t JAPANESE VICTORIOUS CHIU TIEN CHENG, KEY OF THE Y'ALl' rOSITlON, CAPTHED BY JAPANESE AFTEK HARD FOUGHT BATTLE CZAK'S TKOOPS IN RETREAT EIGHT HtNDRED THEIR LOSS IN KILLED AND POINDED. Tokio, (By Cable). After five days of fighting, largely w it li artillery, the first Japanese army, under General Kuroki, lias forced a crossing of the Yalu River, and with a gallant infan try charge, covering a frontage of four miles, it drove the Russians from Chiuticncheng and the heights on the right bank of the lho or Aida River, which enters the Yalu from the north, r.lmost opposite Wiju. The Japanese turned the left flank of the Russian position, and in the battle they swept away the new front interposed by the Russians to check their onward move ment. The Russians were also forced to abandon Antung. They burned the town and retreated to Feng Huan cheng. The Japanese now control the es tuary of the Yalu. In the decisive battle the losses were: Japanese, "oo killed and wounded. Russians, Noo. The Japanese captured 28 quick firing puns, 20 officers and many men. The Russians made two stands. The Russians say their forces en paged numbered less than 5,000 and that the Japanese greatly outnum bered them. General Kuroki began the move ment on Tucselay by ordering a de tachment of the Imperial Guards di vision to seize the Island of Kurito. which is in the Yalu above Wiju. and 0 detachment of the Second Divis ion, to seize the Island of Kintcito which is situated below Wiju. The detachment of the imperial puarels met with some resistance, but It succeeded in clearing the enemy out and occupied Kurito Island. The Rus sians abandoned the island of Kin teito when attacked by the detachment of the second division. The actual losses sustained by the detachment of the imperial guards is rot known, as there is an error in that riart of the message received here re ferring to the number killed, but 9 of the detachments were severely and 16 slightly wounded. The detachment of the second division which took thej Island of Kinteito sustained no losses. During these movements on the is lands the Russians opened fire on the Japanese with eight Q'j centimeter guns from a hill behind Chiu Tn Cheng and two llotehkiss guns, which were mounted on the bank of the river at Kosan, where the Russians seemed to have established their headquarters. One battery of Japanese artillery which had taken a position on a hill to the east of Wiju, fired three volleys at Fosan, and at noon of Tuesday the Russian batteries behind Chiu Tien Cheng shelled Wiju, wounding one Japanese soldier with shrapnel. On Wednesday the Russians resum ed the bombardment of Wiju, firing at intervals throughout the day. The Japanese artillery did not respond to this fire. General Kuroki has received reports to the effect that the Russians are fortifying the heights 011 the right Lank of the I ho River. These new defenses are declared to extend from Chiu Tien Cheng through the village of Mokao to Koshoki. a distance of three and a quarter miles. The reports of this lighting which have been received here do not indi-. EIGHT KILLED IN WRECK World's Fair Special Wrecked on Iron Mountain Road. TRAIN ORDERS MISUNDERSTOOD. Wreck Occurred While the Train Wis Going I a High Rate ol Speed, and One of the Cars Was Thrown Hundred Feel From Ibe Track. Three of. Dead 1'nldentlflcd Pi into t'e'ri, the Others Trainmen. Kimswick, Mo., (Special). A mis understanding of orders by the engi neer of train No. 18 on the St. I.ouis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad running as a World's Fair special, resulted in a serious wreck at Wickcs Siding, about a mile and a half north of here, in which X were killed and 17 injured. The wreck occurred while the train was going at an excessive rate of Speed. There was trouble with a freight car on ore 1 f the fast trains, and it was necessary to abandon it on i'ukide of Millionaire. Chit ago, 1 Spec ial 1. - -George McKay, a wealthy real estate owner of New York city, shot nnd killed himself at the Auditorium Hotel. Death was self-inflected, as when found he was sitting upright in a el.air and a -c-volver was lying n the bed beside liim. Relatives of the dead man arc unable to assign a reason for the sui cide. McKay, who made his home in New York, cainc to Chicago last Mon day to attend to some business con nected with his real estate. His hold ings, which are s.nd to be worth fully $ 1,000,000, were ail located in Chicago American Women as Nurses. Chicago (Special).