1 TENT LIFE SUITS FRISCO PEOPLE Thousands Are Sti I in the Refggte Camps. TOE CLIMATE IS IN ITS FAVOB. Tm Hit Ba Pal li deed Shape, a Tketf Sanitary CasdltUst Art Ik Bt Ckssfj Tbil Hv Tikea Plc Use ibt ftr People Art Accustomed I LItIo TM Wty sad Ey It San Prancisco, Cat (Special). Were On familiar with conditions in San Francisco, to drop down in the city at 9m present time he would undoubtedly bngine that there had been a return to We earl mitring days, (or the refugee ttmpa, Katie red all over the city where ktt there may be a vacant lot, gfve the ppeannca of the Western boom towns 4t In hsuuu growth with which Amer icans krre become to familiar. When aocyoco of the residents of San Francisco era rendered homeless by the great fire (be changed conditions of living brought to great hardships, for San Franciscans ar aoetntonicd to the outdoor life, made ao Inviting by California'! climatic con dition, and when the fire came a large pamber of them were in the midst of ndr annual preparations for a summer's Anting under tents in the woods, on the Mountains or by the seashore. It is a fact worthy of mention that hundreds of those driven from their homes by the flre carried with them their own tents, , which were pitched with the skill of a ! jaleran, either on some vacant lot or amid the shades of some park. The re i ault of this was that these camps, wheth )r under governmental supervision or ' npdrr individual care, operated under i (deal conditions impossible of realtza t Sort anywhere else than in California. Daring those three memorable days while the fire was raging In rhe heart . of the city there was no order in the migration of the people. The idea was to get to a place of safety, consequently every open place was pre-empted by "squatters," regardless of uniformity or ' regadarvry in laying out the various camps. Fully 25,000 refugees fled to Oolden Gate Park, and 12,000 more to ' tfc government reservation at the Presi , Ao. The others were scattered over the hills about the city and in the various amajl park9 in the western and southern , aection. According to the computa tion! of the California Promotion Com 1 msttee, 173,000 people slept outside of houses on the second night of the fire, While 25,000 were housed with friends who were not in the danger line. It was a most heterogeneous conglom ( esation of people thus thrown together, , and the disaster obliterated all social Mne and sent the people back to first J pooclples. Rich and poor, high and Jew were on a level in this common mis I fbrttme, and Die color line was so ef : festively obliterated that it was no un tommon occurrence to see Caucasians, 1 Mongolians and negjpes in fraternal dis cussion of the events of the day, and ' tharing with each other the provender upplied by the commissary department. The camp within the gates of the Pre Mio was the first to adopt systematic roles and come under regulations. Tents jVere issued to all who applied, and at 4rst they were permitted to place them ' as they pleased. The restriction against flres within the reservation was raised, and people were permitted to cook on the streets in front of the tents. The anitary regulations of this camp were perfect from the beginning, and when the Red Cross assumed charge 10 days later rot a case of illness had been re ported. Bejore the end of the second week the tents were all repitched by the loldiers, and everyone made as com fortable as circumstances would permit, with commissary supplies given out with liberal hand. The process of elimination has been at work among these tent dwellers so Successfully that but 40,000 remain. Gradually the authorities are concentrat ing these into two large camps in order to facilitate the distribution of supplies, and now it is becoming a problem to Induce these people to return to homes in the city or to enter the barracks which are being erected for them at conven ient locations. FINOS HER MOTHER STRANGLED. flerrlble Crime la a California Village Two Arretted on Suspicion. San Francisco (Special). Mr?. Eliza beth Erandrup, 42 years old, in the little village of Baden, San Mateo County, was murdered Friday afternoon. Her body, with marks of the assassin's fingers 011 the throat, was discovered by her 15-years-old daughter, I.i;-zie, in an unused portion of the Linden Hotel, where the crime was committed. The storeroom is apart from the rest of the house. Its ;door Is not opened once in six months. Friday evening 15-year-old Lizzie Mc Donnell was impelled to enter it. While ihe stood debating with herself whether to go in or net, she heard, or, rather, thought she heard, her mother calling her from the room. She immediately opened the door. There lying on the floor, her face covered with a white doth, her neck and head bearing traces of a strangler's hands, lay the dead body of her mother. George C. Jones, a half breed Kanaka, and Harry H. Cocland have been arrested, charged with the murder, the motive for which has no: yet been discovered. Two Drowned I Potomac. Everett, Ca., (Special). J. M. Stew art, section foreman of the Seaboard Air Line at Bladen, Ca., was shot and in stantly killed by Oscar Knight, his ap prentice. Knight shot him twice in the back and when he fell fired seven shot Into his body. The