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Show ) f , du? gox 6TANDJ.NO CUcv H1XO.M, HAWORTH CAPTURED. tcu Proprietors. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Year tnavauce Wx MouiLb Tnree Momiis II & ,'Alcred at the Post Office at Hrigbam City ab botoud cub aatiei. HiKlM bTANDIMi, Editor. INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Items of news are eol.cited from ail parts of rv. rite upon ore side of the paper only. WiUe proper names plainly In order to protect the publisher from Impositions from irresponsible persons, the full name of the author should be signed to all communications. The ldent.ly of corresponds his still be withheld whenever desired. lie count CONVICTS One ot the Convicts Who Escaped From Prison Again Behind the Bars. tin- - condemned "Ni k HaVKntli, murderer who escaped from the Utah state peuitentiaiy Finlay night, was captured Sunday morning in a new board shanty, standing in the fnut orchard of Brigham Ashton, from half to three quaiters of a mile fiom the village of Halliday. Howard Kennedy, a fruit farmer, discovered him at about sunrise, on his way to shoot pheasants. Haworth lay on his side in the shanty, and, thinking he might be dead, Kennedy went in Later he sent John Morten-son- , a 15 year-olboy, to Neilsons store. The Nellsons, Len and llyrum, telephoned for a' description of and, being satisfied that he was the refugee, took rifles and went after him. Kennedy and George Blair joined them, with shotguns. When Haworth was covered with the guns he made no resistance, and was soon on his road back to prison. Lynch, the other condemned murderer, who escaped, has not yet been taken, but it is believed It Is only a matter of a few days until he will again be behind the bars. newly-plante- d d EVERY THURSDAY. PUBLISHED n UTAH STATE NEWS. much-soug- The typhoid epidemic in Sait I.ake City la waning with the advent ot cooler weather. Mrs. Laura Stark of Ogden ia dead bs the result of taking an overdose of laudanum by mistake. The infantry at I'ort Douglas, 205 Btrong, have gone to Fort Riley, Kans., where the fall maneuvers will be held. At Morgan, Charles McGuire, who MANCHURIA LOST TO CHINA. raised a check from $7 to $70 waa sentenced to one year in the peni- Russia Will Wage War Rather Than ' Yield Up Her Claims. . tentiary. The Cologne Gazette published a The prospects are now favorable that as early as practicable In the dispatch from SL Petersburg as folspring the district of Basin, will have lows: "Russia Is not disinclined to accept the modus vlvendi In the Korean a cyanide mill In operation. A pamphlet which has just been Is- question, but If Manchuria Is brought , sued by the Commercial club 'to adver- Into tho controversy by Japan, Russia tise Salt Lake City devotes two pages would rather that the dispute come to war than yield her claims. A sign to the organ In the tabernacle. that Russia is prepared for the worst Secretary Bateman of the State Fair Is that the officers families, who are association announces that the assoto go to Port Arthur, have ciation cleared over $2,000 on the re- preparing been requested to defer going there' cent fair, despite the bad weather. before 1904, the ostensible 'reason beA son of Judge Jacob ing that the buildings for their accomJohnson ot Spring City was thrown modation are not yet completed. Jafrom a horse which he was riding, sus- pan has brought together masses of taining a broken collarbone in the ac- .troops for purposes other than mere cident maneuvering. The offlcers-elec- t of the city of FED WIFE ARSENIC. Huntsville will take the oath ot office and the occasion win be celeFriday, Enthusiast Charged With brated by a banquet and a general Religious Murdering Hie Third Wife. food time. Ebenezer S. Blydenburg, arrested at A camp of Sons of Confederate VeEldora, Iowa, charged with the murterans has been formed in Salt Lake der, by poisoning, of his wife, has been City, Fisher Harris, secretary of the released nnder $10,000 bonds. Commercial club, having been elected Mrs. Blydenburg died suddenly on commandant May 29th, a few months after her marFrank Smith of Lehl, aged 15, was riage. At the instigation of the dead shot by a companion while hunting womans sister the remains were dis'ducks, and fatally Injured. The lad interred and the stomach found to conwho shot him claimed he did not know tain arsenic. The dead woman, who bis gun was loaded. owned a valuable Iowa farm, was The educational display at the State third wife. Blydenburgs . Fair was