DEATH AND RUIN ' IN FLOODED AREA Worth Topcka, Kansas, Scene of Terrible Destruction. XOO PEOPLE DEAD AND 200 MISSINO. Niabera ot People Drowned or Unaccounted For la Other Parts of Flooded Districts in Three States Manr Fatalities Feared From the Sallerlof and Exposure Endured by Hundreds ol Women and Children The Property Lorses la Topeka Estimated at $4,000,000 Public Buildings Turned Into Skelters lor the Homeless. More than 200 lives lost, 20,000 people homeless, property valued at $6,000,000 to $8,000,000 destroyed, crops damaged to the extent of several million dollars, thousands of sheep and other livestock drowned, great industries like the Armour, Swift and Cudahy packing plants temporarily stopped and railroad traffic interrupted make up the terrible record of the flood and fire disasters in Kansas, Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska. Hundreds of mile of country and numbers of small towns are flooded, but lhe indications are that the waters have done their worst, and the Kansas River and other streams are slowly receding;. North Topcka, Kan., the center of the navoc ot the combined destroying ele ments, presents a deplorable spectacle. The conditions at that point arc these: Dead by drowning, 170 to 200. Homeless, 8,000. Feople missing, 200. Property losses, $4,000,000. Houses burned, 200. At Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan. : Dead by drowning, 15. People homeless, 10.000. Property losses, $2,000,000 to $4,000, soo. The death list is increased by fatalities In other sections of the flooded districts in the several states, and the estimated property losses may be largely increased. IVompt measures of relief have been taken. The Convention Hall at Kansas City and other large public buildings have been turned into shelters for the homeless. It is feared that much sick ness and many deaths will result from the suffering and exposure endured dur ing the past 48 hours by thousands of women and children. Scores ol People Perish at Topcka. Topeka, Kans. (Special). There is ground for hope that the worst has passed. The Kansas Kivcr is so slowly receding as to be hardly perceptible, but the five-mile-wide stream is gradually fettling back into its rightful channel. Up and down the official gauge has flut tered all day. At .night City Engineer McCalie issued a bulletin giving out the cheering intelligence that the waters had subsided to the extent of exactly seven and a half inches. It may be some hour? before another drop may be noticed. With 175 or 2C0 lives lost; millions of dollars of property destroyed ; with hun dreds of pistols-shots as signals of dis tress, blended with the agonizina eric- of unwilling inhabitants of treetops and toofs of houses, and the waters creeping upward, and then slowly subsiding, and alternately changing hope to dispair, the city has passed the most memorable Sunday of its existence. Through all lhis discomforting condition of affairs was added the presence of a cold, dismal rain. The work of the heroic rescuers was rot abated in the le.vt by the conditions which confronted them. For long, dreary hours knee-deep in water, and some times in water up to their necks, they worked with might and main. Short of Food and Fuel. Des Moines, la. (Special). The relief authorit ies announced that they were confronted with a food and fuel famine. Meat markets all over the city declare they have but two or three days' stock Crn hand. There is no trail) entering the city and no prosect of getting a ship ment of freight into Des Moines. Bak eries are overtaxed by reason of the de mand of the six thousand flood refugee? through the relief association. The temperature of the past three days has been such as to cause great suffering and to threaten great loss 01 life through exposure. Now it tran spires that there is but a meager coal supply, and that the light and powc plant and the waterworks have an in sufficient supply. Roads are impassa ble for team-liaulir.g and no coal can be shipped in. At the water com nny's office it was stated that the situation was alarming Notice was sent to every resident in the city to draw an extra 'iilp'v of water 1o provide against the closing of the ylant. Owing to the breaking of an other levee, the commons, on which Co tents were placed for flood refugee., was flooded, completely submerging the tents. The occupants escaped. Hope has been inspired in the breast? nf the Gooo flood refugees by the report that the river has begun to slowly de cline. The condition of the sufferer 4 lias been slightly alleviated by the bet ter organization of the relief forces. Udlctments lor Peonage. Montgomery, Ala. (Special ). The United States Grand Jury returned 36 indictments against white residents of Coosa and Tallapoosa counties, charging peonage, or holding negroes in servitude Haadrcds Ol ol Plague. Hongkong (By Cable). Consul Gen eral McWade, of the United States, writes that the famine situation in Xwangsi is appalling. Hundreds are dying. The people are uttering many anti-foreign threats and much alarm is felt in the district. Plague has occurred at Yokohama. A stoker of a Bombay learner was quarantined with the dis ease on May 4 and two fatalities oc curred. The area in which the plague -victims lived