Daily Bee The OMAHA DEE goti to the. homes 1 rad by tb women alli foods (or advertiser. WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska Partly cloudy. For Iowa Partly cloudy. For weather report Bee page 3. VOL. XXXIX-NO. 10G. OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, i OCTOBER 18, 1909. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. V SOUTHLAND WINS Tiverton People Make Gruesome Search for Head LONDON AROUSED OVER EXECUTION Mob Violence Breaks Out in British Capital Because of Shooting of Francisco Ferrer. Signs of the Season WM. I. BUCHANAN DIES SUDDENLY American Diplomat Found Uncon scious Near Embassy in London and Expires in Short Time. V PRESIDENT; 'FT ' 'v f aches San Antonio Afte ?-. de Over Lone Star Stats ' The Omaha t- fcfcKNl fOrgyr ) ill Countryside Folk Seek the One Means of Positive Identification of Girl's Mutilated Corpse. visits fort sam ho, SPANISH EMBASSY ENDANGERED HELD MANY IMPORTANT POSTS Will Assist in Laying Cornerstont New Chapel on Government Hill.-' CROSSES HISTORIC PECOS RIVER Rides Over Highest Railway Bridge in the World. TAKES SUNDAY AFTERNOON NAP . t Krrrlren Hearty Welcome from People In Little Town Along the Way and Makes Short Talks from Rear of Train. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Oct. 17. The presi dent's travels brought him to the far south today. After twenty-one hours of continu. ous Journeying from El Paso he arrived hero at 7:30 p. m. and, despite the fact that It was Sunday night, was given a cheering welcome. A big crowd was gathered nt the station 'and the streets leading from the depot to the Antonio hotel were lined with pwple. After being received by the city officials, the president Was driven to the hotel, with an escort of cavalry, and later In the even ing proceeded to Fort Sam Houston, where he assisted In the dedication and accepted, on behalf of the government, the chapel which has been erected at the famous old army post by the cltisens of San Antonio. President Taft had much to do, as "secre tir'&of war, with the building up of Fort Houston Into a brigade post, and has always had a deep interest in it. Tomorrow morning the president will help to put In place the corner-stone of the nearly completed chapel, Will review the troops 'stationed at Fort Sam Houston, and returning to the city, will make an out door address to the people from a grand stand in Alamo plaza. He will leave dur ing the afternoon tor Gregory, Tex., near Corpus Curlstl, to spend four days on the ranch of his brother, Charles P. Taft. The latter passed through here yesterday for the ranch to prepare a welcome for the president. The president's train today passed through the thinly settled part of the state and made but a few stops. ; Speaks at Depots. At Del Kio, Sanderson and one or two other places the president made brief speeches to the depot throng3, which were - made up In part of Mexicans, residents of the community and farmers who had driven many miles in their best "Sunday-go-to-meeting" clothes. The sagebrush and cac tus tf the far west reaches of the state gave, way ae the day advanced to mesquite bushu and finally to the. pasture, lands and -cotton" field! for whtWt the state Is . famous. In some of the fields Uae fleeoy staple was breaking In white puffs from the bolls. The president's train was one of four teen specials running Into San Antonio ten minutes ' apart. Most of the trains were filled ' with troops returning to Fort Sam Houston from duty at the meeting of Pres luent Taft and llaa yesterday. iiio president, at the Pecos river, passed otic what is declared to be the highest 1'iMlway bridge In the world. The river runs In a rocky canyon 325 feet below the rails. The wind was blowing a gale as the president's train parsed over the slender steel structure and the engineer ran at a snail's pace. General Albert L. Meyer, commander of the Department of Texas, rode with his staff ih a private car attached to the presi dent's train from El Paso back to his sta tion In this city. Colonel Cecil Lyon, re publican national committeeman for Texas, Joined the party at El Paso yesterday, and will remain during the entire time the president Is in Texas. Secretary of War Dickinson Is the only cabinet officer with the president. It Is his purpose to remain until the president j lurns to Washington, making' the entire '(Southern trip with President Taft. Takes Afternoon Nap. President Taft spent much of me day In resting and took a long, refreshing sleep during the afternoon. In the morning he disposed of tot of correspondence which had reached htm at HI Paso and which he had Ho opportunity to attend to during the exchange of courtesies between himself and President Diaz. .The president heard with deep gratification from Washington this morning that Mrs. Taft had returned to Washington and was so much Improved in health that she went to church with her later.' Tils president accepted and dedicated