Postoffice Inspector Sullivan thinks they arc responsible for the numerous cases of safe-blowing that have occurred in. Col orado^ and. adjoining States -during: the past "several months. - LONG3IONT, Colo., April 12.— Two men dynamited the safe In the postoffice here early this morning, but were surprised by citizens before they could gather much booty. Only two registered letters were secured and these were later recovered from the men . who were captured In a lumber yard near by. The men gave their names as, George Bradley and William Morrison and claim they are from Pueblo.- Officers hero- believe, they may have had something to do with the recent holding up of a restaurant there, when two men patrons of the place wore shot and killed. Noise of Explosion Attracts Atten tion of Citizens and the Cracks- meil Are Captured. BURGLARS TJSE DYNAMITE ON SAFE IN" A POSTOFFICE They . are supposed now to be hiding south of the city near a cemetery and an other big force of police will start on the hunt to-morrow. VANCOUVER, B. C, April 12.— Fred Jones and Clnrk, the desperadoes who es caped from Westminster penitentiary last week and were fired on by the police here yesterday, committed a bold robbery early this morning, which put them in posses sion of a a full supply of firearms and ammunition. The fugitive .convicts broke into Tis dall'i gun store In the center of town. They shattered a pane of glass In the front window and ransacked the premises. The two men secured two bfg Colt's revol vers each and a supply of cartridges. They threw a number of small revolvers Into a corner- and had evidently made a careful selection. .Special Dispatch to The Call. FIVE MEN ARE ACCUSED OF KILLING A NEIGHBOR Investigation Into the Assassination of a Colorado Rancher Leads ta Their Arrest. AKRON, Colo., April ll'.-Five arrests have been made aa a result of the Inves tigation of the Coroner's Jury into the death of Joseph Meenan, who was assas sinated neax his ranch home, fourteen miles from here, on the night of April 3. The verdict of the Coroner's Jury was that Meenan was killed as the result of a con ;piracy between Perry Tuttle, George Tuttlc. Frank Irwin, Elmer Shanks and Clinton E>ansdill, and that the Immediate cause of hie death was four gunshot wour.ds inflicted by one or more of the above-named persons. All the euspects hive been arrested. It developed duHnfi the Inquest that threats had been frequently made against. Meenan's Hie ever since he killed John Irwin on last Christmas day. Oeorgo Tuttle is one of the bc?t known men in this section of the State. Perry Tuttle is his son, and is related to the .Irwin* by marriage. Shanks Is a cousin of the Tuttles and Dansdlll, and Is em ployed by the elder Tuttlc. John Irwin.' whose killing is said to have started a feud, was a son-in-law of George Tuttle. POLITICAL PRISONERS ARE OFFERED LIBERTY Tney Prefer Remaining in Jail to Accepting the Terms Pro posed to Them. <1TY Or MKXICO, April i:.-The peo l ir imprisoned in Monterey for being par tisans of Francisco Reyes, candidate for Governor, have been offered their liberty, cut prefer remaining In prison to accept ing the terms offered them. The friends of Governor Bernardo lieyea say that neither he nor his party responsible for the election troubles, :nd that the Governor was giving due protection to his political opponents, and lhat he is quite blameless for the regret to ble occurrences. OFFICERS HOLD RANCHER PENDING INVESTIGATION Mrs. John Church, Who Mys teriously Disappeared. Believe That He Murdered Mr. and NEWCASTLE, Wyo.; April 12.— Mr. aiyj Mr.«. John Church, formerly of Omaha, Neb., who have been missing from their ranch near Moorcroft, are be lieved to have been murdered. A reward for information of their -whereabouts has been offered by the county officials. W. C. Clifton, with whom it Is alleged the Churches had a quarrel, has been arrest ed, charged with their murder^' Russian Strikers Fight Police. ST. PETERSBURG, April 12.-Strikes have broken out at the Morhine Shoe Works of the Russo- American Rubber Company here and bloody encounters have taken nlace between the strikers and the police. The Czar'B advisers are en deavoring to dissuade him from taking Ms intended journey to Italy Tor fear of *narch!