on trucks and festooned with canvased hams and loaves of bread The Chicago and Alton Railway em ployes escorted a float representing a chair car Near the center of the pa rade borne aloft on poles by a hundred men was a huge banner a block In length Inscribed McKinley and Roose velt and Four Years More of Prosperity A sixtyfoot plank gilded and properly inscribed was borne on the shoulders of fifty uniformed men The parade was reviewed by Senators Hanna Mason and Cullom National Committeemen Henry C Payne Perry I Heath and others from the balcony of the Grand Pacific Hotel and around this point j the greatest enthusiasm of the parade was shown Senator Hanna was cheered by the marchers and was kept busy respond- ing to the salutations Many outoftown organizations were represented In the parade The most prominent was a delegation of 150 from the Amerlcus Club of Pittsburg Pa who i were guests of the Hamilton Club Big marching clubs were also present from Kenosha WIs Rockford Dixon and Deerlng Ill and from many of the near by suburban towns CARTIST OUTI1HRAK IX SPAIN The Chief of a fined Killed and Men Put to Flight Madrid 23 A conflict between 24 armed and a detachment of alona The chief of the Carllsts was kill ed and another man was wounded Three Remington rifles were captured The band retreated in the direction of Mon cada pursued by cavalry and Infantry The Carlist general Bolivar has been arrested at Barcelona and a number of other arrests have been made In connec tion with the uprising at Badalono It ap pears that a Badalona band of Carltats who wore red caps summoned the gen darmes of Badalona to surrender but the attacked and dispersed aim of the Carlisle the municipal treasury as on the body of their chief was found a receipt thus worded Received from the mayor of Badalona pesetas which will be refunded when his majesty King Carlos occupies the throne of his ancestors j Orllst appeared near Icualado were pursued by the gendarmes but two were wounded all got away Another and was discovered neighborhood of Vergara and was also pursued j Worried Over Oar Iernmlne Trade J Berlin Oct 23 The central bureau for the preparation of commercial treaties has addressed a circular to the German press calling attention to the remarkable in crease of American exports to the Le- vant since the establishment of a direct line of steamships to and the opening of a permanent exhibition of American in the Turkish The bureau advises the organization of a German chamber of commerce In to watch German commer- cial Interests against American competi Two llenib In Cbafleen Command Gen Chaffee reported to the War Department the following casualties At Battery O Third Artillery cause un known at Pekln October 23 general pris- oner James A Friel late private F Ninth Infantry gunshot wound abdomen Pass- ing Reviewing hour hal I i thousand party th content marcher I earn dental sIdewalk d- egree par- lor I i Oct occurred yesterday near I I later them Oct bend ot twenty Con I tion I has Tlenuln camp October 3 Rumus Com- pany Pracilcaily Suspended indif- ferent Iii gendarmes Bad Barcelona 29A al- though Con- stantinople John- son ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ POLITICAL GOSSIP of smoke from the Jersey shore are entering Into the campaign for Con- gress In the Seventh New York district That includes Staten Island where there are not a few splendid residences The portly and nlso somewhat aged German Nicholas Muller of New Brighton who was In Congress twenty years ago and after a long interregnum came back two years ago that he might have something- to take his mind from several domestic sorrows is again running for the Demo- crats while the Republicans have nomi nated Gen James L OBolrne of Now York City At the last session Mr Muller Intro duced ono or two bills in the House to make it an offense to maintain factories producing black smoke and deadly fumes that might be wafted into another State This was aimed at the Now Jersey manu factories which have come to be a men ace to Staten Island residents disfiguring their fine houses and choking the people with nauseous gases Now Mr Muller and his friends say that some of the big corporations which own these factories In New Jersey are combining to defeat him for reelection Whether or not that be so Mr Muller had SOOO majority two years ago and the district is regarded as a Democratic stronghold in a Wisconsin town of the name of Bristol a big Republican club from Kenosha numbering 700 marchers had a high and somewhat expensive frolic the other night When the marchers reach ed Bristol they found the hall in which a Republican meeting was to be held crowded to the dcors As the marchers could not get within some 100 of the younger members started out to take the town and to a considerable extent they succeeded Cider mills were looted fire bells rung and one store stripped of all Its contents The Republican club Im- mediately promised to make good for all losses and efforts are on foot to prevent the arrest and conviction of the Judge Bartlett Tripp of South Dakota who was Minister to Austria under Presi- dent Cleveland but who Is now regarded as substantially a Republican has been campaigning In behalf of McKInley and Roosevelt ir Iowa Illinois and Indiana He is quoted as saying that after through nearly every tection of Illi- nois he does not regard It as possible that the vote could be for Bryan except where laborers are in the majority Judge Bart- lett says a vast amount of pernicious literature was spread among these work- ingmen but that the effect of this has been righted and he thinks the vote of the majority of Illinois laborers will be for McKinley He will spend the re- mainder o the campaign speaking In South Dakota Nebraska Republicans are crying col onization just as Democrats are doing in West Virginia There are some wealthy farmers residing along the borders of the State and the charge is that they are concerned in a colonization scheme that would bring voters from Missouri and Colorado Corn husking began early In October and Is said to have been com- pleted more than a week ago Many laborers were imported from adjoining Spates for this work and although the Is done the laborers nearly nil of whom are Bryan men are retained In many cases six or seven more than the actual needs of the farmers at this time The purpose is claimed to be to vote these men for Bryan at the election next Tues dayThe parties in Nebraska are having a lively wrangle as to which ticket shall be given first place on the official bal lot The State law says that the party which cast most votes at the preceding election shall have first place Accord ingly the fusionists declare that the first place belongs to them but the Republi cans assert that the fusionists are not a party but several parties and that the Republicans cast more votes last year than any other party Defiant letters have been sent to county clerks who are making up the official ballot and a Sam Hill of a time has followed Senator Thurston of Nebraska has been campaigning in Montana for the assist- ance of Senator Carter The Nebraskan has had great ovations everywhere In that State and Is credited with making Re publican votes One of his latest meetings was at Butte where the demonstration- was on a magnificent The heat of campaigning In Iowa has narrowed down to two Congressional dis- tricts the Second and the Sixth State- ments by the Republicans seem to Indi- cate that they are beaten for sure In the Second district There the Democrats are openly trading promising their votes for McKinley In return for votes for Volmer Democratic candidate for Congress The Republican State committee has made a frantic appeal to the Republicans and Gold Democrats In the district to vote straight and not scratch their tickets Late last week an appeal to the Repub- lican State committee for help was made from the Sixth district where Representa- tive Lacey is the candidate for reelection Maj Lacey says he Is certain of 2000 ma jority in the district and he has pulled out of so many close fights in that dis- trict that there is a disposition to believe him The activity last week of Demo crats in Manhaska and Wapello counties centers of population caused Republicans much alarm The result is said to de- pend largely upon the mining vote Many negroes have recently been Imported into the mines and are of course expected to vote the Republican ticket There is a Social Democratic candidate for Congress- in the district and there Is a possibility that he will draw many votes from among the miners which would be distinctly to Maj Laceys advantage Some North Dakota voters are trying- to make prohibition the paramount issue In the State campaign and to a large ex- tent they have succeeded The State con- vention was captured by what is known as the Missouri slope crowd and the can- didates nominated were nearly all Iny eluding the candidate