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The Saint Paul globe. (St. Paul, Minn.) 1896-1905, November 23, 1899, Image 1

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VOL. XXII.— NO. 327.
ALARM L\ NATAL
11. 1. REPORTS EMANATING FROM
BRITISH SOIRCES SHOW THAT
IT EXISTS
SOME niJHTHfi AT IHOOI RIVER
REPORTS OF SKIRMISHES THERE
ARE CONFIRMED BY STATE
MEXTS OF CASUALTIES
SEN. JOTJBERTS BOLD PLAN
[iitt-tidn to Attempt Defeat of Brit
ish Relieving Column From Dur
ban in Detail, While Con? .iilnß
Reduction of LaU> xmlth — Britons
1 ne jim > as to Condition of Gen.
Hildyard'* Beleaguered Force*.
%
DURBAN, Nov. 22 (.10 p. m.">.— Owing
to the proximity of the Boers to Pieter
aru litzburg it has been necessary tc alter
:he defense of Durban. Estcourt is still
lilent.
All accounts point conclusively t<> a de
termined rush of the Boers towards Pie
trrrnarltzburg with a very large force.
Several thousand men with guns are re
ported twenty-five miles from Howick.
They are said to be .inder the personal
coii'mand of Gen. Joubert.
Todays engagement at Mool river
found Uie British almost wholly on the
defensive. A correspondent of the Natal
Adviser says the Boer shells fell' within
a short distance of the British troops; |
that the shells did little damage; that
the shelling continued all day, at inter
vals of three to five minutes.
According to this advice the Boers are
advancing rapidly and under cover where
possible. The British artillery was in po
sition behind the hotel where Gen. Bar
ton and his staff are being accommo
dated.
Maj. Thornycroft's mounted artillery
moved along a ridge to the enemy's left
funk. The Devonshire regiment and the
Royal Welsh fusileers occupied the
trenches. There was but little firing,
the correspondent Bays, but the enemy
possessed at least one Howitzer, with a
range of five miles, and several six
pounders.
Prince Christian has been appointed to
the staff of Gen. Percy Scott, the Durban
commander.
ALARM IN NATAL.
LONDON. Nov. 23.— Although it
Is evident that the situation
In Natal is again becoming su'fi-'
ciently alarming, nothing can be officially
ascertained to allay pub.ic anxiety or the
curiosity felt regarding the disposl.ion of
reinforcements recently landed at Dur
ban. The war office dispatches are con- j
fined to a mere recital of a few casualties ]
at Mooi river, which confirm the reports |
cf skirmishes there, but give no details as
to how the engagements happened. Sps
cial correspondents are only permitted to |
describe Maj. Barton's camp at Mooi
river vaguely as "large," or "ample."
One correspondent says that 7.000 Boers
are within twenty-five miles of Uowick
Falls, near Pietermaritzburg, and that
the inhabitants are fleeing to the capital.
Evidently a considerable fores of the en
emy is now within thirty or forty mi es
of Pietermaritzburg. but it is officially
announced from there that no anxiety
prevails, the garrison numbering 1,000
men. with six guns.
Gen. Joubsn's plan, apparently, is a
daring attempt to defear the British re
lieving column from Durban in detail,
while still attempting the reduction of
Ladysmith. A serious attack on Mo >I
river camp is now hourly expected, with
the object of destroying the bridge at
Weston, Should this b? accomplished the
Boers would b.- free to turn their atten
tion again to Estcourt, while, if it failed,
the enemy would retire again on Weenen
or rejoin vh.~ investing forces around Lh
dysmith.
The Boer report that Gen. Hildyard's
messenger, asking Gen. White for as
sistance, was captured causes some un
easiness, but It Is argued that if Gen
Hlldyard had not bf>en strong enough to
hold out he would some time ago have
been obliged to retire on Pieterrharitz
bnrg. Therefore, small credence is given
the- story.
Nothing is known regarding the food
supplies of the garrisons thus isolated
It '.s believed Estcourt is well provided
but there is less confidence In the case of
Mool river.
There I? no further news from the west
ern frontier except the list of casualty.
It is announced frnm Paris that Coi de
ViHeboia Mareuil, a French officer has
accepted the post of chief of staff to
Gen. Joubert. In succession to Col
Sf-hiele, the general officer who was
v.ounded and taken prisoner at Eland*
lacgte. From the same source It is re
ported that two Russian officers Lieut
Col. Gonetski, of the guards, and Gen'
Seltse, of another crack Russian regi
ment, have resigned and are going to
join the Boers.
A dispatch tc the Daily News from Not
tingham Road, Natal, dated Tuesday.
bi ys the Boers have arrived near there.
RELIEF OF KIMBERLEY.
The Daily Mail publishes a dispatch
from Nauuwpoort. dated Wednesday
which says that a large force under Gan
Metheun has creased the Orange river
and is advancing to the relief of Kimb-r
--ley.
The- Pally Mail says this morning:
"We are able to confirm the report that
orders i hare been issued to mobilize a
fixth division at Aldershot for service in
SouOj Africa, or wherever it may be
wanted."