£ts. - -^ - — _1;;, MASKED HIGHWAYMEN HOLD UP A STREETCAR Chicago Desperadoes Rob Passengers of Their Valuables and Make Their Escape. CHICAGO, April 12.— Three masked men held up a streetcar near Garfield Park in this city at an early hour to-day and robbed seven passengers, the conductor and motorman of about $100, a gold watch and eome Jewelry. Tho highwaymen boarded the car near Sacramento avenue. One kept guard on tho front platform and one on the rear, while the third en tered the car and at the point of a-re volver forced the occupants to give up their valuables. Tho only woman on tho car fell on her knees, praying for mercy. The matter was not reported to the polico for several hours and no clow 'has been found to what Is the boldest holdup of tho kind In this city since October, 1S95. UNION PACIFIC TRAIN ESCAPES DESTRUCTION Passes Through Aspen Tunnel Few Minutes Before a Big Land slide Occurs. SALT LAKE, Utah. April 12.— A special to tho Herald from Evanston, Wyo., says that a landslide occurred at tho east end of the Aspen tunnel late to-day, burying the Union Pacific tracks eighteen or twenty feet for a distance of 200 or COO feet and badly caving in the end of tho tunnel. It is thought the tracks cannot be cleared for at least twenty-four hours. No one was killed in the slide as far as known. The cast-bound passenger train had just passed through the tunnel when tho slide. came down the mountain,' Just missinff the train, .___ A letter also has been received from Former Under Sheriff Bowers of this county, now at Manvel, in which he de clares he saw the fugitive passing vmhm ten feet of him. and recognized him posi tively, although the latter gave no sign of recognition. Bowers Is well acquainted with McKinney. It is now probable that Sheriff Collins and his posse will . return to BakerstieW and endeavor to make White- River in time to meet the outlaw at that point, as there Is nothing more to De clone at Randsburg. Sheriff Lovin of Mojave County. Ariz., and posse are believed 1 to be at Randsburg with him and will no doubt go to the White River country. Sheriff Kelly -notified them by wire of the battle with the outlaw to-night. The posse from Inyo County, sent out by Sheriff C. A. Collins, brother of the Tulare Sheriff, was last reported to be In the Granite Wells country, 'on the i>or ders of Inyo, Kern and San Bernardino counties, 'where there was at first some fear that the outlaw might turn in an effort to reach Southern Nevada. Thia danger is now considered past and all ef forts will be turned to the attempt to In tercept the murderer at White River or around Porterville and Viaalia. The lat ter will doubtless secure provisions and fresh mounts at Glonnvllle. where ne has many friends. Should he be wounded una unable to proceed there are many who will no doubt protect him there. by rail, which it ia not believed for an instant he would attempt to do, being too ¦well known. The officer!*, however, have not believed the story and have contmueo. to act on the first theory. ROME. April 12.— Easter Sunday here vrc.3 marked by magnificent weather. A private mass was held at the Vatican with a few selected guests. The Pontiff was present, but for the first time in his pontificate he did not officiate personally. This, circumstance has given rise to all kinds of rumors respecting Pope Leo's health. He, however, was well enough to receive a large number of Hungarian pilgrims. PRIVATE EASTER MASS CELEBRATED AT VATICAN" Desperate Fugitive Convicts Prepare * for Battle. GAIN WEAPONS BY A ROBBERY TO DEFY LAW The officers at Kernvllle are positive of the identity of the man they met and it was McKinney, whom bpth know well. This should set at rest all doubts as to tho Identity of tho Kingman murderer with that of the Porterville outlaw, which many acquaintances of the latter profess to doubt, notwithstanding tho positive* identification of him by # others. A.sport ing man of this city has a letter p-arjH>rt ins to have been received from the out law, dated and sent from Ilermoslllo, Mexico, on March 27, four days before the Kingman murder. If .that be. true it would be impossible for him to have maae the trip to Kingman in that time except OFFICERS ARE