for attorney gen- eral hostile to the enforcement of pro- hibition laws There the opponents of prohibition were content to rest even al- lowing a plank in the platform commend ing the prohibition law which was enact ed after prohibition was incorporated in the State constitution Since the State convention however a great stir has been made by the Prohi- bitionists so that the Republican State committee has announced that they will use all their Influence and all the ma- chinery of the party to prevent the sage of a resolution by the legislature to resubmit the question of a prohibition amendment to the constitution to the people Some three yours ago a bill that would practically have given local au thorities the right to license saloons pass- ed both branches of the legislature but was vetoed by the governor The Republican candidate for governor of Minnesota Capt Van Sent was re- cently assailed Jy Democrats in a state- ment that he had not fairly treated widow of a former business In settling up their affairs The caus- ed consternation among the Republicans for a while but finally the widow a Mrs Rutherford shown to have her stock In the company to Capt Van Sent at a price considerably more thaa It would bring In the market all of which has eased the situation for Minnesota Re- publicans and enabled them to tee a good safe majority still for their candi- date Wise Hctlled America Indians or New York Oct 29 Thomas Sherman of Jersey City is in a critical condition in the Jersey City Hospital from a wound received at the hands of John Cunning ham last night The trouble out of a depute as to whether the Indians or were the first settlers of Amer- ica Urecipta Kx pen ill arm National bank notes received yesterday for redemption 573502 internal revenue 857451 expenditures ttiVXO Fumes perpetra- tors S order- S 5 Up Se C go- ing S SSS S pan the charge was sold Irish Treasury and Zl61dhl customs ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ WAR STILL AT HEIGHT Series of Fights Between the Americans and Filipinos GEN hALTS DISASTROUS 3IARCH- HnnUhlps Encountered by to Infanta Province Deocrtcr Fnvio Now n Kebcl General SeuUa Threaten Inff lletMluc to Former Commit ea of Pucntj fourth Iteciuient Oen Young Reports IncreasIng Insurgent Activity Manila Oct 38 While scoutine Looc u detachment of th Twentieth and Twentyeighth regiments u dc Oupt- Belgler were attacked by m instilments- armet with riHt under the command of a white man whose nationality hi known to the Americans The immrgaats for the most part Intrenched After an heroic fight Capt Deleter drove off the enemy killing than s r mr five The fight lasted for two Capt Belgler and three privates were slightly wounded anti txvo of UM Ameri- cans wore killed An engagement took on October 21 betue c detachments of the Third Cav- alry and the Thirtythird Volunteer In fantry numbering sixty and a force ol insurgents including 400 rJilemen and 1000 bolo men The fighting was dep r- ate Finally under pressure of over whelming numbers the Americans ware compelled to retire on Narvican LlenV George L Febiger and four privates were killed nine were wounded and four missing Twentynine horses are missing A number of teamsters were captured by the Insurgents but were released The enemys loss Is estimated at 150 Column mini by Kenosnil A civilian launch towing a barge loaded with merchandise near Arayat was at- tacked by a force of 1W insurgents titular David Fagln a deserter from the Twenty fourth Infantry The American trop on hearing the firing turned out in before the boat could be looted and re captured It Fagln who holds the rank of general among the Insurgents lies sworn special ermlty toward his former company Of the twenty men he captured a month ago seven have returned Ono was killed In a fight his body being hor ribly mutilated Fngln semis mo Kes to his former comrades threatening them with violence if they become his prison ers It was Fagins men who captured Lieut Frederick W Alataetter who Is still a prisoner Gen Halls expedition with a force of nearly SOO men through the mountains to Bnangonan Province of Infanta in pur- suit of the Insurgent general Galilee al It discovered no trace of the encountered hardships on tlw march Twenty Chinese porters died forty men were sent Into stationing a garrison of 250 men in H gonan and Island oil th coast of Infanta Province Gen Hall and the rest of his force embarked there on the transport Garronse UeiTiiileil trout Town Reports from Gen Youngs district show a dally Increase of Insurgents there owing to the fact that recruits are going thither from the towns While a detail of the Thirtythird Vol unteer Infantry was returning from Ban gucd on rafts it was fired upon by Insur- gents Sergt Berdstaller being killed and two privates wounded The Philippine commission has decided to compile the revised Philippines customs tariff from Its own Investigations assist by the report of the army board The re- sult will be forwarded to the United States for publication and discussion among those interested In foreign com- merce When the details appear to satisfactory and the draft has been an proved by the Secretary of War the cam mission will promulgate ft as a law The measure has on n new and In ternational commercial internet and the course of the commission is heartily com mended here Archbishop Clmppclle nt Dnciipnu Archbishop ChappMle who recently left Manila accompanied by several friars for the northern disricts of Luzon under conditions that aroused the suspicions of the Filipinos here that he Intended to es- tablish the friars In parishes there was warmly welcomed on his arrival at Diego pan As two years have elapsed since an opportunity for baptism had been present ed more than 2500 persons have boon bap- tized In view of the protest of the parish against the appointment of a friar as par- ish priest Mgr did not attempt to make it DOUIVTS TilE TOUTUIIK TATE Coiiiimiitiler Skeptical of Reported liar Imritic to Men In Philippines Special to The WithlngUm Norfolk Va Oct 23 Commander J C Gilmore U S N does not believe that one of the men of his command McDon- ald who was captured with him while surveying in the Philippines was buried alive by order of the insurgent chief No viclo The latter hits just boon condemn ed to death for that anti other crimes by a courtmartial of whose findings Gets Wheaton has approved It Is more likely n the opinion of the commander that Novlclo was tried for executing a wound ed prisoner and condemned for that of- fense The sensationally detailed account of the murder of VenvJIIe by opening lila veins and of burying alive of lie Donald is regarded askance by naval of- ficers acquainted with the methods of the tribemen in dealing with their enamiM Commander Gllmore and his fellowaap fives left McDonald for dead Venvlile wise desperately wounded Such small comforts as could be left him placed within his reach by American prison- ers before they were marched off TUft boy did not look as though h could llv half an hour when his comrades torn front him by their savag pter It Is highly Improbable In the opinion of naval men here that nay trouble wwU have been gone to in burying whom It was desired to torture Filipino havagas thy delight to wU MC the torture to which a captive is nut ami would therefore not buri 4 Mc- Donald COMMITTED SUICIDE AT SEA MIlM MarlIn VIio Rild She a School Tenrlier Oil Ittitlrram Savannah Ga Oct 52 Tho siMUMhlp- Naeoch e from New York arrlv 4 bar today with passenger ratecteg Wkftn the chip salted Thursday a young women registered OR UM list s- Mis Martin She was about twenty five or thirty ett Sit vhm- clous and made friends Mi Capt Smith that was a schooL teas r In New but had Joet posi- tion To o e of Uur p afrs sfca said h hid tiring for Urn in Ract Twentythird street New York T stilt another a young warns h Mid that had became 4eeisndssit it had test position sad UMU fc tend to om U MM M- Hatteras was late Friday ove lug and about 10 eetoek MISS Martin r tired morning she w miss- ing The only Mi an un rN- en the kamita of which was BcnUrfaad 1- R Maltby CBzonovte aad a ticket In her purse which hud t X Y- Tt iceTrr c eil Vlililnn Week WaUham Oct Ji Tbe ttaonjd freight rr ek on the TFileMnttK r u within a occurred this aftaroflya Two men were slightly hurt and ears and on tecoraoUve wore badly dam agl The injured axe V A linens fire man and Jamen LHrin tOH bead Drk man both of Fitchburg Knxia ir Lyn4s who was eheineor ot th freight Uai run Into last Sunday was lusto In charge ot the train that was telescoped an Expedition Ills near net were more hours place are subsequently force en- emy tad After lie bit lucre Ill Pact the were the were the assert have tae tnt one there warn years was easily Ink she Jersey leer been souse passenger eke sino her i passed Saturday clew wee beast purchased Mass here week sea ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ > ¬