- A party of young women who are on their way to Port Arthur to act as Russian curses arrived in Chicago. The party U under the leadership of the Coun tess of Bavanda, who has lived sev eral years in Russia. Countess lia anda is an American bv birth, a na tive of New Orleans. The six young women accompanying the Countess belong to prominent families in New York, boston and Pittsburg. iHiiuBy Fall Dowa Shaft. Johannesburg, (By Cable). The collapse of a cage in the Robinson mine precipitated forty-three native ifloo feet to the bottom. All were killed. The bottom 01 Ibe shaft is a quagmire of human remains. Flit Spanish Miners silled. Madrid (By Cable). The caving in of a coal mine at Tocina, Seville, buried many miners. Fifty bodies have been recovered. Ten of the miners were rescued, but alt of them were badly injured. IN FIVE DAYS BATTLE cate whether the Russians retired down the river or in the direction of I'eng I latin Cheng, on the road to Li- aoyang. The Japaivsc captured Chiu Tien Cheng, 10 miles north of Antung, which is regarded as the key to the Russian position on the right bank of the Yalu River. It is reported that the Russians will retreat to I'eng II nan Clung, which is on the road to l.ianyang, Manchuria. Oied wit'nlhTriag. St. Petersburg (By Cable). The operations of the Vladivostok squad ron have revived the spirits of the people of St. Petersburg, who have I'rrn downcast since the e!c' rm -tion of the I'etropavlovsk and the iiit qiient confinement of the remnant "f the Port Arthur tlcet to the harbor. The fact that the navy is doing some thing of an offensive character appeals to the popular mind, which has been unable to appreciate the reason for the inactivity of the fine ships of the V ladivostok squadron. The official report of Rear Admiral Yeszen to the Kmperor is as follows: "During the night of April 26 two Russian torpedo boats met at sea the Japanese military transport Kinshiu Maru, of .4.000 tons, laden with rice and other military stores and about 1.500 tons of coal. The transport was armed with four llotehkiss guns of forty-seven millimeters. The Rus sians captured on board seventeen offi cers, twenty soldiers, eighty-five mili tary carriers, or coolies, and sixty-five of the crew, who surrendered. The remainder of the men, who were to form a lauding party, and who were left without officers, obstinately re fused to surrender or go 0:1 board a Russian cruiser. Furthermore, they offered armed resistance to the Rus sians. In the end they were sent to the bottom with the transport." He adds that there were 200 men aboard the transport. Admiral Yeszen also reports that besides the sinking of the Japanese steamer Goyo-Maru at Won-San (Gen San) April 25 the Russians sank at sea the same evening the Japanese steamer Nakamtira-Maru, of 220 tons, whose crew was saved. It is generally recognized that Rear Admiral Yeszen cannot do more than frighten the Japanese and compel them to exercise greater care in their military movements, as the sinking of a few transports or even cruisers can have no permanent effect on the result of the war. Moreover, he is bound by bis instructions not to risk his ships unduly, the intention being to keep them safe for an attack with the Baltic fleet when it arrives in the Pacific. The possibility of a Japanese at tempt to mine the entrances to Vladi vostok, as was done at Port Arthur, is considered, but the conditions are different, and besides. Rear Admiral Yeszen, with the lesson of the I'etro pavlovsk disaster fresh in his mind, will observe the utmost caution. St. Petersburg is loaded with ru mors regarding the sinking of the j Japanese military transport the Kin- 1 shiu-.Maru. One report has it that ' .t.txio men were aboard the transport I when she went down, but the ad- i nr.ralty insists that there were only 200. the main line near Wickes Siding. Orders were issued for all north bound and southbound trains to use the switch at that point instead of the main line. Five trains passed the sid ing during the interval between the breakdown of the freight car and the arrival of No. 18. It is stated by Conductor Austin lliat he read the order tg the engineer and handed a copy to him. The of tic a 1 s of the road cannot account for Ihc fact that the train approachrd the .-iding at the high rate of speed it must have b re to cause the damage it did. The engine tinned completely over, pinioning Fngineer Bailey beneath tons of steel. Master Mechanic Tuber who was riding in the engine, was also instantly killed. The baggage car was thrown nearly loo 1rt from the wreck, and is entire ly demolished. The two coaches di rectly in the rear of the baggage 1 :ir wire also overturned and badly mccked The sleeping car in the rear r the coaches was thrown 011 its side and damaged. Three Thousand Miners Strike. Canton. O., (Special). Miners of the Tuscarawas district, about .1.000 in number, quit woik until an agreement is reached on the scale The trouble is over the machine rate, which a ten days' conference in Canton caily in the month failed to settle. That con ference referred the whole question to a committee of live operators and live miners, but so (ar the committee has failed to agree on a time and place of meeting. They will probably gel together this week. There are about thirty live mines in the district, locat ed in Fastern Stark, Carroll and Tus carawas counties. Serious Flood il Fori Scott. Fort Scott, Kan., (Special). Fort Scott M experiencemg the most serious llood in its history. Marmaton river aii.l Mill Creek, which runs inlo the former stream here, have risen ten feet in the past twenty four hours, the result of heavy rains. Several hundreds