BREAK THE PACT W0RSE THAN SAVACES TO FIGHT IT OUT FORCING THEIR WAY IN FIGHT TO A FIRISf I NEBR Li NEBRASKA NOTES THIBE AT PACKING CEKTEftS rlLLIWlXO AGAIN- IN BKITISH fOM,lX AT YOKOHAMA IS TOLD TO INVESTIGATE. DONNELLY CALLS OUT MEN PL ACT OTTERED Of SMALL POKTION OXLT. rno- PaOraburf A p prthi-Dal a f,aat A a tliar lirlilnl May He Cro atad aad Awaltlur Tiir taar D:aila. SO SIGH OT A TRI CK IV iTBIal E OK BlTCMtBS. 1APS PRESSING THE KCSSIAHS KKAK LW CUWASU. SETTLE NOW TO STRUGGLE Aaothar Coafaroaeo la Hni of Kffaeilaa; Paara Ciataeeoaafw.il Rletlag Reaawed aaa oaa Hu u lJara CHICAGO. The packing hou striae was oidered renewed In Cblca go and all other cities. Violation of agreement by tbe packing bouse proprietors Is assigned as tbe cause. Tbe following telegram was seot 07 President Donnelly to all tbe employes of radons packing houses In tbe different cities affected oy tbe previous stiver: "Orders out all tbe departments again. Companies violated agree ment. ' "MI1CHAKL DONNELLY, "President International Meat Cut'.ers and Butcher Workmen." Today tliree thousand cattle butchers reported at tbe stock yards bue for work. Ooly half of tlu rn were given placas. Thereupon all refused to wi.rk. They reported In a body at their unloi. teadquarters I The Rrnnral order for a renewal of the itilke was soon forthcoming. j While the immediate provocation titr tho vot10uf.1t i.l tn ctrlL'A urua an. I parently the failure of tbe packers to take hack a larucr proportion of the strikers who reported for work to day, (he real cause of the was Inferred to be a circular issued yesterday by the packers. fhe circular purported to explain to the public th" agreement entered Into with the labor leaders. Seem Inglj the circular could be taken as implylrg that the agreement did not bind the packers to rc-emplny all of the men who walked out. The construction tbe labor leaders had placed upon tbe agreement wa.s that all should be reemployed within for ty-C ve days. When the 3, WO butchers went Into the yards here lorhy to take their eld places the geoeial greeting re ceived was: "We cannot take hack more than half the regular force " Immediately there was a woeful display of chagrin and disappoint ment. The men held a conference of an Impromptu nature and reached an agreement to act as a unit or not at all. "You must take vis all back or none," came the reply of the unlun men, who saw performing the tasks they had done before numbers of non-union workmen. The packers refused to accede to this, and a con ference was sent to see President Donnelly. The latter was quickly in communication with bis advisors. Within an hour and a balf tbe de cision was reached to reopen the strike. Prsldeot Donnely'g tele gram was accordingly sent to all unions. Will Give Up Ship ST. PETERSBURG -Tbe Rus sian reply to tbe British protest was handed to Ambassador Hardlnge. Russia agrees that tbe Malacca sball not be brought before a prize court, and undertakes that no similar In cident sball occur In tbe future. As a matter of formality tbe Mal acca's cargo will be examined at Suda bay, Island of Crete, lo tbe presence of tbe British and Russian consuls, the Russian government bavlng ordered her to stop at Suda bay for that purpose. The report of the captain of the St Petersburg, which has at last reached the admiralty, gives as his reason lor summarily making a prl of the steamer Malacca the fact that tbe Hntlsh master of the Malacca declined to produce the manifest of his cargo.as required by International law, when stopped by a belligerent In'time of war. WASHINGTON -Spencer Eddy, tbe American charge d'affalrs at St. Petersburg, cabled tbe state de partment that the British embassy thee has been officially notified that the steamer Malacca has been re leased, and that lo consequence tbe existing tension ha been rellevid Sentence of Bribers. ST. LOUIS Jerry J. Hanolgan and Charlci J. Demy were sentenced by Judge Taylor of the 8; Louis circuit court to aerve two years each Pave Penalty for Murder. COLUMBUS, O -Charles Stlmmel, coovlcted of the murder of Joseph W. Sbelde, a bookkeeper at Dayton, O.. waa electrocuted In tbe annei at tbe Oblo penitentiary a few mlnu ST. PETERSBURG.