body was found in front of Stewart's home. Jealousy of his wife and Stewart is the cause given by Knight, who was committed to Brunswick jail charged with murder lv the coroner's jury. Mrs. Ledoux Uuilly. Stockton, CaUSpeclal) With her hca I high and a smile 011 hi r face, Mrs. Emma Ledoux, charged with :!ie unrder of A. N. McVicker, whose body was found in a trunk at the Southern Pacific Depot, in this city, sometime a;?o, heard the .foreman of the jury, which tor over three weeks has been listening to te:H: mony. pronounce her guilty, as charged, without recommendation of any kind. She did not even turn pale or show the !eat sign of excitement. The verdict carrie with it the death penalty by ; banging. LATESTNEWS 1NSH0RT0RDER POMK8T10 The United State! District Court of Kansas imposed fines aggregating $85,- 000 on the Burhnirton Kailroaa ana Packer Swift. Cudhy, Armour and Morrii and gave Jail sentence! to two tretght brokers for violating tne anti rebating clause of the Elkins law. President Stickney, of the Chicago, Great Western Railway, announced that his railroad would at once discontinue the practice of allowing grain elevator rebates. Richard Ivens was hanged for the murder of Mrs. Bessie Hollister, in Chicago. He made tio confession and was in a state of collapse on the scaf fold. An analysis of 4Q samples of r.ausagc and hamburg stek in Indianapolis proved that 3.1 of them contained chemi cals prohibited by law. Three small children of Charles Wucs thorn, of Harrison, O., were burned to death by the explosion of a gasoline stove. Prof. George B. Stevens, Pwight pro fessor of systematic theology in the Yale Divinity School, is dead. An Italian woman testified at the coro ner' investigation into the murder of Mrs. Alice Kinnan, in New York, that Mrs. Kinnan said she had been clubbed by an attorney, with whom she had quarreled over money matters. The executive council of the Federa tion of Labor named a committee to call on Secretary Bonaparte in reference to shipjoiners' and carpenters' wages. J. E. Holloren, of Springfield. Mass., was elected president of the National Association of Train Dispatchers, in convention in Buffalo. The cotton manufacturers of Fall River, Mass., granted the operatives a 14 per cent, increase in wages. About 25.000 hands are benefited. President Jacob Gould Schurman, ot Cornell University, declares the nation needs a new baptism of business honesty. Mae C. Wood's suit in Omaha. Neb., against Senator Thomas C. Piatt was dismissed. John T. Winn, who was tired of ill luck, threw himself from a New Y'ork ferryboat. A monument was unveiled on the old Red Bank battlefield, near Woodbury, N. J. Mrs. Emma Kaufman, wife of a wealthy Sioux Fall brewer, who is ac cused of beating her maid-servant to death, was pursued by a mob of women crying "Lynch her!" The Pennsylvania Railroad issues a statement that President A. J. Cassatt has not been asked to testify before the Interstate Commerce Commission. Caleb H. Jackson, who said he was a manufacturer, of Harrisburg, Pa., was arrested in New York on a charge of embezzling $10,000. The police know who murdered Mrs. C. D. Kinnan in upper New York, and have the weapon with which the crime was committed. The Brooklvn Eaarle declares that Wil liam Randolph Hearst controls a major ity of the Democratic State Committee of New Y'ork. The Cleveland (0.) ice dealers charg ed with conspiring to raise the price of ice were found not guilty. Eighty thousand dollars of the $100,- 000 voted by the Canadian Parliament lor the relief of the San Francisco sut- ferers has been forwarded to James D. Phelan, president of the relief committee. The Philadelphians accused of graft in connection with the erection of the Municipal Hospital were acquitted of the charge of conspiracy by order of the presiding judge. A nephew and two nieces of he late James A. Bailey, the circus man. will contest the latter's will leaving millions to his widow. 10KEIGN The Russian Douma rejected a pro posal to arraign the ministry for ineffi ciency and complicity in the recent mas sacre of Jews. An amendment offered by the Constitutional Democrats de manding a parliamentary ministry was adopted. The commission of the Russian Dau nu that investigated the massacre at Bialystok has reported that the police, with the aid of military officers, were di rectly responsible for the outbreak. The Jews of Berlin held a meeting and adopted resolutions expressing horror at "the criminal barbarities of the Rus sian authorities." Guatemalan regular troops are re ported to have crossed over into Salva dor, thus committing an act of war. The cornation of King Haakon and Queen Maud passed off without any trouble. Tiie Central Association of German Manufacturers decidtd to support the temporary extension of the treaty duties to the United States because German in dustry was not at this time prepared for a tariff war with the United Stairs. William J. Bryan, in an interview at Trondhicm, where he is attending the coronation of King Haakon, declared that trusts could not be controlled or regulated, and should be exterminated completely. The Russian parliamentary comini-.-.