The Omaha Daily Bee. ESTABLISHED .TUNE 19, 1871. OMAHA, MONDAY 3IOUNINO, NOVEMBER 17, 1902. SINGLE COPY THREE CENTS. LEHIGH MINERS' LIFE Company Drawi Roseate Piotan of the Ezistenoe of Iu Employes. YELL PAID AND WELL CARCD FOR ALWAYS Coma Hare Pianos aid Others Organi in Tbeir Happy Homes. CONDITIONS COMPARE WELL WITH ANY Ifm and Boys Hsts Every Opportinity That Might Be Expected. . COMPANY PAYS BUT SMALL DIVIDENDS fronts Held Down to Eleven Cents Ton After hara-lnar Off Taxes ad Depreciation In . Value. PHILADELPHIA, Not. 16 Tbe state xnant of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation company, aubmitted to the anthracite strike comlaelon, now In session at Scran toa. Pa.. In aniwer to the demands of the Znlnera u made public here today. Tbe newer recite the developmfnt of the company from the date of He charter in 1822, refers to the expense of operation nd to the comparatively small profit nd declares the demand of the employes for an Increase of 20 per cent Is unjusti fiable, the reasons given In support of the demand not being founded on fact. Aeconi- 'panylng tbe statement are two exhibits. One shows the earnings of the employes of the company for one year, based on the time worked during 1901, the number of the several classes of workmen and the rates paid according to the pay roll for tbe first 'half of May for 1902. The other Is a cata logue of overt acts charged to the strik ing employes of the company during the recent contest, . the riots, assaults and disturbances of various kinds being num bered at upwards of sixty. The answer tatee: , The Lehlah Coal end Navigation company i I Is tne oldest corporation engaged in tne mining of coal In the ttnthraclte region. It was chartered In 122 and was the successor iof the IPhlnh Coal Mine company, which mas organised In 1793. It si ho acquired cer tain rights on the Lehigh river which were granted in 1M8. ' Its Holdings and Claims. ! It owns and controls about 14,000 acres of coal lands In Carbon and Schuylkill coun ties, which are estimated to contain over 600,000,000 tons of available unmlned coal. Its employes number about 6.000 and its capacity of production Is over 2tO.0"K tons a month. Its capital stock and funded debt amount to upward of $32,000,000. All of Its capital stock utid bonds were Issued for full value, but although its more important coat lands were purrimsed l a time when the country was a wilderness, and all Its lands have been acquired at moderate prices, the dividends upon Its capital stock to date only average 4.03 per cent. The profit on coat mined by the company during the' ten years ending December 21, 1901, haa averaged 11.0 cents per ton after charging off taxes on coal lands and de- ? reflation, but not Including any charge or royalty, which represents the value of the coal In the ground. Nor were the rates cf freight-on the railroads exorbitant, as hewn tiy thi' 'tu.ct that the cumrmny con structed its own canal and found It ad- Ents scons to send the coal to market over e railroad here rather than by the canal. ' About Miners' Pay. . , Referring to the claim by the miners that better wagea are paid In the bituminous Selda.for substantially similar work, the sins war states: This company does not know what rate of wages Is paid In the bituminous coxl fields throughout the country, but there Is nowhere In any fields substantially similar work to that which in done under contract In the mines of this company. It Is a fact, however, that miners of ordinary skill and experience have always been able to go from the mines of thla company to any other mining region throughout the country i end obtain employment. In 1901, for, a day of ten hours, contrsct miners earned n average of 13.14 per day, skilled laborers 2.11, unnkllled laborers fl.83, boys $1 for iwork under ground. The rates for outside 'labor average as follows: Skilled labor liJ.M, unskilled labor II. 2 and boys 77 cents. (The average annual earnings of adults wss 475.. How the Miners Live, 1 Penlal la made of tbe claim of tbe miners that their earnings are Insufficient to main tain the American standard of living, and concerning the Lehigh Coal and Navigation company theee figures are given: 1 Out of 3,063 families ?70 own their own 'houses. Pianos will be found in 146 and 'house organs in 3,(7. The company owns and rents to Its employee 71 housea at an average rental of 14.75 a month. The char . (acter of these housea Is fully up to the leverage In any part of the country occu .pled by any other cla-w of workmen. It jhas been the practice of the company to ell surface rights to those of Its employes 'Who desired to put up their own houses .arid for many years there has been a de mand on this account. The town of Sum mit HIM has a population of about ' end almost the whole of the surface, with it he dwellings, Is owned and occupied by jt he dwellings of the employes of I lie cuiii I'sny. I The families of the miners have ample Wchool accommodation and over t.OOO chll jdren are In attendance, while-over 78 per f ent of the whole fund spent In the region s derived from tsxes paid by thla com gany on Its coal estate. rendition of the Boys. Regarding the employment of boys the rtateraent says: Slate picking ia a very easy occupation (Compared to the work done by the boy aipon a farm and many of them are needed to take care of the mine mules and other light work, and In thla way tue wagea of She household are largely and legitimately fnctvaaed. Since 1hm7 more than 2S0 young men have gone from I .an ford and other villages In the neighborhood to normal schools and college and become mining