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Show "HEWS OFA WEEK IN CONDENSED FORM RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT EVENTS TOLD IN BRIEFEST MANNER POSSIBLE. Happenings That Are Making History Information Gathered from All Quarters of the Globe and Given in a Few Lines. INTER-MOUNTAIN. Equal suffrage will be granted to every woman in practically every state in the United States within a very few years, according to Dr. Barton Bar-ton O. Aylesworth, lecturer and organizer organ-izer of the National Women's Suffrage association, who is in Port Collins, Colo., on an vacation. At the request of the Russell Sage foundation of New York, Frank J. Bruno of Colorado Springs will prepare for the foundation a book upon up-on organized charities iu the smaller cities. The book will feature the work of the foundation with reference to women and children. F. A. Schwabe, a musician,, has been arrested on the charge of having set Are to the Hoaquim hotel at Hoa-quim, Hoa-quim, Wash., two people having lost their lives in the fire. It is charged To the failure of a safety mechanism mechan-ism to operate when a sudden and powerful pull was given by an artilleryman artil-leryman in attaching the laynard is now laid the responsibility for the accident ac-cident which cost the lives of eleven men at Fortress Monroe, Va., in the battle practice recently. William J. Bryan made a general denial at Chillecothe, Mo., of the story sent out from Lincoln, Neb., that he would lead a bolt from the Democratic convention in Nebraska and organize a rump convention. Evidently murdered for his money, the body of H. F. Seachario. a cattleman, cat-tleman, was found in the outskirts of Roanoke, Va. A negro with whom the murdered man had quarreled is missing. Albert Sprague, aged 37, a farmer whose home was near Greensburg, Ind., was murdered in bed while asleep. A former employe is suspected. sus-pected. Wilbur Glenn Voliva, successor to John Alexander Dowie as overseer of the religious commonwealth near Chicago, Chi-cago, will continue the policies of Zion City's founder and seek to extend the faith he established. G. A. Albert, guard at the county convict farm at Greenville, Texas, is accused of having forced William M. Edwards, serving a short term on a misdemeanor charge, to work jn the hot sun when sick until he dropped dead WASHINGTON. Proceedings have been begun by the department of justice against sixteen six-teen concerns manufacturing sanitary enameled ware, the concerns, being located in nine different states, are charged with restraint of trade. There is going to be another big battleship cruise next fall, although it will not equal the world's girding tour of three years ago. Sixteen battleships bat-tleships will mobilize in the Atlantic ocean in November and make a cruise to European ports. All records in the deportation department de-partment at Ellis island have been broken in the last six months. More than 10,000 immigrants have been sent back in that period, while in the previous pre-vious years the deportation have u.ot exceeded 7,000 a year. The next chief justice of the supreme su-preme court will probably be named one of the four members of the permanent per-manent court of arbitration at The Hague, the death of Chief Justice Fuller Ful-ler having caused a vacancy. In a speech at Emporia, Kans., Speaker Cannon made it plain that he does not intend to abandon the race for the speakership, declaring that no "muck-raking magazines" could make him say he would not be a candidate. FOREIGN. that Schwabe was intoxicated and either started the fire accidentally or with malicious intent. Albert Ives, a well known mining man, who owns large mining interests inter-ests in Ely, Nev., was placed under arrest at Denver on the charge of bigamy. Ives is charged with marrying marry-ing 16-year-old Hazel Barter, while he has a wife and daughter living. Bloodshed will follow any attempt of Utah sheepmen to extend their grazing operations in the Big Park country of western Colorado, according accord-ing to T. W. Moneil, of Montrose, Colo., who delivered a sensational address ad-dress to the Colorado Stockgrowers' association at Grand Junction. DOMESTIC Within sight of the lights of Manhattan, Man-hattan, four men held up a carload of Immigrants and robbed them of perhaps $500 in cash, while their train was standing at west shore terminal ter-minal at Weehawken, N. J. Workmen opening the entries of the Leiter mine at Zeigler, Ills., which were closed by an explosion more :han a year ago, found six bodies which were entombed by the explosion, m ne According to figures given out by the commissioner of immigration at Winnipeg, the arrivals since March 31 this year in western Canada . were 93,000, of which 46,500 came from the United States. Princess Ghika, of Paris, who is better bet-ter known as Mme. Laine de Pougy, has been awarded $60 damages against a man and two women who made rude remarks about a hat she wore some months ago at St. Germains. Anonio Naura, former Spanish premier, pre-mier, was wounded by a would-be assassin