has been quarantined. Prayed as Fir Rated. London (By Cable). A telegram Jrom Grimsby says the Huddersfiehj carried 29 emigrants and five other steerage passengers. All except 21 were taken ashore with the crew of flic Jluddcrsfield. Prttkbat of Liberia, Mexico City (Special). President Torfirio Diaz, with reference to the -agitation for his re-election, said it was the duty of all citizens to serve the country if called upon, "even at a per . eumaJ sacrifice," THE LATEST NEWS IN SHORT CRDE2. Domestic Edwin Gould offered $1000 reward for the capture of John Heffernan's murderer, and said nine other members of the Ardsley Club would offer a sim ilar amount, making the total amount $10,000. A petition was filed in the United States Circuit Court in San Francisco to declare the Copper King Mining Company, a London corporation, to be bankrupt. A monument was unveiled in Phila delphia which was erected in memory of the German soldiers who partici pated in the Franco-Prussian war. The miners of the Continental Coal Company near Mcycrsdale. Pa., struck upon receiving notice of five ccr.ts in the pay for mining coal. The statue in memory of General Sherman was unveiled in New York, Secretary of W ar Elihu Root delivering the oration. ICvery brick contractor in Pittsburg has shut down on account of the squab ble between the bricklayers and the stonemasons. Ten persons were injured in a colli sion of trolley cars in Charleston, Mass. Two of the victims are expect ed to die. All the grand officers of the Brother hood of Railway Trainmen were re elected at the convention in Denver, Cot. The Fav-Sholes Typewriter Com pany closed down its plant because the workmen demanded more wages. It is now reported that in addition to the eight trainmen who were killed in the Southern Railway freight wreck at Bryan, Ala., Wednesday, five tramps (four colored and one white) were killed and their bodies burned. The United States Agricultural De partment is making a map of the Unit ed States which will cover five and one tenth acres of ground at the St. Louis Exposition. Frederick Munch, of Philadelphia, just elected grand junior warden of the Grand Commandery of Knights Tem plar of Pennsylvania, died of typhoid pneumonia. Col. Johnston L. DcPcyster, who raised the first flag over the fallen cap itol at Richmond, 'a., died at his home at Tivoli-on-Hudson. Harsh epithets were applied in the House aganst the members of the cab inet of British Colombia and the gov ernment was defeated. M. Leopold Mabillcau, while lectur ing in Chicago, rcierrcd to the Amer ican college professor as "a hired man in a cage." The Presbyterian General Assembly adopted by a unanimous vote the report of the revision committee as a whole. Mrs. H. A. Brown, an actress, will seek a divorce from her husband, a millionaire broker of Boston. Citizen George Francis Train is very ill from smallpox in the pesthousc near Stamford, Conn. At a meeting of the directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad in Philadelphia. J. R. Wood was appointed passenger traffic manager, which is a new office. George W. Boyd, assistant general pas senger agent, was promoted to the office of general passenger agent, to succeed .Mr. Wood. ). li. J haycr, Jr., was eiectcd fifth vice-president, a new office. 'I he New York Clearinghouse Asso ciation is considering the advisability of making public the weekly statement oi the trust companies which clear through it. Co!. Albert Brewer, a millionaire of Tiffin, O., is dead. He was accused of murder in a saloon row a year ago. His trial ;.s postponed from time to tir.e. fcrcijn. Herbert Gladstone, the chief Liberal whip in English politics, warns the Lib erals concerning Chamberlain's protec tionist policy, stating that "the govern ment is hopelessly discredited and it is impossible to assume that a general election will be long delayed.' Seventeen men, including three titil garian officers, killed themselves upon realizing that further resistance was useless i:i the recent fight between the imperial fo-ces and insurgent bands in the Bulgarian village of Mogil. It is reported that fUizabeth Weiss has been arrested at Hamburg, accus ed of having supplied babies from a private institution she keeps to persons desiring to use infants for fraudulent purposes. Capt. Sir Edward Hulse, press censor in the South African war at Johannes burg, Transvaal, was found in his room in that place dead from a pistol shot. Prime Minister Balfour, in replying to Sir Charles Dilke in the House oi Commons, urged that the time had come when the question should be pub iicly discussed whether the doctrine that revenue should never be raised except for purposes oi expenditure must not be .abandoned. Lady Margaret Cowcll-Stepney, daughter of Lord de Tabley, was grant ed in the London courts a judicial sep aration from her husband. Sir Arthur Cowell-Stepncy, who is now an Ameri can citizen, residing in Idaho. The Town of Melazgherd, in the Vilayet of Van, Asiatic Turkey, has been destroyed by an earthquake and the loss of liie heavy, one report giv ing it at 2000, but the United States vice consul places it at 5'JO. ( )n account of the revolution Presi dent Castro has closed a number of Venezuelan ports, nearly all of which are unimportant. The