very fine, and was a Credit second wife is said to have died In to all the schools. The first attempt Brooklyn, N. Y., and it Is stated that t a display In muBic was given and her life was insured for $7,000. Blyen-bur- called forth words of pralBe. has manifested great zeal in reLara P. Madsen, one of Mt Pleas- ligious work, and his arrest has ant's most prominent citizens, fell caused excItemenL from his wagon and was run over by JAPS WILL FIGHT. the heavy Joad, breaking his back. He (lived but two hours after the accident Decide to Declare War on Russia on i Samuel Briley, a Salt Lake saloon Expiration of Ultimatum. knan, attempted suicide by taking morThe correspondent of the London phine one night last week, ag the re- Post at Chee Foo, telegraphing Ocsult of a protracted spree, but was tober 10th, says: "It Is stated that the aved by prompt medical attendance. Japanese have decided to declare hosJohn H. Seely and Jamea F. Jensen, tilities on the expiration of their ultiiMt Pleasant's two principal thorough- matum to Russia. The Russian fleet bred stock growers, carried off nearly has cleared from Port Arthur, It la nil the first and Becond prizes for reported that the Japanese are landwhich they bad entries at the State ing troops at Masanpho, Korea. A Fair. number ot field guns were embarked The tenth annual teachers' conven- at Port Arthur Saturday for an' untion of Utah, held In Salt Lake City known destination. All the available Jast week, was the largest school con- force of workmen Is employed on the fortifications. tention ever held In Utah, and the teachers declare It was a decided suc- Girl Killed While Watching Singular cess In every way, Tragedy. Lizzie Russel), aged 6, was playing William Beals, an aeronaut, was alpear a rubbish fire at her home In Salt most Instantly killed in San Francisco, Lake City, when her dress caught Sunday. He made an ascension and Are and she was so badly burned that descends safely in a parachute to - Ideath resulted, after several hours of within forty feet of the ground, w'hen he released his hold on the trapeze jlntense suffering. bar. He fell on a hard pavement in Syracuse people claim the model Golden Gate park and soon died. lapple orchard of Utah la located at Madge Heeney, aged 17 years, was Ithat place. It ia owned by W. H. Mil-J- riding on an electric car at the time of the ascension. She leaned far out and is composed of twenty-fiv- e of the car to get a better view of the acres set to winter apple trees that parachute descent, and her head struck an electric mast with such are now eight years old. force that death soon followed. A number of the prominent young Arizona Outlaw Surrenders. ment of Taylorsville have formed an athletic club and will take a part In Joseph Roberts, the Graham counamateur athletes from now on. They ty, Arizona, outlaw who repulsed a will organize a football team, basket party of officers on Blue river about (ball team and track team. three weeks ago, has surrendered. " Five women were badly bruised and Wounded and worn out after a hard fight he found It Impossible to escape' shaken up as the result of a collision the third posse that had taken his trail street car with a freight train In and be gave himself up to Deputy of a ISalt Lake City. The collision was due Sheriff Bob Bailey, who was engaged to the slippery condition of the track. In the fight between the Roberts gang Graham county officers and rangThe motor man escaped death by and ers. Roberts was taken to Solomon-vlll- e Jumping. and placed In jail. C. H. Barnes, aged 35, Rio Grande Fatal Shooting Affray. Western station agent at Sevier, comIn a revengeful mood Ray Gurley mitted suicide Saturday by killing d himself with a shot- and a party of cow men encountered gun. His wife died two years ago In William Traylor and his partner, E. L. Kansas, and grieving over her death Allen, at Carpenters store on the Blue led to the deed. river In Arizona, Wednesday night, Twenty head of yearling Rambouillet and the quarrel, which originated over lambs exhibited at the State Fair by some cattle alleged to have been J. F. Jensen of ML Pleasant, have stolen by Traylor, ended In a fatal been purchased by Porter & Millan of conflict Gurley and his party drew wackfoot, Ida., the price paid being guns and opened fire on Traylor and and $2b per head. The lambs took two Allen. Instantly killing Traylor, wounding Allen, who fled as his comfirst prizes and one second prize. fell. panion - Mrs. Benedicts C. Hanson,' who died at her home