-iuiiers who investigated the massacre of the Jews at Bialystok say the attacks by the mobs could have been stopped by energetic intervention of the police and troops. Five women suffragists were arrested in London for causing a disturbance in front of the residence of the chancellor of the exchequer. Emperor William has signed a decree appointing his brother, Prince Henry of Prussia, commander-in-chief of the Gcr man navy.' The schooner Bertha collided with the steamer American off Dover, Eng., and -ink. Eight persons were drowned. Marianne Konopkovo has been arre-t-1 near Cracow charged with killing more than .100 children. The British government continues to refuse to interfere in the Russian trou bles. Mrs Rcid, wife of the American am bassador, and Mrs. Nicholas I.ongworth were the guests of the Duchess of Al bany at tea at Claremont, near Eslier. Surrey. Socialist deputies objected vigorously in the Swiss National Council against he proposed interdiction of American ire-ervcd meats. M. Lodygensky, the Liberal govcrno- who tried to stop the Black Hundred agitation at Vologda, Russia, lias been removed from office. A band of Pulajancs attacked tin town of Bnrauen, on the Island o ' evte, and killed five policemen, losin;; their own Itader. The Sultan of Morocco has yielded 'o France in her demands for reparation for the murder of a French citizen in Morocco, Adherents of the Sultan of Morocco made an unsuccessful attempt to assas sinate Bu Hamara, the pretender. CONGRESS AND RUSSIA'S HORROR A Vigorous Resolution Mr. Gill. Offered By WILL DO NO MORE THAN SYMPATHIZE. RtprMeoitlv 0111, la HI Ritolilloa Say lot America People Wiot t Kaow "tt'ker i Place lb Respoiilblllly lor Thai Uatpkibl Crimea" Calta Upoa tb Presides! For Information. Washington, D. C. ( Special). Since the recent massacre of the Jew! at Bialy stok, in Russia, resolutions either ex pressing the sympathy of the American people with the unfortunate Jews and the indignation aroused by their oppres sion, or calling upon the President to transmit to Congress what information this government has, if any, regarding the massacres, have been introduced in Congress; but no resolution introduced in either house approach in vigor the terms of a preamble and resolution in troduced by Representative Gill, of Bal timore. After reciting the outrages perpetrated upon the unfortunate Jews, Mr. Gill goes on to ay that the people of this country desire to know "where to pjace the re sponsibility for these unspeakable crimes, so that their recurrence may be rendered unlikely in the future." He then calls upon the President to send the House and official information that he may have regarding the matter. Mr. Gill's resolutions read as follows: "Whereas, the unofficial advices from Bialystok concerning the massacre of the Jews describe atrocities which outrage human feelings, atrocities more horrify ing that those perpetrated by the Turks upon the Armenians, and add onother bloody chapter to the history of the oft repeated Russian massaccs in which thousands of Jews have perished; and Whereas, these advices further state that the brutality of the Russian mobs vented itself in savage torture, in fiend ish mutilation of the dead and in dia bolic rending of innocent babes limb from imb before the eves of their frantic mothers, and that the police and soldiers connived at or participated in the car nage; and hereas, the members of this body and the people of this country who sym pathize with the persecuted and the op pressed of all races, desire to know where to place the responsibility for these unspeakable crimes, so that their recur rence may be rendered unlikely in the future; therefore, be it "Resolved by the House of Represen tatives of the United State of America, That the President, who rendered such signal service to the cause of humanity by bringing about peace between Russia and Japan, be respectfully requested, if he finds is compatible with public inter ests, to transmit to this body such of ficial information concerning the details of the Bialystok massacre as he shall secure in pursuance of this resolution." In spite of the indignation of every member of Coneress at the atrocious crimes committed at Bialystok, an indig nation that is shared by President Roose velt and every member of his Cabinet, it is regarded as very dobutful if any of ficial action will be taken by the admin istration. For this reason all resolutions, either of sympathy or calling on the President for information are being per mitted to remain without action by the Committee on Foreign Affairs in each house. STITCHES IN A HEART. Delicate Operation 00 a Mao Who Had Been Slabbed. New York (Special). Three stitches were put in the heart of Anthony Savage, 23 years old, by Dr. Blaisdell, surgeon in charge at the Eastern District Hospital, Krooklyn. Ihe operation, which physi cians believe will save the life of Savage, took one hour and 15 minutes, and dur ing the whole of that time the left lung and heart were exposed to the view of the physicians, who watched the deli cate organs perform their functions. Savage was stabbed IS times during a fight a week ago. Friday he collapsed, and jJr. lilaisilell decided that he was suffering from internal hemorrhages. He decided an operation was the only thing that would be of any use. He found the pleural cavity filled with blood