“THE NEWS Domestic Charles R. Heike, former secretary | of the Sugar Trust, made the direct i ¢harge that the late Henry O. Have: | yer was responsible for the sugar | eighing frauds. The federal government has taken | legal steps to recover 3,000,000 acres i of land granted to the Oregon and | California Railway Company. What is supposed to have been a i chest containing $100,000 in gold and i belonging to Davis Bowers, of An- derson, Ind., is missing. Miss Edith K. Thomas and Fred 1. Fogelman, students of Ursinus | College, Pa., were drowned’ while boating at night. i With few exceptions stocks on the New York Stock Exchange reach ed the low level of the year. Mayor Gaynor named a committee of one hundred for a world's fair in New York in 1913. John A. Dix, Jr., bank president paper manufacturer and opponent of William R. Hearst, succeeds William T. Conners as chairman of the Demo- | cratic State Committee of New York Edmund A. Guggenheim, the son of millionaire Senator Simon Gugd | genheim, spent minutes in jai{ | for speeding an auto in the streets | of New York. i Twenty burglaries in Memphis, Tenn., are attributed to a man who | passed as Dr. J. C. Brown and lived in fashionable apartments, President Taft, in addressing the graduating class at Bryn Mawr, fav ored the higher education of women Joseph 8S, Harris, former president of the Philadelphia and leading Ratlroad, died of apoplexy. Then thousand woolen operatives of Providence, R. I., have been plac ed on short time, E. H. Jennings and F. A. Griffin, two bankers of Pittsburg, were fined and given jail sentences after confessing to bribery connection with the recent municipal corruption exposures. Announcement was made that all the employes of the Atchison, Tope- ka and Santa Fe Railway Company receiving less than" $80 per month, have been granted an of 10 per cent. in wages. One workman oo short j§ charges in increase was killed and sever were Injured when a scaffold col lapsed at the plant of the Forged Steel Wheel Company under con- struction at Lyndora, Pa An Italian in Chicago had his sav- ings of $747 burned up when a j dler knocked his in a pocket of which he had the money, into a can of hot coals, Henry 8 chief of the Court Appeals of Kentucky accepted the presidency of the University of Kentucky. succee James yed- vest, 0 Barber, of justice K. Patterson The month of May just passed was & record breaker number of automobile six killed and e The Edward secret marriag Mrs. Raymond After a ifn the bit two mont) returned for Chicago In the casuailios Pr Ne : +e t-five injured death in Yon re Er sers, : pri £¢ 0 Prince Ji of Ital Lippe ed in Peru and E draw the troops they had mobilized on the frontier preparatory to war the boundary dispute to be settled by arbitration. M. Poppofl, instructor of aviation In the Russian Army, was probably fatally injured in an aeroplane accl dent at Gatchina, Russia A bill will be introduced in the Prussian Diet to increase the dmper ors allowance to about $5,000,000. Colonel Roosevelt had a long cond ference with Joseph Chamberlain, the English statesman, in London. . Juan Vicente Comes was inaugur | ated at Caracas as president of Vene zuela for a term of four years Mra. Pierre Lorillard Ronals, New York, died in Paris. The decree issued by Dr. Irias io command the the Madriz war vesse Venus, that no vessel should enter the port of Bluefleids without the permission f the Madriz govern and and he hos a8 t HE 1ador will both with of OF ment, will be disregarded by Captain Gilmer, of the United States ship Paducah : Colonel Roosevelt and Lord Cro mer are in accord with references t¢ Epgland's Egyptian policy. The Norwegian bark Borghild was wrecked off Coster Ledges, Nove Scotia Two of the erew were drowned and nineteen were rescued in an exhausted condition. Eight lives were lost and half a dozen ves sels wrecked in rocent storm. A FREureian threw a tin ean al Crown Prince Frederick William of Germany while the royal party was | retiring from a military review. The Hritish Antartic expedition, fn command of Captain Scott, sailed | from England. Twenty-nine young men were sentenced to death and eight women to imprisonment for life on charges | of being associated with a band of | robbers in Russia, The trial of the last big case con- nected with the lquidation of the revolution of 1805-6, involving 2217 accused, will soon begin before the Military District Court of Riga, | Russia, i In consequence of the difficulty of forming a new Danish Cabinet in the present state of polities, Pra mier Xahle, at the request of King Frederick, has