SURE. , A message to ; night from Randsburg says that Sheriff Collins of VIsalia and Deputy Sheriff Gus Tower of Bakersfleld returned there this afternoon. Tho re mainder of the posso Is still at tho boras works at Searlcs. where Collins and Tower had expected to return to-morrow, but the latest news is likely to change their plans. The news was Immediately brought to Kernvllle, telephoned to Callente and from' there wired to Bakersfleld. Sheriff. Kelly received a confirmation in an of ficial report by telephone from the depu ties at Kernvllle." Details are difficult to get, as all messages have to be tele phoned by a private line to Callente and relayed by others to BakersHeld. There are no officers at Glennvllle or In Linns Valley, but Sheriff Kelly has wired to Vlsalla, to have a posse sent out to way lay Mckinney. at White River Station, at tho border of Kern and Tulare counties. If the outlaw is wounded, as believed, he can hardly hope to escape. McKInney. seeing the trap, put spurs to his horse and dashed off at full speed, firing several shots at the officers as he went. None of the latter took effect, and the deputies were soon hot on the trial, which lay straight for the Green Horn Mountains, which rahgo runs northeast and southwest and separates this por tion of the county from Lima Valley and Glennvllle. Although his mount was jaded and worn, McKInney had a good start on the officers, and the country, with its rough formation, favored him. Neverthe less, he would probably have been over taken but for the heavy brush. Into which he turned, and was lost to sight. The of ficers beat the brush for some time and ncouted the country 6ver without buwecsa. They are x»f the opinion that the murderer was wounded in the fight. nevertheless, within range of their rifles, and. they fired on him without parley or preliminaries. There was no thought of attempting to take him alive, but it was a cape of kill or to be killed. From the start it has been an open secret that the intention of every officer Is to show no quarter and to kill tho murderer at the ilrst opportunity. OUTLAW RIDES HARD. MURDERER OF . : SEVERAL MEN WHO IS BEING HUNTED BY POSSES IN THE KPIRNVILLE DISTRICT AXD WHO IS REPORTED TO HAVE BEEN WOUNDED BY OFFICERS. „ , The police are looking for several peotn who scattered after the bloody affray ami who are supposed to have taken a promi nent part In It. Tho christening took place Saturday night. Mexican liquor flowed, and In the early hours of Sunday tha usual melee ensued "-¦ --» I.OS ANGEIXS. April 12.— There wax a battle royal early this morning as a wind up of a peon christening at Boxcar Town In the stockyards of the Southern PaclUc. Teofllo Marmalejo lies at the County Hos pital at the point of death, Louis So to is at the Receiving Hospital with four cut3 in the head and one in the groin and >'•- lipe Robles, who has a fierce jab In the left arm. Is detained as a prisoner at the FIGHT AT CHRISTENUTG MAY CAUSE ONE DEATH Peons at Los Angeles Have a Cel ebration and Three Are Wounded. AMSTERDAM. April 12.— The strike ha<» collapsed. The aged Socialist leader, Domela Nieuvenhuis. who emerged from his retirement In order to conduct the strike agitation, m« present at a stormy meeting of the labor organization, which sat during the whole of last night anil until half-past S o'clock this morning. He proposed to terminate the agitation, since the cause of labor had been betrayed. Th*, meeting acaulesced in this view and de cided not to elect a new strike commit tee. A similar decision was reached at a recent meeting at Rotterdam. Employes of tho Transportation Com panies Give Up the Struggle. STRIKE OF THE DUTCH luABOR TTNIONS FAILS CHICAGO. April 12.