and the auricle punctured. The blood was drained and the wound in the auriele sewed up. Savage rallied after the operation, and it is believed that he will recover. CHINA PAYS THE BILL $600,000 For the Massacre of Six Ml:- slooirlei. Paris, (By Cable). The foreign office has been advised that China signed a treaty according complete satisfaction to 1' ranee for the masscre of six French Jesuit missionaries at Nanchang, Kiang- rn province, in February last. China pays $joo,ooo indemnity to the missions ami $400,000 indemnity to the deceased miionaries' families, builds a memorial hospital and punishes the ring leaders of the rioting. In addition, post humous honors, which the people of Nanchang demanded, will not be strain ed to the Chinese magistrate wdiose sui cide was the signal for the outbreak. Ihe French gunboats in the vicinity of Nanchang will now be withdrawn. Eirlliquak la the Northwest. Red Wing. Minn., (Special). Earth quake shocks were distinctly felt at tne Goodhue lounty Poor harm, three miles from this city. No damage was done. laiaot From Overwork. Owatonna, Minn., (Special). Miss Laura Kelly became violenty insane dur ing the class day exercises at I'illsbury Academy and died soon afterward. She collapsed while making an address. Miss Kelly had beea graduated with highest honors after four years of hard study. Rockefeller Glvei $260,000. Chicago (Special) Dr. T. Goodspeed, secretary of the board of trustees of the University of Chicago, announced that 1 gift of Jio.ooo had been received from John D. Rockefeller. Earthqaaka la Cub. Santiago, Cuba (By Cable). Two nrthquake shocks half an hour apart, the first occurring at 2 o'clock A. M., slightly damaged many buildings in this ity. Several persons were slightly in iured by falling articles. The first shocks lasted IS seconds. The second was shorter, though heavier. Fire Sweeps Aa llllael Tewa. Paducah, Ky., (Special). Fire is re ported to have destroyed the entire busi ness section of Golconda, III,, and to he now beyond control. Golconda is 40 .nilcs from Paducah. LITE WASHINGTON AFFAIRS. Representative! Gill and Smith, dur ing the debate in the House on the Pure Food Bill, attackd the proposition to compel the placing of the weights on canned goods ai impoible and im practicable. Attorney General Moody announced that the government would institute proceedings against the Standard Oil Company under both the Elkins Law and the Sherman Anti-trust Law. A tormy coloquy between Representa tive Bourke Cocktan, of New York, and Sullivan, of Massachusetts, enlivened the discussion over the Pure Food Bill in the House. Speaker Cannon insists that all busi nes before the House shall have been disposed of before he entertain! a motion to adjourn. The proposition to increase the head tax and the literacy test will probably be stricken from the Immigration Bill. The Senate passed the bill appropriat ing $5,000 for traveling expenses for the President. William C. Dennis, of Indiana, has been appointed assistant solicitor of the Department of State, a new office created by the last Diplomatic and Con sular Appropriation Bill. According to a bulletin of the Depart ment of Commerce and Labor exports of meat and meat products for the past It months amounted to $100,000,000. Fredcrico Velasquez, the Dominican minister of foreign affairs, had a talk with Secretary Root about Santo Do mingo's financial embarrassment. The Immunity Bill passed by the Senate and amended by the House was sent to conference by the House. The House adopted the Senate amend ment to go slowdy in building monster battleships. i The Senate agreed to the conference report to the Fortifications Appropria tions Bill. The House passed a joint resolution authorizing the President to appoint a commission to examine and report upon a route. for the construction of a Chesa peake and Delaware Canal. Clarence M. York, secretary to Chief Justice Fuller, of the Supreme Court of the United States, was killed by jump ing or falling from a window of Gar field Hospital. The House voted down a proposition to amend the Constitution so as to elect Senators by popular vote and extend the terms of representatives to four years. Senators Beveridge, Proctor and Lodge spoke in defense of the Senate Meat Inspection Bill and claimed that the House compromise was faulty. President Roosevelt received Mathnow, a Russian giant. Mathnow was accom panied by his wife. The House passed the bill appropriat ing $25,000 for the traveling expenses of the President. The House passed a bill to compel railroads to check through baggage on "split tickets." The meat inspection amendment to the Agricultural Appropriation Bill was adopted by the House without division, and the bill was sent to conference. Secretary Bonaparte approved the de cision of the court-martial which found Lieutenant Commander Witherspoon guilty of negligence in connection with the grounding of the battleship Rhode Island. . Dr. W. T. Harris, United States com missioner of education, has resigned. Dr. Elmer E. Brown, professor of education in the University of California, was ap pointed to succeed him. The House committee ordered a fav orable report on the bill authorizing an annual appropriation of $50,000 to pay the President's traveling