The Morning Post's correspondent at
Pi. terniaritzburar telegraphing Tue«dav
evening says:
"The Boers arc now all around Mooi
Ki\-cr station, where anotfier of your cor
respondents is reported tc be with the
tl'eops.
LOOTING THE FARMSTEADS.
The Daily News has the following from
Pietermaritzburs-, under Wednesdav'a
date:
"Vuur correspondent managed to escape
from the Mooi River district yesterday
before the arrival of 6,000 Boers, who ar«
looting- the farmsteads in all directions"
The native Boers, encouraged by the suc
cess <>f the Transvaai^rs, join in the loot
ing. Th-? main body of Boers made a
rapid march from Ulundi, southwest of
IJetcnurt. to a point near Fort Notting
ham, south of the railway, in a single
day. Th-3y are within forty miles of
Plctermaritsburg, at the farthest, and it
is said that they intend to attack the
town."
FUTURE OF FREE STATE.
LONDON. Nov. 22. -Sir Charles Dilke
M. P. for the Forest of Dean division of
Gloucestershire, speaking at Chelsea this
evening said:
"When the British forces enter Bloem
fcnteia some declaration regarding the
fty %l i*ml fbk
future will have to be made. If the peace
to be offered la one In which Cape Colony
can concur, the Free State government
will abandon the violent element in the
Transvaal forces.
"The settlement. In order to pacify
South Africa, as Canada has been paci
necl, must be a settlement in which the
constitutional position of Cape Colony
and Natal must play the leading part.
The big guns and forts must be got rid
cf. 1 "
BRITISH SORTIE CHECKED.
PRETORIA, Nov. 21.— The following
dispatch has been received from Boer
headquarters near Ladysmith:
"The field cornets of the Pretoria com.
mando reported that British gun car
riages and some horsemen had been heard
moving last night at Ladysmith. Our
outposts observed the British endeavor
ing to sortie towards Lombard's Kop and
Bulawama hill, where our Maxims opened
fire. The range was too great and, there,
fore, our artillery began shelling, which
drove the British back. About daybreak
the. British batteries fired upon our po
sitions. Two burghers were wounded. It
is supposed that the object of the sortie
was to relieve the Estcourt force, who
had sent an urgent message to Ladysmi-h
requesting aid. The burghers captured
the messenger, but finally allowed him
to proceed."
It is reported that the Natal police have
captured a number of Trarevaal dispatch
riders. In his latest report Gen. Joubert
says:
"I am cutting off the retreat of the
Estcourt troop 3to Pletermaritzburg and
driving them back on the Tugela river."
It is reported that the B^er commander
with the forces near Ladys-nith "compre
hensively surveyed the different points
from which the fall of Ladysmith can be
Insured."
WAR CASI'ALTIES.
The official returns of the casualties of
the Transvaal since the outbreak of the
war phow that ninety men have been
killed and 200 wounded, of whom'a num
ber have recovered and returned to the
front.
Newspaper reports from Cape Colony
Ray a general rising of th? Dutch farmer's
1< imminent in Xatal. and that the co'o
nial Boers in those districts which have
proclainu-d republican territory have al
ready joined the Boer forces.
Gen. Snyman, who is outside of Mafe
klng 1 , reports heavy firing Monday after
noon.
REOCCTPATION OF NAUUWPOORT
CAPE TOWN, Nov. 21.-On Sunday
I,COO men. sent by train from De Aar
reoccupiod Nauuwpoort. Soon after this
an attempt was made by disloyal Dutch
to destroy a bridge three miles In their
rear, but it was frustrated, and the dam
age was repaired.
Another naval contingent from the bat
tles-hlp Monarch and cruiser Dorch has
left Simons Town for the front.
FREE STATE BURGHERS.
DURBAN, Nov. 22,-About £.000 Free
Stale burghers, with gun«, are marching
from the west by way of Fort Notting
ham. °
The Boers opened fire with artillery on
Mool river camp from the north but
without casualties to the British.
JOHN HAYS HAMMOND.
NEW YORK, Nov. 22. - John Hays
Hammond, who became prominent dur
ing the Jameson raid in the Transvaal,
and is well known from the responsible
position he holds in connection with min
ing enterprises in various parts of the
f world, arrived here on the White Star
j steamship Teutonic with his wife today.
i Mr. Hammond expressed himself as very
grateful for the kind interest shown by
! his countrymen in all parts of America
during his troubles in South Africa at !
the time of the Johannesburg revolution.
Mr. Hammond was in the best of health! j
He said he was very glad to get back to
New York.
AMERICAN WOMAN'S PLIGHT.
HENDERSON, Xy. Nov. 22. - Mrs. '
Nancy Huston Banks, formerly of this ■
city, the essayist and novelist, is at pres
ent the guest of Cecil Rhodes, in the be
leaguered city of Kimberley, South Af- I
rica. She is there a.* the correspondent
of a London paper, and is in company
With Miss Amalie Kussner, of New York. |
All of these persons are on starvation j
rations. Mrs. Bank? succeeded in getting ;
the only message out of Kimberley. Her I
father, Judge George Huston, of Mor-
Kanfield, is en route to Washington, D.
j <'•• lo h# y e the department tcke steps
for his daughter's safety. Mrs. Banks,
in 1893, was one of the prominent mem
bers of the world's fair board of lady
ocmmlssloners. She is quite a talented
woman, and is the author of a number
of books.
