The Omaha Daily- Bee. FOK A CHARACTERISTICALLY WEST ERN NEWSPAPER READ THE BEE THE BEE IS THE PREFERRED ADVER TISING MEDIUM IN ITS TERRITORY ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871. OMAHA, MONDAY MOUSING, SEPTEMBER 12, 1904. SINGLE COPY THREE CENTS. ROOSEVELT ON ISSUES President'! Letter of Acceptance of the Republican Nomination. LINES BETWEEN PARTIES SHARPiV DRAWN No Doubt m to Attit' the Pnblio Question. -. POLICY OF ADMINISTRATION M. 5 i "AR o Actio of the Past and Pie, r Future Maintained. V DEMOCRATIC ATTACKS FULLY ANS " i. All Points at Inane Concisely and Lucidly Considered la . tbe Formal Document by the Candidate. President Roosevelt formal letter of acceptance of the nomination for the office of president of the United States, tendered him by the republican convention last June, la published In full In The Bee this morn ing;. In It Mr. Roosevelt has covered fully but concisely the Issues raised between the two parties In the present campaign, and frankly states his own and the party's position In regard to the great questions' that concern the people and the govern ment. He makea plain the success that lias attended the nation under republican policies, and points out the mistakes made by the opposition, and Its Insincerity and Inconsistency In attacking the republican party and its policies. The monetary ques tion, the matters of trusts and tariff, of labor and capital, of the Philippines, the ' army and navy, In faot everything that Is covered in the platform of the party, are dealt with In the president's usual vigorous manner, without ambiguity of phrase or effort fo mislead by shiftiness In construction. It Is a plain document, setting forth frankly the views of the man and outlining a policy that all good cltisena must endorse. The letter In fall Is: OYSTER BAY, N. T., Sept 13, 1904,-Hon. J. U. Cannon, Chairman 01 the Notification Conunliiea: tly Dear bir l accept tue nomination tor the presidency tendered mo oy me republican national convention ana cordially approve the platform auopied by It. In writing tfiis letter ymre are certain points upon which 1 aealre to lay especial stress. It Is difficult to find out from the utter ances of our opponents what are the real Issues upon wnich they propose to wage this campaign. It la not unfair to say that, having abandoned most of the princi ples upon which they have insisted dining the last eight years, they now seem at a loan, both an to what It Is that they really believe and as to how firmly they shall as sert their belief In anything. In fact. It. la dobuL'til If they venture reaulutely to press a single Issue; as soon as they raise one they tthiink from it and seek to explain It away. Such an attitude Is the probably In evitable result of the effjrt to improvise conviction, for when, thus Improvised It Is natural that they should be held In a tentative manner. The party nour In control of the govern ment Is troubled by no such difficulties. We do not have to guess at our own con victions and then correct the guess If U seems unpopular. The principles which we profess are. those In , which we believe wit heart nd soul and atrength. Men may differ from ua, but they cannot accuse us of shiftiness or Insincerity. The policies we have pursued are those which we earnestly hold as essential to the national welfare and repute. Our actions speak even louder than our words for, the faith that Is In us. We base our appeal upon what we have done and are doing, upon, our record of ad ministration and legislation during the last seven years. In whloh we have had com plete control of the government We In tend In the future to carry on the govern ment In he same way that we have carried It on In the past Not to Be Trusted. A party wnose members are radically at variance on most vital Issues, and If united at nil, are only united on Issues where their attitude threatens widespread disaster to the whole country, cannot be trusted to f overn in any matter. A party which, with acile ease, changes all Its convictions be fore election cannot be trusted to adhere with tenacity to any principle after eleo tlon. . A party fit to govern must have con victions. In l96 the republican party came Into power, and In 1900 It retained power on certain definite pledges, each of i which was scrupulously fulfilled. But In addition to meeting and solving the problems which were issues In these campaigns. It also be came necessary to meet other problems which arose after election; and it Is no small part of our claim to public confidence that these warefaolved with the same sue cess that had attended the solution of those concerning which the battles at the polls were fought. In other words,, our governmental elfiolency proved equal not only to the tasks that were anticipated, but to doing each unanticipated task as It arose. W hen the contest of 1H96 was decided, the question of the war with Spain was not an '5U5- .When "e contest of 19uo waa de cided, the shape which the Isthmian canal question ultimately took could not have beJ!.n foreseen. But the same qualities which had enahled those responsible for making and administering the laws at Washington to denl successfully with the tariff and the currency enabled them also to deal with the Spanish war, and the same qualities which enabled them to act wisely ,n,the,Ph"lriP,ne" and ,n c"a also en abled them to do their duty as regards the problems connected with the trusts and to secure the building of the Isthmian canal. We are content to rest our case before the American people upon the fact that to ad herence to a lofty Ideal we have added proved governmental efficiency. Therefore our promises may surely be trusted as re gards any Issue that is now before the people-and we may equally be trusted to deal with any problem which may hereafter arise. Panama and the Constitution.' So well has the work been done that our opponents do not venture to recite the facts about our policies or acta, and then oppose them. They attack them only wheit they have first misrepresented them; for a truthful recital would leave no room for adverse