JAPANESE JITTACK AGAIN Awther Desperate Assault Made on Port Arthur. SEPORT SAYSJAPS SUFFERED GREATLY. Cfcefao Dlspach Say Ther Lose Were Very Larfe, (be Number of Killed Alone Beln H.WO, While Ibe Russlins Los! Only 1,000 General Stocssel Slid lo Have Personally Coanaaoded Ibe Russians. St. Petersburg. (By Cable). An' of ficial report from Lieutenant General Storssel, commanding the military forces at Port Arthur, fays that the Japanese were repulsed with tremen dous loss in a three-day fight from July 20 to July 28. General Kuropatkin reports from Uaoyang some small Russian success es in outpost fighting up to August 5. -without the expected great battle hav ing been opened. The simultaneous receipt of favor able news from these commanders in the far East raised the spirits of those in the Russian capital immensely- Repulsed with Great Loss. General Stocsscl's report, though ten elavs old, is taken as a satisfactory refutation of the recently reseated rumors of the fall of fort Arthur. lie states that the determined Japan ese assaults were repulsed with tre snrtulons loss. The fact that the Japanese were not file to remove their dead and wound ed is taken to prove that their de feat must have been one of great se verity. Togo not Mentioned. The part plaved by the fleet hears out the prediction that Rear Admiral Withoft is able to render efficient isnpport to the garrison. It is consid ered significant that no mention is made of Vice-Admiral Togo indicat ing that the lapanese fleet is impotent to aid friend or injure toe. 1 rsin y colh(1(.j W1(h nortl).b(nmd passenger the bulk of the fleet has been detach- train IR.ar Q Ky ; 32 pas- rd for other service, though this woU, , and 4 ,rallmi(. wcre ,njured. not be likely at a time when a serin,, . n a m,ervew ,n San Fra,lcl5CO land assanlt on the fortress was con- Govt.rm,r Carter, of the Hawaiian 1s tctnnlatcd. j land.-, said that annexation has not The authorities do not divulge the . .tn a commereia, succe5S as (ar as aottrce of General Stoessel s report, ,h j..aKls are concerned. though it is understood tnat it came by way of Chefu. The fact that the Japanese are in nossessinn 01 mc country as far north at Naicheng reli efers it unlikely that it came by the Jand ronfe. Genrral Knropatkin's report states that the Japanese are stationary on this eastern front, the greatest acti vity being on the south and south cast nositions. wher the Ruians re able to take the offensive. While the movements in themselves arc ap parently of no great importance, they re interesting a shnwinp th-it the Japanese are still halting before un dertaking the serious task of attack ing I.iaoyang with its strong circle f defenses. General Stoessel'a Dispatch. Lieutenant General Stoesttl's dis patch to the Emperor follows: : "1 am happy to report that the troops repulsed all the Japanese at racks of July 26, 27 and 28 with enor juf.ns losses. "The garrison's enthusiasm was ex traordinary. "The fleet assisted in the defense ty bombarding the Japanese flank. "Our losses during the three days were about 1500 men and 40 officers killed or wounded." Another Battle? A telecram from Chefu, .lated Au- arust 7, says that according to Chin ese information a fierce battle was fought on the land side of Port Ar thsir August 5. The Japanese are re ported to have been repulsed with Ifreat loss. The telegram says that Lieutenant General -Stoessel was personal'y in command, and that the conduct of the Russian troops was splendid. It is probable that this dispatch re fers to the same battle as General Stoessel'a telegram. Kuropatkin Reports Skirmishes. General Kuropatkin, in a telegram to the Emperor, dated August, reports a reconnaissance August 5 on the tooth front in the direction of the Japanese positions. The Russians set fire to the village of Henchnantsa, thirteen miles northeast of Niuchwang, from which place a small force r.f Ja panese fled precipitately, leaving their transport animals. PETROLEUM PRODUCTION. That 4 mi Oreally EiceedeJ the Output ol Previons Vear. Washington, D. C, (Special). The United States geological survey has issued reports on the production in the United States during the year 1903 of petroleum, asphaltum and bitumin ous rock and copper. The petroleum production was 100, 461,337 barrels, valued at $44.'4-t-050, against 88.766,016 barrels., valued at $71,178,910 in iv)2. Production in Cal foTTiia increased over 10,000,000 bar els, while the Texas production de-tT-ned over 1. 000,000 barrels. 1 The production of copper was 7.W 044,517 pounds, against fx;, 508,64.1 jMinds in 1002. The production of asphaltum and bituminous rock was 101,25s tons, val ed at $1,005,466. This was a smaller atmonnt by over 4000 tons in quanti ty than the year previous, but its -value was ji per cent, greater. Of . tbe total production, 46,187 tons, val ued at $522,164, was from California. This Looks Like Business. " Washimzton. D. C. (Special). A lorry call for 2,000,000 feet of lumber, mostly cypress, was received by Sec retary Murphy, of the Panama Canal Commission from the Isthmus, ttr niHri the lumber. 