Transcript of Washington Weekly Post. (Washington, DC) 1900-10-30 [p 3]....Berlin Oct 29 Referring to a report...

Page 1: Washington Weekly Post. (Washington, DC) 1900-10-30 [p 3]....Berlin Oct 29 Referring to a report cabled from Washington that the United States government would agree to the first two

THE WASHINGTON POST TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 1900 3ti I II

INDEMNITY ASKED

The Envoys Ask China to Pay200000000

IDBEIGX CONTROL OF CUSTOMS

pfmn a for Prince Tunnn Head Modified

Imprisonment Llfe Tlenuln InirBgiianal Territory and Open floor

Irivilect nt Other Center or Trade

rorch e or Wnr Material Abroad to tierBbltiIi d Ituaftlafc Ueply to Germany

London Oct at The Chinese pleniDd-

ttRtitri op n 4 negvlhutem my thShanghai cormpWMlent ot the Dally Kx-

pr s by propMtog that China tthevkl

piT an indemnity ot IMG U09 sterling In

zty Installment agreeing that the likin-

nd the cuntooui rvie HewM be underjoiviirn Control wntfl the obligation shouldb discharged

The al o agreed that Prince Tuanb far life that Tien

tsin tbtM as an Internationalc i and that other place should beop T l to foreign trade

Vn undertake te abstain from pur-

ru i war material In order toraj the Indemnity to doublethe import duties

1arlinl Acceptance br Ilunnln-I ndon Oct RuMia says SL

imr correspondent ofir H kn wldKlng the AngloGerman

art MTnnt unretorvedly accept thetwo rauaea as eatabltehlng principle

had already advocated Concernnit clause 3 she simply refers the two

contracting to the Russian circularof August 35 saying that the would modi-fy h r attitude according to circumitanres The very curtlydismissed that itnot rail for comment

Lord George Hamilton secretary ofstate for India has received the followinglispatch dated October 22 at Paotlngfufrom Sir Alfreii Oaseleo

I have appointed an international cornto inquire Into the murder of the

Tnissionarie and railway official with aview of fixing the responsibility

Itt a diapatch dated PaoTlngFu October 24 Gen nays that In pursu-ance of from Field MarshalCount von WaMernee the British troopswill return to Pekin and Tientsin reach-ing thHr destinations about November 6

Afir reporting regarding the expediagainst the Boxers Gen Gaselee

includes with a statement that he ex-pects to reach Pekln himself October 3L

On Iliiili of French NoteParli Oct The Havns agency has

Twelved the following from PeklnTh foreign envoys have held further

nvellngs and the French note has beencepted in principle as the basIs of dJs

rurclon LI Hung Chang has informedtho legation of the poisoning of Yullpien The Austrian Minister has arriviHl

A company of French troops sent fora days march west of Pekln to rid a di-htrit that was reported to be Infestedvlth Boxers killed eight rebels took oneprisoner and captured a mitrailleuse

The international column now returning from PaoTlngFu Is purging the vil-lages en route The armed population isting punished and all arms arc de-stroyed

The Chinese Minister here cabled to Emperor Kwam Su yesterday urging hismajesty to return to Pekln pointing outhat his so doing would very greatly la-

cilltate the peace negotiationsAn o the Third Article

Berlin Oct 29 Referring to a reportcabled from Washington that the UnitedStates government would agree to thefirst two paragraphs of the AngloGtrman agreement regarding China andwould make a reservation regardinggraph three a foreign oflicetoday

L the United States will accept thefrst and second paragraphs there will beno necessity for a separate understand-ing regarding the third since the firstand second logically cover the third

The Berliner Neueste Nachrlchten sayseemlolllciolly

It was to be anticipated that the United States government with Its declareddisinclination to acquire territory InChina would not accept the AngloGerman reservation If all the cabinets wouidfollow Americas example and pronouncefor freedom of trade and against terri-torial acquisition the reservation wouldbe needless

The foreign envoys In Pekln said aforeign office offIcial today are stillholding conferences but they communi-cate to the Chinese commissioners onlysuch decisions as are unanimouslyreached

DEATHS OF THE DAY

Gen Pasiencer Agent of II O StrickenwIll Apoplexy

Baltimore Oct 29 J M Schryver gen-

eral passenger agent of the Baltimore andOhio Railroad died at noon today ofapoplexy He left his desk In the CentralBuilding Saturday afternoon In his usualgood health and spirits and was taKensuddenly ill late last night the attackcoming on while he was at home with his

lit and three children Mr Schryver-was about fifty years old and had longbeen connected with Baltimore andOhio Railroad

Mr Schryver was born on December 20

1M near Circlevllle Ohio Ha spent hisfirly life In that section Mr SchryversiudiMl law but gave It up to enter therailway service In October 1S73 ho obtitineti a position with the Baltimore andOhio as voucher clerk While serving Inthis position he gave such satisfactionthat he was to rate and divisionclrrk then and assistant gen-eral ticket

n he was appointed asfcistam general passenger agent withtiitdiiuarters in Baltimore Upon the resIKH ition of General Passenger Agent

iiarl s 0 Scull In 1 7 Mr Schryver wasslfoted to fill the vacancy His jurlsdic-t n extended over the lines east of theOh River

He was popular with his fellowofficialsf the Baltimore and Ohio and news ot

hi Middrn death caused genuine sorrowit the Baltimore and Ohio Central BuildiiK t day

Trenton X J Gen Wlll-n s Stryker of ths New Jersey Ntnal Guard died at his home on Westte xtreet this morning He had

1 n ailing siaee last Thursdny with aplication of acute indigestion and

Gen Stryker was born JnTr sixtytwo years of ageHP graduated front Princeton College inl and upon the breaking out of the

r he assisted In organizing thenth New Jersey Regiment He was

br v tod lieutenant colonel for meritoriousMrvioen during the of Charleston

hfr he wa wounded Con Stryker wasa Uwy r but sorer followed profesn He leaves a widow and throe

dren-

Aln ana Pa Oct 28 Rev Martin Luthr my r preidin eider of the Methalit Church district was found

vsa a guest Htrwas to hav preachedlitre last not feeling heretired to Heart trouble wastl au Dr Sinyser was ilftynine-

ars old He entered the ministry inin the East Baltimore ConferenceSmynrs miectwtor will be

t luctinc of the bIshops at Trenton NJ next

Philadelphia Pa Oct 20Dr MatthewJ ri r the pioneer specialist on ijervou-d ii first physleian in this cityto j l electricity as a remedy for narv-ournti last night at hi

BIG

t or

f

tko I imp

abCh

tiep the

frtnit

forth claWdoC

111 lon

Gale

par

t

the

0 promote

agent

fy Oct

t

hart trouble

Four-t

chi

Altoti at a house where

night well

J

Jr

Went

f y011 I W r c renrs old

114

4

parties

tin

1s

I

Adjt

s1ee

thIs ho

but

appointeda

t

and

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

>

>

>

=

<

<

THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION

BY PRESIDENT OP THE UNITEDSTATUS OF AMERICA-

A PROCLAMATIONIt ka pl J Almlthty led i trUc ourU in uT r B4 hotter through another

