EARTHQUAKE HORROR GROWS Fatalities Now Estimated At 1,200 and Property Loss $25,000,000. SINKING OF HARBOR'S SHORE TERRIFIES PEOPLE. Well Need Food and ,S:ck and In jured Medicines American War Ships in Harbor Giving Aid A Mission Of Mercy Abruptly tMMk International i-ompllcatlons may Snlt frm Berlous friction between ovornor Swettenhnm. British execu tive of Jamaica, and Rear Admiral fcavui. In command of the American Warships sent to Kingston by order tf the WnahlnRton authorities for hu faane purposes. According to cnble reports from the Asorlatcd Press correspondent (nd correspondents of English news Mpers at Kingston, Admiral Davis Of tho battleships Missouri and In diana and tho gunboat Yankton milled Saturday afternoon, the Brit ten, Governor having peremptorily or jfered the Admiral to re-embark Uie Bluejackets landed to guard the ruins Of the American consulate and assist Hi keeping order. The British Governor objected to the firing of a salute by the American warships In his honor and declared that there was no nied for American aid. Correspondence passed between the Governor and the Admiral, In Which the former Insultingly ques tioned the veracity and the motives Of the American officer and peremp torily ord( red him to re-embark his men. The Admiral then called on the Governor, and when the Britisher purposely kept him waiting he told tho Governor's aide to inform the Governor that as he did not desire American aid the Admiral had coun termanded President Roosevelt's or der dispatching a supply ship with food for the relief of sufferers. A brief meeting followed between the Governor and the Admiral. In , which the former was very sarcastic in his farewell remarks. Admiral Davis says the Governor was unequal to the task of relieving distress. The conditions are deplor able. Citizens of Kingston suggest, that the Governor be asked to resign. Some construe the Governor's ac tion as inspired by resentment of President Roosevelt's attitude toward Jamaican negroes on the Panama Canal. In nn official report Bear Admiral Davis awiys the Jamaican authorities declined his offer to land wrecking parties, but that later, by request, he landed bluejackets to prevent mu tiny at. the penitentiary, but these were withdrawn. Up to a late hour 'he Washington officials sajd they had received no ad Tices confirming the Associated Press correspondent's report, and Acting j Secretary of State Racoif declared emphatically it was not true and that the ships had not sailed. Havana (By Cable). Rear Ad miral Evans, in a wireless message to the cruiser Columbia here, states j that a huge tidal wave has changed the coast Hue of Jamaica, leaving j the entire south side of Kingston under water. N'o bay is reported left, and the whole coast line is re ported sinking. Thousand In ml. Kingston, Jamaica (By Cable). I The disaster here is as great as the calamities of San Francisco and Val- j para I so. Thousands of perrons have been killed, a ad the dead bodies are being taken from the debris by nun- I drods. The whole town Is in ruins, and the greater portion is still ' mouldering ashes. The smell ol burnt flesh pervades the air. Tho earthquake came as a sudden j oscillation, not from any particular , direction, but np and down. Thous ands of persona were on the streets Of Kingston at the time and great numbers of them were crushed. ! Many American in Kingston wen killed and have been buried. Realizing the possibility of famine, tho people made attempt- to loot. The military, however, at once took possession of foodstuffs. Detach ments of troops, with fixed bayonets, were placed on guard. They were concentrated in a central position. No one Is allowed to puss through the ruined sections of the city. Old Volcano Active, Kingston Is threatened with a fail Tire of water supply, owing' to the bursting of a reservoir, and no water will be obtainable before Friday. The military suffered severely. The hospital camp, where there were several hundred soldiers, was burn ed and a number of the men lost their lives. Major W. II. llardyman and Lieutenant Leader are dead. Col. J. R. M. Dalrymple-Hay and Major Lawrenson are seriously in jured Part of the town of Port Royal has sunk, and two men were drown ed. The batteries sunk eight feet, killing a sapper. In some places the water Is spouting through the debris. The shock was severe at Rich mond, and this town also was de atroyed by fire. Spanish Town 'iso waa damaged. Quo man was idled and 10 men wore Injured there. It is reported that at Annua Hay the crater of an extinct volcano is emitting flames and smoke, and it Is thought that the earthquake origi nated there. The records of Jamaica contains no previous mention of ac tivity of this volcano. OmM Lines (hanged. Tlie steamer Bella, from Philadel phia, arrived here with a small car go of provisions. Business is at a standstill. Some shops have been