— The movement against tho sort of drama that drives the Irish to violence was given an entirely new direction here to-night. The members of the same organization that is ensagei! in the crusade against the green whl3k^r typo of Irish comedian sent to the per formance at McVicker's Theater largi delegations who led the applause. The enthusiastic concerted approval for what was deemed a worthy Irish dramatU: representation was intended aa a fitting public contrast to the demonstration of the Irish descent against the caricatures of that nationality on thfi stace. A* revival of "Arrah-na-Posue" by An drew Mack was the play which met with such a hearty reception. It was given by a strong company with a mounting that compared favorably with the most elaborate productions of the present the atrical season and the success was com plete. The production Is part of tho gen eral plan to present on a welcotno scala the best plays of similar character tn a manner fitted to the highest requirements of modern stagecraft. Irish-Americans Crowd Theater in Chicago and Enthusiastically Approve the Play. "ARBAH-NA-POCrTJE" MEETS WITH HEARTY RECEPTION Encouraged by the hope of securing a State reward and the reward' offered by Wclls-Fargo, several parties of man hunters spent the greater part of the day In the woods looking for the . bandit. Thacker will probably prepare plans for a more active search. Walker's return'ia anxiously awaited.' Sheriff Walker left alono at daylight this morning for the Clear Creek district In the Kouthern portion of the county. The Indications are (hat he has a good idea of where the bandit is located. Detective Thacker of the Wells-Fargo Company ar rived here this morning and during the day has been closeted with Deputy Sheriff Waters and Joseph Downey. Downey, the driver of the stage, arrived here this afternoon from North San Juan. He stated that he would tie able to recog nize the robber if he saw him again.' Sus picion lsnow centered on a man .who was seen around Nevada City on several oc casions. - lie was observed within half a mile of the place of the crime half an hour before the robbery. ' " NEVADA CITY, : April 12.-Xolwlth standing the fact that in all portions of the county officers have been hunting the highwayman who robbed the Downieville stage three miles from Navada City yes terday, no trace of the fugitive has been found, but the Sheriff is said to be in pos session ot information that may lead to the outlaw's capture very soon. Dow ni e vil Ie ? s S t ag fr Robber May Soon Be Captured. VIKNNA. April 12.- A dispatch io the SCca Frcie P' essc from Belgrade says that the Turkish peace committee, which, I; is reported, has been well received in two or thrtc towns, has been warned not to go Into Djakova, which is the center of Albanian resistance. Sadlk Pasha, ii'-ad of the committee, inquired whether the members might safely go to Djakova, £t:d received the following reply: "Come not, fcr if ye come it will h* dune to you as it was to Mehcmed All 1-i.Eha.' Schemed Ali was en exalted Turkish official, who was sent to Djkova in 1S7S V3 persuade the Albanians to cede a small c'istrict to Montenegro In accordance with the Berlin treaty. The house he occu pted was burc.d over his head and he was murdered. - . . Waru Turkish Peace Coirinxittee Not to Go to Djakova. AL3ASTAHT3 MlVKE THSEATS. BANDIT FLEES THROUGH WOODS FROM SHERIFF This afternoon the lion waa In a par ticularly savage mood. Katool entered the cage safely enough and for a few sec onds kept the brute away with a whip. But just as tho door was opened for him to spring out the animal leaped upon, him with a vicious roar. . Pandemonium reigned for a few minutes, -women screaming at the top of their voices an<2 every ono in the tent making a rush to the door for fear of the liana posslbta es cape from the cage. The tamer remained remarkably calm. H« struck Wallace, several blows with tho whip until tho animal retreated to Ifj corner. Then he sprang outside, covered with blood from his many' wounda. There was a long, deep gash on the- sid*> of hl'i fae«,.£OTiinencims. within, an eighth of a.M iijCfc "QfTthaMeVer* Tnero was also a big cut in his left sidVand a iflsep laceration on the left Us. ¦ His left arm was torn nearly half in two by th« animal's teeth. Katool was carried to a coznfortablo place and a phj-sician was summoned. Un less blood poisoning se^s in h© will recov er from hts injuries. Last week Wallae.s severely Injured Millie Warda, Katool's wife, who alternates with him In entering the cage. The accident occurred during a perform ance of the wild animal show. The tent was crowded, probably 200 people, mostly women and children, being present. Wal lace has a record of killing nine men, and Katool's appearance insldo tho cags at every performance has been one of the; features of tha show. FRESNO, April 12.