! For North Caro- '"Tr"TT"n - 7 "TTTv T T"T7 r -t" ska ) - , ., ! : 1 he Morning kort. Temperature for the past 24 hours: Max.;74;Min.5& I VoLXII - ; - y RALEIQH. X Mo. 131 EM0C1 ricGlellan 1 Kentucky Swings Back to Her Old Place in the Party GAINS IN BAY STATE I "Ohio Considers the Mark flanna Idea Good Enough for Her to Tie To j Republican Majority in Iowa j Reduced Pennsylvania Is j Joined to Idols Rhode Island Holds on to Her Democratic Governor- New Jersey Remains in the Camp of the-Enemy Ne braska Claimed by Re publicansThe Democrats! Make Almost a Clean Sweep in Virginia-'-AII One sided in Mississippi-rProb-able RlGrmon Victory in Utah-Colorado Has Gone Republican f New Tork, Nov. 3. The elections throughout the country for an off year apparently had almost as much inter f est to the voters as the hottest of pres t idential years. Electi9ns for governor I were held in Massachusetts. Rhode Is j land, Maryland, Ohio and Iowa. I The indications, based on early and I most scattering returns, are -that Bates f (Republican) is re-elected governor ot I Massachusetts by a reduced plurality I over Gaston (Democrat), who carried I the city of Boston by 18.000. f A dispatch from Providence says that I Garvin, the present Democratic gov I ernor,' is re-elected by a reduced ma I jority over Colt (Republican). I In Maryland, owing to the size of- the I ticket the count proceeded very J slowly, but the latest dispatches from ! Baltimore said that returns thus far 1 favored the election of Warfield (Dem- ocrat) for governor. " From Ohio all the reports that came ' in, and they were few, showed that I Mark Hanna had elected his candidate, 7 Herrick, by about 100,000 majority. Re T publican State Chairman Dick claims I the legislature by an immense plu i rality. . Colonel George B. McClellan was i elected mayor of New York by from E5, 000 to 60,000" plurality. Groat, for comptroller, whom the fusionists j and Republicans made such a fight against, ran ahead ; of McClellan's vote. Low I carried but one of the five boroughs, t and that was Richmond; There he got f over 2,200 vvotes less than he received 5 two years ago. McClellan carried Brooklyn borough, although it was gen Jerally believed, on account of the re volt of McLaughlin, the Democratic leader, there, Low would get from 25, 4 COO to 40.000 plurality. . - I Tammany Hall swept the board clean and elected its ticket from top to bottom. After McClellan's election,. J p.as assured, Mayor Low sent him a I message of congratulations. Tammany Hall's forces united throughout the I rity in a general jollification. There re mutterings heard in many quar- ters that the . Republican machine is not sorry at Low's defeat, and it is I eaid he was knifed unmercifully in I many districts by those Republicans who had been shouting the loudest for him. His defeat, of course,, removes Low from consideration in the selection of a Republican candidate for governor next year. Senator Piatt is not known to have shed any tears when - it was I made known that Low was beaten.. J In New York,, the Republicans have u elected enough assemblymen to insure I them control of the legislature in both branches. The legislature will stand: I Senate, 2D Republicans, 21 Democrats ; I house, 88 Republicans, 62 Democrats, f In New Jersey the Republicans elect $ ed a majority of assemblymen. . returns from Iowa indicate tljat GREATER- NEW . YORE Elected Mayor by a Collossal Plurality Oyer Low , Ifil Cummins wins by a reduced plurality. Kentucky gives Beckham and the Democratic ticket safe majorities. MASSACHUSETTS. Boston, Nov. 3. John Bates, the Re publican candidates for governor, was re-elected to the office by a plurality, of about 40,000 over Col. Wm. A. Gas ton, the Democratic nominee. The en tire Republican state ticket won and the legislature is heavily Republican,' although Ihe Democrats made slight gains in' both branches. The Socialists lose two of their three members in the house. John Cary of Haverhill, the leader of the trio, was beaten by a Republican. Drew, who was nominated in Rockland to succeed the late Fred O'Mac. Cartney, failed of election, but in Brooklyn, Renden was re-elected. The result of the balloting surprised