opened by Chinamen, who have rais ed the prices on goods 1,000 per cent. This so angered the people that the Chinamen were driven out and their shops looted. The hope of famine relief lies in the bnnann crops, which have not been injured. Medical assistance is limited, owing to the deaths of sev eral doctors. The body of Sir James Fergttsson was found and burled. Committees have been formed and the Governor and Lady Swettenhnm and others are doing noble rescue work. The shipping In the harbor is safe. There have been a number of oth er shocks since the first disastrous one and the repetitions keep the peo ple In a state of panic. The Hamburg-American steamer Prlnzessln Victoria Luise, which ran ashore at the harbor entrance Decem ber 16, is now n total loss. Tourists Fleeing The tbpogrophy of the country has been changed, and the navigation channel into this harbor materially altered. Two vessels left heir Thursday for the United States, loiided to their full capacity with returning tourists and fleeing natives. The wounded persons are being cared for on all the ships in the harbor. A German steamer called l:i hero, on her way from Cuba and sailed again after toying in port one hour. Tidal Wave Swept Coast Line. Holland Bay (By Cable). A great tidal wave has swept up Annotta Bay on the northern coast, directly north of Kingston, and the shore lines about Knigston are sinking as a re sult of the earthquake. The tidal wave and subterranean disturbances have wrought such marked changes in the const lines northward as to make the conditions dangerous to shipping and a new chart of these waters necessary. Two lighthouses in Kingston har bor have been demolished or sunk Into the sea, and wharves and piers, the tops of which were burned, have slowly settled Into the water with the sliding shores. The bed of the harbor of Kingston has so completely changed that In some places where It was 'almost shallow before the earthquake tho water is now li)0 or more feet deep. These remarkable changes caused by nature's terrible convulsions are considered ominous, and it is feared the capital city of the island may suffer the fate of Its predecessor, the old city of Port Royal, which, In 1 6 ! li , was destroyed and submerged by the sea. Today the site of that ancient cty Is a low sand bar. ' city Gaandoally Sinking. St. Augustine, Fla. (Special). Wireless messages received at the station on Annstasia Island by Chief Electrician Elklns say that Kings ton is sinking gradually: that holes and cracks 100 feet deep were form ed by the earthquake and that grave fears are felt that the entire city will slip into the bay. Another message says the hospi tal corps, attendants and supplies from the I'nlted States naval vessels at Guantanumo have been sent to the stricken island. F.scupo Of Veiled Englishman. London (By Cable). Sir Alfred Jones, head of the party of distin guished Englishmen who were in the Jamaica earthquake, had a narrct,' escape from death In the disaster. The Evening Standard prints a dis patch sent from Holland Bay, giv ing details. Sir Alfred had just finished lunch eon at (he Myrtle Bank Hotel and gone on to the hotel pier with Jesse Collings, M. P., and other members of the party, who were amusing themselves by tossing pennies to ne gro divers. Sir Alfred left the pier to return to th I hotel. He had rea lied the open i.pace in front of the building when the crash came. Both the hotel and the pier he had Just left were destroyed. Being in the open, Sir Alfred escaped all In Jury. Gerald Loder was another who had a narrow escape. He was in the Jamaica Club, in Hanover Street, at the time the building was demolish ed. He was thrown to the floor b the rocking of the building, but a chair Tell over him, protecting him from falling timbers. He was dug out later with slight injuries. TRAIN BLOWN ' FROM THE TRACK Sixty Killed and Injured On The Big Four. FREIGHT CAR OF POWDER EXPLODES. Terrible Accident Occurs in Darkness and Rain Near Tcrre Haute Over a Score of Charred and Mutilated Bod ies Have Been Taken From the Wreck and the Death List May Reach Forty. ' Terra Haute. Indiana ( Special i1. Twenty-two charred, broken, muti lated bodies were taken from the smouldering ruins of tho accommo dation passenger train on the Cleve land, Cincinnati. Chicago and St. Louis (Dig Four) Railroad, follow ing its destruction by the explosion of a carload of powder as It passed a freight train at Sandford, Ind., five miles west of Terre Haute. The number of injured will total at least thirty-five. Shock I elt thirty Miles. The cause of the disaster hns not been fully determined, but several theories are advanced. The accident was terrible. The shock was felt for t0 miles, many believing it (o lie an earthquake. The entire train, Including the lo comotive, was blown from the track, 'lie coaches were demolished, the en gine wits hurled ."0 