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Show DIM BEIT TOE PRESIDENT OF JON REVERSE of Secretary VOTE Bowen-Loom- is 15. Herbert recently relieved as minister to Venexuelti on account of charges which he is alleged to have made against First Assistant Secretary of State Loomis, formally reported to President Roosevelt this morning. He was with the president only a moment. He was told the muitei was in the hands nf Secretary Taft. Mr. Howen at once proceeded to the war department. Secretary Taft gave Mr. Rnwen a copy of the responses made by Loomis to the charges and all the papers in the case. He was requested to make a formal reply to Secretary Taft, who will lay the whole matter before the president for his decision. Peace talk In the teamsters strike tothat a movement will day The leport vote neriallae tonight to reverse the council w which the teamsters' joint to decided to stand pat" In refusing to deliver to boycotted permit drivers with rumors that the houses, together International executive board of the will meet Teamsters of Brotherhaad the sustain help In Chicago tomorrow, at is strike of the end the belief that 15. te. hand. !J5 li The action of the Ice wagon drivers of laat In accepting the wage scale element that another removes year Kerned likely to augment the strike troubles. The Team Owners' association will Mr. Bowen, accompanied by his wife, FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE meet today to decide when It will beIS 85 YEARS OF AGE to boycotted gin forcing deliveries LONDON'. May 15. Florence Nightfirms. Unless steps are made in the the famous Crimean war nurse, ingale. efto the of peace previous direction 4 forts of the team owners to force delivery, the move will undoubtedly lead to a spread of the atrlke. No violence of any kind waa reported up to noon. President Shea of the team atera today telegraphed President Gompera of the American Federation of Labor arranging for a meeting of the national board of that body, to be held In Chicago at the end of the week. The report that Shea wired the national officers of the teamsters brootherhood to confirmed. come to Chicago la also The teamsters board will be In sesThis move la sion about Wednesday. regarded aa Indicating a probable strike settlement The pupils of three more public schools Joined the ranks of those teamstriking" because non-unisters delivered coal to the schools. Riot calls were sent in from the Hendricks and Carpenter schools and several arrests were made. Five schools are now affected. President Gompera of the American Federation of Labor at Waahington today issued a call to all organised labor for funds to support the teamsters' trike, claiming the employers are concentrating every effort to crush the teamsters organisation and that victory aeema possible if financial support Is forthcoming. One hundred Western Union messengers struck today because coal was delivered to the company by a nonunion teamster. The boys tried to the wagon but were dispersed on ov-ertu- nr by the police. Fully one hundred letters threatening death have been received by half a dosen men identified with the employers end of the strike. Body guards are attending all the principals day and night Charles J Casey, business agent of Carriage and Wagon Workers' union Xo. 4. charged with being an accessory to murder in bringing about the slugging of Charles J. Carlstrom, a nonunion wngonmaker, waived examination before Justice Prlndlvllle today and was held to the grand Jury without ball. The other union officers arrested with Casey In connection with the death of Carlstrom. George Miller, H. J. Newman, John Helden and Frank Novak, were arraigned and held In heavy ball for hearing on May 25. Charles Gllhooley, Edward Feeley and Mark Looney, the alleged sluggers, are being held pending the coroner's inquest on the body of Carlstrom. Gllhooley has made a practical confession. A wholesale exposure of the extent end methods of professional slugging" is expected by the police to be the result of revelations connected with the murder of Carlstrom. Following the confession of Casey and Secretary J. Newman, Gllhooley, alleged leader of the men who beat Carlstrom. broke down and told Ms Dart in that and other deeds of a similar nature. From his admissions, the greater part of which Inspector Lavln declines to reveal' at present, the po-ligleaned clews which set them at work