withdrawn the resig- nations of his ministry. Abraham Elerwelss, who threw a ean of beans at the German Crown Prince, has been placed in ap asy- lum for insane at Dalldorf, PRONE 10 BF FAR TO PITHAN Madriz’'s Generals Heed the Warning Sent to Them. Suggests That United States Gove ernment Name A Candidate For President Of Nicarnugua—Madriz Claims Insurgents Have Not De- feated His Army And That His Forces At Bluefields Did Not Take To Flight, But Have Concentrated At Another Point. Cambridge, Mass. (Special), — In answer to a heartrending letter sent to President Taft and telegrams wir. ed Senator Lodge at Washington by irs. Rachel Pittman begging for the ife of her son, William P. Pittman, he American engineer who fell into ragua, came a reply froth Huntington Wilson, Assistant Secretary of State, Pittman was caught after exploding a mine under the Madriz soldiers. Mr. Wilson wired that in response to Inquiries made in Nicaragua the at Managua had telegraphed him “that Dr. Madriz had assured me, through General Toledo, that a court-martial has not been thought much ordered, and further- more assured me that Pittman will be treated fairly and considerately, end that telegraphic instructions to that effect will be immediately dis- miched to General Irias at Grey- ae hs the This Spr it Pittman O88 of good news cheered Pittman household Street, this city Edwin brother of the captured man, in talking sald: “I would not exactly call brother a soldier of fortune. bad a good trade, that of an en- gineer, which he learned while work. ing his way up the ladder Ward Line steamship Havana and while in the em oy the Panams Canal Commission left even years ago he was 16 years of age. We heard from him for five or six years, we received word that he ing as an officer in the company's employ. Later he ployed by the Panama mission Pan: I work obtained a first-cl license “I have no idea interested in the cause raguan insurgency His Panama threw him in with people of many countries and sympathy and ald were undoubtedly enlisted there He was a friend, I understood, Carlos son of General leader in the Estrada army, port has it, was routed rece an engagement with the gover forces We hope to finite > BEAL ALE bit up $1 vie on on of He only when act- steamship ir i William got f the residence how 0 tn Cha- £*% § Py morro, LCRAINOrNo, hear some] more de my er, but at this concerning Secretary ns time su O8t assuring m BARGAIN SALE IN PANAMAS, Government To Auction 8112.000 Worth Of Hats Seized For Duty. New York for this summer's { Special) Possibly time wear not unt traw-hat wep x «© fe - or quite over for tle SCARON of rgain sale in hal in prospect, in Will be the auct MacVeagh, the Treasury nt: Collocto and ba 1 is joneer of At Loeb nited States District torney talked over the recent seizure Panama hats and decided that pro- ceedings should be taken in the fed eral courts for forfeiture and condemnation The hats, involced as being valued at $65.000, were aid by the government to be worth $112,000, and, with the duty added, would be worth $180.0006 Goods seized in this way by the government are sold at auction their TRANSFERS THE SUIT. Wickersham Takes It Louis To St, Paul, St. Paul, Minn, Walter H From St. Minn, (Special). Sanborn, Judge a certificate from Ceneral Wickersham transferring to this circuit the government suit brought in the Circuit Court at St Louig to restain the 25 roads from carrying into effect pro- posed advapcss in freight rates Judges Sanborn, Hook and Adams finished the regular zalendar, but will remain in Paul for two or three weeks longer should the railroads start anything in the way of proceedings to dissolve the injunction. received Attorney Treasury Drops 85, Washington, D. C. (Special) Department received ‘vacation no- tices,” which means that they were permanently relieved from duty. Of the 85, 6 or 7 were employed in the service of the Collector of Internal Revenue, 22 in the office of the au- ditor of the Postoffice Department and others were employed in the is- sne division of the department Their release was a part of the economy program planned soe A—— A Approves Monopolies, Chicago (Special) Emil Seidel, Bocalist mayor of Milwaukee, in a {abor-saving devices and necousary. Mr, Seidel added that ali monopolies, however, should be under the strict. est regulations, Mayor Seidel wag the guest of the Danish residents of Chicago at thelr annual celeb \:tion commemoratin tho signing of ihe sew Danish oonsts. i UNTERFEITING WAS OONE IN THIS PRISON Remarkable Ingenuity of a Mis- souri (onviet. 