even the most sanguine' of the Repub lican managers, ' none of whom looked for anything better than 25.000 plural ity for Bates. The couservativie men who had been misled' by the hue and cry made by the Democrats were un able to see how Gaston could be beaten by more than 5, OOOy and there were a great, many Republicans who really thought the Democratic candidate would be victorious. In Boston Gaston had a plurality of about 19,000, carry ing 19 of the 25 wards, including Bast Boston, Governor Bates!, home wardj pn.hMtPr cwn, tn Even Bochester swung over to the Democratic5 column, but former Con gressman Fitzgerald moved out of that Republican stronghold some time ago for the express purpose of making it Democratic, and it appears that he has succeeded. Gaston received 47,252 votes In the entire city and Bates 2S,US8. Iast year Gaston received 45,666, and Bates 32, 127, so the Democratic candidate made a net -gain of 3'A per cent, while Gov ernor Bates suffered a loss of 11H per cent; ohio: Columbus, O., Nov. 3. "Excellent weather throughout Ohio had every thing to do with the immense vote polled today. Myron T. Herrick of Cleveland, for Governor, will land a. " majority over Single Taxer Tom John son of Cleveland of from 00,0G0 to over 100.0CO. The legisiatuie will be Repub lican. , Franklin county, of which Columbus is Tthe county seat, with the majority of country precincts to hear - from, shows the Johnson followers . stronger than was believed. In the face of this, however, the entire county Republican ticket will be elected." Hamilton county, the metropolis, gives Herrick for governor an excep tionally large vote, the ratio being about five to one in favor of the full Republican state ticket. Cuyahoga, Johnson's home county, up to this time shows the JohnsonjBryan ticket far behind. Ottawa county, which has been a Democratic stronghold, shows a Re publican gain in all parts. - Lucas county, the home of Mayor Jones, shows the trips of Johnson in his "red "devil" in the northwestern part of the state to have been a losing game. The legislature will be Republican by a good majority. Tliis insures Senator Hanna another six-year - terro in the United States senate. Cincinnati, O., Nov. 3. At this hour, 10 p. m., it appears to be only a ques tion of figures and speculations as to what the Republican majority in this county will be. Complete returns have been received from 140 precincts, of which Johnson carries only two. It was a solar plexus blow that the elec tors of Hamilton county , administered to Tom Li. Johnson. At Renublican headquarters where. everything , is red fire and true blue enthusiasm, estimates based on -information from twp-thirds of all the precincts of the city indicate that the mayor of the Forest City will receive less than 15.0000 votes in the city pro per, . whereas Biglaw; . .who,, led the ticket last spring, received 17,000. Her rick's majority in this county is 20,000 to 25,000. MARYLAND, ' Baltimore, Nov. 3. The result of the election in this state, up to 11 o'clock is uncertain. Only four precincts were turned in. These chow a Democratic majority; of 34 oyer the last congres- nional election when the Republicans carried the city by 31. A very heavy vote was polled,-' nearly 90 per cent, of the number registered voting. Re- ports from the country at this hour state that they will not be able to send in their reports until morning. Reports from Baltimore county state that the Republicans have made gains in that territory, but. this has but little sig (Continued on second page.) BUCKS MUST GO ! . I' Citizens of an Illinois Town -a Law Unto Themselves 1, Chicago, Nov. 3. Rage over the "mur der of Chief of Police George Airie has led citizens of Morgan Pag-k to bill the town with posters ordering the ne groes of th town to leave at once, -i At a secret meeting last evening it was decided by men of the town to clear it of its colored population. De- cnito Vio affn-rfa rf IVf ci vnr den-rtra Pren. tiss and his twelve deputies to prevent any action, posters were recently put out over t the town. The negroes were today stricken with terror, the colored people began to leave town, and sev eral families went with their belong ings. I M BEL BEGHTEL AGAIN -a- An Anonymous Letter Says Her Mother Was the Murderer . Allentown, Pa., Nov. 3. Mrs. Catha- rine Bechtel, mother of Mabel , H. Bechtel. who was found murdered at hfe a week ago may be charged wlth the cnme, if a letter which was received by the police will furnish a well-founded clue. The letter' came from Philadelphia and was toor y & . - vw..