the chapel at Fort Sam Houston tonight in his capacity as commander-in-chief of the army. In doing so he preached his fourth sermon of the trip. Among those who participated In the ceremonies were Bishop Johnson of the Episcopal church, Bishop Forest of the Catholic church. Rabbi Samuel Marks and the Rev. Dr. J. U. Cleaver, president of the Ministerial association of San Antonio. The president took this as a further Indication he has repeated that the churches of the coun try are growing closer togther, on the common ground of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. The presi dent also took occasion to pay his com pliments to the work of the regular army of the United States. In his speech at Del Rio today the pres ident said: "it ia a great, encouraging thing to go through the oountry and find out how much has been done by the energy and enterprise of the people with conditions that seem very discouraging at first. Everywhere In the country where I have been the people seem to be satisfied and free -from discontent. They have homes; they have children; they have good laws, which they obey, and I Infer that this t-ctlun of the country is no exception. t'onaratalates People. "I am certainly glad to see you looking go prosperous, a man has to travel about the country to know what this country Is. and in going about Incidentally he ia able to show himself and let the people Of flip . country see the man they tem porarily aasigned to the position of J' chief executive. . "1 doq't remember that there was a great many votes In favor of assigning me ,to that position by this state, but I am not engaged in a partisan trip. I am only going around, trying 4 get informa tion as to the condition of the country (Continued oh Second Page.) iklA RIVER, Mass., Oct. 17.-Th Tiverton countryside, where various dis membered pcrtlons of a young woman's body have beer, found, was' the objective point today of an Influx of hundreds of mill Operatives, who searched for the miss In); head. Their hunt, however, was with- out result. The beating of bushes and thickets revealed no hidden object of In terest. After today's failure the police be lieve that the head the one means of posi tive Identification of the mutilated body lies at the bottom of Mt. Hope bay. Although the parents and relatives of Miss St. Jean state their belief that the body Is her's, an acquaintance of the miss ing girl has brought out strong points against this theory. Meanwhile "Professor" Frank Hill and Wilfred Thlbeault spent Sunday in Jail, and will remain there at least until the question of their connection with the murder Is heard In court October 25. National Guard Must Take Brace State Militia Must Conform to Regular Army Regulations to ' Get Aid from Congress. WASHINGTON, Oct. 17. January 21 next will be a critical date in the history of the National Guard, for thereafter no por tion of the money appropriated by con gress for the support of the militia can be paid to any organization that falls to conform to the standards of tho regular army. Next year, for the first time In its his tory, the militia, or so much of it aa remains under the caption of the ''National Guard," will be found armed with the latest pattern of militia rifles, clothed from head to foot In regular army gear, sup plied with all regular equipment and with ranks filled to the requirements of the law. The improvement In conditions has been general, but markedly so In the south. Which had formerly been regarded as a weak spot by the strict disciplinarians ot the regular army, who felt chat in this section undue Importance had been given to the social and olub features by the militiamen at the sacrifice ot military quality. Though lacking the massive brigades and divisions of the more populous northern states, the militia companies In a numbet of the southern states are now reported by the inspecting officers to be in a very satisfactory , condition of conformity to army standards. " The-west also is doing. well, thbugh there are some spots regarded as weak, notably in Nevada, where, it Is said, there Is not a single company of the National Guard able to establish a claim to a dollar of tho large annual appropriations made by con gress for the support of the militia. Automobile Skids, Woman Killed Mrs. Bruce Price, Widow of New York Architect, Instantly Killed When Car Leaves Roadway. TUXEDO PARK. N. Y., Oct. 17. Mrs. Bruce Price, a resident of Tuxedo Park, and widow of a New York architect, was killed, and( Mrs. Charles J. Coulter's arm was broken and ahe was otherwise In jured in an automobile accident this after noon on the road from Tuxedo to Arden. Mrs. Coulter's 12-year-old son, who was In the machine, and the chauffeur was unhurt. Tho machine skidded Into the brush on the side of the road when the chauffeur pulled to one side to pass a car ahead, throwing Mrs. Price against a tree, kill ing her almost Instantly. Viviano Children Welcomed