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THE YOUNGSTOWN NEWS VOL. XX. VOUNGSTOWN, N. Y.; tf] DECEMBER 28. 1900. NO. 47. THE TREATY IS RATIFIED Vote Was 55 to 18, Six More Than the Necessary Two-thirds. THE DEBATE IN THE SENATE Amendments Adopted Give the United States Power to Control and Defend the Canal Except by Fortifications, and "Superseding" the Clayton-Bui■ wer Treaty~Other Amendments Lost. Washington, D. C. (Special).—After impending the greater part of a fortnight in considering the Hay-Paunceifote treaty for the modification of the Clayton-Bulwer convention of 1850, the Senate Thursday consumed only one hour and ten minutes in amending it and ratifying It as amended. In this time there were six roll calls and several viva voce votes. The first five %Qf the roll calls were on amendments offered by Individual Senators and the 1 last one on the resolution to ratify the treaty as amended. All the amendments, exctpt those offered by Senator Foraker, and reported by the Commit ■tee on Foreign Relations, were voted [down by majorities averaging about ■19. The ratification resolution was jadopted by a vote of 55 to 18. The ..vote was as follows: ' Yeas—Aldrich, Allison, Bacon, Beveridffe, Burrows, Carter, Chandler, Clay ICullom, Deboe, Dillingham, Elkins, 'Fairbanks, Foraker, Foster, Frye, Gallinger. Hale, Hanna. Hansbrough, •Harris, Hawley, Hoar, Jones (Neva'da), Kean, Kenney, Lindsay, Lodge, Mcßride, McComas. McCumber, MclEnery, McLauriu, McMillin, Mallory, Morgan, Nelson, Penrose, Perkins, "Pettus. Piatt (New York), Prltchard, fProctor, Quarles, Scott. Shoup, Spooner, Stewart, Sullivan, Taliaferro /Thurston, Turner, Warren, Wetmore, , iWoleott—ss. i Nays—Allen, Bard, Bate, Berry, Butler. Cockrell, Culoerson, Daniel, Heit, Ifeid, Martin, Mason, Money, Petti- , 'grew. Teller, Tillman, Turley, Vest, „ (Wellington—lB. j- : '',><The Senate was In executive session Jtor about an hour before the time for '<rt'their''at ; When 3 o'clock arrived Senatoi 'Lodge, who as a member of the Com- -Relations has piijo'ed the treaty Tfirongh the Senate Mince the death of Chairman Davis, lost no time in demanding that the votjlng begin. The Foreign Relations Committee amendments were read [first. Senator Lodge himself suggested a verbal amendment to the first of these, adding the word "convention" after the word "which," so !as to make the amendment readf "Which convention is hereby super; * 'eeded." He explained that suggestion ■had been made that without the addition of that word the amendment might be construed as applying to article VIII. (8) of the Clayton-Bulwei jtreaty, whereas, he said, it was in .tended to apply to the entire treaty. ( The amendment was accepted and ,the two committee amendments, the: ' both were accepted without division. | The first roll call was upon Senator Elkins's amendment, declaring that ''nothing contained in this treaty shall be construed to prevent the United States from acquiring at any time sufficient territory and sovereignty over the same upon which to build, manage, operate, defend, fortify, protect and control said canal, or for any other purposes as the United States may deem best in its own interests." | It was lost by a vote of 25 to 45. The other amendment roll calls were as follows: On Mr. Butler's amendment to strike out section seven of article two, prohibiting fortifications— Itwenty-six yeas to forty-four nays. (Senator Lindsay, who had voted against the Elkins amendment, voted for the Butler provision. On Mr. Mason's amendment, authorizing the protection of the canal as the United States may deem proper—twenty-five yeas to forty-four nays. j On Senator Bard's amendment, reserving the right of the United Strtes to discriminate in the canal traffic in jfavor of American vessels—twentyseven yeas to forty-three nays. | On Senator Tillman's amendment, authorizing the defense of the canal and the maintenance of public order the United States—twenty-seven reas to forty-three nays. f Senator Allen's amendment, amending article two, was voted down viva jroce, as also was an amendment suggested by Senator Teller practically striking out all of article two. T All the amendments suggested having been acted upon and those of the committee adopted, Senator Allen asked for the reading of the treaty as amended. This request was complied