- , a mv j uv. j. xvy W4kj wiiv av-j. written by a woman who signs her- jDaniels. He went j into the woods action in sending the Nashville to self "An interested party." ; where Maxwell was at work and shot ! Colon. - It alleges that the writer" know,s j him down ' witlibW I warning.: j It is re- ' Washington dispatch to the Morning what she is talking about and says : ported that Daniels had ordered Max- ' Post, some of them sent several that the murderer of the girl was Mrs. Bechtel. The letter goes on to say ; that Maxwell had persisted in paying that the mother and her daughter got 'attention tot the stepdawghter of Dan into a quarrel about Weisenberg, and iels- This is. alleged to have furnished that while Mabel was disrobing for the the motive for the shooting. Soon -af-night, her mother picked up . the ter his arrest Daniels was" brought to hatchet to frighten her. but in a fit this city and placed in jail for safe of anger she struck Mabel and killed :eePins- xesie.aay rr. , u , n,! taken to? Kenansville iici. xuiii uctaieij uic auiuui wjhi uio- p6sed of the body and that the other boys did not. know of the crime until j the next day, when a family confer-; ence was held and the disposition of Vi rs. nine" Ttrrt r er r dr ti T"vrr- 'IV e ' , letter says that-if Tom had killed the girl, he would I have confessed before commuting suiuue. f Tom, the writer says, preferred to kill himself rather than have his mother found out. JIM GROW CARS i "T . New Ordinance in Houston Provokes Scenes of Vi olence New Orleans, Nov. 3. The new ordi nance in Houston, Tex., compelling the street car company to provide (sep arate cars for whites and negroes has resulted in a riotous demonstration by the negroes. All the negro ministers have denounced the separation of the race. . The anger of the negroes is turned mainly against those ' of their race who use the boycotted cars, and they say the rocks and brickbats they hurl are aimed ('at those negroes who defy the boycott, rather than at the cars -or conductors. Meantime the com pany has lost nearly all its negro pa trons. ! I BOXES ALL FULL Curious Phase of the Election in a Kentucky Town . Cincinnati, Nov. 3. Before ten o'clock this morning, the election officials of (jovmgton, K.y.,1 were confronted by a proportion whi?h is probably without j t S. J. Smith plantation in Bosier a precedent. At 9.50 long rows of elec- 11 T i tors stood in front of six of seven poll- 1 parish by a mob of negroes, after a ing places. There was no voting- be- ! series of bloody crimes in which two ing done, and the delay insensed -busi- 'other negroes were- killed by him and ness ' men and others who had sacri-'two severely, if '.not fatally, wounded, ficed their timef to go . to the polls. Craddock was a cotton picker on the "There is no legal place to put theSmith plantation and bore a bad, rep ballots," was tb,e explanation madeT by lutation, having recently been run out the election "Judges to their fellow men of another town. According to best who were waiting to vote. "The boxes accounts he first killed Westley Cham are full, and what extra there are we bers with an axe, attacking him with have no keys to." , .. -i jout a word of warning,, severing the The official balloting in the home 'head from the body. Chambers' wife, town of John G. Carlisle, ex-secretary who saw the crime, fled. With a swing of the treasury this year resembled of the ax he , severely: -wounded , her. what i9 known In! bill-posting parts as a "three-sheet4 po8ter.'f It is fully one foot wide and three feet long,1 When folded it loo jd somethin like a sheet which had come j horne from the laun dry nicely creased and folded. It did not take many of these to congest the legal receptacle for ballots. - Extra .boxes belonging to the citywere dug out of the dusty rooms