British government approved the action of the consul at Tahiti, who seiz ed three small islands near Pitcairn re cently. The program has been arranged for the international concert to be given in Berlin during the Wagner commemora tion week. The Spanish government aroused the indignation of the press and the people by agreeing to return to Morocco a runaway from the Sultan's harem. Financial. Pennsy now has five vice-presidents or more than any other railroad. International Paper has declared its quarterly dividend of 1 1-2 per cent. Paris for the first time in a long while is paying ar.y attention to American securities. H. E. Huntingdon is coming East to talk over Southern Pacific matters with L. H. Harntnan. Diamond Steel preferred is reputed by some interests in the company to be worth considerably more than it now brings. If Rockefeller should get $8,000,000 of 'Pennsylvania stock it would make him one of the largest individual sharehold ers. It is reported that the reorganizers of Mexican Central finances will scale the general mortgage bonds 25 per cent., which will effect a reduction in fixed charges of nearly $700,000 per annum. A leading Boston banking house has received official information from the Atchison management that there is no preset- intention of issuing additional bonds. In the year which ended April 30 Pacific Mail's net earnings were $323, "i $16,847, 'he previous year. FOR PEACE OF THE WORLD Review of the Recent Mohawk Con ference. BRILLIANT ARRAY OP SPEAKERS Ex-Secretary Foster, Edward Everett Hale Dr. Joslah Strong, Dr. Lyman Abbott, Solictor Pcnfleld, Japanese Consul and Others tyake Addresses Platform Declares for Obligatory Arbitration. Lake Mohonk (Special). A fast sig nificant in itself of the growth of the sentiment in favor of international arbi tration and the grip it has secured upon the minds of thinking men was seen in the largely increased attendance at the ninth annual Conference on International Arbitration this year. The largest pre vious attendance had been about 200. This year it was 250. These Mohonk gatherings have been made up of chosen number of the leaders of Ameri can thought and action, men and women of large hearts and broad minds, but of the body brought together this year this might be said more truly than ever be fore. It would be hardly possible, in deed, to call together an equal number of persons more truly representative of the best thought, the noblest spirit and the most progressive tendencies of the American people than this assembly at Mohonk. An analysis of the list of its memliers shows that there were present some 20 judges and prominent jurists, .10 preachers and teachers of religion, nearly all ot national reputation : 42 educational leaders, including five presi dents of colleges; over 25 editors of magazines and newspapers, and about .10 "captains of industry," financiers, manu facturers and men of large affairs. The conference had an ideal presiding officer in the person of the Hon. John W. Foster, whose long and distinguished career as a diplomat, statesman and peace commissioner gave him unique qualifications for the place. In his opening address Mr. Foster said that the most edifying and auspicious event to come under the observation of believers in arbitration had come from a quarter of the world to which Anglo Saxons had not been inclined to look for helpful examples in good govern ment. He referred to Chili and Argen tina. A controversy over a boundary line, he said, had threatened to light the torch of war and thrust these two pros perous peoples into sanguinary conflict. But better counsels prevailed, and Chili and Argentina agreed to submit their differences to the arbitration of the King of England. His award was accepted by both nations. Referring to the Venezuelan imbroglio, Mr. Foster sai l the event showed some of the evil effects of transforming the populous nations into great military powers and also served to bring into prominence the value of arbitration and the utility of The Hague tribunal. "It was a high compliment to President Roosevelt to be solicited to act as arbi trator of that disDiite," said the speaker, "but it enhanced his reputation still more to decline the offer and to refer the con tending parties to the tribunal which his own government had done so much to create. MRS. TAYLOR FOUND GUILTY. The Condemned Woman Shows Anger When ths Verdict Is Announced. Monticello, X. Y. (Special). Mrs, Kate Taylor was found guilty of mur der in the first degree for causing the death ft her husband. She was sen tcr.ced to death and , her execution fixed for the week of July 5 at Dannemorra prison. ' Mrs. Taylor was arrested and lodged in jail at Monticello on February 8, charged with having killed her hus band on Tuesday, January 27, by shoot ing him in the back with a revolver. According to the confession of her lfi-ycar-old .daughter, Ida May Taylor, the woman afterward dismembered the body and put it in the cook stove. It was said that afterward she threw the charred bones into the chicken yard. Two weeks afterward the disappear ance of Taylor began to excite com ment. Mrs. Taylor told neighbors that her husband had gone over the moun tains on business. When trying to make a deal witn 1'etcr emits, ncr