-Joe Katool, the wild animal tamer In the employ of itho South ern Carnival Company, waa caught in a cage this afternoon by Wallace, th« un tamable lion, and fearfully lacerated by the savage beast. Special Dispatch ts Tha Ca'.L Officials high and low in the depart ment are anxiously awaiting the return of ¦ Postmaster General Payne from his Southern pleasure trip with Secretary- Moody. Payne probably will be at his desk on the 15th, and the first official act will be to look over the catalogue of scandal and familiarize himself with the work that Is being done to make the de partment's houseelenning a thorough one. Machen to-day denied thr> buggy charge absolutely. He had previously asserted that he had absolutely no connection with the alleged mail box scandals. supplied l fhis" company qs to the estab- < lishment of routes enabled it to defy com- i petition In this particular trade, will be investigated in their spare moments by several inspectors who are workinc on various details of the scandals, indicating the existence of rings, combinations deals, grafts, games and syndicates. The buggy case is distinct from, the mail box charges only In the difference between buggies and mail boxes. The charges in both cases are the same— that the favored companies obtained inside in formation which enabled them to get on the ground where rural routes were about to be established and sell their wares be fore rival companies in the same line of business had a chance to enter Into com petition. The charges filed yesterday that Super intendent Mach?n of the Fr*w Delivery division was In collusion with a buj?gy company which sold, turnouts, to rural WASHINGTON, April 12.— This being Sunday, no new subjects for investigation were added to the PostofScc Department catalogue of scandals. As the case stands now, the investigation of the department, so far as the New York Post office end of the ease is con cerned, will be most searching and thorough. While the charges before the denartment set forth that poatofflces in a!! parts of the country were concerned In the extensive system of the promotion syndicate, its operations are said to -have been most extensive in the New York Postofilce and the initial investigation will be made th^re. Each separate case of the 1776 promotions authorized will be carefully inquired into and the clerk pro moted will be questioned in order to dis cover any violations of the merit system rule, which, it is claimed, has been ren dered inoperative so far as the New York office is concerned by the operations of the syndicate. A rumor was afloat to-night, to the ef fect that so\-f>rf>l arrests might be made within a day or two. the persons to be ftpprehendeu bring high officials in the I'ostofflce Department. Special Dispatch to Th» Call The two Lopez boys, accompanied by a number of their friends and a Mascican called "Indian," wh? is supposed to have fired the shot that wounded Superintend ent Humphrey, started Immediately for tho line and are doubtless in Mexican ter ritory and among friendp, where it will b*; difficult to capture them. It Is doubtea by some if the shooting of Santiago Lopez was accidental. The mines at Picacho arc owned by a corporation, of which Senator Pettigrew of South Dakota Is the principal stock holder. He had 'associated with him at one time Senator Dorsey and Senator Morgan, but it is yaid that they sold out of the company some time ago. The mines are located some four or five miles from the river. The only saloon in the place is owned by Horan and Is near the mill. Erodnax did some lively moving and on the r.oon train left fcr the pcane of the trouble with Deputy Wjlliam Trotter. They were «.ccompnnled by Coroner A. Mor gan and Deputy District Attorney W. R. Andrews. They will not reach Yuma un til to-morrow afternoon and will then have to drive to Picacho, ?ome distance up the Colorado River and on the Cali fornia side. "YU1IA. Ariz., April 1*.