in the -city hall "basement!, but then no. keys could j be found to them. That meant a hurried trip to the hard vrarorstores and shops of the locksmiths. I Both Democrats and Republicans complained qf the ' de- ilay, and many lost their votes because they would not wait and refused to re turn to the polling places. Mob Beats Negroes New York, 'ov 3. Suspected ot having shot Jeremiah Healy.'a white boy, Arthur Patterson and: i William Black, negroes, j : were set upon by a mob of 500 white men today and beaten ?o badly that they had to be taln to a hospital. The arrival of two police- men saved them from being killed. Healy's wound is not dangerous.; i HAD A BIG GUN A Brooklyn Tailor Goes to the White House for Protection Washington, Nov. 3. Louis Bron stein, who says he is a tailor and that' his place of business is at 613 Wythe avenue, Brooklyn, was arrested hefe today while trying to secure an inter view with President RooseVelt. ! He was armed with a loaded 38 calibre pis tol. A number ; of loaded cartridges were found in! hs overcoat pocket i Bronstein Ws he wants the president to protect him agairyst a nephew. He had $15.50 in cash. Bronstein will be examined tomorrow j as to his sanity. lAXWEE'S slayer . i i : ;;,;;:;Vf; ; j liiiFil-ij i;:, George Daniel to Be Tried for Murder This Week in : ! Duplin Goldsboro, , N.1 ' C., Nov. 3. Special. T,-, n,,r,Hn ; t., w: i r -ni j.-1 ' i killed wm Maxwell in the lower part 0 the county on the third of Septem- K woo..,-, v, ;murder in the.flrstj degree, and the pre4 8idimj! jud ffe :orViered !;a special venire Gf - one hurfdred 'men, returnable 'l5efpre" 'him Wednesday' mornine- at 9 SO o'clock1 Th rao arm Ho o vorv COrmna fnr. well to stay away from his .home and morning he ; was for trial. 1 A Syrian named William Simona, ' who was, convicted of an assault in Duplin court yesterday with a knife and a pistol , on some Jews, went j into a horse lot this ; morning to I halter a wild horse ana f was thrown near some other norgeg and had his! skull crushed by a kick from one Gf the animals. ; It :is thought uve f , ; that the Syrian can not Ped eif g I ; Jii r j self cf fop m Cases of Lynching Judge Boyd's Charge to the Grand Jury Startles Ashe ville Lawyers He Also Refers to the Rights . of Labor Unions . Asheville, N. C, Nov. 3. Special. That ! part of Judge Boyd's charge to J the .ani jury jn the federal cuort this morning relating ! to: lynchings ; has caused considerable stirhere ; in legal circles. Referring to lynching, : Judge Boyd said that this crime was a mat ter for thej state courts; nevertheless the state and federal authorities could work together so harmoniously as ef- A - i L6 u s s i q lia Neg r o Mob Officiates New Orleans, Nov. 3. Joseph Crad do k a negro, was lynched yesterday R .11 H : evolutionary Outtfeea v Oe the Isthmus Movement Begun Looking to the Separation of the Isth mus Frm Colombia 'All ii' on Account of the Panama Canal 'Washington, I Nov. 3, The eipected has happened in a revolutionary out break on the Isthmus of Panama, where, 'according to advices . received bv this eovernment. a spirit lof un rest has ere vailed for several months Tt I is a .brnad statement to make. In view of the comparatively meagre in formation in the possession of the state department, that the oDject of kiis po litical disturbance is the establish ment of an independent republic corn posed of the. present Colombian states of Panama .and Cauca. bat pil the Indications point to the conclusion that those responsible for the movement, while they would be glad to obtain control of the entire territory embrac ed in the present natiorj, would jbe sat isfied if they succeeded in securing a division of the country into twb sepa rate governments. ' For several days, the state flepart- ment has been aware that a polit: bn the eal disturbance was impending isthmus. Its denial -of the report that the band of seventy armed mn who landed on the Colombian coast, seventy miles north of Colon, within a' week were Nicaraguans, indicates thajt' it had knowledge of a purely internal! move ment. There are other things' ! which show that the state department was expectirtg trouble. At its instance the navy department