engineers, attorneys. hemlxta. dentists, architects, ministers and professors. Foreigners lie! Wealthy. Some of the foreigners prefer to live In very niggardly and squalid manner, an that they may accumulate the utrger part of their earnings and return to Kurope to live in Idleness; but those who hsve their rermanent home In th region have at least l.uoo.im) deposited In the banka and savings fund In the vicinity, saved from the wages rsrned In the employment of thla companv. The annual remittances to their families ml friends abro.id. throiia-h agencies In , She region snd vtclnlty amounted to 1159.000 or more. In 14 the company established beneficial fund, to which It haa con tributed the sura of tlMUbS and the em ployes tlM.7& Tba employes uf the company declined to participate in the strike of 1900 and the company, la acknowledgement of their loyalty, contributed $23,000 to the beneficial fund. The, statement continues: Since then most of them have joined the Union and felt bound to loin in the strike when ordered last May. No complaint wss addressed to this company; no grievance alleged and no request for higher wages made; but, without notice, the men left the work In a body, against their own will and udgment, because required to do so by he vote of the miner a employed In other goal fields. Hears of l.aber. The claim for a reduction of 20 per rent In the hours of labor, without any reduc tion In earnings, for all employes paid by the hour, day or week, would be necuiiarly gbeurU If enforced as agal'.iat this com', eany. In point of fact the breakers of the Company are able to run only nine hours a day and not ten. The miners only work (Continued on Third Page.) BAD NAME EVEN FOR ANARCHIST Rnblna. Who Fired shots at Leopold, Has I asavery Record In Italy ad England. ROME, Nov. 16. The ministry of the In terior has established the Ide-'ty of the assailant of King Leopold. ra la Oennero Rublno, and he le v.. V, "lo their records as sn advanced sod. waa condemned to a long term of Imp.. '' merit for stealing at Milan In 1893, but effected his escape to England, where he Is supposed to have Imbibed his anarchist principles. His father was a patriotic commute! councillor, but Rublno, while still serving in the army, was condemned to five years detention for writing a suborslve news paper article. These are the only criminal records that have been found against him. Since leaving Italy ha has resided con tinuously in Scotland and England, first in Glasgow and afterward In London. Some years ago he was accused of treachery by his anarchist friends and expelled from their ranks. BRUSSELS, Nov. 16. According to some reports. Rublno in the course of his ex amination before the magistrate declared that I e selected King Leopold for his at tack on account of his majesty's inhuman conduct toward hla daughter, Princess Stephanie,' at the time of her mother's death, and he also wished to show to the anarchists In London who doubted hla loy alty that while they only talked, he acted. He would have killed King Edward, he added, but for the atrong feeling of the English people in favor of the monarch. FIVE DAYS .0N FRAIL RAFT Trying; Experience of Survivors of Vessel Wrecked Recently In Snath Paclfle. LONDON. Nov. 17. The Dally Mall's cor respondent at Wellington. N. Z., telegraphs that the eight survivors from the wreck of the British steamer Elingamitc, who were rescued from a raft by the British survey steamer Penguin, went through a dreadful experience. Tbe raft from which tbey was taken measured only twelve feet long by seven feet wide and bad sixteen persona on It when it left the wreck. The only food on board was two applea. The first apple was consumed on Tuesday and the second on Wednesday, each being di vided Into sixteen portions. From Sunday, the day they wrecked, until Thursday, when they were rescued the survivors drifted sixty miles on the half-submerged raft. Several attempts were made to land on the Three Kings Islands, but without success. Three men died on Monday night from drinking salt water. All of the survivors suffered the tortures of thirst snd four other men and the stewardess died of exhaustion beforeVfiey were picked up. They bad a cruel dis appointment on Tuesday night. A steamer was sighted In , the distance and frantic shouts were raised' by those on the raft. The ateamer lowered a boat which passed within fifty yarda of them, but the boat'a crew apparently did not see the rsft and returned to their vessel. SULTAN GOES AFTER REBELS Monarch ( Morocco Basy ganpresalna . . . Insureetlon Among; Hla Subjects. " TANGIERS. Morocco, Nov. 16. Accord ing to a report which haa reached here from Fes the Imperial troops have suc ceeded in capturing the pretender to the throne. It la stated that the aultan, at the head of an. army of 25,000 men; will direct in person the operations to put down the uprising of the Kabyle tribesmen, at Zemour. Previous dispatchea announced that the sultan, with the entire Moorish army, waa to leave Fe November 10 to suppress the rebellion started by the pretender. The latter began his mission among the most Ignorant and superstitious of tbe Berber 'rlbes. He st first confined himself to a few conjuring tricka. but his success en couraged . him to attempt bigger things. The pretender Is nicknamed "Bu-Hamarp," hieaolug "Father of a she ass," because he never rode on anything but a smsll donkey. HIGH HONOR TO DEAD PRINCE I.ln Knn II, I.ate Viceroy of iakln, Burled from Shanghai with I'nnsual Pomp. SHANGHAI. Nov. 16. The funeral of Liu Kun II., the famous viceroy of Nankin, which took place today at Nankin, waa tho occasion for unprecedented demonstrations of respect on the part of the foreign rep resentatives In the city. The funeral cor tege waa of great length and the obsequies, by command of the dowager' empress, were carried out with Imperial pomp. Nearly 250,000 people lined the route to the jetty where tbe remalna were embarked by a Chinese cruiser, which will bear them to Huan, the native province of the de ceased statesmsn. The foreign men-of-war lying off the city fired minute guns during the progress of the funeral proces sion. DANISH AMBASSADOR STARTS Leaves rooeahaarea with Hla Wile to Visit Paris Before Proceeding to Washington. COPENHAGEN, Nov. 16. Ambassador Jusserand and his wife, who is an Amer ican, left today for Paris, where tbey In tend to spend the new year. . They will proceed thence to Washington. 