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Show J th. opr to"'ht 1 J J yublialjril BailtJ at Wijiiru. Utah w PILOTS WILL BU8INESS NOT INCREASED BY CALLING OF BOYCOTT. SOAR TOMORROW 4 -- lying machines for to compete 4 loving cup. ijooo ily the I'nitcl lrr SAX KRANVI8UO. Sej.i is Despite the calling off ,,f the boycott on the United Railways. there was no appreciable in- crease in the number nf pus- : curried this senger This, it is claimed, is due to the fact that the action of the strike is committee not generally known, but the strikers say it shows that public sentiment is still with them, and tluit their sympathizer will not ride ,,n the cars until the strike is set- tied. - nii'i-iiinu- to Be Devoted to Teste of of Aoroplsnoo One of Many Forms Machines Entered Weighs Mors Than 9.000 Pounds. wh0l. Da y 4 4 Vs, g FAIL OF RECORD? 4 4 LOOKS AS THOUGH THE GREAT SHIP HAD FAILED AFTER ALL. 4 4 Def.mte Result, However, la Not Known No Figure Have Been Compiled to wive the Correct Result England la Soreiy Disappointed. 4 4 a : Kt es ed sub-albe- re-twt- son-in-la- w ng vice-preside-nt ab-ttPt- ly W!!!!ITUAL,8T VANDERBILT DEAD PROVIDENCE. R. L. Sept. 1J.- -J. ard Allen, who -figured 9 In the ler.-n- t Vanderbilt prominent spiritualist je. through his connection with Mrs. as financial agent, it, today following a stroke of n m, t,y worry over the case the way fn which his name was into the ap-FPe- testimony. CHICAGO GRAIN. raiCAGQ. Kept. 13. Wheat oper ay at js 1.4 nd closed at 87 5 opened at 591-- 2 and closed u K 0318 1,Mne5 t 58 1- -4 8. and clot ? WALTER WELLMAN ABANDONS HIS TRIP, By the United - ix,!'je-v- Press.) Norwy' S,i,t Wellman has board tht 'r tr,,hJf. and announced S"!!! tha hi" trial trip tc nnh imle hns been de fir fnr th,a Thi 8 terntJ1! mn1e n "cent Bej but high wind, dnn 1he ,and "d the bs Trnm,w ar-21- 0,1 rw. kin 8 from CUt 1bp frm th oiY a,r"hlp to save ht complete destruction. 44444 BIG NAVAL FLEET L Ill - JACK TAR THREW CRAPS AND THE COON GET S COIN. ' :.'IV., in. . THE i .1 I't.w.) I'nil.-.- l . .1' nine . 11. i;!i:ir, inline lit 9 41 Tin nreaii gi.inlexs in, ki ufler mid vlmi-tl- n.is Mcl.t.,1 Mi '1! ,.ff Kiiy -- lxl.in.1 ill aiui at ,if wh'-i'i- s. th. him-,,,f inusie from 1 By Stall. ng Continuously Burke Sucit I1.1 Miuinliil Inuii Hi,- - xx .ill 111 sc ceeded in Staying tlie Six Rounds. D t in buy. The ship ilm keil .it Although He Wae Knocked Down al.iml rifl.vn hutulivil pnlli enii-i- l Seven Different Times. k pi lie h'v.il llii'iiiK baek. The laisi-t.u.l- .i. 11 uiii'itli Ini ligures. lieal the .u uui.i'i. ilm,' fun i linurs umi eighteen Bltllx iKl'i HIT, 'mi., si'i i:.- - A mlnulen. iiiuile llie run in live iluys. J.u-N rli-iltv.iH to be Jtii.iiMiii, liio In liuiirx aiui he minutes. negro Incivywilglit I'UKillM. .isil.v The lurliiniT. however, failed (11 beat feuli-i- l Kiitlnr Burke, the l;io.-klmi. - the liermuii Htrmmhlp IleuleliNlutid'e 1. 9 i. .1 ' p.i-M- ,l ui- - ill ilm-k- Kuinly j,.(i4 . KcitrcH - I Senator 1 Ben Tillman, of 8outh Carolina, who will lecture at the Grand opera houae tonight. - , FURRY FELLOWS TO HONOR NYE ANNIVERSARY AMERICAS OF CENTRAL FREEDOM. TO ERECT MONUMENT TO THE FAMOUS HUMORIST. Believed in Washington That Honduras Question to Come Before the National Will Adopt a Permanent Form of Convention of Prete Humorist Government Tomorrow ae Uncle 8am Which Meat in Lo Angela Next Week Will Be Located at Laramie. Rejects the Provisional. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Sept. 13. Celebrations will be held throughout Honduras tomorrow and Sunday, the anniversary of the political emancipation of Central America, and will be marked by the return to a constitutional form of government, adopting the provisions of the constitution of 1894. The provisional government will be abandoned next month, when a, permanent president will be elected. The principal candidates are General Davila, president of the provisional government, and Dionysius Gutlerez, formerly a member of the cabinet and for many years prominent In Honduran ean political