MR. MACRUM AND THE BOERS.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 22.— United States
Consul Mac-rum, at Pretoria, has asked
j the state department for leave of ab
sence with permission to take advantage
of It at once. He pleads domestic rea- I
sons for leaving his post. «nd offers to I
place in the consulate as the representa-
I tlve of the United State Vice Consul
Attelbury, who is on the ground. The
department, however, refused to accede
to the request, and Mr. Macrum wilf
stay where he Is unless he sees fit to
quit his post without permission. It is
learned that so far Mr. Macrum has not
j been prohibited by the Boer government
; from caring for the welfare of the- Brit
ish subjects now in the Transvaal and
I the Free State, or, at least he has not I
!so notified the state department. There
; has been some friction encountered in
! the efforts of the Britlsh>governrnent to
secure permission fur the United States
consul to disburse funds for the benefit
of the Fritish soldiers held as prisoners
of war.
FOR RELIEF OF BOERS.
NEW YORK. Nov. 22.— A company, with
John V. Pruyn, of Albany, as chairman,
was originated in this cliy today to as
sist Red Cross work in the South African
republics, especially within the Boer lin P s.
The committee is in no way allied with
the American Red Cross society. The or
ganization was brought about on the sug
gestion of an Englishman who made
j known the poor facilities of the Boers
for caring for their sick, wounded and
! dead. If sufficient funds are sent to the
committee, the families of the Boer dead
I and wounded will be assisted. It is the
intention of the committee to send all
the money to the Netherlands Red
Cross, which is in the field and needs all
the assistance It can get.
-^b-
QUIET RESTORED.
Xo Fear of Further Trouble at Rio
Grande City.
AUSTIN. Tex., Nov. 22.-Ther c are no
new developments anent the race trouble
at Rio Grande City between the federal
negro soldiers and the population of 'hat
town. Early this morning Gov. Sayers
received a telegram from the sheriff at
Rio Grande City stating that everything
was quiet there.
Secretary of War Root telegraphed that
he had sent eVperienoed officers to the
scene of the trouble to make a thorough
and proper ifvesTigatlon, and pending
their report he trusted the people would
remain quiet.
The population of Rio Grande City is
rargely Mexican, and it is believed that
bad blood has existed betwepn them and
the negro soldiers for some time.
Pending a fujl and complete report
from the state adjutant general- and war
officers nothing further will be done In
the matter by Gov. Sayers. He expects
the report from the adjutant general
soon.
THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 23, 1899.
HONOR A PRELATE
PROMINENT CITIZENS ATTEND THE
COMMERCIAL. CLUB RECEPTION
TO ARCHBISHOP IRELAND
those knowing him best
JOIN IN TRIBUTE TO HIS WORTH
AS A CHRISTIAN AND A
CITIZEN
LAEGE NTJMBES ARE PRESENT
Speeches by Mayor Klefer,- Bishop
Gilbert. President Hamlin, Jndge
Flandran and M. I). Mann— The
Archbishop* Re-Mponne— The Af
fair One of the Mont Suceen*ful In
the History of the (lab.
The reception tendered to Archbishop
Ireland last evening by the Commercial
club was one of the most elaborate and
pleasant occasions in the history of the
organization. Fully four hundred of the
most prominent citizens of St. Paul, irre
spective of creed, Joined in paying tribute
to the qualities of citizenship displayed
by the Catholic archbishop.
The billiard room was transformed for
the occasion Into a conservatory, with
hundreds of palms and potted plants,
among which was concealed a stringed
orchestra, which played during the re
ception. The guests entered through the
billiard room, where they were met by the
members of the reception committee,
composed of Isaac Lederer, Jesse A.
Gregg, George E. Hallberg, A. G. Johr
son, C. P. Stlne, John Caulfleld, Rudolph
Schiffmann, F. H. Sabin, B. F. Knauft,
F. S. Fugate, Rufus A. Hoyt, L. A. Gui
terman, A. G. Gallisch, Theodore F.
Smith, John F. Kelly and F. W. Berg
meier, and escorted into the main parlor,
elaborately decorated with bunting in the
national colors, where the reception was
held.
Standing beside Archbishop Ireland dur
ing the reception were President Conde
Hamlin, of the Commercial club; former
Gov. Alexander Ramsey, Senator Davis,
Mayor Klefer, Bishop M. N. Gilbert,
Judge Flandrau and Judge Sanborn.
Among those who extended a welcome to
the guest of tne evening were:
SOME OF THOSE PRESENT.
A. F. McCallum, Z. H. Austin, L. L.
May, Prof Lewis, H. J. Hadlich, As
sistant Postmaster Patrick O Brien,
Senator Albert SchaUer, J. H. Allen,
Judge E. W. Bazille, Alfred Dufrese,
former Judge John W. Willis. William
Egan, Simeon P. Chllds, Judge W. L.