expenses. By a vote of 17 to 29 the Senate voted down an amendment on a street car ex tension bill providing for a franchise tax of 12 per cent. The President and Secretary Shaw ar ranged with a delegation of San Francis co people to deposit $12,000,000 in the banks of that city. Commander Sutherland, of the Yan kee, reported serious disturbances in the neighborhood of Monte Christi, Santo Domingo. The House, 'under suspension of rules, passed a bill giving a national status to the naval militia. BIBLE RESTORED AFTER 30 YEARS. Book Tikta at Aoo Arbor In 1876, Wbea a Hone W Locked In Cbapel. Ann Harbor, Mich. (Special). The feature of alumni day at the Universi ty of Michigan, when a number of classes were holding reunions, was the recovery of the old chapel Bible, which mysteriously disappeared 30 years ago. The class of 1876 returned the book to the university. It seems that one night in '76 the seniors mischievously locked a decrepit old horse in the chapel. Fear ing that the horse might chew the pages of the Bible, they took the book away with them to preserve it. The affair then aroused such a storm in college that nobody dared to return the book, and it has remained in posses sion of members of the class until now. This year's 824 graduates will receive their diplomas tomorrow. Million! In Klondike Qold. Seattle. Wash.. (Special). The steam. ers City ti Seattle and Spokane, of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, arrived Ut-ro hrimrmcr with llim ,t-K. . . '"-'- ...... ....... ,,w.i,jr ,inju,- 000 in gold, besides $70,000 worth of lurs. l lie JJoipnin, 01 tne Alaska Steam ship Company, is scheduled to arrive Thursday with over $1,000,000 in gold on board. FINANCIAL AFFAIRS. Rumors that J. P. Morgan was ser iously ill were "officially" denied. Philadelphia & Erie directors declared the usual semi-annual dividend of 3 per cent. Judge Bradford, at Wilmington, or dered that the Diamond State Steel Cr r pany be sold. Persons in Philadelphia having good Pennsylvania connections say the talk of a large dividend on Baltimore & Ohio is unwarranted. New York banks have apparently gained this week $1,250,000 cash. The Southern Pacific Company has announced a. reduction in passenger rates o-.i all Western lines. Judge Yerkes ha become a member of the Philadelphia Company Minority Shareholders' Committee. "Money will be cheap for at least another month," declares the president t f a Philadelphia trust company. Lake Superior has sold 32,000 tons of steel rails to the National Transconti nental Railway Commission at about $.M the ton. FINALLY DECIDE ON LOCK CANAL President Rooserelt fins in The Senate. His Fight A BITTER CONTEST IS NOW ENDED. The Home Having Already Declare With the Amerlcn, and Agaloit Ih Foreljo, Engl' nter for the Lack Caoil, Step Are te Be at Oice Tike far tbe VIoroa Pretece tlon f Ih Oreat Work. . Washington, D. C, (Special). "Cut loose, now, and build Ihe canal. The American people want results on the isthmus as soon as they can be obtain ed and I want them. Dig! Dig! Con gress and the people are behind us in our efforts." Within 48 hours after the completion of the Panama Canal legislation Presi dent Roosevelt will issue, in effect, the alxive order to Chairman Shouts and Chief Engineer Stevens, of the Panama Canal Commission. The Senate took a portion in accord with the President and the House of Representatics be declaring for a lock canal across the Isthmus of Panama. The result was reached a few minutes after 3 o'clock, and after a das dis cussion that was almost devoid of inter esting incident ouite out of keeping with the universally acknowledged im portance of the subject. There was on ly one recorded vote in connection with the disposition of the question, and that was negative in character, coming on a motion to lay on the table the lock type substitute for the sea-level bill re ported by the Committee on Intcroceanic Canals. This motion was made by Senator Kittredee. the committee champion of the sea-level plan, and was voted down to 36. This vote was accepted as decisive and no one asleed for a division 011 the vote on the acceptance of the substitute. The vote terminates what at one time threatened to become a sharp difference between the Senate, on the one hand, and the President and the House on the other, for there is no denying that when the bill was reported from com mittee the indications in the Senate were all favorable to the sea-level type. There has recently, however, been a steady gain by the lock advocates, notwith standing the report of the Canal Com mittee, as well as the report of the Board of Consulting Engineers,' were against them. The engineers' report has figured prominently in the discus sion, and frequent attention has been called to the fact that while eight out of the 13 engineers reported favorably to a sea-level canal, all of the five dis senters were American engineers, while of the other eight, five were Europeans. Some senators avowed their preference for the all-Amcrican report. The President expressed his great gratification at the action of the United States Senate in supporting his plan for the construction of a lock canal. He has been convinced for several days that the lock type of canal would be adopted by the