Pierce_City_Miner-28Mar1902_Pg2

August 6, 2017 0 Comments

Pierce_City_Miner-28Mar1902_Pg2

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OUILED VSOX
A klcvicw of Happemlnva tai Both ;>'KMtor» sod Weatcra Hemtapherea ; Uorlnv tho Foot Weelc^hatloiml. r matorleal. PoimesL and Peraomal . Areata Tenielr Bhcpoaoded.
The main building of the Unity Col­lar. & -Cuff company In North Ben- . nington, Vt., was burned Sunday. Loss, 160,000.Miss' Alice Rooserelt. with several friends, and accompanied by a maid, has left for a visit with General and
Mrs. Leonard 'Wood at Havana.Bishop Spalding of the Colorado diocese of the Protestant Episcopal church is dead at the home of his son in Erie, Pa., of pneumonia, figed ' – 74 years.A special from Beaumont, Tex., says the body of a fifth victim of a gang of murderers and robbers was tahen from the Neches river in the eastern suburbs of Beaumont today.A dispatch to the London Daily Chronicle from Berlin says that the Russian general, Grlbskl, was re­sponsible for the massacre at Blago- Vestchesk, has been dismissed from the army.
A broken rail caused a frightful wreck on the Southern Pacific near Maxon station, 25 miles west of San­derson, Texas, recently. Prom the latest accounts received here, IS per- ’• sons were killed outright and 28 were more or less injured.Stewart Hill, aged 9 years, died In Denver, Colo. Sunday from the ef­fects of a bullet wound in the breast received yesterday afternoon while engaged in a mimic battle. James Butson, aged 12 years, is under ar­rest, charged with murder.Two' cars and the special coach of . the general superintendent were burn­ed recently after a collision near Bis- bee, Arlr., on the .Arlsona & South­western. J. B. Eberhard, a passenger, and several train hands were injured. .j Bberhard’s skull was fractured.Mrs. Dunsmulr of Victoria, B. C., wife of Premier Dunsmuir, has repelv- ed a letter from an anonymous writer warning her that if she did not keep her husband at home he would be Idiot The premier handed the letter to the police, but took no other no- Uce.Cornelius Shields, general manager of the Dominion Coal company of Montreal. Quebec, states that borings made by the company near Butler’s lake bad revealed the presence of a coal deposit estimated to conUin at least l.OdO.000.000 tons of bituminous
Miss Alice Roosevelt daughter of the president will not attend the coiv onaUon of King Edward. -While the White House oihcials decline to dis- . cuss the matter, it was stated by those In a
without having ness. His . head one of bis eyes Osborne Dtgnai
rSASiaed conscions- was omahed and sfapoet punched ont 1, one of the naval
In a position to know that the presi­dent had directed that she should' not «o.The attention of Secretary Wilson of,the agricultural department was caUed to reports that he contemplated soon resigning from the cabinet' The secretary, treated the subject lighUy, ' declaring that it was news to him and . added in reply to a specific Inquiry that be bad no Intention of taking the step suggested.Lieutenant Howland of the Twenty- ^ first Infantry, and aide on the staff of General Wheaton, who was sent to repwt on the state of tiffalrs in Rlzal province, after the recent outbreak there, reports that the insurgents have how been dispersed and that the sol­diers and constabulary are closely pursuing them.. At Richmond. Va.. William Clayton, a well known contracting painter, was killed recently in a manner that baffles the police. He was found in ^a street in the. residence secUon of
heroM who was with Hobson on'the Merrimac when she was sunk In the entnmce to Suitlagb harbtv .dhiihg the Spanish war. has arrived in Seat­tle. to visit his mother. He has been given a furlongh of three months in wfilch' to recuperate. When he is promoted to boatswain Dlgnan states he will try for a commission.Word has reached Middleton, N. T. that' Cornelius Van Ness, the ocUk genarlan millionaire of Port Jervis, formerly of New York, has been bap­tized in the river Jordan by Rev Will­iam K. Hall of Newburgh, N. T. Mr. and Mrs. Van Ness sailed on the steamer CeWc for a trip to the Orient, bis desire being to gratiiy an ambition of years to be baptized in the Jordan.Prince Henry of Prussia was the central figure Sunday in New York city in another round of • entertain­ment arranged in his honor. He first listened to a concert "at the "Waldorf- Astoria. When that was over he drove to the University club to a luncheon, which was not concluded until the middle of the afternoon. In the evening he was a guest at a dinner of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, and met a large party made up of persons of social prominence.When the prince bade farewell to the company at the Vanderbilt home, he went to the New York Yacht club for an Inforinal reception, and the hour was late when he returned to the Waldorf-Astoria for the night He found time between the four gay events on his program for the day to receive a delegation representing the Commercial club ot St. Paul and several callers, and to finally com­plete the arrangements fox his last two days’ stay in this country and for bis departure for home.The American legation at Constan­tinople has presented to the porte the text of the note refening to the capt­ure of Miss Stone. It is pointed bht in this note that as Miss Sterne was captured, the ransom paid and the prisoners delivered in Turkey, the brigands must be within the Turkish frontier and should therefore be capt­ured. The note denies that the au­thorities were ever required to lessen their vigilance on tho frontier and as­serts that only the movements of the troops in'the Intmior were interfered with.Rev. Jeremiah J. Crowley, the Roman Catholic clergyman who was the central figure in a sensational scene at Chicago on November 3, when the lights' in Holy Name cathe­dral were turned out^uxd the tion of high mass was stopped effort to enforce a ban of mccommu cation against Father Crowley, has re­turned to Chicago and luroduced evl-iiiiieiintiii