comment. Panama offers an Instance In point. Our opponents can criticise what we did In Panama only on condition of misstating what was dune. The administration be haved throughout not only with good faith, but with extraordinary patience and large generosity toward those with whom It dealt. It waa also mindful of American In terests. It acted In strict compliance with the law passed by congress. Had not Panama been promptly recognised, and the transit across the Isthmus kept open, In accordance with our treaty rights and obligations, there would have ensued end leu guerilla warfare and possibly foreign complications; while all chance of building the canal would have been deferred, cer tainly for years, perhaps for a generation or more. Criticism of the action In this matter is simply criticism of the only pos sible action which rould have secured the building of the canal; as well as the peace and quiet which we were, by treaty, bound to preserve along the line of transit across the Isthmus. The service rendered this country in securing the perpetual tight to construct, maintain,' operate and defend the canal was so great., that our opponents do not venture to rKlse . the issue In straightforward fashion; for If so raised there would be no isaue. The decisive no tion which brought about this beneficent result was the exercise by the president of the powers vested in him. and In him alone, by the constitution: the power to recognise foreign governments by entering Into diplomatic relatlima with them, ana the power to make treaties which, when ratified by the senate, become under the constitution part of the supreme law of the land. Neither In this nor In any other matter has there been the slightest failure to live up tn the constitution in letter and In spirit. But the constitution must be observed positively as well as negatively. The president's duty Is to serve the country In accordance with the constitution; end I should be derelict In my duty if I used a false construction of the constitution as a shield for weakness and timidity, or as an excuse for governmental impoteuce. Bis rarelga Poller. Similar misrepresentation la the one ayuu ft our eppoucnui la regard 10 our i foreign policy, and the way the navy ha been made useful In Carrying out this policy. Here agxia all that we ask Is that they truhtfully state what has been done, and then ,-a whetner ,r not they obj.ci to It; for If continued In power we snail continue our foreign policy and our han dling of the navy on exactly the same lines in tne future as in the past. To what phase of our foreign policy, und to what use of the navy, oo our opponents object? Do they object to the way In which the Monroe doctrine has been sir. ngthened and upheld? Never before has this doctrine teen ac qulmced in abroad as It is now; and vet. while upholding the rights of the weaker American republics against foreign aggres sion, the administration has lost no oppor tunity to point out to these republics that those who eeek equity should come w.th clean hands, and that whoever claims lib erty as h right must accept the responsi bilities that go with the exercls of the right. Do our opponents object to what was done In reference to the petition of American citizens against the Klsheneff massacre? or to the protest against the treatment of the Jews in Roumania? or to the effnrtn that have been made in behalf of the Armenians In Turkey? No other ad ministration In our history, no other gov ernment In the world, has more consistently tood for the broadest spirit of brotherhood In our common humanltv, or has held a more resolute attitude of protest against every wrong that outraged the .civilization of the ago, at home or abroad. Do our op ponents object to the fact that the inter national tribunal at the Hague was reciied from Impotence, and turned Into a potent Instrument for peace among the nations? This government has used that tribunal, and advocated Its use by others. In pursu ance of Its policy to promote the cause of international peace and good will by all honorable methods. In carrying out this Collcy It has settled dispute after dispute y arbitration or by friendly agreement. It has behsved toward all nations, strong or weak, with courtesy, dignity and Justice; and it Is now on excellent terms with all. Some Pertinent Points. Do our opponents object to the settlement of the Alaska boundary line? Do they ob ject to the fact that after freeing Cuba v" ,her reciprocal trade advantages with the United States, while at tne same time keeping naval stations in the island and providing against Its sinking Into chaos or being conquored by any foreign power? Do they object to the fact that our flag now files over Porto Rico? Do they object J the acquisition of Hawaii? Once they hauled down" our flag there; we have hoisted it again; do they Intend once more to haul it down? Do they object to the part we played In China? Do they not know that the voice of the United States would now count for nothing In the far east If we had abandoned the Philippine and refused to do what waa done in China? Do they object to the fact that this government secured peaceable set tlement of the troubles in Venexuela two years ago? Do they object to tliu presence of the shlp-of-war off Colon when uie revo lution broke out In Panama, and when only the presence of this ship saved the lives of American citizens and prevented Insult to the flag? Do they object to the fact that American warshjps appeared promptly at the port of Beirut when an effort had been made to assassinate an American official, and In the port of Tan gier when an American citizen had heen abducted? and that in each case the wrong complained of waa righted and expiated? and that within the last few days the visit of an American squadron to Smyrna was followed by the long-delayed concession of their Just rights to those Americans con cerned In educational work in "Turkey? Do they object to the trade treaty with China, so full of advantage for the Ameri can people In the future? Do they object to the fact the the ships carrying the national