Senate on its final vote, notwith standing the report of the majority of the Intcroceanic Canal Committee in favor of a sea-level waterway. A care ful canvas of tlie Senate was made and he was assured that there would be a safe majority in favor of the lock type, which he has advocated ever since the report of the engineers' commission was received. Two days ago the President figured a majority of five in favor of the lock type of canal, and that is precisely the majority is received on the test vote. It was pointed out at the White House that practically the same senators who voted against the lock-canal project also were opposed to the Panama treaty and so recorded their votes. The President regards the vote of the House and the Senate on the lock type of canal as a vote of confidence. Orders will be issued in a few days to press the work as rapidly as posiblc, and it is announced that before the summer is far advanced as many men and as much machinery as profitably can be employed will be engaged in m:.l;ing the dirt fly on the canal route. FIRE IN INSANE ASYLUM. Panic Caused Amoag tbe lamatei A By iliader Killed. Middlctown, Conn., (Special). Fire in the music hall connected with the State Hospital for the Insane caused one death and nearly created a panic among the inmates of the asylum, who were removed from a dormitory nearby to another building during the height of the fire. The dead man was F. L. Lichtenstein, general manager of the Merchants' Silk Company. Part of a falling wall struck him, throwing him against a fire es cape with such force that his body was cut nearly in two. Mr. Lichtcnstien was aliout 32 years old, and came here a short time ago from York, Pa. The loss on the- burned building and contents is estimated at $35,000. Jobn Hty Memorial Library. Providence, R. I., (Special). A re cent conditional offer of $150,000 to Brown University by Andrew Carnegie for a John Hay memorial library, pro vided that an equal sum be raised by the university, has been more than ful filled. It is announced that a total of $312,000, including the Carnegie gift, is in possession of the university. Town In Cub Destroyed. New Orleans, (Special). Cablegrams reporting the destruction of Sagna la Grande, a town of about 13,000 inhabi tants, in Santa Clara Province, Cuba, were received here by Stauffer, Eshel man & Co. Two missages were received, the first announcing that the town had been flooded, and the econd saying that it had been entirely destroyed by fire. The messages came from the firm's representative at Havana. Died la Steel Trip In TuoacL New York, (Special). Two men died a hard death 50 feet down in the slime and and of the East River' bed at a few minutes after 6 o'clock A. M. A "blowout" under the shield of the tun nel D, being constructed for the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, at the end of East Thirty-second Street, caught 20 employes of the contracting company, S. Pearon & Son, of London, in the nar row teel trap of the boring 'ield. All escaped except Jake Krass, a Pole, ami Jim William, a negro, who must hvc been caught by the water as it rot TWO SAVED IN EXHAUSTED CONDITION. Drowning Accident Breaks Up a Picas nre Party. Philadelphia (Special). The careless ness of one man in stepping on the side of a launch in which there was a party of six and tipping it until capsized, re sulted in the drowning of four men in the Delaware River off the extreme northern part of the city. The other two occupants of the little craft had a narrow escape from death. The drowned men arc: John Zwald. John S. McCann. John Ilannigan. Charles K. Keenan. The accident broke up a day's pleas ure, in which more than a dozen men participated. They h"J gathered f-arly in the day at the Hobo Boat Club, war the scene of the accident, and parties of six took turns in going nut in the launch to the middle of the river to fish. The four men above named, with T.-.trirk Dunn and Lewis Jones, went out late in the afternoon. They had no sooner anchored than Keenan stepped on the side of the launch, capsizing it. One of the men in the hoathouse. whose place had been taken in the launch by Ilannigan, and who was looking at the party through Rlasscs, saw the craft turn over and quickly gave the alarm. Two men in skiffs at once set out to the rescue, bul it took them sometime to reach the capsized boat, as the river at that point is quite wide. Four of the men had already sank, but Dunn was picked up while clinping to the keel of the launch and Jones was taken from the water in an exhausted condition as he was swimming ashore. The two skiffs remained in the vicinity for sometime in the hope of finding the bodies of the four unfortunate men. but they did not come to the surface. HARVEST HANDS NEEDED. Gov. fioch Sy Kanss Must Have Eight Thousand at Once. Chicago, III. (Special). Eight thous and harvest hands are needed in Katies at once, according to Governor Hoch in an appeal telegraphed to W. J. Black. traffic manager of the Santa Fc Rail road, and to E. E. Mcl.cod, chairman of the Western Pascngcr Association, as follows: "Kansas must have 8,000 harvest hands within a week or much grain will he lost. We need cheap rates. I appeal for help."' It is contended bv Chicaeo railroad officials that