Kvith, and +he vote was taken on the treaty Itself. T The pairs on the treaty vote were Irs follows: Two Senators for the treaty being paired with one against It, in accordance with custom—Depew ind Sewell for, with Rawlins against; > Clark and Simon for, with Chilton | against; Dolliver and Baker for, with Towne against; Caffery and Piatt <of ' Connecticut for, with Jones of Artansas against; Kyle, absent and un- VMbels Built on the Clyde in 1900. IMmfe&m.Vx year 1000, 320 vessels of were built on the Clyde, THE NEWS EPITOMIZED WASHINGTON ITEMS. Senator William V. Sullivan, of Mississippi, and Mrs. Marie Atkinson, of Washington, were married at St. Stephen's Church. The couple left immediately for the Senator's home in Mississippi.Mrs. MeKinley went to a theatre for the first timp since her husband's inauguration as President. One result of the recent celebratjon of the centennial anniversary of the founding of Washington is the Inauguration of a movement to erect a monument to former Governor Alexander R. Shepherd, to whose energy the city owes largely its beauty. Mr. Shepherd is now in Mexico, where he owns a silver mine. The Senate confirmed the nomination of George V. L. Meyer, of Massachusetts, to be Ambassador to Italy. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. General Hughes reports that 21,000 persons in the Island of Panay, P. 1., have sworn allegiance to the United States. The budget of the municipality oi Havana, Cuba, amounts to $2,411,000 Ttoe principal items are: Police, $902, 000, and salaries of city officials, $177, 000. The volunteer regiments are to return to the United States in the order In which they arrived in the Philippines.De Ford's new central sugar factory at Guayama, Porto Rico, was formally opened by Governor Allen. Many planters were present. The capacity of the factory is 12,000 tons for the season. Governor Wood inspected the troops, the fortifications and improvements on the sea wall at Matanzas, Cuba. The first bill passed by the Porto Rlcan House of Delegates declared that membership in the House is incompatible with the holding of tfther public office. Predictions are freely made at Havana, especially among the Conservatives, that the Cuban Constitutional Convention will break up in a wrangle over the question of suffrage. DOMESTIC. Miss Lydla W. Decou. of Haddonfit>)a jj>T.^r( frftir n into the, Dela'Vare anrfwae drowned. She had expressed, feaf that she would become Insane from illness. Ingram Hall, to be dWoted to scientific study, the gift to Ripon College of O. H. Ingram, of Eau Claire, was dedicated at Ripon, \yis., with appropriate ceremonies. ' Fire at Elk Point, S. D., destroyed the entire business portion of ihe town, involving a loss estimated at $150,000. The report of the New York Police Board for 1899 shows that 110,172 men and 28,703 women were arrested during the year. Leroy R. Piper, former cashier of the First National Bank, of St. Mary's, Ohio, who disappeared in Yellowstone Park, has been given up as dead. In broad daylight thieves robbed the bank of (Jolrt & Co., at Albee, S. D., of $1000 while the cashier had gone across the street, after locking the safe and bank doors. At the convocation exercises of the University of Chicago President Harper announced that John D. Rockefeller had made another gift of $1,500,000 to the institution. Becoming entangled in the reins, a boy named Hall was dragged a mile by a runaway horse at Mount Liberty, Ind., and kicked to death. For a fancied grievance James H. Johnson, colored, shot and killed Florin Crew, near Hyattsville, Md., and then committed suicide. Oswald Ottendorfer, editor and publisher of the New Yorker Staats Zeltung. died after an illness of many years. C. C. Black has filed a petition in bankruptcy, at Goshen, Ind., with 1810,000 liabilities, and $220 assets. Helen Keller, the deaf, blind and heretofore dumb student at Radcllffe College, Mass., astonished her classmates by making an address of a few words. Detroit street railways were reorganized as the Detroit United Railway Company, capitalized at $12,500,000. A movement Is on foot for closing all the saloons In Kansas. The transport Logan sailed from San Francisco for Manila with $1,300,000 in cash. She carried ninety-nine recruits.Cadets at the University of Alabama decided to return to military