-Contirma-tioo of tbe details of tbe reported sinking of tbe British stesmer Height Commander or tbe Valdl vostok squadron Is eagerly awaited here, owing to tbe possibility tbat it wiii create another incident with Great Britain. YOKOIIOMA. Captain Browo of the steamship Tsolan, which brought the crew of tbe si earner Kolgbt Commander Into port says that tbe Knight Commander met three Rus sian warships at 7:30 on Saturday morning off the province of Izu. I The Russian officers who boarded tbe Knight Commander took her .captain back wltb them and ordered I the crew of the Kolght Commander to come 00 board one of the Russian war, hips within ten minutes The Russians then sank the Kuigbt Commander. At 3 o'clock lo the afternoon tbe Russian V(wls met the Tainan and 1 transferred the crew of the Knight j Commander to this vessel. An In dlnn boatswain of the Knight Corn 1 manrfer says the Russians toasted .that between sinking the Knight 'Commander and halting the Tslnan I they sai.k two small Japanese vessels land that before meeting the Knlg'ut Commander they had captured 'Germau steamer, belonging to the IlHtiiberg American line, and the , CiM lier.hdm, a British vessel. The I Russians claimed to have plenty of rupture . Before leaving the Tsinan Captain Browo was ordered to 1)1 iw olT steam and not to move bis vessel until the Russians had disappeared over the b .rUoa. When last seen at 7 o'clock 1 in the evening the Russian warships 1 were straining in a southeasterly I dluctloo toward the mouth of Toklo I bay. The American Trading company agents iiere for the Knight Com ni under, denv that the vessel had any cmtrabmd en board, according to her manifest. LITTLE ADVANTAGE BT KITH" fclOE DtBI.NU THE DAT. Polira Kept Bu.y 1 Stock laroa tflcl, But thiol ONalll CobB daot of Mia Ability to Control. CHICAGO. Little If any advan- ... j a tage was gained by either siae id the stocK yaras strike and there is 0 hope of any Immediate settlement of the difficulty, itemizing ma they have ooe of tbe baldest propo sitions to contend with lo tbe history of the packing Industry, the pack ers are leaving notnirg uuuuuc i gain the upper band in the struggle wltn thirty thousand union em- People la Maw Chwang Watt h flict of Fore, a Oulaula of the Cliy from Ilia UOBM Tp. Coo- TIEN TSIN.-News reached here '.bat 1 battle is on outside cf New Dbwang. Tbe fighting can be seen from tbe bouse tops. ln tbe engagement of yesterday tLe Russian losses are reported to aave been 700. "The Japanese are ilowly nearing New Chwang. Great ixcitemeot prevails In tbat city luring today's and yesterday's lighting. A report from New Chwang states ;bt Saturday's battle was at Ta 'l-.ul Tocg, six miles distant, and ;hat the Japanese were successful. Many Chinese refugees arriving at New Chwang have reported that aine Japanese gunboats from Port Arthur have arrived at Tab Ting Shan. NEW CHWANG. A battle was ouuht Saturday near Ta T:he Klao, STKIKINO employes enlist Or OTMtK IMOJI AID ORGANIZATIONS TO HELP HTKIGULE with the TAKES EXPECTED PACK IBS II KM. DevelopmraU or Today Will Iadl cata Iba BUeagUi I'nioa Laborer In tba Parking Huuaa Klrlke. cloves who are on strike, aii oay long workmen from outside points .attended it Is believed with heavy were rushed to Chicago and taken i jsss. ine progress or me name to the stock yards under police pro- was watched oy many people in tectlon to till the places of tbe(New Chwang from tbe roofs or striker. houses. The day was clear aod the It, was anocunced by the packers ( smoke of the guos could be plainly that 7,000 new men were now In- seen. stalled in the different houses at j .ST. PKTERSuURG. Lieutenant ttie stock yards. With these men General SakharorT lo a dispatch to the general stall dateJ July 23 re ports skirmishes In the vicinity of Kal Chou on July 22. Lieutenant General Count Kell i's recotitialssaoce ou the same date showed that the Japanese had only weak Detachments at Mao Kao aod and with the new arrivals that are expected each day, the packers ex pect to get tlclr affairs In such shape that the strikers will be com p iled to seek a truce