40.000 pieces of nilina also was asked for. with the re juet that the shipment be expedited. Thii it the second or Jer for lumber for the canal. The purchasing agent of the commission is now in Pew Or leans anpervising the shipment of t,. 500,000 leet of yellow pine to the Isth anua. The new steamship company that Ium been organized especially to carry emigrant front Austria-Hun- , ary to Amernca lias 4,uuu,uuu mpi tat A merirer of Wabash and Missouri raxiric might belp Wabash stock, but Zt would add a big load to the other rtwapana burden. riorta are being made to bring 'i the deported miner to the Crip j Creek mining district. " 'ted State Steel has bought the 1 mUl oi the trento:t iron Lorn- the capital of which is (1.000.000. NEWS IN SHORT ORDER. The Latest Happeoin Condensed for Rapid Readinf. Domestic, Joseph Shearer and his wife, Eliza beth, who were married about a month ago, were shot and killed by Harry Fisher, aged 30 years, the woman's brother, in their home, in I'hiladelphia. Fisher also shot himself and died later. The motive for the crime was robbery. Benjamin Brown, of I'hiladelphia, aged 72 years, will wed a widow aged 05 years. This will be his fourth mat rimonial venture. Brown has figured in several accidents and on three oc casions had been pronounced dead. There was a run on the Drovers' Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago by strikers in retaliation for the action of one of the picking firms in making the bank an adjunct tJ its pay de partment. Rear Admiral Rivet and a party of officers from the French cruiser Du pleix vi-itcd the statchouse and city hall in Boston and paid their respects to the governor and mayor. An express train on the West Jersey ind Seashore Railroad, bound for Cape Mav, ran into an open switch at Woodbury, N. J. A number of passengers were injured. An Italian quarryman was wedged j for two days in the Palisades rocks, on the Hudson. He was without food or water and lost his reason because of his sufferings. At Pottstown. Pa.. Harvev Keck and Henry Straub had a pfizc-fight because of an insult offered Keek's bride by Straub. Keck was the win ner. Alfred Knapp, the trangler, sen tenced at Columbus. O., to die in the electric chair, has collapsed and can not eat or sleep. A strike in the building trades and in the subway, in New Vork, is im minent. It wiil affect 40,000 men. An explosion of dynamite caused a panic in the Italian quarter at Pas saic, N. J. A southbound passenger train on the Louisville and Nashville Road u D McKoon, of New York, who disappeared on July 15. reappear ed in California, lie tells a thrilling story of being kidnapped. Supreme Court Justice Nash, of New York, has pronounced the trading stamp act of that State to be unconsti tutional. Dr. Orlando Brown, f ormerly a brigadier general in the United States Amy, died at his home, at Washing ton, Ct. Senator Hoar is suffering with an ittack of lumbago. He is confined to his room, but is not seriously ill. The Sully creditors met in New York, but adjourned without definite action on any proposition. Democrats and Populists of Kansas succeeded in effecting fusion on their state tickets. Rusell Sage observed his eight eighth birthday by attending .-trictly to business. In Chicago September wheat reach ed g-Ji, a gain of nearly 3 cents. Destructive forest fires are raging in Montana. Thomas Taggart, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, an nounced William F. Shcehan, of New York, as chairman of the national ex ecutive committee. Special Inspector Robert C. Ould, of the United States Customs Service, a native of Virginia and a member of Colonel Mosby's command, died at Champlain, N. Y. Governor Blanchard has selected Miss Juanita Lalland, of New Orleans, to christen the battleship Louisiana, which will be launched at Newport News August 27. Prof. Frederick Starr, of the Uni- verity of Chicago, will visit Northern China next year to investigate a mys terious white race, said to be residing there. . Dr. Brown Ayres, of Tulane Uni versity, New Orleans, has accepted the presidency of the University of Tennessee. , . John M. Jones, the oldest printing press manufacturer, is dead at his home, Rochester, N. Y., aged 5 years. . , W. N. Ferris, of Big Rapids, was nominated for governor by the Michi gan Democratic State Convention . The railway po,tal clerks are hav ing their annual convention in Lhi- 0,1 The re is a great demand upon the Philadelphia Mint for subsidiary coin. One thousand nonunion skilled workmen have been employed by the Chicago packers and they will thus be enabled to operate the by-product divi ion of their plants. The coming report of the Geolo gical Survey will show that the Unit ed States exceeded all previous re cords in the production of coal in 1003. A ,1111 involvinir the uossesMon 11 letters written by George Washing ton and Daniel Webster has begun in New York. . . . Itishou Potter denies that the visit of the Archbishop of Canterbury is for the establishment of an American primacy. Mrs. George Law has been suen py the widow of Dr. Lane