{ title: 'The evening journal. (Jamestown, N.Y.) 189?-1904, November 17, 1902, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031812/1902-11-17/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031812/1902-11-17/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031812/1902-11-17/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031812/1902-11-17/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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3 REA S O N S WHr Largest Lfat ol Ssihacnim Fewer paxQcs oo m Cat B ttto « m k t th a n luu k e n or fat fw n U w l b y any o ther Telephone Com pany doing ' in th e - Q ty o f T b i T o w n T a lk A P o l i t i c a l m * - c u t s i o n F e l l F la t ------ — - - .. -A _ Ssmstissas •> M IH M llV « i b « W pailll«*, te tfc e wiw ii tifc m m .w y ii O ta ik jH t aadw a M l f c f l i j O m H a m ill â n e afei M ads, r n i i H t a f r i n t a * t t M t o « N t c m ha b a d at’Wileess f t V u T i j r ^ 13 Wast Third Stoaas. O u M h tW M it n i else*. for Ü ( i R H u l M l M L n ó t a t e . t a t a m l y e » , h n a assail - ? « « m a t • ( t** , « » * ’ M W tmH , healera. m . ft «* « « c a H ié l i oHto wMrtTto %mI is lay. » *ae *e m I dM% ta t atout« i t fc* wteyaaM « m l i i n JettefenM ei ferw* « t a h n M al, n t i i r a ik i ia It.' O tM ia » a 4 áfcÉ M W ertTM rá Street TAW II M m * • W lL B O ir* jpÉMk' Sfcssrt '(By Associated Proa) Scfanton, Nov. 17.—President Mitch e ll resumed the stand today upon the convening o f the coal strike commis sion and his cross examination by Wayne McVeagh which 'was begun on ■ Saturday was—(kmtlnoedr- - UoVeagh represents the Erie Co., which operates its mines under th,e names ot the Pennsylvania Coal Co., and «Hillside Coal and Iron Oo. Mitchell who has been oo the stand Kin re Prl tag, brought with him a number of documents and lx>uks vvhl.L ii*■ Irt- qnently referred to In order to refresh h is memory. MacVeagh began his examination by reading from newspaper clippings of the methods of the labor organization Known u the Operative Plasterers' Association o f New York against the employers. “Do you approve or do yon heartily disapprove o f these methods?“ Mac- Veach asked. **I should say that my anion has no such rules\ waa Mltchell'a re sponse. MacVeagh repeated hi* ques tion. and Mitchell said: \ I can only say that tn the absence o f knowledge as to tbs causes which made them adopt such resolutions I am not competent to pass upon the fairness or onfalrntra o f them. On the surface and with the Information yon convey to me I should say they are unfair.” MacVeagh reverted to the subject of placing the responsibility for the In- creased price of coal and Inquired: “ Do yon frtill feel at liberty to aay it Is none of your business what additional coat tho people will have to pay for their coal if that additional coat is the immediate result of your dem and«.1' “ I have not said at aay time It was none of our btuanoss,” replied Mitchell. \1 have ftated It was beyond our con trol. That we hare absolutely noth in « to do w ith the selling price of c o a l” \W on’t your men have to work five year» to make up the loss they sus ta in « ! during tho »trike?