feet, and the pas sengers were either blown to pieces, consumed by fire or rescued In an injured condition. Some of the 35 Injured will die. The most severely hurt are those in hospitals at Terre Ilnute and at Pnrls, 111. Several others are be ing cared for at Sandford. The full extent of the disaster was revealed at daylight, but the death list will not be complete until work men have cleared the debris and the Injured are out of danger. According to trainmen of Ihe freight, the explosion of the powder was caused by. the concussion of the passenger train, which was slowing down for Sandford. Another theory was that gas es caping from an oil pipe line entered the powder car. standing by the pipe, and that a spark from the passenger locomotive ignited the gas. The be lief was expressed by one or two per sons that the disaster was due to the act of a trump or someone who may have fired a shot Into the car. Town Of Sniiford Damaged, Besides the passenger train, eight freight cars were blowu to pieces by the explosion. Huge masses of iron were found hundreds of feet from the track. The tank of the passen ger locomotive was hurled 100 feet. 300 HOUSES FLOODED. Compliments Judge (Jruy. Washington S lal) The House adopted a joint resolution suggesting the reappointment of Judge George Gray, of Delaware, as one of the regents of the Smithsonian Institu tion, bis term having expired January 14. t Is desired that this appoint ment be made now. us the regents are to meet Wednesday to elect a accessor to the late Professor Lang ley. A Martyr To Duty. St. Petersburg (By Cable) .Count Nicholas Tolstoi, administrator of tho Imperial estates in Moscow province, has lost his 11(6 In n fife which de stroyed bis residence, near Moscow. A woman and two provincial officials who were his guests, as well as two aervunts of the household, also per ished. The Count rescued hfe wife (ram the burning building. He tben returned in an endeavur to save the 'Imperial funds In his care, and was timed to death. IN THE FINANCIAL WOKLD. Bank of England reduced its dis count rate from ( to 5 per cent. John Kent Kane has been elected vice-president of ihe Lincoln Savings & Trust Company. Lackawanna has quite a tumble on a transaction of 200 shares. It fell 32 14 points to 480. A big stock or bond IsBue by tho Southern Railway and another by the Erie are supposed to be surely forth coming. Stockholders of the Western Union bought but very few of the $10, 000,000 of new 1 per cent. bond3. Underwriters were obliged to take nearly all. Amalgamated Copper directors de clared the regular dividend, keeping tho stock on u 7 per cent, basis In stead of Increasing It to 8 per cent, a.i bad been general!, expected. In some quurters this Is taken to Indi cate that the Standard Ol) party Is no longer trying to bull the market, but Is willing to let things sag. Bos ton and Montana also declared the regular dividend. Cincinnati Riverfront Flooded And The Waters Overflow Tracks. Cincinnati, O. (Special). Local Forecast Official BaBsler predicts that the river will pass 56 feet here. A stage of 56 feet will cripple business seriously in tho bottoms. Already one factory, the Globe Soap Com pany, has been forced to shut down. Two hundred and fifty employes are out. Water Is In the cellars of morn than 300 business houses running from the river front to Second Street, in the downtown section. Factories in the West end are still running and a rise of r4 feet will put their fur naces out. Water seeping through the druin at the roundhouse of the Big Four Railroad, at Mill Street, is covering the tracks Into the Grand Central Depot. Tenement houses in Cincinnati along the river front have from two to four inches of water In the cel lars. In Covington, Newport and other cities across the river the water is In the cellars. It Is expected that river packet will be unable to pass under the bridges Thursday. At 8 o'clock Wednesday night the Ohio River registered 54 feet and was rising two Inches an hour. The water reuched the Grand Central Sta tion tonight, and all trains had to leave from the Eighth Street Sta tion. HOTEL WASHED AWAY, Thee Hundred Feet Of Bunk Of A. legheny River Gone, Pittsburg, Pa. (Special). Three hundred feet of the west bank of the Allegheny River, at Spiingdale, Pn., was washed away during the night as a result of the bursting of the gov ernment dam, and the erosion con tinues. A large frame dwelling, known as the Forniff House, was car ried down the liver. Nine other dwellings and the Heldenkamp Mir ror Company's plant are In Imminent danger. The occupants of the houses huve all removed their household goods to places of safety and have deserted their houses. The Forniff dwelling was an old building and had been unoccuiped for sometime. At 10 o'clock the river was within 30 feet of the West Penn Railroad tracks, and families beyond the railroad were preparing