i ¥ Bo —_ DREYFUS GASE 15 CLOSED His Innocence Established and Army Rank Restored. RIOTOUS SCENE IN CHAMBER Rehabilitation of Dreyfus Gives Rise to Stormy Scenes Between Govern- ment and Opposition Defenders. Alfred Dreyfus was completely ac- quitted of the charges on which he was condemned as a traitor, dismiss- ed from the French army and im- prisoned on evil’s island, and regard- ing which France has been torn for years by the most bitter political and ARMENIANS SLAUGHTERED and Soldiers Were Upon by Tartars. At ([Etchmiadin, the ecclesiastical capital of Armenia, Tartars attacked the monastery and residence of the Armenian patriarch. The Tartars, who had hidden themselves in the Officers Fired surrounding hills opened fire and charged the monastery after night- fall. They were repulsed, but form- ed for a second a of infantry ttempt when a force and Cossacks arrived on the scene. The officers tried to per- suade the Tartars to desist from their attack, but the latter opened fire on the troops, wounding several of them. The Cossacks thereupon charged and dispersed the Tartars, killing one and wounding several. In the Zangisur district 300 Tartars racial agitation. His two-fold, the supreme court first an- nouncing its decision establishing the | entire innocence of the accused man, | and the ministry later deciding to | present an urgent bill in parliament | restoring Dreyfus to the army with advanced rank, and otherwise giving the government's most ample repara- tion. : The decision of the court wass a foregone conclusion, as exhaustive inquiries had completely demolished the fabric of the accusation against Dreyfus, showing that the real cul- prit was Major Count Esterhazy. The decision therefore annualled the con- demnation of the Rennes court mar- tial and ordered that the acquittal be posted and published throughout France. The bill to reinstate Dreyfus was passed by parliament 473 to 42, while | that for the restoration of Colonel Picquart received 477 27 negative votes. The scene of tumultuous disorder | which marked the enactment of the law restoring Alfred Dreyfus to the! army was followed by a bloody duel in which Under Secretary of State | Sarraut was dangerously wounded by | the sword of M. Pugliesi-Conti. The | duel assumed the aspect of a verit- able combat between the Government affirmative to | and the opposition, as M. Sarraut’s seconds were Ministers Clemenceau | and Thomson, while M. Pugliesi- | Conti’s were M. Millevoye and Gener- al Jacquet, who were drawn from the | elements which bitterly resist the | Government’s rehabilitation of Drey- | fus. Captain Alfred Dreyfus of the ar- tillery, a member of a wealthy He- | brew family of Alsace, where he was | born in 1859, was, on October 14, | 1894, arrested on the charge of com- | municating French military secrets to | a foreign power, | Two months later Dreyfus was | tried by court martial and found | guilty and January 5 he was publicly | degraded and deported to Devils Is- | land, near Cayenne, French Guiana, | there apparently to spend the re- | mainder of his life. | The friends and relatives of Drey- ful, notably his wife, always believed in his innocence and devoted all their energies tc the work of proving that he had been unjustly condemned. Colonel Picquart, when he became chief of the intelligence department of the French army in 1895, examined the documents in the proceedings against Dreyfus and questioned the | correctness of the proceedings and, continuing his investigations, formed | the opinion that the evidence pointed | to Major Count Esterhazy as being the guilty man. Picquart determined | to see that justice was done and there ensued a fight to preserve the honor | of the French army. Dreyfus, on November 15, 1897, charged Esterhazy with writing the | most incriminating document, but the | latter was acquitted by a court mar- tial in the following January. Corporations Fined. On the ground that their violation! of law in granting rebates on coal shipments was technical and not wil- ful and that, therefore, only a mode- | ‘rate penalty should be imposed, Chief Justice William J. Mills in the Unit- ed States court at Las Vegas, N. M., | imposed a fine of $3,000 on each count of the indictments against the Atchi- son, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway company, and the Colorado