AT arTm— BOTH SIOES LOST HEALY J So Russian War Office Learns from Kurapoctkin. MANY OFFICERS WERE SLAIN. General Herschelman Sustained Great- est Casualties While Defending : Saimatze Road. It is reported at Mukden that the Japanese attacked the Russian posi- tion at An-Shan-Shan, midway be- tween Hai-Cheng and Liac-Yang, on August 2, and were repulsed with heavy loss. The Russian casualties are not known. Detailed reports reaching the war office at St. Petersburg from General Kuropatkin’s generals show that the Russian losses July 30, July 31 and August 1 did not exceed 4,000. The Japanese are believed to have lost at least an equal number. Most of the Russian losses were sus- tained on the Saimatze road and be- tween Simou-Cheng and Hai-Cheng. The greatest number of casualties was Sustained by General Herschel- man, who, with the Ninth European division, held Ku-Chia-Tze and Yu- Shu pass, on the Saimatze road. The fighting there was of the most des- perate and bloody character. A sin- gle regiment lost 25 per cent, or 800 men before jit withdrew toward An- Ping. Another post where most stub- born resistance was made was at Nanga pass, a position between Si- Mou-Cheng and Hai-Cheng, which was held by General Zassalitch, who kad been placed in command of a newly-formed corps, including the Thirty-first division belonging to the Tenth European corps, and two Siber- dan battalions, altogether 18,000 men. General Zassalitch’s misfortune at the Yalu river was duplicatéd, owing to the superiority of the Japanese ar- tillery. He was making a splendid fight until he suddenly discovered that the Japanese gunners were enfilad- ing his batteries. AUTO TOURISTS HELD UP. Highwaymen Rode WMoctor-Cycle and Got $1,000. A party of four in an automobile] were held up late on Old York road, near Willow Grove, 14 miles {rom Philadelphia. The highwayman se- cured about $1,000 in money and jew- elry. The victims of the robbery] wera A. C. Hall, Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Ar-} thus 1. Jackson and Mrs. Thomas | C. Walton, all of New York. They Gap. The highwayman rode a motor- cycle. He disabled Mr. Hall's auto- | mobile and after having been re- lieved of their valuables the victims | were compelled to walk two miles to! a toll gate. There they secured a conveyance and drove to Doylestown, Pa., where the robbery was reported to the police. BOOM DOES NCT COME. Coke Trade Shows Falling Off Instead | of a Gain. The anticipated brightening of the coke trade has failed to materialize, and last week’s record shows a fall- ing off in coke of several thousand tons of coke and 700 ovens banked, and the latter half of the year prom- ses only a moderate demand. Coke prices are not regular and much has been disposed of on close margins. There were 13,345 active and 9,782 idle ovens last week, With | a production of 151,972 tons of coke, compared to 157,440 tons the previous | week. The Trotter plant of the H. C. Frick Company was closed down. | Extensive repairs are proposed. Ship-| ments last week were 8,252 cars, dis-| tributed as follows: To Pittsburg, 3,332 cars; to points west of Pitts- burg, 3,985 cars; to points east of the Connellsville region 985 cars. Pro- duction in the Masontown field was 64,098 tons, compared to 52,938 tons the previous week. | 1 Death of Mrs. Miles. Mrs. Nelson A. Miles died very sud- denly from heart failure at West] Point, N. V. General Miles was away from home and learned the sad news en rouae from Washington to West Point. With the deceased was | her son, Cadet Sherman A. Miles, and | Miss Fitch, of Washington, a niece of | Mrs. Miles, and ‘her son-in-law, | Colonel Samuel Reber, U. S. A, form- | ser aid-de-camp to General Miles. For several years Mrs. Miles has suffered | from ‘attacks of heart trouble. The General and Mrs. Miles have been | occupying quarters at the Academy all summer, visiting their son, who will graduate next June. | Seven Persons Drown. In trying to reach the shore in a] small tender from a stranded yacht] at Halifax, N. S., seven of the eight] perscns in the boat were drowned | through the capsizing of the little craft. The dead as far as can be learned are: George Leach, Nason- ville, R. I.; Captain Charles Hers