duty after a strike of several days. FOREIGN. Pekin advices say General Tung- Fuh-Siang Is practically dictator, and practically controls the movements of China's troops. Thanksgiving over General Roberts's return has been given up. the British Government announcing that It will await the close of war operatlons.The general view of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty taken by the London press is that Great Britain will insist upon a full equivalent in Alaska or some other quarter for any concession she may make. M. Manzonl, who introduced the resolution in the Swiss National Council demandlbg that Great Britain accept arbitration with the Transvaal, announced that tbe Council declined to act thereon. CODAHY PAYS RANSOM Kidnappers Get $25,000 in Gom] Asked For His Boy. . I rHEYTHREATENED TO BUND HM®! The Father Drove at Night Alone is • Wagon to a Rendeivoui In the Waodl and Deposited the Money, Then Re'; turned Home — Soon After Hl* Boa Walked Into the House—The Plot. Omaha, Neb. (Special).—The price of Edward Cutlaliy's liberty was $25,000 In gold, and the kidnappers have the money and the parents have their fifteen-year-old son again. This is the dramatic sequel of fifty hours of ex-"' citetnent over the sudden disappearance of the young man. The search for the lad was participated in by thousands of citizens, hundreds of policemen and a dozen expert detectives, yet the thieves succeeded In carrying 'i out their plot, securing the gold and getting away from the city. The story stands out unique in the history of the criminal annals of the West. After watching the Cudahy home for a month for the purpose of abducting one of the Cudahy girls, the robbers suddenly concluded to take the boy. He was thrust into a cab within a block of home at 7 o'clock in the evening on a well-lighted and prominent' thoroughfare, carried Into the outskirts of the city, kept a prisoner forty-eight hours, and finally handed over to his distracted father In return for a fortune in cash. Mr. Cudahy announced that he will pay $25,000 reward for the apprehension of the abductors of his son, $15.- DOO for two of them and $5000 for one. The abductors sent letters to the house, and they were cunningly conceived. The first letter was brief and to the point. It simply said that the boy was safe, and that the kidnappers wanted $25,000 for his return. But the second letter was diabolical.. It recalled the Charley Ross case. M' cunningly recalled how the father. o|, i] that boy had been willing to pay $2611 "TA"f1 father Hot to doso. And it threatened to put out Cudahy's eyes with acid, and turn him loose, and then abduct another millionaire's child and demand $100,000 ransom, while the whole country rang with the horror of the crime upoa* young Cudahy. On receipt of this letter a consultation was held and the situation gone over in detail. Plans were discussed for capturing the bandits when they should make their appearance at the rendezvous that had been designated. But one after another these plans were dropped as being impracticable. Finally, impelled by the strain under which the entire household was laboring, Mr. Cudahy decided to comply with the terms offered and ransom his son. A trusted messenger, sworn to secrecy, was sent for the money, which was brought to the Cudahy home. After dinner Mr. Cudahy had one of his horses harnessed to a light buggy, and, taking the money in it with him, started alone for the designated place at which the money was to lie left. In the buggy he carried a red lantern. He drove five miles -west of the town in the Sherman avenue road until lie came to a white lantern hanging on a short stick beside the road. Alighting from his buggy, Mr. Cudahy, deposited the sack containing the money near the stick bearing the white light. Then, without seeing anybody, he returned to his home. Medntime the abductors had seen thel red light coming up the road, and, as soon as the buggy disappeared, thsjp took away the money and preparedrto keep faith with the father. The boy was bundled into a cab and set down close by his father's house, about 1 o'clock in the morning. Two policemen saw the cab and watched the boy return to the house, but they were unable to catch the abductors. It was all done-so quickly. Mr. and Mrs. Cudahy feel that they have cause for relief, not only over the return of their son, but also because one or possibly more of their daughters were not included In the conspiracy, which has caused them so much anxiety and grief, a 8 a statement of the conspirators, overheard by the lad while he was In their power, indicates that they had been attempting for a month to secure possession of one of his sisters. TWO NEGROES LYNCHED. Killed a Boat Trader and Hl* Family— Confessed the Crime. New Orleans, La. (Special).