— Thomas Broadnax, Sheriff. San Diego, Cal.: Riot here. My deputy, Burke, killed. Others phot and trouble arising. Come a{ once. Riot was at the mines. "W. H. HORAK." Sheriff Broadnax learned of the riot through a telegram received this after noon as fcllowB: Burke was born in Tuma and had been known and feared. At different times he had been Deputy Sheriff, Constable and City Marshal, and at one time was Con stable at Hedges. Cal. He had killed eight men during the last twelve years, all or nearly all without provocation, and his taking off is not mourned in the section of the country in which he is known. OFFICERS SUMMONED. Thirty guns were out immediately and thirty men were trying to get a shot at IJurkc. Superintendent Humphrey, who tried to intercede, received a painful but nut serious wound through the fleshy part of the thigh. Another Lopez, who was a chum cf Burkc's victim, but no relation, though of the same name, ran up to Burke from behind and. throwing his gun down on him. shot him through the head from behind, the ball coming out through the center of the forehead, killing him in stantly. In the meantime Constable Ho ran did everything In his power to protect his prisoner, emptying his pistol over the heads of the frenzied mob, but without avail. Lopez fired, the ball taking effect in 1-urke's righfc shoulder. Burko jumped frcm the wagon, fhouting and crying apain and again: "For God's sake, don't murder me'." "For God's sake, don't kill meT' nillito .Lopez, a brother of the young inon ¦whom llurkc had killed, stepped for ward frppo, I'rfa and the Gulf of Alexan dretta. The Gf rmans o.btained the conce« •iens for the line and, according to a dis patch from Constantinople on February L\ the Turkish Government guarantres en income of $2200 per kilometer and an an j:uai contribution of tWO per kilometer, to l>r used i:i the payment of working c.v j.cnses for the first portion of the line 1mm Kor.ta to Bagdad. The convention between the Turkish Government and the Germans was thfn awaiting the issue of i.ri irr«<3e to become effective. LONDON, April 1C. — Tlie Standard learns fhat ?n agrrcmcr.t has been con cluded ¦whereby Great Britain, France «:.«! Germany will participate equally in tlse ccntrol of the proposed Bagdad Rail ioad, the revenues of which will be guar anteed by the Turkish custom?. Blows of a Whip Prevent the Animal Killing Its Keeper. Wholesale Violations of the Merit System May Be 'Revealed. Authorities at County Seat Hasten to the Scene of Conflict. Czar's Government Is Shut Out of a Far East Enterprise, s England, Germany and France to Share Control. Wallace, a Ferocious Beast, Tears the Man's Flesh. Constable Sends an Ap peal From Eastern San Diego. Each Promoted Clerk in New York to Be Questioned. Two Men Lose Life in a Fight at Picaeho. Porte Closes Bar gain for Bagdad Railroad. Employe at Fresno Has a Narrow Escape. The light was at Fugrett's ranch on the river, near whore the stream comes through -the mountains. Here R. W. Me • Cracken and "Warren Rankin, deputies of Sheriff Kelly, were lying In wait for Mc- KInney, his arrival being hourly ex pected. Both are tried officers. "When the fugitive came in sight they drew a line on him and waited in their hiding place for a shot, as he was compelled to take this road to set by on his journey. The hunted man, however, -was cautious and on the lookout for an ambush. He approached carefully and the officers were seen before he got close. He was, .;..- south fork of the Kern River, six miles from Kernvlller and escaped. At that hour the murderer came down the ban.k of the stream on horseback. Ho was headed toward the northwest, in the direction of Linns Valley and Porterville, and had evidently come direct from the vicinity of Randsburjr. rfT\i AKERSFIELD. April 12.— Outlaw f%*$ James McKInney had his first Sf^% hruah with officers of the law " ¦ this afternoon at 4 o'clock on the Special Dispatch to The Call. Postoffice Inquiry Is Nearing a Crisis. TURK DEALS HARD BLOW TO RUSSIA ANGRY LION SEEKS LIFE OF A TAMER MINERS RIOT AND BULLETS SPEED DEATH MEN IN HIGH STATION MAY BE ARRESTED PRICE FIVE CENTS. SAN FRANCISCO, MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1903. VOLUME XCIII— NO. 134. The San Francisco Call. Murderer Nearly Stumbles Into a Trap on the South Fork of the IQern River, and After Firing Shots at Deputies in Ambush Gallops to the Mountains OFFICERS WOUND M'KINNEY BUT THE OUTLAW ESCAPES