Digby; Mrs. Vedlto, Digby; Mrs. 3 O'Reilly, supposed to be a New York woman; son aged 13, and also a daughter. Fairbanks to Visit.Ohio. Senator Charles W. Fairbanks will attend a reunion of former residents of Union county, O., at Marysville, August 11. Marysville is about 85 miles from Unicnville Center, where Mr. Fairbanks was born. Russians Lose Over 1,000 Men. General Sakharoff reports that 29 officers and over 1,000 men were kill- ed or wounded in the engagements of July 30 and 31, and six guns were; abandoned. | peals. The resignation is wcrded as | follows: | ly notified on the third, of his nom- | United States by the Republican Na- | address was made by Elihu Root, | cises were heid on the wide veranda | of Senator Fairbanks’ home at In- | other state officers of Indiana, the | the Indiana Republican congression- | the Republican editorial association. | WEST VIRGINIA DEMOCRATS. Ticket Chosen by Delegates to State Convention at Parkersburg. ~ John J. Cornwell, of Hampshire, was nominated for Governor by the | West Virginia Democratic State Con-| vention on the third ballot. Follow- | ing is the vote of the three contest- ants: Cornwell, 638; Thompson, | 285; Bennett, 64. Cabell county then | moved that Cornwell's nominaficn be | made unanimous, which action was taken. The following is the ticket: Governor, John J. Cornwell, of | Hampshire county. ! Secretary of State, William G. Pe- terkin, of Parkers Auditor, Wayne county. Superintendent of Schools, the Rev. M. D. Helmick, of Pleasant county. Attorney General, Lawrence A. Rey- mann, of Wheeling. State Treasurer, Robert 8. Carr, of Kanawha county. Judges of Supreme Court of Ap-| peals, M. H. Dent, of Taylor county and Henry W. Cilmer, of Greenbrier | county. Presidential E'ectors-at-Large, Colonel R. P: Chew, of Jefferson county, and Lewis Bennett, of Lewis county. The platform endorses the St. Louis | platiorm; arraigns the Republican party of the Sta travagance and corrupt use of elec- | tion machinery; condems the Repub-| lican majority in the present Leg-| islature for having defeated the sub-| mission of constitutional amendment, | making the payment of a poll tax a| prerequisite to the right to vote. | “We condemn the present sp.:zial| and extraordinary session of the Legislature, called by a Republican | Governor upcn a hollow pretense of | tax reform, and designed for the pur- | pose of enacting into laws hybrid | bills concocted beyond the limits of the State, with the intent to relieve but to deceive the people. We con- demn the same as hypocritical, fu- tile and extravagant. — eee eee PARKER RESIGNS JUDGESHIP. te for wasteful ex-| | | | Presidential Candidate Passes Up Seat on New York Bench. Judge Alton Brooks Parker filed with Deputy Secretary of State Hor- ace G. Tennant his resignation as Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals. Although dated at Esopus, the resig- nation was handed in at Albany by a messenger sent from the Judge's chambers, and followed a conference between the Judge and his associates on the bencn of the Court of Ap- Rosemount, Esopus, N. Y., Aug. 5, 1904. 1 hereby respectfully resign my of- fice as Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals of the State of New York, such resignation to take effect imme- diately. ALTON B. PARKER. By resigning now Judge Parker makes certain that his successor will | have to be elected in November and | not appointed by Governor Odell. FAIRBANKS NOTIFIED. Republican Candidate for Vice Presi- dent Receives Announcement. Charles W. Fairbanks was formal- ination for Vice President of the tional Convention. The notification former Secretary of War. The exer- dianapolis, in the presence of mem- bers of the notification committee, consisting of one member from each state and territory, the Governor and Republican candidates for state office, al delegation, Indiana delegates and alternates to the National Conven- tion, the state central committee and | All these had been especially invited. Russians Desert THeir Dead. General Kuroki reports that he bur-| ied the bodies of 512 Russians on the | battlefields of Yushulikzu and Yangt-| zuling. In these actions he reports the capture of 268 Russians, eight! of whom were officers. One