Investigating slugging" plots In nther Industries where strikes have been In progress. The police secured the names of four-c- n persons who have been assaulted r Intimidated by gangs of hired sluggers" working for striking unions. TSach case is being investigated by Inspector Lavln's detectives, and additional arrests are expected at any moment. TVe have discovered clews lending H" In a number of directions to cases nf professional slugging done by gangs hired, not only by the wagon workers, hr other unions. Including the wood orkers," raid Inspector Lavln Inst n ght. "We shall not stop until we get to the bottom of the system and break It up." ce SAN Hi f: ; Gal.. . May -- 1 F. L. Robinson, a house cleaner ami Gardner, aged 4". who was craned by liquor. ran amuck ibis morning, murdered four persons and seriously wounded another after which he blew the top of his ow n head off. Robinson monied on the second story of an old tenement. at the corner m Second and A streets. Shortly before S o'clock lie was heard to leave his room. Shortly afterwards there came screams and then It was discovered that he had entered an adjoining room occupied by Mis. Stewart and son, Willie, aged IK. The mother and son were eating breakfast when Robinson entered with a huge knife and rushed upon the youth, stabbing him twice over the heart, killing him Instantly. He then killed the boy's mother before He then rushed she could escape. down stairs and shot H. W. Chase, a carpenter, who wns working at hie bench, killing him instantly. He then . j'ln ; : Ml'i-i-t- i hi disposing of his wives. Tin- dclm-- c sprung a sutpise by r. Gus-la- e with bin on,- - witness, Kulisher. an expi-- i t. whose TOKIo. May 13. It Is definitely was mi ended in disprove tin liu m ics of the pmsccui ion that lloch j know ii huh that the Russian fleet, after poisoned Ills wife. He lin-i- l lo con- - lc.it lug Hnukohe tiny oil May 9, re- -i t ince the .bu y that tin- tmrty of Mrs to Hie bay since that time and may hate ahsoihi-- ar- - iv mi ill there. scabfrom Hie soil in 1n cemelery. Iiciuilfil cnntiriiiutory Information Annum-mwill he heard this afterRojcstven-sky- 's noon ami tomorrow amt the case will no (o tin- jury on Wednesday. ii use uf waters has ..is, w-- tin- mg ten-liiio- , r . - ain-liorc- - 1 s . Vice-Admir- al iiuii-i-i-iiin- - liulii-Ghiii- - .l.ipaucse government from FIVE MOTOR BOAT i variety uf Huiirces. butli utficlal and RACERS WERE SUNK A lush Japanese oltli-lnprivate. Qiiiiiirt-Mcinsketched (lie important acts of the 1'RIS, May 15. Make tli- - C,ini-motor lioat. wlilrh dis- Russian lln-- i since F'rauce was first appeared in tow of the destroyer moved to preserve neutrality. Re luring lilt- storm which oversaid: look the motor lioal racers yesterday, reacht-i- l Tile governor general of Jiido-ClillI'ltglluri. Sardinia, safely. Of the set oil Martcrx live were sunk or itllelally reisirted that the Russian ilia ndotit-il- . licet luid entirely departed from Kain-ran- li A Inter iiport sas tile Arlialete arhay on April 23. but on April 23 rived at Cagliari safely with Hie ert-of the Qualid-Mcnwhich foundered t Inure still remained in theh ay one cruiser, one torpedo bout destroyer and in tin- - storm. lifii-etr:iiiHHirtM of the Russian fleet, mi April 24 the entire Russian fleet LIEUTENANT CHARGED Kuninmh bay and rode at WITH EMBEZZLEMENT .iiirlmr until April 26. when n majority WASHINGTON. May 15.- -A report if the warships sidled, leaving behindlu fioni tlie I'hilippines states that Lieu- four converted cruisers and one boat destroyer. These latter vestenant otto H. Grimm of the Signal corps lias ','.eeii court mart la led. charged sels took supplies of eon! and proviwith embexasllng 2,110(1 pesos of civil sions. (in April 26, toward evening, funds entrusted to him for the pay- these vessels stopped and examined ment of laborers. He was found not t lie German steamer I on Bok find the si earner Providence, which guilty of enibexxlenient, but waa sub Norwegian ieinit-for promotion for the failure jiiiMsert outside of the bay. On April 27 more than thirty Russian vessels to properly account for the funds. miehored lit Hunknlie, and. at 5 o'clock in the afternoon they slopped and exWANTS REHEARING OF MINNIE HEALY CASE amined the British stenmer Stettin, which was passing. the FYenrh official "According II ELFIN A. Mont.. May 1 Rojesvensky promfor Miles F'itilen, the nominal plaintiff in the