'where they expect to arrive In January. A great trib ute was paid to them on their departure, Foreign .Minister Leuntxer, United States Ambassador Swenson and Mrs. Bwenson, the other members of the diplomatic corps, the court dignitaries and a crowd of per sonal friends being present at the station. A number of floral gifts were offered to Mme. Jusserand. LAKE SHORE ADVANCES PAY Switchmen Tome Ftfrst with Ten Per t ent Increase, and Others Will Follow. CLEVELAND. O.. Nov. 16. The Lake 8hore road will post notlcea tomorrow announcing an average Increase of 10 per cent in the wages of the switchmen la tbe entire system. The wagea of the switchmen In tbe Chicago yards were raised recently snd the notice tomorrow will apply to all other switchmen. It will effect about 1.000 men. It la learned that the same company now haa under advise ment a more general Increaae In wages, affecting a great many employes. It la also stated that tho Nickel Plato will follow a 1th a general Increase. MANY CHANGES IN CONGRESS Some Oonipicuoui Figures Disappear from Both Branohss. VEST TAKES FINAL LEAVE OF THE SENATE Speaker Henderson and Several Oth. era Scarcely Less Conspicuous Will Be Missed from Lower '- . House. (From a Buff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON. Nov. 16. (Special. ) With tho Incoming of ?sch new congress there are always many changes in the personnel of the house and it frequently happens that many well known members of tho satiate retire and roaho placei for ambitious gentlemen who have succeeded in winning tho seats. In the Fifty-eighth congress Ave democrats will succeed aa many republicans and others of the minor ity party will give place to men of oppo site political faith. William J. Stone of Missouri, will probably take the seat of that sturdy old democrat. George Veat, whose retirement Is a matter of regret not only to his political associates, but to his political opponents as well. Vest re tires voluntarily. He leaves the senate because he realizes that sge is creeping upon him and that his physical strength Is unequal to the task of six years more of devotion to public Interests, such as he has rendered In the paat. Six years ago Kentucky startled the country by sending a republican to the sen ate. On the fourth of March next that re publican will retire to give place to James B. McCreary, who served for many years In the house o! representatives, but who retired some years ago, only to ccme back now aa a representative of the Blue Grass state In the upper house of congress. The contest between Tillman and Mc Laurln of South Carolina, Is of such rn rent date that everyone who knows any thing of the political hiJtory of the United States recalls the sensational episode which occurred last winter and the some what startling attempt at the resignation of their two seat which preceded It. Me Laurin retires and In tils place comes A. C. Latimer, who Is not to be regarded as a Tlllmanlte by any means, for he Is looked upon as the connecting link between the old days of, southern chivalry and ths dawning of a new political day. For many yeara subsequent to tbe war South Caro lina was represented In the senate by Messrs. Butler and Hampton, two gentle men of the old school who were as dif ferent In every respect from the Tillman school of politicians as It Is possible to imagine. McLaurln's successor baa made a reputation for himself in the house of representatives and those who know him assert that his success in contesting for the higher honor means the return of South Carolina to Ita old-time place among the best represented states of tbe south. Xewlunds Displaces Jones. Last winter Senator Jones of Nevada, that rotund and rugged Englishman who haa bo long represented the stste In the senate, announced that be. would not be a candidate for re-election. Originally elected as a republican; Mr. Jones left: his "party during tbe silver excitement and for the last few yeara has been classed as a silver He. Jones, however, acted with tbe repub licans iu all matters outside of finance, and hla retirement to give place to an avowed democrat means the loss of one seat to the majority. Francis G. New lands, who will occupy that aeat, la a gentleman with a wide knowledge of public affairs and be is besides a man of high standing financially, socially and In every other way. He Is a democrat and has served on the ways and means committee with great credit. He is ' believer In expansion, too. and Is one of those who have the courage to advocate tbe incor poration of the republic of Cuba Into tbe American union. For some years past Senator Jones has taken little interest in tbe work of the senate. Mr. Newlands Is certain to make his state once more well known because of the part that he Is bound to take In every Important sub ject that comes