Kelly, C. L. Haas, George Reis, E. S.
Chittenden, George F. Gifford, C. C.
Whitney, Prof. Weitbrecht, J. M. Haw
thorne, D. M. Sullivan, T. P. O" Regan,
W. R. Johnson, M. J. Donnelly, A. J.
Smith, Cyrus Northrop, F. L. McGhea,
T. F. Smith, F. N. Van Duzee, Oscar
Claussen, Stephen Conday, Dawson
Moreland, Congressman Fred C. Stevens,
Dr. A. J. Stone, F. M. Whe«ler, D. H.
Murphy, W. J. Bennett, Fred Nuss
baumer, Andrew Marks, F. H. Schlick,
A. Michaud, M. D. Munn, Rev. John T.
Harrison, Rev. J. J. Lawler, Rev. C. J.
Clifford. of 'London, England; Rev.
Thomas J. Gibbons, Rev. A. McNulty,
Alvan Eastman, of St. Cloud; Judge L. C.
Collins, of St. Cloud; Elmer Adams, of
Fergus Falls; H. R. Hardick, E. G.
Kranmer, John H. Schulze, Walter L.
Chapin, Thomas Prednergast, T. B. Neu
hausen, Stan Donnelly, iii. J. Cannon, K.
G. Rogers, W. E. Verity, Herman Oppen
heim, Gen. H. W. Childs. W. B. Dean,
B. H. Schriber, Dr. Charires Bean, J. J.
McCardy, R. P. F. Lyons and Dar F.
Reese.
After the informal exchange of greet
ings President Conde Hainan said:
' The mission of thi Commercial club Is
to further the interests and progress of
St. Paul, und it is weil within its fieid
when it honors the gutsc of the evening.
We "are met to rejoice over the unexpact
ed return of one of St. Paul's most dis
tinguished citizens, where he was an
honored representative at that convention
that is the first step in bringing about an
era when there will be njth.ng but 'Peaca
on earth and good will to man.' We wel
come him not only because he Is a great
i dignitary of a church which has had a
'■ powerful influence in the civilization of
i the world, but because he is a citizen of
! St. Paul and our friend and our neigh
j bor."
Mayor Kiefer extended a welcome on
i behalf of the city government ar.d was
i followed by Judge C. E. Flandrau, who
saiU:
A PLEASANT DUTY.
My Dear Archbishop Ireland Tour fel
i low townsmen have chosen me on ihis
pleasing occasion to tell you w T hat they
think of you. and 1 assure you they
could not have imposed a more agre —
■ able duty upon me. Many of us nay«
known you since you were a boy fre?h.
from Burnchurch. in the famous Irish
county of Kilkenny, and we well knew
your good father before you. We have
watched your career from 'youth to early
manhood, through all the phases of
I student life, priest, soldier, citizen and
| bishop, until you have readied almost the
< highest pinnacle of your profession. We
i have been deeply interested in your early
i struggle with the cure in intemperance,
j and shared with you your triumph over
that evil. We have sympathized with
| you In your efforts to aid the poor set
i tiers on the frontier to find homes. We
I witnessed with pride your departure for
! the front as the spiritual adviser of one
; of our gallant regiments in the Civil war,
i and felt assured that had it been in
, harmony with your priestly uniform,
you would have had a musket on your
1 shoulder, or a sword by your side. We
have been captivated by your eloquence,
and have profited by your wisdom on
, countless occasions. We saw with pride
j your opposition to the introduction of
Cahensleyism into this country, because
it conflicted with our ideas of the best
citizenship, and the highest progress of
our country. We have followed you in
your advocacy of "Americanism" in your
church and have rejoiced in the success
ful outcome of your endeavors in that
line, against the opposition of nearly all
Europe, the result of which has been to
convince the pope in Rome, the Catholics
of France, and the Protestants in Ameri
ca that the Catholic church can exict In
perfect harmony and unity in the most
liberal republic in the world.
Our domestic relations with you as a
fellow cieizen of the state and town
have always been of the most cordial
nature, as we have ever found you on
the side of right, toleration and exalted
patriotism.
The fame of states and cities does not
wholly depend upon bricks and mortar
wealth and culture. These elements form
their corporal bodies. but- citizens of
character, worth and patriotism, with
broad and world embracing ideas, whose
lives are devoted to the well being of
their fellowmen. constitute their souls,
which live forever. I am proud to say
my dear bishop, that it is the general
sentiment of your fellow citizens that the
world-wide fame which Minnesota and
St. Paul enjoy is largely the result of the
possession by you of so great a share ef
these enviable attributes, and your *ren
eroug exertion of them in the cause of
liberty, toleration and righteousness.
At the conclusion of Judge Flandrau's
address Bishop •M. N. GllUert was in
troduced. He Bald In part:
BISHOP GILBERTS TRIBUTE.