—Thomns Thompson, who operated a trading boat on the Mississippi, between Vleksburg and Natchez, selling mainly to the negroes, was murdered, with his wife and Infant child, at Arcadia Land in Issuqucnn County, Miss. His trading boat was burned and sunk, and the bodies thrown Into the river. Great excitement was created *n Arkadelphia and the surrounding country by the news of the murder, and 'several posses were sent out. One of the posses identified the murderers as two negroes working at a levee camp near Arcadia. One of them was wearing the clothing of the murdered man, while the other was In possession of his gun. They were promptly arrested, coev:j feeeed their guilt and there soon « terward lynched by the men irho a tured them. \ UNKNOWN BANDIT A SUICIDE » Cuts His Throat in a • Rear New Orleans. l\atto Pumuera Aftpr a I».»r--• Kobbery. But Found ttoald Not Kwape. (p, train robber, drew the panting knife across his iwratnp near this city and •;0n the Illinois Central t had searched in vain Who had escaped from «! to drop a United States ne wounded man had ta were found the watch °' **or °f *n«* n,ail train, letters and a quantl- Hea<! B»d identified as that of Chanalie.iji, j Barnes, with many aliaee* K-ae wanted for partiei pntlng e daring holdup of an llt| express train at Wickf inpts were made to arrest him il Louie, soon after, he shot Chief rial Agent Murray, of the Ittal Railway, and escaped over, tbffl me tops, evading hundreds of pttraPVs. His brother and an neper* later captured and con UNKNOWN GIVES UP OFFICE. been Pitkin in the courts hero, Jlß' Wtelttlons in con ectioq with §w9§|jfft of his private secretary, '.♦■fpiifi. who was charged by him 'Snjttenllng papers and docU' merits c JUtht to light certain letters, clninn ' Sr. tbe woman to have been written W Pitkin and sent through the mtlEWkUe he was Postmaster, the natafc o* which involved a viola FOR MINISTER TO TURKEY. J. a. A.i 4tohraan Nominnteil — Othei 'MVoUm Sent to the Stinate. Washierton, D. C. Special). — The Presldeßnominr' d John G. A. Leishman. ofSennsylvania, now Minister tL Switzerßid, to be United States Minister toß'uTkey, succeeding Oscar S. Straus, »New Yorl{ ArthqjßS- Hardy, of New Hampshire, now JStster to Greece, Kounmiia and SeJßa. was nominated to lie Minister tiefcwiteerland, ami Charles S. FrancMHrf New York, to be Minister to Gree] K Roumania and Servia. Cla Be L. Thurston, of Nebraska, was m(Jßpd for Secretary of the Lega tlon atißienos Ay res. DOUBLE LYNCHINC IN INDIANA. Two 3 ■"*•• Put to Deatl> by Mot, *A For Murder. Rocpj Ind. (Special).—"Jim"' Hendlj Bn and "Bud" Rowland, negroeei wre banged in the jallyard by a f five hundred persons. Hendersoi Sod Rowland waylaid, murdered isd Uien robbed H. S. Simons, a wni FO*rber. The men were stispectejßnd arrested, nnd ty the aid of a dhound their nuilt was estab■Henderson was shot to death in VI. lind then hanged. Rowland ■d before he was strung up. The I Were afterward riddled UNKNOWN Actress and Himself. [ Metzger, a stained glass man! ■fturer. of Newark, N. J., mur- Bn actreee, Elsie Dinsmore, Kllao as hie wife, and killed ■li> Hopewell, Penn. His lawful I llree in Newark, but he de- Lγ and three children several UNKNOWN Love Drove Him to Army. BeJK* hi# sweetheart jilted him FrrftMMfrLe Clair, a graduate of Victoria iMflffi Montreal, and who was loogjjHkre been ordained as a Methodlat allater, enlisted in the Regular AnnfflCuhe recruiting office at Syracuse, JBBr. The couple were to have beea Jpried on Christmas Day. UNKNOWN Bank Robbed of 515,000. KnK'a Bank, at Hope, Ind., won robbJJMj t',roe men who destroyed a heavy charge of nltrogljKgfl|vand secured, It Is said, $15,- OOffiHptlce of the robbers has been UNKNOWN Cut in Two by a Train. Drowsed. f *ov'. ■ ' '.'