uncle, Mrs. Taylor was forced into a confession that she had killed her hus band and burned the body. The Orange Home. Philadelphia (Special). Representa tive Orangemen from all parts of the country, numbering more than 2000, were present at the dedication of the Orange Home, an institution for or phan children and infirm Orangemen, at Hatboro, near here. Thirty-six or phan b'iys, 28 girls and 42 old couples from Maine, Ohio, New York and New Jersey, were entered upon the books as the first charges of the home. The following officers were elected: Rev. George Worrell, Philadelphia, President; Thomas Milligan, Boston, vice president: Dr. J. W. Carroll, Hat boro, resident physician; Mrs. Ida Bowers, Philadelphia, matron. The sum of $6,1.000 has been expended upon the institution. Plot Against Italy's King. Paris (By Cable). A dispatch to the Patrie from Marseilles says three an archists have been arrested at Mcntone on suspicion of being engaged in a plot against King Victor Emmanuel on the occasion of his approaching visit to Paris. Five other suspects escaped. The police found incriminating papers on the arretted men. A Duel With Rapiers. Toledo, O. (Special). A duel with rapiers has been fought near Adrian, Mich. The combatants were a young man of Adrian, who under the name of "Prince Robert," is a frequent con tributor to the magazines and F. O. Eflis, of New York. Mr. Ellis was the challenged party, the affair being over an alleged insult offered to the fiancee of "Prince Robert." At the first on slaught Mr. Ellis was slightly wound ed and gave up the fight. Five Tramps Killed. Birmingham, Ala. (Special). It is now reported that in addition to the eight trainmen who were killed in the Southern Railway freight wreck at Bryan, five tramps, four colored and one white, were killed Eleven Chlldrea Drowaed. Poien, Prussia (By Cable). The Posener Tagcblatt publishes a report that a ferry-boat having on board forty five children capsized on the Warthe river, near Dembro. An investigation of the report shows that a ferryman and eleven children were drowned. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS. August W. Machen Arrested. August V. Machen, general superin tendent of the free delivery system of the Postofficc Department, and whose summer home is at Westminster, Md., was arrested here charged with receiv ing bribes in connection with a contract held by Groff Brothers, of Washington, D. C, for a patent fastener used on street letter boxes. The arrest of Mr. Machen took place at the Postoflice Department about I o'clock, after Mr. Machen had been in the office of Fourth Assistant Post master General Bristow all morning and under sharp cross-examination, conducted by Mr. Bristow and Assist ant Attorney General Robb, of the Postofficc Department. Diller B. Groff, one of the partners in the fi rm of Grrff Brothers, accused of having bribed Mr. Machen, called at police headquarters and stated that he had heard a warrant for his arrest was out. He was served with the warrant and was released on $10,000 bond. Samuel A. Groff. the other member of the Groff firm, was taken into custody later and was released on receipt of bail in the sum of $5000. During this interview it was shown to.Mr. Machen that the department had sufficient, evidence, most of it docu mentary, to cause his arrest on the charge of receiving bribes amounting to about $22,000 or 40 per cent, of the amount paid during the last three years by the government under its contract to Groff Brothers, the owners of the patent known as the "Groff fastener." Mr. Machen throughout the entire pro ceedings in Mr. Bristow's office was remarkably cool. He admitted noth ing, in fact, he declared his innocence of any wrong conduct on his part, at one time characterizing the charges and arrest as a grandstand play on the part of the department." Naval Coaling Stations. President Palma states that the naval coaling station leases will be definitely negotiated this week. He says the mat ter will not be delayed on account of the absence from Cuba of Secretary of State Zaldo, as Secretary of the Treas ury Monies will act in Senor Zaldo's place. President Palma says the govern ment has been waiting to secure an f.pproxlmatc idea of the cost of secur ing from private owners the land re quired for the stations and that such information is now forthcoming, so the money consideration and other details necessary to formulate the terms of the leases will soon be in the President's hands. It is the President's desire that the Senate, when it ratifies the original naval station agreement, shall add to it provisions authorizing the President to conclude the details thereof without referring them to the Senate. This probably will be done. The Isle of Pines Treaty has already been drawn, and its conclusion, it is expected, will be quickly accomplished. Adulterations of Hemp. The War Department is giving at tention to representations which have been made in Washington and in Ma nila, to the effect that the adulteration of Manila hemp is threatening to de stroy the industry of hemp-growing, and the department communicated with Governor Taft on the subject. The following cable message was received: "Ask for conference with cordage manufacturers to learn how