A oe RUSSIAN TY I N STRAITS Military Experts See no Way of Escape for Kuropatkin. JAPANESE HAVE ADVANTAGE. Russian Army Driven from Defenses at Liac-Yang and Cut off on All Sides. The Russian army after being driv- | en back from the outer defenses of Liao-Yang to the works of the fortress itself, abandoned it and crossed to the right bank of the Taitse river to meet General Kuroki’s army, which has suc- ceeded in crossing the river and is furning the Russian left flank. It is also reported that the Japanese have occupied Liao-Yang, and that railroad communication between Liao-Yang and Mukden are interrupted. According to telegraphic advices re- ceived at Tokyo the Japanese army corps on the left, by fierce and re- peated assaults, took possession of the heights which the Russian right occupied. Thereupon all the Rus- sians south of Liao-Yang began to re- treat. The Japanese army Js now pursuing. At daybreak September 1 the Jap- anese army on the left delivered a fierce and successful assault against the heights to the west of Halinintun, and the high ground to the west of Shecushanpao. It pierced the later forced the Russian troops from their the right and center. Field Marshal Marquis Oyama tele- graphs that his losses in ‘these as- saults were heavy It is believed Kouropatkin has feated and that the Lido-Yang is a matter of hours. The resuit of this pursuit and the result of the fierce battle waged on the eastern line where Kuroki is as- sailing the force .which has long sgreened Liao-Yang, together with | the abandonment of the Russian right center on the southern line exposes | the Russian left. It is the opinion of certain members of the general staff at Washington | city, who have famil fethemselves | with the trend of events in the far | cast, that the Russian army, now in | Manchuria, is doomed to capture. Un- | Tess Kuropatkin surrenders, say the | experts of our war bureau, he will] see his really fine army exterminated by the constant pounding of the Jap- anese, who now are in such position as to be practically irresistible The officers of the general staff say that from what they can gather from recent gispatel from the seat of war, the Japanese have the Russian | completely surrounded on all which might afford any hope of es- cape, and that the only country now open to Kuropatkin is wholly impossi- | ble for a military operation involving a successful retreat in the face of a determined foe. MORE OVENS FIRED. Russian lines and retirement of the position .on General | that been Substantial Evidences of the Improve- ment in Trade in the Coke Regions. The coke trade shows signs of a de- cided improvement. Orders were is- sued during the week for the firing of almost 3,000 ovens in the Connells- ville and -Masontown fields, of which number the latter field has about 500 oyens. The Frick Company blew in a ‘large number of these ovens. Pro- duction increased over 13,000 tons last | week and shipments show a gain of over 16,000 tons. This apparent dis- crepancy is due to the large amount of stock coke lifted. W. Peck Nominated. Geo. | After struggling for hours over ma- | : : - . . : | jority and minority reports in plat- | form, the former of which was finally | adopted, the Democratic State con- | vention of Wisconsin, nominated a | State ticket headed by former Gov- ernor George W. Peck, of Milwau- kee, for Governor. SIX BURNED TO DEATH. Whole Family Wiped Out by Burning of the House. H. S. Fling, his wife and four chil- dren were burned to death in a fire which destroyed their home at 1 | o'clock in the morning near Lowther, in Calhoun county, W. Va., and two other persons sleeping in the house were so severely burned that they are not expected to live. The locality is far from telegraph and telephone com- | munications. The names of the in- | jured are not known, but it is said here that one of the two are expected to die from their injuries is Robert Alexander, Jr., of With the house derrick and boiler e at an oil well belonging to Johnson, Upham and Ralston, of Parkersburg, were destroy- ed and the supposition is that the fire was caused by an explosion of gas from the oil well. gas from the well proba- bly crept along the ground until it reached the house, where a light was burning: Not a sign of the house was left standing, and the family were al] killed almost instantly. Fifty Firms Are Affected. { Seven hundred tinsmiths and sheet | metal workers of Philadelphia, went out on a strike for an advance of 5 | cents an hour. were paid at the rate of 371% cents an hour. They are asking for 421% cents an hour, the work day to remain at eight hours. Fifty firms are af- fected by the strike. statement was issued by the employ to the effect that the umion refused to accept an agreement or to submit the same to iing’s,. 