practically nothing can be done here. Reduced fares west of the Missouri River already have been oiven to praties of five or more, and inasmuch as labor is extremely scarce in Chicago and is emplojed by the railroads as fast as it can be obtained, the outlook for local asistaucc is gloomy. Killed Through Jealousy. Washington, (Special). Edward R. Saalbach, 45 years old, a clerk in the War Department, and his wife were drowned in the Potomac River about two miles above this city through the capsiz ing of their canoe. Saalbach was a member of the Washington Canoe Club. The river was especially high ajul the current very strong on account of the recent rains. Saalbach was an expert wnnmer. but f, is thought in his efforts to save his wife he became exhausted and sank. Slaughter of tbe Innocents. Vienna (U Cable) Marianne Konon- kovo has bee-.i arrested at Wciliozka. urar Cracow, 011 the charge of killimr over ,'oo children. Some of the babies were murdered by battering in their skulls, others by burying. Most of the children were ilWitimaien ulii.-l, 1,-,l been intrusted to her care. When the woman was arrested a crowd gathered una fiea to ivncn licr. Frisco Insursnco Test Case. San Francisco, (Special). Two test cases brought by two women of San Francisco against the Palatine Insurance Company, of London, England, to re cover $600 insurance moneys were de cided at Oakland in favor of the plain tiffs. Notice of appeal was given" in each case, and the matter will eventually be thrashed ut in the Supreme Court. The defendent company, through its counsel, announced its intention to rest its defense on the legality of the "earth quake clause" in the policies issued to the plaintiffs. Secret Paper la Dreyfus Case. Paris (By Cable). Maitre Moras in the Supreme Court resumed his presen tation of the Dreyfus case. He argued that many officials and subordinates of the ministry of war had the same ac cess to the secret papers as Dreyfus. whereas the latter Had no knowledge of the mobilization phins which had been communicated to foreign governments Maitre Moras went over critically the secret documents, most of which, he de clared, had been recognized as forger ies, while the remainder contained no proofs of the accused officer's guilt. MUCH IN LITTLE. Thtovf-n nr hminrl to tlielr nrnfi-w- Klim hy hooks of Htttvl. A prayer t!ml Is lung-drawn-out Is npt to bt) ratner nurrow. A koocI irany youiinr nxm will hunt? tl.ln Hummer on front ttiitcg. A woman Ik-kIhk to show her og6 only when nli tries to hide. It. AflrT nil, thoro iro mora prlzeH than lihuikB In l lit- matrimonial lottery. Quito oftmi tho niHii who la nwlfc anil 11 cood KiuxBer dlHtiincca the vow but Hiire chap. Few men bellovo In an rvorlnstlni.- tlro nnd brlmMone lunlBlunnt except (or thutr iiutKlibors. Homo girlH lllrt with handkerchief nnd Homo wlih fnn, but tho majority prefer to flirt with mon. When a wnmiin yot-ii- nwuy for a Bhort vlutt hIiu !nvr!nbly borrows nomithlnpr f-om 0110 of iior nelirhbor to tnke with her. When In doulit. llxten to your wlfu. WIvck tif he.iii'uekiKi men Hre no rlntr clileki'iiii. When opportunity kliooVl u JoKn't iitio u hummer. MriBt of us do thtiiirn merely bucuUHO olli r Peoplo do them Ocrusluuul.v a man rises from noth ing to HomuliilnK wot He. I'rndlKiilH huve. ulwaa excoedi;d tho supply of ftiltud eftlvt-H, Many ti loser nvcntiiuliy makes Kood by making; a bluff ut winning. A woimin'e ldin .f a Ht'iiKy Demon In onn who can kwp n seerut. ICvery rmtn ih c.-ipublo of doing; hi bent nnd It Is uti to him to do It Sluike tho haiidn vt s itno pooplo and lvo Home other people, inn ahike. Many u muu who tukta hl-rmulf tierl muly iu looked upon oh a Joke by CitlH'lU. If a woman's credit Is good at a dry poods iitoro siui nuvur arum uuout in, prior. MrtHt of a nmn'i hro worship Is whImI nn hlmuolf. , , THE KEYSTONE STATE Tb Latest Peansylvanla New Toid la Set Order. The handsome new Stale Capitnl j1Bt being completed, large as it is, is too small to accommodate all of the depart, incnls of Slate comfortably, and already Architect Huston has perfected plans 0f the enlargement of the building. These plans have been seen by a minhcr ol persons interested and contemplate the enlargement of the eastern side of the Capitol by an addition that will extend ti Fourth Street, and will be in con. fortuity with the style, of the present structure. Just when it will be done j not known, but it is probable that the next Legislature will be so impressed with the necessity for more room thai it will make an appropriation to covei the cost. Since Ihe plans for the nen building were made, six new department! have been created the Health, High way, Constabulary, Water Supply an Mines Departments, all of which havi to be accommodated in the new Capitol along with the departments that were ak ready in existence. Superintendent ot Public Grounds and Buildings Shumakel tits hern husv irmtfllltnir drnartmentt tnr. I ing the last few weeks, and ffnds thai on acotint of the space demanded td make all of them comfortable, it will be necessary to lake rooms that had been set aside for other purposes. For in stance, instead of letting the rooms scl aside for the Appropriations Committed of the Senate and House, both of which arc large and