to move out. During the day flvo more houses were undermined nnd fell into the river. None of the buildings were occupied, the tenants having vacated Major Slliert has decided that the only way to prevent further destruc tion of property Is to dynamite the dam near the middle and direct the current from the shore. He has no tified the War Department and is awaiting Instructions. $100,000 Fire At Hcrantou. Scrantou, Pa. 1 Special). Fire from a burning culm pile at. the Avo ca Colliery, of the Erie Company, at Avoca communicated with the break er and the structure was destroyed. The flames spread to the washery building, 100 feet from the breaker, and It was badly damaged. Many breaker boys had narrow escapes, but all got out sarely. The loss 011 the washery and breaker will reach nearly $100,000. New Indian Policy Favored. Washington ( Special ) .-The 8011 ate Committee on Indian Affairs agreed tentatively to Incorporate In the Indian Appropriation bill amend ments embodying the recommenda tions of Senator Clark's select com nltteo relative to the conditions In 'ndlan Territory. Among them are 'revisions for the removal of the re striction on the nar-i of surplus In dian lands and the regulation of the disposal of the coal lauds THE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Domestic John R. Walsh, former president of the Chicago National Bank, was Indicted by the federal grand Jury for alleged mismanagement of the funds of the bnnk. The Indictment contains 182 counts. C. W. Powers, cashier of a bank at Mldvlllc. On., fnught off three burg lars after he had been shot IS times. Andrew Carnegie Is quoted as say ing he would give $200,000,000 to be assured of 10 years of life. The Pennsylvania Rnilrnad has ac quired control of the Philadelphia and Erie. A hitherto unknown rave, filled with bones, has been found in Tennessee. The Mar Andrews & Forbes Com pany, of New York, was fined $10, 000 and the J. 8. Young Company, of Bnltlmore, $8,000, in the United States Circuit Court in New York for combining to monnpolizo the trade in licorice paste. Miss Mary Glass, a teacher, was found with her throat, cut In the schoo'housn at Eldorado. Kan. Rob ert Hall, who was found with a gash In his throat, admitted that he had had a quarrel with her. The plant of the South Atlantic Car and Manufacturing Company, in Sa vannah, Ga., together with 20 cars of material and many partly com pleted box con, was destroyed by lire. John Krnels, his infant son nnd his farther-ln-law, named Shuman, were found dead from nsphyxlatlon and Mrs. Kraels In a dying condition at their home, In Fostoria, O. (iovernor Wlnthrop, of Porto Rico, h his annual message, congratulates the Islanders on their commercial an agricultural prosperity. Elmer Dempster was executed In Washington. Pa., for killing Mrs. Samuel Pearce and her three chil dren. Dr. James Wood row, who waa prominent In church nnd state, died In Columbia, S. C. Governor Albert R. C'immlns. of Iowa, was inaugurated to serve his third term. Attorney General Franklin L. Car son, of Pennsylvania, after an Inves tigation, denies that there was fraud In the construction of the $13,000, 000 state capltol. Eight New York nloermen. sus pected of accepting bribes to vote for ex-Judge Cowing for recorder, were examined by a grand jury. Judge Hough, of New York, has ruled that, the Anti-trust Law does not apply to steamship freight rates made In London. The remains of John C. Durden, of Harrisburg, Pa., were partly cre mated In a wreck near Raleigh, N. C. A. R. Mallory, Inventor of the Mnl lory plow, committed suicide in a grocery In Atlanta, fia.. Seven men were killed by the ex plosion of a locomotive near Norris town, Pa. Snow Is three feet deep In Mon tana. After mourning each other as dead for more than 14 years, Rev. Johu A. Cull, formerly assistant pastor of St. Francis de Sales Church, of Oak land, Cal., nnd his wife were re united In that city. Michael O'Neil, a Central New England Railroad conductor, though mortally injured in a wreck near Winsted, Ct., draged himself a mile and sent a message which saved a passenger train. Judge English met by chance In Sheridan, Wyo., the wife from whom he had been divorced 30 years ago, made love to her and again won her. The Clyde Line freight steamer Onondaga, from Boston for Charles ton, is ashore upon Orlans Beach, Masachusetts coast.' A general corporation hunt has been Instituted by the legislature of Nebraska. Kansas and South Dakota. The police of New York have been asked to look out for Frank S. Mor ton, a missing Boston violinist. HOUSE VOTES FOR THE HIGHER SALARIES Increase From $5,000 to $7,500 Per Annum. BEGINS WITH INCOMING CONGRESS. Opportunity Offered When the Legis lative, Executive and Judicial Appro priation Bill Came Beck Amended by the Senate Members ltr(u to Put Themselves on Record. Washington, D. C. (Special). The House of