Home Kidnaped Youngsters Showered with Kisses Upon Arrival at Union Station. ST. LOUIS. Oct. 17. Grace and Tomasso Viviano, who were kidnaped from their home here August J, arrived home in the company of their fathers today, .The mothers of the children, who are cousins, and many other relatives and friends were at the Union station to greet them. The children were showered with kisses and their mothers held them In their arms enroute to their home. Special services of thanks Were held In St. Charles Bor romej Catholic church today In honor of the return of the children. The family celebrated with a feast. New York Express Wrecked With Railway Men Aboard POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Oct. 17. A wreck In which President W. C. Brown of the New York Central, W, H. New man, former president of the road, and W..K. Vanderbllt. Jr., a director, figured, while those officials were returning from an Inspection ot the company's lines, oc curred at Rhlnecllff, on the Hudson river, ubout twenty miles north of here, early today. One passenger, a peddler of New York, was killed and ten were Injured, nono seriously. The train was the third section of No. 30, the New York Express from the west, due tn New York-at T:30 o'clock In the morning. Just south of the Rhlnecllff sta tion, at 4 Jo o'clock, the eight cars of the train were thrown front the track by a broken rail. Messrs. Brown, Newman and Vanderbllt, who were asleep In the rear car. "Idle Hour," were almost shaken from their berths, and hurriedly dressed to learn the extent of the accident. They Platoons of Police Prevent Bloodshed, but Excitement is Intense. KING ALFONSO IS DENOUNCED "To Hell with the Murderer!" is Inscription on Banner. KING EDWARD ALSO CRITICISED British Monarch Held Responsible for Trouble Socialist Heaps Abuse Upon Rnlera and Calls Raaslan Emperor "Dirty Monster." LONDON, Oct. 17. The red flag was raised in London this afternoon and a large mob moved upon the Spanish - em bassy to make a demonstration of Us dis approval of the execution of Prof. Fran cisco Ferrer, the convicted revolutionist, at Barcelona a few days ago. Several bodies of police were stationed at the ap proaches to the embassy and drove off the crowds In their usual bloodless, effectual way. Considerable excitement and un easiness pervaded the neighborhood. The groans and hootings were plainly heard In the embassy and at Buckingham palace nearby. No one was Injured seriously, although the mounted police rode against the crowds and scattered them several times. The trouble began with a mass meeting In Trafalgar square, which was organized by several socialist ar.d labor bodies. Sev eral hundred members of these organiza tions marched to the square, carrying red flags draped with crepe and bearing In scriptions denouncing King Alfonso. A black-bordered banner was raised against the Nelson column with big letters that could be read from afar: "To Hell With the Murderer- Alfonso." Murder Horrifies Europe. After J. F. Groen, secretary of the "Friends of Russian Freedom," had called the meeting to order he read a telegram from the Countess of Warwick, saying: "No words are too atrong to express Europe's horror at the murder of Ferrer." Several laborlte members of Parliament delivered strong orations. Victor Grayson of Manchester, the socialist member, capped the climax by declaring that If the. head of every king of Europe was torn from his body It would not pay half the price of Ferrer's life. -He called the Rus sian emperor "dirty monster" and said that King Edward, who could have pre vented the exe-dtlon, was responsible tor whatever might happen In England as a result of It. He .demanded the expulsion of the Spanish ambassador. ,, . , .. . Strong resolutions were 'adopted before the meeting BJt.'d," 'Several thousand" per-j sons assembled in the square, the majority of them attracted by . the same curiosity that would take them to the suffragette demonstrations. The socialist societies, carrying their banners, then marched in good order to. the Spanish embassy, sing ing revolutionary songs and hooting King Alfonso. A great rabble accompaned them, filling the streets. It was dark when they reached the open rquare in front of the embassy and they found that the square was filled with platoons of police. The embassy windows were dark and there was no sign of life there. The police would not let the pro cession ' enter the square or even stop. The crowds were turned back and kept moving up Victoria street toward the Par liament buildings, singing, shouting and groaning. The reserves were then brought up and they drove the mob into the side streets, dispersing It without serious trouble. "KATY FLYER" HITS FREIGHT AND ENGINEMEN ARE SLAIN ! Limited Train Rune Into Open Switch Near La Gransre, Texas, with Fearful Results. LA GRANGE, Tex., Oct. 17..