ol persons have been res cued in bents. As far as known mi lives liave been lost. The esti mated Ion to live stock drowned and property damaged is $100,000. Says W Were Killed Monterey, Mexico, (Special). H. G. Caldwell, traveling freight and tat- 1 tenger agent of the Sante Fe Rail road, who was a passenger on the Mexican Central passenger train that was wrecked near Zacatecas several eiays ago, has arrived here and gives the first authentic account of the dis aster. He says that 69 persons lot their lives in the wreck. , The official rtpeirt of the railroad gave the total number of , killed as 11. In addition to the Oo who were Idled, Mr. Caldwell said, n.any were injured seriously. mS IN SHORT ORDER. The Latest Happenings Condensed for Rapid Heading. Domestic Counsel for the Michigan Central Railroad Company filed a bill to pre vent the ticket-brokers in Chicago from continuing their business, charg ing that they nave conspired to de fraud railroad companies. Governor Odell signer! three im portant bills affecting the business of corporations whose titles are mis leading owing to the presence therein of such words as "trust," guarantee," etc. A sweeping injunction was granted by Judge B. S. banker, of the United States District Court in Alqucrque, N. M., against the striking machinists and boilcrmakcrs of the Santa Fe Railroad. Tom Searcy, a negro, 20 years cf ape, was lynched in a remote part of Heiwooel county, Tcnn. Searcy at tempted an assault on a nine-year-old girl. ( apt. A. E. McDonald and his crew of eight men were resued bv lifc- savrs f the Old llarberr Station ir.'iti the lioston schooner Future. 1 haries Kocker was fejund guilty o! rrili- in Rock Rapids, la. He had killeel August Schroeder, a farmer, and mairieil the widow. 'Flic will of Jane II. Reamer, mak ing many bequests for religious and charitable institutions, was tiled for probate in Pittsburg. A deputy sheriff took possession of the offices of Wooden & Co., members of the Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York. William Broderick, a well-known opera singer, dropped dead at the Harnett House, in Cincinnati, from heart disease. The United States Steel Corporation has bought the Clairton steel proper tics from the Crucible Steel Company. The subject of municipal accounting was discussed at the final session of the Municipal League in Chicago. Harry Hart, a youth of 18, shot him self in the presence of his sweetheart in Mount 1 lolly, N. J. II. E. Osgood, of Hiram, Me., killed his wife and himself while on a train en route for home. The Standard Oil Company made a cut of three cents in all grades of oil. Four lives were lost by the burning of the Bryant House, in Lansing, I Mich. j Judge Atchison, of the United States Court in Pittsburg, ehsmissscd the habeas corpus writs secured for Lieu tenant Drury and Private Dowd, U. S. A., held by the civil authoritici for shooting William Crowley. Albert Gallerton Shepard, "4 years old, of Wilkesbarrc, Pa., elied on board the Clyde Line steamer Com anche, which arrived at New York from Jacksonville and Charleston. The committee of arrangement for the Democratic National Convention met in St. Louis. The number eif tickets to be issued for the convention will not exceed 9.500. Thomas W. I.awson, the lioston millionaire, reared from his stock exchange firm fo that he may be tin- j hampered in his fight against "certain interests." Edward Rogers and Thomas Tate ! were held for court, charged with the ' larceny of a p'ocketbook, the pro perty of Henry C. Johnson, the arrest ejf the prisioners being the outcome of a deal for two horses. At Athens, N. Y., Andrew Jackson Duncan, Jr., of New Yfrk, nephew of 1 the late President McKinley, was mar ried to Miss Jessie Rand Van Deusen. ! A misunderstanding eif signals cause ; a railroad wreck at Chariticrs Cross- : iug, McKees Rocks, Pa., in which five; persons were injured, erne fatally. Clement Goyette was hanged at ; l.'Original, Out., for the murder of Daniel Colligan, a farmer, and his son, Thomas, on January 24 last. An attempt was made at Jefferson- ; vi I It-, Ind., to assassinate D. M. Rob bins, candidate for mayor on the indc- I pendent labor ticket. All but 10 of the families of Eskimos ; living if the Mackenzie basin have ' been wiped out by the measles. ' Frederick Graber, made melan- j clioly by the death of his wife, com- j mittcd suicide in Camden, N. J. Major General Peter Joseph Oster- ! haus arrived in New York after an ' absence of 30 years in Germany, where he resides, lie commanded one ' of the tjivjiious of the Union Army . 111 the Civil War. j Mrs. Lizic Travcrs, on trial in I C hicago with her husband for, shop-j lifting, advanced through counsel the j plea that nneler biblical laws she was : compelled to obey her husband. In New York Gustave Fingbush, a German sailor, sheit and wounded ' Adeline lluttncr and then shot him self, perhaps fatally. i Foreign. The review e.f, the French and Italian squadrons bv King Victor F.m niaf.ic'i and President I.ouhet in the G !f t f Naple was a brilliant event. ' The United States battleship K.ev.