many, if any, competent expert inspectors 01 hemp before baling we could secure from the United States, and what sal ary. Personnel of service most impor tant, if inspection is to be made hon est and effective. General Wood's Discrepancy. Regarding a statement published in New York that there is a $3,000,000 dis crepancy between the reports of Gen cral Leonard Wood and his secretary of finance of the total disbursements of the American military government in iUDa, it is stated on the highest author ity that the discrepancy will be ac counted for in the final settlement be tween the War Department and Senor tjuesada, Cuban Minister at Washing ton. Collector Cruzea Censured. A. R. Cruzcn, Collector of Customs at the Port of San Juan, P. R., whose office was recently investigated by a special agent of the Treasury Depart ment, and against whom charges of ir regularities in the administration'of his office are made, has been exonerated on all allegations of dishonesty by Secre tary Shaw. Collector Cruzen has been censured by the Department, but he will be allowed to continue in office. Military Training on the Decline. Incoming reports of army inspectors of military colleges are said to show a generally unsatisfactory state of af fairs so far as the military training of the students is concerned and the Inspector-General is about to send a cir cular letter to the heads of the colleges demanding remedial measures. Major Howie Exonerated. The Secretary of War will make pub lic his findings in the case of charges by Maj. G. K. Hunter against Maj. Robert L. Howze for alleged cruelties in the Philippines. The Secretary finds that the charges are not sustained. In the Departments, Decoration Day exercises were more elaborate than usual. There were ex ercises, with orations, at all the ceme teries. At Arlington Charles Emory Smith was the orator. A monument and bust of the late Senator Cuslunan K. Davis was unveiled. The European squadron will go to Kiel. Orders have been issued for the Kcarsarge to be gotten ready to pro ceed as the flagship of Rear Admiral Cotton, with the European Squadron, to the regatta at Kiel. The Treasury Department has de cided that Japanese Geisha girls are en titled to admission as artists. The Secretary of War has decided that the charges brought by Major Hunter against Major Howze of cruelty toward the Filipinos are not sustained by the evidence. The War Department has had 50 3-inch guns made in Dusseldorf, Ger many. Senators Alger and Burrows and Representative Lucking, of Mich., pre sented to Secretary Hay the renoluiiona adopted at a Detroit mass-meeting pro testing against the massacre of Jews at iusiieneu. 2000 PERSONS ARE KILLED Earthquake Destroys Town of Melazgherd in Turkey, THE ENTIRE POPULATION IS DEAD. Troops In Garrison and 703 Armenians Among the Number Killed 409 Houses In Nearby Villages Also Collapsed Severe Shock Was Felt at Constantinople Stables Turn. ed Into Sleeping Apartments by the People; Constantinople (By Cable). Advices vhich reached here from Asiatic Turkey show that a terrible earthquake occurred at Mclazgerd, on the eastern branch of the headwaters of the Euphrates, in the Vilayet of Bitlis, So miles southeast of F.rzcrum, the capital of Armenia, and not far from Lake Van. The town of Mclazgerd was totally de stroyed, with its entire population, nu:n bering 2000 souls, including 700 Arnicn ians, as well as the troops forming the garrison of Mclazgerd. In addition, over 400 houses in neigh boring villages collapsed. A somewhat severe earth shock was felt here, but no damage was done. London (By Cable). The Foreign Office here received some details from the British Consul at Erzcrum regard ing the recent earthquake at Mclazgerd, according to which a strong earth shock lasting .10 seconds was felt in the morn ing of April 29 throughout the entire dis trict between Lake Van and the Rus sian frontier and as far west at Kharput. The town of Mclazgerd, consisting of 500 houses, was destroyed, and much havoc was wrought in the surrounding villages. Col. Khalil Bey, commanding the garrison of Mclazgerd, with his whole family; three other officers and eighty soldiers perished in the ruins. Lieutenant Colonel Tayib Bey, whose family perished, became insane. The telegraph operator who sent the news of the catastrophe said he himself was badly injured, and that his wife and sister had been killed. The Foreign Office has appealed for subscriptions for the relief of the des titute Mohammedans and Christians of the Mclazgerd district. Washington, D. C. (Special). Vicc Consul Oialvo. at Erzerum, Turkey, sends to the State Department an ac count of an earthquake at Mclazgerd on April 29. He says 520 people were killcl and the city is 111 ruins. Iiarthquake shocks have been almost continuous since November 8. toot. The shock was strongly felt in Erzc rum, a journey of vs hours, and threw the people into a panic. Many of them turned their stables, which are built level with the ground, into sleeping apart ments for greater security. RUSSIA CAN BE HELD GUILTY For the Massacre of Jews In Klsbenef Count Cassia! Mskes Reply. Philadelphia, Pa. (Special). A ca blegram was sent to Count Tolstoi, at Moscow, asking him if the Russian government could be held guilty of the