Fuel & | Iron company. A total fine of $15,- 000 and costs was imposed on each of the defendant companies. Year's Provision Exports. The advance statement of the ex- ports of provisions, issued by the bureau of statistics of the depart- ment of commerce and labor, shows the total value of provisions exported. lexclusive of live cattle, hogs and sheep, at the principal ports of the United States during June, 1906, was $15,365,278, against $13,553,014 in! June, 1905, and for the fiscal year | 1906, $191,056,535, against $152,530,~ 673 in 1905. Train Runs Down Family. A fast train on the Monongah di- vision of the Baltimore & Ohio rail- | road overtook Elijah Norris and his family at 9 o'clock at night on the M. R bree one mile south of] Clarksburg W. Va Norris and a daughter 5 "years old were killed in- | stantly. The mother, two little sons | and a little daughter were badly in- jurasd, and are in a critical condition. Fire supposed to be of incendiary origin destroyed the town of Lynn- | ville, Ind., causing a loss of $75,000. Twenty-two buildings were burned | and the town was practically wiped | out of existence. 2 Smalipox Appears at Colon. | Several cases of smallpox have de- veloped at Colon, but they have been confined to the laboring class. The! medical staff of the canal zone is isolating and quarantining the infest- | ed . district and hopes to stamp out the disease quickly. During maneuvers in the Baltic sea a Russian torpedo boat struck a mine sunk off Bjorko. The boat was de- molished, but the crew were saved. vindication is | | to restore | ment to flight and resumed the pil- | ranging in | others were drowned. | die. All | but all its American employes escap- lat $5,000 Mexican money. | schemes in | duce dividends. Hipches an Armenian village. A de- achment of police arrived and tried order but thie Tartars kill- ed the police captain, put the detach- lage which was continued until the arrival of troops sent from Tiflis. News has been received of horrible ravages by Turkish troops across the border in Turkish Armenia. Soldiers | who were collecting taxes are said to have indulged in frightful outrages. The population of the city of Van is represented to have been nearly de- stroyed by the Turkish troops who pulled down houses, attacked women and acted generally like wild beasts. SEVEN GIRLS DROWNED But One of Party Escapes Terrible Ending of Play of Children. Seven girls of Cedar Rapids, Ia., age from 7 to 16 years, were drowned while wading in Cedar river, only three blocks from home. | The smallest child slipped into a deep | hole, and in trying to rescue her six Ruth Klersey was the only one of the party to es- cape. The dead are: Lacille, Hazel, Gladys and Josie Sweeting; Ruth and Cora Coyle, and Clara Usher. Ruth Kiersey, the only survivor, said they were wading when little Lucille Sweeting slipped off a shelf | in the bottom into deep water. Hazel | Sweeting rushed after her, slipped | into the hole, and the five other girls | rushed one after the other into the | | hole trying vainly to save each other. Ruth Klersey then ran home and gave the alarm Four of the bodies were quickly re- | covered from the water, but it was | too late to resuscitate them. The | other bodies were recovered later. KILLLED BY CLOUDBURST Companies’ Property in Mexico Damaged. A cloudburst and landslide on July | 10 at Ocampo (Jesus Maria) Chihua- hua, Mex., almost completely destroy- | ed the city and killed seven or more | persons. Many others were injured | and it is expected some of them will! the killed and injured are | Mexicans. i The W. C. Greene Company's of- fices and corral were swept away, American loss is estimated The Wat- terson Company, the only other con- | cern owning extensive interests in the camp, suffered a loss of about | $15,000, its reduction works and of- fices being destroyed. Socorro, N. M., experienced an earthquake that broke dishes. It was followed by two lighter shocks later in) the day. A shock was experienced at Socorro about two weeks ago. A | slight shock also was felt at Silver | City, N. M, ed. The company's Laundrymen Indicted. Thirty-nine laundry companies and laundry proprietors were indicted in- dividually by the gramd jury at Cin- cinnati on the charge of maintaining a combination in restraint of trade. Eighteen of these were also indicted as forming