Representatives Friday plucked up enough courage to vote Itself an Increase of Its salary. Af ter 1909 the salary of m-inbers of Congress, which means both Senate and House, Is to be Increased from $5,000 to $7,500, provided the. Sen ate acquiesces in the action of the House. The Increase was made through an amendment to the Legis lative, Executive nnd Judicial Ap propriation Bill, which Is the payroll of the government. The House first tried to Increase Its salaries when It had this bill under consideration on December 14, but after a day's debate the proposition was defeated bj Its opponents by the simple expedient of making members put themselves on record. With the fear of the fate of those who voted for tho notorious "salary grab" law of 1 874 before their eyes, an overwhelming majori ty of the members vlrtuouslv voted against the bill, and then hastened over to the Scnnte side to persuade the senators to put the Increase back In the bill. But the senators, despising the cowardice of the members, not only refused to restore the provisions for increasing the snlaties of the mem bers and of the senators, but struck out of the bill the provision which the House had put in to increase the salaries of the vice president, the speaker and of the members of the cabinet to $12,000. When the bill came bnck to the Houso Friday, as niutllatod in the Senate, the con gressmen sow that It was up to them to Increase their salaries themselves if they wanted more money. It is only fair to state that the proposi tion to increase tho salaries Is entire ly proper. The cost of living in Washington has Increased so outrageously In re cent years thnt It is not possible for a member of Congress to live in a way becoming his position on $5,000 it year. Moreover, there Is no anal ogy between tho present legislation and tho "salary grab" law. because the present proposition does not In crease the salary of the members of this Congress. The men who voted for the "salary grab" law nnd who were driven from public life by their constituents for that, act, made the Increase apply to that Congress, so that they virtually voted themselves $5,000 of back pay. The present in crease will not benefit any member of this Congress, for It does not go into effect until the next Congress enters on its duties. Foreign. A preparation of eucalyptus oil for the treatment of leprosy has been found effective In the leper settle mnt In Hawaii. It Is reported that starving Chin ese are killing and devouring their own children in tho famine-stricken districts. Seismic vibrations were felt at Tolmczzo, at the southern foot of the Carnlc Alps, Italy. Two severe earthquake shocks were felt at Kuba, Province of Baku, RusBla. It is believed in British ofllcial cir cles that tho aproaching meeting be tween Secretary Root and Earl Grey, governor general of Canada, will re suit in arranging the controversies that have been long pending. The American consul general at Antwerp has discovered Important frauds in the exportation to the Unitod States of Infected rugs in the guise of jute bagging. Negotiations for peace bctwitr the Germans and the rebellious na tives in German Southwest Africa have been broken off and serious fighting Is In progress. The North German Fire Insurance Company of Hamburg will appeal against court decision that It must pay losses sustained in San Fran cisco earthquake. The pretender to tho throne of Morocco has about run his race, and his followers are said to be desert lug. Three terrorists were hanged In a row In tho public gardens at Odes sa, Itussia. Count Nicholas Tolstoi, adminis trator of the imperial estates In Mos cow Province, lost his life while try ing to save Imperial funds. The Swodlsh Parliament was open ed with u speech from the throne, delivered by Crown Prince Gustavo. Two prisoners were killed and sev eral severely wounded while trying to break jail In Lugansk, itussia. A second attempt was made to blow up the Russian Company At lantic Line steamer Gregory Morch. Simon N'ewcomb, the astronomer has been made a commander of the Legion of Honor. Smallpox Is adding to the suffer ings of the famine sufferers in China. A general stlke of the stevedores Is threatened ut Havana. Charges that great quantities of lumber produced In ilritlsh Columbia has-been diverted from the Canadian markets to San Francisco to bo ship ped to Panama are to be Investigated. A plenary council of the French bishops to discuss the situation of Ibo Catholic Church In Franco lias been summoned to me-l January 15 In Paris. Great Britain and Kussla are watching Germany's attitude toward Persia. Any attempt of Germany o secure political or commercial as condancy would unite England and :tussla in defense. ROBERT ADAMS A DEFAULTER Startling Charges Against Suicide Congressman. Philadelphia (Special). Tho late Congressman Robert Adams. Jr., of this city, who committed