affalra WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. It Is announced here that Honduras will adopt a permanent form of government tomorrow, and It Is generally believed In official circles that the decision is due to the refusal of the Washington state department to recognlsa the provisional government. An application for such recognition was made some time ago by Senor Ugarte, who was sent here for that purpose. The reason given by the state officials for the refusal was that such recognition of provisional governments offered a premium on revolutions, and greatly retarded the efforts of the more conservative element in Central America to establish stable and reIt is believed sponsible governments. that the Influence of Iresident Roosevelt and President Dlax had much to do with the decision of General Davila to trust his political fortunes to an appeal to popular suffrage. brought to bear to hasten the departure of the fleet. JOB FOR POWDERLY. (By the United Prees.) WASHINGTON, D. C Sept 18. Secretary Strauss of the department of commerce and labor announced toa day tliat he purposed establishing with Agency," National Employment T. V. Powderly In charge. ALASKA HANDICAP. SEATTLE. Wash, Sept 13. The Alaska handicap, the closing stake of the season on the Meadows track, will be run tomorrow. The race is for and upward and has a value of 81.250. The distance Is one mile and a sixteenth. . Kept. IS ANGELES, will Princes of funny fellows gather in Lo Angeles next week, when the nutlonal convention of the Press Humorists' association will meet here. The meeting, the fifth of the newspaper humorists, will be notable through the inauguration of a movement for the building of r monument to the late Edgar Wilson Laramie, Nye, better known as Bill. Wyo., is a favored locution for the memorial, that town being the scene of the humorist's earliest efforts and some of hie best work. Asheville, N. C., where Mr. Nye died, has also been mentioned, but general sentiment apparently favors the Wyoming city. One of the feature events of the convention wilt take place next Friday, when a doien humorists of national reputation will appear on the local stage in a performance to aid the Nye monument fund. Among those on the program are Rev. Robert J. Burdette, now a resident of Los Angles; Charles Itattell Loomis, Eli Perkins, Strickland V. Gillllan, Edward Vance Cook, Wilbur D. Nesbit, 8. E. Kiser, Kam Davis and Thomas A. Daly. Unless the distinguished visitors inexplicably fall down on their assignment, the Los Angeles public will be given its money's worth of laughter and tears. Frank Thompson Hea right, secretary of the aesoclatlon, assisted by Los Angeles newspaper men, have completed to give the professional preparation funny men the time of their lives In the City of Angel, and will he backed up In the attempt by the entire population. The only fly In the ointment will be the absence of Mark Twain, who has written that lie will never again make a land voyage if It can be avoided, honorably or otherwise. 13. IBISHUENGE ur FOR A RACE (By the United Press.) DUBIJX, Sept 18. The Royal Irish Yacht club this afternoon notified the New York Yacht club that a challenge for a series of races for the America's cub will be mailed on the steamer Umbria, the racee to take place next year off Bandy Hook. No particulars are given out but It Is understood the challenge cornea from Upton. their limit l m KmiiliV ar 1 i - - only by continual Mulling. 1 Hiring (lie tight llurkc went to the floor seven times for u count of nine, always taking the count on those occasion for tlie purpose of stalling. He was knocked duwn so ninny time that no one ws able to keep the cnre. In the fifth round lie took the count three tliiip. The sailor might have made the count more often hud he not succeeded in hugging the negro hIiiiosI eontlnuully. In the third round Burke got a wicked left upon the solar plexus. He to hi dropiH-unee. gasping for breath, and managed to get up again after the count of nine and finish the round. Considering the weights of the two men, Burke was lucky to last out the fight. Johnson punished the sailor severely all the time, landing rights and lefts straight to the wind, on his cheat, and occasionally on the face. In the first two rounds Burke tried hard to catch the negro upon the Jaw, but the big black fellow only smiled as he warded off the punches. Johnson used left and right uppercuts most of the time. l'lfnuliH tlie Gummier. h 23.5 kimlM. 