m— rami = p——— ——— WASHINGTON CITY CHOSEN I ! The Japanese and Russian Dip- lomats Will Meet There. {NATIONS COUNSEL sTHE MIKADO United States, With Other Countries, Urge Mikado’s Government to Act With Moderation. National capital has seat of negotia- plenipotentiaries America’s been selected as the tions between the of Russia and Japan for a treaty of peace. The choice of Wacihington ‘as the leccal convention of the conference marks another ‘step in the negotiations toward ulti- | mate peace in the Far East institu- ted by President Roosevelt. Official anncuncement of the selec- tion of Washington was made hy Secretary William f.oeb at the White House. It was in typewritten form and read as follows: “When the two governments were urable to agree upon ¢ither Chefoo or Paris, the Fresident suggested The Hague, but both governments have now re- quested that Washington beé chosen as the place of meeting, and the Pres- ident has accordingly forinaliy noti- fied®both governments that Washing- ton will be so selected.” This statement was supplemented shortly afterward by a semi-official announcement that “after meeting and organizing, the plenipotentiaries | peace | forward | of vhe two governments, if it should | be uncomfortably hot in Washington, may adjourn the meet- ing to some summer resort in the North, and there continue their sit- ‘tings until such time ¢s the weather in Washington shall be more com- ¥ortable.” President Roosevelt has used influence to counsel moderation on Japan’s part. Germany and Fr have also counselled Japan to moder- ‘ation, bwt their voice is not so po- tent as that of America. England has taken the attitude that w Japan, her ally, demands is zh Here is the idea which prevails as to Japan's terms: be found to his ais An indemnity not to aggregate more than the cost of the war and possibly not more than $500,000,000, to be discharged on easy terms. Japan's control of Korea, the Liao Tung peninsula; Japanese ‘or interna- ticnal control of the Manchurian rail- way. Restoration of Manchuria to Chi- na, and removal of the adherence of Russia and Japan to the principle of the open door. | Negroes Clash on | It is considered improbeble at ey junctur> that Japan will impose any | restrictions regarding Vladivostol regarding the movement of Russi naval forces in the far east, or she will demand the island of Sak- halien. It was announced from Washington that an, armistit® will soon be con- cluded between the Russian and Jap-. pending peace negotia- anese armies, tions. M. Negligoff, Russian am- bassador to France, will probably act as one of the czar’s plenipotentiaries, while Marquis Ito may serve the mikado in the same capacity, if he cares to. ' The Russian foreign office ‘inform- . ed the public that negotiations toward the opening of the peace conference are progressing rapidly. ! PRISON FOR BANKER Burns Might Have Got Sentence of 210 Years. Facing three Federal indictments, containing 21 counts, the combined minimum sentence of which would mean a continuous penitentiary sent- ence of 105 years and a maximum sentence of 210 years, Orus M. Burns, the Montpelier, O., banker, indicted by the Federal grand jury for em- bezzlement, misapplication of bank funds, false entries and perjury, voluntarily entered a plea of guilty $n the United States disirict court at Toledo on one count in one in- ictment. Judge R. W. Burns to seven penitentiary. Tayler sentenced years in the Ohio Kansas Needs Harvesters. Kansas farmers will peed 25,000 men and 2,240 teams to harvest their crops, according to a report made by superintendent of the State Labor Department of Kansas to A. B. Jam- ison, superintendent of the Free Em- ployment department of he harvest, incluGging the threshing, will last about 60 days, and the wages will, it is said, range from $1.75 to $2.50 a day Two hundred men have already been signed in Kansas City for the work, and the shipping of men to the Kansas fields will be- gin at once. Children Shot. that | { in the morning, | is an uncle of the Emperor, | { admirality department, This announcement was followed a | few minutes later by an imperial re- | script relieving the grand duke of the | which | Missouri. | ‘At Valdosta, Ga., the 17-year-old son and the 16-vear-old daughter of W. L. Carter, formerly a Baptist minister, attracted by the barking of a dog in the yard surrounding their home, went out to investigate, followed by a» younger child. They were fired up- on by some one from behind the smokehouse. The young girl fel] dead, the boy crawled back to the house, where he died, and the younger child was wounded. Over 70 Miles an Hour. The Lake Shore railroad establish-| ed a new record between Chicago and Buffalo. The distance, 526 miles, was covered in 453 minutes, thus beating the record of 470 made previously. The train was made up of four Pullmans, drawn bj one of the large Prairie type locomo- tives. The