up. One more republican who will be suc ceeded by a democrat Is Hon. J. C. Prltch ard of North Carolina. Mr. Prltchard en tered the senate as the result of the up heaval wbich occurred in the old Tar Heel state six yeara ago. There was a suspi cion for a while that the republicans might succeed in again capturing tbe legislature, but the democrats have It by a handsome majority and they will aend Locke Craig, a comparatively young man, little known In the politics of the country, but with a reputation as an orator which promises to attract a great deal of attention to him. He ia of one of the old families of North Carolina, and. like bis tolleague from South Carolina, Latimer, hla entry In the aenate marks a step toward tbe return of the old time southern- gentry to the place which It once occupied In the national balls of legislation. Donht Aboat Colorado. At thla writing there la a question as to the exact result In Colorado. Should the republlcana succeed in controlling the legislature, as now seems possible, "Ed" Wolcott will sgaln come back. Wolcott la a brilliant man, who waa a power In the aenate during his last term, but who at the same time absolutely lacks the ability to make and retain friends. He Is, on the contrary, a sort of "bull in a china shop." but In spite of hla habits In thla respect he is the strongest republican In Colorado today and there la no other man who can secure tbe necessary votes in tbe legisla ture. Should, however, the democrata aucceed In retaining control of the legislature, Henry M. Teller, whose term expires on March 4 next, will be certain to return. Teller, who la a New Yorker by birth, was one of the first two senators elected from Colorado when the state waa admitted In 1876. Except for a brief period, during which he acted as secretary of the interior under President Arthur, Senator Teller has continued as one of the repreaentatlvea of Colorado In the upper house. Hla re tirement now will be regretted very deeply even by those who opposed him po litically. His ability is of the highest order and his service to the state has meant to him great financial sacrifice.' In speaking to the writer once last winter Senator Teller said that upon hla entry to the senate he gave up a law practice worth 75.000 a year and that ia all the yeara of hla public career he has accepted but one retainer. Idaho, whose senator, Fred Dubois, was one of the aensatlonal leaders of the xlt of the silver delegates from the St. Louis convention In 1896, haa again returned to the republican columu and this return means the retirement from ths senate of Het. y Heltfeld, who was elected as a populist to succeed Dubois, who. In turn, succeeded two years ago George L. Shoup, tbe man who held up the banner of Idaho (Continued on Second Page.) SHORT ON KNIVES AND FORKS Some Members of President's Hunting Party Forced to Eat with Their Fingers. SMEDES, Mlis., Nov. 16. Sunday was a quiet day at the president's camp on the Little Sunflower. There waa no hunt, but tbe president and several members of the party spent a couple of hours In the morn ing rambling over the forest trails on their horses. Dinner was tne chief event of tbe day. The menu Included roast bear paws and 'possum and sweet potatoes. Dinner was served in camp style on h rough pine board table set up In the open nlr. Tin plates and tin rups were used. There were not enough knives and forks to go round, snd the,, colored rook an nounced to the amusement of everybody as tbe party sat down, '(hat on account of the scarcity ol the aftlcles he had dis tributed them only to "The Colonel" us the president Is called-in camp, and tbe "foreign glntleman." The president is en joying his outing very much. Tho presi dent has not had three days of such com plete freedom and rest since he entered the White House. The Insurgent newspaper men returned to the assault today. Having been re pulsed on the land side by Mr. Mangum'a pickets, they resolved today to try to efffct an entry to the camp by the water route. A boat was chartered at Vicksburg, according to tbe story in circulation here, and it was reported to have left that place at 3 o'clock this morning. The route of the expedition Is to be up tbe Missis sippi river to the mouth of tbe Yazoo, thence up the latter river to the Big Sun flower. The distance, owing to the trails and bends In the river. Is over forty ml lee, but if the party started it did not reach its destination. Tbe rlvermen say there is now a sandbar . at the mouth of tbe Yazoo, which would stop any craft drawing over twelve Inches. The Chicago party which is hunting with Bob Bono's pack of hounds seventy miles north of here is reported to have had better luck than the president's party, ac cording to a message received here today. The party during the lat week bagged eleven deer and four bears. Holt Col lier's dander Is up and he vows that "tbe colonel" will not go home empty-handed. His dogs have had a good' rest today and will be In fine condition to resume the chase tomorrow. The weather tonight, however, is not favorable. It has turned colder and rain Is falling. A report Is circulated among the col ored people that the president waa coming to Smedee today and attracted about 1,000 colored people to the station. Tbey waited until dark before being convinced that the report was incorrect. VICKSBURG. Miss., Nov. 16. Tb,e small party who chartered a little boat to make a trip up the Sunflower river, returned this evening, but whether they managed to get within range of the bear hunt camp could not be ascertained. . NO REST'F0RTHE BOODLERS Circuit Attorney Folic Will Push Caae-s Against Men Indicted, hat Not Tried.' . 