sent the ? (United States training ship Dixie wi n lour Kings- hundred marines - on board to ton,.. Jamaica, which is within two days steaming of Colon, and tjie gun boat Nashville - was ordered from Kingston to Colon. j So well i posted was the stat de- partment on the prospects of an out- DreaK tnat yesteraay n seui ,au i"- i ouirv on the subject to Mr. Malmros, tne United States consul at Colon. His answer was received today. He said ; that there was "every evidence of a revolution,' and. according to hrehabje informatIon' he slld nothing else The statement did not surprise the ; ment officials. . In a measure depart- it was pleasing nercs, for It justinea tneir ; months ago, have told of advices re ceived here from agents of the gov ernment on the isthmus that there was ,a decided sentiment among the people in favor of seceding from thej United States of-Colombia, and that this senti ment might result in an outbreik if the Panama canal treaty were rejected by the Colombian congress. Thatj the re fusal of the congress to "ratify- the treaty is responsible for the "evidence of a revolution" of which Consul Malm ros informs the state department to day, officials here do not doubt. Pana ma, that is, the isthmus proper, is hear tily in favor of the canal, anil it re gards the refusal of the government at Bogota to agree to its construction by the United States a direct blow at fectually to deal with this problem no matter in what section or the country such crime might occur. JudgqrBoyd's charge, which is tantamount to a claim for jurisdiction In lynching cases for the United States courts, Is some thing entirely new, and it is said that he has not heretofore so chargjed. His, honor, in his charge, cited sections 558 and 559 of the revised statutes as well as the federal-constitution. Judge Boyd also referred to strikes and labor unions and said that they had the right under the federal consti tution to organize into unionsj or fed erations for the purpose of demanding certain hours or certain wages, but that when they tried ,to keep another man from working longer houfs or for less money they were guilty of a con spiracy and were indictable in the fed eral courts. " I of a He then attacked Tom Washington, who came to her assistance,! cutting Mercer his skull in two with the axe Chambers, a brother of the victim, was next assaulted and severly cut with the ae. . i' ; . s j Craddock fl,ed and was fcatid shortly after, playing craps with a (gang of negroes at Taylors ville. Some three hundred negroes from j the Smith place gathered around. They demanded that he surrender to them: and announced their purpose to burn him, fhe whites would not 'permit that, and rpon the negroes promising not to burn Crad dock nor I mutilate the body, he was turned over to them -and at once hangoC. ' , i LYnching ishmian interests.! There are ther reasons, too, which the people of the isthmus have against the .federal gov ernment. They claim that the rest of Colombia has been assisted materially at the exepense of the isthmus, strin gent laws having provided for apply ing isthmian revenues to the benefit of other, states. ! j J AH these things have tended to fer ment the spirit of dissatisfaction on the isthmus. WHh the rejection of the canal treaty the boiling over stage was reached. Naturally, those behind the present Insurrection movement hope to gain the assistance of the United States, which is anything but kindly disposed at this time toward the Colombian government. Under ordi nary circumstances there would: be no hesitation. In view of the knownj lddi tation of the president and his advis ers over the rejection of the cankl treaty it is better, ; perhaps, in this in stance, to confess ignorance of what the government's ; course will be. ; The treaty between the United States of America and New Grenada, Which went into operation nearly slxty yea.rB ago, provided that the Washington government should at all times main tain free traffic on the isthmus. Undei this treaty the United States has on several occasions landed marine? en 3 blue jackets on the isthmus during po litical outbreaks and prevented the in terruption of' traffic between Colon and t