lor medical attention rendered the defendant by her husband. Ioser.li lloltz. a retired farmer, of New Oxford. Pa., was too shrewd for two bunco men who tried to swindle him. Foreifa. Three hundred and ten houses out of a total of 560 at lllsfeld, Germany, have been destroyed by fire. There were few fatalities. s The adoption of the closure reso lution caused an exciting scene in the British House of Commons. The proposition for a responsible Russian cabinet has not secured the t'avor of the Czar. The Japanese government has is sued treasury bills to the amount of 10,000,000 yenvhich will be disposed of in japan. The White Star Line ha reduced its steerage rate to $10. Dr. Ernest Jedliarka, the eminent fianist and leading teacrter, is aeaa le was well known to American. M. Waldeck-Rosseau, former French premier, is reported to be again criti cally ill The British government committee on naval boiler reported unanimously that water-:tube boiler are more suita ble than cylindrical. The Zeigler relief expedition re turned to Vardo, Norway, without havniir been able to reach the Amer ica, having on board the Zeigler arctic rxurdition. C0NSIDEREDAN INSULT Ba!tlch'p Squadron Ordered to Smyrna Until Our Claims Get Recognition. MINISTERLEISHMAN'S EFFORTS FLTILE. The Radical Actloo Taken by the United States In Ordering a Naval Demonstration Against Turkey Was, it Is Understood, D. termined at a Conference Between the Presi dent and Several Members ol the Cabinet Washington, 1). C, (Special). Act ing on the request of the state de partment, the secretary of the navy has ordered Rear Admiral Jewell, commanding the European squadron, immediately to proceed with his fleet to Smyrna. This action, it is admit ted in official circles, means that a naval demonstration is to be made against Turkey. The orders were cabled to Rear Ad miral Jewell at Nice. His ships are the Olympia, Baltimore and Cleve land. Smvrna was selected because it af forded disect cable communication with Washington and is only about 100 miles distant from Constantinople Ihe trip probably will ne made in; .v ,... ,i ..... 1,- .rrlvpi flii.ro ! l "TWHw nu," himJe in communication with Minister Lcish- ! !;"r"J" uJl or wcre "charged man and also report to Washington. XM for police pro Act Followa Deliberation. j tection (or their dift routing plants at Trtis action was taken by direction . Sixteenth and State streets and George of the President after deliberate con- j street and Lincoln avenue. The sultation with his Cabinet officers, , branch houses of the packers wcre and is the result of Turkey's dilatory j surrounded by union pickets, who tactics in landing several impormni matters presented by Minister Lcish nian. Among these were: Claim for damages to American citizens in the Ottoman Empire. A demand that American physicians and dentists be allowed to practice their professions in Turkey on the same basis as other foreigners. A protest because of the discrim ination against American schools in that country in favor of institutions managed by Europeans. Evasion Tantamount to Insult. Tl. ....... An ..n rtrti M , ' n L i rl f 1 C t Vl f 1 IIC Plait UlUttllimill recent evasion of its promises by the I Porte as almost tantamount to an in sult. For nearly a year Minister Lei.-hniaii had sought an interview with the Sultan, in order to present the matters referred to. Finally, after many postponements from time to time, upon various pretexts, the Sul tan received our representative. As forcibly as permitted by the cir cumstances Minister Leishman con veyed to the Sultan the instructions he had received from Secretary Hay and asked for an early answer. He was promised that the answer would be communicated to him by the for eign office on Tuesday. When that day arrived he was told that he would have to wait until Thursday. The latter day having passed without hear ing from the Torte, Minister Leish man so informed the state depart ment. It is understood that when the mat ter was brought before the cabinet the members agreed unanimously with Secretary Hay that something should be done to show the Turkish gov n ment the displeasure of this govern ment. Accordingly it was agreed that Rear Admiral Jewell should proceed forthwith to Turkish waters and re main there until the claims and de mands of the United States should re ceive recognition. JUDGE MAV DECIDE DISPUTE. Conciliation Board Determines lo Place Con troversy Brlore Chairman. Wilkesbarre, Pa., (Special). At a meeting of the anthracite board of conciliation held here at the request of the miners, the operators presented a plan for the settlement of the check weighmen and check docking boss questions which have caused so much trouble in the upper coal fields. The operators ask that the entire controversy be submitted to Judge George Gray, the chairman of the anthracite strike commission, his de cision to be final and binding. The miners asked for time to consider the proposition and action was deferred until the next meeting of the board, which will be helj here on August 12. In view of the fact that President