. , % *>i' DE WETS SPLENDID DASH Story of the Boers' Escape From Encircling British Columns. BOLDEST EXPLOIT OF THE WAR The Karr Force Galloped Through Npringhaan Nek, About Four Ml Iμ of 11n.n.l Flat. Itnbroken )> round, (he Kntranr< to Which Wμ Guarded by Two Port. —\ M»gnlHi <i\l Spectacle. Bloomfonteiu, South Africa (By Cable.)— The details of General Dβ Wet's escape from the encircling British columns furnish oue of tlio boldest incidents of the war. When Haasbroek's command joined De Wet. some fifteen miles east of Thaba Nchu, General Knox was only about nu hour distant, and the Boer situation appeared desperate.But Do Wet was equal to the occasion. Dispatching Haasbroek west ward, to make a feint at VlctorUi Nek, De Wet prepared to break through the British columns at Sprliiglmau Nek Pass, about four miles of brund, flat, unbroken ground. Ar the entrance were two fortified posts, while artillery was posted on a hill eastward, watching the Boers. Suddenly a maguiftccut spectacle was presented. The whole Boer ;.rniy of 2500 men started at a gallop, in open order, through the nek President Sieyn and Plet Fourie led the charge, and Det Wet brought up the rear. The British guns and rifles boomed and rattled iucossanrly. The Boors flrst tried the eastward route, but encountering artillery they diverged and galloped to the front of the hill to the westward, where the lire of only a aiiijjk' post was effective.The who'e manoeuvre was a piece of magnificent daring, nnd its success was complete, in spite of the loss of a fifteen-pounder and tweniy-iive prisoners. /' REINFORCEMENTS FOR KITCHENER »»-• w IT.nil fr-ntr- - ■' London Tw announces. that In view of tfii immv tion in South Africa it has decided to reinforce General Kitchsner as follows: Eight hundred mounted infan try and two regiments of cavalry will be dispatched Immediately. Detachments of mounted men for 10,000 colonial police, who are being enrolled in Great Britain, will start as fast as they are formed. The Government has invited Australia and New Zea land to send more mounted troops. Open Revolt in Cape Colony. London (By Cable).—"We understand that private reliable advices have been received in London," says the Daily Mail, "to the effect that virtually all the districts of Cape Colony in the vicinity of the Ora-ige River are in more or less open revolt, and that there is likely to be sharp lighting on a rather large scale before the invasion If crushed. The tactics of the Boers It) rallying as many as possible of the Dutch in the back country to ttelr cause are proving successful." French Routs Boer UNKNOWN Cape Town, South Africa (By Oable; —At Thorndale, Transvaal, General French has routed 2500 Boers with four guns and a pom-pom. ThornUalr is sixteen miles northwest of dorp." The Brltigh had fourteen wounded and the Boers fled In dlsor der with about fifty killedi Generals Baden-Powell and Brabant have been ordered to the front. ROCER WOLCOTT DEAD. Former Governor of Haiincliunetti Ex pirei at Hl* Homo in Bo»ton. Boston (Special).—Former Oovernoi Roger Wolcott died of typhoid at hU home In this city He was born in Boston July 13, 1847, the son of J. Huntington and Cornelia Frothing baiij Wolcott. An ancestor was Oil ver Wolcott, one, of the signers cf the Declaration ol Independence, and all his forbears iry stock. He Was graduated from Harvard In the class of '70. He was three times Governor of Massachusetts. At the end of his third term he declined a renomination. Recently he was offered the Ambassa dorship to Italy by President McKln ley, but declined It. A widow and four children survlre him. were of Revolution STEAMSHIIP ALPHA LOST. She Wμ Bound For Japan With a Cargo of Salt Salmon. Vancouver. B. C. (Special). — The steamship Alpha went to the bottom of Union Bay, Vancouver Island, a few days ago. The storm that made tin. Alpha founder, swept the whole coast. The news was brought to this city by the steamship Czar. Captain York and nine members of the crew were drowned, together with the managing owner, Sam Barber. W American, who bad lately resided in Vancouver. The Alpha was bound from Vancouver for Japan with a cargo of salt salmon. She was valued at $45,000, and was formerly owned by Plckford & Black. Halifax. N a STATE NEWS. Report of State Labor Bureau. T>alx»r was more generally employed to the third quarter of I'.mhi than during the preceding three mouths, snya Oμ Bulletin of the State Labor Bureau for the quarter ended last September 30. The number of unionists Idle on October 1 whs 31,460, and on Fuly 1, 4!