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SHAFFER EXPLAINS
• I
Head of Amalgamated Associa*
tion Tells Why Strike Failed.
• •■* , i .
K MOT ROAST FOR GOMPERS
American Federation of Labor f De
clares Shaffer, Refused to Donate
One Cent to Support
. - . •.. the Strike.
\ A Pittsburg special says: The As
sociated Press has secured an advance
copy of., the statement by President
..Shaffer, of the Amalgamated associa
tion, giving a history of the late iron,
steel and tin workers’ strike from its
inception, and the terms of its settle
ment. The circular will be mailed to
all departments at once. In part, the
circular is as follows:
“We wmre in fairly good condition
to win without help, but looked for
aid from other labor bodies, some of
which were pledged, and to the gen
eral public, but especially relied upon
the American Federation of Labor,
with which body we have been affilia
ted ever since its inception and toward
whose suport we have never failed to
contribute.
“Our strike advanced and we were
confident of winning until the newspa
pers deliberately and maliciously pub
lished statements which were replete
with lies. Our people began to doubt
and upbraid; some, who had been of
ficials, deserted us, and afterwards,
like J. D. Hickey, of Milwaukee, ac-
cepted the terms of the trust ana scab
bed. Hundreds who dared not sleep
at home, went to other places, and in
nearly every mill the trust tried to run
were many Amalgamated association
men from striking mills. We knew our
cause would be lost, but proceeded,
feeling sure we could win if support
could be secured for the faithful strik
ers. The American Federation gave
us not one cent. The report that finan
ciai support came from the national
lodge of the mine Workers is absolute
ly false —we received nothing.
“Perceiving that lack of money, loss
of public approval, desertion by hun
dreds of our own people and neglect
by other organizations would render
it impossible to gain a decisive victory,
we endeavored to save what we could.
I arranged for Mr. Gompers. of the
American- Federation of Labor, to meet
Mr. Morgan to effect a settlement. Mr.
Morgan gave up his vacation, went to
New York and waited for Mr. Gom
pers, who failed to appear, nor has not
since explained why he neglected our
interests. We were called upon at the
national office by John Mitchell, of the
United Mine Workers; Mr. Easley, of
the civic federation; Mr. Henry White,
of the garment workers, and Profes
sor Jenks, of the Cornell university.
These gentlemen inquired carefully
into our strike, and Mr. Mitchell stat
ed that if we would present a proposi
tion which he outlined, he would de
mand acceptance by the trust or call
out the miners, and he said he felt
sure Mr. Sargent would call out the
trainmen to strike also. We sent the
proposition to the members of the ex
ecutive board, which voted in favor
of the proposition. This proposition
was rejected ”
Then President Shaffer says he wait
ed for the coal miners and railroad
men to be called out. But they were
not, and President Shaffer settled the
strike on September 14 on the best
terms he could get, which were in
substance as follows:
The scale shall be the price agreed
upon at Cleveland and found in the
scale book.
The company reserves the right to
discharge any employee who shall, by
interference or abuse, constrain to pre
vent'another peaceably following his
avocation without reference to connec
tion with labor organizations.
Non-union mills shall be represented
as such—no attempts made to organ
ize, no charters granted; old charters
retained by men if they desire.
Individual agreements shall be made
for mills of improved character until
they are developed, when scales shall
be made to govern.
- Agreed that the company shall not
hold prejudice against employees by
reason of their membership with the
Amalgamated association.
This agreement to remain in force
three years from July 1, 1901, but ter
minable at ninety days’ notice from
either party on or after October 1,
1902.
Mr. Shaffer closes by saying he is
willing to resign if the members think
he is inefficient and incapable.
To War Against Anarchists.
A national organization having for
its purpose the clearing of the coun
try of anarchists has been organized,
in a small way, in Milwaukee. The
organization is to be called “The Amer
ican Patriotic Educational League.
OPPOSES CONSTITUTION.
Alabama Ex-Governor Will Try to Pre
vent Ratification of Document.