\ tlacVeagh aakad. “ Not by any means“ was the posi tive smswer o f Mitchell. Replying to question* by Ur. H o Veagh on tha right of private parties to protect their property Mitchell said the provision In the tnlncre’ constitu tion ajalnst pickets grew out o f the Homestead strike, when *. number of private detectives were employed aa guards who, h a declared. had been rw- crnlted from the slums o f Philadelphia and (other largs cities. Mitchell in sisted thfit the city, county and state sathorlUee were competent to banditi the matter. . Raising bis voice to a high pitch, aad speaking with great ferww, HcVeagh asked the witness: “D o n 't you know as wall as you know your name is John Mitchell that in spite of the anthoritles o f tils city, of this county aad of thia state, this whole region has been treated tor Qva months to a Tcrltable foretaste of hell?” Mitchell calmly replied: “I don’t know anything of the kind.” “W ell, yon will before we are through with yon,” Waa'McVeagh-s re tort. (Continued op Pace Six.) I Travata In th* 1st* of Man. lecture by tha rector, tomorrow, Tuesday evening in S t Lake's school team at 8 o’clock. Admission 25 Cents. (31 Stock feed a t Mott’s Seed store. WAGES OF MINERS. Few of Tfielr Sons Graduate From tha ( High Schools. Pottsvllle, Pa., Nor, 17.—Statistics gathered by th©-.United Mine Work ers from the Schuylkill regton tor pre» sentatlpn to the. arbitration comml? «son, ahow that only K per ceht óf the graduates, of local high echaola-kM -song of minera« The wage ratashows a a average at 1385 per y ear for-mtue; workers, thQ wages of laborera being included w ith those of miners 10 the calculation. • A protest-will be made, on behalf of Schuylkill minsrs- to the cótnmissloneKs, against the eucospt- oace of . the proposition of the Read in s company to base the rate of wages on the price bf coal. This was tha system in voguq here before the strike of 1900 and mine workers say that to return to It would be very unsatisfactory. CIVIU SERVICE WORK. Many Thousand Applicants for Office Examined. ■Washington, Nov. 17.—Th* scmi&l report of A. R. .Serven, chief examln er of the civil sonriee commission, shown that during the last fiscal year Gtv,558 people w«ro examined In and for the classified service of whom <0.609 passed and 18,288 were *P* pointed,' promoted or transferred. In addition 1,174 persons were examined for the Philippines eervice of whom 480 passed and 694 failed. Over 250, 000 aheata of examination <iuestfona were handled. TRANSIT. Prlaonar on Hla Way From Cleve land to Albany. Utica, Now. 17.—Paul Zowsliki, a prisoner who waa arreeted In Cleveland and waa In charge of as Albany/Offi cer who was taking him to Alhiny to anawer a charge of grand larctny, I caped from tho southwestern special Just west of thia city at aa early hour thla moraine by climbing from tha window of a cloeet to the roof of the car whero ho remained until th* train started from the station hers. Ha disappeared In the darks «aa. Silk M ill for Salamanca. Salamanca, Now. 17.—According to some of the men interested In tha Beraey Traction company which has macde application for a francbl*^. to operate an electric road here, who are 'also interested In manufacturing en terprises. there. Is a prospect of »«car ing for Salamanca a silk m ill which w ill eventually furnish employment to BOO or eeogtrls and women, and , a canrwasa taaoor being made to aae< tain the number 'of jteraoos here who wcrald like employjaentof rooh a a tare. Escaped From Burning Hotel. North OoDwsy, N. H., Not. n.^T h s Ikaadali boua«, oste of tits popular ho tels at thla place, was burned (o tha proa ml wlih its contect* «ally today at a loss of 115 . 000 . n fty or <0 gaestk escaped, although soma of then had bar«ly time to get ont before tha fiaxaes reached ttiem. E«plpgloi» W ith Loss s i L!f*_ Bírtningham, Ala., Nor. 17.