hundred | and fifteen of the prisoners were wounded. | —_—_— | Will Send Warship. Admiral Sigsbee, at San Juan, has| been directed to dispatch a war vessel | ! to Monte Christia, Santo Domingo. This was done at the suggestion of Mr. Dawson, the American minister at Santo Domingo, and the inference is that trouble is impeding in that | country. _—T TT | 34 HURT IN COLLISION. Passenger Trains on Louisville and | Nashville Crash. | A southbound passenger train on the Louisville and Nashville collided near Horse Cave, Ky., with a north-| bound passenger train. About 30 | passengers and four trainmen were | | injured, but not seriously except En- | gineer Rehm. of the southbound train, who may die. According to the information here Rehm either disregarded orders or was sound asleep as his train was go- ing at the rate of 40 miles an hour when it struck the northbound train. The baggage car on the southbound train was destroyed and the postal car damaged, but none of the coaches left the track. Eight Drowned. While bathing in the Mississippi river at Alton, Iill., Michal Riley, his daughter, and six of the latter’s girl friends were drowned. One child who was in the party was res- cued. German Steamer Sank. It is officially announced that the German steamer recently sunk by the Vladi stok « was the man vessel of about 1,000 i ‘Subway NEI JAPANESE. KILLED The Mikado’s Fcrces Entrenched | Near Port Arthur. REPORTS FROM TWO SOURCES. General Stoesse! Declares His Oppo- nents Were Beaten Back After Three Days’ Fighting. | | The Japanese force which captured Wolff's Hill is now intrenched in the] valley about two-thirds of a mile from | tne fortress at Port Arthur. A Ja-| panese cruiser is alleged to have struck a mine and sunk. The Ja- panese have occupied Louisa bay, landing troops with the probable in- tention of attacking west of the city. The Russian artillery harasses the | Japanese who are attempting to ad- | vance their trenches. | The London Times’ correspondent at Tokyo, under date of August T7,| says that there are ‘unofficial reports | | there that the Japanese have captured | commanding positions north and northeast of Port Arthur's at a dis- tance of 2,750 yards from the main line of Russian defenses. According to Chinese information, a fierce battle was fought on the land side of Port Arthur August 5. = The Japanese are reported to have been | repulsed with great loss, the killed alone being estimated at 10,000, while | the Russians lost 1,000. The tele- gram says that Lieutenant-General | Stoessel was personally in command | and that the conduct of the Russian troops was splendid. . Lieutenant-General Stoessel, com- manding the Russians at Port Arthur, | in an undated dispatch to the Emperor says: “] am happy to report that the troops repulsed all the Japanese | attacks of July 26, 27 and 28 with | enormous losses. The garrison’s en-| thusiasm was extraordinary. The | fleet assisted in the defelise by bom- barding the Japanese flank. | “Our losses during the three days | were about 1,500 men and 40 officers | killed or wounded. - According to| statements of Chinese and prisoners | the Japanese lost as many as 10,000.] The losses were so great that the| enemy has not had time to remove | the dead and wounded.” ee | TAGGART ANNOUNCES HIS AIDS. Makes Appointments to Democratic | Campaign Cemmittees. | Thomas Taggart, Chairman of the| Democratic National Committee, an-| nounced the following officers of the] Democratic committee and the follow- | ing members of the National Execu-| tive Committee: National Committee—Delancey Nie- oll, Vice Chairman, New York; George Foster Peabody, Treasurer, New | York. | Executive Committee—W. F. Shee-| han, Chairman, New York; August Belmont, New York; Jchn R. Me- | Lean, Ohio; United States Senator | Thomas S. Martin, Virginia; J. M.| Guffey, Pennsylvania; former United States Senator James Smita, Jr, New Jersey; Timothy E. Ryan, Wis- consin. ! SPEED TERMS ARE NOT MET. Union Iron Works May Forfeit $18,300 on Account of the Ohio. | According to a statement in the San | Francisco Examiner, the Union Iron Works may forfeit $18,300 to the United States government as a pen- alty for failure to bring the battle-! ship Ohio up to the stipulated speed requirements. The sum will be de- ducted from the original contract price of $2,899,000. The official corrected time made by the Ohio on her trial trip, as tele- 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. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. During a downpour of rain at Baily- stok, Russia, there was a regular shower of small fish. The consumption of cotton by mills | in the United States exceeds 4,000,- 000 baies annually. | Bugler Martin, who was with Custer in many of his fights, has been retirea after 30 years’ service in the United | States army. i A report issued by the Bureau of | Commerce and Labor shows a shrink- | age of domestic commercial opera-| tions. A band of alleged robbers, belong- ing to the Black Hand Society, has been rounded up and arrested in West- chester county, New York. An order was issued by Secretary Taft permitting army officers on duty at the War Department to wear civil- | ian dress. Creditors cf Daniel J. Sully & Co. | decided to refuse his offer of 40) per cent, and the bankruptcy proceedings will go on. | Governor S. W. T. Lanham was un-| animously renominated for Governor! of Texas by the Democratic State Con- vention. Bishop H. C. Potter, of New York, | who assistci at the opening of the Tavern,” was roundly ecrit-| icised by some temperance people and | praised by a few. | {| no meat. George M. Long, a navy yard em- ploye at Washington, cut the throat of his sweetheart, Nora Adams, and | then took his own life. Both died | together. | Former Governor James T. Lewis, | War Governor of Wisc 1 | the result of a second oplexy a week ago. Gove 3 83 years of age. | . | their homes. WEATHER AND CROPS. Spring Wheat Affected by Rust in Some Sections. The weather bureau's weekly sum- mary of crop conditions is as fol- lows: Very favorable temperature pre- vailed during the week ending Au gust 1 in nearly all districts, and while droughty conditions are begin- ning to be felt over limited areas in the central valleys and Southern { States, the rainfall has been gener- ally ample for crop needs. Corn has experienced a week of favorable tem- perature, and while needing rain in portions of the Ohio, Central Missis- sippi and Missouri valleys, the crop, as a whole, has made good progress and continues in promising condition. Thrashing winter wheat has advanced under favorable weather conditions in the central valleys, but frequent rains have interrupted this work in th» middle Atlantic States. The quality and yield of grain are prov- ing disappointing in the lower Missis- s'pi valiey, where the crop suffered much from excessive rains during the period cf harvest. Unfavorable reports respecting spring wheat are more pronounced, as well as more general, than in the previous week, rust being more or iers prevalent in al] of the principal ! spring wheat States of the Rocky mounta ns. In portions of Minne- sota and North Dakota, however, a geod crop is promised. Harvesting is in progress in Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota and will begin about the 5th in Minnesota. Harvest is also in progress in Oregon, with better vields than were expected. In Wash- ington spring wheat is -sripening scmewhat too rapidly as a result of | het winds. Oat harvest is in general progressing in the more northern sec- tions and is largely finished in the central and southern districts. Rust has caused damage in North Dakota and portions of Minnesota, and rains have proved injurious to oats in shock in Maryland, Delaware and New Jer sey. RIOT IN CHICAGO. Police Use Clubs Freely and Make Many Arrests. In a riot which broke out at the stock yards in Chicago, two police: | men were injured and 28 rioters were | arrested. The trouble started when five strike-breakers from one of the machine shops in one of the packing plants were leaving the yard and tried to board a street car to go to Despite the signals ci the strike-breakers the motormen on 12 cars refused to stop, and a crowd standing near by, seeing a good oOp- portunity to get revenge on the non- | union men, commenced hurling stones at them. Two policemen who wero guarding the entrance went to the assistance of the non-union men, but the rioters by