8T. .; IXOTIS. .Nor.,- lsVrJy.eeuit. Attorney. Folk, who has returned from Columbia, Mo., where he prosecuted the case against Colonel Ed Butler, who waa convicted of attempted bribery. Is preparing for the trial of other alleged boodlers next week. The cases- against Charlie S. A. Outke. T. Ed Albright, Adolph Maderla, Charlea J. Denny, Emll Hartmann, John A. Sheri dan and Julius Lchmann, former delegates, on the charge of bribery in connection with the Suburban Street Railway fran chise deal, are docketed for trial tomor row. It is Mr. Folks' Intension to make an effort to try Gutke. It Is believed that the counsel for the defendants will try to get mere time, but Mr. Folk is anx ious to proceed with the trial of one of tbe defendants. Whether Butler will be tried at Fulton on the charge of bribery In the lighting deal before the higher courts have passed upon tbe case tried at Columbia last week rests with Judge Hockaday. To Mr. Folk Judge Hockaday atated that he had tried defendants an two charges before the first was finally settled, and he may decide that Butler can be tried legally at Fulton be fore the Columbia case Is finally aettled. RABBI FRANKLIN'S NEW MOVE Gets Jewish and Gentile Congrega tions Into I'nlon Thanksgiving Services, DETROIT, Nov. 16 (Special.) Rabbi Leo M. Franklin of Temple Bethel, and formerly of Omaha, has started a move ment which promises to mark the largest step forward that has ever been taken in the religious history of Detroit. He has srranged and with every prospect of success, a Citizens' Thanksgiving service at the Detroit opera house, which shall be lnterdenominstional snd nonsectarlan In character. Already ministers and laymen of the Presbyterian. Congregational. Meth odist, Baptist, Universallst and Unitarian congregations have entered Into the plan and will participate In the aervice. The executive committee Is now awaiting an answer from the Catholic Bishop, whose co-operation la also expected. The possibility of arranging such a serv ice was first scouted by many, as Detroit churchmen are notoriously conservative, but the Idea has taken a wonderful hold on the people. Dr. Lee 8. McCoIlester of the Universallst church Is associated with Dr. Franklin In the promotion of the aerv ice which. If successful, will be made a permanent institution. The Orpheus club, male chorua of fifty voices, will furnish the music for the occasion. CLEVELAND SAL00NS CLOSED Spasm of Police Reform Turns Forest City Into Airtight Village. CLEVELAND, O.. Nov. 16. The five po lice captains who are to be retired on January 1 by the order of Director Dunn were shown how to close the saloons in this city today. Thirty arrests were made up to midnight, an unusually large num ber. A policeman was stationed at the en trance to every prominent downtown sa loon and no one waa admitted. YOUNG BOY MURDERS A BABY Shocking Result of a aarrel Between Children In a I.Htle Wlsron. sin Town. BALDWIN, Wis.. Nov. 1.-Jer.s Nelson, the 14-year-old aon of Mra. Klale Nelson, a widow, shot and Instantly killed the 7-year-old aon of Albert Kcken today. Tbe shooting Is said to have been the result of a quarrel. SETS FORTH NEEDS OF ARMY Inspector General Breckenridgo Makes His Xeport to lost. MORE OFFICERS THE FIRST REQUIREMENT Sot Enough to Equip Companies and Look After Detnehed Service Conditions In the Philip pine Islands. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. The annual re port of General J. C. Breckenrldge, in spector general of the army, is a volumi nous document and covers every phase of the military establishment and each de partment bureau and command in tbe army. More than fifty recommendations and sug gestions are made relating to Improvements In tbe army, most of which pertain to technical matters and minor conditions. Much of the report necessarily has been covered In the reports of bureau chiefs and commanding officers. General Breckenrldge finds much to commend In all branches of the service and reports progress and Im provements everywhere. The most serious criticism is In regard to absenteel&m, where officers are on de tached duty, leaving tho regiments short of officers. Thus, In the Philippines espe cially, It is found that many companies are without captains and the companies In command of new and untried officers. He attributes this to lack of officers In the army to fill the details and detached as signments. General Breckenrldge shows that Instruc tion in the army is progressing satisfac torily. He recommends the fortification of Pearl Harbor In the Hawaiian Islands ss a strategic point. He says water trans portation in the army is rapidly assuming stable and economical methods. Progress In the Philippines. He has tbe following to say regarding his inspection in the Philippines: During my tour in the Philippines it was evident on all sides that the army, aa a whole, was laboring patiently and faith fully to solve the many vexing problems continually presented to It. Tho difficulties encountered and the hardships endured never can be fully apreciated by any one who hue not been on tho ground and ob served the. dally life of ofticers and men, miles away from home influences and as sociations, living in communities either openly or secretly hostile, depending al most entirely for their subsistence upon the commissary where one Is always afraid to take even an ordinary drink of water without ascertaining first whether It has been cooked. Critics at home may search for epithets to apply to our general ofticers, but these officers are not less kindhearted than their critics, and