Nicholls of D strict Nor 1, U. M. W. of A., in a public statement, proposed that Judge Gray or the entire strike commission be asked to settle the question, it is quite likely that the whole matter will eventually be sub mitted to Indue Gray. The grievance of the employees of C'uxe Bros. & Co., of the Middle Coal Fields was alo taken up by the board The men claim that several of their number wcre discharged for loading coal above a certain size, when they had never received notice not to do in The matter was temporarily settled bv a resolution, presented by the oper ators, beng adopted to the effect that the suspended employees be reinstat rti immedintelv and. as a comben sation for their loss, to allow them ber cent, of their avern'-e earnings from tht date of the grievence, the earnings of the month previous to their suspension to be the basis of the calculation. It was also recommended that a compromise concerning tne size 01 coal to be loaded be effected by joint consult! tion between the men and officials of the company. $20,000,000 Lost In Forest Fire. St. Johns, N. F., (Special). Re newed outbreaks of forest fires are causing widespread destruction through out the colony. A number of settle ments have been destroyed in differ ent localities, and the outskirts 01 St. Johns are now being threatened. A force of police and citizens nave been employed in trying to prevent the spread of the fires. It is estimated that $20,000,000 wortn ot marketable timber has been destroyed in the in terior this season. Kilht Comaiaader Was Lawful Prize. Vladivostok, (By Cable). The prize court has adjudged the sunken steam er Knight Commander and it cargo a lawful prize. The trial of the case and an investigation of the steamer' papers, etc., established the fact that the cargo, consisting principally of railway material, was consigned through a Japanese port to Chemulpo, leading fairly to the inference that it was designed for use on the military railway under construction from Se oul to the Yam. INQUIRY INTO CHIC AG) STRIKE. Inspector Carroll, ol Department of Commerce and Labor, on Scene. Chicago, (Special). Inspector Car roll, the special representative of the United States Department of Com merce and Labor, who obtained the evidence for the government on which an injunction was issued two years ago by Judge Peter S. Grosscup, of the federal district court, enjoining the larger packing companies from combining in making the prices either as buyers of live stock or sellers of meat, was in the stockyards here in vestigating conditions. The inspec tor's presence is by direction of the Department of Commerce and Labor, actuated, it is stated, by direct orders from President Roosevelt, who is anxious to obtain' exact information. Difficulty was experienced by the packers' employment agents in bring ing strikebreakers into the stockyards. In one case 12 Greeks who have come from Milwaakee failed to reach their destination. They were captured while enroute through Chicago by a crowd of strike pickets. The Greeks were taken to union headquarters and dissuaded from working. The pack ers had better success with a special train bearing 145 men and women strikebreakers, chielly negroes and Italians. These wcre switched direct ly into the stockyards and unloaded he doors ol the various packing houses. A short time previous .00 turned back all the retail butchers with wagons after supplies of meat. Police were dispatched to prevent further interference with the retailers. The first eviction resulting from the stockyards strike was made. A crowd of strike sympathizers stoned two constables who put Mrs. Mary Anderson- out of her home, in Forty fourth street, for nonpayment of rent. Mrs. Anderson's husband, a striker, had left Chicago in search of work. The wife was ill in bed when she and 1,... u i.u .1 . r;..A by constables. Mrs. Anderson was , . red ff,r. b-vr ,u:,pb""' cared for bv neighbors. A patrol wagon of police stopped the tone- I throwers. Before the arrival of the police, however, the crowd had wrecked the! cottage from which the woman naa 1 been evicted. Nothing was left lor any other tenant except bare walls. Windows, doors, shelves, plumbing, etc., were smashed beyond all repair. THIRTY-SEVEN HURT IN WRECK. Engineer Rehm, Wbo, It I Tnootht Was Responsible, May Die. Louisville, Ky., (Special). A snuth- 1 1 . . ., . . ... u.iim.u passenger train on me i.ouis- ville and Nashville which left Cincin nati at 6 o'clock P. M., collided near Horse Cave, Ky., with a northbound pnssen-er ;" which left Nashville about 8 30 o'clock. Thir.y-tl.ree passengers and four trainmen were injured, but none ser iously except F.ngineer Rehm. of the southbound train, who may die. Ac cording to the information here, Rehm either disregarded orders or was sound asleep, as his train was go- ing at ine raie 01 40 nines an no ir : ...iV .1.