>,382. The condition of the labor market lUe last quarter tru about normal, the Idleness not being reneral, hut <i>iitlued to three industries—cigar making (the result of the New York dry strike). rlothlnjf (dull season), und construction work. As a consequence of irregular employment in these industries tlie earnings .if trnde unionist:* suffered n decline from J&OM of the third quarter of tSO'.t; In I'nct. earnings Id nenrly all mules were smaller in 1900s. The number of labor organizations ha* steadily increased lu this State for ■iome yearn past mvtil they now number liiitt,., an Increnee ef thirty-four lißra June, wlille the aggregate membership In'£2oo less than iu June, being 1U0.3.T2. The decline is mainly due to a falling off in strength of some of the recently organised union* In the western part of the State. Immigration at the port of New York continues to increase, the arrival* during the Inst quarter being 83.166, compared with 56,078 during the corresponding quarter of 189!), and 43.717 in 181)8. The employment of convict* upon the public highways has been common in some of the States but. although for many years urged, has only recently been attempted In New York. The first experiment was made by the Oneirta County Board of Supervisor* In 1890 und apparently proved a success. According to a report made to the State Engineer nnd Surveyor, which Iμ extensively quoted in, the Bulletin, 1)1)10 feet of road coat $5873.35, of which the item of prison labor (ttbout thirty-four men employed 2075 days at twenty-live cents a day.) was $658.75 und the materials $3828.00. The total cost per mile was therefore, $4515. which is snid to be less than half die cost of similar roads in Oneida County bulft by contract. Syracuse's Widow Pharmaciat. It is announced that the highest ratting ever given by the New York Stajtelto&td of Pharmacy In an exthe proprietor of a drug store. This store was left to her three yeara ago. when her husband died. She tried to jell the business, but the offers she received were so low that she decided aot to make the sacrifice. Instead she hired a licensed elerli and started In to run the business with his asßlstince. Every spare moment out of school hours has been spent in the store and In the study of pharmacy. The result of this woman's hard work Is seen In the showing she made In the examination and In the succeaa of the business. Governor Odell's Military Family. Governor-elect Odell announced the appointment of the following as liiH military family: Governor's personal aides, William LtttaUer, of Gloversviile, Charles H. Sherrili, of New York Uty, George P. Roth, of Rochester, with rank of Oaptaln, and Edward 8. Fowler of Brooklyn, with rank of Lieutenant-Colonel; military aides, Oaptniu Charles Heury Ross, of the Eighth Regiment, Captain John J. Byrne, of the Ninth Regiment, Major Charles O. Davis, of the Thirteenth Regiment, Captain Charles I. Devebolse, of Troop C, First Lieutenant Chauncey Mhtlock, of the Third Battery. Captaiu Seymour Penfleld White, of the Sixty-flfth Regiment. Captain A. C. Mclntyre, of the Twenty-fourth Separate Company, First Lieutenant W. Leland Thompson, of the Twelfth Separate Company, Captain J. T. Sadler, of the Thirtieth Separate Company, and Lieutenant-Commander Alfred Brooks Fry, of the Naval Militia. Girl Victims in One Grave. The bodies of Fhineas Jackson Morris, janitor; Ruth Thomas, of Pike; Maud F. Flzzell, of Bradford, Penn.; Cora Storms, of Boston, Krle County; Inez Jones, of Busti; May Williams. o< Cannonsvllle; Bessie Hathaway, ol Lake Coma, l'ciin., victims of the flr« which destroyed (he State Normal and Training School, were laid at rest ai Fredoula. Every store in the village was closed. Thousands came from tai and pear to witness the last sad rites, which began at 11 o'clock, when high mass was celebrated In Bt. Joseph's Catholic Church, and were continued at 2 p. ui. in the First Presbyterian Chim-h. Following the services all the coftlns were carried to Forest Hill Cemetery in ncparate hearses and thu bodies laid side by side In one grave. Edward P. Coyne Resigns. Edward P. Coyne, of Geneseo, Llv* Ingston County, First Deputy Attorney-General, has tendered bit