more anxiously mindful of the etrTferlngs which necessarily fall upon the Innocent In warfare as well as the guilty and are devising means by which the poor might be cared for and fed. There Is reason for gratification that our fellow countrymen have confidence in their army and many know what war is, and the reaction has not been sluggish. That the army performed its duties well and bore Ita hardships uncomplainingly la well known to all who have kept In touch with it since the opening of the Philippine Insurrection. In fact. It has done only those things which we expect of it and which we will continue to expect of American soldiers. Soldiers Need quarters. The crying need of the soldiers now In the Phtlapptnes- r- qdarters, and -nothing will add more to the discipline and ef ficiency of ofticers and men serving In that division than the construction as rapidly as possible of commodious quarters and barracks for our troops on sites which will afford ample room for proper Instruction of large bodies of men In drill and target practice. Discussing the American troops and the Filipinos, General Breckinridge says: There has been a good deal of discussion In the public press and elsewhere concern ing the treatment of the native Filipinos by the American troops, and some rather serious charges have been brought against the army, which charges have not been substantiated. The conditions of war in the Philippine islands have been perhaps unusual, and from reasons arising from the conduct of the Filipinos themselves, who, as the authorities Hgree, are sometimes ex tremely cruel and treacherous. In the conduct of tho American army toward them the exercise of unexampled patience is claimed, and the humanity of the troops engaged has no parallel in ths history of dealing with Asiatics. - Some Official Bouquets. WMth what novel duties In both civil and military administration and In the charac ter and environment of the war on the opposite side of the globe, have our soldiers been brought In contact? The world haa felt the current of those distant affairs and our nation may not be fully conscious of the awakening. Who among us on the day of the battle of Manila bay were fa miliar with the names of men who had faithfully devoted long Uvea to our service, not without some dangers by land and sea and now how the character of the nation has been weighed in the balance according lo their wordB and deeds. M-rrltt, with youthful fame In the Shenandoah valley and on the great plains appears In hla maturity on this last scene. Otis, of honest Judgment, fa. reaching Insight, and a cormorant for work, bearing his honorable wounds with all modesty; Bates, the gentle man and soldier, the right hand of his chief In diplomacy or emergency; Wheaton, the thunderbolt and embodiment of mili tary ardor; MacArthur, judicious, courage out, masterful and broad-minded; Hughes, acute and rexolute amidst an attempted Moscow and in the rugged places of Samar and the middle Inlands; Funston, who won hla fame amidst the hardships of the farthest front: Young, forever in the lead and seeking the vitals of the enemy; Smith, tireless and HKgrelve; Bell, courteous and recklessly audacious, the prince of the ad vance guard: Lawton, droit et loyale, who baptised that land with his blood and wrought famoUHly and kindly on both hemispheres, doing easily and without un due sacrifice whatever was most needed or most difficult; Chaffee, whose sterling worth had been displayed in the old and new worlds wherever American arma have brought her principles, and won success either In the whirl of repelling deadly tyranny from the Antilles or In bringing safety to the beleagured regions from the bloody Manchur of the Forbidden City; Davis, whose omnivorous Industry and knowledge have wrought memorable monu ments In the form of city government and great memorial structure as well aa in his profession: Qrant, who carried from Porto Hlco to the far east a name Americans regard as the epitome of unpretentious and admirable aervice, and who haa shown unwearied work and fairness in every scene; and Baldwin, the last to win a star for worsting the enemy In fierce fight, in a career filled with such bearing as brought two medals of honor for soldierly courage to him, alone. Rewards Well Won. When the rewards of service go to men like these the heart of our army is elate. Thexe are not half the names, nor are all of them aa well known to their fallow countrymen aa they deserve. Hut theno are among those whom 1 met or the results of whose work I wilncHed during the last year. Famous regiments which fought or endured amidst those acenea will herlx'i the occasion in their regimental traditions. And young men who hen-after lake the oath to serve their country will recall how faithfully and well bhe was wont to be served when the old regiment first went down to the sea In great ships. The army of the past has again proved the mettle of which It is made, and the naval and civil ofticers have writ of their numes In bold characters among the Immortals, and the army of the future Is taking step and the spirit will go marching on still, as always, loyal and true and steadfast to the end. There seems to be something pathetic as well as niajextlc in tbe attitude of the army where It has done and deserved ho well. I'nknown It entered upon Ita duly there, and but half known it returns. Its merits sterling us f yore. The nriVers ol the Inspection corps In the Philippines substantially agree that extreme and frequent cruelty has riot iMt-n habitually prucii.