-: lucky, Hying the Hag eif Rear Admiral ' I. .alls, assisted in the review. j King Edward and (Jiicen Alexandra attended the l.eopardstown races, t'.e i smartest day of the Dublin race week. ! Richard Croker saw his horse, A:t;:ri- ! can Hoy, win the April Plate. j Miie-ter.tns ot l ern.e, li. t. ., a town of .t.tico. the largest settlement in C tr.w's Nfst Pass district, was des troyed by lire. Estimated lots, Jtro.ixio. Paul Kruger, former president of the I ransvaul, is reported to be af llieted with cerebral trouble and he is now e.tren.ely weak. It is reported through Russian sources tl at the Russian" coverr.ni'.-tit is about to moderate the aiui-Jcwish j legislator). The commandant e,f the Groolfon teiu district, German Southwest Afri ca, reports that the Germans there have suffered severe losses and lack the necessaries of life. The Berlin Vossichc-Zcitung says the Emperor has expressed dissatisfaction with the management of affairs in Southwest Africa. Ernest Deligne, former secretary of Don Jaime ele Bemrbon, son eif Don Carlos, pretender to the Spanish throne, was scntencYd in Paris to 10 mouths' imprisonment for pawning the famous jeweled necklace of Marie Antoinette. Engineer Brousneff, the Russian of ficer sent out in loo.t in search for the Pedar expedition headed by Bar on Tell, has returned without news, and he believes the entire party died of cold and starvation. The British Secretary tf War. un der his new scheme of army reform, intends to reduce the volunteer force by Ko.ooo, the militia by 64 battalions and the yeomanry by 120 men per battalion. In a fight between'Grreks and Bui garians, April 25. at Salonica, Mace donia, 20 men were killeel or wounded. Fifty miners perished by the caving in of a mine at Tocina, Seville. Spam WORLD'S FAIR OPEN The Ceremonies in St Louis and Washington. ENORMOLS CROWDS AT THE OTENINC. President Roosevelt to Touch the .Button at the White House- Program at the Louisiana Purchase Monument Rush Work to Oct Grounds In Condition for the Exercises Warships and Distinguished Persons Arrive, St. Louis, Special). At noetin Presi dent Roosevelt pressed an electric button in the Green Room of the White House at Washington, which started the machinery of the World's Fair at St. I.ouis, nearly a thousand miles nway. The program for the opening cere monies at St. Louis began at 9 A. M., when tbe officers of the Exposition, the national commission an 'i thc boarel eif lady managers assembled in the Administration Building to march to the Plaza of St, Louis, where they took their places upon the platform erected at the base of the Louisiana Purchase Monument. A detachment of the JcfTerseTn Guards, with a band and an officer of the United States: Army, escorted the party. Represen tatives of foreign governments as sembled in. the Hall of Congress at 9.15 A. M., anel walked with a similar escort to the plaza. The state, and territorial commissioners, with the governors of several states were in the United Slates Government Build ing and proceeded, to the plaza under escort of Jeffcrs'Mi Guards and a military officer. The exercises were held in the open air, the audience occupying the broad Plaza of St. Louis facing the monument. President David R. Francis, of the Exposition called the assemblage to order at 10 o clock, and alter an invocation ny icev. ur. era ,v. u - , , T, i- . , r ; . ....... , ... - . , the Lord s Prayer, n which the : , ence joincei, rrestticnt i rancis men ; tie live rcei nis aneircss 1-rom this point forward the pro- I f 11 I assume mat tne apparent 01 x anama to assume some snare ol as y, w," ' o, ri. surplds of revenues over expenditures the foreign indebtedness of Colom a"v' 1 I i lnlieeltv ' wi" l,c a"Kmecd by not less than bia, the state department has made C. . .11 i!rr., r'f $.15,000,000, thus affording a safe mar- ; no move in that matter since the re- March Louisiana, Transfer of the E l"?..Vesl' enl. ,nS TrV,luA. J,' ' exiiuit. .Mr reeiencK j v. skiii, with presentation of official com- mission arm ins gnia 01 ouicc. ( . " , , V, ci ct ',. ' gresscs, and aelds: 1 lie appropria-; impress upon rum the fact that con Mr Frederick!. V . Skiff. will pre- ,jons f()r cach nf t,)c fisca, ycars l8o- pj.lcrations of equity should move sent to tne cnie.s 01 n.s nvisi.m ,..eir 1 i.Mici'il CAiiiniiLLir.llc 'jnl ItWIimiUG id I ' y V v" "" ' oince. Chorus- Hymn of the WeM, words by Edmund Clarence Steadman; music by John Knowles I aine 1 Address The mayor oft he C ity oF t. Louis J ion. Koiia wens. i Address -I he president of the Na- tional Commission, Hon. 1 nomas a !',' t-ar,er- ... , I Ad.lresscs-By a United States 1 .... o,.u ."" J awney on behalf 01 the committee o the Lmted States ; Congress. ' ',u"l7 ,'"-"" '-"-1 "1 do not question the honesty of ward H. llariman. president New..!,.,. r,,,.r;,.;.,. ;.t,.; ; s,Y'-rk ..S-,'-'?lc Commission 1 Music Hie Star-Spangled Banner, 1 rancis Scott Key. 1 '"V , , , 1 ; . 1 resident eif the united States, the r. fi.. i, ,, Secretary of War, Hon. William H. 