flag now have a higher standard than ever before in marksmanship and In sensmanshlp, as Individual units and as component parts of squadrons and fleets? If they object to any or all of these things, we Join issue with them. Our foreign policy has been not only highly advantageous to the United States, but hardly less advanta geous to the world as a whole. Peace and food will have followed in its footsteps, he government has shown Itself no less anxious to respect the rights of others than Insistent that the rights of Americans be respected In return. As for the navy. It has been and now Is the most patent guar-, antee of peace; and it is such chiefly be cause it is formidable, and ready for use, , Pension, policy of Administration. When, our opponents apeak of "encroach ments" by the executive upon the authority of congress or the Juulclary, apparently the act they ordinarily have In view la pension order No, 78, Issued under the authority of existing law. - This order directed that hereafter any veteran of the civil war who had reached the age of & should be pre sumptively entitled to the pension of 6 a month, given under the dependent pension law to tnose whose capacity to earn their livelihood by manual labor has been de creased 60 per cent, and that by the time the age of 10 waa reached the presumption should be that the physical disability was complete, the age being treated as an evi dential fact In each case. This order was made In the performance of a duty Imposed upon the president by an act of congress, which requires the executive to make regu lations to govern the subordinates of the pension office In determining who are en titled to pensions. President -Cleveland had alreaay exercised this power by a regulation which declared that 75 should be set as the age at which total disability should be conclusively presumed. Similarly President McKlnley established 66 as tne age at which half disability should be con clusively presumed. The regulation now In question, In the exerclae of the same power, supplemented these regulations mado under Presidents Cleveland and MclKnley. The men who fought for union and for liberty In the years from 1861 to lfutt not only caved this nation from ruin, but ren dered an inestimable service to all man klnJ. We of the United States owe the fact that today we have a country to what they slid, and the nation has decreed by law that no one of them. If disabled from earning his own living, shall lack the pen sion to which he Is entitled, not only aa a matter of gratitude, but as a matter of Justice. It is the policy of the repub lican party, steadily continued through many years, to treat the veterans of the civil war in a spirit of broad liberality. The order In question carried out this pol icy and ia justified not merely on legal grounds, but also on grounds of public nioralltv. It la a matter of common knowl edge that when the average man who de pends for hla wages upon bodily labor has reached the age of 62 his earning ability Is, In all probability, less by half than it was when he was in his prime, and that bv the time he has reached the age of 70 he has probably lost all -earning ability. If there la doubt upon thla point let the doubter examine the employes doing man ual labor In any great manufactory or on any great railroad, and find out now large Is the proportion of men between the ages of 62 and 70. and whether these men are still employed at the highly paid task which they did In their prime. As a mat ter of face, many railroads pension their employes when thefy have reached these ages, and in nations where old age pensions prevail thev always begin somewhere be tween the two limits thus set. It Is easy to test our opponents' sincerity In this matter. The order In question Is revocable at the pleasure of the executive. If our opponents come into power they can revoke this order and announce that they will treat the veterans of sixty-two to seventy aa presumably in full bodily vigor and not en titled to pensions. Will they now authorita tively state that they intend to do thiaT If so, we accept the Issue. If not, then we have the right to ask why they raise an Issue which, when raised, they do not ven ture to meet. 1 Other Arts of Government. In addition to those acts of the adminis tration which they venture to assail only after misrepresenting them, there are oth ers which they dare not overtly or officially attack, and yet which they covertly bring forward as reasons for the overthrow of the party. In certain great centers and with certain great Interests our opponents make every effort to show that the settle ment of the anthracite coal srlke by the in dividual act of the president, and. the suc cessful suit agulnst the Northern Securities coinpuny the merger suit undertaken by the department Jjf Justice, were acts be cause of which the present administration should be thrown from power. Yet they dure. not openly condemn either act. They dare not In any authoritative or formal manner say that In either case wrong was done or error committed In th method of action, or In the choice of Instruments for putting that action Into effect. But what they dare not manfully assert In open day, they seek to use furtively and through spe cial agents. It la perhai natural that an attack so conducted should be made some times on the ground that too much, some times on the ground that too Utile, has been done. Some of our opponents com. plain because under the anti-trust and In terstate commerce law suits were under taken which have been successful; others, because suits were not undertaken which would have been unauoceaef ul. The demo cratic state convention in New Yoik dealt with the anthracite coal strike by demand ing in deliberate and formal fashion that the national government should lake pos session of the coal fields; yet champions of that conventions cause now condemn the .Continued, on tne FIXUi Pa-.) LETTER FROM THE FRONT Press Correspondent Writes Impressions Received At Battle of Motion Pass. JAPANESE ARMY THE BETTER HANDLED Writer Fines Some Rnsslan Soldiers Who Arc Tired of War and Possible. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.)1 HEADQUARTERS SECOND DIVISION FIRST IMPERIAL JAPANESE ARMY, NEAR MOT1EN PASS, July 22.-When the whole history of this war is written the affair at Mo Tien Ling on July 17 may have the proportions merely of an outpost engagement. But It brings Into strong light the methods and the efficiency of the two armies at the present stage of hostili ties and It explains the continuous and un varying success on land of the Yankees of the east against one of the great military powers of Europe. Why the Russians sho lid have abandoned the best defensive position between the Yalu and Llao Yang without a fight and soon afterward make two costly and unsuccessful efforts to re gain it remains yet a mystery. Two days before this attack the Japanese knew, through their remarkable Intelligence serv ice, that It was planned. They foresaw largely how It would be executed, though probably they did not anticipate how stub bornly the Russians, fired with ambition to maintain the prestige of European troops and Inspired by the name of Skobe leff, linked with the memories of Schipka Pass, would etorm the stronghold. It was Skobeleff's fighting and Skobeleff's men against the men and the methods of a quarter century later. Correspondents Are Delayed. On the morning of the 17th several of the correspondents who were camped at the division general's headquartera some miles from the pass were awakened at daylight by tbe sound of distant volleys. A thick white fog covered the hills, like a London fog in December, so dense that tents could not be seen 100 yards away. The ground was muddy and trees dripped as though there had been a heavy rain. The corie spondents were soon In their daddies, but word came from the press censor that they were not to go until given permission. Within an hour most of the military at taches and newspaper men ' had gathered in front of headquarters, fretting to be re leased. Delegates from each '.amp were laboring with tbe staff officers. Word came from within that the general was ac quiescent, but part of the staff unwilling. We were to "wait a little," a phrase be come familiar during two months of wait ing at Tokio. Later the general might go and perhaps the correspondents could ac company him. The waiting was protracted until 3 o'clock, and meantime could be seen the machinery of battle behind the stage. Bev eral Infantry battalions came up the road at a dog trot, the men's khaki tunics plas tered to their backs with sweat, while they mopped their faees with towels presented by the patriotic societies of Japan, benrlng blue prints, oi .the mikado's soldiers storm Ing Impossible blue precipes lit the face of gigantic .blue bearded Russians. Most of the men looked as eager for their work as a foot ball team racing onto the Held, There were no shirkers, although some fol lowed the rear of their companies, panting painfully under the fifty pounds weight of equipment which they all carry. A hos pital company marched past, with the stretchers roped to the backs of horses and some of the lied Cross men shoul dered wooden crutches to help soldiers with leg wounds from the field. Trains of the small black Japanese stallion passed. bearing ammunition boxes and trenching spades, which are also utilized for bury ing the dead. Ammunition caissons with lathering six-horse teams rumbled over the road, and two or three, field batteries In reserve appeared and unharnessed on the square, where 'the marks or the Russian tents remained, to await possible orders for the front. A company of engineers shoul dering bamboo poles and colls of copper wire began to stretch a new telephone line, which extended across the fields as fast as the colls could be unwound. (Array Has Light Equipment. Probably no other army has as light and durable material for many uses as the Japanese find In this bamboo. Occasion ally an officer wearing the gold and white sash of tho staff galloped in from the di rection of the firing. But there was no confusion or disorder and seemingly little hurry. Every officer and man and every organisation knew Its business and pro ceeded about it without excitement or fuss. The whole machine operated with the same smoothness that It has exhibited from the day. the mobilisation began in Tokio. The sounds of battle were increasing at 7 o'clock and the expectant witnesses be came impatient. The guns tiegjn booming about that time and the explosion of. a shell was heard every two or three min utes, while the unremitting rattle of rifle fire became louder, punctuated by frequent volleys, and everyone knew that the vol leys came from Russian rifles and that the Japunese were firing at will. In accord ance with their .usual tactics. . Soino fancied that the work was comlnj closer. It certainly sounded nearer , than on the morning of the Fourth, and the listeners began to speculate whether ihe Russians had carried the pass. The Chinese were getting frightened and parties of women and children went scurrying up the hill roads with bundles of valuable. Correspondents Get Started. About 9 o'clock the telephone bell In the staff office gave a long, sharp ring and an officer emerged to announce that all might start Word had come that the Russians were running. Correspondents and officers were off at full speed, the cavalcade with the various uniforms of different national ities making an unusual group. The tall German captain towered above all others, wearing a cap of the same color and pat tern as a Russian officer's, which sug gested the realisation of the Japanese fear that foreigners on the battlefield might be shot by their own troops. ' Just t the foot of the high hill where begins the steep accent of the pass came a squad of wounded soldlors going to the base hospital Some had their arms in slings; others were bandaged across their faces. Most of them were very pale 'from loss of blood and heat, but all smiled and saluted. A long procession of wounded descended the Jilll. Part were carried on stretchers, with their guns and equipments beside them, for nothing is wasted or lost with the Japanese army, and when the soldiers go Into a fight they leaye no trail of discarded blankets and haversacks. All the wounded were quiet and stoical, as usual. One boy. shot through both arms, was walking, and. aa he could not salute. (Continued on SeeooA fsgs) ROBBERS GET SIX THOUSAND Express Train on Canadian Parlne Held Vp by Foar Men at Mission Junction. WINNIPEG. Manitoba, Sept.