"This Is an event motaentouß and sig
nificant in the experience of the city of
St. Paul. As a cltl«en who ha a livea here
for nearly twenty ye;ars I know that
Archbishop Ireland is fully in sympathy
with everything that enter? into tha wel
fare of the city and of the state. We
are brothers, working hand in hand for
the uplifting of this city in the way of
righteousness and morality. Archbishe»p
Ireland would be a leader for righteous
ness in any city on the face of the earth.
We honor him because he is known to
us and because we respect him and his
motives. He is not only a prominent cit
izen of St. Paul, but a prominent citizen of
the nineteenth century."
M. D. Munn extended a welcome on
behalf of the Commercial club and was
followed by Archbishop Ireland, who was
greeted with applause. He said:
THE ARCHBISHOPS REPLY.
Friends and Fellow Citizens:" As my
friends and fellow ciiisens, you greet me
as your friend and fellow citizen I thank
you. I am deeply moved by the words
addressed to me in the name of so many
of the citizens of St. Paul, and of other
towns of the state of Minnesota Not to
appreciate the value of this evening's
manifestation, not to experience by it the
tnrill of joyous gratitude, would argue
1 tM. m , me is not a mind t0 apprehend
nobaity and generoatty of thought and
action in fellow man; that mine is not a
heart to soften beneath the warmth of
kindness, to vibrate In response to the
touch of disinterested friendship
While I journeyed through foreign lands
it was my fortune to receive not infre
quently from distinguished assemblages
tokens of favor and of good will, of
which the sweet memory will never de
part from me. But nowhere was the as
semblage so dear to me, as the present
one, nowhere so full of significance and
of promise.
This evening's gathering speaks for my
home— for St. Paul and Minnesota The
voice of home has for the soul a charm
which that of no other land can possess;
for there, as nowhere else, are the
treasured results of our life work and
the endearments of our heart. And if
there Is in words of commendation a
substance that we may priz?, whether as
a comforting- sign that past years have
not been spent altogether in vain, or as
an inspiration of encouragement to do
well in the future, the commendation
given In our home has more value than
that g'ven in other lands, inasmuch as it
comes from those who are In a better
position to speak with due regard for the
facts. And where, ts in our own home,
can tokens and promises of friendship
be so precious? For it is in our home
where our years are to be spent and the
ills and pains of life are to be met, that
friendship's cheer bears sweetest fruit.
One is fortunate to live in a communi
ty where the citizens are generous
enough to speak to a fellow citizen words
of friendly approval. It is a proverb
no man is a prophet In his own country.
Near neighbors know our shortcomings,
no tess than our good qualities. It Is al
most inherent in human nature to give
so much attention to the shortcomings
that no time is left to see the good
Qualities. Such evidently. Is not the cas«
in St. Paul or Minnesota; here men are
large-minded and
LARGE-HEARTED.
They see others at their best; they p^ss
lightly over defects ff th*y at all notice
them, and give praise wherever there ap
pears to be room for praise. If a man
is not a prophet in St. $ Paul the fault
is his own, not that of 'his fellow citi
zens.
I cannot but wish for my own «ake
and for that of those whom it is my
privilege to serve _that a4l thar has been
said of me this evening' were as true
as friendly hearts have persuaded friend
ly tongues to declare. How-ever much a
man is known by his fellow citizens, he
is known best of. all by. himself. While
listening- to your affectionate word.- I
must in truth see in them rather what
I have Btriven to be than>«what I actually
have been. They are, however, spoken
to a purpose, for they trill spur me to
renewed efforts bo that in the future I
may be in Bpeoeh and *ct less distant
from the standard set before^ me than
may have been the case in the past.
So much is certainly true: I have ar
dently loved my city, my- state, my coun
try; I have always deemed it my urgent
duty to do whatever was possible for the
benefit of my fellow citizens, without
distinction of creed or race. The min
ister of a church whose principles and
laws are for me inviolable, to the spiritual
welfare of whose children I am pledged
by my ordination vov;s, I have never
believed that I must not see in men out
side the ranks of that church, my fellow
men and my brothers. I have never be
lieved that it is not my solemn duty to
spend myself and be spent for men in
the fullest outpour of ray soul's energies.
For me humanity is the mark of man's
brotherhood, and to its Remotest frontier
humanity receives my ltove. Nor have I
held the doctrine that a minister of re
ligion is I'mlted in his work for men to
strictly spiritual affairs' To me religion
embraces the whole roan, and the whole
world— it is as Catholic as the divine love
which it aims to apply to the world.
While, if you wish, nry primary field is
the strictly spiritual. I hold that, ft in
a lesser, siill In ■as true a sense, my
rightful lield la th^ whole range of hu
man interests— morn!, intellectual, so
cial and oven material. Being a Catholic
and a bishop, I do not cease to be a man
and a citizen; aye, as such I should be
the more thoroughly the man and the
<itizen.
PRACTICAL CHRISTIAN CHARITY.
It is a notable feature of this atisem
blaye, that while I am'- .a bishop of the
Catholic church, and profess myself the
sternest upholder of its teachings. I am
greeted by fellow citbtena and friends
the greater part, of whom are non-Catho
lics, and that ©4?e of the distinguished
gentlemen who has. just addressed me
is a high-stationed prelate of a Protes
tant church. We have learned the great
lessons of practical Christian charity
?^ f L. of Practical Am^Hcan citizenship.