229. Thn Lusitania wux frequently delayed by fog, but made up with tremendous liurslM of. pe d when tlie weullier waa The 1 ii Hi lex t lin 11 lilit iiiIh average the Lusitanias fine. While public attention was centered on the LuNitunlu, the French liner lot nence eiinie Into port iiliumd. and with a real record. Kho minle the shu ge from Havre, 8,140 lli unae-iliilnii- -d 1 111 miles, in six days, one lmur und thirty niinutes, at an average of 22.8 knots an hour. Till broke her previous record of six days, two luiurs and twenty-thre- e minutes. LONDON, Kept. 13. All England ia dlHupiMilnted, as everybody waa count- ing on tlie LuHltania breaking all trans-Atlan- tic records and w renting ths bluo. rlblKin of the cu from Germany. Soma consolation ia felt in the statement that the Cunarder wa not pressed to th limit siiil will show an Increase of speed In future voyages. LILI-ETTO WED PRINCE. HONOLULU, 81 pt. 13. Ulluokalani, the dusky empress who once ruled Hawaii before Undo Bam undertook the Job, has announced that she will shortly be married to Prince Arl Pal, of Tahiti. The prince is now reported to be on his way tu Honolulu, ELECTORAL COLLEGES WILL and the nuptials will take place shortly CHOOSE REPRESENTATIVES. after his arrival. It Is said that the prince, when a youth, fell in love with the husky queen, but his amorous ad- Public Intsrest Is Not Very Keen as to vances were repulsed by her majesty the Result Emperor Grievously Disbecause of his lack of wealth and Inappointed at the Results of the Loot fluence. Since then Arl Pal has gained Two Elections. both In large measure, ss well as some 850 pounds of fat. The while bereft of royal prestige, la herself 8T. PETERSBURG. Sept. 18. All wealthy, so that marriage is looked Wn taken, step preliminary having upon as purely a love affair. the provincial electoral colleges will meet tomorrow to choose the parliamentary representative for the third Russian douma, which Is to inct In HELD A PRI80NER November. Though the fate of Rum-slIN A HUT IN CHILI. experiment in parliamentary gov(By the United Press.) 6 ernment Is at stake, public Inti rest In the elections nnd the assembling of th t LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Kept. third douma la not very keen. Th.i 13. William H. McDaniel. clerk nf the national house of 4 emperor was grievously disappointed by the results nf the first and second representatives, writes to local 4 friends from Chill, declaring 4 elections, neither of which produced a 4 that he Is held a prisoner In a 4 body capable of working In harmony 4 hut In Antofugast. stating that 4 with hi chosen advisers. Should thn 4 his right arm ia shot off, his 4 third douma fall to prove more satls-tor- y, the result undoubtedly would be 4 newspaper credential stolen and 4 4 he I absolutely destitute. He 4 that Russias advance toward a repre4 give no reason for his attack 4 sentative form of government would 4 nr by whom, but appeals to his 4 be set back many years. 4 friends here and Senator Clark 4 Under the changes in the election 4 to Investigate the case. Clark 4 law, however, better results are hoped 4 promises to Investigate. Me- - 4 for. Under the new law, the Intent of 4 Daniel declares that three at- - 4 which Is to eliminate, as far as possible, 4 temps have been made to take 4 the revolutionary and ignorant ele4 ments which brought about the down4 his life. 4 fall of the two first parliaments, reli4 ance has been placed upon the large land owners and property-holdin- g city NEW GLASGOW STEAMER. dwellers, who are the most conservative GLASGOW, Sept. 12. The Califor- class In Russia. The uneducated