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Show Governor William Sulzer must go to trial. This was decided by the high court of Impeachment Monday, when, by a vote of 51 to 1, Its members overruled the motion of the governor's counsel to dismiss the proceedings. Miss Doris Robinson, a nurse at the Maiden, Mass., hospital, was stabbed while on duty by an Unidentified Unidenti-fied man. whn thpn nimnpri thrnnp-h n BRIEF REVIEW OF A TO EVENTS RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS IN ITEMIZED ITEM-IZED FORM window and escaped. Hiss Robinson's Robin-son's condition is critical. Charles Cameron, business agent of the Chicago painters' union, was shot four times, probably fatally, and John Walters, a painting contractor, was seriously injured in a quarrel with a third man. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Hurley, who had been married only a few weeks, were burned to death in an incendiary incendi-ary fire that swept through a three-story three-story brick building in Boston. Former United States Congressman Washington Gardner of Albion, Mich., was elected commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, at the final business session at the forty-seventh annual encampment at Chattanooga, Tenn. WASHINGTON Failure to get news of the little sloop Wasp, with Andrew M. Evans, commissioner of education of Alaska on board, which has been missing in Alaskan waters since August 24, has alarmed officials at Washington. The revenue cutter Bear, now at Unalas-ka, Unalas-ka, will make a search. Postmaster General Burleson has announced purchase by the postofflce department of forty-one automobiles to be used in the collection and delivery de-livery of parcel post matter. Home and Foreign News Gathered From All Quarters of the World, and Prepared for Busy Men ) INTERMOUNTAIIM Ira Cox of Salt Lake failed to escape es-cape a fine of $100 on a vagrancy Charge by marrying Allie Williams, fit Butte, Police Judge Booher sarcastically sar-castically referring to the Diggs-Caminetti Diggs-Caminetti case and imposing the limit. The court declared that Cox could not pull any blinds over his eyes. More than a dozen passenger on a Great Northern train were injured, one fatally and two others seriously, near Mukilteo, Wash., through the breaking of an axle on the tender and the ditching of the locomotive, tender tend-er and baggage car. Mrs. Etta Wharton of Walla Walla, will recover $1,400 1 from Dr. W. H. Werner of College Place, a suburb, because the physician left a fourteen-inch fourteen-inch spring In her body after an operation. op-eration. The spring was In the body of the woman for fifteen days. Samuel E. Marts of Limon, Colo., a Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific freight conductor, was shot and killed by an unknown tramp who previously had held up and robbed Brakeman Norman D. Reed of Marts' train, and who now is a fugitive before posses of deputy sheriffs. ' Tom Carroll, 16 years old, of Reno, Nev., accidentally shot himself, expiring expir-ing instantly, at Comins lake. He was with a party of high school students stu-dents who were duck hunting on the lake in a boat. Elizabeth Eisenberg, a 3-year-old girl, was instantly killed by a Union Pacific train near Loveland, Colo. Felix Madera, a Mexican boy, 9 years of age, was struck on the ankle by the engine, hut without serious injury, in-jury, as he jumped from the track af- Secretary Garrison has before him a Philippine slavery report by W. H. Phipps, auditor for the islands, practically prac-tically backing up the startling charges of Dean Worcester. It cites details of many cases of boys and girls sold into slavery at prices ranging rang-ing from $60 to $100 gold. The tariff conference committee has voted to leave bananas on the free list. The senate conferees also gave way as to the duty on lemons, limes, grapefruit and similar fruits. Secretary Wilson has dispatched Ethelbert Stewart, chief clerk of the bureau of labor, to Denver, to act as mediator in the impending coal miners' min-ers' strike. The 'first of Secretary Daniels' "floating schools" for academic instruction in-struction of the enlisted men of the ter ne naa tried to save me gin s life. DOMESTIC Historic Greenwood cemetery, the resting place in Brooklyn of many famous dead, received the body ot New York's late mayor, William Jay Gaynor, at midafternoon Monday, after af-ter funeral services in his honor that were without parallel in the history of the city. Philadelphia won the pennant of the American league for this season and its fifth championship in the sixteen six-teen years' history of the organization, organiza-tion, by reeling off two victories over Detroit on Monday. Robert Quirk of Waterloo, Ia., one . of the most important cattle breeders of Iowa was probably fatally iniuren at Chicago when he was hit by the engine of a cattle train. Four workmen were killed and one was probably fatally injured by an explosion in the gelatine mixing house of the Dupont powder works at