- u j ... v ntn 11 rnuin me iiuMiiiJimiiij iram. The baggage car on the southbound train was destroyed and the postal car damaged, but none of the coaches left the track. AL'TOMOBILISTS HELD LP. Hij hwsyman Gels $1,000 In Money and Jewel' ry Near Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Pa., (Special). A par ty of four in an automobile were held up late at night on Old York road, near Willow Grove, a resort about 14 miles from this city. The highwayman secured about $1,000 in money and jewelry. The victime of the robber were A. C. Hall, Mrs. Hall. Mrs. Ar thur L. Jackson an 1 Mrs. Thomas C. Walton, all of New ork. They were en route to the Delaware Water Gap. 1 he highwayman rode a motor cycle He disabled Mr. Hall's automohile. 1 and, after having been relieved of their The children struggled aifrl scream valuables, the victims were compelled ! tfj, fighting desperately to reach the to walk two miles to a tollgate. There they secured a conveyance and drove to Doylestown, Ta., where the rob gery was reported to the police. MAY-FORFEifoFoSUM. Penalty of Ihe Battleship Ohio to Make Speed Requirements. San Francisco, Cal., (Sprcial). The Union Iron Works may forfeit $18,300 to the United States government as penalty for failure to bring the battle ship Ohio up to the stipulated speed requirements. The sum will be deducted from the original contract price of $2,800,000. The official corected time made by itip Ohio on nor tri:il trin. c trli.- graphed to the Navy Department at Washington, was 17,817 knots, which is .183 knots below the mark named in the contract. The Ohio will be accepted by the government, as she proved herself a perfect fighting machine and met all requirements with, the exception of speed. WOO Armenians Massacred. London, (By Cable). The corres pondent of the Daily News wires from Van, Turkish Armenia, that a report has reached there from a high Turkish authority that 0000 male Ar menians have been killed in the dis tricts of Mush and Sassoum. Eiplosloo Fell Twelve Mile. Wilkesbarre, Pa., (Special). By an explosion in .thc Oliver Dynamite Company's plant, controlled by the Dupont-De Ne Mour Company, at Laurel Run, one man was killed and two girls were injured by flying glass. The force of the concussion wa felt twelve miles away. A hole fifteen feet deep and nearly as wide was torn out under the site of the mill and not a vestige of the body of the dead man can be found. Amcricaa Tourist Drowned. Halifax, N. S., (Special). A pec ial from Digby, N. S., say that a sail boat containing eight or ten Ameri can tourist capsized . and sank off Smith' cove, near Digby. and that all hoard were drowned. Tub anJ boats with grappling and doctor have left Digby lor the scene ot tne acci dent. ' Suicide ol Jud D. P. Veraer. Greenville, S. C, (Special). Judge D. P. Verner, master in equity of Greenville county, committed suicide by shooting. He wa one ol the best known men in the state. HAITIAN TROOPS RIOTING Syrians in Port An Prince Are Pelted With Stories. THE AMERICANS FLEE TO SAFETY. Owing lo Energetic Remonstrances ol the Diplomatic Corps Ibe Government Will Take Measurers to Protect Ihe Peaceable Inhibi tion and Patrols ol Police Have Been Sent' lo Protect Syrian Stores. Port au Trince, Haiti (Special) The city of Port au Trince is in a state of great disorder. Bands of soldiers throwing stones prevent the Syrians from re-opening their stores. Amer ican citizens have hoisted the Stars and Stripes over their residences, and a number of them have sought ref uge in the American legation, driv ing there in carriages flying the Amer ican flag and pursued by the populace throwing stones. Owing lo the energetic remon strances of the diplomatic corps the Government has decided to lake meas ures to protect the peaeable inhabi tants and strong patrols cf police have been sent to protect the Syrian stores. After the disorders of the morning Mr. Powell, the American Minister, went to the palace and demanded of President' Nord that the Government ! should take immediate action to stop . the rioting and to protect all foreigners and their property, demanding es pecially that American interests be protected. The President sent for the Minister of the Interior and the Military Gover nor and ordered them to take immedi ate steps to stop the disorders, and for this purpose to senJ troops and police to the disturbed districts. President Nord assured Minister Powell that the lives and property of foreigners would be protected, and said he would see that their business did not suffer dam age. After the interview at the palace Minister Powell. Alexander Rattiste. the American Deputy Consul, and ; Utneral Larnc. the .Military ijover nor. visited the disturbed districts and pyxMiany '" " t K'ven to the houses of the foreigners, , . . Turkish Subjects Protected, Washington. D. C. (Special). It is a curious fact that while Minister i.eish r,,0 , r,.nlis,.!nnot . iPi-kino to ' secure from the Turkish Government ! "''d- Mr- Rol. without preliminary certain rights for Ameican citizens i addressed himself to the formal noti-rcside-it there. Mr. Powell, the Amerl- I fixation. can Minister to Haiti, should be en- Senator I-airbanks was given anoth caged in protecting Turkish subjects " ovation as he arose to accept the in I'ort au I'nnce ana in me resi 01 ihr Haitian Reoublic. It is learned that this is done at the request of the . ... . 