-vd. and that all w II founded t'omplalnl of excesses have led to Ulai aud funisbiuasut of tbs uflsnaera, CONDITION 0FTHE WEATHER Forecast .for Nebraska Fair Mondav and Tuesday; Colder In West Portion Tuesday. Temperature at Omaha Yesterday. Hour. Peg. Moor. Dear. S a. m :tj i p. vn :ti a. ni ;it It p. m .1:1 T a. ni :t's a p. m ,1t n. m .11 4 p. ni HT A a. m ill ft p. m :i:i to n. m at it p. m :t:l It a. tn ..... . 31 7 . ni ..... . ;tJ lis ni fUi M p. tn tt n p. m VU SOCIALISTS IN FEDERATION Demand Another Ilepresent at Ive on (he Executive Heard It Increase Is Made. NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 16. There is a strong probability that the executive coun cil of the American Federation of Labor will be enlarged from nine to eleven mem bers at the present convention and that one of the additional members will be a repre sentative of the socialist wing of the labor unions. The socialists assert that they eontrol nearly one-third of the votes cast In the convention and feel fairly confident of getting one man on the board. There Is a strong clement opposed to the Increase In number, but the socialists say they do expect to have won that much when the fight lj ovrr. But two cities have so far been mentioned as the place for the next convention, Buffalo and Milwaukee. The latter place clnlms the better right as It has been a candidate three times and on each occasion has withdrawn in favor of the place In which the convention was held. No energetic work has been done by the advocates of either city. W. E. Kennedy, general organizer of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, has prepared a resolution, which he expects will raise something of a breeze upon the floor of the convention. It Is to the effect that the present local government of the District of Columbia Is antique and obsolete and that residents of the District should be allowed to vote. The resolution Is certain of opposition, as It is the avowed policy of the federation to refrain from political matters. The visiting delegates were handsomely entertained today by tho local laboring men, who arranged several social affairs for them during the afternoon and secured one of the theaters for them tonight. COLLIDE ON MOUNTAIN ROAD Midland and Rio Grande Trains Meet with Disaster on Joint Truck. RIFLE, Colo.. Nov. 16. A collision be tween an extra stock train of the Colorado Midland road and a freight train on the Rio Grande road half a mile west of here, caused the death of E. R. Thorp, fireman of one of the Midland engines. The accident occurred on the Joint track o.f the two roads. The injured: Fred Slider, Midland engineer, left arm and right hand broken. W. B. Crawford, Rio Grande brakrman, back injured. August Gavin, live stock agent for tho Midland, all ribs on left, side broken, in ternal injuries. . v The damage to stock and equipment amounts to about 100,000. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Nov. 16. The southbound passenger train on the Louis ville division of the Pennsylvania road, which left the station here at 6:15 this evening, struck a freight engine on a siding at Raymond street, and both englnea were thrown down a thirty-foot embankment. Engineer John Ritchie was picked up un conscious and Is cut about the bead and leg by barbed wire fencing, against which ho was thrown. Fireman Homer Hall of the freight train was badly bruised by being thrown againBt a post at the foot of tbe embankment. The engines were badly smashed. None of the passengers was injured. GRANGERS H0LDA MEMORIAL Impressive Ceremonies for Distin guished Dead of Order Held on Snndny. LANSING, Mich., Nov. 16 Impressive exercises were held by tbe National Grange In Representative hnll today in memory of the members of that body who have died in the last year. Eulogies were pro nounced for the following who were either masters of state granges or the wlvea of masters: J. C. Tilllnghast, Rhode Island; H. E. Huxley, Wisconsin; Mrs. D. H. Thing, Maine; Alpha Mesaer, Vermont; Mrs. S. E. Bowen, Connecticut; H. O. De Vriea and Mrs. C. S. Wesson. Aaron Jones, master of the grange, at today's session severely scored what he termed the moBt gigantic of all monopolies, the proposed bankers' trust. He sees In tbe program advocated at New Orleans last week by some members of the Bankers' as. aoclatlon for the creation of a system of branch banking an encroachment upqn the functions of rural communltlea of vast and serious Import. He advocated the estab lishing of rural loan and trust companies, the growth of which In Indiana, he aays, has been phenomenal In the last two years. ONE-THIRD FOR SHAREHOLDERS Wreck of Chicago's Horseless Cab Company Showa Little Salv age for Owners. CHICAGO, Nov. 16. It is announced that tbe liquidation committee authorized to wind up the affairs of the Illinois Electric Vehicle Transportation company, which failed after an unsuccessful attempt to operate electric cabs and carriages In Chi cago, will soon turn over to tbe sharehold ers a payment of $1.50 on each share of stock. Altogether, the aum to be returned to the Investors will amount to $260,000. As the shares are of r, par value the liqui dation will present a loas on each of 63.60. GOVERNOR YATES IS BETTER Turn In His Case Such as to Satisfy Physicians with Ills Con dition. SPRINGFIELD. III., Nov. 16. Physicians attending Governor Vates stats tonight that they believe a turn for the better has developed. For five houra this morning his temperature remained stationary at 99 3-6 degrees, only one above normal. This Is tbe lowest mark since the beginning of the governor's Illness, twenty-three days ago. Motesurnts ol Ocean eaaels, ov. 1H. At Hamburg Arrived! Ahydoe, from Ta coma anil Han KrMm Iwco via Valparaiso, MoiiluvUI.