8 arbitration. | - | | more remote requirements. sides | | to {all three stories. Parmerly the men | MANY FAILURES. During the Month of August Commer- | cial Insoivencies Exceeded $10,000,000. According to reports from branch | offices of kK G. Dun & Co. throughout | the United States, commercial insol- | vencies during the month of August were 900 in in amount of comparing with 812 in the correspond- | ing month last year, when the amount | involved was $10,877,782. Manufaet- uring disasters numbered 158; | against 241 a year ago, and liabilities | were only $3,030,570, compared with | $7,748,685. The numerical increase was provided by the trading class, 682 largely exceeding the 544 in August, | 1903, while the indebtedness was $3,- 728, 468, against $2,946,352 last year. The improvement over 1903 as to lia- | class | was almost offset by the largely un- | bilities in the manufacturing favorable showing in the third divi- | sion, which embraces brokers, dealers | in real estate, transporters others | than railways and similar concerns | not properly included in either of the | two principal classes. Here there | were 20 suspensions, with liabilities | of $3,732,460, comparing with 27 de-| faults for only $182,745 a year ago. | Five banks were forced to suspend for $883,000, against eight failures in this | class last year, when the amount in- volved was $871,075. In addition | there was one bankruptcy of a large | stock company, probably due to over-| capitalization, which did not stop the operation of the various plants, and hence cannot fairly be included with the manufacturing suspensions. Confidence increases each week as | a larger proportion of the agricultural | vield is placed beyond the reach of | injury and industrial undertakings are less interrupted by labor contiro- versies. It is not to be expected that | the business world , will suddenly | abandon its conservative attitude, | purchases being still restricted large- ly to such needs as are clearly dis-| cerned, but there-is evidence of a | growing disposition to. provide for Failures this week in the U nited States are 222 against 205 last year, 226 the preceding week, ‘and 181 in the corresponding week .last. year. Failures in Canada number 25 against 30 last week, 24 the preceding week, | and seven last year. RUSSIAN ARMY DIVIDED. Said to Have Forced Fleeing Troops Into Swollen Stream by Hundreds. dispatches from the far e cate the ono tits a been ‘scparated by the Russ Japs ast indi- | y has ian Comn- mander-in-Chief. Kuroki is attack-| ing the section north of the Taitse river; OXku is assaulting that part south of the river and at Liao-Yang. TWO separe actions are in progress. It appears from dispatches from Tokio touching upon the situation about 1.ao-Yang that General Kouro- patkin made a most disastrous move Thursday night in attempting to get his army across the Taitse river to the north of I1.iao-Yang, for he has put his force to a great disadvantage in separating it. These dispatches say General Kuro- ki is delivering a tremendous attack cn fhe Russian forces, north of the river, while on the south side General Oku’s forces, which compose the left cf the Japanese armies, are attacking the Russians and driving hundreds of them to death in the river, which is a swollen torrent. This would .indi- cate that the Russians, in their con-! fusion, amounting practically to a rout, have congested: the bridges which cross the river.and are fighting a Jjcsing rear guard action. Oku ap- parently has them ot his mercy. The Tokio dispatches say that when de- tails are known it will likely be found that a great tragedy has occurred on the northern side of the Taitse river. Tokio believes the Russian Ics i so far have been 30,030 and the dis- patch says the Japanese commanders | have already reported losses of 25.