11 .u 1 lurkisll uovernmcm. .nauy " vnan aim Armenians now in the - . A ;. ,:,;. , esi mine!, air niu'inni' naturalisation, brt the majority have not renounced their Turkish nation ality. Mr. Powell is caring for all alike. DROWNED WHILE BATHING. Seven Little Girls and a Man Who W'a With Them Go lo Death. Alton, 111., (Special). While bath ing in the Mississippi River, Michael ,. , ... .,,, ,1.- Ri ev. his daughter, and six ol the - . latter's little girl friends were drown ed. One child, who was in the party, was rescued. Riley lived near the river in the southern part of the city, and was ac customed to bathe on the beach in front of his home after his return from work. His little daughter begged to go with him and Riley took her and sev eral of her girl friends to bathe. W hen they entered tne water miey . . . , , 1 . 1 . ,ade the children join hands and they all waded into the river and walked along a sand bar. which stretched out into the stream at that point. They had gone some distance from the shore when suddenly the whole n.-irtv disanneared beneath the water, having in the darkness stepped from u cn,l Kr into ihp Heen channel. sand bar, where the water, was only a foot or so in depth. Riley, who is said to have been a good swimmrr, is thought to have been made help less by the girls clinging to him and hampering his efforts to save them. Riley was 32 years old, and the sges of the children drowned ranged from 8 to 14 years. Four of the bodies have been recovered. JID0E PARKER RESIGNS. I'cslgns as Member ol the Court ol Ap eals of New York. Albany, N. Y., (Special). Alton B. 1'arker ceased to be chief judge of the Court of Appeals of this state at ' 3 20 P. M., Friday and became the un trammeled candidate of the Demo cratic party for the presidency of the United States, lacking only the for mal notification of his nomination, which will take place at Roscmount Wednesday. Without any advance announcement or intimation of his purpose, he came to Albany, took part with five of the other judges in clearing up practically all of the cases which had been argued before the court, and Jhen sent a mes senger to file his formal resignation in the office ol the Secretary 01 state, as the constitution and public officer la.w required. FINANCIAL All Japanese oonds are strong. Money in New .York loaned at 4 of I per cent. Cambria Steel 6old ex-dividend, which amounts to 75 cents a share. New York banks presumably gain ed $7,500,000 of cash during the past week. A large number of anthracite col lieries' will be shut down during Au gust in order to curtail the output. Canadian Facific' June nef earn ings increased $203,000. Winter wheat harvesting in the West is completed. "Modern Miller" say the total crop is better than ear lier estimates made it. Copper export for the year ending lune 30 were 142,000,000 pounds, an increase over the previous year of 1,78,000 pounds. The United State Leather Com pany ha put up the price of sole leather I cent a pound. Thi is equi valent to a net profit for the company of 2 000,000 a year. Union Pacific director have de clared the regular semi-annual of a per rent, on both the common and prelerrid tocK. MR. FAIRBANKS NOTIFIED. Speech ol Notification Is Delivered by Men. Elihu Root, Indianapolis, lnd., (Special). Char les W. Fairbanks, senior United States senator from Indiana, was formally notified of his nomination for vice president of the United States by the Republican National Convention. The notification address was made by Elihu Root, former secretary of war. The exercises were held on the wide veranda of Senator Fairbanks' beauti ful home at Sixteenth and Meridan' streets, in the presence of member! of the notification committee, consist ing of one members from each state and territory, the governor and other slate officers of Indiana. The program was similar to that arranged at Canton by Former Presi dent iMcKinlcy on the occasion of his official notification. The especially in vited guests were served with lunch eon in large tents on the lawn, and the general public was served with light refreshments in the house. A photograph of the candidate and com mittee was taken from the steps of the veranda. The members of the no tification committee began arriving on early trains. Ex-Sccrctarv Root took hrrakfam i ih r'ninmKi. rii. Shortly after noon the journey of one .Ad one-half miles north, beneath t)l(, overlapping trees of Meridan street began. One thousand members of the Marion Club acted as escort In the first carriage rode Mr. Root 1 I t t-, , , i , r. 1 ana governor 1'uruin ano Marry a. New. The notification committee and other special guetts followed in car riages. Several thousand persons along the line of march sent up frc (iicnt cheers as the procession moved. Many residences along the line were profusely decorated. Gathered at the residence were 5,000 people. Senator Fairbanks and Mrs. Fair banks received the committee and es pecially invited guests, and with little delav Mr. Root and Senator Fairbanks ltd the way to the veranda, where seats were arranged tor all. An enthusiastic greeting was accord ed the two speakers as they appeared on the veranda. The demonstration lasted for several minutes, during whith the members of the committee were seated. Cheers broke out acain and Jgain. and several recognitions w ere necessary before quiet was se- - VON PLEHVE'S SHYER CONFESSES. . H W. . er.l Srhnni T..rh.. .