in Ephraim on Saturday, Steel Mills Shut Down. was one of the best known women in A special to the Chicago Journal that section of the state, where her from JolleL Ills., says 1,000 employes name Is synonymous with charity and of the Illinois Steel company were on benevolence, and she will be greatly Saturday thrown out of employmenL missed by the poor and suffering. The converted billet and three rod The recession of the waters of Great mills were shut down, while the blast Salt Lake on the northern shores of furnace and merchant mills will conthat body of water has resulted In the tinue to run. The officials of the comdiscovery of a great deposit of aspbal-tupany say that they do not know when with Indications of oil of a very the plant will be started up again, but fine grade, locations having been made hope to resume operations again in a few days. Various causes are asPf Salt Lake City and Ogden men. signed for the - r' , , double-barrelle- 1 shut-dow- 'Y-r- MAKE DASH FOR FREEDOM ;1N TRACK OFTOllXAPO TOWN Sevcn Desperate Convicls, Among Whom Were Two Condemned Murders, Make an Effort to Es- cape From the Utah State Pent tentiary, of aliceville. kans., de- - MCLISHED BY TESTER. Haworth and James Lynch Are Free for the Time Being, InWhile Convict Frank Dayton Three Persors Killea and Sixteen y Damage jured, While the Prope-tWas Killed in Fight With the "Nick Will Be Officers, ' Ero-mou- s. were killed outright, Three per'-ontwo fatally itijuied and fouiteen others more or less seriously hurt, besides enormous property damage, as the result of tornadofs that prevailed near Hamilton, Greenwood county, and near Aliceville, in Coffee county, Kans., Wednesday. The town of Aliceville, which has 200 inhabitants, was prac-- I ticaliy demolished. Heavy rains and windstorms were general all o er the central part of Kansas. With the exception of those near Hamilton and Aliceville and vicinity, only minor damage was done. In Greenwood and Coffey counties five clouds formed distinct at about the same time. The two largest of these clouds struck near Aliceville, and, traveling southwest, destroyed buildings and crops over a strip a quarter of a mile in width. At Aliceville every one of the fifty houses s A desperate attempt was made by seven convicts in the Utah penitentiary to escape on Friday evening, and as a result Kick Haworth and to James Lynch, both condemned death, are at liberty, while Frank Dayton, one of the ringleaders In the plot, was killed during the break for liberty and the other participants in the plot were recaptured. That all ol the prisoners in the plot did not escape Is probably due to Alexander A. Robertson, the defaulting teller of Wells, Fargo & Co.s bank, of Salt Lake City, serving a four year sentence, who, when hearing the scuffle between prisoners and the guard from whom they secured the keys to the cell3, sounded the alarm which speedily brought the prison officials to the scene of the outbreak. Connors, one of the ringleaders, saw Robertson run upstairs to turn In the alarm, and attempted to catch him With the evident Intention of killing him, but Robertson managed to elude his purseur by secreting himself in a cell. The men engaged In the outbreak were Nick Haworth, James Lynch, Frank Dayton, Harry Waddell, Frank Connors, Abe Majors and Edward Mullen. But for the assistance of the delivery Ehuckers, a convict, would have been wholesale. Other convicts rendered aid to the overpowered guards. Maxwell, serving time for a bank robbery at Springville, saved the life of Guard Jacobs. When overpowered and beaten almost Into Insensibility by the gang of convicts, Jacobs was dragged from his perilous position by the prisoner. The enraged mob turned upon Maxwell and beat him down with their weapons. Three of the convicts were armed with revolvers at the time of the escape. Lynch is still in possession of his. Another weapon was found on the person of Waddell and another on Majors. The chambers of one had been fired. The delivery had been carefully planned and waa desperately attempted. Just before locking up time Guard kebulon Jacobs, who is stationed at the north cell house, went down the corridor to turn the giant bolts. It waa a few minutes past 6 at the time. He reached the door of the south cell house and started Inside. On entering the door he was struck down by the desperate convicts and heat Into It was during this enInsensibility. counter that Maxwell Interfered and was cruelly beaten over the head. The keys were secured from Jacobs