average speed, deducting for stops, was 70.9 miles an hour. fmports of raw material for production in A-ay was the minutes, | < .George W. iron | the Pittsburgh mills for | churia heaviest for two years.) sovereignty. DISPUTE OVER MOROCCO Diplomatic Wrangle Arises Between France and Germany. diplomatic strain between and Germany is undeniably serious. The chief cause of this is the inability thus far of either party to propose a remedy acceptable to the other. France is tenacious to up- hold her predominant position in Morocco without subjecting it to in- spection and revision by the interna- tional congress proposed by Germany. On the other hand, Germany does not recognize French predominance in Morocco or the Anglo-French agree- ment on which this predominance is The France based. Thus "Germany’s issue is equally against Great Britain and France, although the latter is more immediately involved. All parties are making appeal to the friendly co-operation of other nations so that indirectly all Europe is par- ticipating in the controversy and this permits a wide range of speculation concerning a rearrangement of politi- cal alliances. However, the officials maintain that the issue does not in- volve such far-reaching questions, but is the renewal of the long-pending struggle over Morocco in aggravated form. SECRETARY HAY RETURNS His Health Is Improved, but He Is Far from Well. Secretary of State John Hay arriv- ed from Europe on the Baltic, much improved in health, but plainly show- ing he was far from being a well man. His presence in this country evidently was anxiously President Roosevelt, for and long document was him in quarantine by a senger from the White went down the bay on the revenue cutter to deliver it to Mr. Hay in per- The contents of this message Secretary Hay refused to divulge. Secreiary Hay was informed Yy the newspaper men that the envoys he Russo-Japanese peace nego- tiations were to meet in Washington. It was the first information he had ived as to ent's efforts. Mr. Hay discuss the subject of peace. He said he ‘had ro intention of leaving the cabinet. expected by an imposing delivered to special mes- House who S01. not TWELVE KILLED IN FIGHT Excursion With Appalling Results. Twelve negroes are dead and sev- eral others are wounded as a result of the pitched battle on an excursion Train train that left Atlanta Saturday night | In addition to the | for Columbus, Ga. five negroes found dead on the train three others have died in Griffin, Ga. from their wounds. It is stated by the result of a crap when the crowd went up and renewed on the game train going back. The train had not left the yards of the Atlanta depot before the battle opened, knives, pistols and brass knucklers heing used. RESIGN PORTFOLIOS High Admiral of the Navy and Head! of Russian Admiralty Quit. made in St. Duke Alexis. the high admiral, who and Ad- head of the Russian miral Avellan, supreme direction of the navy, he had held since the days of the Em- peror’s father, Alexander II1., when | Russia resolved to enter the lists as | a first-class sea power and to build | up a great navy, the remnants of which were destroved in the battle of the Sea of Japa DEATHS REACH 500 List of Victims of Bussian Mine Ex- plosion Increases. Five hundred persons were killed in the explosion which occurred at the Ivan colliery at Ehartsisk, belong- ing to the Russian Donetz Company. JEWISH TOWN BURNED Anti-Semites Turn Incendiaries in Russia—Many Homeless. News of another Jewish Russia has reached this country. The =ntire city of Yanova, in the Goverenment of Kovno, has been de- stroyed by fire, and letters receivad here tell of thousand of Jewish fami- lies who have been made homeless and who are on the verge of starva- tion. The fire was the work of anti-Sem- itic incendiaries. The enemies of the Jews, failing in their attempt to create Jew-killing riots, set fire to the town. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS shot o Three men were during strike demonstration at Chicago. Theodore premie P. Delyannis, the Greek r, has been buried in Athens. . William J. Bryan and daugh- led for Europe. They will be later by Mr. Bryan. 