in the hostili ties and s-ek a peaceable sett lenient at the dictation of the employers. Alth jukIi the receipts of live stock Wafju.kau passes, were small compared with receipts There was no change in tbe situa on corresponding days under normal tion on the high road to Mukden, conditions, still many cattle, hogs according to the report, but strong and sheen were left in the pens Japanese columns with thirty guns unsold. Will) all CHICAGO. Determined on a fight to a finish to enforce tbe demands of tbe striking butchers, a sympa thetic strike of ajl the union work men employed In the meat packing industry throughout the country wltb tbe exception of the teamsters, will be declared. The indications are tbat the teamsters will join tbe other unions in order to bring tbe packers tc terms. Tbe teamsters Chicago plants, elared in favor strike, but their been rati bed by employed In tbe at a meeting, de of a sympathetic decision has not tbe Joint council United State. Interested W AMI I NGTON. Minister Congei at Peking has cabled the state de partmsnt under a recent data tint lie baa been informed that the Rus sians evacuated New Chwang. He also confirms the published reports of the sinking by tbe Vladlvostock squadron of a British steamer with a rano conskned to "the American Trading company." The vessel mentioned by Mr. Con act is tbe Knlabt Commander, Hopkins & Son, the local agents of the American Trading company, re port that the steamer sunk was of six thousand tons ana senea rmm np Yurk aily flays ago under charter by Howard lloulder, Rowatt Si Co., Londoo aod New York. The general cargo she carried be lougtd mostly to American mer chants and was consigned to tbe American Trading company's ship ping aaents at Ytkoboma, on ao count of the chartering firm. It is stated positively that the cargo con tained no contraband and it is ex pected that the state department wlll be addressed on tbe subject. Boneateel Now Quiet. BON EST EEL, S. D.-A peaceful day was passed, no incident worthy of rrcntlon occurlng to disturb the quiet tbat enveloped the town. A feeling of confidence that Bonesteel had finally delivered Itself from the reln of terror tbat has prevailed during the past week, is spreading and the cltlzeos and lew remaining visitors are now breathing more naturally. Postmaatcr Under Fire. DENVER, Col. Secretary Hay wood of the western federation of miners, forwards a telegram to Piesl deot Roosevelt stating ihat Post master F. M. Rcardon, of Victor, Col., Is one of the members of the committee which he say is responsi ble Tor deporting minois from the Cripple Creek district and asking that steps bo taken to prevent fed eral officeholders from taking patt In such deio nstmtlom. Wound May Prove Fatal. ST. LOUIS. -Manager Ben Jenkins of the Cafe Luzon, on the Philip Dine reservation at the wor'd's fair, who was wounded In an encounter wltn Kllllplnos, who nslsted tbe rlosincr of the restaurant by an at tack wltb knives, Is not expected to live. Union Pacific to Build New Track. OMAHA. Neb Report of the building of a cutoff from Marysvllle, Ka . to looeka. Kaa., and the future operation of through pawn the union workmen out on strike, with the except ion of the picking lnuse tearost rs, the only additions to t he ranks Of the strikers were work as do this oOlclal order to walk out, and the waitresses in the restaurants at the stock yards controlled bv tbe pack- log companies. The teamsters have J become restless and the general bell if Is that few, if any, of the 7(H) employed in the pecking in-j dustry wll.l wait for the sanction of j internal officers of tbe union to go on strike. Rumors of renewed efforts to set tle the difficulty by arbitration were! thick, but upon investigation tney were found to be without founda tion. When ques'loned regarding the situ ation, Michael J. Doun.lly, prcsi- , . . I ... I . . . t . . . ll l Apt li nlzitioo wblcb precipitated are advancing along the lett bank of the Tat Tse river In the direction of Siak liotan. ST. PETERSBURG. Orders have been sent to the volunteer fleet about lo ) teamsters who quit sleamers st . Peteisburg and Smolensk Individuals, prefer