According to a Birmingham, Aia.,
dispatch, ex-Governor Johnston has de
clared himself opposed to the new con
stitution of the state as presented by
the recent constitutional convention
tor adoption or rejection by the peo
ple of Alabama. He states that he
will go ofr the stump and fight the new
paper and will begin his work at an
jarly date.
BOERS WINNING VICTORIES.
Renewed Activity of Brave Burghere
In South z-kfrica Is Again Wor
rying the Red Coats.
A London special, says: While Mr.
Kruger and Dr. Leyds are drawing-up
petition's to President Roosevelt and
the czar asking them to intervene, the
lighting Boers are helping themselves
in South Africa by celebrating the ex
piration of the period in which Lord
Kitchener proclaimed they must sur
render, by notable successes, killing
68 officers and men, wounding 63 and
capturing five guns and 300 men. The
situation is singularly like the opening
of the war two years ago, the names
of the same places recurring in the
dispatches. Utrecht, where Major
Gough was entrapped, was the scene
-of a similar ambuscade eighteen
months back. Acton Home, where the
Boers reappeared last' Friday, is 18
miles south of Ladysmith, prominent
in the early hostilities, and the Natal
colonies are mustering for the defense
of Tugela, as when General Joubert. in
vaded Natal in 1899.
In Cape Colony fighting is again go
ing on south of Stormberg in territory
traversed by raiders and their pur
suers half a dozen times.
The government’s publication of
these reverses causes an outburst o t
exasperation against the conduct of
the war, not in South Africa, but in
the ministry. The great ministerial
journals accuse the government of try
ing to run the war “on the cheap’’ by
not providing Lord Kitchener with
sufficient resources. •
The war office has received the fol
lowing dispatch from Lord Kitchener,
dated Pretoria, September 22:
“Kritzinger, while endeavoring to
force a passage of the Orange river,
near Herschal, at 1 o’clock Friday
morning, rushed on the camp of a par
ty of Lovatt’s scouts. He failed to
cross the river, but the scouts lost
heavily. Lieutenant Colonel Andrew
Murray and Captain Murray, his adju
tant, were killed. I deeply regret the
loss of Colonel Murray, who through
out the war had led Lovatt's scouts
with great gallantry,
"Under cover of darkness the Boers
managed to carry off a gun. They
were promptly followed up and the
gun was recovered in a smart engage
ment, in which Kritzinger lost two
killed and twenty taken prisoners.”
Lord Kitchener also reports that the
British captured by the Boers in the
ambuscade near Scheeper’s Nek Sep
tember 17 have been released and that
the British casualties in the recent
Ylafontein engagement, when the
Boers captured a company of mounted
infantry and two guns, were one officer
and five men killed, twenty-three men
wounded and six officers and 109 men
taken prisoners. He announces that
these prisoners have since been re
leased.
He further reports the capture of
two commandoes, one consisting of 55
men under Commandant Kochs, who
were taken with their transport, west
of Adenbrug, and the other consisting
of 54 men including P. J. Botha, who
were taken with 48 wagons and their
belongings, 45 miles south of Carolina.
ANARCHISTS GROW BOLD.
With Shotguns They Stand Guard
Over Office of Notorious Publication.
At Spring Valley, Ills., twenty an
archists armed with double-barreled
shotguns and 1,000 rounds of ammuni
tion are standing guard over the of
fice of L’Aurore, the notorious anarch
ist publication which expressed joy at
the murder of President McKinley and
satisfaction over the announcement of
Assassin Czolgosz that he was an an
archist. Meanwhile fully 2,000 citizens
of adjoining towns have sent word to
the authorities of Spring Valley that
they are ready and extremely anxious
to start at a moment’s notice for the
city and assist in exterminating the
reds. The temper of the people is at
the boiling point, the defiant attitude
of the anarchist colony serving to in
crease the anger.
A Committee will w r ait upon General
Manager Dalzeil, of the Spring Valley
Coal Company, who resides in Chica
go, and insist that he discharge every
known anarchist in his employ.
The anarchists and their sympathiz
ers number fully 500, and if this step is
taken it will mean that one or two of
the mines will have to close down un
til other men can be brought in.