3 Gustavus d Princess Margaret of ht were married at Windsor, Yellow Fever Bulletin. Gov. Magoon has reported to the S nal commission from : new cases of yellow in the canal zone. Among them re George B. McIntyre, American chainman, La Boca; Samuel Davis, Panama; S- non-employe, West, American, draughts Panama, and Henry Van Hol- American, man, { land, American, clerk, Panama. Japan hus 3 1 will be restored to her the outcome of the | would | : | negroes who were | on the excursion that the battle was started | to Atlanta | The sensa:ional announcement was | Petersburg that Grand | had resigned. disaster in | Adolphus of | sured China that Map- TWENTY-FIVE INDEATHLIST Coll'sion on Western Maryland Railroad Terribly Fatal. LIST OF DEAD MAY GROW Dead and Mangled Bodies Line Tracks and Many Were Pinioned Be neathed the Debris. A disastrous wreck on the Western Maryland railroad occurred Saturday evening at a point about a quarter of a mile from Patapsco," a small sta- tion between Westminster and Finks- burg, Md. The death roll now foots up 25 and this number is likely to be increased from among the list of those griev- ously mangled. All the dead were employes of the railroad, returning to their homes in the small towns along the railroad to spend Sunday. With the exception of the train crews they had been”at work repairing the damage done to the roadbed 10 days ago by a minor freight wreck at Mount Hope station, near Baltimore. The passenger train carried a large number of passen- gers, all the coaches being filled. As many of the workmen as could do so went into the baggage car, the re- mainder of the gang of 35 finding places on ‘the platforms between the mail and baggage cars and between the latter and the tender. In the neighborhood of Patapsco station, abput eight miles from West- minster, the Western Maryland has many curves and that just west of the bridge crossing the Patapsco river is a sharp one. An extra freight, made up of heavy coal and provision cars, was running east. It should have taken a siding to allow the passenger train to pass. Such were the orders. Why they were disregarded will never be known, for those who should have seen that they were obeyed are dead. The passenger train was running at a speed of 30 miles an hour and the freight was making good time with the two engines by which it was be- ing drawn. Just west of the bridge | they came together with terrific force, the three engines being piled | one upon another, fortunately in such | a manner that sufficient steam con- nections were broken to relieve the | boiler and thus prevent the further horror of pone or more explosions. BLOODY PIRATES KILL 150 Terrible Tale of Massacre Comes Out of the Far East. At San Francisco, details of a ter- | rible massacre by pirates of 150 na- | tives on the Siberian coast have been received in a letter from Petropavlov- ski on the coast of Kamchatka. A. Morogravlenof has written to his brother, a resident of San Francisco, that in the early part of the year the natives in-one of the small setlle- ments down the coast observed a vacht, or schooner, drop anchor in the harbor, and its coming was hailed with cries of rejoicing. Off the ves- sel came a number of small- boats. The natives could see the crew piling what they thought were supplies in- to the several craft. The men then | pulled for the shore. During that and the next day there was heard the firing of arms, and, later, smoke and fire were observed. This led to an’ investigation from Petropaviovski and other towns on the coast, and a horrible tale of pill- age and massacre was brought to light. About the streets of the settlement writes Morogravlenof, were strewn | the bodies of 150 of the inhabitants, shot and cut to pieces by the pirates, who. under the pretense of friendship, had gained a landing on the coast. Robbery was their motive, for every | hut had been ransacked, and any- thing of marketable value had been | taken Who the marauders were, those who managed to make their escape could mot say, beyond giving the in- formation that some Japanese were in the party. When | sent his letter the. people | pavlovski feared an attack on town. of Petro- that BIG coaL OUSTER Suit Filed Against Hocking Valley Under Ohio Trust Law. Definite charges that the Hocking | Valley Railroad Company, either di- rectly or through its officers, holds the controlling interest in coal com- panies operating in the Hocking val- ley, and favors these concerns by dis- crimination against competitors in that territory, are contained in an amended petition filed by Attorney | General Ellis in the Franklin county circuit court in the suit to oust the | railway company from its charter for alleged violation of the State anti- | trust law. | The petition designates the Buck- | eye Coal and Railway Company, the Sunday Creek Coal Company, the | Continental Coal Company and the Toledo & Ohio Central, the Kanawha & Michigan and the Zanesville & Western Railway Companies as cor- porations controlled by the Hocking Valley Railroad Company. Russia finally agreed to Washington as the meeting place for the peace conference. Will decision Tax Leases. handed down by of West Virginia, the Tax Commissioner In a | supreme court ruling of State several mi to the iin and cision is a victory for element and will tax burden on real l property. counties. The the tax reform atly y and personal Morogravienof | the | Dillon that and coal leases are subject taxation is sus- tained, and willt bring upon the tax | books Pi00 000) 000 of valuation and lion dollars annual revenue | de- | reduce the | TRAIN FALLS FROM TRESTLE Three