eelehrated Minnie Ilenly ised Admiral le Jonquleres lhat he case. Involving $10,000,000, has applied would leave Honkohe Mny 3. It Is to the supreme court to try for a re- evident, however, that the Russians 8. hearing In the decision for Heinxe re- were anchored at Honkohe on May Indofrom "The latest telegrams handed down. cently china Indicate the presence at Honkohe on May 12 of seven Russian batseven erulsers. two torpedo tleships. FIERCE FIGHTING boat destroyers and four converted cruisers. "Since the apiiearance of tbe Rasslnn fleet in the fur east Saigon has beISLAND come ON a base for the transportation of military supplies for fleet. The number of vessels furnishing supplies lo the Russians Is so great that those which were Three Hundred Natives Killed In anchored at Saigon May 5 were count ii hie hy tens. tin- - ! c. Ar-liale- te - ia RAILROAD EXPERT u. E E THE RUSSIAN LEFT was showered with congratulations today on having reached her eighty-fift- h birthday. There were a number of callers at her residence. No. 10 South street. Park lane, all of whom PRESENT LAW ADEQUATE TO EIGHTY THOUSAND REINFORCEwere received and welcomed, although the health of the venerable heroine Is MENTS FOR 0YAMA. PREVENT DISCRIMINATIONS. not of the beat. King Edwards congratulations, in the form of an autograph lettei, were delivered to Miss Nightingale by special messenger. DisTounziakou patches couched in felicitous phrases Argues That Safeguards to Protect Japs Concentrating at were received from noted men and Russian Troops Fitted Out Shippers Against Extortion women throughout Europe. ANOTHER ISSUES Ill the lloch CHICAGO. May minder trial today Police Inspector Tokio Advices Declare That After Sbq-i-i. dd uf the confession made by May 8 Rojestvensky Returned 9 and 11. llni ii to Inin ini Hoi-lSliq-pto French Waters. claimed admitted he used . nli-.i- GOVERNMENT ANOTHER DENIAL. In-- , : id , I, ( furums'ti to I I" " I'f Sicnlid and II the lii'in,' nf Itdcrii.il Rcxciuie t'ollcc-lo- r ll.ii r iMddci-ldgcknocked at the dour, uloi'.i answered by a young son iif liiabici idge. Robinson shot and killed him nisi. int ly and then rushed inside nxi-n,,. Roy's do.id body and I inddci-idgel Mi- He then ran I. nr- - after t'ollcctor itodderiflge, ill bu! the latter saved ills life by Jumping from a story window, sustaining painful luit not fatal injury. I inddi'i'idge was shot in the back, M but Is not necessarily mortally wounded. The i raxed murderer, when he saw that Tioddci-idghad escaped, turned Ids rllle on himself anil blew the entire lop of his heart off. Robinson came here four yearn ago and hart a liberal education and was a tine He run through $40,-00- 0 ten years ago in the wist, which he lost through drink. He made a meagre living by picking tip odd Jobs. - FRENCH Witness for Defense. of His Own Head Off. May arrived here from New York yesteay. Mr. Bowen, after leaving his bags at the hotel, went to the White House and left his card for the president He spent the evening quietly at his hotel, where he received a number of Mr. Bowen refuses to disfriends. cuss the matter in any way whatever beyond saying that his mission to Washington Is In obedience to Instructions received some time ago. Counsel for Alleged Wife Murderer and Bigamist Produce But One Murders Four People, Seriously Wounded Another and Then Blew the Top W. Howen. who was Teamsters Executive Board oi Meet Interaona Union Will Chicago Tomorrow. rs Taft. COUNCIL. WASHINGTON, CttCAGO, May STILL ANCHORED MAN DRINK-CRAZE- D IN HONKOHE BAT Matter Is In the Hands $ A RUSSIAN FLEET NSPECTOR SATS HAND Informed By Roosevelt That MOVEMENT MONDAY, MAY 15, 1905 HORRIBLE CRIME OF BOWEN CALLS ON 10FTE1SM STRIKE BUM TO OGDE jM , TIT APT 161. IX. NulBER VOLUME UTAH With Sommer Uniforms. Have Disappeared. SENSATIONAL NEVADA GOLD STRIKE tor-liei- -- re-m- rt. VIoe-AdinIr- al RENO, Nev May 15. Mining men GlINSHl, FASS, May 15. Flighty reinforcements thousand Japanese have arrived at the front. The cavalry In particular has been strengthened There has been considerable skirmishprevious witnesses that the present law ing on the Russian left, but no moveia ample to prevent secret rebates and ments on the right. It Is reported that discriminations, but maintained there were existing abuses systematically Oyama is directing large masses of practiced by railroads that cannot be troops from Fakomen' toward reached. He charged