this time had grown in numbers so rapidly that fully 1,000 angry men were trying to get at the strike-breakers. Retreating into the machine shop the policemen sent in a riot call When the additional officers arrived a charge was made on the rioters. The crowd was armed with bricks and stones and when the policemen start- ed forward every man who could find | room enough threw a brick. Two | of the bricks went true to the mark | and two of the policemen dropped in their tracks, having been ®it on the head. They were picked up by | their companions and taken inside the machine shop, where it was found that one of the men, Patrick Ryan, was suffering from a fractured skull. Seeing the condition of their com- panions the other 18 policemen made another charge on the crowd. This time the onslaught was in earnest, 18 clubs being swayed from right to left | with all the muscle that each man could muster. Each time a club de- scended, it landed on a man’s head and fully 50 of the rioters were beat en to the pavement before they show: ed any signs of scattering. As soon as the policemen saw that they had the mob on the run they turned their attention to those who were lying on the ground and succeeded in arresting 28 of them before they could scram? ble to their feet and get away. Cruiser Kasuga Is Sunk. The Giornale 4d’ Italia, a Roman paper, published in an extra edition | a dispatch from Tokyo announcing that the Japanese armored cruiser Kasuga, formerly the Argentine war- ship Rivadavia, has been sunk. The Liao-Yang correspondent of D’Italia asserts that conditions among the Russians at the front are disastrous. The army, he says, is dying of hun- ger. After a march lasting 48 hours they were given nothing but a piece of sugar. They have no bread and Provision trains arrive at long Intervels only. “Under these conditions,” he adds, “the work of the troops is truly heroic.” Revolutionists Condemned to Death. The Haytian military tribunal has | condemned to death by default 40 ex. iled persons accused of complicity in the attempted revolution headed by General Montplaisir. At Archa- ries the populace, after looting three Syrian shops, drove away 100 Sy- rians, who reached Port au Prince stripped of everything. Trouble iA | feared in other cities of the republic Athlete Named for Congress. Robert Garrett, of Baltimore coun: ty, was nominated for Congress by the Yepublicans of the Second Maryland Congressional district. Mr. Garreti is a nephew of the former President of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad oi that name. During the Olympian games in Greece, in 1896, he won first prize in the discus throwing contest. Contracts were let in Pittsburg for constructing a trolley line from Gar- rett, Pa., to Frostburg, Md | 26@27c; Michigan X and above, 28@ SLAUGHTER AT PT. ARTHUR japanese Make Desperate At- tempt But Meet Repulse. YANGSE PASS WAS TAKEN. Army of the Czar Forced to Retreat Toward Its Base at Liaoyang. A desperate three days’ assault on the inner defenses on the eastern and northern sides of Port Arthur failed, according to advices brought by two junks which arrived at Che- foo. A Russian who escaped from Port Arthur via Pigeon bay on the night of July 29 states that the earth trembled under the terrific can- nonading which began at 4 a. m. July 26 and ended during the night of July 28, when the battle ceased. A Chinese who has arrived here on a separate junk confirms the Russian’s statement that the Russian killed and wounded during the assault numbered between 5,000 and 6,000. The Japanese in their repeated as- saults against the eastern forts on the hills, through barbed wire entan- glements and over mines, displayed fanatical bravery. They were mow- ed down by the hail of shells and bul- lets and the explosion of mines under their feet. Their losses are esti- mated at 20,000. The Russian de- clares that the Russians held all the eastern forts leading to Golden Hill and that the Japanese, shattered and exhausted, retired to the eastward. As related by the passengers from the two junks, the Japanese advance, which began from Kwokau before daybreak July 26, was directed against Kikwan, Kinkintun, Kinkinshan and Piehtoushan forts, lying mnear the