- 000. The ‘Russian losses August 31 and September 1 are officially given as 5,000. i ice of Tubes Cut. Representatives of the steel tube interests met in New York and de- cided to reduce the price of tubes $5 per ton. This reduction. it is stated, is made in > nticipation of a reduc in prices of steel billets next ion week. ELEVATOR CABLE PARTS. Two Killed and Six Injured in Acci- dent in Chicago Store. | Two people were killed and six seri- | ously injured by the falling of an ele- | vator in the store of Sears, Roebuck & Co., of Chicago. The passenger elevator ordinarily | used was out of repair and the freight | elevator was used during the day by the customers and employes. While a load of passengers was being car-| ried up the cable parted, allowing the elevator with its load of 10 people The conductor, Fnillip Caldwell, was instantly killed, | and Mrs. Kate Hays, 40 years old, was so badly hurt that she died in the hospital. Six others were injured but not fatally. 4 Eloping Princess at Italian Resort. Princess Louise, of Coburg, who eloped several days ago from Elster, with Lieutenant Mattasiteh, has ar- rived at Como, accompanied by the count. The couple are staying at the | Hotel Plinius under the name of Von | Ruff and wife. The princess looks | to be in excellept health. She says | she will prosecute those responsible | for her imprisonment. — FT 4 Soldiers Must Stand Civil Triai. Herrick and Prosecutor | Foster, of Athens, O., joined in a to the Secretary of War, as seven members of the Fourteenth ry, now under arre 1 in the murder of ( of Warren, O., at the maneuvers, be sent at once to for trial by civil authori War Department has ex desire to have the men t civil law, but for some reas delivered the accused. Governor Athens Athens lies. The i the Clark, not nwnber and $10,491,498 | delauited indebtedness, | | sition near Liao-Yang, were mistaken | | the armies | side, | rendered a decision in whieh he stat- {| ed that premiums charge | legal rate of interest is usury and can- | 000, with $6 DETECTIVES MOBBED. PROGRESS OF THE WAR | Russiah and Japanese Armies in a Decisive Struggle One Killed and Two Injured in Alle- « gheny City. Following a hearing iefore Alder- man Walter Wadsworth of Allegheny, in which Harry W. Starkey and his brother, Nelson C. Starkey, | of the Allegheny County Sabbath Ob- servance Association, were held for court on charges of perjury and con- Desperate Attempt of the Japanese to | spiracy to indict, the former shot and | Take the Fortification Against | killed ‘ome man and injured another. | Fearful Odds. | The shooting took place while a | hooting, howling mob of nearly 1,000 | people were following Power Tor rance Gamble, chief detective for the asso- | ciation, and ® his two subordinates o h £ | irom the alderman’s office. { 10, Her struggle on the plains © Harry D. Knox, 35 years old, mar- Liao-Yang. The battle began on the | ried was shot through the abdomen 30th ult., the Japanese with 1,200 | and died on the way to the Allegheny guns searching the Russian position, shen) Hosvusl, a ® 1 3 2 e injured are George anoute, but efforts to turn the Muscovite aged 35 years, supposed to be a driv- flank were repeatedly repulsed. er of an ice wagon. Power T. Gam- Report from Tokyo tells how Jap-| ble, of No. 502 Lowell street, Pitts- anese captured An-Ping, after a three- | burg, badly beaten about the head and | days’ battle and the loss of 2,000 men. | Pody and cut apout the pais. Made Two Japanese companies, which | DiS escape after the shooting succeeded in occupying a Russian po | SLAUGHTER AT PORT ARTHUR. Russian and Japanese armies, esti- mated to total 500,000 men, are locked | | in death 70 DROWN IN POLAND. Envi anuibilated: by | Ferryboat Capsizes and Out of 100 The Japanese forces engaged in | Only 30 Are Saved. this battle can only be estimated, | A dispatch from Berlin says a tele- | but they are believed to number about | gram received from Lodz, Poland, an- 200,000 men. General Kuropatkin js | nouncing that a ferryboat capsized on known to have six army corps, besides | A . = 147 squadrons of cavalry, bringing up | the river Kamien, wesulting in 70 the Russian total to about the same | Persons being drowned. number that the Japanese have. How | Thirty of the passengers were compare with regard to Saved. Itis added that the boat was artillery is not definitely known. | licensed to carry only 30 persons. A special] courier ‘from Port Arthur ETE brings accounts of the fighting as | published in copies of the Novji Krai, | which is edited by Colonel Arwetiff. Dr. R. The paper states that at 11 o'clock or A. H. McKee