-a Interested in the Zemstvo. St. Petersburg, (By Cable). The assassin of Minister of the Interior von Piehve is said to have made a partial confession, in which he declar- j id that at one time he was a school teacher in a rural district and was greatly interested in the Zemstvo, for the curtailment of whose powers he blamed the dead minister. He still absolutely refuses to disclose his name. A watch is kept on him day and night, not only in order to prevent Ins doing himself bodily harm, but in the belief that he may betray himself in his sleep. Thus far, however, he has only muttered two words in sleep endearing diminutives for Peter and Natalie, probably the names of a com- ' rade and sweetheart. The police have discovered that a third accomplice was concerned in thf murder plot, anJ that he was sta tioned on a quay on the Neva, where one of the imperial yachts was moor ed, on the chance that the mtuistet might go to Petcrhof that day by boat. The Emperor will not reach a final decision regarding the successor of the late M. von Piehve until he con sults his uncle, the Grand-Duke Ser gius. M. Witte, president of the minister ial council, had an audience with the Einpt-ror on the occasion of the sign ing of the German-Russian commer cial treaty. The audience was long, and before it ended M. Muravirff, the minister of justice arrived and the F.mperor discussed with the two min isters the proposed reforms for the ministry of the interior. It is consid ered more and more probable that M. Muravicff will become minister of the interior, but, if so, he will not be chief of the gendarmeri-. which now in cludes the department of political po lice, which was merged into this port folio in the case of the late M. von Piehve. Airship a Success. Oakland, Cal., (Special). Captain T. C. Baldwin made another ascen sion with his airship from ldora Park. He rose to a height of about 500 feet and then s;iiled northward for a dis tance of about ten blocks in n slight breeze, made a turn, came back and descended in the park without any mishap. The ascension was entirely satisfactory. A Jealous K.val' Crime. Chariton, la, (Special). Maddened because his sweetheart went riding with a rival, Walter Ralston, aged 19 lay in ambush, and when the couple returned fired upon them. Miss Ruth Campbell, aged 14, was shot through the lungs and probably win die. m companion escaped. Ralston is undei arrest, Secret Service Agenl Guilty. Wilmington, Del., (Special). For mer Secret Service Agent'Peeke, whe was convicted of conspiracy in con nection with the arrest of Italians foi naturalization frauds, was sentenced by Judge Bradford, in the United States District Court here, to five years' imprisonment and to pay 1 fine of $3000. John C. De Cillis, whe was implicated with him and who pleaded guilty, was sentenced to foiu years' imprisonment and $2000 fine. De Cillis was the principal witnesi for the government against Peeke. Stillan la Mk Answer, Washington, D. C, (Special). Min ister Leishman, at Constantinople, ca bled the state department that he had been informed by the Sultan that the latter' answer to the demand of this government will, be given in a per onal audience next Thursday. The demand in general are that the dis crimination aguinst American citizen shall cease, and that Americana shall have the same privilege and exemp tion a citizen of European nation, and especillythat Turkey shall cease to embarrass American educational and religious institutions there. . THE KEYSTONE STATE Latest News of Pennsylvania Told itt Short Order. Auditor General Snyder has received; a check for .iS5,oo5 Irom City Treas urer Schocli, of Philadelphia, collect ed as license taxes. Up to the present time the collections of the Auditor General's Department are $1,000,000 ahead of this time last year. An effort is being made now to run down the foreign corporations that are doing business in this State and evading taxation by not registering. Every one of them will be made to register and pay back taxes, and it is thought a million dollars will be secured from this source. Recently one of these foreign corporations was forced to dis gorge $13,000 back taxes and another paid over to the- State $0000 taxes, which it had evaded paying for a long time. William A. F.ngle, of Pottsville, an engineer employed on the Pennsyl vania Railroad, has received a patent on a cut-out valve for locomotives, the principle of which came to him in a dream. So realistic was the de vice pictured to him that he could not get it out of his mind, and the result was that he perfected models and drawing and applied for a patent. At present, for