shore. The Russian outposts were driven back. In the meantime Ad- miral Togo shelled the forts at long range, but the return fire of the forts kept his ships at a safe distance, rendering the co-operation of the fleet ineffective. General Kuroki has administered a severe defeat to the Russian forces, which defended the Russian east flank at Liao-Yang, winning separate ac- tions at Yu-Shu-Lik-Zu and Yangse pass. These two places are 26 miles apart, but the two actions were fought at the same time. The Russians held strong positions. The thermometer registered over 110 degrees Fahren- heit, and the soldiers suffered cruelly from heat exhaustion. Fusion in Kansas Complete. The Democratic and Populist State Convention at Topeka, Kas. effected fusion in the State campaign, and nominated the following joint ticket: Governor David L. Dale, Democrat; Lieutenant Governor, M. A. House- holder, Populist; Secretary of State, John H. Curran, Democrat; Justice of the Supreme Court, John T. Little, Populist; State Treasurer, Thomas F. Dolan, Democrat; Superintendent of Public Instruction, Martin R. How- ard, Democrat; Attorney General, W. W. Wells, Populist; Superintendent of Insurance, John Stowell, Populist; Congressman-at-Large, Frank Brady, Populist; Railroad Commissioner, F. H. Chase, Populist. Each party will vote for its own National ticket. WIFE MAKES CONFESSION. Tells How Husband and a Partner Committed Wholesale Murder. The wife of Paul Reed, at States- boro, confessed that Will Catts and Paul Reed, negroes, who are in jail at Savannah, Ga., for fear of lynch- ing, murdered the Hodges family near Statesboro and burned their house. ‘The motive was robbery. They killed Hodges with an iron brace after he had caught them dig- ging up a pile of money in the yard. They then killed Mrs. Hodges and the little girl by striking thetn on the head with a lamp. The babies were killed before the house was fired. nominated for Governor by the State Democratic Convention of Michigan. Boston Wool Market. The wool market here is quiet this week, most manufacturers having freely stocked up during the early part of the summer. Quotations are as follows: Ohio and Pennsylvania, XX and above, 34@35¢c; X, 30@ 3lc: No. 1, 33@34c; No. 2, 33@ 840; Vy, 3% and 1%-blood, un- washed, 281, @29c; unwashed, delaine, 29¢; No. 1, 30@3lc; No. 2, 29@30¢c; 14, 3 and ¥4-blcod, unwashed, 28@ 2814c; unwashed delaine, 25@26¢; Territory, Idaho, fine, 17@18c; heavy, fine, 14@15c; fine, medium, 17@18c; Wyoming, fine, medium, 17@18c; Utah and Nevada, fine, 16% @17%c; fine, medium, 17@18c. Unions Endorse Strike. All the labor unions in Chicago have endorsed the stock yards strike. Aft- er listening to the strikers’ side of the controversy, which was presented to them by Michael J. Donnelly, Presi- den of the striking Butchers’ Union, the Chicago Federation of Labor, which is composed of every labor or- ganization in Chicago, and has a mem- bership of 300,000, adopted resolu- tions to-night pledging the moral and financial support of the Federation body as long as the strike continues. Pay of Rural Delivery Carriers. In the adjustment of the salaries of | rural carriers in the postal service | it has been decided that all carriers appointed prior to June 30, 1904, who | were entitled to th? maximum pay of | $600, under the rules which govern-| ed the establishment of routes at that | time, shall receive the maximum of | $700, but that the schedule which be- | came effective July 1, 1904, and rec- | ently. announced, shall prevail in fix- ing the compensation of all carriers appointed since June 30. - y TWO OF THE INJURED MAY DIE, _— 8 Firemgn Prevented Flames from Reaching Place Where Ben- zine Was Stored, By the explosion of 10 kegs of rail- way torpedoes at the plant of the Versailles Railway Signal works, along the tracks of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in Versailles borough, Allegheny county, Pa., the three brick buildings used as a factory were en- tirely destroyed, two men were per- haps fatally injured, one young Wwo- man badly hurt, while four others were scratched and cut by the flying tin and brick. The injured are: Charles Klingen- smith, 39 years old; burned ail over the body; taken to