that the railwhere the Japanese are conroads have been steadily Increasing rates by the subtile classification of centrating, the river being bridged by freight and argued that all safeguards pontoons. Tbe Russian troops are beto protect shippers against extortion ing fitted out with summer uniforms. Action Will Be Taken have disappeared. are excited over thb aenantional strikes at White Horae, a few miles eaat of Renn. It la declared the mineral wealth will rival that of Tonopah and Goldfield. A stampede la on. WASHINGTON, May 15 Professor E. P. Ripley of Harvard, a railway expert, was before the senate, committee on Interstate commerce today and advocated the enactment of legislation to cure the existing evils in the railway business. He agreed with Toun-slako- No Further In the Case By the Kansas Gty Police. FIFTY KANSAS CITY, May 15. Richard Croker, Jr., arrived here today from Newton, Kansas, with the body of bia brother, Herbert, which he la taking to Croker called at police New York. headquarters. The police have completed their lnveatlgatlon of the vlalt of Herbert Croker to an opium den and the North End saloons of thla city, which resulted in hla death on a Santa Fe train near Newton, Kanaaa, Friday morning, and unleaa the relatives of young Croker request it no further action on the case will be taken by the local police. Charles Wilson, the negro porter at the Coates house, who accompanied Croker on hla vlalt to the opium den and later put him on a train at the Ah Lee depot, waa released today. and Ghee Kee, the Chinese proprietors of the opium den are being held and will be prosecuted in police court for conducting an illegal business. Two detectives met Richard Croker, Jr. at the station and told aim the particulars of his brother's visit to this city. He asked If It could be possible that hla brother had met with foul play, and when told that the result of the Investigation here did not Justify that belief, he intimated that he would take the body to New York at once and that no further Investigation of the rase would be requested. RAILWAY TRAINMEN IN SESSION AT BUFFALO B VFF'AI.O, N. Y.. May 15. The seventh biennial convention cif the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, the largest organisation of railway em ployes In the world, began here today and probably will continue for two weeks. Matter of routine character were discussed at, the opening session. a Chances In the constitution and affecting the Insurance branch of the order are the principal questions before the convention, the sessions nf which are secret. Nearly one thousand delegates and visitors are in mat-ter- PERSONS RICAN PORTO . u, JOLO Vice-Admi- Injured. FRANCE DENIE8 THE ALLEGATIONS OF JAPAN PARIS, May 15. The French government has Issued another denial of STRIKE ENDED M A NILA, May 15. Fierce lighting the allegations made hy Japan to the has been going on the past two weeks effect thnt the Russian fleet lingered on the Island of Jolo between the out- cither in Kninranh bay nr Honkohe law Moro chief, Pala, with 600 hay. The declaration thnt Rojestven-sk.v- 's fleet left on May 8 and hns since followers, and troops under the Per of 30 Increase Secure Laborers to remained away from French waters Is personal command of Wood. repeated. Cent In Wages and a Nine-HoPnlu's Ioises thus far an 300 killed, Day. while those of General Wood are sev- TWO TRANSPORTS SUNK well-arm- Fire Causes Celluloid Factory Blow Up Many Are Fatally 5 Encounter With Command of General Wood. Major-Gener- ed al ur IN PECHILI GULF en killed ar.d nineteen wounded. Pain followers, in ac" CUE FUG, Mny 15. A second Japcordance with Moro tradition, prefer WASHINGTON, May 15. President death to anese transport wns sunk In the Gulf capture. Gompers of the American Federation with detachments of Pei-hll- l General Wood, by a mine at the same time of Labor has received a telegram from from the Fourteenth cavalry, the Sev- the transport Hheyutamnru went down. a labor leader In Porto Rico stating Twenty-seconTwenty-thir- d The survivors were taken to Port Arthat the strike there has ended satis- enteenth, scouts, thur. and constabulary Infantry factorily. Fourteen thousand agricul- has driven Pala and his followers Into tural laborers went on strike several a swamp, which haa been surrounded. BRITISH STEAMER weeks ago. The majority have secured SYLVIAN CONFISCATED Pala was a noted slave trader and an