as-sassin at Barcelona, but will recover. His assailant was captured. Lord de Villiers, chief Justice of the supreme court of South Africa, in unveiling un-veiling the statue at Cape Town of Cecil Rhodes, which has been erected by public subscription, pronounced an eloquent panegyric upon Rhodes, saying say-ing that Rhodes foresaw and strove) to attain the union of South Africa. Under the auspices of the agricultural agricultu-ral societies of France, former President Presi-dent Loubet on July 24, opened the experimental refrigerating station at Chateau Renard, through which it is designed to introduce in France a sys- bodies were well preserved and easily identified. Henry Gentry, a negro lad of 18, was burned at the stake at Belton, Texas, while two other negroes, a Drother and a companion, were saved !rom a like fate by the pleadings of Ihe sheriff and several citizens. Gentry Gen-try killed the leader of a posse that was searching for him after he had assaulted as-saulted a woman. The American Zinc, Lead and Smelting Smelt-ing company has adjusted the strike it the company's mines at Joplin, Mo. Five hundred strikers went back to work at a reduction of 25 cents a day. George Figueroa, member of a well known California family, has been convicted at Los Angeles of murdering murder-ing his wife, the crime being committed commit-ted twenty-four hours after their marriage. mar-riage. Senator Albert B. Cummins of Iowa, In his sepech before the Chautauqua at Peabody, Kans., asserted that Senator Sen-ator Aldrich and Speaker Cannon were traitors to their party, if not to the country, when they gave their support sup-port to the Wickersham railroad bill as it came from the attorney general's I office, and demanded that it go through congress. D. George DresbacTV, a physician of Vin Hill, Cal., was shot and killed by his mother-in-law, Mrs. Havy Wood during a quarrel. Mrs. Wood, who is 65 years old, said that she shot n? son-in-law because he had struck her and was about to s'.rike his wife. Mrs. Dresbach bore out her mother's story. According to advices received at the insurgent headquarters at Blue-fields, Blue-fields, Nicaragua, conditions at Cape Gracias are unsatisfactory to foreign interests. The representative of the j Nicaraguan government in charge there is said to be permitting open demonstrations of an anti-foreign character. I The long war between the Ameri-1 can Federation of Labor . and the : Stove Founders' National Defense Association As-sociation has come to an end, and it is predicted that Gompers and the other labor leaders will not be called upon to serve the prison sentences imposed upon them. Sixteen Hindoos who applied Tor ad-; mission to this country at Seattle, . have been ordered deported. The Hindoos are illiterate, cannot speak ! the English language, have little money and are of poor physique. An adjustment of the eastern freight rate situation will be made loon, according to advices from Washington. Wash-ington. The settlement, it is said, will be satisfactory to all concerned. Forest fires in British Columbia are causing considerable loss and many lives are endangered. The people are fleeing the country to safety. Prize fighting in Los Angeles is at an end. Without a dissenting vote the city council has instructed the "ity attorney to prepare an ordinance "pubrg boxing oshibitions and ' " vi: rt!:!Sls. j tern for the transportation of refrigerated refriger-ated meats. Large numbers of students of the government and private schools are wearing black cravats as a sign of mourning for Wardani, the murderer of Boutros Pasha, according to a dispatch dis-patch lrom Cairo. It is stated on good authority that the late Cape government granted to a syndicate of London financiers an area of land in Cape colony for the purpose of cotton growing by a company com-pany which, it is stated, is now being formed in London. Cairo has now become one of the gayest cities in the world, and some of the costumes worn at the fancy dress balls are decidedly daring. One lady, the wife of a popular British officer, of-ficer, created a great sensation xha other evening by engaging a stately Arab to wheel her through the streets in a perambulator. Nearly 4 000 Americans arrived at Berlin hotels and boarding houses in the month of June an altogether unprecedented un-precedented figure. They were exceeded ex-ceeded in number only by the Russians, Rus-sians, but lrotu the money-spending point of view the local hotel keeper counts one Yankee tourist against half a dozen Russians. A terrific cyc'.one broke over the district dis-trict northwest of Millan, Italy, July 24, doing great damage to the towns of Saranno, Rovellasoa. Lonate and Pozzolo. It is estimated that twenty-five twenty-five persons were killed and wounded. Many houses were unroofed and telegraph tele-graph lines were leveled. At Canillaa de Aceltuno, Spain., a man named Antonio Jimenez suddenly sudden-ly went mad and attacked people in the street wi h a large knife. He killed an old man. a woman carry'n? a child, and a young girl, and he in jured many others. |