and the convicts started for the death row, where the men condemned to death are confined, meeting Guard Dave Wilkins, overpowering him, and marching him on ahead. Unlocking the Iron grating which swings open In front of Haworths cell, they shouted to him to accept his freedom. Hurriedly they opened the door of Lynchs cell, and were starting on another, when, In their hurry and commotion, they dropped the keys upon the floor. They were Instantly seized by Ed Shuckers, another convict, who had been attracted to the place by the noise. They had failed to discover him In the crowd and did not observe him as he stealthily placed the keys In his pocket Then he stepped Inside an empty cell and turned the key in the lock. Searching for ihe keys the were losing time. Other prisoners were shouting to them for liberty. "We are losing time, said Lynch, who assumed the leadership as soon as he was liberated. "To hell with the .others; we havent time. ! The loss of the keys probably presented the delivery from the cellB of iKing, Mortensen and Botha, all awaiting execution. The seven men then made a dash for the outer walla of the prison, but the officials had been made aware of the outbreak by this time, and gave chase. A ladder was secured by the convicts and they quickly Bcaled the wall. The leaders had barely reached the ground when the guards opened fire and Dayton was killed and Waddell wounded the latter falling on the body of the former. One of the guards grappled with Majors on top of the wall and succeeded in throwing him to the ground below, where he lay stunned. The other prisoners were all captured with the exception of Ha worth and Lynch, and it Is believed Lynch was wounded. Guard Wilkins was shot In the thigh by one of the convicts, but the wound Is not serious. Guard Jacobs was badly beaten, and while his wounds are painful he is not seriously Injured. Majors was badly bruised wall, by his fall from the twenty-foo- t and one arm was grazed by a bullet. Governor Wells has offered a reward of $500 each for the return to the state prison of Lynch and Haworth. Bloodhounds have been placed on the track of the prisoners, and It Is believed they will be captured. Some of the prison officials are of the opinion that a strange woman who called on Nick Haworth recently may have had something to do with the smuggling of the guns with which the convicts were armed. Frank Conners said to a reporter, after he was returned to his cell, that he was the first man to gain the ground on the outside of the wall, and that Lynch was second. He refuses to say anything about the manner in which weapons were obtained, or to tell who planned the delivery. Other prisoners were equally reticent. Peter Mortensen, a close neighbor of Haworth on murderers row, was sitting on the bunk in his cell when questioned. He absolutely refused to speak of the matter, and declined to say whether he would have attempted to escape had his cell been unlocked. Nathan F. Haworth, commonly known as Nick Haworth, was under death sentence for the murder of Nlghtwatchman Robert Sandall In the Farmers Union store at Layton. The death penalty was Imposed on June 20, 1900. The prisoner confessed to the crime after his arrest and in bis appeal to the supreme court for a new trial, his attorney attempted to prove that he was Insane at the time of the confession. The fact that he attempted suicide at the time of hts arrest was also urged to prove Insanity. James Lynch was convicted of murder In the first degree for the death of Colonel Godfrey Prowse in the Sheep Ranch gambling house in Salt Lake and sentenced to death January 11, 1900. Robert L. King, who assistof the place, ed Lynch in the hold-uIs also under death sentence In the The escaped convict penitentiary. had a record before coming to this state, and served time in Idaho under the name of Welch. Frank Dayton, the man shot dead, term for was serving a twelve-yea- r the robbing and shooting of Dr. Kimball In Salt Lake City In 1900. After robbing his victim Dayton attempted to shoot him, and in avoiding a death wound Mr. Kimball was shot through the palm of his right hand. He was confined in the penitentiary on Oc- STRIKERS CIGARETTE CAUSED TROUBLE. - con-ylc- ts WOMEN Try to Prevent FIGHT. Help From Going Into Glove Factories. Four ot the glove factories that were closed by the strike of the employees on Wednesday resumed operations In Chicago, Friday, with nonunion help. The police were called to quell a riot at the factory of the Garden City Glove