-o, i tc, and lmdon. At yueeiistnwri Hailed: Ktrurla, from LlvcriiMol for New Vork. At New Vork-Arrived : I .a Touraine. from lias re, Cajubria, Ueno, Leghorn and Kaiiloa, ARMOUR PLANTBURNS Big Establishment tt Sionx Oity is Entirely Ooniumed by Tiro. LOSS OVER EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND fireman Absolutely Impotsnt U Stop Spread of tha Flamos. HANDICAPPED BY POOR WATER PRESSURE Exploding Ammonia Drams Make Wark of f Departmsnt Dangersns. LARGE STOCK OF DRESSED MEAT LOST of Mr Hobs and Cannes Great Commo tion. SIOUX CITY. Ia.. Nov. 16-(Speclal Tel egram.) Tbe big packing plant of Armour Co. In this city was completely de stroyed by fire early this morning. The loss Is $870,000. about SO per cent of which Is covered by Insurance. Six hundred r.ieit will be thrown out of employment. The fire started in the fertilizing room of the plant. Its origin is assigned either ta an imperfect dryer or to spontaneoua com bustion. The alarm was quickly given, but the flames swept through tbe building with the force of a tornado. The entire Sioux City fire department responded, but when the first stream of water was turned on the building it was a mass of flamea. The big ammonia vats exploded one after an other and the firemen were compelled to fleo for their lives to escape suffocation. Five hundred carcasses of dressed beef, 3,500 dressed hogs and 2.HO0.000 pounds of pork product were destroyed. The- Insur ance amounts to $721,f;00 and ia distributed among tho principal rompanlea tn America. The Armour plant has always been con sidered a good risk. Armour & Co. announce thoy will re build at once on a more extensive scale. Insurance on Plnat. The Insurance was distributed aa follows: Royal of Kngland t 100"C Palatine 5 .ijimi Hartford 5 ooij Norwich I'nlon 6 00i Commercial Knlon b'.wki Traderx of Chicago 6,U Royal Exchange 5'mio Phoenix of Brooklyn ' 'ii North iirltlsh and Mercantile slorni Himovcr 2,r Ijondon and Lancashire l.dm Buffalo German ; Riy Pelican 2.5H0 National I'nlon V.yw) German American 2..vi Hamburg Bremen 2,fi4M Manchester '',u't German Alliance.... 2 Vo Milwaukee Mechanics J..Vki Connecticut Niagara K'.frVt Aachen and Munich 2.Fii-i Queen , ..; 2..V Rochester German Mercantile f ire and Marine... Uvea. Detroit Firo and Marine. G r eii wich Cltisens of Missouri Fin-men's of Baltimore Buffalo Commercial Imhuque Fire and Marine Hawkeye Michigan Fire and Marine.... I K & O. of New York Spring Garden Milwaukee Fire Phoenix of Knaiand 2.f.ivi J. KM 3.01 y. 2.011c 1.60C 1..W l.co l,0i i.oort 8.000 l.WW 2,f) Newark 1,600 Farmers of tork I.R11O Aetna 25.000 Springfield 25.000 Soottifh l and N 10,000 Krltlsh American 15,oo) Phoenix of Hartford 15.000 National 25.nnn Pri.r.KlHn National 10.000 American of New Jeraey 10,000 American of Philadelphia 10,000 American Central 10,000 Fireman's Fund 10,000 Provident of Washington 7,500 Imperial m.non Pennsylvania 7.50 I'nlon of Pennsylvania 2.500 Liverpool, Ixnidon and Globe 17.500 Home of New York 15.000 Vnion of Knaland 12,000 Traders of Chicago 10.000 Atlas of Kngland 10,000 German American 7 ,501) Phoenix of Kngland 7.500 Manchester 6,000 Germaniii 6.000 Kqultablo 5,001) Orient 5.01K1 Fire Association 6.0110 IOndon and Iwtncashlre 6.000 Security of Connecticut 6.0"0 St. Paul Fire and Murine 6,000 German of Freeport 6.000 Philadelphia Underwriters 6.000 Insurance Company of No. America B.O01) Norwich Union 6,000 Ijiw I'nlon and Crown 6,000 Thuiingla 6,000 New Hampshire 6,0nO Hartford , 10,000 Hanovt-r 5.0nO Westchester 6.0k) Reading 2.500 Cltlxena' of Missouri 2.5ti Firemen's of Baltimore 250 1 Western Assurance j 500 Ietrolt Fire and Marine 2500 CJueen 5!mxi - Farmers' of York J.50t) Anchor 2.500 Sun of Kngland 7on Aachen and Munich iiSOO Hamburg Bremen 2.W1 Phoenix Of Hrooklyn 2.510 Milwaukee Mechanics 2.500 Merchants Fire and Marino Z,6N) Pes Moines 2,500 Connecticut 2.600 National lTnlon , 4.K0O National Standard rM t.Oof) American of Boston 2.rn Royal 7 600 Agricultural 7,500 Northern of Kngland 10.000 London Lloyd's..- 150,000 Water Prrsaaro Inadequate. Within a short time after tha fire was discovered by a watchman six streams of water were being thrown upon the fire, which waa then In the fertilizer building, which ww 120x60 feet and four atorles high, but the pressure waa Inadequate. The floors and contents of tha building burned -like chaff. The roof soon foil and the fire burst through Into the beet killing bouss. At the same time the cattle chute Ignited and In five minutes fell with a crash. Ones In the beef killing bouae the flamea had full sway. From thia house to ths oleo building waa only a step, and when ths oils stared to burn tha firs presented a most spectacular appearance. Tha big beef house, containing BOO car casses, next caught fir and tha whole plant, except ths hog house, waa tn flamea. ' Tha country for miles around waa lighted up. Suddenly there was a tenifio detona tion, followed quickly by another, and then another. Twenty-four drums of 100 pounds of ammonia each exploded before tha re serve supply In tha ammonia cistern waa reached. That explosion almost rased tha entire plant. Tha flamea wars blown through, tbe Bra wall which separated tha hog house from the other buildings. Tba hog house con tained J.&00 dressed bogs and S, 500.000 pounds of pork products. Steadily ths flis crept against the wind and through tha offloa building. Not a scrap of paper waa aaved. When tha laat of tha ammonia drums was going off a burning chute fell upon a buprfc ol lira bogs an J thsir squuals were) add4 j