Transport Goes Aground.
A Manila dispatch says: The U. S.
transport Buford, carrying the Seven
teenth infantry to relieve the Twenty
third. and then under orders to pro
ceed for New York, has gone aground
on a sandbar off the island of Mii
lianao.
Destructive Fire in Chicago.
Fire in the four-story and basement
building at Chicago early Thursday
for a time baffled ail efforts of the fire
men, menaced several large structures
practically in the center of the whole
sale district and resulted in a loss ag
gregating $200,000.
THIRTY-TWO LIVES LOST.
Disatrcusly Fatal Railway Collisicn
Occurs In Roumania.
The express train for Vienna collid
ed Saturday morning at Paiota, Rou
mania, with a petroleum train, killing
thirty-two persons and injuring nine.
The petroleum train, which crashed
into the rear of the express, was de
scending a grade at the time. Eight
een petroleum cars were set on fire
TlinT-iKlit- Weight Vacation.
Over the. hills and far away,,,.
Would ! could hie this summer day
With baggage on this lightsome plan—
A,Jap umbrella and a fan.
Some paper books—l should not read—
A few small coins—; would not need;
All work forgotten—of! I’d stray,
Over the hills and far away.
—Chicago Record-Herald.
The lie afncl the She.
‘‘Miss Slimsby’s neck looks like
ivory, doesn’t it?”
“Yes, but it’s really nothing but
bone.”—Brooklyn Life.
A Sa<l Travesty.
Jaggles—“Do you think he’s hon
est?”
Waggles—“ Why, man, he’s so honest
that everybody calls him a crank !”-*■•
Puck.
No Difference.
Mrs. Peterby—“My dressmaker's bill
was twice as large this year as last.”
Mrs. Poplin—“l don’t see how your
husband*can afford it?”
“H ? can’t. But then lie couldn’t last
year.”—Life,
His Sympathy Aroused.
She met him at the door, all breath
less with excitement.
“John,” she cried, “baby’s cut a
tooth.”
“Poor little fellow,” he returned, com
miseratingly; “is it a bad cut?”—Chi
cago Post,
The Kind He Wanted.
“Young man,” said the fortune teller,
going into a trance, “I can see ycu, in
the near future, with an airship—”
“Make it an heirship to a million,
can’t you?” eagerly exclaimed Ardup,
slipping another half dollar into her
hand.—Chicago Tribune.
A Miraculous Survivor.
Hobbs—“Tubbs is the most remark
able man I know r .”
Dobbs—“ln what way?”
Hobbs—“He weighs about 180
pounds, and according to his own
account he never eats anything and
hasn't had a good night’s sleep for
thirty years.”—Chicago Record- Her
aid.
A Contrast to Avoid.
“I don't want to see Lydia when
she comes back from that summer
school.”
“Why not?”
“Oh, she will be bursting with
knowledge while the rest of us have
been sitting around here in the heat
forgetting what little we know."-£>e
troit Free Press.
Heady For the Itush.
They had been drifting about in the
open boat seven days, and all were
near unto death, when the half-fam
ished sailor in the bow' leaped up and
cried “A sail! A sail!”
“What, a bargain sale?” shrieked
the lialf-dead woman passenger, as
she began fumbling for her purse.—*
Baltimore World.
Just Wliat lie Meant.
“So you resolved to say just what
you meant to Miss Win'nem,” re
marked Miss Cayenne.
“Yes,” answered Willie Wishing
ton; “I c-ame out bodily and asked her
if she w r ould be mine.”
“Oh, that isn’t what you meant. The
real question is, “Can you be hers?’ ”
—Washington Star.
Devious.
Wheeler—“l took that short (?) trip
you recommended. It was thirty
miles.”
Sprockett—“Well?”
Wheeler—“ Well, you said it was
only fifteen miles as the crow flies.”
Sprockett—“Ah! Maybe the crows
were full of corn the day you went.”
—Philadelphia Press.
A Front in Sight.
“Yes,” said the man w r ho prides
himself on being exceedingly astute,
“I lent him an umbrella.”