for the night of August 24, the Japanese | stock market. concentrated a great force of infantry | john A. Green, of Stone City, was opposite a redoubt battery on a moun- nominated for Congress by the Dem- tainous position. | ocrats of the Fifth Iowa district. Lying Dong, the Japanese began to | Light snow fell at Virginia, Minn. greep along Lg dings, ‘ The Ruma | on Tuesday, Crops, flowers and garden hi IRL as produce were damaged. Heavy frosts RATT 7 aint 2 3 “yin. | are reported” from ° other western The Japanese rolled down the hill-| Meosaba ranbenpOints dead and wounded, their rifles| ~ ->9 9 geno " rattling after them. At midnight they | Antonio Giorgia was put to death advanced again with reckless bravery. | in the electric chair at Auburn, N.Y, One company penetrated the line of | for the murder of John VanGorder and defences, bnt the Russian infantry, | his half-sister, Miss Farnham, at West shouting. drew their bayonets and = Almond, N. Y. nihilated the enemy. Factory No. 12, of the American | The main body of the Japanese re-| Window Glass Company at Muncie, | treated over the and then threw | Ind., was destroyed by fire. The | | searchlights over the scene. More | loss is $50,000. The plant had been troops advanced, stumbling across the | idle for two years. dead and wounded. The Russians The largest sugar factory in Ger- waited until they we 100 yards | many, named Kulmsee, near Thorn, away, then fired their machine guns, | West Prussia, was burned, which were protected by armor plates, | 5 Joss of $1,250,000 The fire caused TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. S. Sutton, of Allegheny, sued $100,000 lost in be 3 detectives | NINE KILLED IN A WRECK Head-on Collision of Trains on Canadian Grand Trunk. MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT DEAD. Passengers Were Party of Sightseers on Their Way to Exhibition at Sherbrooke. Nine people were Killed and 23 others injured in a head-on collision on the Grand Trunk Railway near Richmond, Quebec. The trains in- volved were a special excursion from Montreal bound for Sherbrooke and passenger train No. 5, running he- tween Island Pond, Vermont, and Montreal. The collision, it is claim- ed, was due to neglect of orders on the part of the train crew of the ex- cursion train, which left Richmond without awaiting the arrival of the passenger train. The excursion train was running as the first section of the regular Grand Trunk Portland express, which usual ly crosses the Island Pond train at Richmond and was running on its time. This makes it all the. more inexplicable why Conductor Atkin- son, in charge of the ‘excursion train, did not wait to make the usual crossing. Atkinson disappeared shortly after the wreck occurred. The excursion train, made up of 10 coaches and a baggage car, car- ried about 1,000 persons bound for the “exhibition at, Sherbrooke. The Island Pond train was composed of five coaches and a baggage car and | had only a small number of assen- | gers. The excursion train had barely cleared the Richmond yard when, rounding a curve, it met the Island | Pond train running at a high rate of | speed, Both engineers reversed, .and, | with their firemen, jumped, escaping | with minor injuries. The shock of | the collision was plainly heard in'| Richmond, more than a mile away. | | Both engines were locked firmly to- | gether. 'Pheibaggage car of the ex: | cursion train; was picked up ‘and ‘dropped om top ef the smoker follow- ing it, and it was in these two cars| | that the greate r number ‘of fataiities | | occurred. Among the Killed all. of whom were Canadians is J. B. Blanchet, who was elected to represent St. Hyacinthe | | ini the Canadian House of Commons | and mowed the enemy down like reap- | a rise in the sugar market at Ham- | ers cutting grai Once more the Japanese endeavor- ed to storm the fort. There was a fight and the burg. The Pacific Mail steamer Manchuria Company’s new sailed for the wnd-to-hand naxims : \ . i phang The fittowd or pam Orient with the members of the Phil- 3 ow 8 1 ind 0 To the | IDDINE Commission, returning from Yow rpon Tow; Ianc ~° | their visit here. and dead were mixed to- X 2 " The Minnesota Democratic State were the infantry engaged that men at one another. chine fired point bla Fendall G. Winston, of Minneapolis, for Lieutenant Governor. The Russian losses in the fighting of August 25 and August 26, east and EDITOR PERISHED AT SEA. Jumped Overboard Either Fell or from Steamer. | 3 4 T | or wounded. The great majority of C,. B. ork of Kings Bridge, New York city, editor of two magazines of ae casualties were sustained at An- | New York, either fell or jumped over- 8: : board from the steamer Prince Albert, By the dropping of an midway between Ostend and Dover | from the seventh floor elevator | | Le involving | '23t Spring. 