massacre of the Jews in Kishcncff. lie answered by cable: Guilty is government. First, ex cluding Jews from common rights, making the separate caste; secondly, in culcating by force in Russians an idol atrous faith instead of Christianity." Count Cassini, the Russian ambassa dor at Washington, listened attentively to the reading of Count Tolstoi's cable gram and in answer said: "I will say this much: The unfortun ate calamity to a number of Jewish sub jects of Russia is deeply deplored, and measures have been taken not only to punish the perpetrators, but to prevent the recurrence of the misfortune. Now, I ask, what good can result to the Jews from the campaign waged against Rus sia in the United States? "The two governments are traditional friends, the friendship is too old and too well founded to be seriously dis turbed. Such calamities have occurred in other countries, and will, unfortu nately, occur again, I need not specify instances.'.' Haitian Cabinet. Port an Prince, Haiti (By Cable). President Nord has refused toaccept the resignation of the Hayticn cabinet. The ministers retain their portfolios with the understanding that the cabinet will continue the investigation into the al leged extensive frauds in the issuing of Haitian government securities amount ing to $2,000,000. It was the opposition of the cabinet to a continuance of this investigation which caused the ministers to tender their resignations. Must Serve Ills Country. New York (Special). Three children perished with .their mother in a fire in the five-story apartment house at 306 West One Hundred and Thirty fifth street. The father, a fourth child and another tenant were seriously burn ed. The fire, it is believed, was started Dy an incendiary. jne police arc searching for a man who, with his hands covered with oil, was seen run ning from the place. Steamers Crash, 22 Lost. Antwerp (By Cable). The British steamer Huddersficld, which sailed from this port for Grimsby, England, collided with the Norwegian steamer L'to. The Huddersficld foundered. Twenty-two Austrian and Italian emi grants were drowned. The crew was saved. The bows of the L'to were dam aged. Vcnezuelai Ports Closed. Caracas, Venezuela (By Cable). The Official Gazette published a Presidential decree temporarily suppressing . the Custom-houses at La Vela, Quanta, Puerto Sucre, La Guayra, Cano, Colo tado and Ciudad Bolivar, and allowing steamers from the United States ij days and sailing vessels 30 days. These al lowances count frcm June I. There is no clue to the identity of the man who shot and killed John llcf ferman near the Ardsley Clubhouse, at Irvington, N. Y. Wlot New Office. Pckin (By Cable). An imperial edict just issued appoints Wtl Ting-fang, the former - Chinese minister at Washing ton, to be a member of the foreign office. His rank will be below that of the five officers designated in the pro-l tocoi. 1 ne appointment practical v ere ates a new office. Sir J. Miller's Rock Island, riden by Maher. the American jockey, won the classic Derby at Epsom. The King and Queen and other distinguished per sons were oresent. WILL APPEAL TO SUPREME COURT. A Permanent Restraint Front Stifling Competition in Beef. Chicago (Special). The beef com bine was permanently enjoined by Judge Peter S. Grosscup, of the United States Circuit Court, from continuing any agreement in restraint of trade. Special Counsel John S. Miller, rep resenting all the packers, gave notice of an appeal from the decree, and the case will be taken to the United States Su preme Court. The making of the temporary injunc tion permanent might have been done in the middle of April had not the com bine chosen to take the full time allow ed by law before submitting to the re cording of the decree. There was no delay in the final adjudication of the case, because in no event could it have been considered by the Supreme Court before the October term. Sixty days from date are allowed the combine to perfect its appeal to the higher court. It is believed that much stress will be laid upon Judge Gross cup's interpretation of the legal charac ter of interstate commerce. This point constituted the burden of Attorney Mil ler's argument when the demurrer to the Government's bill of complaint wa made last December. The final order of injunction does not differ materially from the temporary order which has been in force against the packers since last May. The death of Gustavus F. SwHt. which occurred subsequent to the granting of the tem porary injunction, was suggested to the Court by the Government attorneys, and his name was eliminated from the final decree as one of the individual defend ants, though the packing concern of Swift & Co. is still covered by the Court's order. Briefly put. the decree enjoins the packers and their representatives from doing anything in violation of the pro visions of the Sherman Anti-Trust act of 1800. It covers Armour & Co., Swift & Co., Nelson, Morris & Co., the Schwarzchild and Sulzberger Company and the Hammond Packing Company. Mic last named ,is now a part of the National Packing Company, incorpor- atcd recently under the laws of New Jersey. The effect of the decree is to insist on free competition in the meat mar kets. Secret mcetines to acrce on uni form prices arc