“I’m surprised at you! When his
unreliability about umbrellas is one
of bis chief characteristics!”
“Yes. But I lent it with the under
standing that he is t<f bring me back
the one he gets in its place.”
A Pessimistic Opinion.
“They say that in order to be hap
py,” said the young woman who reads
a great deal, “a man ought to be a
fool or a philosopher.”
“Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne. “If
a man is a fool he can’t get a woman
to accept him. And if lie is as wise as
philosophers are credited with being
tie won’t propose.”—Washington Star.
“Young Mr. Dawdles lias become
very industrious since lie decided to
go into business. His office hours are
from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.
“Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne; “I
understand that, he has had to raise
his office boy’s wages for staying all
that time to tell people that Mr.
Dawdle had just gone out, but would
be in at 11 o’clock next morning.”-*
Washington Star.
Happy Thought.
Aunt Hannah—“ What makes you
look so sad to-night, Frederick V”
Frederick—“ Only think of it, Auntie!
I came away from Carrie’s to-night
without asking if she loved me.”
Aunt Hannah—“But she has told you
she loves you, time and time again.”
Frederick—“Oh, yes, and ’she told,
me so to-night the first of the even
ing; but I always ask her when I
come away. There's one thing I can
do. I’ll write her a long letter before
I go to bed.”—Boston Transcript
QUITE* READY, FOR THE EMER
GENCY! f
Wordsworth s lines, of the child at
play, “as if his whole vocation were
endless imitation,” were re’cently recalled
by a conversation overheard in the chil
dren’s ward at a provincial hospital.
A little girl, whose role was that of
nurse, rang an imaginary telephone on
the wall to talk to her companion at the
farther end of the room, who played
the part of doctor.
“Hallo!” said the nurse. "Is that the
doctor ?”
“Yes,” answered her companion, in a
deep voice, “this is the doctor.”
“This lady is very'‘ill,” he was in
formed. , • .
“Well, what seems to be the matter?”
“She has swallowed a whole bottle of
ink,” said the nurse.
The doctor, not flurried, inquired what
had been done for the patient; but the
nurse, too, was ready in emergencies.
She answered: “I gave her two pads
of blotting paper!”— Tit-Bits.
THE DOCTOR’S JOKE.
He was a horrid doctor, anyway, and
no gentleman, or he would not have
been so cruel to the fair young girl v/h<r
sought his aid. But even doctors are
human and like to joke.
‘Doctor,’ she said, “I am afraid this
climate is too severe for me. I have
such great trouble breathing with nay
lungs.”
You would have a great deal more
trouble breathing without them,” re
plied the cruel man with a loud, hoarse
laugh.
The maiden shrunk from such a
wicked man and fled as though
by a —Boston Herald.
TIT FOR TAT.
Voter—May I ask whether your visit
home at this time has any political sig
nificance ?
Statesman—Young man, let me first
ask whether your numerous visits to my
daughter in my absence have any senti
mental significance. —Chicago Record-
Herald.
MUST RUN THE RISK.
Do you approve of women’s taking
an active part in politics?” asked the
idle person.
“Certainly,” answered Mr. Meekton.
Let them go ahead. If thiey want to
stay away from home and take chances
on a man’s walking right in on the best
carpet with his muddy boots that’s their
lookout, not ours.” —Washington Star.
handicapped.
“He never amounted to much did
he?”
No, but then the poor fellow never
had half a chance.”
“How was that?”
He was considered a prodigy when
he was young, and was treated accord
ingly.”—Chicago Post.
A POSSIBLE INCIDENT.
First Horse—What’s wrong with old
Grey? He’s shaking his head as if a
hornet had stung him.
Second Horse—Perhaps he has a bee
in his bonnet.
SIOO Krward. SIOO.
The readers of this naper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure in all
ite stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cura is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy
ing the foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
P. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
People in the West End of London are
spending much money this year on exter
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FITS permanently cured. No flts ornervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. B. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
There’s more in a clock than appears on
the face of it.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25e a bottle
British exports to the Cape and Natal
increased thirty-four per cent last year.