Holding fnst in our cr»h consciences to
what we believe to b$ the truth, we
respect the conscience* of others whom
God, not we, should judge; and we <?in
<- on t liuird on Fourtk Page;
WILL BE NO POMP
FUNERAL, OF VICE PRESIDENT HO
BAHT TO Hli CONDUCTED IN
SIMPLE STYL.B
WILL SOT LIE IX STATE
FORMER NEIGHBORS TO BE GIVEN
AN OPPORTUNITY TO VIEW
REMAINS IN HOME
PEESIDENT WILL ATTEND
Senator Ilnnna Agrees to Act nil
One of the Pallbearer*—Govern
ment Offices Will Be < lowed mm a.
Mark of Respect to the Dintln-
Kutshed Dead— Union Jack Half-
Masted Over British Embassy.
NEW YORK, Nov. 22.— Th« funeral of
the late Garret A. Hobart, vice presi
dent of the United States, will take place
on Saturday. The morning services at
the residence will be attended by only
members of Mr. Hobart's family, Presi
dent McKinley and his cabinet, and Mrs.
Hobart's Intimate friends. At the Church
of the Redeemer, in Paterson, the public
service will be held at 2:30 o'clock in the
afternoon.
The body will not lie in state in the
city hall, as was desired by the city au
thorities, but on Friday afternoon the
casket will be open In the library- of his
late home, and for three hours the pub
lic may view the face of the late vice
president.
The body lies in a handsome casket of
cak, the plate bearing the inscription:
: 1844. :
: Garret A. Hobart. :
: 1899. :
The following official statement was
given out at the Hobart residence by
Private Secretary Evans tonight:
"The funeral services over the body of
THE ELUSIVE FILIPINO.
the late vice president will be held at
the Church of the Redeemer, Paterson,
on Saturday, Nov. 25. at 2:30 p. m. Inas
much as the seating accommodation of
the church is entirely inadequate, it will
be necessary that seats be reserved for
the various national, state and local offi
cials., representatives of the organiza
tions with which Mr. Hobart was con
nected and intimate personal friends of
the fanniy. It is, therefore, impossible
to provide for the general public until
various officials, representatives and
friends have been accommodated- Pre
liminary to the services on Saturday a
brief service will be held at the Hobart
he me for the immediate family and close
friends. The body will then be placed in
the library room, where the public will
have an opportunity to view it. The In
terment will be at the convenience of
the family, at Cedar Grove cemetery."
Four troops of the governor's guard
will take part in the ceremony, and will
probably act as an escort from the house
to the church and thence to the cemetery.
The troopp will also act fs a bod\ guard
to President McKimey.
MRS. HOBART BETTER.
PATERSON. N. J., Nov. 22.-Mrs. Ho
bart, who had been worn out by her long
vigil at the bedside of her lat? husband,
the vice president, was feeling so much
better today that she was able to assist
Attorney General Griggs, her husband's
law partner, Albert A. Wilcox, and Pri
vate Secretary Evans, in the prepara
tions for the funeral of Mr. Hobart Sat
urday afternoon. The attorney general
informed the family today that Presi
dent McKinley would attend the funeral.
Regarding Mr. Hobart's wealth it is re
lated that shortly after the election of
lSf6i in reply to questions by friends. h»
said that he could only give a guess;
that he was connecied with a great many
concerns, and a director In over sixty.
If his stock could be disposed of for wliat
it was worth he thought it would bring
between two and three million dollars?,
while at a sacrifice sale it would not
amount to half that. The life insurance
policies on Vice President Hobart's life
aggregated about $350,000. Onl* company
alone had issued a policy on his life for
5100,000.
TOKENS OF RESPECT.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.— Tn response
to a large number of telegraphic inquiries
the treasury department de.slros. it is
stated, that the offices of all collecters
Of customs and collectors of internal rev
enue, stamp deputies ami other official 3
be closed on next Saturday, the day
of the funeral of Vice President Hobart.
At the request of Attorney General
Gripgfl, the secretary of war has directed
that 200 regu'ar troops be sent to Pater
son, N. J., on the day of the funeral of
Vice President Hobart. These troops will
PRICE TWO CENTS-J JMftS^
BULLETIN OF
IMPOHTANT NEWS OF THE DAY
Weather Forecast for St. Paul.
Fair; North to Bast Winds.
I— lowa Indiana Unruly,
Honor for Ireland.
Pnnernl of Hohnrl.
Natal Again In Danger.
B— Death of Mr. Flonrnoy.
Grlndeland Law's Scope.
8 — Minneapolis Matters.
North went News.
Clone After Affninnldo.
Dewey Re»ent» Attack.
4— Editorial.
Democratic Party Plans. .
Grange Against Tro»ts.
6— Sporting: News.
6— Markets of the World.
Bar Silver, Wic.
Ca«h Wheat, 66 7-8-67 C.
Stocks Quite.
7— News of the Railroads.
B— ln the Field of Labor.
St. Paul Social News.
State Fair Cattle Show.