-The "Katy Flyer" on the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad, southbound, rah Into an open switch at Halstead, six miles east of here at 6:40 this afternoon crashing into a freight train. Engineer Crawford, of the freight train, and Fireman Stutsman, of the passenger train were Instantly killed and several passengers Injured. Both en gines were badly wrecked and the baggage and mall cars demolished. I STUYVESANT FISH MAY WIN Former Head- of Illinois Central Mar Become Minister to China, Sara R WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.-So far as could be learned In official circles here tonight, the name of Stuyvesant Fish ot New York had not been considered In connection with the United Stales ministership to China. The report published In Shanghai and cabled to this country relative to the prob able appointment of Mr. Fish to fill the vacancy In the Chinese mission was, how ever, read with Interest In this city. found that the smoker and one of the day coaches had rolled over on their sides and that James Krakeskle, a peddler, 21 years old, of New York, had been burled through a window and crushed to death. Mose Wright, the engineer, had stopped his engine as soon as he felt the derailed cars tugging behind him and the engine did not leave the rails. He Jumped from hla cab with a torch and found the wrecked cars In darkness. H. Schlemler of New York, the fire man, distinguished himself by dashing ahead with a red lantern and stopped an express from New York, which was due on the northbound track, on to which the wrecked train had partly fallen. The smoker and the day coach were the only cars which overturned. The Pull mans, Including the "Idle Hour," left the rails and ploughed deep furrows In the roadbed, but the weight kept them balanced. From the Pittsburg1 IMopatoh. TRIBUTE PAID MR. GOMPERS Ten Thousand Union Men in Line in Washington . Parade. COURT DECIDES HIS CASE SOON Opinion In Contempt Proceedings, Expected at Capital 1'neaday, Means Much to Labor Leader and Following;. (From a Staff Correspondent ) WASHINGTON. Oct. 17. (Special.) The reception and parade accorded Samuel Gompers, president of the American Feder ation of Labor, by the craftsmen of Wash ington on Monday evening was Significant not only In the numbers participating In the street demonstration, but In the en thusiasm shown Mr. Gompers at the re ception In Convention -hall. Washington has never seen a larger outpouring of union labor than on this occasion. All the trades were represented and some of the skilled artisans' organizations had hundreds of workers in line. The Plate Printers' urlon, particularly those connected with the bureau of printing and engraving, was as fine a body of men as one might wish to see. That which ' struck' the spectator most was the orderly d aracter of the pro cession. Ten thousand men In. line Is an army, and ' as these Tirade drganlmitlons marched steadily to' the music of many bands the demonstration wes impressive. ; Samuel Compere, an "English Jew, has had a very remarkable career. From the earliest days when he was learning his trade as a clgarmaker he was preaching the gospel of unionism and since his eleva tion to the head of an organization that numbers two millions he has emphasized with voice and pen the demands of union ItCbor. Gompers has been unmercifully flayed, not only In the public print,' but by the leaders In the commercial world. But he has gone on undismayed, notwithstand ing that he Is facing a jail sentence be cause of his violation of a court order. The circuit court of appeals, it is expected, will on next Tuesday affirm or modify the opinion of Justice Wright of the supreme court of the District of Columbia in sen tencing Gompers to one year's Imprison ment In the district jail for contempt of a court order growing out pf the Bucks stove case. History of Bucks Case. ' The Bucks Stove company of St. Louis, which was put on the unfair list by Samuel Gompers In his paper, the Amerlcun Feder ationlHt, brought suit against Gompers and the paper demanding that thje paper cease publishing the company as unfair. The case was heard on Its merits and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff company. This verdict was sustained by Justice Wright In an elaborate opinion going into the whole subject of the rights of citizens and the limitations to be placed on free speech. An order was Issued by Justice Wright calling upon Sampel Gompers to desist from classing the company as unfair. Gompers paid no attention to the order of the court, but pounded away on the company because of its non-unionism. Jus tice Wright then haled Mr. Gompers be fore him and the order of the court having been completely ignored by the president of the American Federation of I-abor, sentenced Gompers to a year's Imprison ment In the district Jail, that being the maximum sentence in cases of contempt An appeal was taken .to the circuit court, which has had the case under consideration for several months. It is now exptjted