the slightest breakdown, it is necessary to disconnect the entire disabled side, causing expensive de lays. Mr. Englc's invention is a form of valve cutting off the supply of steam from .one or the other pipes leading to the steam chest. By it de fects in the steam chest and cylinders . are readily located. While he was walking along the tracks of the Philadelphia & Reading Railway Jacob Zook Schmucker was run down b? st freight train at a point just north oj the station in Phoenix ville and received injuries which re sulted in his death. He was 15 years of age and was considered one of the brightest pupils of the Hill School, Pottstown. He had been camping with some of the faculty in the Adi rondacks and while on his return his mileage book gave out when he reach ed Perkiomen Junction. Being put off the train at that point he started afoot to Pottstown. He was the son of the late Dr. V. M. Schmucker, of Read ing. A contract has just been closed be tween the Tittsburg Steel Company and the Republic Iron and Steel Com pany for 110.000 tons of billets to be delivered to the Tittsburg Company's works at Monessen within the next two months. The contract involves about $2,000,000. The business goes tot a concern outside of the Steel Cor poration, and the price is about $19.25 a ton, although the Billet Association recently fixed the price at $23 a ton. Burglars at the home of Mrs. Kate Berger, early the other morning, were badly frigtened when she suddenly . opened a door and burst in upon them. They were so scared that in escaping through a window one of them carried along the sash upon his shoulders and bore it down the street. Mrs. Berger pursued two of. the men until they outdistanced ' her. ' The burglars dropped most of their booty. Henry Buhmn, who owns a small farm in Powder Valley, in the lowct portion of Lehigh County, for some time has noticed that an oily substance appeared on the stream running through his property. Mr. Buhmn se cured a quantity of the substance and had it analyzed by a chemist in Phil adelphia, who pronounced it to be petroleum of a fine quality. Further investigations will be made and the drilling of a well may be started. Dr. R; L, Cooper, one of the best known physicians in the lower end of Montgomery County, died after a brief illness at his late residence on York Road! at Ogontz. He was stricken with paralysis and never re covered consciousness. He had been a resident of Ogontz for the past thirty years and for the past five years had served Cheltenham Town ship as sanitary agent. The plant of the Eljis & Lessig Iron and Steel Co., Pottstown, was sold at public sale for $105,000. George B. Les sig, president of the company and the heaviest stockholder, was the purchas er. The company will be organized and work is to be resumed in a short time. The Ellis fit Lessig plant cov ers fourteen acres and is equipped" with plate and bar mills and nail ma chinery. An unidentified man was killed on the Pennsylvania .Railroad at Lafay ette. He was about 60 years old. He had a discharge paner for Neal Devlin, of Company E. Second New Jersey Cavalry, dated Vicksburg. June 20. 1865. He also had a slip of paper bearing the. address of Dennis T. Gopnlcy. of 1024 South Eighteenth Street, Philadelphia. ' John H. Harden and Paul Kernan, liminary surveys for the buildings of Phoenixville, have begun the pre which will be erected on the farms recently pnehasrd by the State for a hospital for epileptics, near Spring City. The plans for the huildlnir will be drawn by Philip Johnson, of Philadelphia. The committee appointed at a re cent citizens' meeting to call upon he Board of Public Buildings and Ground with a view to ascertaining the character of the wall it is proposed to put around Capitol Park, made a report at a meeting held in the Board of Trade rooms, Harrisburg. In its report the committee says it had the assurance of Governor Pennypaclter that plans for a proposed wall have not been approved, and that no con tract has been made. The farmers of Aston Township are alarmed by the numerous robberies in that vicinity. F'our places were entered in one night. Miles Kelly, a grocer, lost a wagon; Andrew Math ews lost a saddle and bridal; a num ber of chickens were taken from the hennery of Samuel Riddle and a colt was stolen from Solomon Dean. On a Lehigh Valley express train Edmund F. Ritter, a bartender in an Easton saloon, shot his wife twice in the bead and then turned the weapon on himself, putting two bullets into hi own brain. He died instantly, but the woman may survive, Jerry Condo, the turnkey at the Center County jail, who wa beaten by the rive prisoners, who escaped from the jail on Friday evening, died at a result of hi injurie. He never regained consciousness after the as sault. Condo was 62 year of age, and a veteran of the Civil War, having served in General James A. Beavern' regiment, the 148th. He' leave a wife and teveral children. Public sympathy for the murdered turnkey if pronounc ed and many threats of lynching have been made against the murderer! if they thould be caught.