ilng to lQ rffan fr0u inteference with rather than wait for an 1 . . , S,iDDin,,. u S expected thtse steamers will eventually Join the Baltic fleet and be replaced by ordioaty warships. ... SUEZ. It is rumored here tint the Russian consul is about to char ter an Egyptian steamer to convey orders to vessels of the Russian volunteer fleet to quit the Red sea forthwith. POUT SAID Advices received here say that the Russian volunteer fleet steamer Smolensk bred three blank shots across the bows of tbe British steamer Ardova, the cargo of which consists of coal aod ex plosive, and the vessel not stopping, the Smolensk seot two loaded shots tbe 't ber, one of them passing over her amldsblps and the other over ner The Ardova was then selzea ana criiMml strike said : "I have no hope of an Immediate stern. Th. ft.,ht la nn unit I hp The SCIUVIUCU-.. v , ,u C..,l0r,ab do now Is to stick ner crew irausicncu w . - The vessel only thing we can on the cod." The union organizations recalled their ultimatum issued prohioiting their members empl yed In tbe Inde pendent packing plants from killing live stocK purchased lo the stock yards, where the animals are beir g handled by non-union employes. The labor leaders took this step after tbe independent pickers had pointed out to them that If such an order was carried out it would be a benefit to the big packing companies. . .ll,.ht lla araa iiitn nil i'iiui j p- - 11'.. to.flo .nHiti!1 Purine coast over the main line of rtf,na .a .III folio. tt. lua.. .. bunted " " " ' . 1. . ...ih.,..i Tnneka to Marrsrllie. work on which aroaecuior wnfuiivww 7 ,, T , ' r will begin at oust. will be brought to.Suez The Ardova, Captain Smith, sailed from New York June 15, for Manila. She arrived at Port Said July 11. ST. PETERSBURG. it is now stated that tbe liberation of the rcnlnsuiar and Oriental steamship Malacca will occur at Algiers. Tide Claims two Sailors LONDON. -A terrible fate has berallen Carl Jensen, aged 35, cap tain of the German schooner Hans, and one of his deck hands, named Ludwlg Hannlngscn Two members of the crew of the Hans, which was towed loto King's Lynn harbor, report tbat while the shiD was anchored near the Long- sand, in the wash awaiting the turn nf the tide, the captain and Han Active for Mrs. Lillie. LINCOLN, Ncb.-Attorneys foi Mrs. Lena Lillie, whose conviction nnd sentence for life imprisonment on the charac. of killing her husband was recently affirmed, filed with the supremo court an amended motion nlngson ort tl)e 8Chooner in a small for a rehearing. Ihoat. qccomDanled by tbe ships' Tbe two principal points urgea are . Ernest Hansen, aaed 16, to that tbe court should have granted gh0(jt sealS( wDlcn weie basknB ,l0 new iriai ctcau&e 01 mc 1,CW,J . iiie sands discovered evidence secured after) T vintr lrie hov In the boat, the the first trial. They cited the Bnd- . mn ,nd(d and went to shoot ng of a bloody shirt "Pn the out- h , During their absence the skirts of David City, wblcb they in- . . h k adrift and the strong slst was woro by tho real murderer, ajd rapldly Tlsln( tldc pieventcd as enough elvdeoce to Justify setting he boy from 8cu),Dg l0 bi8 com- aslde the veraici. iney hisu iusisv that the couit erred when it al- of the teamster's unions. The Joint council will meet for tbe purpose of considering the ptotosi tton. The general belief is tbat the decision of the teamsters to loin lo the strike will be endorstd by the council. This endorsement, how ever, as tbe international officers of the teamsters union have to sanction the proposed strike before the men can leave their work. Lnder these circumstances it is not likely tbe teamsters will be officially called out before Tuesday. No conferences were held today either by the packers or the labor lenders, or Jointly, in an effort to reach an adjustment of the contro versy. Both sides rested today, ap parently waiting for tomorrow's de velopements. Chief of Pollen O'Neil, who spent rhn n:iv maldnz olans said: "No one knows what will happen. The opportunity is here for one of the trreatest labor contests in the coun try, and apparently there is no hope r uvBrtinu it. The nolice will be able