- 11. The Canadian Pacific railway's westbound Transcontinental express was held up by four masked men four and a half miles west of Mission Junction. At the point of revolvers the express messenger was compelled to hand over the valuables and the aaf was dynamited. The registered mall iss also ransacked. The robbers escapAl to the bushes and are supposed to have grossed tbe boundury. They secured about 81,000 from the express safe. MONTREAU Sept. 11. General Manager McNIooll of the Canadian Pacific tonight stated that he had been advised that the transcontinental trais) which left here last Tuesday morning hi been held, up by train robbers twenty! two miles from MIs-hrty-three miles from Ion Junction, B. C, Vancouver. There four men. in the party. They compelled the train crew to uncouple the mall aljd express car from the remainder, of the train and run ahead two miles. Here theft looted the mall and express cars. It Is nW known how much they secured. .. Mr. llcNIcoll stated that he had been advised hat arrests had been made. rjpnT HOHESZOLLERNS HCHWER1S Emperor William sd Family Onests of the Grasid Dike. BCHWERIN IN MECKLENBERO. Sept. 11. Emperor William and Empress Au gusta Victoria nnive here this evening, accompanied by Crown Prince Frederick William and hi betrothed, Duchess Cecilia of Mecklenberg-8chwrl. The city was lavishly decorated and, tbe royal party was given in enthusiastic reception by the populace. I At a state dinner at Jos castle the grand duke of Mecklenberg-Schwerln in a short speech welcomed hla guests. The emperor In his reply expressed great Joy at the betrothal of the crotrn prince and the duchess and said thatltbe latter would be received with open arris and honored by the Imperial house. tHer character, his majesty said, be was convinced would ensure the happiness it his son and with it the happiness of els house and the fatherland. The emperor ooneludld by proposing the health of tho grand duke, dwelling on the close and Intimate relation, which always had prevailed betweenhe two houses. FIRECRACKERS , IX WESTMINSTER Antl-Rltaaltst Disturbs the Sunday .. Meeting. LONDON, Sept. 11 --A singular affair took place in Westminster Abbey today. At the middle of the morning service a serlrs of loud explosion came from the north transept and started the kneeling congregation to Its, feed causing an almost dangerous rush for th"Voors. Rev. Canon Duckworth succeeded In reassuring the people and In preventing a panic. It was discovered that the cause of the explosions was a firecracker, , te ; label attached to which showed tho outrage to be the work of a fanatical adherent' of- the late John Kenstt, the antl-rltulfj!c crusader. The culprit escaped In the "confusion following the explosion. MELBA'I Al'TO KILLS MAN Fatal Accident In Streets of Parts Prostrates' Noted Slnster. PARIS, Sept. ll.-Mme. Melba. the dis tinguished singer, while driving in an auto mobile this afternoon, accompanied by. her two cousin, the Misses Walker, ran over a man about 84 years of age and killed him instantly. The accident occurred on the Boulevard Perolre, Mme. Melba being on thr, way from the Hotel Rlts to Versailles. The chauffeur was not to blame, as the old man got In the way of the automobile while endeavoring to escape being run over by a cab. Mme. Melba was greatly dis tressed and returned to the hotel, where she Is now confined to her apartments. SERIOIS ANTI-SEMITIC RIOTS Several Persona Injured nt Rovno and Many Houses Pillaged. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 11. Antl-Sem-Itlc rioting took place at Boa no, in the government of Volhynla, 8 ntember 4, dur ing which many persons were Injured and shops pillaged. A similar outbreak occurred at Bmela In the government of Kleff, where the troops were called.. Ninety-eight houses ana 146 shops were pillaged and several persons seriously and many slightly wojinded by the troops. Many of the rioters were ar rested. The affair lasted for two days, September 4 and 6. MASSACRE IN GERMAN NEW fit INK A Natives Attack Catholic Mission and Kill Priests and Sisters. BRISBANE, Queensland, Sept. 11. News has been received from Oerman New Guinea saying that natives attacked the Catholic mission and murdered Fathers Raschen and Ruttar, Brother Bley, Plar schaert and Schellekens, and Sister Soflt, Agatha, Annie, Agne and Angella. Thirty-six natives were captured and six teen of them were executed for the crime. The design of the native was to murder all the whites, but this was frustrated. TROOPS LEAVING GAINESVILLE All the State Mllltla Will Be on Their War Homo Within Few Days. GAINE8VILLE, Va Sept. 11. General Corbln has abandoned the battlefield. He left corps headquarters thl morning for Washington In an automobile. Mrs. Corbln and Mrs. Grant accompanied the general. The state troop are on the move and according to the program all will be out of camp and on their way home by to morrow. The entraining 1 progressing tar-pldly and according to a temporary schedule arranged by the management of the Southern railway the score of tracks at each of the two main camp are filled with troop train which are being loaded with horses, etc. Each regiment Is run In two and sometimes three sections. Already the cities of canvas which nestled In snug localities In the Virginia hills and warmed with the armies of the blue and the, brown have disappeared. The 1,000 regular troops which were divided between the two camps will remain ,ln the Held until the' state troops have reached their destination and the necessary cars have returned for the transportation of the regulars. Movements of Oeeaa Vessels Sept. 11. At Liverpool Arrived: Ionian, from Han. treal. At Queenstown Sailed; Lucanla, for New York. At Dover Sailed: Phoenicia, for New York; Vaderland, for New York. At New York Arrived: ilimbunr. from Hamburg; Columbia, fry at Glasgow, FATHER SCHELL AT CAPITAL Urges Action by Department to Protect the Winnebago Indiana. COMMISSIONER JONES PROMISES TO HELP Insists that Lnek of Appropriation Leaves Him In Position to Do Little In Matter of Break Ing; 1 p Illicit Traffic. (From a 8taff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON. Sept. ll.