MOB MND POLICE FIGHT Hunc' reds of Shots Exchanged in Race Riot in New York. Negro Who Killed Ship's Company and Norwegian 1 MURDERER LYNCHED Scuttled Ship Is Hanged. Condor that Honduras mur- st2amship Rebert McField, the derer, was lynched at Utilla, Hondur- THROW BRICKS FROM ROOFS Chimneys Were Torn Down to Fur- nish the Rioters on House Tops With Ammunition. “San Juan Hill,” the district bound- | ed by Amsterdam and West End ave- nues and Sixty-first and Sixty-third streets New York, so called because of its notoriety as a battleground. was the scene of a furious race riot, after many shots had been fired and sev-| eral persons had been seriously in- jured. s The trouble began when a police- man arrested Edward Connelly for at- tacking Henry Williams, a negro, and was pursued to the station house with | his prisoner by a mob of Connelly’s friends hurling showers of stones and other missiles. When the station house reserves turned out the whole neigh- porhood was in an uproar and blacks | engaged in desperate struggles in the | streets. Torrents of missiles were hur- led from roofs and windows. Within 10 minutes not less than a thousand men, boys and women black and white were engaged in furious combat. The worst of the fighting was in Sixty-second street, where from every window and from every roof rained missiles, while hundreds of shots were fired. Roundsman Patrick Walsh was knocked down by Joseph B. Smita, a negro who, after attempting to shoot him, struck him repeatedly with the butt of his revolver. Walsh was fin- ally rescued by his comrades. Squads of policemen were sent along | the roofs of the houses in Sixty-second | street, where the fighting seemed heav- jest. They walked from West End avenue to Amsterdam, clearing the roofs. and found that many chimneys had been torn to pieces to furnish am- munition to the rioters. More arrests were made and several whites and ne- groes were rescued from gangs of as- sailants, but desultory combats con- tinued. MACCABEES WIN SUIT Man, Who Sued to Prevent Increas- of Assessment, Loses Case. Judge Law, in the circuit court, at Port Huron, Mich., handed down his opinion in the case of Dan St. Clair Wineland of Pittsburgh, against the Knights of the Maccabees of the World, in which Wineland protested pgainst the rise in rates adopted by the supreme tent at its biennial ses- sion a year ago. Judge Law dismissed the bill of complaint with costs to the defendant. The decision was based on the clause jin the laws of the supreme tent gov- erning applications for membership, which reads as follows: “This applica- tion and the constitution and laws of the supreme tent now in force or that may hereafter be adopted are made | the sole basis of the contract between myself and the supreme tent.” LEADERS HANGED Authorities Dealing With Rioters at Odessa. Russian Twenty-four leaders of the recent disturbances at Odessa were hanged in various prisons. will be publicly executed upon the ar- | rival of General Ignatieff, President of the special conference for the revision of the exceptional laws designed for safeguarding public order. The battleship Georgi Pcbiedoiosetz has arrived at Odessa with a fresh crew for the purpose of taking 67 mu- tiners to Sebastopol for trial by court- martial. Of 202 persons arrested and charged with robbery or incendiarism in con- nection with the recent riots, 74 were | acquitted owing to lack of evidence and 28 were sentenced to six weeks’ imprisonment, the time to include the | two weeks which they have already passed ins prison. The new Japanese loan of $50,000,- 000 allotted in the United States, was day heavily over-subscribed in one after lists were opened. DEATHS FROM HEAT New York City Suffers from Protract- ed Hot Spell. Ten deaths and more than reached New York City and continued till Monday. Frank M. Fuller, Secretary of the, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, died | : suddenly at his home in Uniontown, | the | Pa. Apoplexy, superinduced by heat, was responsible for his death, i is believed. Six deaths from the heat had been points, New England reported from probably 10 while there were time as many prostrations, some of which result fatally. Gas Exnlosion. One person was killed, two other are said to be missing and nine wer injured, by the explosions of illuminating ga that wrecked four residences in th may vicinity of Liberty avenue