Panama. That it will do so if present disturbances - assume that aspect Is a foregone conclusion. What may result from the presence of a large body oi American troops on the isthmus at this time, with the entire personal, If not the official, sympathy of the adminis tration with the ; revolutionists, may only be conjectured. But it is not an exaggeration to say that the adminis tration feels that the rejection of the canal treaty by the Colombian congress was a breach of good faith toward the United States- As every one who has read history knows, breeches of good faith have frequently caused war. - The Dixie, with her four hundred ma rines, was sent to Guantanamo, Cub-, ostensibly' to leave the marines to gar rison the new coaling stations which the ; United States have acquired at that place. When she left the United States it was reported that she had se cre hurry orders, the purport ; of I which was not known to" the public. The na vy department denied the report. The Dixie went to Guantanamo. She diVf not land the marines, but took; them to Kinkston, Jamaica, It was plainly ! hinted today that ; the department's j reason for sending her thre was that j Kingston was centrally located for a short run to the isthmus of Panama or Santo Domingo, where revolution ary : disturbances are occurring. No official explanation is obtainable for the sending of the Dixie to Kingston, which is 54G miles from Colon. A few days ago the navy depart ment ordered ; the cruiser ! Baltimore from Norfolk to Puerto Plata, Domin ican Republic,, to safeguard American interests. The gunboat Nashville was then at Kingston; Officials of tie de partment said that j the reason they had not ordered the Nashville to Puerto Plata was that there wasjsome- thing wrong with her machinery. The explanation given today of the (Nash ville's presence at Colon is that reports indicating a state of political unrest on the isthmus had made it the pjart of wisdom to have her show the stars and stripes there to let malcontents know that American interests must not be interfered with. Capain C. B. Humph rey and Lieutenant E, V. D, Murphy of the army recently returned to Wash ington : from a secret mission to Vene zuela - and the Isthmus of Panama. They had long interviews with mem bers of the general staff of thei army and Secretary of the Navy Moody. The Post's Washington dispatches said at the time that thsy had brought bick news wnicn ine omciais regarded as too Important to disclose. - v . TheOatbrtak AnBniied Washington, Nov. 3. This cabiegram was given put at the White: House to night after j a conference between the president and Mr. Hay: j "An uprising took ; place at Panama tonight. Independence was proclaim ed. The Colombian army and. naval officials weye made prisoners. A gov ernment was to be organized, consist ing of three consuls land a cabinet. It was rumorejd at Panama that a similar uprising was to take! place at Colon." , The following semi-official statement was issued- tonight: - j "A number of confused and 'conflict ing dispatches hay been received from' the Isthmus of x Panama i indicating rather serious disturbances at both Panama and Colon. The-navy depart ment has dispatched several vessels to these ports with directions' to do ev- erything possible to keep trans and maintain order." t open Washington, Nov. 3. Dispatches re ceived tonight by the state department and the navy department say that a revolutionary outbreak, having; for . its object the establishment of the inde pendence of the state of Panama, was begun, this evening. ; Independence was proclaimed and the Colombian; troops were made prisoners. As ; the result of a conference at the executive offices of the president, between f President Roosevelt and a ! number of state de partment and navy department offi cials, the cruiser Atlanta and the training ehic Dixie were v prdere to I I i ill ' " of Panama Colon and the crulsor Boston to Pan ama, ! The gunboat Nashville arrive at Colon yesterday and has landeuT marines and blue jackets for the pur-, pose of earning out the treaty pledg of the United States to prevent Inter ruption of traffic across the isthmus. jNot j the fUshtest doubt Is felt here that