roomy, remain idle between sessions of the Legislature, it will be necessary to utilize them for department accommodations, and the Appropriation! Committees will have to use the Scnatt and House caucus room, which hav been designed for meeting purposes ex clusively. This furnish considerable ad ditional room, all of which is needed j Within a short time Superintendent Sim I maker has installed the following de 1 partinents in the new building, and they arc all now comfortably housed, with every convenience, a great contrast, bj the way, to what they have been accus tomed to in the past few years since the Capitol was commenced : Department ol Public Instruction, entresol, south wing Department of State Constabularly,, first floor, center wing; Health Department, entresol floor, center wing; Resident clerk and House Library, first floor, cen ter; Senate librarian and library, first floor, center; Mining Department, entre sol, north wing; Agriculture, third floor, north wing; Game Commission, third floor, north wing; Fish Commission, fourth floor, north wing; Highway Com mission, fourth floor, north wing; Fac tory In'pector, fourth floor, north wing; Public Buildings and Grunds, first floor, center; Economic Zoologist, third floor, north wing; Dairy and Food Commis sioner, third floor, north wing. The de partments of the Adjutant General and Secretary of Internal Affairs have not been moved to the new Capitol, but ar rangements are being made to install them within the next month. On account of the valuable documents it was consid ered best to wait until the last to remove them, but all will be in place in due lime. Mrs. Howard L. Boas, wife of the Montello brick magnate, who left her new home, one of the finest in Reading, to bring divorce proceedings a few months ago, gave testimony before the commissioner. Mrs. Boas alleges cruel and barbarous treatment. She makes no mention of Mrs. Ltira Fair Stcinginger, whom she recently sued for alienation of her husband's affections. The Boascs were married twenty years ago by Boas' brother-in-law, Bishop S. C. Breyfogel, of the Evangelical Association. Mrs. Boas says her husband took the manage .meiit of all household affairs out of her hands and gave them to the servants with instructions not to take orders from her. He frequently remained out till early in the morning and did not eat breakfast till noon, she says, and in the meantime no breakfast was served to licr by his orders. When her friends vis ited her in her palatial home her hus band insulted them, she alleges. He once assaitHcd her, she goes on, ami told persons he was bent on driving her away. Had she remained with him his conduct would have killed her, she testi fied. Mrs. Boas Is living at the man sion of her ' father, Nathan Harhstcr, president of the Reading Hardware Com. pany. David J. Davis, adjutant of the Thir teenth Regiment, of Scranton, was ap pointed a judge advocate of the Third Brigade by General C. B. Doughem. He has for some years served in the Thirteenth and is not only a well-trained soldier, but also a prominent lawyer of Scranton. . Rosa Pasika, a girl 9 years old, was beheaded while picking coal" near the Jersey Central yards, Scranton. She was sent out to pick coal just before dusk, and wandered too near a switch. She stooped to gather some coal in front of a locomotive and did not see it mov ing until she was struck. 1 ler head was severed from her body, and lay at some distance from the track when found. A novel event designed to encourage men hi church work took place at Read ing in the shape of a church smoker, at which Bishop Talbot, of the Central Pennsylvania Diocese, presided. The af fair was held in St. Mary's Episcopal Church. Cigars and pipes were passed round and plans for church work and improvement were discussed. The bish op is a lover of the weed, nnd smoked up in great style during the meeting. Dr. Charles M. Ebert, 84 years old, said to be the oldest practicing physi cian in the State fell down the stairs at his home in Mauch Chunk and his neck was broken He. was dead wl'.m members of the family, roused by the noise made by the fall, reached his side. Gustav A. Endlich, of Reading, wa! elected president of the Board of Trus tees of Muhlenberg College, to succeed the late S. A. Repass, judge Endlich also succeeds Dr. Repass on the various committees. Dr. George T. Ettinget was elected dean of the faculty of the institution. Rev. W. D. C. Keiter, ' Bethlehem, and Rev. C. J. Cooper, Al lentown, are secretary and treasurer re spectively of the board. William B. Sfoope, was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment in the West ern Penitentiary by the Blair County Court for attempting to set fire to build ings in the commercial centre of Altoona. Inflation of the internal organs of his abdomen by compressed air, administered as a joke by a fellow-workman on June 3, is thought to have caused the death of Steven Borean a steel worker in the, Carnegie Mill, at Homestead. He diid the same day and the case was not re ported to the Coroner' office. The record did not atisfy Coroner Ann strong, and he had the body exhumed in, St Mary'- Cemetery, back of Homc-j atead. A post-mortem examination will! be" held to determine tne true cause ofj death. !