and Thirty- | battleshinp ninth street, Pittsburg. The n known victim precipitated the explos- | jon and lost her life in searching 1 the cellar for a gas leak with a light ed lamp. M. Witte as Peace Envoy. Ambassador Meyer cabled the stat department at Washington from St. yetersburg that M. Witte, president of | the committee of ministers, had been selected to take the place of M. Mur- M. Witte will sail from Cher- pourg, France, on July 25 and will ar- This regarded in Washington 4s! avieff. rive in New York August 1. change i jndicating tI czar for pea heen very the leader of , earnest desire of th M. Witte has alway in favor of peace an the peace party and | dragged from his cell. | of the Morgan home and riddled with Another batch of 17 | two | score cases of prostration resulted from the wave of intense heat which | yy Saturday, two of them probably fatally, | as, the night afier the gunboat Tatum- bla surrendered him to the civil au- thorities there and six hours after the departure of the ship which brought | the first news of the crime. McField | murdered the captain, his crew of four and six oassengers, including two | wemen and a child, then scuttled the | vessel. When McField was confined in the | civil jail at Utilla the strongest guard the little town possessed was placed about him. The citizens of Utilla were wrought to a frenzy through the nar- rative of Miss Morgan, who had re- covered to tell the happenings on the schooner. The jzil fall, the guard McField, was surrounded at night- quickly over powered raving ard cursing, t It was proposed to burn him in front of the home of Miss Morgan. The Pentucket brought them back to the | popular. jrand Duchess Elizabeth, mob went so far as to build a fire, | Battery. Commander Peary left at| widow of Grand Duke Sergius (as- but the pleadings of the British Con- | midnight for Boston, whence he will | sinated in Moscow sular agent finally persuaded the mob | go 10 Sydney, C. B.,, where he will] last) attended the {first requium for to put the negro to a less tearful death. | join the ship. | Count Shuvaloff tonight. t He was bound and still protesting| The pride of the Peary family.| The assassination of Count Shuva- and begging, strung up to the veranda | Marie Anighito, the commander's 10- loff is considered to be a purely poli- PEARY SAILS FOR THE POLE News comes from Honduras via the . . | Arctic Ship Roosevelt Starts on Profiting from Nishaps Craft Used Commander i4as { and has not been identified. He was : | rcently arrested as a political sus- Taken All Precautions. | pect, but escaped from the police Commander Peary's polar shiv. | The assassin waited in the ante . v ** | room of the prefecture till the other Roosevelt left her anchorage off | jetitioners had been received, then Twanty-ninth street, North river, entering the audience room he ad- New York, Sunday afternoon, and | vanced toward Count Shuvaloff firing starte I er journey i 1est of the! : started on her journey in quest of the passed through the body of the pre- north pole. of relatives Quarantine. vear-old daughter, remained on board | the Roosevelt, eee DEADLY RIOTS AT WARSAW Strikers Marched Through Streets Demanding Reduction of 20 Per Count Shuvaloff, prefect of police Voyage of Exploration. in Warsaw and formerly attached to the ministry of the interior, was as- sassinated white receiving petitions. One of the petitioners drew a revol- ver and fired five times at the prefect { who fell dead. The assassin was’ ar- to Other | rested. He was dressed as a peasant VESSEL IS WELL FITTED i . . . . : | station before his examination. | five shots at close range. The bullets | 5 Ug< i fect. | i : A great crowd gathered in front of -| the 3 a 3 ; I members of | the house of Count Shuvaloft and Le P i 1 : 2 | made a demonstration to snow its Je Peary Arctic club, went as far as| indignation and sorrow at the assas- The ard tug | sination of the prefect, who was very Commander Peary, with a number | and friends. navy and as the ship headed Cent in Rents. Tries to Kill All on Schooner and Swam to an Isiand and was Washed | dust murder, with robbery as the motive, | The 800 by which 12 lives were sacrificed, was | brought to New Orleans by Capt. | Hans Holm of the Norwegian fruiter | covered. Bratten. radi 3 ympia sai from | et trading schooner Olympia sailed from | of fatalities. Utilla, Honduras, with $1,400 to buy | cattle at Truxillo to sell at She carried a crew of four men and nine passengers, among them TWO | pam, women “and two children. ) February 17 {at 11 o'clock, Friday night, June 390. After i . x a negro, armed with a | tical crime as the Count was not Yet | rifle, shooting down the men one af- 40 years old, and was regarded as be- | ter another MINE HORRORS NEGRD SHOOTS TWELVE |..." ot vce in at Alabama Mine. An explosion ol fire damp in No. 2 pit of the United Colliery company at | Wattstown, Wales is believed to have | resutten in the loss of 126 ‘lives. The explosion was followed immediately by the belching of clouds of smoke and from the pit shaft, in which 150 working. All communica-= the doomed men in this Rob Captain’s Strong Box. ONE YOUNG WOMAN ESCAPED | men were | tions with Ashore in an Exhausted Condition. | direction is completely cut off. No. 1 ae | shaft, adjoining, has ordinarily af- One of the most shocking storles of | forded communication with No. 2. men in No. 1 and the few | who escaped from No 2 were drawn 3% Altogether 68 bodies have been re- Efforts at rescue are still in little | progress, but the rescuers are work- the p 4 | ing without hope of reducing the list The captain of | Three men were killed and five in- Belize. | jured by the caving in of a rock at Sayretown mines, north of Birming- Ala. The mines belong to the 3 rey. | Alabama Consolidated Coal and Iron The vessel left the harbor of Utilla| company. she had been under way less | BIGGER CORN ACREAGE han an hour, everybody was arouse d! by a shot and, rushing on deck, found | Condition Better Than Last Year, Winchaste! Wheat a Little Off. was Robert| Preliminary returns to the chief of This negro y Irn: | the bureau of statistics of the depart- 1 hullets. 5 Ral oii | for the open sea stood on the rail, ing of the best type of Russian | peGill BANKERS MUST PAY | waiving her handkerchief to her fath. | official. . He came from one of the After he had killed all but one of | ment of agriculture show the acreage — er and mother on the tug, Limos: famous families in Russia. The } {36 men, he ordered him to go below | of corn planted to be about 94,011,000 Receiver Enters Suit Against Bank| Going down the river and the bay, count wasi a | son of Count ‘Peter ,,q geuttle the ship. When the man | acres, an increase of about 2,080,000 officials. | Captain Frank Houghton was on the Shuvaloft, the statesman who repre- reappeared on deck the negro shot | acres, on the area planted last year. i ; : : | bridge. The ferrybo yachts and | sented Russia at the Berlin confer} pi dead : | The average condition of the growing Soins Niger direction of end tugs kept him busy answering ga S208, Wa formerly colonel of he fie put the two women, Miss Tisic | crop on July 1° was 87.3 per cent, as troller of the currency at Washing |, (.q re sl ns S21 Guard regiment, known as the t. = : I yO Twoite, | compared with 86.4 per cent on Jul ton, Frank D. Allen, the receiver of| Mes ai a aa 5 Athletic Petersburg, and was one of Emperor Morgan and her Sjaret; Mrs. W alter 1 7.9) and a i average of ny the defunct Central National Bank of |." om ed to on or eit | Nicholas’ personal friends. As pre- Roses 3 ihe .aory with Mes Bp | per cent. Boston, brought suit in the United Tos. Som a en od ie fect of Odessa when he succeeded six-wells-old Infoni and lott the Som. The average condition of winter States Circuit Court against the Pr a salute fired by the Gen, Zelenoi, who was extremely stecHing fof the mainland. He shot: oyoq¢ on July 1 was 82.7 per cent, as board of directors of the institution, | sun, io tht tie Surgpon vere, Count Shuvalaff earned the 284 killed Mrs. Rose and ‘her infant. | compared with 8.5 per cent last alleging gross negligence, wasteful | 0 “ein su lag ith a esteem of all by his firm vet lenient He began shooting ak Miss Morgea month, and a 10-year average of 77.8 mismanagement, wrongful, fraudu- | 10 1. a a an) =" 38 espsdinion course, making himself particularly and wounded her in the arm, . Fhe per cent. 5 . A e James olf, a Yyoung| popular with the students. jumped ove rboard and started to swim | The average condition of spring lent and collusive conduct in office, | an he wilful an persistent viola- | ] : : | and t 11 d 1 been in the Bellevue hospital dispen- tions of the federal statutes govern- ing national banking associations. Mr. Allen