800 'KEGS OF POWDER EXPLODE. One Man Kilied, Three Injured and Buildings Wrecked. Eight hundred kegs of powder ex-| ploded jn the press room of the Laf- | f convention nominated John A. John- | son, of St. Peter, for Governor and | i | three others and causing costly de- | | struction of property. | south of Liao-Yang, were 3,000 killed | { | of the Park | | square, on the evening of August 30. His | building, at Fifth avenue and Smith- mysterious disappearance, recalling | field street, Pittsburg, five persons that of Frederick Kent Loomis, was | Were injured, but it is thought that | reported on the arrival of the steam- all of those injured will recover. er at Dover to the American consul, Thomas N. McCauley, of New York, Mr. Prescott, by B. W. Ordway, of 1903 | organizer and former President of the Dean street, Brooklyn, in whose com- pany Mr. Spahr was making a tour of Europe far the benefit of his health. in the hands of a receiver, is under arrest charged with larceny of $4, Sa by C. S. Wilsox, of Hamilton, Ont, former stockholder. Five hundred steel] care riveters em- | Baltic Brings in 3,124. What was said to be the largest | number of steornge passengers ever brought irom Great Britain ijn a sin-| gle vessel, arrived at New York, Sept- | for higher wages. ember 1, on the steamship Baltic, | getting $1.80 a day no 13 ia’ ovearold fess Ag s : After killing his 2-year-old gen at | New tracks will be laid. The im- 1 on ol Bran I: : , : Long Br aneh, N: J., Thomas Hauld | provements will make Alliance the schmidt, a gardener, ended his OWN | jp e0gt freight transfer point on the life. it | system. | By recent order of the War Depart- | ment, Columbus is made 1p | Quarters for the United States Ma- rine Corps Recruiting district, with substations at Pittsburg, Wheeling, Cincinnati and Dayton. Captain E. E. West in charge. Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, passed his 78th birihday on the 29th of August. BIG ORDER FOR CARS. NEWS NOTES. Harvey Haverick, of Akron, O., years old, was drowned in the Ohio | canal. He was in bathing and was seized with cramps. Mt. Vesuvius is again in activity. Flames, ashes and stones are arising from it to a considerable height and a wide stream of lava is issuing from the crater. Two locomotives were demolished in a rear-end collision of two Cleve- land Terminal and Valley Railroad freight trains at Akron, O. No one was injured. James Glas Standard Steel Car Company Will Build 1,000 for the B. & O. The Standard Steel Car Company, which has its works at Butler, Pa., received an order for 1,000 40-foot drop-end gondolas from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The gondolas are to be built after the latest designs of the car company and contain a number of improvements. The order calls for delivery in Oec- tober and November. There ' are enough orders on the books of the company to keep its plant in partial operation to December 1. The plant has not been working up to capacity for several months, owing to the gen- eral dullness of the railroad equip- ment business. 300 Families Homeless. , master plumber of the Pennsylvania Lines West, who shot himself accidentally while hunting near Woo r, O., is in a critical con- dition. His right foot had to be am- putated. Judge J. A. Kohler, of Akroa;, O., =~ by build- ing and loan associations above the not be collected. Fire completely destroyed the ce- ment plant of the Struthers Furnace Company, five > EY town, O. The ,000 Oho looted the je | We. 0. Wi Hexen at Cosh a Forest fires have destroyed the escaped without I lue. | hamlet of Little Bay, N. F., and 300 The Big Four is planning to shorten | families are homeless. Two men I and In- have been drowned. The steamer ine between Prospero embarked the women and for Harn children. The men are fighting the Hous- | flames in an effort to prevent the th {oing | fire from covering a wider area. The | government is providing food, shel- fer and other assistance. muel Walke a > | oan er, TO net =" The Paraguayan revolutionists have from apoplexy. 