Tk of rellcion and charity h reverywhere Our country throughtit Ms tot h i Meued with abundantbtrrMU Labor and th Icdnitrle ofP hare prospered beyond allOur eeramere kai iprtad orer war id Ourp r lofiueate ia Uc freedom tad

e OT r a4 1 4 llrta f our oficUl repreteau

and na r of In China huem mtaalr preserved VT been

ge raHr exempt from pitt ace and othertreat ealamltl sad etea tke tratfe tlilUlUa-wMeh orenrktlmtd city GaiTcaUaevMtet the Mfitimeata of sympathy and

eaaritr by vlrtua of which wa artU He4 pe ple

yew therefore 1 William MaKlaley Prattef the da hereby aw I t and

tH lh of Xartmber neatvs by all the peapta of the Waited

at tarns r abroad ai a day at Thanks5l ta and if M to Him who held the

ta Xe Iwilav f life handI reaatn i d tkat they gather In their neTeral

pta a ot wanMp and deratiily glee Him thanksthe preteortty wherewith He baa eadawe-

dfemton and bMMBlty ear armlet ned noand far all Hta beaeSta to ua aa IndlTM

teals sad aa a tMtion and that they humblyslay tor the eMtlattaaee of lila Divine furfir Mcent and amity with other nattMi andfir rlghteeuMwaa and peace In all a r ways

I wittiest I have hereunto set ray band andcawed the seal the United States to beaSied

at the city of Washington this Xth dayet Oetefcor In the year of our Lord eae thwi

Mae beaked and of the Mtp leMe efthe United States the one hundred and twmty-ttth WILLIAM MKIXLET

Dy the PresidentJOHN hAY Secretary of State

PORTO RICAN CANNOT REGISTER

Junrbe Neither n Native Xor a NaturalizedCitizen of United State

New York Oct 2y The application orFrank Juarbe a Porto Rican for a per-emptory writ of mandamus directing thehoard of registry to register him as avoter on the ground that he became anAmerican citizen by virtue of the cessionof Porto Rico by Spain to the UnitedStates was denied today by JusticeFreedman in the Supreme Court

Justice Freedman In his opinion citesArticle XIV of the Constitution of the

States stating that all personsnaturalized in the United States

mId subejct to the jurisdiction thereof arecitizens of the United States and of theState where they reside The movingpapers he says show that Juarbe wasnot horn in tne United States and do notshow that he was naturalized

SETS ASIDE VOTING TRUST

American Distilling Company Stock

Combine Declared Illegal

Chancellor MagIc of New Jerner RulesAny Irrevocable Arrnnceiucnt or Ex-

clusion of Other StockholdersAcniust Iic 1olicy

Trenton N J Oct 29ChancellorMagic today rendered a decision in oneof the suits brought by Philip Kreisselagainst the Distilling Company of

In the decision the chancellor grantsinjunction restraining Au-

gust Belmont John L Cadwallader theJefferson College William F Harrlty andAlvin W Krech trustees from voting64000000 worth of stock of the company

which they hold as trustees in pursuance-of an agreement entered into in Junelast The agreement provided that Willlam I Bull William F Harrity RudolphKepler Alvin W Krech and RichardSutro a committee of the stockholdersshould Investigate the affairs of the com-pany This committee did investigateand furtherance of the agreement recommended that the stockholders deposittheir stock with the Mercantile TrustCompany for surrender to the trusteesalready named who for a period of fiveyears should hold legal title to the stockand have power to vote It in the manage-ment of the company

The agreement also provided that thestockholders who should not deposit theirstock with the trust company or transfer to the should not partici-pate In any benefit of the plans adoptedexcept on such conditions and penaltiesas the committee and trustees should de-

termineKreissel In his bin charged that the

trustees were about to put Into operationthe plans for the management of thecompany that had been recommended bythe committee of stockholders includingthe election of officers and he askedthat they be restrained from doing so

The chancellor In granting the Injunction that the voting trust that hadbeen In pursuance of the agree-ment was Illegal He recognized therule of stockiiohlers to delegate by proxyor otherwise the power to vote stockwhere that authority was revocable buthe held that stockholders were entitledto have other stockholders exercise andexpress their Judgment In the manage-ment of the company except where bylegislative authority stockholders maydelegate that power and added

If stockholders combine by confer-ring power of attorney or by creating atrust with voting power to formulateand execute a plan for the managementof a corporation and exclude themselvesby an act irrevocable for a fixed periodfrom exercising their Judgment or Ifthey reserve to themselves any benefit tobe derived from such a plan to the ex-

clusion of other stockholders who do notcome Into the combination the agreement-to so combine is contrary to the dutydue other stockholders and against pub-lic policy

STUDENTS LOST IN UNEXPLORED CAVE

Experience of Two Sjrneiine UnIversityllojH CaveriiH to He Explored

Syracuse N Y Oct 2S P M Helperand K A Holmes Syracuse Universitystudents discovered a cave near Jamesvllle this county Friday They crawledinto it and finding a passage leadingdownward they entered that also andsoon wore In a second cave Another pas-sage leading downward was entered andtho boys found themselves In a thirdcavern They had only a few matchesand when they tried to retrace their stepscould not locate the opening

After searching for more than two hoursfound a small hole In the roof of

cave By alternately standing uponeach others shoulders they managed todig away the rock and crawl up into thecave by which they entered finally roachinff the open air An exploring expeditionwill soon be organized

MOSQUITO FLEET STORMBOUND

Cutter No Reported 31i lnc in u GaleVe el Im Our In Search

Wilmington C C Oct 29 Four of thevessels of the mosquito fleet Nos 7 S

9 and 11 bound from Trenton to Cuba bythe route to do revenue cutterduty the island put in at Southportyesterday morning on account of roughweather reported having lost No 10

In the vicinity of Frying Pan lightshipearly Sunday morning

The revenue cutter Algonquin stationedat this port loft immediately In search ofher little vessel Is of very lightdraft a crew of captain and sixnun

TiE

te-e

ofhue

hue

of made

ole

del Valeapr the

na-t

far

Trof

ef

Unit

Ame-rIca

in

trust

hell

tHY

0

lanand

The

year weeksbeen manifest

been

great

theand seas

CIlgte41neat distantThe

tires our peoplebeen

the

Chris-tian

aisles

54 fer seedthee and harvest fir the

Ifs

Disc

lied

es

I

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

±

BRYAN WILL OBEY LAW

As to Payment of GovernmentBonds in Silver or

REPLIES TO SERIES OF QUESTIONS

Withdrawal of Army from the Philippinesand Declaration of Their Independenceaa Soon na Stable Government Caa Be-

KatnblUbedIn Turn Asks a Number ofQuestions for Some Responsible Itepnb

to An ver Tlic lloaroc Doctrine

Wilmington Del Oct 24The ofMr Bryans night meetings Inwas held in a big tent and while themeeting began much earlier Mr BryandW not appear until 9 oclock He had along and busy day and found It necessaryto take an unusually prolonged rest afterhis arrival In this city The tent wasCrowded to suffocation and there werefar more people on the outside of the tentand In Its Immediate vicinity than therewere on the inside of the canvas

The great crowd yelled itself hoarsewhen M Bryan entered and some timewas required to secure quiet After In-

troducing his speech by expressing hisgratification at being present Mr Bryantook up the Issues of the campaign Hetook cognizance of a series of questionspropounded to him by John P Nleids ofthis city These questions were as follows

I Will he if elected President ascommanderInchief Immediately with-draw the army from the Philippine Is1ands

2 How soon does he contemplate that astable form of government can be givento the Philippine Wanda

3 How soon after a stable form of gov-ernment is established does he proposethat Congress shall declare the indepen-dence of these islands

4 How soon after a stable form of gov-ernment Is established and Independenceis declared does he propose that the Amer-ican protectorate over the Philippine Isl-ands shall continue