Increase of SO per rent In wages warrior when the Americans occupied nine-hoand a day. the Islands. Itter he esesped with lib NAGASAKI. May 15 The nnval prise followers to the Island of Pula Bekar, court at Saselio haa confiscated the near Borneo. One of Palas leaders British steamer Syivlana, captured on RACE ACROSS ATLANTIC deserted and took refuge In the British February 20, hound for Vladivostok vitli Cardiff coal. settlement at Lahad. PuIh discoverfoling his whereabouts. landed with a lowing and demanded of the British RUSSIAN VESSEL8 OFF CAPE VARELLA Sandy Hoek to the Needles. Pierra magistrate thnt he turn the deserter Lorlllsrd owned the Vesta, George and over to him. SINGAPORE. May 13. The steamer Franklin Osgood the Fleet wing and The demand was not iimiplieil with Janies Gmrton Bennett the Henrietta. find Pala ordered a massacre. Twenty-fiv- e Jiiuou reports that on May 12th she The stakes were $30,000 a corner, mak personr. Including several British, sighted thirteen Rttsslnn war veasela Ing $90,000 in all. The Henrietta won were killed. Pala escaped to the Island off Cape Vnrella. north of Honkohe the race, though both of the other of Jolo an-- organised the present up- hay. uonteatants came In but eight hours rising. KOCH MURDER behind. tl Is reported that the Borneo to JURY IN CASE COULD NOT AGREE Wood General was the between race The next requested CRmbrla. owned by James Asbury of apprehend Pala dead or alive and turn MANKATO. Minn., May 15. The London, and the Dauntless, owned by him over to them. in the trial of George Koch, race This jury Bennett. James Gordon charged with murdering Dr. Iwiis A. was sailed in 1870 for a cup worth MILLIONAIRE HELD TO THE GRAND JURY Gehhardt at New Vim November 1 of $1,350. The British yacht won by 1 last year, disagreed at noon today and 43 Cambria minutes. The hour and This Is the second PHILADELPHIA. May 15. A. G. El- was dicharged. sailed a northern course, while the A third trial Is UnDauntless took a middle course. The liott, Jr., a millionaire paper manufac- trial of the case. of a on likely. 22 charge held was today days, turer. Cambria sailed 2,917 miles in 5 hours and 17 minutes, and the obtaining $1,000 from the Tradesmens TRAIN BOUND FOR RACES Dauntless sailed 2,968 miles In 23 days National hank under false pretenses. GOES INTO THE DITCH and his remaining VIENNA persons May 15. Fifty were Injured, some perhaps fatally, as the result cf an explosion of celluloid during a fire In the French Celluloid company's plant today. The fire chief and several firemen are among the Injured. A large crowd was pressing close to the fire lines when the explosion occurred. YACHTS ARE READY TO NEW YORK. May 15. Aboard the fleet yachts lying in the bay that are to take iart lit the great trans-Atlantrace to begin tomorrow there was much activity today. Everything was In anticipabeing put In ship-shation of the start. Public Interest in the contest 1s of the keenest sort, and it Is expected that thousands of persons will go out to the Hook tomorrow to witness the beginning of the rare ic pe d, ur for the emperor's trophy. It will be the first time In nearly a score of years that there has been a yacht race across the Atlantic. The last race sailed arross the ocean was in 1887. when the Coronet defeated the The race was started off Dauntless. March of that year and In Bay Ridge the two yachts raced to Queenstown. The stakes were $10,000 a side. The Coronet won. covering 2.0449 miles and and 7 hours. The liest time of a yacht across I he MITCHELL AGREES making the voyage in 14 dnya, 20 hours TO MEET SULLIVAN Atlantic wns not made In a race. The i ml 30 minutes. Previous to this race there were sev- schooner Endymion in 1900 crossed SEATTLE, May 13. Charley Mitcheral other lontests of the kind that ex- from Bandy Hook to the Llsnrd in 12 Sulell ten 20 ocean She agreed this morning to meet hours. averaged days and cited great Interest. The first articles to sign eslivan here Wednesday race was between the American knots an hour for the passage and Oalia Vilona olfhSF If) Tfl Henrietta. Fleetwing and tablished a record for the course schooners Vesta, in IRK, the Course being from. sailed. 4 NEW YORK, May 15. A train hound for the Belmont Park races was Itched this nfternoon near Wood-have- n. L. I. Fireman Domllt waa fatally Injured and the engineer slightly. Twelve passengers were more or less seriously Injured. . |