I amsure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ago.— Mbs. Thomas Bob
bins, Maple St., Norwich, NX, Feb. 17, 1900.
There are over 200,000 acres of uncult.-
vated oyster land in Long Island Sound.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the
hands or spot the kettle. Sold by all drug
gists.
“When it comes to matrimony,” says
the cynical bachelor, “it seems as though
no man ever gets old enough to know bet
ter.”
SOZODONT Tooth Powder 25c
LIFE OH McKINLEY will sell by
the thousands. Agenls will make
from $5.00 to S2O per day, $1.50 book
best nuthor, best terms, freight paid,
outfit free, send ten cts in stamps to
pay postage, and begin at once; circu
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BIBLE HOUSE. Atlanta, Ga.
Ilf ANTED immediately enwretic man as trav
tiy 1 w elini? salesman for our tobaccos and
■ ■cifrars. Experience not essontial. Good position.
COMMERCIAL TOBACCO CO., Bedford City, Va.
“The Mane* that made West Point farntm.”
McILHENNY’S TABASCO.
HH '
H Best Cough byrup. Tastes Good. Use PI
CIJ • In time. Sold by druggists. pW
w (Thompson’s Eyo Wator
AN UNUSUAL HAPPENING.
Cholly— I get such frightful head
aches lately. Doctor thinks perhaps
there s some foreign substance in my
bwain.
Miss Pepprey—Ah! An idea, per-
Press.
f ,*e. ;
The Typewriter Invention.
A statistician has proved that the invention
of the typewriter has given employment to
500,000 people, bnt he fail* to state how many
cases of weak stomachs and dyspepsia it has
induced. All people of sedentary occupation
need -os tetter'a Stomach Bitters. It is a
wonderful medicine and helps nature bear
the strain which ensues from confinement.
It also cures dyspepsia, .indigestion, constipa
tion and flatulency. Be sure to try it and you
will not be disappointed.
The two most unpopular men in the
world are the baseball umpire and the
weather man.
That. Palo Woman
You meet everywhere in nine cases out ten 1s
ent tied to rosy cheeks and a strong eonstiui
titan. Her Troubles are easdy curable. The
right remedy is Dickey’s Female l pule and
Regulator. It invigorates all the delicate or
ganism of woman, and banishes every iorin of
female weakness.
The annual expenditure of the Mexican
Government to-day is three times what it
was thirty years ago.
Best for tile Bowels.
No matter what ails yon, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. Cascabets help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, coat you just ID
cents to start getting your health’back. Cas
cabets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
Eighty thousand cats are yearly export
ed from Great Britain. The total number
on those islands is estimated at 7,000,000
Poorly?
“ For two years I suffered ter
ribly from dyspepsia, with great
depression, and was always feeling
poorly. I then tried Ayer’s Sarsa
parilla, and in one week I was a
new man.” —John McDonald,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Don’t forget that it’s
“Ayer’s” Sarsaparilla
that will make you strong
and hopeful. Don’t waste
your time and money by
trying some other kind.
Use the old, tested, tried
and true Ayer’s Sarsapa
rilla. SI.OO i bottle. All drnjjists.
Ask your doctor what he thinks of Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla. He knows all about this (fraud
old family medicine. Follow his advice and
wo will be satisfied.
J. C. Ayek Cos., Lowell, Mass.
Constipation
Does your head ache ? Pain
back of your eyes? Bad
taste in your mouth? It’s
your liver! Ayer’s Pills are
liver pills. They cure consti
pation, headache, dyspepsia.
25c. All druggists.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
brown or rich black? Then use
BUCKINGHAM'S BYE Whiskers 1
“A BAD EYE.”
There is only one kind
•*|Spp which cannot be cured
by Mitchell’s Eye
Salve. That’s a blind eye, mor
ally or otherwise. Having the
curable kind, try “ Mitchell’s.”
You will be satisfied. Price, 25c.
Mitchell’s Eye Salve
By mail, 25c; Hall & Ruckel, New York City.
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A Slight Illness Treated at Once Will Frequently Prevent a
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EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR
By J. HAMILTON AYERS, A. M.. M. D.
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