an organization in re- straint of trade. These include all members of the Laundry Exchange, who are indicted on 39 individual in- dictments. The indicted companies and individuals appeared in court through their attorney and arranged | to give bond later. | RUSSIAN GENERAL SHOT DEAD Assassin Fired Three Shots from the Sidewalk. | Advices received from Peterhof are that Gen. Kozloff was assassinated there by a well-dressed man, believed to be either a university student or | professor. The general was riding | along the street when the assassin | suddenly drew a revolver from his | coat pocket as he was standing on the | sidewalk and fired three shots point | blank at Kozloff, all of them striking | him in the body and causing almost | 7 instant death. The assassin stood, | calmly watching his victim, until ar- | rested. He declined to make any | | statement. THREE BURNED TO DEATH | | Drunken Foreigners Upset Lamp and Eight Houses Are Burned. During a drunken revel among | Slavonian laborers at mill H, of the .ehigh Portland Cement Company at Fogelsville, Pa., an oil lamp was up- set, setting fire to boarding house No. Fraudulent Mining Schemes. | Consul General George E. Anderson, | in a report to the bureau of manu- facturers, from Rio Janeiro, warns the public against fradulent mining Brazil. While there are a number of reputable mining and! dredging companies operating in Bra- | zil for gold and diamonds, he says fraud has been practiced on an ex- tensive Scale by promoters of com- panies that have neither land nor | other accessories necessary to pro- | trades: KANSAS’ LL GUTEMALA LOSES IN FIGHT Two Thous nd Killed, Wounded and Captured. UNCLE SAM'S PEACE PROPOSED Both Guatemala and Salvador Agree to United States’ Proposal for Conference. in Principle A message ‘from San Salvador, dated July 15, says: Saturday night the Salvadorean amy again attacked | the Guatemalan forces at Platanar and obtained a victory over them, the | Guatemalans suffering a loss of 2,-| 000 men in killed, wounded and pris- | oners. The Guatemalan army, which in- vaded by way cf Sante Fe, was re- pulsed by the Honduran army. Honduras is making common cause | with Salvador. | The fighting has been in progress for the last two days with the ad- vantage on the part of the attacking force, so far at least, inasmuch as the Guatemalan army is fighting a rear guard action and is slowly re- treating. Nicaragua, it is reported, has is- sued a warning to Guatemala that if she does not respect Nicaraguan ter- | ritory that nation will take a hand in | the strife. Both Guatemala and Salvador have accepted the tender of the good offi- ces of the United States Government | looking to a settlement of their diff- erences. This information is official dispatches conveyed in received at the State Department, Washington frome the American diplomatic representa- tives in Guatemala and Salvador, an- | nouncing that the two belligerent | countries have availed themselves of the tender of the good offices of the! United States looking to their ap- proaching each other in a conference having in view an adjustment of their | differences, the cessation of hostili- | | ties and the bringing about of peace. The advices to the State Depart- ment, it is stated, make no reference to the question of declaration of war, | regarding which President Bonilla of | Honduras announced that Honduras ! | had made no declaration of war and | that | without previous declaration,” ‘Guatemala invaded territory MECHANICS NEEDED of Rebuilding San Francisco Makes Labor Scarce. San Francisco is arising from its ashes with surprising rapidity, and building is progressing on all sides. The labor situation is exciting much Work interest and inquiry, and the Cali- | | fornia Promotion Committee, after | conferences with employers and em- ployes through the Building Trades Council ascertained that in all trades | except the building trades the demand | is fully supplied with the exception of | laborers, several thousand such men being in immediate demand for rail- | way construction and debris removal. In the building trades conditions are different. Mechanics are needed in | all departments of the building indus- | try, principally in the following | Plumbers, electrical workers, gas | and electric fixture hangers, hodcar- | riers, bricklayers, cement workers