-(8peelal Tele gram.) Father Joseph Schell of Homer, Neb., who. with The Bee, has been active In behalf of ameliorating the condition of the Winnebago Indians before the Interior department, Is In Washington for the pur pose of urging the Indian office to do some thing to stop the illicit sale of liquor to the Indians. Father Schell, says that if something Is not done soon the Wlnne bagoes will be put back a generation, their property confiscated by land sharks and their moral condition will be ft thousand fold worse than when they were wholly savages. Father Schell called yesterday upon Judge Campbell, assistant attorney general for the Interior department and waa Informed by the latter that he had heard of the conditions of the , Winnebago reservation and that he was ready to prosecute any case reported to him by the commissioner of Indian affairs. He waa unable, he said, to act until the matter had been brought officially to his attention. Following the Interview with Judge Campbell, Father Schell had an Interview with Commissioner Jones. "I am well ac quainted with the said condition of the Wlnnebagoes," Father Schell reports Mr. Jones as answering, "through your reports that reached me and through reports of our agent. I know that the Indians lose their money and that n enormous whisky traffic is ruining them, but I am not In a position to do sjiy thing, as there are no funds provided." This Is astonishing," raid Father Schell. "Who Is supposed to protect the Indians If you cannot do It?" "The government Is supposed to protect them," Mr. Jones answered, "but as con gress has refused to appropriate the neces sary funds, I can do nothing." After a further representation of the case, however, Commissioner Jones promised to do all that he could to remedy matters, al though he repeatedly expressed doubts as to the department's' ability to accomplish reforms until congress had acted. "The bootleggers and the saloonkeepers are comparatively Innocent people and are only tools In the hands of those who collect the Indian pay checks," said Father Schell. "I am convinced that If Secretary Hitch cock could only know one-tenth of what Is going on there something would be done. Most of the notes which these traders are holding against the Indians are whisky notes and the proofs are on hand, and something must be done." Father Schell will leave tomorrow for his home In Nebraska, but will return to Wash ington unless the department takes some steps to remedy the condition of which he. complains. BALTIC ' KLRET SAILS FOR EAST. Squadron Consists of Nine Battleships and Four Cruisers. CRONBTADT. Sept. 11. The Baltic fleet sailed today for the far east. The vessels of the fleet are the battleships Souvaroff (Vice Admiral Rojestvensky's -flagship), the Navarln, Slssol, Vellky, Borodino, Alex ander III, Orel, Olcg, and the Osllabia (Rear Admiral Voelkersam' flagship); the cruisers Admiral Nakhlmoff, Dmitri Ddna kol, Aurora and .the Almas (Read ytdmlral Enqulst' flagship), and several torpedo boats and torpedo boat destroyers. , The fleet will merely touch at Libau, where It will be Joined by' twelve trans ports, colliers and supply ships already waiting there, and will then proceed direct to the Orient. The scene on the departure of the fleet was an Imposing one. At dawn the first anchor, was hoisted on the swift cru!aer Aurora, which, accompanied by two torpedo boats, slipped out of the harbor. The town was awakened by the booming of the guns of the forts as.; the Aurora sped towards LI ban In advance of the main squadron. At 2 o'clock In the afternoon, the time set for the departure of the remainder of the fleet, the Imperial yacht, with the em peror, Grand Duke Alexis, the high ad miral and other high naval officer on board, put out from Peterhof, on the other side of the bay, with an escort of three torpedo boats. Admirals Rojestvensky and Voelkjersam went on board the Imperial yacht and personally said farewell to the emperor. Then with destroyers ahead and abeam, the Souvaroff led the squadron down the Finnish gulf. The water front and the piers and forts were crowded - with spec tator. The ensigns . on the forts and yachts were dipped and the guns of each chain of forts across the bay Joined in an admiral's salute, while from the signal masts above the forts fluttered a string of oolored flags reading: "Good luck to the Bsltlo fleet on Its long voyage." The weather all day had been alternating from clear to cloudy, but as the fleet left port there was a burst of sunshine followed up on the southern horlson by the blurr of a ralnsquall across the gulf. PRAYERS FOR RUSSIAN SUCCESS Holy Synod Orders Special Services In All Churches. ST. PETERSBl-'RO, Sept. 11. The official Messenger today publishes the following resolution which was adopted by the holy synod: "By virtue of an imperial ukase to the effect that during the present trials of our dear country ' more ardent prayers should be offered for the victory of the Russian troops, who are worshipers of Christ, over a cruel enemy, full of guile, the holy synod pronounced the time ripe for special pray ers to be offered in all of the churches in the empire on Sundays and holidays after mass, beseeching that heavenly aid should be sent to the Russian army, whloh I sacrificing Its life for Its faith, Its emperur and Its country, for long life for the vic torious troops and for the repose of th souls of the warriors who fall." DONNELLY VISITS DAVENPORT President of Meat Cutters' In Ion De. Clares Strike Accomplished Mark Good. DAVENPORT. Ia.. Sept. ll.