the McKeesport Hospital and may not recover. Chariés Bevan, 23 years old; in jured internally, cut about the face and body; unconscious at the house of Superintendent Frank Dutche, at Versailles, and may not recover. Nina Doty, 17 years old; cut about face and arms and suffering from shock. Alice Fagan, West Newton, Pa.; cut about face and arms, but not seri ously. Annie and Mary Coates, sisters, of Boston, Pa.; bruised and cut by flying bricks; injuries not serious. Lizzie Ormon, . of VMicKeesport, bruised and cut by fiying bricks and suffering from shock and fright; in- juries not serious. Just what caused the explosion ig not known and may never be known. All the workmen know is that while two of them were shoveling torpedoes into a keg, getting them ready for shipment, there was a flash and a roar, the buildings trembled and rocked and then commenced to crum: ble into pieces. In addition to the three buildings of the plant, which were completely destroyed, the win dows and doors were torn from four other buildings of the plant, while the windows and doors were wrecked in dwelling houses within the space of four blocks of the scene of the ex plosion. The buildings caught fire, but the ‘blaze was soon, extinguished. MILLIONS IN SMALL COIN. Mint Will Turn Out $100,000,000 ir Nickels and Cents. Successful experiments in the manu facture of copper blanks from which cents are stamped at the United States mint in Philadelphia will ren der unnecessary the reduction in the force which it was expected would go into effect there in September. The mint here is the only cone in the United States which makes cents and nickels and there will be a rec ord breaking production of those coins from September to December The mint will devote itself exclusive ly to this coinage and $25,000,000 wil! be turned out each month. In the last four months of the year the de mand for subsidiary coin is so greafl that $100,000,000 material, it is esti mated, will be exhausted by Feb ruary. NEWS NOTES. Cotton authorities expect a crop of 12,000,000 bales. A Rock Island train was held up, the passengers robbed and cars looted near Tucumcari, N. M. The campaign managers of both po litical parties have begun the work of collecting funds for the great ex pense of the campaign. J. G. Garber was nominated by the Republicans of the Ninth Congres sional district of Missouri, to oppose Congressman Champ Clark. Despite official denials; the news papers insist that a marriage has been arranged between the Infanta Maria Teresa, sister of King Alfonso, and Prince Ferdinand, of Bavaria. A dispatch to a London paper from Brussels, which is not confirmed, re ports that 32 persons were killed near Arion by an explosion, which after ward set fire to several miles of corn fields. Four hundred and fifty telegraphers employed by the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railway system stopped work August 1. The action of the men is the result of demands for an increase in wages and certain other conces. sions. Commander N. E. Mason has been appointed chief of the bureau of ord- nance, navy department, to succeed Rear Admiral Converse, who ‘to-day assumed the duties of chief of the bureau of navigation. Five Gold Miners Killed. An accident at the Shakespeare gold mine, Webbwood, on the Soo branch of the Canadian Pacific Rail- road, east of Detroit, Mich., resulted in the suffocation of five men. The dead are: Peter Entid, John Wal- ton, John Difhby, Webbwood; Peter Grant and an unknown man. Gunboat Is Blown Up. The Russian gunboat Sivoutch (which has been in the Liao river since the beginning of the war) has been deserted and blown up near Sancha, and the crew with the ves- sel’s guns have started for Liao- Yang. Two Japanese gunboats went on Monday to reconniter the position of the Sivoutch and were fired upon. New Counterfeit Bank Note. Chief Wilkie, of the United States secret service, announces the discov- ery of a ncw counterfeit $10 National bank note. It is on the National Bank of Commerce in New York, ser- ies 1882; Bruce, register; Wymen, treasurer. It is a poorly executed photograph. The family of the late T. D. Law- son, of Meridian, Miss., have insisted hat the wo “Killed by F. G. Sem- iY an