Gibbs-town, Gibbs-town, N. J. Sections of Maryland were swept by destructive storms of wind and rain Monday, causing damage to crops and buildings that will run into the thousands and one known fatality. John McAlpine, wealthy Duluth lumberman, who is believed to have been murdered in the basement of his home August 15, left an estate of navy has been , established on the cruiser Des Moines, new patrolling Dominican waters. FOREIGN The strike of omnibus men of London Lon-don was settled at Monday's conference confer-ence of the British board of trade. Under the terms of settlement the men gain the chief points for which they contended recognition of their union and representation by union officials of-ficials in disputes between the companies com-panies and their drivers and conductors. conduc-tors. The Liverpool Daily Courier, a conservative con-servative and Unionist .paper, says that there will be a general election before the home rulfc bill for Ireland receives the royal assent which is necessary to make it law. The Greek authorities at Korltsa in Albania on Monday seized the American mission school" there where, instruction is given to nearly one hundred Albanian girls. A northbound train on the Mexican Mexi-can National railway has been dynamited dyna-mited by the rebels near Vanegas, in the northern part of the state of San Luis Potosi. From the meager reports re-ports it is believed that thirty were killed. The number of cases of cholera at present under surveillance at Bucharest Bucha-rest is 1,137. There have been forty-five forty-five deaths. mure muu $i,uuu,uuu, suujeci to neavy incumbrances, according to his private pri-vate secretary. After spending forty-three years in prison John Taborn, 66, the oldest convict in the Ohio penitentiary, has been pardoned by Governor Cox. He was convicted of 'murder in Delaware county in 1S70 and sentenced to life imprisonment. Police and private detectives with difficulty held in check a mob of angry an-gry foreigners who believed their savings had been swept away when the Victor bank, a state institution at McKees Rocks, Pa., was closed by Bank Inspecting Examiner McGlln-chey. McGlln-chey. Samuel Blythe, the cashier has disappeared. The Rev. W. E. Pippin, a Baptist minister, after pleading guilty at Ben-tonville, Ben-tonville, Ark., to passing a worthless check on a member of his congregation, congrega-tion, was sentenced to three years in the state penitentiary. Indications that the Frisco railway eystem soon may be placed on a paying pay-ing basis was given at a hearing in the district court at St. Paul. A 100-foot brick chimney collapsed and fell through the roof of a foundry Vice Admiral Sir John Fellowes died suddenly at his home in England, Monday, Mon-day, of heart disease. Lieut. Col. Francisco Cardenas, alleged al-leged by the constitutionalists of Mexico Mex-ico to have been the assassin of Francisco Fran-cisco I. Madero, former president of Mexico, has been assassinated at Michoalan. The streets of Dublin were the scene of a battle on Sunday between the police and strikers. Many heads were broken. Thirty-five civilians and seven policernen are in hospitals as the result of the engagements, and many others were treated for minor injuries. Complete anchary reigns in Albania. The provisional foreign minister, Mu-fid Mu-fid Bey, has summoned his partisans to arms to march against Essad Pasha, the former commander in chief of the Turkish forces at Scutari. The German aviator, Victor Stoefler, who left Warsaw, Russia, in an attempt at-tempt to reach Paris in a single day, was forced by a storm to descend near the Russian frontier and was arrested. ar-rested. King Constantine of Greece walked about the downtown streets of Paris at the Deering plants of the International Inter-national Harvester company in Chicago. Chi-cago. One man was killed and five Injured. Counsel for William Sulzer lost the first skirmish in a legal battle they began Friday at the first session of the high court of impeachment, to prevent the accused executive from coming to trial. Their objections to permitting four senators to sit as members of the colirt were overruled. An agreement to end the clock workers' work-ers' strike at Galveston, Texas, affecting affect-ing 3,500 men, was reached at a conference con-ference of all labor unions involved Friday ai (jinoon. The agreement will Le Ki:!mitt:tl to the several unions lor r;.'.t.fcat.lor on Saturday in civilian clothing and attended by only one aide. The police po-lice had taken precautions to guard .him, however. Relatives of the queen of Spain have been shocked by the news that the second daughter of the queen, like her second son, will be both deaf and dumb. A proposal to make the Azores archipelago an international neutral zone is being considered by the American Amer-ican British and German governments. The proposal f, said to be incidental to flic opening of the Panama canal. The striking railway men at Liver- pool and C-rewc, a short distance from Liverpool, d'";';ded to resut'-.e work on j Monday. |