prohibited. The pack ers must not arbitrarily raise, lower or fix prices by agreement. They are en joined from establishing uniform rule? ot credit to dealers and they must not have a common blacklist of customers who are delinquent in payment for goods. In case of violation of any of these provisions of the decree they are to be brought into court and punished lor contempt. WILCOX APPEAL ARGUED. Contended There Was Never Satisfactory Evi dence Against Him. Raleigh, N. C. (Special). The sec ond appeal in the case of James Wil cox, sentenced in March, 1902, to be hanged, and who, on a new trial grant ed by the Supreme Court, was sentenc cd in January, 1903, to 30 years in prison for the murder of Miss Ella Cropscy at Elizabeth City, N. C, was heard by the Supreme Court. The appeal was pros ecutcd in forma pauperis. E. F. Aydlett, of Elizabeth City, and W. M. .bond, ot fc.denton, appeared fo Wilcox, and Attorney-General Gilmer tor the state, lhe petition for a new trial was based on the ground that there never has been evidence enough against Wilcox for the case to go to the jury and mat me Judge should nave so di rectcd. Other contentions were that there was enough evidence tending to show suicide to leave the matter in doubt as to murder having been com mitted. The Supreme Court has the matter under advisement and it will be some days, perhaps weeks, before an opinion is rendered. Threatened the President Walla Walla, Wash. (Special). Jos-. cph Becker, a radical Socialist, is in jail here on suspicion of having intended to kill President Roosevelt. The episode was kept quiet until r-.ftcr the President's departure. Becker is accused of having remarked at Pendleton, Ore., last week that he had one bullet for President Roosevelt and another for Emperor William, of Germany. He left for Wal la Walla with a ritle, and his Pendleton partner, Patrick Kine, followed him here, notifying the police. Becker war found working in a butcher shop. He was arrested, and on being questioned disclosed the location of his ritle, which was hidden in a farmer's barn on the line of march. Becker is a Swiss. Big Fire la New Hampshire City. Laconia, N. II. (Special). This city is in darkness, nearly 100 buildings have been burned, 350 persons made home less and a loss of between $350,000 and $400,000 inflicted as the result of a fire in the Lakcport section, the area burn ed being about 150 acres, The city fire department was helpless to stay the pro gress of the flames and the destruction went on until the fire actually burned it self out for want of material. Love and Poisoi. Watcrbury, Ct. (Special). Because his sweetheart failed to return his affec tion David Fitzpatrick, a 17-year-old boy, swallowed half an ounce of carbolic acic at his home here. The pain made hirr rush from his room shrieking for aid Two physicians avcd his life. Laborer Inherits 20,000. York, Pa. (Special). Intelligence that he is the sole heir to his father'r estate of $20,000 at Stuttgart, Germany, reached Charles Geiger, who since 1882 has been a day laborer. Geiger left his home in Germany when a youth and his father lost track "of him. Geiger re cently wrote to Stuttgart to inquire ol his father's fate and the letter fell inte the hands of attorneys, who have beet trying for several years to locate the heir to the Geiger money. Four Killed by Gas. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special). An exploa ion of gas in the Charticrs Cool and Coke Company mine at Federal, Pa., killed four men instantly, badly burned sevee and slightly injured a number of others Several more are missing and are be lieved to be still in the mine. As the mine is on fire it is feared they will be burned to death or suffocated by the smoke. The injured are foreigners and their names are not known. Five are be lieved to be fatally hurt. About 75 nico were at work when the explosion oc- THE KEYSTONE STATE Latest Ne ol Pennsylvania Told B Short Order. Patents granted: Henry Aiken, Pittsburg, tongs operating mechanism! J. M. Anderson, Pittsburg, unitini) metals: Biddle Arthurs, Pittsburg, bur. glar alarm; John W. Bayr.e and C.C. Durborrow, Altoona, liquid and gase ous fuel burner; Malcolm H. Baker, East Liberty, alternating current arc lamp; Charles O. Bcatley, McKeci Rocks, cigarct former: Arthur B. Bel lows, Pittsburg, steel gondola cars; Resin B. Benford, Sharpshurg, eruppjr blinds Milton H. Bolsingcr, Windhcr envelope fastener; Charles W. Bray! Pittsburg, apparatus for rolling piatci or sheets; Arthur J. Briggs, Allegheny,' telephone receiver holder; Charles F. Buente, Allegheny, fireproof floor con struction; Edgar H. Beyer, Waynes boro, vise; Cyrus M. Carnahan, Allc gheny, brake beam; Charles S. Clark, Altoona. skimming regular for ice ma chines; William E. Coy an. Homestead, making steel castings; George M. Er vin, Johnstown, railway track structure; Reginald A. Fecccndon, Pittsburg, re ceiver for electro-magnetic waves; Ar thur L. George, Johnstown, railway track structure. Pensions granted: Samuel F. Dick son, Tyrone, $10; Jerome Bowman, Johnstown, $55; Etta C. Farrcllv, rownville, $8: Martha E. Hcnch, Mc Allistcrville, $8; Margaret Keller, Allc gheny, $12. Ohio Christian Gille, Zancsvillc, J12; John Weaver. Beaver Dam, $40; Lyman