70 | captured Villa Conception and 400 vears old and liv | men with arms and ammunition. International Mercantile Agency, now | | 7 ployed by the Pressed Steel Car Com- | pany at Schoenville went on a strike | They have been | for ordinary and | improvements in the Alliance yards. | the head- | lin & Rand powder works, two miles east of Punxsutawney, Pa., instantly killing one map, seriously injuring | Leonard Bair man, unme The injuried a | intendent of the pr er; William Vandyke, engineer, will recover; : Sheridan Calhoun, beiler tende ‘beliey ved to be fatally hurt. The press room, about 40 feet was totally destroyed. Leon-1 ard Bair was in the building at the | time of the explosion. When his body was recovered from the ruins it was found part of his head had been blown away. No other part of his body was in the least mutilated. The three other men were in an en- | gine room 200 feet from the press room. Each was severely cut and | bruised by flying debris, and all were knocked unconscious by the force of | the explosion. Other buildings in the factory en- closure. were wracked, and every | building within a mile wag damaged. The residence of Powder Boss Spe- 21 years old, a wheel- z killed. l.ot Bair, super- mill, will recov- rieq, a 06( a h 9 or . wn k c 3 o which brought 2 20 60 passengers in the | | $2.25 for flat cars. _ They ask ‘forall 4 2000 feet from .the plant, was "| steerage, in addition .te 671 in the | uniform scale of $2.25. l'ruined. The Speno family is visiting i Ttsige ohii 24 : : Sh a Gi cabins, axing ? toral os 124 DEI | The Pennsylvania Company has the | in New Jersey, and the house was Sons a 1C I U¢ crew 1 Pry ay “iv : sons on board, including . work well under way for extensive | unoccupied. In many homes every window glass in the house was shat- tered. The shock of the explosion caused | every building in Punxsutawney to | tremble on its foundation. — | TRAGEDY OF GRAND BANK. Thirty-One of Fishing Crew Lost, One | by One, While Trawling. f The Canadian Schponer Troop, from the Grand Banks fishing grounds, re- ports that on Fon) 20 the fishing schooner Coleraine reported having | spoken a French barkentine, name un- known, 170 miles off Cape Race with only three men left out of a crew of 34, the others having been lost while fishing with their dories. The French Captain begged Captain Zimmerman to board his vessel and help him to reach this port, but the weather was too stormy compliance with this request, and it | is feared that the French vessel and | the remainder. of her crew have per- ished. Fire Destroys 180 Hogs. The large packing plant of Street | and Cockran, in Baltimore, was total- ly destroyed by fire, the loss being | estimated at $125,000. The buildings, a large stock of meats and 180 hogs were entirely consumed. Several firemen received minor injuries, none serious. The fire was caused by the explosion of ammonia tanks. RUSSIAN SHIP DESTROYED. Strikes Mine While Clearing Chan- nel at Port Arthur. A Russian steamer engaged in clear- ing the channel at Port Arthur struck a mine and was destroyed last Wednesday. Safe Crackers Make $1,000 Haul. Safe crackers robbed the safe in Etham’s furniture house, Titusville, Pa. of more than $1,000 in cash. and came near wrecking the building. { gotiations | Ow to permit! ger at Pekin. GOOD WEATHER FOR CROPS. Corn Shows Decided Outlook for:Apples Promising. The weather bureaus weekly sum- mary of crop conditions is as follows: While the latter part of the week was abnormally ool in the Ohio val- ley, lower lake region, Middle Atlan- tic States and New England, the tem- perature, as a whole, was favorable for maturing crops. Occasional showers occurred in Central Califgr- nia, and there was more than the usual rainfall in the Western plateau districts. Freezing temperature. is reported from Central Wyoming and light frosts from Colorado, Montana and portions of Ohio, Pennsylvania Improvement. has prevented rapid development of corn in the Ohio valley and lake re- gion, the crop as a whole has exper- ienced decided improvement. Much of that prostrated by winds in the previous aveek in Indiana and Iilinois is straightening. Early corn has al- ready matured in Southern Missouri and is ripening rapidly in Nebraska and South Dakota, cutting being in progress in the first named State and in Kansas. The week was practi- cally rainless in