0 Pardon To Be Granted To lee J. Jaynes, Who Is Serving A Five Year Term For Forgery, So That He May Be Prosecuted For Coun- terfeiting Done While In The Pen- itentiary—How He Got His Ma. terials Is A Mystery. Jefferson City, Mo. (Special) —The government authorities have induced Hadley to announce that he will pardon Lee J. Jaynes, Jackson County, who is serving a five-year term in Missouri Peniten tiary for forgery, so he may be pros- ecuted for counterfeiting While serving his sentence Janes has been making counterfeit dollars and half-dollars. In some mysteriou way he obtained babbit metal, a quantity of lead, some bismuth, block tin and other material used by coun- terfeiters. He constructed molds of plaster of paris. The articles were found in his cell The prison authorities got hold of a large number of the spurious coins Jaynes passed them off on other con- victs on holidays, when the inmates are given the of the yards He also exchanged counterfeit coins for bills with convicts who about to be released Governor of freedom by Me , 88 2 Thes £3 The coins were considered Hugh, of the Secret Service money are res good the 3 inttoering and if Cring ana and made would readily The pass manner material is which wh Oob- making terious in for Jaynes CO as th et in the same money as Nn methods pri a On the old performed An no of that on authority recalled the function pris intoxicant that he longer perfectly the beautiful “jags” which convict acquired before “still” was discovered JOIN THE FIGHT creased Freight Rates. Every System In The North And Middle West creases Ranging From Three Thirty-One Per Come plaints Have Been Made By Ship pers In The East And Middle West—It Is Expected That More Tariffs Will Be Filed Within The Next Few Days, Cent. No PD. C we government's wt Qnanial ngton { Special inder he Sherman by which a part of the crease of fre went spended by | . n fhe Ea it and filed with the Inte Com tarifis of the free ncreased Attorney clines to indicate in behalf ratos General W d hat course he wi the government, ickersham de. “ 1 Ww i pursue of ’ the Lad Rate posipon- adm and istration finally passing Bill, hesitated, Practically every railroad system in the North from the Atlantic to the Pacific had filed with the Inter- state Commerce Commission the le. gal notification of proposed increases in commodity rates The increases filed range from 3 to 31 per cent. WASHINGT ON . BY TELEGRAPH | ! The International Moral and Social Commission has been incorporated to conduct a worldwide campaign of moral, social and political reform One million three hundred thous. been withdrawn from pending classification Republican leaders of the Senate and House had a conference with coal eontry, An aerial lighthouse for the guid- at Spandau, Germany. Proceedings are to be instituted under the anti-trust law against the so-called Sugar Trust. President Taft in an address to the graduating class of the Ohio Uni- versity at Ada, O., gave a world of advice to the young men and women and discussed at length the opportunities and limits of the vari. ous professions and business pur- sults, including the law, the ministry, medicine, teaching, journalism, farm- Ing and modern Inlustrial condi- tions, The House granted an appropria- tion of $30,000 to the Secretary of Agriculture with which to conduct experiments in papermaking. Former Governor W. RB. Hoggatt, of Alaska, stated before the Senate Committee on Judiciary that he is a friend bf the Guggenheims, J, Plarpont Morgan and George W, Per. ne. President Taft will appoint Colo. nel Roosevelt chairman of a peace committee, If Congress acts favorably on a resolution now before it creat. ing a commission. of the Treasury Mae- Veagh has gone to New York to look into the SENATE PASSES | THE RAILROAD BILL Measure Had Beer Under Con- | sid. ration for Twelve Weeks, i THE FINAL \OTE WAS 50 10 12. Substitute For House IB Accepted After Debates Which Lasted | Through The Afternoon And Even- | ing, Final Action Not Being Taken Until 9.55 o'Clock—Rill Will Now | Go To The Conferees—Court Of | Commerce Provision Precludes A Unanimous Vote. ———— Vashington, D,. C. (Special) The Administration had more the It for Senate passed Railroad Bill. consideration been under than twelve weeks and practically no other busi- ness except appropriation bills were considered in that long period, Only twelve voles were recorded against the bill. The practical unanimity with which the measure was passed was due to the radical changes made in the mensure from the form in which was drafted by General Wickersham, numerous conferences White House