-Presldent Donnelly of the Amalgamated Meet Cut ters today addressed a large cro-vd at a meeting of the Butchers' union. H de clared that the recent strike had resulted in Improved conditions of labor and that the butchers would establish a permanent board of arbitration fcnd bring about last Ins Industrial peace. NEBRASKA WEATHER FORECAST Warmer Monday. Tuesday Fair. Temperature nt Omaha Yesterday! Hoar. ne. Ho nr. De. A a. a. T a. H a. t n. 10 a. 11 a. Ill m. . S3 . "1 1 2 s 4 ft A T P P. P. P. P. P. P. P. P. t ..... I no no nt KH tin T H T OH a 61 i i SUMMARY OF THE WAR NEWS Cessation of Flahtlnsr In Manchuria for the Present Baltic Fleet Sails. What little news was received Sunday from the Manchurlan theater of war Indi cates the almost entire suspension of ac tive operations by both Russians and Japa nese. The last dispatch from Mukden was filed by a correspondent of the Associated Press Sunday evening. It said that all was quiet in that region and the understanding was that the main force of the Japanese had retired to Yental. on the railroad about ten miles northeast of Llao Yang. Kouro patkln briefly reports that there was no fighting Saturday, except patrol encoun ters. A dispatch received In London from St. Petersburg gives a report that Viceroy Alexleff has resigned. The Baltic fleet, rumors regarding which from time to time occupied the press re ports, sailed Sunday from Cronstadt and It Is officially announced In St. Petersburg that Its destination Is the far east. St. Petersburg dispatches Indicate active preparations . to greatly Increase the Rus sian fighting force. The story from Port Arthur la one of bombardments. SITUATION AT PORT ARTHUR Russians Drive Japs from One of the Minor Trenches. CHE FOO, Sept. 11.-11:20 p. m.-Accord-Ing ta the latest news received here from Port Arthur the Russians, on September 4, shelled the Japanese covered trenches In front of Pallchuang and destroyed them. Everything waa quiet along the entire line during the night of September 4. but In the morning It was seen that the Japanese outposts had crept closer In to the Russian lines. One Incident of the recent bombardment of Port Arthur was the striking of the roof of a hospital by a Japanese shell. The Jap anese fire waa drawn to the hospital by Russian beacon signals placed near It. One small Russian scouting party suc ceeded In creeping close to the Japanese entrenchments on Corner mountain, but the barking of dogs gave the alarm and pro vented a further advance. Japanese re serves poured Into the Intrenchments and opened fire, but a shell from a Japanese battery landed In the trench and killed many of the Japanese soldiers, and the re mainder retired. This enabled the Russians to occupy the trench until dawn. The trench evidently waa unimportant, for the Japanese made no attempt to retake It and the Russian scouts withdrew shortly after daybreak. On September a small body of Japanese troops captured 'some outpost trenches on High hill, which Is not faf from Corner mountain, but upon the approach later of a Russian detachment they evacuated this position without fighting. . The Port Arthur NoVlgral, In a recent Is sue, declares thut a Japanese colonel has beeen executed because he failed to occupy a certain position on Corner mountain within a specified time. J In Its Issue of September 2 the same paper says that a Japanese torpedo boat struck a mine fourteen mile southeast of the 'har bor and sank, and that on the day after this occurrence the Japanese cruiser Itsu kuwhlma also was da-naged by a floating mine.. A Chinese who left Port Arthur the night of 'September arrived here today and re ports that Japanese troops to the numberof 5000 control . Louisa bay. to the northwest of Port Arthur, and that the Japanese sre In control also of Pigeon bay, to the ures of Port Arthur. This Chinese' wanted to leava from Pigeon bay, but the Japanese would not allow him to do so. He was taken to Port Dalny and on the wsy passed through Ave villages where detachmenta of Jnpaneso troops numbering from 2,000 to 5,000 each were quartered. He says the Japanese are making use of a balloon, which he describes as a cigar shaped affair with a car suspended, and says that a "fat foreigner, wearing a mus tache" runs the balloon. The Japanese Intrenchments line the hill tn every direction and reinforcement are constantly arriving from Port Dalny. The Japanese horpltals at Port Dalny are filled with wounded and transports are engaged In removing the wounded men to Japan aa fast as possible. Rl'SSIAN SHIP AT SAN FRANCISCO Captain of Trnnaport Lena Says Hla Engines Need Repairs. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. ll.-The .Russian transport Lena, Captain Berllnsky, put Into this port today for repalra. The 1ena in thirty-one days from Vladivostok, via Bay atwa, Sakhalin Islands. It made the run from Bayalwa In nineteen days, which is ronaldered fast Jtirrt'e. The Lena has a crew of 497 mail and twenty-one officers, and carries twenty-three guns. It has three funnels and three masts. Captain Berllnsky, who officially declares the Lena to be a transport, state that their engines and boilers are In need of re pairs. After passing quarantine, the Leria anchored off the I'nlon Iron works, where It now lie. According to Brassy's Naval Annual, the Lena formerly was the Kherson of the Ruaslan volunteer fleet, Brassy refers to It as a "volunteer cruiser," and also as a "transport vessel." The Lena has a speed of nineteen and one-halt knots. Its hull I of steel and Its displacement la of 10.2-'5 tons. It Is 4(11 feet long, M feet S Inches wide and has a draught of 24 feet. It has two propeller. Its Indicated horse-power Is 1J.500. It was built at Hebbum, England, In 189t. According to Brassy the Lena car ries three 4.7-lnch quick-firing guns and twenty of smaller caliber. The arrival of the Lena has been re ported to Washington.' Instructions are e pected from the Waahlngton authorities to morrow as to the length or time the Lena may remain In pert. Pilot MeOulloch, who brought the Lrna into port, says that chains were wrapped round Its hull. Indicating that tome of Its plates were loose. Immediately after the