5 Will he pay the obligations of thisgovernment in silver gold if electedPresident

Mr Bryan read the questions and replied as he proceeded to each of the In-quiries He said In effect that he wouldget the army out or the Philippines assoon as possible and with reference tothe payment of the national debt that hewould obey the law

his Iolicr Iii the PhilippinesIntroducing the subject Mr Bryan saidIf I were to permit a Republican in

each town to select the subjects which Ito discuss I am afraid that every-where some Republican would avail hlmsell of th opportunity in order to preventmy discussing the things Republicans didnot want to discuss And when I heardthat some questions were to be asked Isuggested that It was only proper thatthe Republican committee should backthe questions so that there would be a re-sponsible party known in the transactionI have not heard yet whether the Repub-lican committee was willing to ask thesequestions on its responsibility or not but-I thought that I would make an excep-tion of this case and answer the livequestions and then ask some

He then took up the questions and reto them seriatim as follows

a reply to the first question he quoted from his speech of acceptance saying

I stated that if elected President I wouldImmediately convene Congress In extraor-dinary session and would ask Congress-to declare the nations policy to be to es-tablish a stable government in the Phil-ippine Islands as we are now establish-ing a stable government in Cuba to de-clare our purpose to give independenceto the Filipinos as we have promised togive independence to the Cubans to de-

clare our purpose to give protection tothe Filipinos as we have promised to giveprotection to the Cubans and have forseventyfive years given protection to therepublics of Central and South America

Time Than Required in CubitOn the second question he said No

one has attempted to fix the number ofhours or days or weeks or months neces-sary but I will say this that I believethat we could establish a stable govern-ment in the Philippine Islands in lesstime than the Republican party has estab-lished one in Cuba and that I think Ican promise you that our officials wouldnot embezzle as Republican officials haveembezzled Cuban money

To the third question he answered thatin his speech of acceptance it was proposed to give them Independence as soonas their stable government is establishedThe phrase and as soon means imme-diately in our language I dont knowwhat It means In Republican and answer-Ing the fourth question he said

If the questioner had read my speechhe would have seen that there was nolimit on the protectorate and we believethat this nation can assert the doctrinethat when this nation helps a republic tostand upon Its feet the ground whereon-it stands is holy ground and that no king

ever set his foot on ItOn the fifth question relative to pay

ing the obligations of this governmentIn sliver or gold if elected President hesaidI want the Republicans who want thatquestion answered to first find out whatthe law requires and then I want themto know that If elected President I willenforce that law just as I will enforcethe law against trusts and put stripedclothes on big thieves as well as littlethieves But if you ask me to construe-a Republican law I reply that I shallnot construe a law until It becomes myduty to enforce It

3Ir Rrynn Questions InHaving replied to the questions Mr

Bryan then propounded some of his ownHe said

Now I want to ask five questions andwhen I ask these questions I want someresponsible man to answer them It ishardly fair for a man who has no respon-sibility to place his responsibility againstthat of one who has responsibility placedupon him by a party and I want yourparty leaders to answer the questionsthat I am going to

Mr Bryan then from the Presidents message of December 5 1 83 rec-ommending the ncrease of the army to105000 men and asked If the Republicanparty through authorized tospook will declare that Republican suc-

cess this fall means a standing army of100000 in this country

His second question was If the Declaration of Independence Is true thatgovernments derive their just pow r fromthe consent of the governed I want toask how you can buy the right to govern

cttu r uiquestion was Is the Filipino

the fourth question Can you purchasetrade with human

Monroe Doctrine In the Pacific

The fifth question related to the estab-lishment of a protectorate In the Philip-pine Islands concerning which Mrsaid Republicans that weprotect the Filipino without a great dealof trouble We protected the repub-lics of Central and South America forseventyfive years and we have hadauthority In those South American re-

publics We have never governedbut we have protected them fromInterference It has never anythingbut It has been valuable

The Republican doctrine Is the doctrinebehind which the monarchies of the OldWorld have bidder when they have wanted to plunder people under the pretense-of protecting them Ours Is a differentprotectorate

Concluding kid presentation of these Inquiries Mr Bryan said

When the Republicans get through ar-guing those five questions I will havesame more for them The trouble la thatthe Republican party Is not attempting tomeet Issue campaign

Mr Bryan then took un oth

Gold

len

frt

r

was

pled

Jell

ask

anyone

people or to by

to be a or a

Bran

no

tem

cOt

shall

Asks Tote

title forcercitizen subject

say

have

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

er questions the campaign andon

subjectsAlter concluding his at the tent

Mr was driven to the Grand OperaHouse where he made his lastthe night to a congregation composedlargely of ladies some of hadtheir there for or four

TAGGART CLAIMS INDIANA

Democratic Chairman Alio Predicts Gala

to Washington PostIndianapolis Ind Oct 23 Democratic

National Committeeman Taggart gave hisfirst authorized Interview today on theIndiana outlook claiming the State butgiving no figures He claims seven

an increase of three and bothof the State legislature He In-

sists that the Republicans will use anImmense corruption fund on election day

Senator Fairbanks also gave an Inter-view claiming the legislature as well asthe Republican national and State ticketsHe expects the heaviest gains among thefanners He insists that his party willgain two Congressmen In

Secretary Hawkins ofcommittee gave out the following Atthis time of the campaign In 1895 we couldfeel the ground slipping from ourThis year we are holding our groundgaining I had expected we might lose inthe closing weeks on account of the useof Republican but we have gainedInstead and late to change thetide

Senator Beverldge Is the most optimisticRepublican He tells his friends that hethinks the party will carry Indiana by40000 Conservative politicians place theRepublican majority at 12000 The bettingtoday reached as high as 3 to 1 on Durbin Republican for governor

The Christian minis era of Indianapolismet today and a poll showed twelve forWoolley Prohibitionist one for Bryanand 3 noncommittal with none for Mc-Kinley The canteen proposition Is losing the President many votes among theCampbellites-

The talk of trading Bryan for Kern itIs believed is responsible for Bryans re-appearance in the State next Thursdayand he will make a number of spe hes

In Dubois County Democrats are sending canvassers abroad among the numer-ous German voters taking names of ablebodied men between the ages of eighteenand fortyfive These canvassers affectmuch mystery as to their purpose butleave the inference that canvass ismade in contemplation of a draft for anImperial to serve in foreign landsThis has created some little panic amongthe German farmers

CLEVELAND ON EXPANSION

Ills Views Clearly Defined In Connectionwith Nicaragua nail Hawaii

Mr Clevelands Ironical and sarcasticobservations on Republican policy In thePhilippines expressed in January 1890

and reproduced in The Post yesterday areonly consistent with his whole record asa public man In his first annual men

December 8 18S5 Mr Cleveland inCongress of his withdrawal from

the Senate of the FrellnghuysenZavalatreaty negotiated by his immediate predecessor President Arthur with the gov-

ernment of Nicaragua for the construc-tion by and at the sole cost of the UnitedStates of a canal through NIcaraguanterritory and in explanation of that firstofficial act Mr Cleveland defined his position in these words-

I do not favor a policy of acquisition ofnew and distant territory or the Incorporation ofremote with our own

The are vital and organic andwe must be conscious of that Irresistible tide ofcommercial expansion which aa the concomitant-of our active civilization day by day la beingurged onward by those Increasing facilities of pro-

duction transportation and communication towhich steam and electricity have given birth butour duty in the present Instructs us to address our-

selves mainly to the development of the vast re-

sources of the great area committed to ourand to the cultivation of the arts of peaceour borders though Jealously alert In preventingthe American hemisphere from being Involved Inthe political problems and complications of distantgovernments Therefore I am unable to recom-

mend propositions Involving paramount privilegesof ownership or right outside of our own territorywhen coupled with absolute and unlimited engage-

ments to defend the territorial integrity of theState where such Interests He While theproject of connecting the two oceans bya canal Is to be encouraged I am of opinion thatany scheme to that end to be considered with favorshould be free train the features alluded to