on amending Interstate awe. All of the “insurg- who opposed many features of iginal bill voted for it sed at 6.506 Senator Elkins, chairm Atlorney following Al the the subject of Comm ents’’ the or Debat when Ce o'clock an of Interstate Commerce up the bill House, and the body of ities to take Wag ing out the matier ng the § was enate voted was % © Bill's “High “high spots” it passed the follows vides for the creation of a nes of Commerce exclusively of of the ! Spots.” The bill a= in the for the appeals Interstate Comte ‘he court eit in powers are to be « the Judges of the cuit Court, to receive and emolumen and a: pointed (nn t first insin President terms one, two, three, foi Each as he retires to work of a circuit by a Jes bench, these be filled 10 0-01 tn the ir of ir and take judge gnation and oth fa by the be up to to | i : i 1 { i i i i i 3 Court While be in Ons are made for ait ge "h of Washington, to be held here $ anywhere ¢ government, the offices the cou to the BOKS States, 1 Interstate C A the 0 ag nmerce defendant ¢ the court, permitted other Interested defense is placed un- Attorney and in tol Hire the tion of the en commission parties are and io the fail eral to do inten have permitied t CArry on # ure of the sult in of the Attorney Appea apreme Court B03 may be taken to the 8 Worth 85,000,000; Gets 83.000. New York Frederick Parsons, a rotired coffee mer. reputed be worth $5,000. - wa®® appointed a deputy com- gas and waler supply, in Queens borough, at a | of $3,000 a vear. j { Special) to of FARMERS MUST MIX BRAINS WITH WORK Hays Says Vacational School is Solution of Problem. Technical Training Is Needed On Farms To Get Most Out Of The Soll — Professor Hays Advocates The Extension Of The Consolidated Rural Schools Idea. Minn, ~De- time is at farmers must technical training {Bpecial). hand mix brains with their Crookston, claring the when of M. Hays farmers’ Agriculture Willet the vocational Minne- here on,” sald farmers i, un- The aL a meeting of the Northern gota Development Association “The world is looking Professor Hays, “while we plod along in our unorganized systematic, half-hearted way. world believes that broader and better trained we could much better vields than we do, and we are forced to believe that the world is right Whether our ac tivity social, political or on the 15 bushel 25-bushel portunity.” religious, be we with economical, are basis, a op that the Crooks- ro declared school at 18 of the cu Professor ultural vag the Ha ¥B h I far ¥4 ¢ iwolidated fitutions » three addition BUILT CHURCH IN 10 HOURS, Morning And Services Held At Night, Ii held in the Christian Chu by 180 members « The church pletions, electrically Bn Started In Peoria were urch, Was ele The iric buildin y x wid and 'nder the supervision of foe, the at & feet © 12 feet high ins D. C structure, ck A who planned men started work EB o'cle At P. M rious other church rung the ma €& o'clock city 10 a pletion Material for the by vari cities A PLASTER were of us concerns and other WORTH 850. Stuck To Business Of Flaster, ¥ Department Side distown. N Mid ury The reas il receive hes $50 bill for stuck n bed left dresser peaked hi plaster after heating It the dress did not & gO Bhe did but accidentally dropped it on er In picking it up $50 bill clinging to it and applied to her husband's back The bill was miesed and servants were suspected having stolen it The whole household worried matter until the merchant re- moved his porous plaster and the bill was found she 1 it of — ed By A Peking (Special). --The consuls at | ers in that city have assumed open- | iy an insulting attitude toward for- | cigners, and have defiled the walls | of the American Consulate in a dis- | gusting manner. ! Placards have been posted In the streets calling upon the people to | rise and slaughter the foreigners and destroy their property. The authorities at Nanking have removed the bolts from the rifles of the soldiers. The situation is con- sidered to depend entirely upon the attitude of the military in the city, | which up to the present has not | manifested symptoms of digloyaity. The United States cruiser New Or- | leans and the German and Japanese | men-of-war are lying off the town, | and it is believed that these vessels | will be adequate to protect all for- | oigners in the event of an outbreak. | Commander Roger Wells of the New Orleans has conferred with the commanders of the other warships and they have agreed upon a plan for coneerted action If necessary. All the diplomats at Peking think that an outbreak in the provinces uthorities ever, that it