'Ja"; , , 1 ni 11c concnision 01 tne ac cress i.y li . r..ti r .. i-.f V . t wi 1 riLii L11I f t.Ve.U;f'd StaYes! r.lie' While House in the presence of members of , the Diplomatic Corps, chief justice and asse.ciate justices of the Supreme lir dVn ti e Sen- e the Si e,ker presieiet t 01 tne . -senate, tut .-speaker . f 1. II ..f II n. .. ...I of the House e.f Representatives and ; tiler persons distinguished in official life, pressed the butfou connected by w ire with thc Exposition grounds and ......... . : " . .. .. unfurling flags ein all the buildings ; Slid setting the great cascades in 1110- j tlotl. 1 st:trte,l t ii mac unprv. 1 h, cum. net 1 i ne MiiKiuK "ii .Mnei in in Kiuiiu cheirus concluded the exercises. The parade "tif the Pike conccssiona- ', :,,.- n ... .. . ..rr..: : 1 tu- r 111 :.. 1 thousands e,f men. and women ami; animals took part, followed the open- : ing ceremonies. 1 I .al).-J Scorpoin In Slipper, Minneapeilis, Minn.,( Spec Miss Mabel Lane was bitten by arge 'black scorpion at her home. : M '"sis .suiiiimi ui mi ; icar Minnetonka Lake. Despite the ; near .Mmnetonka Lake. I)cnitc the ; , , ,,. . . , pain en tne sung, .miss i.auc seized a pair e,f hair curlers, wrenched the .. ... 1. C. - . 1 1 ' r...v . , il in .Jof.lu.l. I hen she tekplioned for a physician. Dr. Miles, of hxcel- sior, arrived at the Lane residence and prescribed opiates to relieve the nation altcctiug production and com pain. lie permitted the wound to binalions effecting interstate com- i bleed freelv and Miss Lane is rernver. ! tnerce directlv. Vet. unon a showimr i ing. Miss Lane, who had been in Cuba for three months, returned hemic on Sunday morning. She unpacked j i.cr iruiiK on .Meinuay ami rcmovcel a , number eif articles, inclueling a pair 1 of house slippers. It was in one ! of these that the scorpion had been i brought over. j ! B. 4 0. Locomotive Explodes. Pittsburg, Pa., (Special). Engine i No. jjm, of the Baltimore and Ohio ,r",nalc l,ro"r"!,,,S to S'P Railroad, east-bound, exploited while' Congressional and Departments, passing Tenth street, Braeldock. ! The members eif the Isthmian Canal Three men were fatally injured, three j Commission have returned to Wash otljers dangerously hurt anel five I ingtoii frenn a tour eif inspection eif buildings were wrecked. Two of the j the recently acquired canal property Houses cauglit tire and were des- troyed. Thc cause eif the explosion lias not iieen ascertained. Failed to Obtain Immunity. Minneapolis, Minn., (Special). Charles II. Brown, who was secrctaiy of the board of corrections and chari ties under former Mayor Ames and who went em the stand in the trial of William II. Jonhson, former super intendent ejf the peior, and under oath Jescribcd the system eif "graft" by which the poeir fund was looted, was arraigned under three indictments charging official malfeasance. Brown Miuglit to obtain immunity by testi fying against Johnson, but the latter was acquitted by the jury. Accuiicd Mm Attempts Suicide. Richland Centre, Wis. (Special). Henry Morrison, who is in jail charged with the murder of his wife and daughter, attempted to commit suicide, but was discovered by the sheriff in time to prevent the act. Morrison had secured a piece of elec tric light wire from the wall of his cell and tried to pierce his heart with it. Failing in that, be was in the act of driving the wire into his skull with his shot, when (he sheriff stopped him. Jli injuries are not serious LIVE WASHINGTON AFFAIRS. Appropriations Analyicd. Washington, D. C. (Special). Rep resentative Hemcnway, of Indiana, and Representative Livington, of Georgia, respectively chairman and ranking minority members of the House committee on appropriations, according to established custom, made public statements dealing with the ap propriations provided at this session of Congress. Althoiigh the gentle men agree as to figures, their deduc tions vary, for Mr. 11 emcn way's state ment appears under the caption "Good Government Housekeeping," while Mr. Livingston heads his "A Congress That Has Done Nothing But Spend Money." Acceirrling in the tables presented, the grand teital of appropriations for the year 11104-1005 is $781,574,6.19, against $753,058,500 for the preceding year. After reviewing the expenditures for the next fiscal year, Mr. Hemcn way concludes: "The expenditures of our govern ment in their aggregate, as exhibited by the appropriations of Congress, arc large, anel by unthinking persons arc denounced, and yet according to ,the very best authority our national government is the most economically administered of any in the civilized world." A table to substantiate this state ment is given showing the per capita expenditures of the leading nations. The highest given is New Zealand, where the per capita expense is $3o..v; the lowest is the United States, with a per capita showing of $7.97. Of this total sum $.26.801, 843 was to pay dcficicnccs for prior fiscal yearsanel $56,500,000 is set aside for application to the sinking fund. This leaves the total appropriation for the expenses of the government for the year 1905 the property on the isthmus in the $696,272,786. The total estimated rev- name of the United States. Whether enues for this period are $704,472,060, j this transfer has actually been made or an excess over appropriations or I by the Republic of Panama the de authorized expenditures of $6,119,274. partment of justice has not yet been Continuing, Mr. Hcmenway says: advised, but it is assumed it will be Experience has demonstrated that one year with another the actual ex- i lieimieures 01 111c penelitures eif the government arc j feo , , , priations made hv Longress, and, an- i ticioatinir that the comimr fiscal vear ! nm p aJ rxcrrinn to ,hi , practically well established rule, it is Mfe assunu. (hat he .im,.,ri.nt gin of at least $40,000,000." , Mf LivinKStni in his statement, coniparcs thc cx.)cnditures of demo-1 cratic cofl(rrcssc!i with republican con- , and ,g( as ni;lIc b democratic 1 . J . . . congress, do not materially vary, as will be seen, one from the other, and , avcragc 01lly ?4,j4,o, 7,602 for cach ! , ..T,)e Mc alpo shows ,hat , ,)riations for fcdcral expenditures made under a republican a iministra- i tion j,y a republican Congress for the ncxt f)Scat year have reached the start- ling sum e,f $781,574,629 or an increase rt $2H695S 027 oyer thc avcr;if,e of the last two years under democratic con- I trol and wjtl,jn a ,)Criot, of ess than y(.ars thcjr aRgrcgate amount or in their de- 1 rlaienL.e the wisdom of tl)e ,)0icy of lhe dominant party that has made these ciwrmous expendi- ...,. ...., ,1 u :. ' iiiisn ntvc-?iu Y lilt (lindane nf tllc lnji,ary and naval establish- mcnts, thc maintenance of which is at thc expense of needed internal im- . . AnShh S ,nc sc;sion which n just about to ri,,sC t)c representatives of the peo- pe have been denieel consideration of ?C ,lc'na,,,!s OI tncir constituents all along this line, and yet the appropria-, . ' - . ' i 1 1 ,i(llls for thc :,rn,y hilrnv Bn jncrease over what it costs in l8(i .-if $54,000, 000, and the navy the still greater in- creasc of $69,000,000, ,.o.... 1 1 .1.- vv naiever may nave oeen 111c sins nf commission of this Congress, they are as nothing compared to its sins ef omission, elenvint? eonsielerntion In nil . . . ' " . . legislation to the wcllarc ot great masses of people." ill,. P..., t,h,i Conde Hamlin, of the St. Paul Pioneer Press; Don C. Scitz, of the ; V..... V,l VV....I.I ...,.l l. m V,,r, c 1 . , , , . , , of the Philadelphia Ledger and 'e New Wk limes, representing the American Newspaper rublshers As- l, -, n t iti r;.ll.l 1111 Hi. !iltrirni,i n.n- sociation, called 011 the attorney gen era) l,lay ?l,d. ,a.i,H be,ore !V" a com" plaint against the so-called paper manufacturers, trust, alleging viola- manufacturers, trust, alleimiir viola- . .c .1 ci - - . 1 i'1 .-iiierin.iii unu-uusi . . T1,c ttorney general explained to ; them the distinrton betwe-ei:) what col!( an, wnat cftiiuj not ic ar cnmplMicd under thc Sh erman act. and particularly the distinction the courts have drawn between ceunbi- of evidence which seemed to indicate j that a combination existed in the 1 paper business w erchy different paper , uiauuiaciurers nave agreed 10 regulate the supply of paper and to divide anu,ng themselves the territory of its consumption, the atteirncy general stated that he would have an in- vestiuatiou maele. and if it were found that this feature of thc charges could sustained he would institute ap on the isthmus. the naval collier lar,ar went aground 011 Loggerhead Buoy. Before thc House committee Assist ant Secretary Darling opposed, and Rear Admiral Taylor f.ivored, the bill (or a general board in the Navy. The Senate confirmed the 110111 iuation of Jeter C. Pritchard lo be United States circuit judge. The sundry Civil Bill agreed upon caries an appropriation of $000,000 for a plaza for the Baltimore Custom house, and Si 71100 to cover the damage to the building by the recent fire. The sum eif J 100.000 is ap propriated for work during the cur rent year. By a party vote of 169 to 1 25 Speaker Cannon, of the House, was sustained in his ruling that the Cock ran resolution was not privileged and out ol order. Thc House then re sumed consideration of the Shipping Bill. A Utah sheriff testified before the Senate Investigating Committee that two eif Apostle Taylor's wives are employed as domestics in the houses where two either wives live. The House adopted the cnnfcrrm'C repeirt m the Military Academy Ap propriation Bill, which disposes of the lust of the supply bills. THE CANAL TRANSFERRED Closing Ncgotations in Panama Deal Consummated Bjr Day and Russell. FORTY MILLION DOLLARS ADVANCED Deeds of the Property, Archives and Other Papers and Documents Which Will Be lonf lo the United States I'uder the Transfer, Have Alreay Been Turned Over to the Kepresenatives of Our QovermenL Washington, D. C. (Special). The attorney general has received cable grams from Messrs. Day and Russell, who went tei Paris as his representa tive to conduct the closing negotia tions for the Panama Canal property, to the effect that the deeds of the property, archives and all other papers anel