-\The freixht depot of the 8outh*ra railway at Fell City, a Janctioñ point SB arilás east ot Blrmtogham, waa'baraed early today. In it waa a quantity o í powter and dynamite which eaploded. It la reportad that four or flv* men antra killed and serrerai were wonniwl. A freight train waa partially wrecked and the engineer was injured. Tb« wlnee were down sud details have not yet heea received. Turkey DIsMA The Ladlaa’ Aid society of the Con gregational churchy will giwe a turltsy dinner In the cborch parlttr* Thor*- day, Nov. io from * to I p. * . TÍ Ok els 25 cents. ________ 17d3 Tork’s facial massac* rstaoras wrinkle« «ad klack head*. TOI K ala street. ftd ia ô * A h int has bean aptly defined a« \ a . Jog of th e Cental elbow.\ It la. Sttch ■ Jog Is «Hr brief remind«- tha* Dow is the t l » « to b* fitted oa yaray «Vp» pera, n i l pro mines to be a gay sea*: son and your awalleat gowa isr Isr from “right” if yoar allppera ara aot corract. Our Patent Kid Oxfords m< strap aaadati ale Ui» aca»* of com fort «&A wlM wear ao ma£h hattar than Ä© ordinaar <»rt that thay ara really Imw «panátra thaa tha <*>*, m m hoa«e «Upptrs. They ar* M nttly «irèlarteé im M : Th*jr are daäat»y M ätw l?« là é+ ■ *• ‘ ' f * * J 0 ^ I * . ' - - 1 • \ • A . ..j ^ * * á ¡ s * r * Ü e ) MRS. Q IO R O i CALAHANE’3 .* FRIQHTFUU FALU Very 8 *y*ra Injuria* Received—Waa the Fall and Accident of the Raault . cl p*aià« (W» tha Pa^t of Some On»T —Who M lflkt iHave Been Reepanal ; hit FoV It?. Mrs. Oeorga Oalahane la lying at the hospital In thia city In a critical coe- ditlofi aa the r«ault o f Inlurlcs received . In (ailing from ,th.e «ecOnd «ory of the Broadhead block w>Jch‘ stands over the Chadákóln rív*r on South Main street, to the grouad. Some 26 feet be low. It has 'béén dlfllealt for the police department to ‘obtain accurate infor mation as to the casta* of the woman's- fall, bpt there 1» little doubt tn tha' minds of. th e offlceñ or or others who havo lnveertlgated the case that the fall t o not th.e rasnlt of an accident but that tha vnfortanate woman waa intentionally pushed from the porch in the rear of the block. Just who was responsible for thla ia th« question that la puxzllnr tha department. Qegrg* Calahana, th# injured wo man’s husband, hla . brother W illiam Galahane, a n d hla slater Kate Oalabana Smith, were apprehended by tho police and takan to the police station shorty after the accident. .They will be de tained pending a mope complete exam ination into the detalla of the caso and to await th« outcome of the woman’s lp Juries. -—The two Calahaaft'e. together with the sister and Qeorge’a wife, occupied etpall «Bftrtmenta In the Broadhead block. Mrs. Smith, the sistor, for merly lived In Buffalo, but canie to thla city and took ap her^resldence with her brothers a few weeks ago, since which time there has been more or less trouble in the family; it may be truthfully ssid, however, that this waa not the beginning of th* fam ily quarrels. About 10 o ’clock Sunday. a|ght Offl- ear Olson, who was on the Brooklyn Sdoara beat, waa called (ato the Broad- head block aAi account of a quarrel amocg the Oalahanes. The foar of them had bean drinking and all seem ed to be in a quarrelsome mpod. The offlcsr Soon reetortxl ardor and left the house, Informing the quartet that if he heard anything farther from them during the night he would taka the eatirp family to tho police station. Shortly batons midnight the oScer was summoned by Addle Slater, who occupies rooms near the Calahanea Sha told him that a woman bad fallen from the veranda to tha ground. Ha quickly found the report to be true, and tha* the injured woman was Mrs. Calahana. Help was. summoned, ao -ajobalance was called aad aha was ta k d H ^ lh « hoepttal, where phyabdanx were caliM-and It was found that she had sustained \*ry aerare