company, when fifty women strikers tried to prevent employees from working. Several of the latter were roughly handled. Non-Unio- n non-unio- n Sealed Into Office. The new British cabinet ministers have assumed their duties, the seals of office having been exchanged at a privy council held by King Edward at Buckingham palace Friday morning. All the retiring officials and their successors were present with the exception of the Duke of Devonshire, the late Lord president of the council, and Mr. the new war secretary. The latter was indisposed and the former was subsequently received $n private audience by tbe king. Arnold-Forste- 71 ' funnel-shape- or in town was either totally wrecked foundation. moved from its WAR CLOUD IN EAST WilAt Aliceville but one person, Ho hurt. was seriously liam Bruce, and was crushed by falling timbers will probably die Southwest of in Coffey county, heavy damage was done to farming property. The was torn aim house of John Earlwine of tho members four and to pieces family injured, but none dangerously. A taby was blown a distance of fifty bruises. yard and suffered only slight Tlio other injured lived four miles limwest of Hamilton, where within a ited locality nine farm houses were destroved. Many small buildings were turned over and hundreds of stacks of scattered. hay and corn shocks FLEETS OF RUSSIA AND IN SAME HARBOR. JApA Alice-viiie- RUSSIA , ISSUES ULTIMATUM. Will Never Leave Manchuria Until mands Upon China Are Granted. De- According to information reaching Yokohama, the Russian minister at Pekin, M. Lessar, has Informed the Chinese foreign office that Russia will never evacuate Manchuria unless her latest demands are granted. China, it is added, has appealed to the Japanese minister, M. Uchida, for Japanese assistance. THERE'S NO KING LIKE DODO. ten-yea- side guards. After being badly wounded he attempted to rise from the ground and get away and was only prevented by the timely Interference of Guard Schulze. Abraham R. Majors, alias James Morgan, was serving a life sentence for the killing of Captain Brown ot the Ogden police force In 1901. Majors and his brother had been brought to bay by the officers after having robbed a man. The two men put up a desperate fight with the officers, both Captain Brown and Majorss brother being killed in the battle. Majors was sentenced on October 8, 1901. Edward Joseph Fullen, who was grazed on the arm by a ball from one of the guards guns, and who put up a vicious fight for his liberty, has been In the prison but a short time. He was found guilty of the crime of robbery and sentenced to three years and six months on April 21st of this It Is rumored In London tha. rang Edward hat Newspaper dispatch: determined not only to reign, but rule TOOK A HEADER. LAMBETH PALACE. HISTORIC ENGLISH STRUCTURE. NOW UNDERGOING REPAIRS Whisky Caused Tragedy. Boy's Clothing Set on Fire by a While crazed from the influence of Lighted Cigarette. liquor that he had been drinking for Harry Jacobs, 19 years old, a several days. Dr. C. O. Rice, one of painter, rushed through tbe smoker the most prominent In physicians of an elevated train in Chicago, Fri- Pueblo, Colo., shot and almost Inday, his clothing enveloped In flames, stantly killed Police Officer Martz causing a panic among the passen- while the latter was trying to arrest gers, and sustaining painful Injuries. Jacobss clothes, which were satur- him in tbe Palace drug store. The ated with benzino, became Ignited tragedy occurred after the frenzied from a cigarette which he held in his physician had driven everyone from hand. A policeman extinguished the the store by flourishing his revolver blaze by throwing bis overcoat about and threatening to kill anyone who tbe boy. came within range. Was the Girl Poisonedf Teaching the Red Man. A mystery surrounds tbe death of A statement showing the total enMiss Clara Zink, a rollment ot pupils In government Ingirl, who died at Whatcom, Wash., an la to and be dian schools during the fiscal year autopsy Friday night, held by physicians to try and deter- ended June 30, has been made public mine the cause of 1L The girl had at the Indian bureau. During the been working all day painting the In- period mentioned there were 24,357 terior of her home. Shortly after t enrolled, with an average attendance oclock she was taken with convuk of 20,876. In tho mission schools 3,789 little Indians were taught by deBlons and died at C oclock. Her famThere were ily were Inclined to the belief that nominational teachers. fumes of the paint had overcome her. 101 Indians In the white public 300 schools deThree physician who were called to schools. At all th her assistance declared that she was voted to Indian education, Ihere were suffering from strychulno poisoning. enrolled 28,411 pupils. d sistant In the work preliminary to the attempted flight, made the ascent In Airship Plunges Into the Potomac the aerodrome and escaped with a River and Emerges a Total Wreck. ducking. 