that a decision will bo rendered on next Tuesday and should the circuit court affirm the decision of Justice Wright Gompers will go to the supreme court of the United Stales on that clause of the constitution which provides that the freedom of speech shall not be abridged. The case is Interesting because of the prominence of Mr. Gompers and the organ ization which he represents. What effect It will have upon the forces ot union labor should Gompers have to go to Jail is prob lematical. The enthusiasts in the ranks of union labor and some of the firebrands of the organization see dire consciences ahead if the "Grand Old Man," as they call Gompers, is compelled to serve a term In Jail for violation of a court order which is held by Gompers' attorneys as savoring of czartsm. Climate and Cheese Blaklasjv In a recent bulltln Issued by the bureau of animal Industry, Department of Agri culture, it is admitted, practically, that climatic conditions in the various portions of the United States where efforts have been made to manufacture that delicious, If somewhat odoriferous, Camembert cheese, has been a failure. The bureau of animal industry does not confess to abso lute failure successfully to manufacture Camembert, but It amounts to practically a confession of failure. This condition. It appears, la largely due to the fact that cllmatlo conditions are unfavorable during the greater part of the year in most of the regions where factories have been located. It is believed, however, that the cllmatlo (Continued on Second Page.) Convict Killed in Battle with Sheriff's Posse Fugitives from Oregon Penitentiary Are Overcome by Officers After Desperate Running 'Fight. SALEM. Ore., Oct. 17. The battle that began last night between a sheriff's posse of sixty men and three escaped penitentiary convicts was resumed early today with the result that one of the convicts Is dead and another seriously wounded. A third was seriously wounded last night. The dead man Is George Carter, sen tenced from eastern Oregon, for horse stealing. George Duncan waa shot and probably will die. He also was serving a sentence for horsestealing and Is believed to have been Carter's partner. Albert Fer ris Is In a serious condition. He was serv ing a sentence for burglary. The men had not moved any considerable distance before daylight and were soon located, making their way upstream and carrying Duncan on a stretcher. The posse began shooting hitting' almost at the first fire. When the posse closed i.t or the fugitives Carter was dead and the other two were too badly Injured to make any further resistance. Insurgents Take Nicaraguan Town Leade'of Zelaya Forces Slain During Sharp Battle . Preceding Sur render of the City. ' NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 17. A special from Blueflelds, by way of wireless from Colon, says: The town of Chlje.' an important point twenty miles above Nama; Is In the hands of the insurgents. There was sharp firing long before the place was taken. The leader of the Zelaya forces and an opposing officer were both killed. It Is reported that San Carlos, a stratcglo point on Lake Nicaragua,' has been cap tured by Insurgents. Meat Packers: in Big Convention Association .Holds Fourth Annual Conclave in Chicago, with Large Delegations Present. CHICAGO, Oct. 17. The fourth annual convention of the American Meat Pack ers' association will be opened here to morrow. Five hundred delegatea from all parts of the country already have arrived. Seventy-five delegates from Cincinnati headed by Michael Ryan, president ot the association, arrived tonight. Governor De neen will welcome the delegates at the opening ' of the convention tomorrow,' M'CARREN HOLDS HIS OWN New York Politician Keeps Up Game Battle Against Effects of Recent Operation. NEW YORK. Oct. 17. State Senator Patrick H. McCarren's fight against the effects of an operation for appendicitis which he underwent on Wednesday last was reported tonight as progressing favor ably. Callers were not allowed to see the patient today, but Dr. Hughes, who has charge of the case, assured all that the senator's condition was encouraging. He would not say positively that all danger had passed. Revenue Cutter Aground Amid Tempest-Tossed Seas WASHINGTON, Oct. 17. Tempest-tossed off Key West, with decks awash, anchor chains snapping and great waves hurled high In columns all about it, the revenue cutter Forward, caught In the hurricane that swept from Cuba to Florida a week ago, made a great fight for safety, though finally rur ground. An echo of the great storm, the first official recital of how it raged at sea, has reached the Treasury department In a report from Captain F. G. Dodge, the Forward's commander. For ten days, says this report, the barom eter had been above normal, with no Indi cations of a hurricane until 11 o'clock last Sunday night. Suddenly the barometer be gan to fal.l and its descent was rapid. Th wind Increased from a