plasterers, lathers, carpenters, sheet | metal workers and elevator goastrus. | tors. TWELVE STUDENTS KILLED Persian Malcontents Are Subsiding Since thes Authorities Have Be- come Active. A sharp street fight occurred in Teheran, Persia, between the troops! and a procession of students mal- contents, in which 12 of the students and two soldiers were killed. The activity of the authorities has | tended somewhat to restore public confidence with the result that the shops were reopened. The mullahs, however, are still in the great mos- que. The opinion prevails that the true state of affairs is hidden from the shah. BUMPER WHEAT CROP Seventy-Five Million Bushels Is Lat- est Estimate of Harvest. Reports from points throughout the | State indicate that the wheat crop in Kansas is turning out much better | than was expected up to the time of harvest. It is too early to make a final estimate for the State, but the | threshing thus far shows that the | Kansas crop will not be greatly differ- ent from that of 1905 in quantity and will be better in quality. The indi- | cations are that the crop will exceed ! 75,000,000 bushels. The reports from Oklahoma indicate | that in some sections the outturn is | not up to early expectations, and the | crop of the two Territories probably | will not exceed 25,000,000 bushels, as | | compared with 30,000,000 bushels pre- | viously estimated. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. The Republican state convention of { North Dakota was dominated by the | stalwart faction of the party. | state ticke | by Governor E. | nominated for re-election. A full nominated, headed Y. Sarles, who was was Confederate soldiers of General John H. Morgan's command are now | receiving pay from the Federal gov- | ernment for horses taken from them when they surrendered. The amount each receives is $125. Henry county, sions, Clay Evans, of Hamilton former commissioner of pen- and recently American consul ! general in London, was nominated for governor by the Tennessee Republi- can State convention. D. C. Swab was nominated for railroad commis sioner. | what the result of the | Salva | term will expire | less would have | visited the Chicago stock | Japan, | at Cronstadt, Ru | ated for | the admiral. | Since the | also the const { county, LEADER SLAIN Ex-President of Salvador Killed by Guatemalan Troops. Regalado, former president of Sal- vador, and the leader of the Salva- dorean troops in the present conflict with Guatemala, has been killed in battle. The announcement of his death reached the state department at Washington through a dispatch from United States Minister Merry at San Salvador. The dispateh stated that Regalade was killed ‘in the last movement of the Salvadorean troops against the Gautemalans, but did not indicate battle was. Thomas Regalado was president of dor from 15%9 to 1903. A pro- vision of the Salvadorean constitu- tion prevented him from having a second term immediately following his first. but he was a candidate to succeed President KEsealon, whose ext year, and doubt- been elected, as he idol who had achieved a soldier. WILSON VISITS CHICAGO was a popular much fame as Secretary of Acricuiture inspects Stock Yards and Packing Houses. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson vards and packing houses and expressed him- self satisfied with what he saw. { When asked for an expression as | to the result of his investigation Secretary Wilson said: ‘When inspeeted article of meat, Uncle Sam will stand for its charaeter, but Uncle Sam will not put that seal on' any last year’s bird’s nest, ncither upon any old. rag found I have held my packers and they fullly understand the “situation. Ample time w.ll be given the packers to arrange their | operations for complying with the new | law, and the new inspectors will be | appointed when certified by the civil service commission.” ROJESTVENSKY FREE Russian Commander Is Acquitted. Four’ Officers Condemned. Admiral Rojestvensky, on the enemy began July 4, was a quitted after the court had deliber- nearly 10 hours. Four cers of the torpedo boat destroyor Bedovi, who were placed on trial with were found guilty of ha ing premeditatedly surrendered Bedovi and. all four wer to death. On account of offi- the sentence to vice. quested to commute their dismissal from the Admiral Rojestvens: vas