8T0RM 8WEPT GERMANY. steel built flying maThe sixty-foo- t chine, the climax of years of exhaus- Great Damage Done by Hurricane tive study In the efforts of Professor Which Swept Over Empire. Samuel F. Langley, secretary of the A hurricane swept over Germany Smithsonian institution, to solve the on Wednesday. A portion of the problem of mechanical flight In midtower 180 feet high, of the new city air, was launched at Tidewater, Va., hall at Charlottenberg, a suberb of Wednesday, and the experiment, care- Berlin, has been blown down and and for fully planned delayed months, trees in the parks and forests have proved a complete failure. The Im- been uprooted. A wall at the new mense air ship sped rapidly along its baths of Dresden was blown over, seventy-foo- t track, was carried by its killing four workmen and injuring own momentum for 100 yards and eight others. A mill was blown down then fell gradually Into the Potomac at Lubeck and numerous other small river, whence it emerged a total accidents have occurred. The large wreck. vessels left Bremen and Hamburg, Professor Charles M. Manley, who but the smaller craft remained in has been Professor Langley's chief as port on account of the storm. year. Frank Conners, another life man, was convicted of the murder of Officer William Strong at Provo on the Lambeth palace, the London resimorning of June 27, 1899. He was convicted of the murder In the first dence of the archbishop of Canterbury, degree and sentenced to life imprisis now undergoing extensive repairs, onment on October 9, 1899. He Is the older portions of the palace havsaid to be one of tbe shrewdest of the become decayed. Recent examinaconvicts In the penitentiary and Is ing tion showed that the external structhought to have been one of the chief tures were much fretted and the tall conspirators in the well laid ploL hexagonal chimneys above the roof twenty-year-ol- information received In Official Paris show that a formidable Russia fleet, comprising ninety wa,hlpa $ all classes, has left Port Arthur am has arrived at south of Korea, where the Japanese fieet had already arrived. The Russian ships have anchored within the MaSha-Pharbor alongside the Japanese ship Several brigades of Russian troops have been moved forward to th Korean coast and are now encamped on the border. Diplomatic negoti. tions are still proceeding at Tokio. These do not relate to the evacuatiop of Manchuria by the Russian troops, but to the future of Korea. A cablegram for Berlin says the Chinese minister is at Essen, wher he is buying arms and other war m. terial. BAKERS AWFUL CPIME. Puts Lye in Competitors Flour am Many Deaths Narrowly Averted. Rivalry between local bake shops at Whatcom, Wash., would have resulted In a wholesale killing of innocent people, had It not been that tbe bakers, who, it is alleged, attempted to injure their enemies, overdid the thing, John Birk and James Henry conduct rival bake shops on West Holly street in Whatcom, and bitter leek ing exists between them. Some time since some flour consigned to Henry came with a shipment of Birks goods. Birk, so it is charged, instructed hi baker, William Burnwent, to put a quantity of concentrated lye in Henrys . flour. This order Burnwent a alleged to have followed. Henrys baker had some of it analyzed and this analysis is said to have shown the presence of enough concentrated lye to kill every person who ate as bread Is ordinarily consumed during a meal. Burnwent found out that the presence of the lye In the flour had been discovered, and left town before the sheriff could serve a warrant on him. Later he came back and both he and Birk were arrested. BANDIT A SQUEALER. p tober 4, 1900. Harry Waddell, the ringleader of the plot, and who was shot In the r right thigh, was serving a sentence for burglary and assault with a deadly weapon with Intent to do bodily harm. On February 21, 1902, he was sentenced to a term of seven years on the first charge and on the second to three years, which sentence will take effect after the expiration of the former. The man took a leading