i&larlea. Her right hip was BteraUy crashed, Ocre was a bad rut amii- one of her eyes aad many bruises about tB^ body. Ijears were also ontnrtalned that she had sustained internal Injuries. An lnvefMsTjtion at the home disclosed the fart that a nine- toot section of the ralllner surround ing the porch in the rear o t the Cala- hsM rooms had been broken off. ~0*org* Qalahane waa In bed and oiaiaed to be suffering from severe tajarles him self He said that ha had (alien from the porch to the ground wKh hla wife; that Mrs. Oalahane had •tapped oat on the porch daring tha night aod that ha followed her out, whan aha (brew her arma around his neck and drew him toward the railing, and that when they leaned against it tha boards gave way and both feU to the ground below. Ho further said that In fallina he had alighted direct ly en top o t his wife aad ip conae- guaesc's she had suffered most severely, ly* The officer* did not believe his story and later a physical «am ination dis closed the fact that h* was not Injured fa aay way. nor wars his shoes or dothlfig covered with fresh mad such as la hollered must have bean the casa h a i he fallen where lira, nalahane CelL A t tibe hospital Mrs. Calahaae waa In only a aetnl-conscious condltkn and little acowate Information cgald be «biaiMkl trota hsr. Tbeoacenrwew hwUaet to frelfeyre « a t sfca waa ateald to ta ll «reo what ehe waa aMe t* d«-«f tha oocarrsnce. O wHly before noew todar Dr. A .H . 9 owm * aad Polka jastka Osoeea-.-W#' M * ijsai'.ti9'tiM boev<taIaa«'aAtr s*\ ^MriMMMsa h r tha d*sliif - -*■*■ - - n u s p .IVM-lMCflB' WJ .U P f M N i JVUBMfc. much worae-then it ; -was set ttrat thought to be. Bho waa iulferlng great pain* In the stomach and . waa vomiting considerably, more or l«se blood being thrown up, Tha doctor considers her condition very critical. In her Statement to t^je doctor and tha police Justice she charged Mrs. Sm ith, the sister of her htisband. w ith Hie trouble. She ssytr that Mrs. Smith directed her. to leave theTttttSe^ead she refused to do po. The tnjured wrojnan thtici went o iit on the back porch and was followed by Mrs. Smith, who struck her on the face. She A id ’that neither her husband nor his 'brnther were an the parch. She had oo recol lection of falling, the last thing aha re membered wave the fart o f the quarrel with Mrs. Sm ith and of being struck In the. • I t 1* attlta remarkahle ||st thMrbody d l d ^ f I n t o Hie S^eam, which t w s r L S e e m ; Calahane'a rodsai; but. fortunately, dbteg the straggle which must have preceded the fall th.e two women had worked their way toward the north end of . the long porch and It waa this which saved her from almost tnatant death. She fed beside the stream Instead ot into it. Bad she fallen into the water she must kaye been drowned a t once. -rr Georg» Caiahane and wife we rtf married only a few months ago. tha ceremony hawing tAfen performed by Herr. Dr. W right oft the Mth of July. In the ccrtificmte Oalahane'a age Is given as.ZS y ears. Mrs. Oalahane'a maiden name was l l n l e IaRoee, age X yean, hoars at Toledo, O. Mrs. Sm ith, tye sister of Caiahane, who !• -charged with the trouble, is tha wife of H . j . EmIEH, an engineer on the Buffalo A Southweatara railway, whoaa home la in Buffalo. Thay have aot lived togaCher lor some tlm a THE BODY RECOVIRED. Finwral of Alton Newhooaa and Earla LueslnK to he Held Tueeday Morning. Findley Lake. Nor. It.