peasnia. the new Anchor Line twin-screantry, whose representatives were eassteamship which was launched July I. ily swayed by revolutionary arguments, will leave on her maiden voyage to have been relegated to a subordinate New Tork tomorrow, and will here- position, and there Is no chance that after make regular trips between that the coming douma will be dominated city and Glasgow. The California has by the advanced liberal and radical accommodations for 300 first cabin and parties. But at the same time much She is doubt Is expressed as to whether the 400 second cabin passengers. tompart-ment- s, third douma will be able to divided Into nine water-tigaccomplish and is fitted with a wireless any more practical or beneficial result than Its predecessors. telegraph system. Ex-Que- en a's w 8TEN8LAND MU8T STAY. CHICAGO, Sept. 13. The state board of pardons today refused to release Paul SUniland, former president of the collapsed Milwaukee Avenue State frank, now serving a term In the penitentiary. An effort was made to secure Btenslands pardon on account of alleged 111 health. He must serve eight sentence. years of the fifteen-ye- rii'ui'il. Aii I'Xiii nniit rlK, tn I tuiiniM-Mlil- c. ilie xtiiriiiia point of tin- two voy-IIt heater here luel night. Tlx- uuoi rex lii'iiiu illll'iTrnl. but it I rKlIuiilteil markable feature nf the light wae the Hint I lif i liliiinl covt-r- i ,1 tin- - hiiiiiii fact that Burke stayed the entire nix tlie In its the l.iiMlitnlu In five tiny it. rmindH. lie could do that, Imuexer. oin- hour uinl thirty minutiD, or tlUvly-li- tin Ohlo-Kentuc- NEW YORK, Sept. 18. While no official announcement will be made by Secretary Loeb, It was reported from Oyster Bay last night that the president had summoned Secretary of the Navy Metcalf for starting the battleearship fleet for the Pacific a month The Intended. was plan as lier than first arranged called for the departure of sixteen battleships about December 17. Since then the president has followed closely the Oriental immlgra-- l tlon troubles upon the Pacific coast, and questioned Secretary Straus particularly on this point two days ago. In Reports are constantly coming from Fadflc coast officials, and since the Vancouver riots pressure has been Iv l .11'. I RACING IN OLD KENTUCK. LEXINGTON, Ky Kept. 13. A scene of animation again greets the eye on Lexington's famous race track, where season ojions the fall The meet here will last tomorrow. to Saturday, September 21, Inclusive, and will be followed by a twenty-foday meet at Latonla, from Monday. September 23, to Saturday, October 19. Next will come the meet of the Louisville Jockey dub, eighteen days, beginning Monday, October 21, and continuing through November 3. It is expected that some of J. B. will be seen on Haggin's the local track next week. It will be the first time Mr. Haggin has had a starter on the Lexington track for twenty-on- e years. The last time the Haggin colore, orange and blue, were seen here wae in 1886, when Tyrant won the Distillers' stakes. This will be the first running meeting ever held in the fall at Lexington. WILL SAIL EARLY I 11 son-in-la- w w, (lie Y Kept 13 I'liiiipli-ttuhir.iid, trip ;iu, makiiig A wurliis I,i'lil mil fium Vjileeiist.iwu tile t'uil-uii- li r tile Impi-Ksi. uuiKlilp heavier-than-tlie-a- Chl-duri- FRIDAY, SLUMBER 13, 1907 4 4 Sept. 13.-- Sky America and Europe will pUuis" ct for a comprte in the airship flights will be the feature of whlt-11 WO tup. the Jamestown at Aeroplane day tomorrow. Many famous Unbent of the Aero club of America are the gnj of Euroetiu organisations management tl of the exposition in the comgnfl have entered airships of the dav event feature The mon. Selenfor the competition the be sill machine trophy, ga American flying entered only flying fa which have been DENIE8 THE REPORTED INTERir xarhines of the VIEW TO THE SECRETARY. type. director aeronautics, larari Ludlow, 111 will take purl in the contest with Says That the President Would Not 25 la 40 feet which by ktert aeroplane, Accept the Nomination Under Any is fixe, which