Lena dropped an chor In the bay" Captain Berllnsky left the warship, but the object of his visit ashore was not announced. An officer of the cruiser, however. St ted that the Lena left Vladivostok on a cruising expedition, hop ing to capture some of the transpacific vessels carrying contraband of war. It was admitted that the vessel moat eagerly sought for was th steamship America of th Toyo Klaen Kalaha line, which com pany nt It from thl port several week go for th Orient. The America arrld lafeiy at Hon- Kong on September X BALTIC FLEET SAILS Imperial Taobt Giea Parting Signal of "Good Voyage and Suooeds." MAKES IMPOSING ARRAY IN HARBOR. Stop is to Be Made at Lisbon, When Tores More Ships Join It, NOT ALLOWED TO COAL IN BRITISH P0RT3 Humor Viceroy Alexieff Has Tendered Resignation to Our. OFFICIAL REPORT OF JAPANESE LOSSES Killed and Wounded -In Battles 1st Vicinity of Llao Vang Abont Eighteen Thousand Officer and Men. (Copyright by New York Herald Co., 1904.) ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. U.-(New Torlc Herald Cablegram Special Telegram to Tha Bee.) At midday today the second Paclflo squadion, the powerful Baltic fleet, the de parture of which caused much - specula tlon, started from Cronstadt to Libau, where It will remain until Joined by tha Orel, the Jenitoung and the Ssumrud. The fleet formed In a double line, led bjr ten torpedo boat destroyers. It made an imposing showing as it turned slowly, amid, impressive salutes and farewells, tn tha fore were the three slater battleship of 13,51$ tons each, the Suvoroff, 'flying the pennant of Vice Admiral Rojestvenskyi tha Borodino and the Alexander III. Cloily following came three other battleships, tho Oslyblax, the Slssou Vellky (Slssou the Great j and the Navarln, the first flying tha pennant of Rear Admiral Felkeraon. Then the cruisers, the Oleg Nakhlmoff, the Dmitri Donakol, the Aurora, the Svlet lana and the trim Almas, Intended origi nally as a yacht for Viceroy Alexleff, flying the pennant of Rear Admiral Enkvlit. About an hour later the Imperial yacht Czarvana appeared and gave the signal: "Oood voyage and success." Apropos this morning' papers publish la full the memorandum of the governor of Malta announcing that ships of belliger ents may not be coaled In English govern ment harbors and comment on the! asm In the most bitter terms. The statement Is heard today that the Ruaslan people will never forget It. t The account of the battle of Llao Tans sent by M. Nlmlrovltch Datschenko fully shows 1 what has been previously tele graphed, that General Kouropatkin waa confident of victory, which failed through the misconstruction of his order by no less than three ' of . hi generals. . Kouro patkin now calls urgently for a Urge Xofco of reinforcements, the Japanese possibly, having forces in the field exceeding all anticipations. Th Odessa military district Is being rap idly mobilised. There Is a persistent rumor afloat that the reserves of St. Petersburg and Moscow are likewise to be mobilised. Terrible anxiety exists owing to lack of the publication of the details of the losses at Llao Yang. All known Is that hun dreds of wagons and stores of diftereu descriptions have been sacrificed. . Viceroy Alexieff Resigns. LONDON, Sept. 11. A dispatch to Hus ter's Telegram company from Bt. Peters burg says It Is understood that Viceroy Alexleff, In view of the paramount military exigencies In the far cast, has placed his resignation In the hands of the emperor, but that no decision with regard to It has yet been made. Csntr Calls Reserves to Arms. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. ll.-The em peror his called to arms the reserve troops In twenty-two circuits In the governments of Kherson, Bessarabia, Ekarerlnoslav and Taurlda, bolonglng to the military district of Odessa, and nlso one category of reserve officers throughout the empire. Official Report of Japanese Losses. WASHINGTON. Sept. 11. A dlspsto't from Tokio, which reached the Japaneae legation today, places the total casualties on the Japanese side at the battle of Llao -Vang at 17.52!) officers and men killed and wounded. Of these the army of the right (Kurokl's) lost 4.88. the center (Nodtu'a) 4,092 pnd the left (Oku ) 7,681. . The number of officers killed was 136 and the number wounded 464. No Fialitlns; Saturday, ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. ll.-In a tele gram to Emperor Nicholas, dated Septem ber 10, Generol Kouropatkin says: , "There were no hostilities today (Satur day) except Insignificant patrol encounters, In which we sustained no casualties." All Is Unlet at Mukden. MUKDEN, Sept. 11. -All la quiet in thl region. It Is understood that the mala force of Japanese has retired to Yenta. A solemn service was held here today for the repose of the aouls of those killed in aotlon. It was attended by the entire Staff and garrison. f A few distant shots were heard during the ceremony, but this did not disturb th solemnity of the services. The weather IS threatening and more rain la expected. CREW REMAINS ON A Mi OLD Ruaslan Cruiser Taken Into I'pper . Harbor nt Shanghai.! SHANGHAI. Sept. 11-Th Russian pro tected cruiser Askold, completely repaired, painted an glided, but with no bunting whatever showing, proceeded to It berth In retirement In the upper harbor yester day. There were three courses proposed for the disposition of th crews of the Askold and the torpedo boat destroyer Grosovol, alsp held In retirement. One waa to dlstVlbute them among the chief treaty prt. which was first accepted and re jected; the second ass to Intern them In the Chinese forts at Klang Nlng,on th Yangtsxe river, and the third was that they should remain on board the disarmed warships. The Japanese government has accepted the third and final proposition. It Is understood that the visit of 11 Tlang, who left Peking a short time ago for a visit to th southern provinces, I mainly concerned with an exhaustive In quiry Into the proposed removal of a por 'nn of the Klngan arsenal and th erec tion of the arsenal at Ping Hsiang, th It of th Sheng Kung faoa colliery said Iron rain.