— (Special. )— The tody of Earle Laeaink. one o t the yoang sea drowa*d ta th* lake hare at aooa Saturday waa tfonnd about 4 o’clock that afteraooa. a cheat dis tance from tha little Island where aha boat was overtnrasd. The funsral a g Alton Kswboaas and of Ur. Luealnk will be keld Irom tha rrwfdffnoo ot K r Nswbooae's mother, Mrs. Darcnport. t t th* town of French Creek. Tueeday asornlng at 10 o'clock, the bodies a t both Uta unfoftnaats yoong men having beta taksn thare. Tha e*4 fatality has esst a gloom over the eatlra aoomunity surround ing the laka- H r. (fewhotiee had been in bod oess a t the village share O m accident owmnad for aosee years and waa known and liked by every oca In the eoasmanlty. Ur. Lnsalnk's bona waa In French Creek, and while ha bad not cach a wide acquaintance aa bis oompanic®, he waa popular W h «a kaows aai boC6 winbé greallÿ misséd from the clrtlea in wkick they have moved. FIRE »T WESTFIELD. FARM BUILDING« BURNED; EVI •OENTLY W ORK OF INCEN DIARY, Gerry Youth Mutilated Hlnjeelf—Tr^ok Of l-ake Erla Traction Company Haa ' Nearly Reached Corporation JUitia Fios* th a ;W fli.:;V \ _ W^stfleld, N ot . iy,—(Special.)—A .yoang man named Cotot» waa brought to the hospital hers fiom Oerry suffer ing ftomaTcasa o fae lf niutHatktfEWhy he'should haro injured hlm^alf la not clear except on the theory that it was done to escape pajn. neatly btod to dw tii boiars being relieved. At 7 o'clock Sunday evening I^ostcr F . Terry who lives Just outside the limits on tha south side of town, dis covered' a small blase In tha straw staok th his -barnyard. Tha blaxe waa on the «net side and the w ind was blowing from that direction. The •tack contained is tons of straw and ienrroundlng it were a grape packing a 109-foot shed and a barn. _ 40 feet All the building» ware btarned. The too la y>d live atock ware sawad but much hay, grain aad many grape crates were destroyed. The Are department responded, but bo hy drant was near enough to the fire for aervlce. Lons |2,JOO; no Insurance.' The straw stack would appear to have been sat on Ore. The lAko Erie Traction company Is almost at the corporation line In the construction of the trolley road. Ralls and ties wilt b* laid to the line this week, weather permitting. Definite arrangement* have been mad* for crossing the Lake Shore and Nickel Plate tracks at Ripley crossing, on a trestle 22 feet above the tracks. Tho trolley line will leave the m ala road one quarter of a m ile above th f take Share station and cross the tracks and land o n . the lUckenbrode property. T hen w ill bean Incline of (W feat on either end. The trestle .will do away with the dangeroas part ot tha road which formerly was to run parallel to the railroad tracks a t filpla? crossing, •harter Howrs Wanted by 15,000. Philadelphia, Nov. 17.—Thirty-five thonaand testa* operatives Is §00 mills in tU ^ d ty wfH make a deavaod upon their essayera for a redaction of their honra of labrar from CO to H a week. Thla was deddad u£wn a t a meeting of tha delegates rcpnssating 10 unions which embrace the entire kxai textile trades. It wmm sat# today tha* the demand «III be submitted «o «nploysci not later than Jan. l. Ferry Pfaada Net Oullty. Soaaerville, M asa, Nov. 17.—To tha charge ot having murdered Agnes M o Phce In this d t y on Oct. 4, Gtiorge Ik O. Perry, thé OamÇrldg» negro already chañad wl,th th e murder of Clara A. Morton at 'Wawerly, Nov. 1 , pleaded not guilty todav la tha ßoaiarvilie so- perier crim im i court Ex- Fiftseri Dead Vreni Flrewortcs . -pteelon. New Tortt, Nov. l7^VYa&k O’Con nor. ¿7 yean o ld , died coday from Injuries suffered at the fireworks ex plosion la Madison sqnam election night. He is the 18th person to die as tha xeMltoC that accident Physi cian» at âeUsnsa hospital ssid 'today that the death « f James Fenton, col ored, another Yictiai of the explosion, i* only a matt«*-of a few days. Travels fe «hs. M a of Man. lecture by . tlsa rector, tomorrow, Tuesday «M a ía#.i* 9 t Lake's achool at . l ^olbefc: jAdmlishm H rooiia canta. '£ treat .lei- a ll at tlM hasaar and tcmm ru to & m M hi th>s PrUaitlT* MethadM d k in « , ''All«« str4et,. Wad- Tharaday —« itM a y , Kar. 1». Steel Cabinet Workere' Ball. ' Tha first annua] ball of Steel Cab* inet Workers’ union 7294 will be held In K. of P hall Thursday evening, N ot . 