is extremely improbable that the trouble will reach this city Alarming Reports In Washington Received From Minister Calhoun. Washington, D. C. (Special) Alarming reports have been received by the State Department from Min- In the city of Nanking, ae- the natives to kill all foreigners and destroy their property. All through that portion of China Iying south of the Yangtze River the authorities are very much worked up over the feeling against aliens which is daily exhibiting itse}d. That an outbreak is likely at any time is almost certain, and in consequence great nervousness is felt Minister Calhoun is prepared, with other representatives of foreign gov- ernments, for any emergency, and, while hoping for the best, is some- what of the opinion that another Boxer uprising is possible. Banker Fined 83,000, Trenton, N. J. (8pecial).-Judge Rellstab, in the United States Court, imposed a fine of $5,000 on Hiram A. Lyon, a prominent banker of Minneapolis, on the charge of smug- pling. Lyon was detected in the act of attempting to smuggle two pear] necklaces through the p at Ho- Judge Retiitab Lyon entered dejors on of non vult and the court hnnnediate. {r faed the sentence, a “Mother” Jones Seriously 111, Cincinnati, 0. (Special). "Moth. er” Jones, who has appeared promi- nently in many labor strikes of the last decade, is ill at a hotel She dar, nc," was doiard. ton she Is seriously HN ; Hottest Day In Seven Years, rH degrees las seven ps i a A i FLY OVER CHANNEL ND BACK AGAIN The Latest Daring Achievement in Aviation. CHARLES S. ROLLS, THE PERFORMER Capt. Charles Stewart Rolls, Driving A Wright Biplane, Eclipses The Feats Of Bleriot And De Losnepn ~Fuace Of The Aeroplane Was Too Bwift For The Torpedo Boats That Tried To Keep Up With Hime Rolls Has Made Many World's Records As A Motorist. Dover E { Special). The Rolls, captain f the Army Wright bk C-BAX0ON Aero- English Chan- inel twice without alighting He made the trip between Dover and Calaf minutes. Whi Franchmen lLouiz Bler. and Count [De lesseps. have crossed the channel in aeroplane, } ishwman In perform across is 21 fight estab Charles the London Heger i plane, 1 dicated Ang If nautic Hon iin Oo A ' | Motor : A g Lhe S60 ' ic io an an ner ar machine £4 ¥ the doub nee helweer ed BLop Dover at 6.3 sric conditions LI No time in eriving tele French reappeared iarger ery minuie Home Again. nally Ul 1 ECA Me alter iastic iy soar. lace made given an * o'clock at t Bleriot, the strain Vi Zangatle er tied with taiging the to overwhelmed he dismount ved modestly. f %ie credit yviane, which ran the whole flight, ATO was bult by Grm, un- wilh a rear Rolls When had enough Fy > miles we of the yf the Rolls re. round 21to- 2 iight- Mr. AVeTAage he wd to his in til | reach | 800 feet {1.000 feet on his return I'he westh. jer on the trip to France was very { clear, but was somewhat hazy on the i return Mr, Rolls had to make his course by the sun, De Lessups did on May 21 Althoug it was calm below Mr Rolls found a strong wind above, which caused him to deviate from a straight course. He covered 50 miles He sarried four large bags of compressed alr in case of his falling into the sea. sangalie Then as than GIRL'S PERILOUS RIDE, Found Crouching On Bumpers OF A Boston And Maine Train, Lowell, Mass. (Special). Crouch. led down on the bumpers of a pas jsenger coach attached to a morth- : {bound train on the Boston and | Maine Rallroad, a boy and girl were | discovered when the train reached {this city. They gave the names of { Thomas Reed, 13 years old, and his { sister, Lena Reed, 10 years old, and {said they lived in Cambridge “We were going to see grandma™ explained, sayin, that their lived in Goffstown. N | they { grandmother H ‘Neither seemed to realize the per il of the mode of travel! they had chosen. Sergeant Of Marines Kills Mimself, San Francisco (Special). — Pre. ferring death to disgrace and proba- ble prison sentence from pending court martigl proceedings, G. © Reeves, a first sergeant in the Uni ted States Marines, stationed on Goat Island here, snatched a priv. ate's revolver from its holster and deliberately blew out his brains Reeves was accused of drawing up a false report to his suprelor regard. ing a fight in which he engaged. SASS HAO. 0s Roosevelt As World's Arbitrator. Minneapolis, Minn. (Special) ‘wAd- dressing the G. A. R. posts bere in observation of Memorial Day, Prof Maria Sanford, professor emeritus of the University of Minnesota, urged the veterans of the late war te work for world peace as being the one great object now before the Grand Army of the Republic. She said