M. Cole, Geneva. $40; George E. Farmer, Salem, $46; Josiah Gamble, Martins F'crry, $40; Nathan B. Smith, Dennison, $55; David B. Long, Bel laire, $.; Elisha P. Wise, Warren, F55 ; William Cunningham. Bridgeport, 40; Horace M. Cook, Conneaut, $40; (esse Frasier, Middleport, $55; John Heston, Cambridge, $46; Sarah E. Fay, Jefferson, $8; Ella Potts, Cadiz, $u; ocorge W. Cypher, Saxton, $15; Fran :is R. Bausman, Pittsburg, $12; Elijah A.. Leech, Allegheny, $55; Jonathan Davis, Washington, $12; Charles M Brown, Dunkard. $12; John J. Pritts, Garrett. $10; John B. Clark, Beaver 24; minor of Henry A. Wise, Butler) 10; Caroline Peters, Brookville, $8; sarah Quest, Green Castle, $8; Emma Hill, Altoona, $8. James Kerr, of Clearfield savs that plans have been made to extend the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad to every coal-bearing district 11 Pennsylvania. John V. Thompson, of New Castle, eft there with his son Carl, aged 10. 011 l journey, overland, to California. They ill travel in a wagon and will be ah em at least three years. Leo Aranzo, one oi the three Italians vho were wounded in a shooting affray it Freedom on Sunday evening, died rom the effects of his' wounds at the Beaver County General Hospital at Rochester. , James Gilmarton was bound over for :ourt at Sharon on a charge of aggra vated assault and battery. It is alleged :hat he beat Joseph Nometh, a for tigner, on the head with a piece of iron. Samuel Leaston. the colored sexton if the First Baptist Church of Altoona, ircd two shots at Harry Norman, aged j6. also colored, both oi which took cf .'ect, inflicting perhaps fatal injuries, calousy was the cause of the shooting. Three new cases of smallpox havo leen reported at Butler. Fire broke out in the hotel at Bear Lake and destroyed all the buildings nn the cast side of Main street. Loss,, VJ5.000. The insurance is small. During a storm the Samuel Linn louse, near Canonsburg, was struck Dy ightning and badly damaged. The value of an education t the av rrage boy is $1800 a year, according ti :hc arguments presented by cx-Stipcrin-.endent of Schools Lamb, of Braddock, in. an address before the public school teachers of New Castle. Thomas Sitricz, a self-confessed mur derer, is now in Clearfield jail awaiting trial. Some weeks ago. according to the story of the prisoner, he hit a fel low workman at Smoke Run with a shovel during a quarrel. The blow was such a heavy one that the victim died. Sitricz escaped and made his way to Chicago, where he secured employment. The thoughts of his crime preyed on his mind , to such an extent tnat he could not rest, and after receiving his wages, he boarded a train and upon his arrival in Clearfield gave himself up to Sheriff McCullotlgh. Sitricz came from Hun gary about n years ago and can talk English fluently. He is unmarried and rather good looking and aged about 25. Pietro Diana, wanted as one of the ringleaders of the riot at Hillsville lir.tcstone quarries last winter, was cap tured at Braddock and placed in jail at New Castle by Sheriff Brown. It i claimed that Diana carried a shotgun with which he fired at the officers. Burglars blew o;.cii the safe in the Herminic postotfice and secured about $400 in stamps and $75. A lamp exploded at the residence of Robert Morris, in New Castle. The family had a narrow escape. Charters were issued by the State Department to the following corpora tions: Shenango Valley Flour and Produce Company, Sharon; capital, $25,000; Standard Iron Mining and Furnace Company, Philadelphia, capi tal, $10,000; Intcr-Statc Conduit and Brick Company. Scranton: capita) $150,000; Rodgcrs & Hill, Incorporat ed, Conshohocker. ; capital, $50,000; Brighton F'ire Brick Comnanv. New Brighton, capital. $.10,000: Scott Coal and Coke Company, Somerset ; capital. $ioo,oco; Stoncy Mount Land Com pany. Phihdelphia; . capital, $50,000; Mt. Penn Water Company, Mt. Pcnn; capital, $10,000; Confluence Yrater Company, Confluence; capital, $20,000; Fishing Creek Manufacturing Com pany, Carbondale; capital $7500; Frank P. Held & Company, Philadelphia; apital, $50,000. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will close three of its four large green houses at Altoona. The railroad com pany is gradually abandoning the Growth of flowers. While on his way to work Frederick Stevenson, fire boss at No. to cc-lliery, was attacked by two men on the out skirts of Lansford, and brutally beaten. He was knocked down with a stone from ambush, which cut a hole in his head and rendered him unconscious. He was then trampled upon and left for dead. Stevenson worked during the mine strike, and is supposed to be the victim of enemies made then. A thief walked into the jewelry store ff Mrs. M. Arnheim at Pittsburg and without the least hesitancy walked to the window, lilted some silverware that was in his way and, picking up a tray containing 29, rings, walked out of the store and disappeared. Mrs. Arnheim, who was alone in the store, rushed to the door and called for help, but tho thief had escaped., His plunder was valued at about $joo. Scrautcn is troubled with horse thieves. Four steeds have been taken within the last, two nights. Joseph Jcrinjn, a millionaire coal operator, lost a pacer valued ot $500, and his sta LI: boss' horso is also none. '