20. Admission SO cts., tsdlet not attended S& cts., rsfreshncnU Includ ed. _________________ 17d4t Third annual rummage sals o f the liberal Christian guild. Warner block. I Main street, Thursday, J'riday aad Saturday. UKEWOOD-CBAUTAMTOli. Intereft af Btow ' f, W u iW l^yf* Over the ^prospsqt of- , **»• A lain th * iake, ^ ;:¡& X É ñ Stow, Nov. 17.- (6pecial)- 4 it*|i|^' har», is nm nln* hlgji for t H p r o î Â o i , a t r o l t e y ^ i i ^ : _ Lakowobd'to Chautattq.ua.'“ last .wesk eome pronilnen t 'Jajneato*n, whpae^wery\ asma p ¿ itíS fe known to signify business, ,haVs''-: tid ing tóng:’ walks In o u t of 1 places, along the swamps, ait* « 1 ^ 1 ^ ing-the- Ulla, occasionally ettokjUw-n' fw? stakes and stoppln* a t 'Urnas Confer and point direction* ’ toyMBpgf iQUSly but név«r one? i J the farmers where they want thej laid or if they want It a t all, as 'BuMf ' h*en the plan heretofore parsued impossible electrie roads w m laM - « ¡ifl «or paper to- please eraerbfiafi tlon. ■m The most Incredulou» «une ttów SN»> v srplred wlth eonfldenoe tbat tha itM tiO talked of road la about to m itn W n ii\ J~ but where tt wiM be loeaM I U w e ^gií:f Btow eeema to ha a «wBpOK:’. than srer for nataie haa heen f í a t lávlah. hfcre o t ways, w h li« st vtátiacfeB,. the oppoelte eondltion la snm irteiaÉ ' and the hardsst barrter o< all Fonte la encoaatesedg aod so i tlon is rifo whleh lt wouM he tdlf tm répeat tn thcee oolstrnlK.' B a l m f M p E hsfore Interest grow» «mus» and tfcawa% la soma tatk o t caWng a ateetlsg ciUseng to eonfer as to Mui lntansta.«tf V thás polnt on tha lak« la the HgWt « j f -< lts poselble fatsra, --- -rr-: Xt is understood that Usa n r r u i f party- urtn tacen «oday, --- •CHENECTADY »O Y O O rr. The Rejil Test sf It W ill Com* TÉÍi\ Evening, • Schenectady, Not. 17.—Th« « n f : test of the strength of the linTiUft against the .Schsoectady railway the. Trades Aamnbly, Tsprwislhsa practic^ly tha entire labor elemeat aC.../ this city, wifi come thla anrealmr -sii, : the dose ot tha .work tfay la «few-''' OenertU llectri« works aad Innal , : plant a t ths Amertoan Ijooo*notlTt< M this time tha hnte o f the are asaally erowdadi with bat this evening, aocovdfay -;W; .. claims of the Trade« Aa*roMy ttw r»f * ' w ill not be a anion naa oat «ha etna. - - Rlig Or Telephon 111 I sc n tr m o i(.iU iT M i l i n L M M M . M E H H , , Oan NerHsaa sag Fa*«» . 1 I WILL K L IV « TO AKY W UT W TU* CITY . , , Port, Catawba, Tokay or'Sherry ‘Wioè* r o a s f u n • » , m ai.se rana « u m r n s i l ü T . A . W . M U R R A Y , ___________ _ ___________ waetassts M aaar » ¡ a » s r ; “ ^ G r e e n V e g e t a b le s . Spinach, R a d iih e i, Cnetim bers, Pfaad Ltl f W ) C u rly Lettuce, Yoaag O n ions, P a n iey . eic. M m a ia « le t ef Pears far tabic or lor e t u i i f . I n g e r s o n B r o s , » • T K « r | H i 1& E A S T T f l l W S T # ■■Ni M» I I » I F ’l l i P l t l ^ i M 1 » * • w i n ^ i n r A vw acseatia! own. They i f fBki-praof àwi ther häv« th* «raeAranC« oí » stylish Ovtrcoftt» w< hnvc tfwai f f o m 4 ' « l o o t o m M M MACKINTOSHES from *5.00 and *6.00^ MANHATTAN , -BOSOM* Tmnki,V*Iim,Dr«