suicide in his apartments in Washington last year by shooting, was declared In the Orphans' Court here to have been a defaulter to the amount of $70, 000. The startling assertion was made during an argument in sur charge proceedings brought, against H. Carlton Adams, surviving execu tor and trustee of the estate of his father, Robert Adams, Sr., by his stepmother, Mrs. Robert Adams, Sr., and his stepsister, Mrs. Charles Mo ran, of New York. Counsel for H. Carlton Adams told the court ho would show that Con gressman Adams had appropriated to his own use $70,000 worth of bonds belonging to the estate of Robert Adams, Sr., nnd to H. Carlton Adams. It was stated that the Congressman and H. Carlton Adams had keys to a safe deposit box, in which tho alleged missing bonds had been kept and that as far back as five years, H. Carlton Adams hud discovered that Pennsylvania Canal bonds were miss ing. He notified his brother, Robert, and tho matter was fixed up. Sub sequently H. Carlton Adams' con dition became such that he could not attend to business and that mat ters were left in the hands of the Congressman. A broker testified thnt Congress man Adams had pleged Pennsylvania Canal Company bonds valued at $10, 000 for a loan of $2,900. Of the remaining bonds, valued at about $60,000, no trace has beeu found. It was also clnlmed that a part of the accumulated Incom-i of his fath er's estate, of which Congressman Adams had charge, was unaccounted for. In proof of his assertion the at torney for H. Carlton Adams produc ed In court a letter from the suicide congressman, written In Washington the day he ended his life, In which be said he was sorry he had caused a "mess," and urged that H. Carl ton AdamB be not held responsible for any securities that might be miss ed. It is thought that counsel, upon In structions of the court, will be able to come to a satisfactory agreement without further airing the affairs of the dead statesman In court. Convention Of Mini-workers. Indianapolis, ind. (Special). The (onvention of the United Mlnework ers, of America voted $1,000 for the relief of the families of the victims of the Clinton (Ind.) mine disaster, in which eight were killed, and adopted a resolution pledglug the support of the natlonul organization to Moyer and Heywood, the imprison ed miner.! in Idaho. The action of the last national convention regard ing them was reiterated. To Absorb The I. And E. Philadelphia (Special). Within one month tho Philadelphia and Erie Railroad Company will pass out of existence an a separate corporation nnd be oiuo a part or i ho Pennsyl vania. This was derided npon at a meeting of tho board or dlroctors of the Philadelphia and Erie held today in Broad Stroet Station. The action waa foreshadowed several days ago, and wa.i, tborefore, expected The agreement decided upon Is to ex change stock, share for share, at par, In the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL I STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Some Interesting Happening Briefly fold. Derides For Power Companies. Secretary Tnft. In opinion, de cides that the diversion of 15,000 cubic feet of water per second from the the American side and the trans mission of 160,000 horsepower from the Canndlan side of Niagara Falls will not affect perceptibly to the eye the scenic grandeur of the falls. Permits will accordingly be issued to the Niagara Falls Power Com pany for 8,600 feet nnd to the Niaga ra Falls Hydraulic Power and Manu facturing Company for 6,500. In regard to the wnter taken from the Canadian side of the falls, he points out that It is taken from a level murh lower than the point above Goat Island, where the river divides to make the American and the Canadian fnllB, and therefore Its diversion cannot affect the amount of water which passes over the American falls. Kulogle On Mr. Gorman. Arrans" .uents are gradually be ins' made for the memorial exerclseB tor tho late Senator Arthur P. Oor man, to be held In the Senato Cham ber next Saturday, January 26. Eulogies will then be delivered by Senators Ra'ynor, Whyte. Blackburn. Clay, Overman, Morgan, Aldrich, Hale, Spooner, Frye, Allison, Cnr mack, Tillman. Cullom and Elklns New Land Contnilssloner. The President nominated Richard A. Ballinger. of Seattle, Wash., to be Commissioner of the General Land Office, to siicceed W. A. Rich ards, who Is to retire on March 4. Mr. Ballinger Is n member of a lnw firm in Seattle and has been Mayor of that city. He Is n gradu ate of Williams Collage), where he was a classmate of James R. Gar field, who Is soon to become Secre tary of the Interior. Increases Artillery Corps. The Senate passed the Warren bill Increasing the artillery corps of the army. The total Increase, which Is to reach Its maximum In five years, is 0,197 officers and men. which, with the Increases In certain salaries of the men In special grades, Bitch as