part In the jail break and was foremost in the assault upon the two in- Gathering of Vessels In Korean Water and Removal of Russian Troop to Coast Loovs as Though Trouble Was Brewing. Tells Names of Pals in Attempted Train Robbery. Gay Harshman, alias Jim Connors, the bandit who was wounded In an attempt to hold up the Oregon Railroad and Navigation train at Corbett, Ore., two weeks ago, has disclosed to the sheriff at Portland, Ore., the names of the rest of the gang of train robbers and where they are likely to be found. According to Harshman the leader of the band was "Jim James, a distant relative of the notorious outlaw Jesse James; the other members were George Underwood, Bill MoHurshman says It rgan, and himself. was planned that after the robbery James and Underwood were to make for the Mexican boundary; the Morgans were to go to Sammtsh Flats on Bellingham bay, and that Harshman himself waB to have gone to eastern Oregon. Harshman also stated that he thought tbe other members of the gang had carried out their portion of the programme and are now in tbe Vicinities named. TREATY. ANGLO-FRENC- Powers After CeWarfare. The terms of the general treaty of arbitration between France and Great Britain have been concluded between Peace Between nturies of Foreign Minister Delcasse and the aIn London. The advanced stage of the negotiations has not yet been communicated to the public. The treaty follows the general lines arbitration of the treaty, which to a considerable extent served as a model. The treaty is mainly significant In of the being the culmination France and between Great Britain after centuries of warfare, the maintenance of defensive armaments and the recent animosities growing out of the Fashoda Incident and the South African war. It Is also significant of the tendency toward rearrangement of the European political alliances. uthorities German Tutor Charged With KilHnff One of His Pupils. The trial of Andreas DIppold, a tutor, who tied Heinz Kcch, the son of Director Koch of the Deutch bank, to a bed and whipped him to death, has begun in Berlin. Heinz, with a younger brother, who was also fearfully punished, lived with the tutor In a secluded house. A medical board has decided that DIppold Is sane. He alleges that he of whipped the boys on the authority e In danger of falling. The decay is gento the atmosphere, which Is impregnated with chemical fumes belched from factories In South Lambeth. The work of reparation was not taken In hand a day too soon to save the fine old structure. erally attributed their parents. Gave His Life for a Companion. After having saved a companion who had fallen into the Nasel river, Albert Monahan, aged 28. of Astoria, Ore., sank back into the water and met his death. The two men were working on a log boom and Monahans companion slipped between the logs. Young Monahan plunged in after him and succeeded after much difficulty in assisting him onto a log. Monahan was completely exhausted and unable to drag himself from the water. His body was recovered. Girls Wins Steer Roping Contest Lucille Mulhall, 18 years old, and friend of President Roosevelt, has contest won the $1,000 at McAllister, I. T., defeating the cowboys in the southwest. The conditions were that three steel were to be roped and tied In the fastest time, and the contest was open to all. Miss Mulhall threw her first secsteer and tied It up in forty-thre- e onds. The second required one minute and eleven seconds, while the third was roped, thrown and tied to the remarkably fast time of forty seconds. Sixty Thousand Men to Strike. An International sympathetic strike, affecting the 60,000 organized bridge and structural in the United States and Canada, is to be called in a few weeks. Pittsburg will contribute 3,000 men, completely ty- n UP a11 brllge anJ structural work and throwing out of employment thou sands of men of the crafts in that citjf. The strike Is to be In sympathy with the fight of the New York members against the Cornell Construction company, members of the big Congressman steer-ropin- g n Hidind Charged With Criminal. ot D. R. Nelson Tennessee forfeited a bond of 85,000 by falling to appear in the District court at Coffeyvllle, Kans., Monday w answer the charge of Becretlng brother, John Nelson, from the county officers and a reward of $200 ha f been offered by the commissioners Montgomery county for the arrest. John Nelson ws convicted of killing Albert Morris year ago, and while out on bond ne disappeared. Judge Nelson was of hiding him. |