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ConwreiMinu WUUau H. Moodr of MMsaehiuetts to Saeeced " Bli HeoilTMtioA ot iMrnm to iwico Bf- fe«t Mot 1-Had Been. JBxpoeted- Cooteet tor Poattloo.
Washington, March ^change in the cabinet of PresMent Roose­velt occurred Monday when Secretary Long submitted his resignation in a beau­tiful letter, it being accompanied by one
equally feUdtous by the pieddenL change was made complete by the selec­tion of Representotive' William Henry Moody of the Sixth congreaaional district of Massachusetts as Mr# Long’s successor in the navy department.This change has been expected for a
long time. Mr. long bad intended/to re­
tire at the beginning of the late President McKinley's second term, but he consented to remain until certain lines of p night ■ ■ -■ '.n;:;;';:.The trouble originated over a train -crew being dlacharged some 10 days , "aga^uiie they^r nm
aro^d-another crew. v 'Trouble has been brewing for some / : ’ < time, but -not- until today was any " decisive action taken by the train, men. A committee from the brotbei> hood ^waited upon Saperlntendent asm and demanded that the dl» charged crew be reinstated and dpon his refnsal a strike was daclafed, . which went into effect at 4 o’clock this afternwn -Superintendent Rua ' sell, wh^ Interviewed tonight said – the length of the'tie-up was indefinite : and that not a train was moving with > th^xceptlon of the mails.Tralninaster James L. De Fbrce at Spokane, when asked about the mafe – i. ter, said: ‘T had heard nothing of " the strike on the Montana dlvlsibh. " ;If the facts are as stated in the dis­patch, the strike will not Interfere with- the movement of passenger trains nor of the movement of freight . trains on any other division of the^ Northern Pacific system.”
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BlvOs ow Hats. ^a.-,:
Chicago, Marcu W.-The Hlinols Auda- ' bon siefety Is going to strike a blow at the root of the fashion of wearing sea­gulls and ferns for bonnet decorations.The society has dedded that moral suai 4 Sion with tixe women is not effective, the people to get after a^e the
a notice that the sellihg of skins of gulls and fern, and songiSs is illegal mdet the law of Hlinoia. 'Ibe name of each bird which it is forbidden to buy or sell wUl be given in order that ignorance can not be pleaded as an excuse for law vio- ktion.A committee choeen by the directors of
house
from which they-were purd^
I
I
U the merchsnts agree to do tt|is they
will avert proeeoation.
Thwilcieg Brave MeO.Washington, March 10.-General Chaf­fee, commanding^ division of the Phil-
ippine^ recently telegraphed bis personal thanks to Corporal James Mur^y and Privates 'Michael Doran and H. N. John- S(m, signal corps, for their devotion to bat six months, but to have served under under fire at Candelaria, Tayshas, inyou at tbs outset of President McKinley's Decembet last. These men had previously odministntion. I have seen you fat both rfxeired the recommendation of Brigadier tebtimw, and if boa never been my good, J- *'• BeU and Captain Hearn, Twenty- locttme to be aasooiated with any pablje^ Ant in&ntry. man more single minded in his devotionto the puUic interest. Our relations have
been not merely official, hut also those ofBuglani Captwred.Peedcskfll, N. Y., March 12.—One bur-personal friendship. May all the was shot and killed and another was
THiEX)DOILB RObSEVHLT. , Durham Bros. aiM were seen by.To the Hon. John D. Long, Secretary! policemen. The burglars tried to Of the Navy. ,escap4 and fired two shots at the. police-Moodr’s Me^ow. *““» retunxed the fire.(Mr. Moody’s seleotion was the outcome Pvcwldeat of Bnull.of an mteresUng^ contest. There w^. New York, March‘l2.-Senor A. Fon- no lees than a half dooen aspirants, but toura Xavier, Brazilian consul general in toe struggle ^y narrowed ^wn to this city, received a private cable dispatch twQ representatives m congreaa-Mr. Foss from Rio de Janeiro the dee-
of niinois, chairman of the naval com- tion of Dr. Francisco Do Paula Rodriguez mittee of the house, who had t^a energetic Alvez as president of Brazil, soppori of hia western colleagues, and
Mr. Moody, for whom made the whuxing fight.Senator Lodge It was for aGeneral Strike Ordered, v .Boston, March 12.-President Ryan oftime in doubt whether Moody would not the Longshoremen’s union has ordered a'
be .placed in some foreign •nisrion ^rather general stiike qf all longriioremen and than in the navy departmeix^ but be pre- dock freight handlen in sympathy with ferred to stay at home. i the New York, New Haven A, Hartford—— —-—— – • men. – This union embraces 2800 men.PklUirplM fariff Is FlxedaWashington, March 10.—'The pr^ot hs^ signed toe Philippine tariff bUL . .
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It la said that more wives are dl*.-appointed In love than sptnstefe.•-Si'-

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