to handle the situation, how ever, without outside assistance, 00 matter what happens." In addition to the four trains filled with non-union men orougni, into the yards under police protec tion, many other trains loaded with men w!io bad been secured during tbe last twenty-rour uours weio scheduled to arrive before daylight. With the number of meo alrsady in stalled within the stockyaras ana the addition of cierks and office men to the killing rooms, work will be resumed in all tbe plants on as ex tended a scale as possible, jiieso men will an worn unuer icmw yv tection and it is not expected trouble will come until several firms begin distributing meats to tbe local trade with non-union drivers. It Is on a ik. this apparent preaicameni 01 11-0 packers that the labor leaders were depending for success in the strug gle. NEW YORK To all outward ap pearances there Is perfect harmony between the big packers and their employes in this city. The killing of cattle went on as usual during the five Sunday work hours in tbe sebwarcblld k Sulzbreer plant and hi. nf the United Dressed Beef company. The leaders were busy holdlne conferences however, and the situation In this city depends nn the outcome of the conference at Chicago. ST. JOSEPH. Ate Kruse, a negro strike breaker, was assaulted hy pickets near tbe packing plant of Swift and Company today and fired Into a crowd of assailants, wounding live. panlons. lowed the state of introduce evl denco to show that the revolver found In the well after tbe tragedy was LI. lie's in opposition to their contention that it was not, and they think this was a bit of new evidence tbat also Justified a retilal. Mrs. Maybrick Still In France ' ROUEN, F ance. Notwithstand ing tbe reports that Mrs. Maybrick bad gone to Paris prior to sailing for America, there Is every Indication that she is still here wltn ner mother, Baroness De Roques. Put Maila to Bad Uae NEW ORLEANS, La.-Detectlve today arrested David P. Comer, sr , and David B. Comer, Jr., and charged them with violating tbe federal stitutea relative to using the malls for fraudulent purposes. The ac cuse,) ran tbe German Chemical company bare aod are said to have represented tbe phenacetln product thev were selling as hsvlng been defendants are expected to be used:mtnuftcture(j In tfermsny and pur as state witnesses. reyedio original packages. Boodle Cases Continued. ST. LOUIS. The cases of Charloi F. Kelly and Charles A. Gutke. for mer members of the house of dele gates charged with bribery In con nection with city lluhtlng legisla tion, were called In Judire McDon ald's division of the circuit, court and continued rivedavs. The cont inuance was asked because of tbe fact that th ornd iurv has not yet reported Indications In tbe cases in wblcb the AtnAntim u ro iv ttoni.ari In ha IIAAfl ' Woman Seriously Injured. BELLE FOURCHE, S. D.-Mrs. John Jacobs, who lives 00 a ranch near Camp Cook, is dangerously In jured as the result of an accidental shooting by her husband. After they had retired Mrs. Jacobs got up and went to the bedroom window to look out, and her bus bard, suddenly waking, saw her form In tbe window and supposing It to be the Intruders from outside, grab bed his gun and shot, the full effects of the load blowing off a part of h er shoulder. She may not live. Military Rule Will Ceaee DENVER. Before the end of the present week there will be no mili tary rule in the state of Colorado. The troops In Teller, San Miguel and Las Animas counties will be with drawn and tbe administration of affairs lo these counties left to tbe civil authorities. Tbe withdrawal of tbe troops will alsn bring about the dissolution of tbe Adltary com miaainn now In existence Id tht Cripple Greek district. Slipping from tbe plaok on whics be was resting. Ray Curl, the lo year -old son of A. ii. Curl, sank U tbe tottom of tbe clay pool at tlx brick yard, near West Lincoln oi was drowned. The body was ool recovered until late in tbe afteroooo. Tbe Union Pacific has a large gang of men at Papillion changing tb steel of their sidetracks to a muct heavier grade. With tbeir heavy engines running over these tracks 11 has been learned