U twice as large as any Condition! All the Power in the Others constructed. heretofore ht has sho will jKtrlirlpate include Ur. AlexParty Couldn't Induce Him to Accept. ander Graham Bell, the Inventor of the telephone; reter Cooper Hewitt, with KAN 13. If FRANCISCO, Kept. the largest areoplane ever constructed, e Nicholas Longworth, of weighing 9.000 pounds and forty-fivfeet in length; John F. Holland, President Roosevelt, speaks with any of (he type of submarine boats authority, und It Is generally believed bearing his name; Arthur Dufour of that what little he says has the sancMilwaukee. G. Curtis Gillespie of New tion of the chief executive, Theodore of Whitehead and BridgeTurk George Roosevelt will not be a candidate for port Conn. The contests will take place over rennminatinn as president, and all the brt's parade ground and the waters of jmwer of the Republican party cannot Hampton Roads, Just off the exposition compel him to remain In the White gniunds and in plain view of the house for the next four years. Long-wort- h rniwds. The contest will be governed speaks guardedly, particularly by rales formulated by the Aero club of with reference to his father-in-labut America The machine which aeconi-pUththe required flight in the short-a- t on this occasion uttered decisive words heard with Interest time and with the best display of that will 'be throughout the entire country. stability and eaae will be declared th Congressman and Mrs. Longworth winer. returned from a two months' visit at Honolulu yesterday and went to the WILL DEPORT ASIATICS. Fairmont hotel. They exepect to reCHm of Vaneeuver Raising Funds main here until Saturday, before proto Ship Orisntala ceeding to Cincinnati. Longworth said Hawaii was prosperous and that the Japanese, who numYAXCOrVER, Sept. 18. It was here last night that two mure ber about 60,000 people In the Islands drips, the Indiana and Woolwich, both were very peaceable, and that the troucurving Asiatics, are expected to arrble with them upon the mainland was ive this week, and trouble la feared not duplicated In HawaiL If they try to land their I do not know much about things in passengers. According to reports here yesterday, the United States Just now," said Mr. t subscription list, headed by Mayor Longworth, "for I have not read the Bcthuae with a 8100 subscription, is newspapers, and have heard little or Wing raised to transport any Hindus nothing. ether Asiatics who may be landed Asked about a reported Interview Wi from the various steamships. The with him ae he was leaving Honolulu Nbscriptlon list has already reached a week ago regarding the probability SAM. It is the intention of rs the of Roosevelt running again, Longworth to ship to Ottawa, the seat said he hod not been interviewed. d the federal government, any of the When the substance of the alleged inHhdus or Jaanese or Chinamen who terview, in which It was stated that the wired on the steamship Monteagle president might run again If conditions Wednesday night if they attempt to were favorable, and the convention " to Vancouver from Victoria. made a practically unanimous demand Disquieting dispatches come from that he head the ticket, wae quoted, Wattle, where the ed Japanese are Longworth eald quietly, but with emto be forming a defensive phasis: because of a proposed Asl-f- le But there will be no conditions. demonstration. was reThe president's Xany firearms have been sold In Seminded of the conditions at Philadelthi. Wash., to the Japanese and phia 4hen Roosevelt was nominated the past two days. for against his will and "CWM of Jaimnese servants have of having at that time accepted the left their employers without conditions that arose. JJtPPlng to take their possessions with Tee, I remember, said Longworth, a tid emigrated to the there wilt be no conditions this "but Japanese ft Dement downtown. time. NORFOLK. colored population Mould do J th rii tj h.m, but he still A sa niv.'ijer. j 22 XL-- No. VOL S0 -kou" ",5 Tre Sacpi Cr:l:na whirlwind ha been threatened that the th b heard a iH 1 : .. .J Mt ht |