electricians, machinists, etc., will amount to $2-1:1,324 annually. could Retire .lodges. Representative De Armond, ol Missouri, has Introduced a bill in the House authorizing the President to retire any Judge of the Uniter' States when he thinks the retirement of such a judge would promote the public welfare, and giving the Presi dent power, b and with the advice of the Senate, to fill the vacnncy thus created. Congress And The Departments. By a vote of 8 to 7 the House Committee on the Judiciary defeated another attempt to bring out the Hepborn-Bel liver Liquor Bill, which prohibits express companies and in terstate carriers from delivering In toxicants In temperance communities. The Department of Justice an nounced that the United States gov ernment had begun two suits in San Francisco for the purpose of enforc ing the provision of the treaty with Japan giving to the Japanese equal school advantages. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw announced that lie had decided to adhere to his original selection of a site for the Pittsburg postofflce, located at Fifteenth and Penn Streets. Secretary Tafl issued permits for tho importation of 160,000 electrical horse-power, generated on the Cana dian side of Niagara Falls, Into the United States. The Senate agreed to the Klttredge resolution Instructing tho Secretary of Commerce and Labor to Investi gate the Lumber Trust. The Douse passed the Urgent De ficiency Bill, carry an appropriation of $344,650 for various branches of the government. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs agreed to a favorable re port of the Perkins Expatriation Bill. By a vote of 133 to 92 the House of Representatives voted to Increase their salaries to $7,500 per year. R. A. Ballinger wai nominated to bo commissioner of t',e General Land Office. The Senate passed a bill providing for Increasing the artillery corps of tho Army. President Roosevelt has written a letter to Chairman Foss, of the Naval Affairs Committee, urging that an appropriation should be made at once for two first-class bat tleships of the maximum size. Senator Blackburn offered an amendment to the Foraker Brown vlllo resolution disclaiming any In tention on the part of the Senate to question tho President's right to dis charge the negro troops. Secretary of State Root, accom panied by his wife and daughter, left Washington for Ottawa, Canada, whore we will be entertained by Earl Grey, the governor general. A report wbb made by Chairman Shonts to the Senate committee, de claring that borings made had shown a suitable foundation for the pro posed Gatuu dam. A resolution was adopted by the National Board of Trade proposing changes In the Bankruptcy Law. The Isthmian Canal Commission Is disposed to award the contract, for building the canal to Oliver & Bungs at their bid. The House Committee on Military A flairs decided to make u favorable report of the Hull Bill for the re organization of tho artillery of the Army. Representative Olmsted, of Peon sylvanla, became the champion of the Carlisle Indian School In the House. Commissioner of Corporations Gar field, while before the House Com mittee on Interstate and Forelgu Commerce, Indorsed the Towusend bill, providing for an Investigation by presidential direction of all labor and capital disputes. Tho executive committee of the National Reciprocal Demurrage Con vention luld beforo the President a memorial to amend the law so as to penalise the railroads lor refusal to rumlsh cars when reques'ed by snip pers, or failure to move cars when thoy have been louded. The report of the Select Committee on ludlan Territory wnj made to tin Senate. It criticises Secretary Hitrli cock's withdrawal of land for the forest reserve as Illegal. In a speech in tho Senate Carmaclt Indorsed the action of the President In discharging the negro troops on account of the Brownsville riot. Latest News Gleaned From Various Parts. Miss Emma,-, AVorstall, of New town, and Wa)i.'-'Mcptt, of Wrights town, were married In the Nevv town Friends' Meeting House. Tho ceremony was according to the So ciety of Friends, under care of the Makefleld Monthly Meeting. The overseers were Mr. and Mrs. Chnrles L. Knight and Mr. nnd Mrs. New lln Ely. Miss Edna Scofleld. of Moj-) Inn, Pa., was maid of honor, and Howard Wright, of Rochester, N. ., was best man. Evan T. Worthing ton, of Newton, rend th marriage certificate, which was signed Try tbreo hundred persons. A reception followed the ceremony. It was held at the home of the bride's father, George C. Worstall, and attrndod by nearly one hundred nnd fifty per sons. Fire destroyed the Inrge flour mill belonging to the Albert Bromer es-i tate and operated by George H. Shoemaker below Bch wenkBVlllc. The loss Is $20,000 and Insurance $500. This Is the third time the mifl at this site was burned. Mrs. Henry Neff, of Pottsvllle, when sho awoke found that, her 