reslg. nation to Attorney-General Davie* Upon the sudden death of his brother; John H. Coyne, who was First Deputy, Judge Coyne was asked by Attorney- General Divles to take up the unfinished work with which be wm familiar. He bas completed It and now desires to resume his duties as Conn, ty Judge and Surrogate of Livingston County. Warrant For "Half Horse, Half Man." The police of Watertown hold a warrant for James Brown, a freak, being "half horse and half man," on the charge of Jumping a board bill Ha has been exhibited at fairs throughout the Bute. i JAn lodependeit Re-J t Hblicu Paper. J i 6. OUTER PRICE,. Editor. The BrtfMest and Beat J County Paper. T $1.00 Per Vear la AOaaee. # AtmrtWagltfwMApplletfke. J
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Youngstown News, 1900-12-28 |
| Description | Early newspapers of Youngstown, New York |
| Subject |
Newspapers--New York (State) Niagara County (N.Y.)--Newspapers Youngstown (N.Y.)--Newspapers |
| NY Heritage Topic | Community & Events |
| Location |
New York (State), Western Niagara County (N.Y.) Youngstown (N.Y.) |
| Date of Original | 1900-12-28 |
| Physical Format | Newspapers |
| Type | Text |
| Language | English |
| Format of Digital | image/tiff |
| Identifier | ytn_19001228 |
| Holding Institution |
Nioga Library System Town of Porter Historical Society Museum Niagara Falls Public Library |
| Digital Collection | Youngstown Newspapers |
| Library Council | WNYLRC |
| Rights | All images in this collection are for educational and non-commercial purposes only. |
| File Name | index.cpd |
Description
| Title | Youngstown News, 1900-12-28 |
| Description | Early newspapers of Youngstown, New York |
| Subject |
Newspapers--New York (State) Niagara County (N.Y.)--Newspapers Youngstown (N.Y.)--Newspapers |
| NY Heritage Topic | Community & Events |
| Location |
New York (State), Western Niagara County (N.Y.) Youngstown (N.Y.) |
| Date of Original | 1900-12-28 |
| Physical Format | Newspapers |
| Type | Text |
| Language | English |
| Format of Digital | image/tiff |
| Identifier | ytn_19001228_001 |
| Holding Institution |
Nioga Library System Town of Porter Historical Society Museum Niagara Falls Public Library |
| Digital Collection | Youngstown Newspapers |
| Library Council | WNYLRC |
| Rights | All images in this collection are for educational and non-commercial purposes only. |
| Technical Data | 2956.44 KB |
| Transcript |
THE YOUNGSTOWN NEWS VOL. XX. VOUNGSTOWN, N. Y.; tf] DECEMBER 28. 1900. NO. 47. THE TREATY IS RATIFIED Vote Was 55 to 18, Six More Than the Necessary Two-thirds. THE DEBATE IN THE SENATE Amendments Adopted Give the United States Power to Control and Defend the Canal Except by Fortifications, and "Superseding" the Clayton-Bui■ wer Treaty~Other Amendments Lost. Washington, D. C. (Special).—After impending the greater part of a fortnight in considering the Hay-Paunceifote treaty for the modification of the Clayton-Bulwer convention of 1850, the Senate Thursday consumed only one hour and ten minutes in amending it and ratifying It as amended. In this time there were six roll calls and several viva voce votes. The first five %Qf the roll calls were on amendments offered by Individual Senators and the 1 last one on the resolution to ratify the treaty as amended. All the amendments, exctpt those offered by Senator Foraker, and reported by the Commit ■tee on Foreign Relations, were voted [down by majorities averaging about ■19. The ratification resolution was jadopted by a vote of 55 to 18. The ..vote was as follows: ' Yeas—Aldrich, Allison, Bacon, Beveridffe, Burrows, Carter, Chandler, Clay ICullom, Deboe, Dillingham, Elkins, 'Fairbanks, Foraker, Foster, Frye, Gallinger. Hale, Hanna. Hansbrough, •Harris, Hawley, Hoar, Jones (Neva'da), Kean, Kenney, Lindsay, Lodge, Mcßride, McComas. McCumber, MclEnery, McLauriu, McMillin, Mallory, Morgan, Nelson, Penrose, Perkins, "Pettus. Piatt (New York), Prltchard, fProctor, Quarles, Scott. Shoup, Spooner, Stewart, Sullivan, Taliaferro /Thurston, Turner, Warren, Wetmore, , iWoleott—ss. i Nays—Allen, Bard, Bate, Berry, Butler. Cockrell, Culoerson, Daniel, Heit, Ifeid, Martin, Mason, Money, Petti- , 'grew. Teller, Tillman, Turley, Vest, „ (Wellington—lB. j- : '',> |
| File Name | ytn_19001228_001.tif |
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