tbat tbe steel baa been too light, hence tbe change. Other Improvements of tbe road In this vicinity will be made this sum mer. Clay Henkle, of Selma, Iowa, wbc was enroute to Bonesteel, suddenly became crazed at Veidiger and jumped through a car window. The conductor backed tbe train but couldn't find tbe man. Later tb fellow waa located by tbe village marshal there and was uninjured He still expressed a desire to go tc Bonesteel. There was a meetlrg of owners oJ land on tbe Little Nemeba river al Brock for the purpose of taking steps looking to the redemption tl such lands from overflow. It wai decided to organize under '.he old drainage law.as tbe constitutionality of that law lias been aetintely settled while the legality of tbe new swamf laud law is pending in the supreme court on a motion for rehearing. This Sutherland is enjoyir.g some thing of a building boom at present. An opera house will be erected with in a few days, one new store build ing is In the course of construction, another livery barn Is not improba ble aod residence houses cannot bi built fast enoigb to meet the de mand. The crop prospects and tbe ujjveinent in land are partly respon sible for the forward trend in tb town's prosperity. At Parkhurst, aretailmeat man ot Grand Island, lecelved a letter order ing birn to place $500 in a box in the rear of his store or the writei would blow his head iff. He re ceived the letter two hours after ths time which he was to have placed the money tbeie and found bis head still on straight. The police havs the letter. It Is considered either ai a Juke or the work of some one half witted. At Columbus lightning struck a telephone wiie aod shortly afterward flames were seen issuing from the second story of Gray's grocery de partment. The upper story is occu pied by lawyers' offices and a grain commission firm The los to the building is aoout SGOO and the damage to the stock on the firsl 11 ior from smoke and water will b 8200 more. Wm. Sutton, president and mana ger of the Table Rock Clay company, says that the recent stock issued by tbe company and oidered sold baa been disposed of, and that the erec tion of a new plant on tbe ground recently purchased for that purpose ofC. II. Karris will bciga Sn t!i6.- near future, tbe new machinery for tbat purpose having been already ordered. Tbe new plant will be modern and up-to-date aod have a daily capacity for manufacturing 60,000 brick. The dam at Ericson across the Ceaar river Is to be rebuilt. A party from Central City has pur chased 900 acres of land, taking in tbe entice lake bed and will con struct a dam of solid masonry near whare tbe old dam stood. Tbe lake will be stocked wltb trout and pickerel In addition to tbe large number of bass of all sizes in tne bayous above the contemplated dam. The old Jecd mill will be converted Into a power bouse for an electric light plant and the belated fisher man will no longer need to hurry home. Work on the dam Is to start immediately and sixty days is the time set for constructing tbe dam. Lew H. Davis of Falroury com mitted suicide by drinking carbolic acid. He had been drinking during tbe afternoon and threatened several times to take his life, but nothing was thought of it as be had made this threat several times before. A little later bis wife went to get a drink and smelling carbolic acid In the dipper immediatley instituted a search wbicb resulted In the finding of tbe body in the road In front of the house with tbe empty carbolic acid bottle In bis pocket A coro ners' Jury was empaneled wblcb brought in a verdict of suicide. He was 45 years old and leaves a wife and two sons aged respectively 12 aod 4 years. He was an Odd Fellow and a Modern Woodman and carried 5,000 insurance on bis life The several lodges of Falls City will bold a picnic for three days commencing August 23. Good speakers are to be In attendance The first five weeks ol tbe Valen tine Junior normal baa passed wltb a larger enrollment than tbat of tbe same time last year. Tbe teacbert are performing tbelr work wltb ncrgy and enthusiasm . All enow a d-termlistion to make tbe eojnnro or the teachers pleasant aaweUaa 'protflnble.