documents which will belong to the United States under the transfer have alreafy been turned over to them and that the purchase price of $40,000,000 has been advanced to the canal company by a Paris syndicate of bankers. This syndicate, it is under stood, offers to pay over the money with a view to expediting the con summation of the sale on the assur ance of the attorney general that the draft of the syndicate on he United States for the $40,000,000 would be honored 011 presentation at the treas ury at Washington. At the time the money was paid over to tne canal company 111 Paris, Maj. Mark Brooke, of the engineer corps et the army, now in Colon was authorized to formally receive made within a nay or two. Messrs Day and Russell are expected to re- turn to Washington withing the next fe d , j,, w j)h , , title eieeels ot tne canal property. Though svmnathizin with the ef. forts of the European holders of Co- lombian bonds to induce the new state f PaMama to assltnle some share of tircmcnt from Washington of M Iinnau-Varilla, the Panaman minister. Before the minister left Washing- ton. Secretary Hay took occasion to Panama to an assumption of some . . part ol the national debt, but the minister was not particularly' im- pressed and no effort was made to bri prefsure , bear on the new ROVernmcl1t. The attcmpt to dclay thc payment of the $10,000,000 to Panama by the presentation of the old Colon fire claims probably will not receive the indorsement of the department. jariSi (By Cable). The case of i olomlna against the Panama Canal Company, involving the former's right , ho)daooo of stock) a9 again postponed for another fortnight 0 COLOR PUT INTO HIS EVE. Be-8'0" Specialists Paint Man's Iris With India Ink. T,l' j , ,r , ,. . , I hiladelphia, (Special). A dispatch to the Public Ledger from Boston savs: e a Infirmary m this city seems to indicate that the color of the human eye can be changed by ,he ,lse of necdles. u ni,aMi, li..,. 11, llnrujf Haskell and Dr. Hefferman and the patient was a young man who has been suffering for some time with an r. , , . j- - , .1 a'lcc''0 which partially distroyed the color of his eye, but only in the sli,,l,tnst trfrm niTf.t ite cintit o 'The iris contained a white streak almost its entire width. Two drops of a 2 per cent, solution of cocaine W"e P"1 H"'1" .!.lid4S J";"' ' ,eH in .". ' '.. e-.oioii it ncceiics. 1 ucse were huuiicu t ,1,, cornea, making a large number ( ,loU.s of the tillicst size. Mim1te llan,iti,.s of india ink, previously '. . . ' V. ' 1 1 . 'I-1 I ' I shaded to match the iris as nearly as ioss,ble. were rubbed !.:.i, ,i.,, r,-r ntl 1 worked into c.h of 1 into the cornea ,11 tine m,nn., 1. "t i ., . ,' i.'trcu 11110 cncii 01 me notes maae , )PCdIe points -ru ..hvsicians si 'The physicians say the operation j was completely successful." TOKNADO LEAVES DEATH AND RUIN. Nearly 0 Score ol Lives Lost in Indian Territory. Pryeir Creek, J. T., (Special).- -Six persons were killed by a tornado which swept through the country ar)0llt fmir ,ilcs south of here. Reports have been received that number of others were injured, but names oi oiily two are known. The storm started near Chowteau, on thc Missouri, Kansas and Texas Road eight miles from here, and swerved to the northeast, cutting a path from onc-li:ilf lo a mile wide anel about 2t miles long. The Abbott home was demolished mid the four members ejf the family instantly killed. Thc storm then struck the Dealy hemic, blowing it to pieces, killing thi young son and probably fatally in juring the father. Miners Threatened By Fire. ' Scranleni, IV, (Special). Thc large breaker of tjie Scrauton Ceial Com pany in Pinebreiok, near the central part eif the city, was totally destroyed by fire. The flames were discovered ui tout noon issuing from the top ol the structure and immediately thc lire companies responded to the alarm anel kept the llanics well withir bounds. The greatest cxcitcineiit pre vailed for a time among the rclativci ot the 400 men and boys who were ai work in the mines and whose fate was not known. One Killed andFivrlurt Chillicothc, (.)., (Special ). Charlct Shumaker, a candy salesman ejf Lan caster, C, was killed and five othei passengers injured in a wreck on the jVorfolk and Wc.tcrn near Hayes villc. The worst hurt arc Mrs. Sarah Jes sup, of Dayton, (),, who sustamee.' concussion of the brain anel will prob ably die, and J. W. Wright, Hunting ton, W. Va.. who was injured in ternally and seriously hurt. The women's coach unel day coach 1 a n off into a siding whil: the trni.i was pasmi over a switch and they overturned. N. & M. EXPEN'SION. Proposed $35,005,000 to Be Used for Future j Extensions. New York (Special). A new bemd issue of $35,000,000, to run 40 ycars it not more than 4 per cent, is pro posed in a circular to stockholders issued by the directors of the Norfolk md Western Railway. Authorization for the creation of a new ml rtgage is rctucsled of the stockholders, who are called for a special meeting at Roanoke, Va., on June 17 to vote on the proposcel new bonds. It is de clared that- there is no intention