gentle to a moderate breeze, with bard squalls of short dura tion and Intervals ot calm. At S o'clock Sunday mornlrgth barome BOY MINER SUPREME JUDGE Sympathetic Review of Career of Judge Jacob Fawcett. FACED BULLETS WITHOUT FEAR Present Justice of Nebraska II I ah ' Court Early Developed the Qualities that DlstlnauUh Him Today. In the Chicago Tribune of Sunday ap pears an article giving the life history, In narrative form, of Judge Jacob Fawcett of the Nebraska supreme court. It ap pears under the caption, "Boy Miner Climbs to Supreme Bench," and draws the lesson that the discipline and train ing of honest poverty and service in the volunteer army of the '60b has been most valuable in building up character for those who had the nerve to fight against all obstacles. The writer in the Tribune says: Among the lawyers who have achieved distinction either at the bar or on the bench none has acquitted himself with more fidelity to the higher Instincts ot the profession than has Jacob Fawcett of Omaha, now on the supreme bench of Nebraska. In the legal profession, as in all of the avocations of life, there Is a growing de mand tor more common honesty and a growing, belief, that this common honesty la more frequently found in .the' man whose early , life started under , common conditions and among common people. In the early history of Judge Fawcett is an Interesting story, familiar to many of the old timers, especially the old soldiers of Illinois and Wisconsin, showing how the nobler qualities of the grownup man had their starting point In the stanch character and ripening experience of the grownup boy. From Mine to Battlefield. At the age of 14, with his mother dead Jacob Fawcett was working with his father in the lead mines in southwestern Wiscon sin. After each day's work, by the light of the candle, he would pore over the war newa, following with avidity the move ments of the great armies an.t the detailed accounts pf the great battles. His brother, a few years older, re sponded to the first call for volunteers, and all the mofe for this the father and mother less family needed the 14-year-old , boy. But the country needed him, too, as he reasoned It out, and he begged the en rolling officers who were raising a com pany at Hazel1 Green, Wis., to let him go as a drummer boy. Once enlisted, he refused the drum and took his place In the ranks with a musket In Company I, Sixteenth Wisconsin Infantry. At daylight Sundny morning, April 6, 1S62, this Wisconsin regiment fired the shot which opened the great battle of Shiloh, one of the blooilest battles of the war. At sundown of the first day 250 men of the regiment had been killed or wounded, and among the wounded was the boy, Jacob Fawcett On the morning of the j)th, two and a half days after he had been wounded, the doctors found Fawcett lying on some aacks of corn on the deck of a steam boat on the Tennessee river, and the sur geon dressing his wounds learned that it was his 15th birthday. There were weeks of suffering In the hospital; there were four months of painful hobbling about on crutches. It was a time for the boy 15 years old to show a manly patience and a strength of character and self-reliance equal to the courage he had shown In the battle of Shiloh. In due time he re turned to duty, participating In the bat tles and campaigns of his regiment, under General Grant, through the years of '62 and 'C3. Sacceasful Pica for Freedom. Fawcett was a bom lawyer, as suggested at that time by the following Interesting (Continued on Second Page.) ter had dropped from 29.75 to 29.65 ivlthln four hours. Then the Forward headed for Man-'o-War Harbor. The strong gale, with frequent squalls, precluded picking up a mooring buoy and the anchors 'were dropped. Several wheelhouse windows blew In, the wind picked up tiie water and swept it In solid sheets with terrific force. At 10:65 a. m. Sunday, amid a terrific blow from the east-northeast, but In a moderate sea because of the protection of Flemmlng key, the starboard chain parted, and ten minutes later the port chain went also. The Forward's head was hurled around to port and at 11:15 it ran aground. The vessel, saved from damage through the careful handling of Its officers against great odds and hazard of life, only needed the emptying of Its bunkers and elimina tion of other welglita in order to be pulled off from Its soft resting place. Was First Minister to Panama, Also Representative to Argentina. FORMERLY IOWA BUSINESS MAN Engaged in Mercantile Trade at Sioux City in 1832. . HEADED PAN-AMERICAN FAIR Also Represented llarvkeye "late at Columbian Exposition In Chicago Public Life Covered Wide Field of Endeavor. LONDON. Oct. 17. William I. Buchanan of Buffalo, N. Y., former American min ister to the Argentine republic and to Panama, who had been closely Identified with several Important American diplo matic nilf-rlons, met a trngla death last night on a London street. He was dis covered