asks that a full account- ing be made and that the directors] be ordered to pay to him for the benefit of the stockholders and cred- itors the amount of the losses which led to the failure of the institution and for which he believes them re- | sponsible. This sum may reach $500,000. | MINE SOLD FOR $2,000,000. | Syndicate Headed by C. W. Mackay | i Buys Kimberly Property. | The Balaka group of gold and sil- | ver mines in Shasta county, Cal., own- jed by the late Teter L. Kimberly, | Frank H. Buhl, of Sharon, Pa. and | others, has just been sold to a syndi- | cate headed by Clarence W. Mackey | for $2,000,000. The deal was closed by | | George A. Baird, of Chicago, and Ira | Bassett, of Cleveland, trustees of the | Kimberly estate. It is estimated that | the ore in sight is worth $16,000,000. 1 WwW. K. Mathews, of New York, is vice | president of the syndicate. Sixty Bandits Executed. A story of wholesale execution at the little village of Taikiu, 100 miles | inland from Fusan, Korea, has been | brought to San Francisco by the Rev. | E. F. McFarland, a missionary, Who | | came home on the steamer Korea. | | In less than a week 60 men, charged | | with being bandits and cut-throats, | | were slaughtered miwy f m m f| | were hanged by order of the Japanese | { | | | government. | Window Glass Advanced. At a meeting of ithe Western win- dow glass joblLers in Chicago the re- tail price of window glass was aa | ed 10 per cent, the raise to take effect lat once. A further advance in prices, lit was said, would probably be an- nounced within a few days. Unusual in- crease in building operations requiring increased output of glass was given as the main cause cf the advance. Net Going to Australia. President Roosevelt has declined the invitation extended by the common- wealth government to Miss Alice? | Roosevelt to visit Austraia with Sec- retary Taft and the members of his faraily, which was accompanied by the assurance that the party would be cordially welcomed by all classes. THREE DROWNED Man Tries to Show Women He's Not Afraid; Upsets Skiff. Two men and a woman mill opera- tives, lost their lives in a boating ac- cident on Willands pont at Dover, N. Two other occupants of the boat | were rescued in an exhausted condi- | tion. Eva Thibault, 18 years; Phil- Langlois, 2b years, and Peter E. Damdoorraj, aged 35 years, were drowned. Henry Lanouette and An- . | nie Daurdane were rescued. “| According to the story the boat {had five occupants. Miss Daurdane became alarmed and to allay her fears Langlois, it is said, stood up in the boat and began to rock the little craft from side to side. The boat l.was capsized and the five were turown into the water. S S Oregon Again the Winner. e According to announcement made at the Navy department the battleship s | Oregon has won the trophy for the e highest scores made by vessels of the class at the last annual e | target practice. The same vessel won the trophy a year ago. The Wisconsin n | stood second this year and the moni- ¢. | tor Monadnock third in the battle- ship class. | VAST TREASURE FROM ALASKA e ceived from Frozen North. phia from the gold fields, away in the vaults of States mint. Six armed, all federal e | the government’s treas ka to Philadelphia, the the men, agents, gua S sd during monotony. | pointment on mander and Dr. Wolf, were Chief | complied with the demands of the | Engineer George Wardell, Steward | strikers. . Charles Percy and Matt Henson, the | TG explorerer’s negro servant. Matt | REBELS NOT PUNISHED has been with Peary on all of his | ce trips. Mutiny Causes Admiral Kruger to Another member of the party, who Leave Service. was not on board, is Ross E. Mar-| pyggia has abandoned the idea of { moted | sioned grades to orderly sergeant of | lieutenant Largest Shipment of Gold Ever De- vas stowed | trust has its agents in Buenos Ayres United heavily | Oregonian, who, for six months h Three bloody encounters between troops and striking shoemakers, in which about 20 persons were killed or wounded, occurred in Warsaw. The | strik were marching through the for ‘Sydney. | city from house to house demanding Those on board yesterday, who |the lowering of the rents by 20 per will go all the way besires the com- | cent. Many proprietors, out of fear, Wolf received his ap- Saturday night and York Tuesday night sary. Dr. wn will leave New vin, of Ithaca, a recent graduate of} ; 3 - : 0.1 trying secur Cornell, who will assist Peary in | Trias ito secure marking surveys and will go with | him all the way. the extradition of the men of the battleship Kniaz Po: temkine who mutinied. The Nashash- isn says that Rear Admiral Kruger will leave the service on account of his treatment of the situation creat : . ! ed by the mutiny on the Kniaz Potem- Commander-in-Chief of G. A. R. Pas-| je at Odessa. The admiral wil ses Away in the West. | probably be court-martialed. Wilmon Whildin Blackmar,| ~The Nashashisn prints a report that the G. A. of | Lieut.