to sell any of thc new bonds at the present time, as the cash resources obtained fremi the sale of thc con solidated mortgage bonds and equip nent trust certificates are ample for all current needs. The new mortgage, which is to provide for future capital expenditures, will be a first lien on the extensions and branches not now :ovcrcel by thc first consolidated nortgage anel on such extensions and branches ns may be aciiired from the proceeds of these bonds. The bonds will also be a lien, subject to ihe first consolidated mortgage, on all thc other properties. DEATHBED MARRIAGE BROUGHT WEALTH Clara Schlemmer McGregor Gets a Dower, ol $2,090,000. New York, (Special). Married to Bradford McGregor two vcars aco. when she knew him to be dying, Ilara Schlemmer is the heiress of fj.ooo.ooo, which comes to her as his vidow. Surre'gatc Silkman, of White Plans, in partitioning the $u,ooo,coo ro McGregor estate under the wills nf Bradford, the son, and Ambrose Nf. McGregor, his father, who was a Standard Oil magnate, has- ordered this dower paid to her. The residue iocs to her mother-in-law. Mrs. Clara Schlemmer McGregor is Dnly 24 ycars old and beautiful. Brad ford McGregor loved her deveitcdly, and while on his deathbed, following an operation, he asked her to keep her troth with him, and she did. Since he died she has lived in Paris. The deathbed marriage of Brad ford McGregor and Miss Schlemmer was one of the sensations of New York in 1902. The two young people had long been sweethearts, and the fact that his wealth gave McGregor more important position in the A-orld than the woman he loved held maele no difference to him. Both '.heir families come of good stock. THREE LIVES LOST IN FIRE. Fatalities Attending Burning of a Soap Factory! in New York. New York, (Special). Three lives were lost and property valued at $2oo,-s 000 was destroyed in a fire at the John Stanley soap works here. The deadj all of whom were firemen, are: Thomas Madigan. j James Crean. ' Hugo Arigone. Madigan and Crean were buried under tons of debris when the walls of the building fell, and it was many( hours before their bodies were re :overed. Arigone, who was caught n the same crash, was still alive when' released, but was so badly injured that he died at a hospital several aours later. Many other firemen who had been railed out by the four alarms had nar . row escapes during the progress ol the fire, erne great source of danger being the frequent explosions ol chemicals in the building. Besides the soap plant the Dunbar Box anel Lumber Company's lumber yards, adjoining, were badly damaged; 1 Killed Holdup Mao. San Jose, Cal., (Special). A masked man, armed wilh two revolvers, enter ed the rooms of the Delmonte Social Club, and after lining up against the wall six men who were in the rooms, took a diamond ring valued at $xxi from one of the men, grabbed $350: or $400 from the table and then backed out of the room. After pursuit bjf citizens lasting over an hour, during which 30 shots were exchanged, th robber was finally killed. Upon in vestigation 'the dead man was found to be Bert Thorndyke, a prominent young man. Business Blocks In Ruins. Fairlanel, I. T., (Special). Half a dozen business blocks were destroyed by a tornado that swept through here killing seven persons outright and injuring a number of others. Three of the injured will die. It is estimated that the tornado caused property dam. age to the extent of $10,000. Fou( miles south of here the tornado was even more severe. Farmhouses and bams were completely demolished and farm stock was killed. FACTS .WORTH REMEMBERING. A little over la per cent, of milk is soliel matter. Trades unions have existed in China for 4.000 ycars. the penguin wings arc usetul only under water. A woman S feet 5 inches high' should weigh l.2 pounds. Mexico produces about 48.000.000 pounds of cotttiu annually. Primary agricultural schools are. now established in twelve cities of ixony. 1 America furnished Japan j6o.030.ooo' pounds of Hour in ljoj. , In Jcpan Mate socialism is favorejf by the government and taught in the, colleges. 1 he cost of the Spanish-Anicncan War was $350,000,000; that e.f the L'oer, War, $1,400,1x10,000. Ihc one is tin- onlv ucin which cannot be counterfeited. Its delicate! tints cannot be reproduced. lhe I'llipmos cat large qnaiHitics, if dried grasshoppers, anel also ore-i pare them in confections. The Stanilard Oil Company and the American Tobacco Company control the products of Japan in their rc.spcc- tivc lines. 1 f England north of London has three-, fourths ot a mile of railway for each square mile 01 hind, and south cf London more thnii a mile. France produced last year iMj7.uca metric tons of pig iron, which is uu increase of jiJ.000 tons over ix2. There are now 1,. 125.167 '.elcnlmno' . stations of the. Bell Company with1 , marly 4.000,000 miles of cicrnit, uv khowu by it.i t uruLiI report. ' Germany is e'c:iene!c;.t on i''irei,Tii countries for jx per cv.it. ivf all thai foexlstriyfs i.tcess uy for her pci;'c, A Japanese tr.ts 11 ti c -vera'ie cite; pound ejf fire per day.