2-year-ol.l son, Henry, was lying dead in bed beside hor. The child hud been smothered during the night by rolling Itself in the blanket. It was In perfect health when put to sleep. I Thomas Sheerer Parker, the oltl est. In point of practice of the mem bers qf tho Allegheny County bar, died of slow paralysis, tho result of being run down by an automobile 16 months ago. He was born in Car lisle, April 2, 1840, and was gradu ated from Dickinson College. He served in tho Civil War and took part in tho battlo of Antletttm. In' i860 he Bettled in Pittsburg and be gan tho practice of law. He leaves his widow, one son, two daughters and a brother, Dr. Joseph B. Parker, a retired nuval officer, of Philadel phia. The State Department of Health has sent a communication lo Road-) ing requesting that notice bo taken of the refuse emitting from local in dustries and polluting the Schuyl kill, to which it Is conveyed through tho storm water sowers. Mayor Ger ber met with the Board of Public Works and advised that action be taken to remedy the matter. It was decided that the most feasible plan of taking care of the waste water would be to allow connection to be made with the house sewer system, through which It will be purified be fore reaching the river. It is also proposed to establish a municipal laboratory to make analytic tests of water and milk. The annual meeting of the Stato Horticultural Society was held at Harrisburg. Tho program opened with an address by the president, Gabriel Heistor. of Harrisburg. J. H. Hale, of Glastonbury. Conn., spoko on "Money in Peach Culture." There were also short talks by State Zoo logist Surface, Representative Creasy of Cntawlssn, and other members of the society. Nathan Wilcox, nn inmate of tha Danville Hospital for tho Insane, wai thought to have escaped Tuesdaj night and a search covering several miles was made. Wilcox was latei found hiding under a bed in ono o( of Ihe dormitories. Tho large frame barn owned bj Samuel Egoll', of Spring City, burn ed to the ground, together with th entire Summer crop of grain and hay, eight cows, one horse and al! the farming Implements, Total losi Is about $3000, no Insurance. Rev. Dr. William Barnes Lower pastor of the fashionable Calvarj Presbyterian Church, of Wyncote will sail on February 7 for a threi months' tour of the Orient. Jonathan Rumberger died at Slia mokin.. He was a Civil War veteras and participated in many engage ments on Southenf-battlefields. The Blair County Court granted a rule to revoke the license of the Alttunont Hotel, the largest hotel rn the county, on the grounds that the proprietor declined to sell liquor across tho bar to colored people, The hotel men of tho county are discussing the advisability of open ing Jim Crow bar-rooms to avoid outbreaks of race prejudice. It has been decided that the night schools must be closed until the con lagloiiB diseases now afill.'tlng the children of Scranton are checked. That the heulth authorities have control of the stiustlon now seems evident. The school buildings are to be fumigated and n'.i text books are not to ' tiken from homes wHero contagious diseuse has existed. There are 124 prisoners In the Northampton County Jail, the great est number In the history of the county. The number of prisoners have increased about 30 per cent, in tho last year. The jail Is over crowded. Many of the prisoners are men sentenced to thirty days and less by the police courts of Easton. It hns been suggested that If these men were placed on a bread trad water diet during their impiisonmdnt tho fact would soon become general -ly known, and the number of prison ers would probably be reduced. - John Beloss and George Stebanitz, foreigners, while crossing the Penn sylvania Kailroad bridge at Monnt Etna in attempting to get ont of the way of n freight train, walked over the side urtyl fell into the Juniata River many feet below . Both were drowned. Henry Overkalt. a resldont of Rocktown. a farming village near Ashland,, was found dead on the road leading to locust-Dale at an early hour the other momlug. He was lying face downward In a pool of water and the supposition Is that he fell and was drowned. Tho pool was but four indies deop. A fust freight train, on the Penn sylvania Railroad run" down and in stantly killed Mrs. Fred Hall, $4 yoars old, near Mill Creek. Sfco was walking on Vie tracks to vfctlt her husband, who worked at the si'.ud works near that place. George 11. Stewart, millionaire capitalist, of Shlppensburg. has been appointed u member of the Board of Munagors of tho Reformatory at Huntingdon to succeed the late Alex Port, of Huntingdon. Mr. StdWart, Is a brother of Justice Johu Stewart, of the Supreme Court, end fftato Senutor Alexander Stewart. The wife or Wu Ting-fang, former minister from China to the United States, has just paid the cost of building a large and tine hospital tn Hongkong.