-Gen. Stoessel has been placed he Rotatlic. Gen fn. Moles Jaane,ji nor ivest af Tsarskos@elo in : : . . | consequence of the revelations made July 16, of intestinal nephritis. His! py the commission which has been wife was with him during his illness | investigating the defense and capitu | lation of Port Arthur. Being apprehensive of a mutiny the GEN. BLACKMAR DEAD Gen. commander-in-chief of W. W. Blackmar was born at Bris-| tol, Bucks county, Pa., July 25 1841, authorities have ordered the sailors son of Rev. Joseph and Eliza Jane | of the Russian cruisers Minine and Blackmar, of English descent. Dur-' Kremi to be relieved of their arms. ing his childhood the family removed to Boston, Mass., where he began his education in the Brimmer school, WILL MEET AT PORTSMOUTH Selected foi later attending the Bridgewater Nor- New England Town mal school. He was fitting for col- Peace Conference. Assistant Secretary Peirce an: lege at Phillips academy, Exeter N. H., when the Civil war broke out. He : Yoni enlisted as a private in the Fifteenth nounced that the plenipotentiaries of Pennsylvania cavalry, and was pro- Russia and Japait had agreed upon through ail the non-commis- Portsmouth, N. H., as the meeting place fpr the sessions of the peace conference, to be held outside of Washington. The sessions will be held in the Government Navy Yard l'at Portsmouth. Orders have his company; was then commissioned and transferred to the First West Virginia veteran cavalry. He carried the colors across a deep o 11 / e . ec ry" 3 > Y Y r r o . . gully und T heay y fire of the enemy Mayflower to join on the field of Five Forks, around gvster Bay early ohio 4 trade rallied © ry The or. SL which the brigade rallied and won the | oa the plenipotentiaries. fight. For this act of gallantry he aboard the vessels + was made captain and awarded a Con- small cruiser been issued for the the Dolphin at in August to re With the under the will pro- envoys escort of gressional medal of honor. He was ceed to Portsmouth. The plenipoten- adjutant general of his brigade and | tiaries will assemble at New York also provost marshal, retaining the early in August and be taken tc latter position until the end of the Oyster Bay to pay their respects t€ war. After the close of hostilities he the President and be formally pre- resumed his studies; was graduated sented by him to each other. ‘at the Harvard Law school, secured The location of the Portsmouth a large practice and managed the af- N Yard is one offering all the fairs of a number of important trust af ss of a Northern summer re- estates. Boston Wool Market. Traders ‘ e strengtl The Tokio correspondent of the! De as oe oe a. London Times says the Japanese im- | wont market darmg xe market. perial household has taken up half of ing of the present clip is assured. the Korean foreign loan. | Pulled wools are scarce. foreign wools Three trainmen were killed and two pre strong. The Ipnge in this market were probably fatally injured in a is about as follows: Ohio and Penn: freight wreck on the Iowa Central sylvania —XX and above, 36c; X 33@ railroad, near Richland, Iowa. j 31c; No. 1, 41@42c; No. 2, 42@43c; Mr. Rockhill, the American Minister] 12 unwashed, 28@30¢c: % ‘blood, un it ’ = ' washed, 35@36c Is blood, 36¢c; ‘at Peking, has cabled the State De-|yjgoq, 35¢; unwashed delaine, 29@30c: partment that the Chinese Govern- | ypmerchantable, 32@33c; fine washed ment is vigorously opposing the treat- delaine, 39@40c. Michigan—Fine un- ened boycott of American goods. | washed, 27@28¢c; 14 blood, unwashed, The salaries af the Russian pleni- | 3 : 34 blood, 34@35c; *% blood, TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. agree Drpao potentiaries have been fixed at $200 a | 32@33c. day each, besides anh allowance of $7,-! 