the spring wheat re- gion of Minnesota and the Dakotas, affording favorable weather for harv- esting and thrashing. Some early wheat in the northern portion of North Dakota is yet unripe, and rust is still damaging late wheat in that State, and much of the crop will not be cut. Disappointing yields are generally reported from Idaho, Wash- ington and Oregon. The outlook for apples continues promising in New England, New York and the upper lake regions, but unfa- vorahle reports continue {rom the States of the central valleys. Ex cept in portions of New England ull the Middle Atlantic States, where | blight and rot are reported to a great- | er or less extent, an excellent crop of i potatoes is indicated. Good prog- ress has been made with fall plowing throughout the central valleys and Middle Atlantic States. KONGO STATE BUILDS FORTS. | Believed to Apprehend a German . Invasion. Official information: from PEritish Central Africa, ‘says that the Kongo | Free State is constructing forts of considerable magnitude on the west- ern shore of Lake Tanganyika and that one of these forts, equipped with 20 guns, hours of the German Irontier. It is believed that the Belgians appre- hend a German invasion. A number of natives who are German subjects have been expelled from the Kongo Free State. It is understood that ne- regarding the matter are proceeding between Berlin and Brussels. The west shore of Lake Tanganyika belong to the Kongo Free State, the south shore to the British Central Africa and the east shore to German Hast Africa. The area of the lake is estimated at 14,000 square miles. TWO WERE KILLED. Ran Away and Dashed Train at Crossing. A horse driven by Dr. and Mrs. A. G. Miner, ran into a Baltimore and Ohio passenger train at Tod avenue crossing, Warren, O., and they were both killed. Flagman John Cohen Horse into | made futile efforts to prevent the aec- cident, but the driver could not con- trol the fractious horse. Mr. Miner was a prominent physician, 68 ‘years old, and his wife was 65 years old. Both had large property interests in Niles, their former home. No chil- dren Survive them. ‘FIND. GREAT GOLD MINE. Japan Preparing * Open Fields Esti- mated Worth Half a Billion. Following an ‘inspection has issued a proclamation making complete preparation to develop gold fields recently = discovered in the province of Iwate. The engineers estimate that these fields will yield gold to the value of $500,000,000. It is estimated that the annual yield of the mines will be $15,000,000. TROUBLE IN CHINA. Boxerism Revived and Missionaries Flee for Protection. A revival of boxerism is reported from Tamingfu, in the southwestern part of Pechili province, 215 miles from Tientsin. Aver 200 American missionaries, . including women and children, have been obliged to evacu- ate Tamingfu owing to an intended massacre on the part of the boxers, who call themselves “Tsaiyun.” The telegraph company refused to transmit a message from these mis- sionaries to American Minister Con- Fortunately, however, an English friend ‘in Honan forward- ed their message, whereupon Yuan Shika, viceroy of Pechili province, dispatched urgent orders for their protection. ‘In view of the fact that the local authorities gave them .no protection and there was no hope of continuing their work, the missionaries came out. They traveled in safety. | Fifteen head of horses were burned in a fire which destroyed the stables of Charles Marshall, on Lake street, Allegheny. Church to Sell Live Stock. The trustees of the United Pre esby- | terian Church at Taylorstown, Pa. | have devised a mew way to raise money .to repair their chureh. A big | harvest home picnic is to be held in foe Snodgrass woods. After dinner there is to be an auction sale of live { stock and other articles which have been contributed by members of the church and others. Already a big tS lot of stock has been donated, be- sides many useful articles for farm use. and New York. Although cool weather is. within two. & : - made by government engineers the government which iS. wp rd is For a ( Miss Ne fvenue, from kid a cold. 1 and sick all over. ney Pills without ‘compelles remedy.” (Signed A TRI Milburn by all de Golc “The towns gold,” s mean ju of the 1 mines ¢ age of ; profitab street n ed, ant makes 1 After a of peop pieces pieces of cours: rare fin tions, It; An Atl peries of covering separate the Unie gions. 1 United S and exte building