OCEAN LINERS.
NEW YORK— Arrived: Teutonic, from
Liverpool; Anchorla, from Glasgow;
Ems, from Genoa. Sailed: Georgic,
Liverpool; St. Louis, Southampton; Old
enburg, Bremen; Westernland. Ant
werp; Majestic, Liverpool.
QUEENSTOWN — Arrived: Steamer
Oceanic, New York for Liverpool, and
proceeded.
PLYMOUTH— SaiIed: Steamer Pretoria,
from Hamburg for New York.
BREMEN — Arrived: Barbarossa, from
New York via Southampton.
PLYMOUTH— Arrived: Patricia, from
New York for Hamburg.
SOUTHAMPTON— Arrived: Trave, from
New York for Bremen.
LIVERPOOL— Arrived: Lake Superior,
from Montreal.
GLASGOW-Arrived: Waldenaian, from
Philadelphia.
HONG KONG — Arrived previously:
Gaelic, San Francisco.
NAGASAKI - Sailed: Glenogle, San
Francisco.
YOKOHAMA— SaiIed: Energia, Tacoma.
TODAY IN ST. PAIL.
METROPOLITAN— NeiII stock company
in "Amy Robsart," 8:15.
GRAND— "HoteI Topsy Turvy," 8:15.
Palm Garden— Vaudeville. 2 and 8 p. m.
Olympic Theater— Vaudeville, 2 and 8 p.
m.
Cathedral bazaar, Sherman hall, 8 p. m.
Cherry Bisters. Raudenbush hall, 8 p. m.
Gov. Lind at Y. M. C. A., 8 p. m.
Manchester Martyrs, Cretin hall, 8 p. m.
be on pclice duty in the vicinity of and
around the residence.
The*i<rilish Ja,-k over the embassy was
at half n,ast tod iv. as a mark of respect
foi the late Vie* President Hobart. Lord
Pauncefote md the members of his staff
left their cards at the White house as a
further evidenca of respect. The half
masting of ihe embassy flag attracted
considerable attention, and is regarded as
nn unusual mark of consideration to an
American official.
PRESIDENT AND CABINET.
It is expected that President McKinley
and his cabinet, the sup-cmc court judges
and other officials from Washington will
arrive before noon on Saturday. A spe
cial train bearing the renators and repre
sentatives and the other United States
officials will start from New York, and
committees will be on hand Rt Paterson
to take charge of those on board.
A great many messages of condolence
were received today, including messages
from Chief Justice Fuller, of the United
States supreme court; Gen. Gordon, of
Savannah; Mr. and Mrs. Whitelaw Reid.
Daniel N. Morgan, formerly treasurer of
the United States; United States Senator
Carter, of Montana; United States Min
ister Harris, at Vienna; the Oregon Stat^
Bar association. Mrs. Ju'ia Dent Grant
and a number of foreign ministers at
Washington.
All of the public buildlrgrs in Paterson
have been dr.iped. as well as many of
the private residences throughout New-
Jersey.
Dr. Newton, the vice president's phy
sician, today filed the certificate of d«>a:h.
giving the cause of death as 'dilution of
the heart, dvi to myocarditis."
Mr. Hobart was a member of the order
of Free and Accepted Masons, n thirty
second degree Scottish rite Mason, and
a Knight Templar. In reply to inquiries
of representatives of various Masonic
bo<iles, it has be* n exp'air.ed to them that
the fan>ily deem ii best not to have n
Masonic funer.il.
Up to the present the names of the pall
bearers have not been announced. Mr.
Hobart, two months ago. when he feared
something might happen, named six of
his most intimate friends in New Jersey,
and it is believed that these will act ai
his pallbearers.
Mis. Hobart is bearing up well under
hor trreat trouble, and today was able to
see a few of hsr most Intimate friends,
including Attorney General Giiggs and
Mrs. Itrigga, and Rev. Dr. David Magle,
who will deliver the funeral oration.
PRESIDENT" S PLANS.
President McKinley and cabinet will
leave Paterson Immediately after the In
terment of the remains of Vice President
Hobart In .Cedar Lawn cemetery, and the
United States senators will return on the
Continued on Fourth rage.
ON THE WARPATH
81C AND POX INDIANS TinUFSATEIf
RESIDENTS OF TAMA COUNTY,
IOWA
WITH RIFLE ASD TOMAHAWK
WERE WITH GREAT DIFFICULTY
RESTRAINED FROM MAKING
AX ATTACK
AN INDIAN GIRL ABDUCTED
Taken to the Government Indian
Training School at Toledo, Where
She I* Held a Prisoner-White
Friend of the Indian. In.tltnte.
Habea* Corpus Proceeding, » n d
Avert. Serlou* Trouble.
DEB MOIKEB, Nov. 22,-Four hundred
and fifty redskins at the Sac and Fox
Indian reservation, i n Tama county are
ready to .tart on the warpath with' rlfl,
and tomahawk.
I. E. Wllcox, of Montour, wag in con
sultation with Judge Oliver P. Shiras
of the federal court here, today, end said
that It waa only because of his personal
lnterces S1O n that the Indians had been
prevented from making an assault on the
people of Tama City and Toledo to
aveng© themselves for alleged wrongs in
flicted by the Indian agent.