Confederate Veterans Killed and 29 Others Injured. Three persons were killed and 29 injured in the wreck of an east- bound passenger train on the South- ern railway at Golden Gate, Il. The train was a special, carrying Con- federate veterans to the reunion at Louisville. While running at a speed of 50 miles an hour the en- gine struck a spread rail on a trestle, 20 feet high, and the engine and four coaches were overturned and fell to the bottom of the ravine. The en- gine turned completely over. The dead are: J. J. Uhles, Greenway, Ark.; J. D. Johnson, fireman, Prince- ton, Ind.; Otto Graetz, engineer, Princeton, Ind. . GERMANY WILL FORTIFY Klaochou Bay to Be Made Safe Base for War Vessels. An imperial order to Kiaochou bay, the German conces- sion in the southern part of the Shantung peninsula, has been issued. The work will be done under the su- pervision of the governor of the protectorate, Rear Admiral Truppel, and five engineer and fortifiction officers detailed for this purpose. It is probable that the work now con- templated is the beginning of an ex- tensive plan. fortify CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. American Steel & Wire orders are reported to be highly satisfactory for the dull portion of the year. | Secrets of bribes paid to settle | strikes in Chicago were revealed be- fore a grand ‘jury by John C. Dris- coll. Securities worth $120,000 were stolen from the state-room of a Fall River boat. The thief offered to rg- turn them for a small sum. People of the Danish West Indies may send commission to Denmark to urge the sale of the islands to the United States. Baron Nathaniel de Rothschild, who died June 13, left $4,000,000 to be distributed for various charitable pur- poses. Finnel Buechler, ex-president of the Newark, O., council and a leading business man, was probably fatally burned by a natural gas explosion. Mt. Vesuvius has entered upon a new phase of activity, which has re- sulted in widening the recently made openings next to the crater. At Auburn, N. Y., a smouldering fire in the Columbian Rope Company created such dense smoke that more than two score firemen and employes were overcome and brought out un- conscious. The Tangier correspondent of the London “Times” says that the Aus- trian government has accepted the invitation of the sultan of Morocco to an ifiternational conference, con- ditional on ‘a similar acceptance by other powers. President Roosevelt directed that immigration inspectors use discretion in enforcing the Chinese exclusion law in order that the threatened Chinese boycott of American goods may be averted. Count Zeppelin has constructed a new airship, with which he has made a successful] trial trip, “sailing from Manzell, on the north shore of lake Constance, to Romanshorn, on the south shore of the lake, in three hours. A cablegram from Gov. Magoon of the Isthmian canal zone, reports four additional cases of yellow fever, two Americans and two Jamaicans. Three of the cases occurred at Pana- ma, and one at Culebra. The Ameri- cans stricken are: S. I. Davis, book- keeper, Panama, and Edgar Nicholai, bookkeeper, Culebra. Kirkman Goes to Prison. President has approved the findings {in two trials of Captain George W. | Kirkman of the | the army and confinement in the peni- | tentiary for three years. Kirkman was connected with the sensational case resulting in the suicide of the wife of another army officer at Omaha, Neb. Monument to Slocum Victims. of the 1,900 persons who lost their lives in the disaster to the execursion steamer Gen. Slocum a year ago, was Middlevillage, L. I. On one side is | a bronze plate depicting the burning | steamboat in bas-relief. size figures in bronze adorn the mon- ument—Memory, Grief, Faith and | Hope. Flint Glass Plant Burned. the National Flint Glass known as the Jenkins Two firemen were severely falling walls. Roy Har- stock. injured by bert, who went to work at the fac- tory is unaccounted for. Beef Trust Indictments. Two important heads of the beef trust have been indicted by the feder- al grand jury. Ten other persons have also been indicted. The names of the 12 men will be kept until they have been arrested by the United States ma shal. Pelee Shows Renewed Activity. { For the past ten days Mt. Pelee has given signs of renewed activity. Dense clouds of smoke have been dis- | charged from the volcano and have slowly fallen over the White River valley, afterward disappearing on ar- rival at the sea coast. Sharp lumi- nous flashes have been perceived at the dome of the mountain and a fair- ly strong burst of flame was seen | June 3. The collapse of part of the | dome occurred. It was accompanied by an outflow of mud into the river valley. Twenty-fifth Infan-! | try, sentencing him to dismissal from | A granite shaft erected in memory | unveiled in the Lutheran cemetery in | Four life- | Fire destroyed the $150,000 plant of | company, | factory, at| Kokomo, Ind., with $25,000 worth of | secref | WAGES WILL BE INCREASED Iron Companies in Pittsburg Will Meet Detroit Scale. TWO THOUSAND MEN AFFECTED Puddlers Will Get $5.75 Per Ton— Other Ironworkers May Also Be Benefitted. The wages of 2,000 puddlers employ- ed in non-union plants in the Pittsburg district will be advanced 38 cents per ton, as the result of the decision of the manufacturers not dealing with the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers to meet the ad- vance of the,NdTtJ rdlw mfwy m m vance in wages granted union men by the Republic Iron & Steel Company at the Detroit conference. The men are mow drawing practi- cally the old scale of the Amalgamated which is $5.371 per. ton, and when they get the advance will be paid $5.75 per ton. This increase in the payrolls of the several companies will call for additional disbursement in wages of $20,000 monthly. Among the plants that will meet the advance in the scale of the Amal- gamated Association are: Olivers Mill Southside; the Republic works of the National Tube Company, South- side; the Frankstown works of the National Tube Company, Second ave- nue; Moorhead ¢ Brothers’ plant, Sharpsburg; ‘Spang-Chalfant works, Etna; Black Diamond, works of the Park Steel Company, in the Penn ave- nue district. In addition to the above the Lindsay & McCutcheon works, al- though not operating its puddling de- partment owing to the strike, will meet the scale when it resumes oper- ations shortly. Practically ali the independent companies dealing with the union, who did not participate in the Detroit scale conference, have notified the na- tional office of the association that the scale is satisfactory to them®and that they would pay the advance ask- ed starting July 1. THREE CHILDREN CREMATED Parents, Powerless to Save Them, Have Narrow Escape. Three children of Henry Herrs- man, ranging from 4 to 8 years, were burned to death in a fire which de, stroyed their home near Swanton, three miles west of Piedmont, W. Va. The fire originated from a defective chimney. Herrsman and his wife occupied the ground floor and the children slept upstairs. The parents were aroused by the smell of smoke and barely es- caped with their lives. The fire left the family entirely destitute. PREMIER ASSASSINATED Gambler Take Revenge for Enforce- ment of Laws. Theodore P. Delyannis, the popu- lar premier of ‘Gteéece, was ‘stabbed and mortally wounded by a profess- ional gambler named Gherakaris at the main entrance of the chamber of deputies .at Athens. The . . premier died within three hours. The assassin, who was immediately arrested, said he committed the deed in revenge for the’ stringent .meas- ures taken by - Premier ‘ Delyannis against the gambling houses, all of which recently were closed. THREE SISTERS DROWN One Began to Sink and Others Lost Lives Trying to Save Her. Misses Hallie, Fanny anu Annie Belle Booth, daughters of ‘Dr. Grant Booth, were drowned while bathing in the Ohio river, near Crecilius, Ky. Their cges ranged from 14 to 21. One of the girls got into deep water and quicksand and began tn | sink. The other three went to her assistance, and Hallie, Annie and Fanny were ‘' drowned. Julia, the voungest, was saved by Elum Vernon and others who were nearby in a gasoline launch. Two of the bodies | have heen recovered. Russian Cruiser Ordered Away. The Russian auxiliary cruiser Ku- | ban, anchored off Cape St. James, near Saigon, Cochin China, and the Gover- | nor ordered her to depart immediate- | 1y and sent a French warship to en- | force the neutrality of these waters. Twenty-eight of the colliers which supplied the Russian fleet with coal | have left Saigon and thirty more are | preparing to sail. The British steam- er Carlisle, which is understood to have on board war munitions intend- ed for the Russians, is detained. | Kills Her Children. Mrs. Paul Klass killed her four small children and committed suicide at her home, near Kieler, Wis. She used a large butcher knife, cutting each of the children’s throats. The eldest was six and the youngest a baby. The woman had been in ill health. Postmaster General Cortelyou | caused a fraud order to be against a chemical preparation which is “guaranteed to turn the blackest skin to purest white.” has issued To Resume Friendly Relations. John Barrett, United States minis- ter to Columbia, presented to president, Senor Enrique Cortez, former minister of foreign affairs of | the South American republic. Cortez has been appointed confiden- tial agent of the Colombian govern- ment in Washington, and will use his efforts to re-establish the cordial re- lations between the two Senor Cortez is also charged | the duty of establishing friendly re- | lations between his government and { Panama. ' WEEKLY CROP REPORT Weather Conditions Favorable for the Growing Crops. As a whole the weather last week was favorable for the cultivation of crops. There .was ample warmth throughout the central and Southern portions of the country, but insuffi- cient heat in the extreme Northern districts, especially in New England, Minnesota and the Dakotas. In the lake region and upper Ohio valley the condition of corn is not promising, owing largely to unfav- orable effects of low temperature and excessive moisture, but in the States of the lower Ohio, upper Mississippi and Missouri valleys the crop has made good progress and, as a rule, has shown decided improve- ment. In portions of the central and west gulf States corn would be identified by rains. In the Atlantic States cutworms are prov- ing destructive. Winter wheat harvest has begun as far north as the central portions of Kansas and Missouri and South- the more southerly sections, where the yields are generally disappoint; ing. In the more northerly portiofis of the principal winter wheat States the crop has .generally done wall, although complaints of rust and in- sects continue in some sections, and heavy rains in Michigan and Wiscon- sin have caused lodging. On the Pa- ‘cific coast the outlook continues promising, exceptionally so in Wash- ington. A general improvement in the con- dition of spring wheat in Minnesota and the Dakotas is indicated, al- though in the two last named States some fields continue thin and weedy. Spring wheat is also doing well on the north Pacific coast, the outlook in Washington being the best in years. Oats have suffered from heavy rains ‘in the upper lake region and from lack of moisture in Southern Illinois; elsewhere the reports re-— specting this crop are.generally fav- orable! Harvest is general in the Southern States, with disappointing yields in Texas and Oklahoma. The weather conditions throughout nearly have been favorable for the cultiva- tion of cotton, although a consider- able -part « of the crop grassy. ANOTHER BATTLE Operations .in Manchuria Indicate Japs Are: Advancing. While the world is discussing and speculating where and when the peace negotiations ‘will be initiated and the probable outcome, operations are going on in Manchuria which are generally interpreted as being the opening of a fresh battle. Reports from General Linevitch and Russian correspondents specify movements and skirmishes which ‘are apparently unimportant individually, but which are regarded by observers in Burope as showing that the Japanese are ad- vancing in a vast semicircle, with the intention of surrounding the Rus- sians. reneral Linevitch’s reports seem to indicate that: the left point of the semi-circle is near Fenghwa, 90 miles north of Tieling and the right point at Yingcheng, 60 miles east of Fengh- wa. Market. Manufacturers show a tendency ‘to hold back on high prices at pres- ent ruling in the wool market. market is notably strong. As far as any medium grades of wool are con- cerned the demand is strong enough to warrant the belief that that por- tion of the clip will sell at good prices. Pulled wools are ‘in small supply. Foreign and Territory wools are firm, with trading moderate. Leading quotations are: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, 34@35c; X, B82@33c; No. 1, 33@39c; "No. 2, 39@4nc; fine unwashed, 26@27¢; quarter blood unwashed, 34@35¢; three-eighthst blood, 34@35c; half blood, 32@33c. Wool Justice Brewer declared in an ad- dress at Vassar college that a woman may. become president of United States within a generation. WAITING FOR FRANCE America and England Decline to ; Confer About Morocco. Great Britain as one of the pow- ers signatory to the Madrid con- vention of 1880, in answer to the re- quest of the Sultan of Morocco to join an international conference un- less such action would be satisfactory to’ France. same stand, the two powers being in accord with France that such a con- ference would be the best way of prompting urgent reforms in Morocco. AUTO STRUCK BY TRAIN Man and Wife Are Instantly Killed and Their Two Sons Fatally Hurt. An automobile occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Sayer, of Englewood, N. J., and their two sons, was struck by an Erie train near Goshen. Mr. the | Vv Senor | countries. | with | and Mrs. Sayer were instantly killed and their sons were hurled to the side of the tracks. They are not expected to survive. he chauifeur saved his life by jumping. Oyama Ready to Advance. The Japaanese have forced the ad- vance posts of the Russian left beyond ihe Knoche river and are occupying the heights north of the river. A | heavy force seems to be behind the movement. Field Marshal Oyama is ready for a general offensive move- [een Capt. James Wilson of the Alle- gheny, (Pa.), police was convicted of | receiving $50 from a woman for the | privilege of keeping a disorderly | house. middle ern Illinois and is in full progress in - the whole of the cotton belt : continues The. The United States has taken the inte tim line not sca. lan Tk tor con