Eight years later on the fifth day afterhis Inauguration for his second term as

Mr Cleveland turned downImportant acts of his immedi

ate predecessor Harrison by withdraw-ing from the Senate the treaty nego-

tiated only a month previously for theannexation of Hawaii to the UnitedStates Having withdrawn the treaty hedispatched the Hon James H Blount ofGeorgia to Honolulu as a paramount spe

commissioner to make investigationthe circumstances and conditions

Surely said Mr Cleveland in his sub-sequent special message to Congress under our Constitution and laws the enlargement of our limits Is a manifestationof the highest attribute of sovereigntyand if entered upon as an executive actall things relating to the transactionshould be clear and free from suspicionAdditional importance attached to thisparticular treaty of annexation because-It contemplated a departure from unbroken American tradition in providing-for the addition to our terntory of islandsof the sea more than2OCO miles removedfrom our nearest

He Instructed Willis to advisethe deposed Queen LJHuokalanl of hisMr Clevelands desire io aid in re

storing her to her throne a If suchrestoration could be effected upon termsproviding for clemency as well as justiceto all concerned The conditions

that the past be bur-led and that the restored governmentshould reossume Its authority as If Itscontinuity had not been InterruptedThese conditions did not acceptableto the Queen and thereupon Cleveland submitted to authorityand discretion of Congressconnected with our relationswail

LATEST LIST OF SOLDIER DEAD

Cotcalty itepnrts from Manila Takuand Nnsnanki

Gen MacArthurs weekly report ofdeaths from disease is as follows

Manila Oct 2J 1SOO

Adjutant General WashingtonFollowing deaths have occurred since last reportDysentery Ocuber 2 Company E Serentfnth

Infantry Albert W FrUby October 24 CompanyM Twentyflm Infantry Patrick J Martin Com-pany I Thirteenth Infantry Dennis Murphy Oc-

tober 51 Company G Thirtyeighth lafaatrfGeorge P Thornton

Tubereoleeis October Tro p K CarFred P SullIvan Company P

r Infantry Charles T Stearns October 3Company C Seventeenth Infantry William GrossOdder 7 Company 0 Thirtieth Infantry Login B

Malarial fever October 52 Company A Fortyninth Infantry lUbert I Baker Company fSigns Corps U S A John Taylor August tCompany B Twentyeighth Infantry John Engel

fever October IS Company K Twentyseveath Ufaatry Charles E Lenox

Meningitis Oeteber 4 Company H In-

fantry William H OctoberF Fortyfirst Infantry William J Miller

All other eaiues Oettber 21 Trap L Third CayAlien J Rnmery October IT Company C

Infantry Douglas Abten October 21Company I ThirtyserwUk Infantry John J Eng

September 24 Opatpaay C InVernl StottoUli October I

Thirtyseventh Infantry William ChatmaaSurgeon Parley in charge of the hospi-

tal at Nagasaki cables the following listof casualties

Following have occurred since last repert October SS nephritl Kathan HoSmasterCompany II Fourteenth Infantry October S6-

myeHtli Charles CrtsUr Company G FourteenthInfantry

One tins Killed ned Two WoundedGen MaeArthur8 latest casualty list if

as followsKilled October it near Bankuad texan Com-

pany I Thirtythird Infantry S rgt Vincent Burgsutler

Wounded Thomas Tucker w cnde4 la shoulderThomas B Davis wounded ta thigh

Involve

mtUn

set tree hour

of Three CORcresalcs

Co-nge men

Indian

feet

mon

arm

sage

Interest

chare

genera

President

cal

coast

pate

Ur

maters

4 Fourair

IL

hart

Eight

air

lan Port h

rat

presented

Special The

Jackson

Phelps

deaths

madarala

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

SOUND MONEY PARADE-

Six Hours and a Half

GREAT CHICAGO DEMONSTRATION

Holiness to EnableRepublican Voters of All Branches ofTrade to Join In the Prosperity ParadeReviewed by Senator llanna and IllsCommittee Collcacncs A Lively Clashwith Bryan Miontcrt Line of Jl arch

Chicago Oct 27 For six and atoday workingmen every i

of industry in Chicago lawyersmerchants railroad men financiersmarched through the downtown districtsof the city in the parade of Republicanvoters which was planned as the culmina-tion of the national campaign in ChicagoBetween two solid lines of spectatorsstretched from the starting point of thelong march on Michigan avenue to itsdisbanding place on Jackson Boulevardnear the river and underneathof flags and bannersthe big ofile buildings and waving fromthe windows and roofs the paraderstramped from 10 In the morning untilhalf past 4 In the afternoon

The day was practically a holiday InChicago The Board of Trade the banksand many of the big downtown storeswere closed and tbe residence districtswere deserted for hours while

themselves along the milesof the tortuous line of march and applaud-ed to their hearts

The day was a Hardly acloud flecked the sky while a cool breezefrom Take Michigan tempered the warmrays of the sun and kept fluttering theflags and streamers which decorated theline of march and lifted high In the airthe scores of Immense kites from whichwere suspended McKinley and Prosper-ity barners

Along the Line of ItlnrchPromptly at 10 oclock the head of the

parade composed of a double line of po j

lice and followed by Col E C Youngand staff chief marshal moved from thestarting point at Seventh avenue andRandolph street and from that time the

with scores of bands playingof music good bad and

tramped steadily over the granitepavements past the reviewing stand onJackson boulevard to Jackson and Market streets where they disbanded-

At nearly every point along the line ofparade the marchers cheering wavingflags blowing horns and singingpalgn songs as they flIed by were cheered In turn by the densely packed masseson the sidewalks but here and there acounter demonstration in favor of Bryanwas made by the throngs and in one instance almost a riot took place in consequence In front of the City Hall onWashington street were gathered acrowd of enthusiastic Bryan shouters allwaving pictures of the Democratic Presi

candidate Some one in the crowdsidewalk threw a potato into the

ranks of a West Side marching club goIng by The potato hit a marcher in theeye and forced him to leave the ranksAnother marcher plunged Into the crowdand forced his way to the thrower In aninstant there was a freeforall fightThree companies of the marchers brokeranks and with uplifted canes rushedinto the struggling shouting mass on the

work by over thirty po-

licemen before things were quieted downand In the meantime black eyes and gorynoses had accumulated to an alarming

Features of the DisplayThe parade was replete with unique

features Well up toward the head of thefphrade and1 preceding the members of theMarquette Club who were In tallyhostwo elephants lumbered along bearing ontheir huge sides banners inscribed G 0P These were the contribution of theMarquette Club Close behind the elephants came a diminutive donkey Thiswas labeled I Am a Sound Money Donkey The Hamilton Club contributed afloat bearing a stuffed elephant appropri-ately decorated and bearing various legends Furnaces In full blast with rowsof perspiring workmen caught the fancyof the crowd as did an enormous dinnerpail mounted on trucks and festoonedwith canvased hams and loaves of bread

The Chicago and Alton Railway employes escorted a float representing a

chair car Near the center of the parade borne aloft on poles by a hundredmen was a huge banner a block Inlength Inscribed McKinley and Roosevelt and Four Years More of ProsperityA sixtyfoot plank gilded and properlyinscribed was borne on the shoulders offifty uniformed men

The parade was reviewed by SenatorsHanna Mason and Cullom NationalCommitteemen Henry C Payne Perry I

Heath and others from the balcony of theGrand Pacific Hotel and around this point j

the greatest enthusiasm of the parade wasshown Senator Hanna was cheered bythe marchers and was kept busy respond-ing to the salutations

Many outoftown organizations wererepresented In the parade The mostprominent was a delegation of 150 fromthe Amerlcus Club of Pittsburg Pa who i

were guests of the Hamilton Club Bigmarching clubs were also present fromKenosha WIs Rockford Dixon andDeerlng Ill and from many of the nearby suburban towns