lying on a sidewalk in Park Lane, near the Amerlcun embassy, la a dying condition a few minutes before U o'clock, and was carried to St. George's hospital, a short distance away. He waa dead when the ambulance reached the hospital. The cause of death Is hot known, but It ia supposed that it resulted from heart dis ease or apoplexy. There were no marks of violence on tho body, nor had robbery been committed. The body was placed In the hospital morgue and the police notified. The Iden tity of the dead man was discovered this afternoon through Inquiries sent out by the management of the hotel where Mr. Buchanan was staying. An' Inquest will be held tomorrow. Mr. Buchanan, who had come to Lon don on a mission for the United States government In connection with the Vene zuelan claims, had been here for several weeks. lie previously had visited 'Berlin and Paris. He took up quarters at Clar Idge's hotel, one of the most fashionable In the city, which Is located about half a mile from Park Lane Won Fame In Havrker State. SIOUX CITY, Oct. 17. W. I. Buchanan, who was found dead near the American embassy In London last night, may be said to have got hla start on the road to promi nence In Sioux City. - Coming to thin place In U82. when ha was 29 years old, he engaged In the crockery business. The personality which aftei wards proved such a valuable asset In public life soon won him many friends here. His work with the Corn Palace celebra tion led to Ills appointment by Governor Horace Boles in 1890 one ot two commis sioners of Iowa to the World's Columbian exposition, ut - Chlcano. -iie-. wan .? made chairman tit tho ommltTee '"on agriculture was appointed by Director General Davis as. chief of the department of agriculture of the exposition. The news of Mr. Buchaian'a death comes as a great shock to his hundreds of friends here. Held Many Important Posts. WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.-Nows ot the death of Mr. Buchanan came as a great shock to his many friends in official Washington. Since President Cleveland's last administration,, Mr. Buchanan had Ir regularly, It Is true, but with very short Intervals of Intermission, been connected with tbe Department of State in soma of the most Important diplomatic work that has engaged the attention ot the depart ment and the uniform success that haa attended his undertakings has caused him to be regarded as one of the foremost American diplomatists. He was remarkably successful in the relations with the 'Latin-American peo ples, not only because of his complete mastery of the Spanish language, but also because of his ability to- enter Into the peculiar mental processes of the South and Central American people. Former Sioux City Merchant. Mr. Buchanan was born In Covington, O., September 10, 1863. He went to Sioux City, Ia., when about 29 years old, where he 'entered business as a merchant 8o well did he manage the Corn Palace ex position held In that city that he was called upon to represent hla state at the World's Columbian exposition In Chicago. Mr. Buchanan . was appointed United States minister to the Argentine republlo by President Cleveland In 1894. He de voted himself to extending and Improving American trade with South America gen erally and with the. Argentine republlo especially. Incidentally he negotiated a reciprocity treaty between Argentina and America that gave great promise of mu tual benefit to the business Interests of the two countries, but this treaty failed of ratification by the. United States senate. Mr. Buchanan, as director general, suc cessfully managed the Buffalo Pan-American exposition. First Minister to Panama. Scarcely had hj finished his service as a delegate to the second Pan-American con ference, held in the city of Mexico In 1962, b.fora he was again drafted Into the diplomatic service to become the first United States mlnlrter to Panama, whum. owing to his tact, h was able to adjust many of the difficult Issues that had arisen aa the consequence of the separation of the province of Panama from the parent state of Colombia. Voluntailly relinquishing that post when his work was done, Mr. Buchanan went to S .utli America and later to Europe as rep resentative of large business Concerns. But soon another call came from the State de partment and he went first to the Rio Janeiro conference and then to Venezuela. American concessions and diplomatic busl-. mss generally were in bad shape In that country and Mr. Buchanan succeeded In arranging for a private settlement of tour of the five great American claims against Venezuela and for the reference to The Hague tribunal of the fifth. FIST BLOW CAUSES DEATH IN QUARREL OVER MONEY Edgar Uoodwla of Sashvl Kills Adversary with Blow that Break Man's Keck. NASHVILLE. Tenn., Oct IT. With a flat blow, Edgar Goodwin killed Eugene Wil liams Instantly this afternoon, breaking his nev-k. The men quarreled. It la said, over a dollar. Goodwin was arrested.