the acute cause of the InsurrecV tion was the action of the Colombian congress in rejecting the Panama canal treaty. The people of the isthmus or almost unanimously in favor, of th, construction of the canal by the United; States, and it has been frequently as serted that if the treaty, were defeated a Bogota the state of Panama, anI probably the adjoining state of CaucaJ would j secede and make terms with? the; united States for bulldinff isthmian waterway. th4 . Thei first news' that there had been an uprising at Panama came In a tele gram, received at the state department shortly before 10 o:clock tonight. Itt contents were immediately communi cated to the president, who lost no tlme In calling a conference - of state and navy ! department officials. There wa Secretary Hay. Assistant Secretary; Loom I s. Acting Secretary of the Navy, Darling, tind Rear.l Admiral Taylor chief (of the bureau! of navigation. Itl did not take the president and thai other; officials long to determine what course to pursue. Realizing that the insurrection was serious, they bedded? to send warships' tp both Colon and Panama for the purpose, not only ot protecting American interests, but ofs v landmg men to preserve the freedom ot- . traffic; between Panama and Colon, as required by the treaty of 1845 between the United States and New Grenada.' Instructions to the commanders of th vessels named were accordingly pre-; pared. ,( In i adition to ordcrinff the 'Atlanta, the Boston and the Dixie to the Isth mus, J Instructions were telegraphed to Rear Admiral Glass, commanding the Pacific ' squadron, now at Acapulco, Mexico, 1,300 miles from Panama, to hold this vessels In readiness for ser vice in "(isthmian waters. i.- FATAL FALL OF 1 A NAVAL OFFICER 'hi Lieutenant Beecher of the Maine Fell Through a ijj Hatch Forty Feet Newport, R. I., Nov. 8. The big battleship Maine came tearing " Into portlate this evening with her ensign at half mast. She had on board the remains ; of Lieutenant Albert M.1 Beecher, who was killed accidentally; early1 in the afternoon. The Maine was off Gay Head preparing for target practice and lieutenant Beecher, the ordnance officer, was in the foreward; turrent inspecting the-12-lnch guns. : While thus engaged, Lieutenant! Belcher lost his balance and fell head-' lpnfe down the hatch to the handling? room, forty fcet below, striking his head. As soon as the Main arrived' Vord was sent to lieutenant Beecher'a brother, j Paymaster Beecher, on board the ; training ship Monongahela, atl Portsmouth, and his relatives In! Dodge, Kas. ! Lieutenant Beecher was the ordnanoe officer of the ship and was looked upon 4s one of the experts In the service, having previously to his duty on the Maine been attached to the bureau oS ordnance at Washington. He waa un married. : ' i ! I SUIT FOR MILLIONS Widow of Cecil Rhodes Wants Her Share of the Estate London, Nov. 3. Princess Radalwlll today issuer a writ demanding) ?7.000, 000 j from! Lord Koseberry, Earl prej and Messrs. Alfred Belt, Dr. Jameson,' L. Mitchell and B. A. Hawks ley, trus tees lof the estate of the late Cecil, Rhodes,; under an agreement alleged t have! been made on or about June 30, 1899, between herself and Mr, Rhodes, This is a sequel to the arrest and Im prisonment of the princess at Capo, Town in 1902 on the charge of, forging Rhodes' signature to bills for several thousand founds. The case, which doubtless 'will prov. sensational, is expected to lead to many exposures. The friends of Princess Radzlwllf Say Ishd possesses documents of higH political importance, which were sup pressed during the trial at Cape Town,: and which will be produced in court dealing with South African .matters,' particularly with the Jameson raid, and thef aVejred complicity of former Colonial Secretary Chamberlain, there in.! U Improvements at Biltmdre f Ashevilie, N. I C, Nov. 3. Special. Since Mr. Huyler's last visit to Mon treal, near Black Mountain, reports have been in circulation that many, changes will be noticed in Montreal shortly. It yin said that very consid erable additions will be made to the " hotel and a number of new cottages' will be built and will be equipped' with all modern con'cnlences, ' "vA