CARTIST OUTI1HRAK IX SPAIN

The Chief of a fined Killed and MenPut to Flight

Madrid 23 A conflict between24 armed and a detachment of

alona The chief of the Carllsts was killed and another man was wounded ThreeRemington rifles were captured Theband retreated in the direction of Moncada pursued by cavalry and Infantry

The Carlist general Bolivar has beenarrested at Barcelona and a number ofother arrests have been made In connection with the uprising at Badalono It appears that a Badalona band of Carltatswho wore red caps summoned the gendarmes of Badalona to surrender but the

attacked and dispersedaim of the Carlisle

the municipal treasury as on the body oftheir chief was found a receipt thusworded

Received from the mayor of Badalonapesetas which will be refunded when

his majesty King Carlos occupies thethrone of his ancestors j

Orllst appeared near Icualadowere pursued by the gendarmes but

two were wounded all got awayAnother and was discoveredneighborhood of Vergara and was also

pursued j

Worried Over Oar Iernmlne Trade JBerlin Oct 23 The central bureau for

the preparation of commercial treaties hasaddressed a circular to the German presscalling attention to the remarkable increase of American exports to the Le-vant since the establishment of a directline of steamships to andthe opening of a permanent exhibition ofAmerican in the TurkishThe bureau advises the organization of aGerman chamber of commerce In

to watch German commer-cial Interests against American competi

Two llenib In Cbafleen CommandGen Chaffee reported to the War

Department the following casualties At

Battery O Third Artillery cause unknown at Pekln October 23 general pris-oner James A Friel late private

F Ninth Infantry gunshot woundabdomen

Pass-

ing Reviewing

hourhal I

i

thousand

party th

content

marcher

I

earn

dental

sIdewalk

d-egree

par-

lor

I

i

Octoccurred yesterday near

I

I

later them

Oct bend ot twenty

Con

I

tionI

has

Tlenuln camp October 3 Rumus

Com-pany

Pracilcaily Suspended

indif-

ferent

Iii

gendarmes Bad

Barcelona 29Aal-

though

Con-stantinople

John-son

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

POLITICAL GOSSIP

of smoke from the Jersey shoreare entering Into the campaign for Con-gress In the Seventh New York districtThat includes Staten Island where thereare not a few splendid residences Theportly and nlso somewhat aged GermanNicholas Muller of New Brighton whowas In Congress twenty years ago andafter a long interregnum came back twoyears ago that he might have something-to take his mind from several domesticsorrows is again running for the Demo-crats while the Republicans have nominated Gen James L OBolrne of NowYork City

At the last session Mr Muller Introduced ono or two bills in the House tomake it an offense to maintain factoriesproducing black smoke and deadly fumesthat might be wafted into another StateThis was aimed at the Now Jersey manufactories which have come to be a menace to Staten Island residents disfiguringtheir fine houses and choking the peoplewith nauseous gases Now Mr Mullerand his friends say that some of the bigcorporations which own these factoriesIn New Jersey are combining to defeathim for reelection Whether or not thatbe so Mr Muller had SOOO majority twoyears ago and the district is regarded asa Democratic stronghold

in a Wisconsin town of the name ofBristol a big Republican club fromKenosha numbering 700 marchers had ahigh and somewhat expensive frolic theother night When the marchers reached Bristol they found the hall in whicha Republican meeting was to be heldcrowded to the dcors As the marcherscould not get within some 100 of theyounger members started out to take thetown and to a considerable extent theysucceeded Cider mills were looted firebells rung and one store stripped of allIts contents The Republican club Im-

mediately promised to make good for alllosses and efforts are on foot to preventthe arrest and conviction of the

Judge Bartlett Tripp of South Dakotawho was Minister to Austria under Presi-dent Cleveland but who Is now regardedas substantially a Republican has beencampaigning In behalf of McKInley andRoosevelt ir Iowa Illinois and IndianaHe is quoted as saying that after

through nearly every tection of Illi-nois he does not regard It as possible thatthe vote could be for Bryan except wherelaborers are in the majority Judge Bart-lett says a vast amount of perniciousliterature was spread among these work-ingmen but that the effect of this hasbeen righted and he thinks the vote ofthe majority of Illinois laborers will befor McKinley He will spend the re-

mainder o the campaign speaking InSouth Dakota

Nebraska Republicans are crying colonization just as Democrats are doingin West Virginia There are some wealthyfarmers residing along the borders ofthe State and the charge is that theyare concerned in a colonization schemethat would bring voters from Missouriand Colorado Corn husking began earlyIn October and Is said to have been com-pleted more than a week ago Manylaborers were imported from adjoiningSpates for this work and although the

Is done the laborers nearly nil ofwhom are Bryan men are retained Inmany cases six or seven more than theactual needs of the farmers at this timeThe purpose is claimed to be to vote thesemen for Bryan at the election next TuesdayThe

parties in Nebraska are having alively wrangle as to which ticket shallbe given first place on the official ballot The State law says that the partywhich cast most votes at the precedingelection shall have first place Accordingly the fusionists declare that the firstplace belongs to them but the Republicans assert that the fusionists are nota party but several parties and that theRepublicans cast more votes last yearthan any other party Defiant lettershave been sent to county clerks who aremaking up the official ballot and a SamHill of a time has followed

Senator Thurston of Nebraska has beencampaigning in Montana for the assist-ance of Senator Carter The Nebraskanhas had great ovations everywhere In thatState and Is credited with making Republican votes One of his latest meetingswas at Butte where the demonstration-was on a magnificent

The heat of campaigning In Iowa hasnarrowed down to two Congressional dis-

tricts the Second and the Sixth State-ments by the Republicans seem to Indi-

cate that they are beaten for sure In theSecond district There the Democrats areopenly trading promising their votes forMcKinley In return for votes for VolmerDemocratic candidate for Congress TheRepublican State committee has made afrantic appeal to the Republicans andGold Democrats In the district to votestraight and not scratch their tickets

Late last week an appeal to the Repub-lican State committee for help was madefrom the Sixth district where Representa-tive Lacey is the candidate for reelectionMaj Lacey says he Is certain of 2000 majority in the district and he has pulledout of so many close fights in that dis-

trict that there is a disposition to believehim The activity last week of Democrats in Manhaska and Wapello countiescenters of population caused Republicansmuch alarm The result is said to de-

pend largely upon the mining vote Manynegroes have recently been Imported intothe mines and are of course expected tovote the Republican ticket There is aSocial Democratic candidate for Congress-in the district and there Is a possibilitythat he will draw many votes from amongthe miners which would be distinctly toMaj Laceys advantage

Some North Dakota voters are trying-to make prohibition the paramount issueIn the State campaign and to a large ex-tent they have succeeded The State con-vention was captured by what is knownas the Missouri slope crowd and the can-didates nominated were nearly all Inyeluding the candidate for attorney gen-eral hostile to the enforcement of pro-hibition laws There the opponents ofprohibition were content to rest even al-

lowing a plank in the platform commending the prohibition law which was enacted after prohibition was incorporated inthe State constitution

Since the State convention however agreat stir has been made by the Prohi-bitionists so that the Republican Statecommittee has announced that they willuse all their Influence and all the ma-chinery of the party to prevent thesage of a resolution by the legislature toresubmit the question of a prohibitionamendment to the constitution to thepeople Some three yours ago a bill thatwould practically have given local authorities the right to license saloons pass-ed both branches of the legislature butwas vetoed by the governor