500 for traveling and other expenses. Feud Ends With Fatal Result. The little Kanawha Navigation George Ritchgy, a farmer, surrend- Company, owner of the locks and dams | ered to Sheriff Allphin of Boone coun- in the Little Kanawha river, accepted | ty, at Hebron, Ky. and is held for the offer of the United States Govern- killing William Smith with a knife and ment of $75,000 for its entire holdings. | probably mortally wounding John Warner, Smith's father-in-law. The tragedy was the culmination of a feud. The coal and coke railroad running from Charleston to Elkins, W. Va., owned by Henry G..Davis and Senator | Stephen B. Elkins, has been sold to | the Vanderbilts, who intend to make it a trunk line through the north cen- tral portion of the State. John R. Drexel, of Philadeiphia, has bought the yacht Veglia, of 1,000 tons, | which belonged to the late Baron | Nathaniel De Rothschild. | White Man and Seven Chinese Killed. Beef Trust Reaching Out. | John V. Noel, who is in Washing-| Wiliam Dwyer and seven Chinese | ton, accompanied by Dr. Salvador | Were killed by an explosion at the | giant powder works ten miles from Praate, the Argentine consul at St.| Jakland Cal. The explosion occurred More than $3,000,000 in Klondike 2 : : gold, the biggest shipment of preci-| Louis, having just returned from the in the mixing house and z2ll the men ous metal ever received at Philadel- | Argentine republic, says the beef at work there were killed. Fire broke | out after the explosion, and unless it can be checked other explosions will | follow. looking to secure control of the en- back to the island. out, for he promised her immunity if she He fired at her, | evidently gave wheat on July 1 was 91.0 per cent, as compared with 93.7 per cent last month, and a 10-year average of 89.3 dory. | per cent. with- | — Paper Trust to Be Investigated. eat Judge J. V. Quarles, of the United lieving she was dead, he rowed away | States District court at Milwaukee, toward the mainland. | Wis,, announced that a special United Miss Morgan swam back to the is-{gtates Grand Jury would be summol- land, where she was thrown on the | og in September to meet in Milwau- beach by the waves in an exhausted | kee, Judge Quarles refused to make condition. She hid in the bushes and | known the matters the Grand Jury Is for two days suffered from heat and | especially summoned to investigate, exposure, until found by a woman hut it is said it will devote itself to and rescued from starvation. an inquiry into the affairs of the gen- McGill was caught at El Portvinei, | eral paper company, the so-called a little town on the road to Ceiba.| “paper trust.” His life was saved through the pres- i ence on the coast of President Benil- la, who was on an inspection tour. The Honduran warship Ta Tumbia was brought into service and the murderer placed aboard. put his ammunition would come back to the She started back and when in oar's length he struck her on the | head with an oar, stunning her. Be- School Teacher Kills Herself. Miss Ollie Furst, aged 27 years, a well-known Allegany county, (Md.) school teacher, and daughter of Mrs. Philadelphia and the late Alfred Furst of Barton, Md., committed suicide by shooting herself in the forehead, just after she had finished preparations for Fight Between Bandits and Posse in| going to Pen Mar to attend the meet- Kansas Costs Three Lives. ing of the State Teachers’ associa- Cc. S. Calhoun of Kansas City, an tion. No motive is given for the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railway deed. wd ' detective, was shot and instantly kill- Tor: Broweod. bi, ed at Cedarvale by two outlaws,| , Tires Drowned, who were shot down later by a posse | _ Three lives were lost by the sink- of citizens at Hewins, seven miles | D8 of the steam yacht Normandie from Coraville, close to the Oklahoma which was run down in the Hudson state line. One of the outlaws, Ed. | Iver off Dobbs Ferry by the Norweg- Madigan, of Ponca City, Okla., was ian tramp steamer Volund. Those killed instantly by the posse. The who perished were Miss Gladys Dodge other, William Chadburn, of Winfield, of New York, a guest aboard the Kan., was fatally wounded. vacht; the captain, William Storm of Madigan and Chadburn held up six Hyde Park, N. Y., and the engineer, traveling men at Winfield Sunday | Stewart Gracie of Brooklyn. Miss | | OFFICER AND OUTLAWS DEAD i! night. Calhoun met them at Cedar- | Dodge wore jewels valued at $5,000. vale, three days later and attempted Eo Se SE to arrest them when they opened fire. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Calhoun was instantly killed. A pos- se overtook the outlaws at Hewins| Count Cassini bade farewell to and in the fight which ensued Madi- Washington after seven years spent gan was killed and Chadburn fatally | there as Russia’s ambassador. shot. Tire caused $100,000 damage in the factory of the Ireland & Matthews * SENSATION IN COMMONS Manufacturing Company, at Detroit, —— Mich. The loss is covered by insur- Lord Roberts Says British Army | ance. Needs Bracing Un. John W. Wooten, a lawyer, was sentenced to Sing Sing for the alleged Field Marshal Lord Roberts creat- : stealing of a $1,000 check from David ed a sensation in the house of lords, when in a lengthy and well-consider- Rothschild , who is now serving ed speech he deiiberately express- sentence for wrecking the Federal ed his opinion as a practical soldier bank of New York City. that the military force of Great Baron Speck von Sternburg, the Britian was inadequate, imperfectly | German ambassador at Washington, trained and totally unfit to. uphold |and his wife sailed for Germany for Great Britain as a first-class power. Lord. Roberts did not blame the government, which he said was actu- ated by a national feeling, but he | transfer wagon, between the Lake scathingly attacked the people of | Shore and the Lake Erie stations, at England who, he said, showed no |Laporte, Ind, was made by two national feeling toward the military | highwaymen. =. antil danger arose. At Coalmont, Ind., Roll Cardwell, 35 rears of age, was called to the door of his home and shot to death by a person unknown. An offer of the Norwegian throne has been made to King Edward’s son- in-law, Prince Charles of Denmark. The matter is under consideration. A dispatch from St. Petersburg an- nounces that Vice Admiral Birileff has been appointed head of the Rus- sian admirality in succession. to Ad- miral Avellan, who resigned. ! a three months’ vacation. An unsuccessful attempt to rob the: United States Express Company’s BIG SALARIES REDUCED Morton Will Effect Large Saving for Equitable. Sweeping reductions in the salaries of various officials and employes of the Equitable Society were announced by Chairman Morton. The decreases will amount to 20 per cent on all salaries over $15,000 per annum, 15 per cent on the annual salaries be- tween $9,000 and $15,000, both in- clusive, and 10 per cent decrease from all salaries above $2,500 and be- low $9,000 per year. These changes become operative on August 1 next, and effect a saving of from $150,000 to $200,000 a year. In the first or 20 per cent class may | The navy deparfment is informed that the 16,000-ton battleship Kansas will be launched at the yard of the New York Shipbuilding Company at Camden, N. J., August 12. : Postmaster General George B. Cortel- you announced the appointment of Stevenson A. Williams, of Bel Air, as a member of the Republican Nat- ional committee for Maryland, to fill be included Chairman and Acting pei 3 Br 2 & | the vacancy caused by the resi i . atime Sos os 3 VE >) 3 esignatio President Morton and Second Vice | of former United States Senator Fa President Gage E. Tarbell | E. McComas Ey | CHARGED WITH GRAFTING iL Indictments Against County Officials In: Milwaukee. 3 Sixty-seven indictments against 25 | tpriet 00 he Lmnied States Dis- Bij - ; : at icago by . individuals, most of whom are former | H. Bethea. Ibi He i county officials, were handed down by | torney all the claims, amounting to the Milwaukee county, (Wis.) grand | $400,000, have been paid off with in- jury, in the municipal court. | terest. | Dowie = had all proceedings against him | John Alexander | bankruptcy dismissed tire beef output of that country. ravieff has resigned his posi- shief plenipotentiary for Rus- erenc the coming peace Cont | I'c Presid proclamati to settlement ervation in U | Nearly all of the indictments charge | | bribery, the amounts, it is i i having been paid to present ar county officials in connecticn for 1 erection of addition to the unty hospital several years The Shanghai correspondent of the London Morning sends received from Pekin that Great ain and the United States ha {0 prote Post ago. for FI” nes Ne: Dr. ver $ A .922992320919024292009% VAAMMMMAANAMWARANNAA = EERE 0 2