Mr. Wilcox finally arranged with Judge
Bhiras to go to Cedar Rapids and there
We a petition for habeas corpus for the
release of an Indian girl, aged eighteen,
confined in the government Indian train
ing school, at Toledo, for a month. Mr
W llcox returned to his home tonight as
suring the officials that he will be 'able
to control' the Indians as long as the
courts have the controversy in hand
The woman In the caae is Lelah-Puch-
Ka-che and B h e is married. Her hua
band is Ta-Ta-Pi-Ch*. They w fc re mar.
ried when she was seventeen, according
to Indian dates, the Sac and Fox Indians
being permitted to marry on reserva
tions according to tribal custom*. When
the training school was established by
the government at Toledo, Indian Agent
W. Q. Malm sent out an order for all
Indian children under eighteen to enroll
In the school. The Indians refused and
hid their- children. The girl in question
was taken into another county and en
rolled in a school near Belle Pi-ains.
INDIAN GIRL ABDUCTED.
An Indian interpreter was charged with
helping children to escape from the res
ervation, and on the trial the state sum
moned the woman in thi.s case as a wit
ness. Mr. Wilcox Induced her parents
and husband to accompany her lntc court
at Tama City. The Interpreter was dis
charged, but the Indian agent and Supt.
G. N. Xellis, of the school, seized the
girl, took her away from her husband
by force, and, conveying her to the In
dian school building, confined her there.
She had been detained in a ror.m there
since the Ist of the month. It Is for her
release that Mr. Wilcox now seeks a
writ of habeas corpus. The husband is
nominally the plaintiff, find the claim is
made that the government has nu right
to force Indians to go *o school, and in
this cast? may have no right to detain a
married woman.
More than 360 of the Indiana have re
fused to accept their government pay for
more than a year on account of this con
troversy with- the government, and on
account of other complaints, one of which
relate? to the opening of rods through
the reservation, it being claimed by them
that the roads have been cut diagonally
across the land, without compensation,
and not following section lines.
ENDEARED TO IRELAND.
Mr. Croker'a Generosity Han Snved
the Russell Estate.
NEW YORK. Nov. 22— The mission of
Lord Mayor Daniel Tallon, of Dublin, ;.nd
John E. Redmond, M. P.. to this country,
in the interest of preserving: the Parnell
homestead in County Wlcklow, lie'and,
has been successful. Tonight Thomas F.
Smith, privat-a secretary to Richard
Croker, and general secretary of Turn
many hall, presented to the lord mayor,
in the nnme of Tammany hall, a cert'tled
cheek for £3.000, to save the ParrHl
homestead. This was $5,000 in excess of
the amount needed. In presenting the
draft Mr. Smith said it gave him gre a
plea?»ire to present the draft or. behalf of
Mr. Croker. who had commissioned h m
to do so. In accepting the check, L i\l
Mayor Tallon said:
"Will you allow me to convey t.> Mr.
Cu'ker mv utmost thanks, a- d ;he thiks
of the citizens of Dublin, ah! ;ot only <>t
Dublin, but of the Ills* nation, for the
magnificent gift. Tell Mr. Croker for one
who is author izsd to speak in behalf of
the Irish people, that he has saved the
Parnell estate. Tell him that his name
will be remembered as ]nr.g as the Iri«h
race survives. I am told he is goiug to
Europe in v short time, and I will ask
y. ai. In my name, to ascertain what time
he will get to Dublin, for I should like
that he would visit Dublin and. in the
name of that city. I promise Mr. Croker
that he will not snly be tendered the free
dom oi that city, but of tne whole of the
Trish nation. He is tonight ih<- idol of
the frish race at horns and abroad."
DEFENSE OF FUNSTON.
Chaplain McKlunon to the Keiicne
of the X tin Ban n.
SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 22.— Rev. Fath
er McKinnon, chaplain In the United
States army, defends Gen. Fnnston and
Col. Metoalf from the charges of dese
crating churches. He says churcues In
the Philippines were not desecrated by
American tn>ops. but by insurgents and
Chinese. The priest is positive that Col.
Metcnlf did not shoot a prisoner in cold
blood, as has been alleged.
In reply to Gen. Funston's challenge to
prove the truth of its assertions regard
ing the leo lag of Caloocm churches, the
San Francisco Monitor, in a < ard from
its editor. T. A. Connelly, invite? the gen
eral to bring a libel suit, promising to do
nate $2,000 to the Red Cross society if
he wins it.
FATAL COLLISION.
B. A O. Paa*enfi,-er Runs Into a
Frelftht Train.
CI*EVF.IiAND, 0.. Nov. 22 — Wo.st -bound
passenger train No. 5, on the Baltimore
& Ohio road, ran into the rear end of a
West-bound freight train early today
near McCook's station, Indiana, while
running at a high rate of speed, causing
a bad wreck, killing Engineer Bradford,
of the passenger train, and Injuring En
gineer Sarbor and two firemen.

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