The Republican candidate for governorof Minnesota Capt Van Sent was re-cently assailed Jy Democrats in a state-ment that he had not fairly treatedwidow of a former business Insettling up their affairs The caus-ed consternation among the Republicansfor a while but finally the widow a MrsRutherford shown to have herstock In the company to Capt Van Sentat a price considerably more thaa Itwould bring In the market all of whichhas eased the situation for Minnesota Re-publicans and enabled them to tee agood safe majority still for their candi-date

Wise Hctlled America Indians orNew York Oct 29 Thomas Sherman

of Jersey City is in a critical condition inthe Jersey City Hospital from a woundreceived at the hands of John Cunningham last night The trouble out ofa depute as to whether the Indians or

were the first settlers of Amer-ica

Urecipta Kx pen ill armNational bank notes received yesterday

for redemption 573502 internal revenue

857451 expenditures ttiVXO

Fumes

perpetra-tors

S

order-S

5Up

Se C

go-ing

S

SSS

S

pan

the

charge

was sold

Irish

Treasury and

Zl61dhl customs

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

WAR STILL AT HEIGHT

Series of Fights Between theAmericans and Filipinos

GEN hALTS DISASTROUS 3IARCH-

HnnUhlps Encountered byto Infanta Province Deocrtcr FnvioNow n Kebcl General SeuUa ThreatenInff lletMluc to Former Commit eaof Pucntj fourth Iteciuient Oen YoungReports IncreasIng Insurgent Activity

Manila Oct 38 While scoutineLooc u detachment of th Twentieth andTwentyeighth regiments u d c Oupt-Belgler were attacked by m instilments-armet with riHt under the command ofa white man whose nationality hiknown to the Americans The immrgaatsfor the most part Intrenched

After an heroic fight Capt Deleter droveoff the enemy killing than s r mrfive The fight lasted for twoCapt Belgler and three privates wereslightly wounded anti txvo of UM Ameri-cans wore killed

An engagement took on October21 betue c detachments of the Third Cav-alry and the Thirtythird Volunteer Infantry numbering sixty and a force olinsurgents including 400 rJilemen and1000 bolo men The fighting was dep r-

ate Finally under pressure of overwhelming numbers the Americans warecompelled to retire on Narvican LlenVGeorge L Febiger and four privates werekilled nine were wounded and fourmissing Twentynine horses are missingA number of teamsters were capturedby the Insurgents but werereleased The enemys loss Is estimatedat 150

Column mini by KenosnilA civilian launch towing a barge loaded

with merchandise near Arayat was at-tacked by a force of 1W insurgents titularDavid Fagln a deserter from the Twentyfourth Infantry The American tropon hearing the firing turned out inbefore the boat could be looted and recaptured It Fagln who holds the rankof general among the Insurgents liessworn special ermlty toward his formercompany Of the twenty men he captureda month ago seven have returned Onowas killed In a fight his body being horribly mutilated Fngln semis mo Kesto his former comrades threatening themwith violence if they become his prisoners It was Fagins men who capturedLieut Frederick W Alataetter who Is

still a prisonerGen Halls expedition with a force of

nearly SOO men through the mountains toBnangonan Province of Infanta in pur-

suit of the Insurgent general Galilee alIt discovered no trace of the

encountered hardships on tlwmarch Twenty Chinese porters diedforty men were sent Intostationing a garrison of 250 men in H

gonan and Island oil thcoast of Infanta Province Gen Hall andthe rest of his force embarked there onthe transport Garronse

UeiTiiileil trout TownReports from Gen Youngs district show

a dally Increase of Insurgents there owingto the fact that recruits are going thitherfrom the towns

While a detail of the Thirtythird Volunteer Infantry was returning from Bangucd on rafts it was fired upon by Insur-gents Sergt Berdstaller being killed andtwo privates wounded

The Philippine commission has decidedto compile the revised Philippines customstariff from Its own Investigations assistby the report of the army board The re-

sult will be forwarded to the UnitedStates for publication and discussionamong those interested In foreign com-

merce When the details appear tosatisfactory and the draft has been anproved by the Secretary of War the cammission will promulgate ft as a lawThe measure has on n new and International commercial internet and thecourse of the commission is heartily commended here

Archbishop Clmppclle nt DnciipnuArchbishop ChappMle who recently left

Manila accompanied by several friars forthe northern disricts of Luzon underconditions that aroused the suspicions ofthe Filipinos here that he Intended to es-

tablish the friars In parishes there waswarmly welcomed on his arrival at Diegopan As two years have elapsed since anopportunity for baptism had been presented more than 2500 persons have boon bap-tized

In view of the protest of the parishagainst the appointment of a friar as par-ish priest Mgr did not attemptto make it

DOUIVTS TilE TOUTUIIK TATE

Coiiiimiitiler Skeptical of Reported liarImritic to Men In Philippines

Special to The WithlngUmNorfolk Va Oct 23 Commander J C

Gilmore U S N does not believe thatone of the men of his command McDon-ald who was captured with him whilesurveying in the Philippines was buriedalive by order of the insurgent chief Noviclo The latter hits just boon condemned to death for that anti other crimes bya courtmartial of whose findings GetsWheaton has approved It Is more likelyn the opinion of the commander that

Novlclo was tried for executing a wounded prisoner and condemned for that of-

fenseThe sensationally detailed account of

the murder of VenvJIIe by opening lilaveins and of burying alive of lieDonald is regarded askance by naval of-ficers acquainted with the methods of thetribemen in dealing with their enamiMCommander Gllmore and his fellowaapfives left McDonald for dead Venvlilewise desperately wounded Such smallcomforts as could be left him placedwithin his reach by American prison-ers before they were marched off TUftboy did not look as though h could llvhalf an hour when his comradestorn front him by their savag pter

It Is highly Improbable In the opinion ofnaval men here that nay trouble wwUhave been gone to in buryingwhom It was desired to torture Filipinohavagas thy delight to wU MCthe torture to which a captive is nut amiwould therefore not buri 4 Mc-Donald

COMMITTED SUICIDE AT SEA

MIlM MarlIn VIio Rild She aSchool Tenrlier Oil Ittitlrram

Savannah Ga Oct 52 Tho siMUMhlp-Naeoch e from New York arrlv 4 bartoday with passenger ratecteg Wkftnthe chip salted Thursday ayoung women registered OR UM list s-

Mis Martin She was about twentyfive or thirty ett Sit vhm-clous and made friends MiCapt Smith that was a schooL teasr In New but had Joet posi-

tion To o e of Uur p afrs sfca saidh hid tiring for Urn in Ract

Twentythird street New York T stiltanother a young warns hMid that had became 4eeisndssit

it had test position sad UMU fc

tend to om U MM M-

Hatteras was late Friday ovelug and about 10 eetoek MISS Martin rtired morning she w miss-

ing The only Mi an un rN-en the kamita of which was BcnUrfaad 1-

R Maltby CBzonovte aad a ticket Inher purse which hud t

X Y-

Tt iceTrr c eil Vlililnn WeekWaUham Oct Ji Tbe ttaonjd

freight rr ek on the TFileMnttK r uwithin a occurred this aftaroflyaTwo men were slightly hurt andears and on tecoraoUve wore badly damagl The injured axe V A linens fireman and Jamen LHrin tOH bead Drkman both of Fitchburg Knxia ir Lyn4swho was eheineor ot th freight Uairun Into last Sunday was lusto In chargeot the train that was telescoped

an Expedition

Ills

near

net

were

morehours

place

are

subsequently

force

en-

emytad

After

lie

bit

lucre

IllPact

the

werethe

were

the

assert

have

taetnt

onethere warn

years waseasily Ink

sheJersey leer

been souse

passengereke sino

her ipassed

Saturdayclew wee

beast purchased

Masshere

weeksea

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

<

¬

¬

>

¬