ac- | quited on the ground that Te was not in his fuli senses. FINED RAILROAD $40,000 & Alton for Rebating. Judge Landis in the United States District Court sentenced the Chi & Alton railroad, which was re | Chicago convicted of granting illegal rebates! | at Kdnsas City, to pay a fine of $20,- 000 on each of two counts, or a to- | tal of $40, 04 00. John Faithorn and Fred A. Waan, former officials of t also convicted, were sentenced to; | pay a fine of $5,000 each on two | | counts, or a total of 319,000 each. The specific charge | were convicted was on which they that they had] | given to the Schwarzschild & Sulz- | | berger Company a rebate of $1 a car | on all shipments from the Kansas City plant of the packing company. Another Wage An advance of 5 per cent in wages in cotton mills of 30 cities and towns of southern Massachusetts and Rhodz Island went into effect July 9. About 15,000 operatives are benefitted. inception of the upward movement in mill wages early in the vear 165,000 textile operatives in thea New England states have had thoir pay advanced 5 to 14 per cent. Shortage of $145,000. Revelation of the financial embar- rassment of Alexander & Alexander, one of the largest firms of cotton fan- tors in the state of G ria develop- ed discrepancies of about $145,005. following the disappearance of Thomas W. Alexander, Lead of the firm. The Geor: Railrcad bank Advance | loses $115,000. Canned Refuse. After an investigation extending ver several weeks the Massachusetts State Board of Health reported that in many instances the canned meats put up by Chicago packers and sold in Massachusetts are made of rafuse or are filled with boric presarvatives. Ramsey Announces New Road. The consolidation of the Indust railroad and the Lorain & Ashland | road, now being built, is announced by Joseph Ramsey, of Pittsburg, and ruction of a road south to the Ohio river. Sheriff Hammil, of Pierce Wisconsin was killed and City Marshal Isaacs. of Prescott, Wis, seriously Deputy injured by Italian laborer | near Prescott. Eight Killed. i A train of trolley cars westbound | £70; Lockport. N. Y., on the lines of the AN rionarc ant Railway Company a due at Tonawanda at 9:15 p. m., ran into an open switch at just east of Martinsville, and crashed into ‘a trolley {freight train of se ight cars which wera lying on the siding waiting for the passenger train to go by. Eight passengers were killed outright, and a score injured, some of whom may ven f die. the seal of Uncle Sam is placed upon any in an alley. I] last meeting with the | whose trial | charge of surrendering to the | after the battle of the Sea of | bh >fore a court-martial | extenuating | ; circumstances the emperor will be re- Gets Limit of Law e road who were | was: | a siding | motor and a | THIED TO KILL AN ADMIRAL Commander of Black Sea Fleet Is Shot through the Lungs. TROOPS BEING CONCENTRATED Fear of General Uprising Shown in Activity of Military Throughout Empire. Vice Admiral Cliouknin, commander of the Black Sea fleet, who was shot by a sailor while taking a walk in th2 garden of his villa, died the next day. Vice Admiral Chouknin has been blamed for his severity and it was to his treatment of the crews of the ship { under his command that the mutiny | en board the battleship Kniaz Potem- kin in June and July last year was at- iributed. An attempt was made on the life of the Admiral February 9 last. A wo- mag appeared at his official residence uring the afternoon of that day and obit in her card, saying she was the dz aughter of a Rear Admiral at Sb. Petersburg. On entering the Admir- | al's ofiice the woman drew a rapid- fire pistol and fired four shots at him, cach bullet reaching the mark. As she turned to escape the woman was killed by the orderly on duty at | Chouknin’s door. The crime beyond | doubt was political. Some time elapsed before the po- | lice were able to establish the identi- ty of the woman who attempted Ad- miralk Chouknin’s life, but it finally | became known that she was a He- | brew named Cecilia Shabad, 25 years old. The preparations which sian War the Rus- Office has been making at all the principal cities to meet an | armed revolutionary movement prove to haye been very elaborate. At Riga the garrison is divided into three divisions of two battallons of infantry, .half a company of Cossacks and three machine guns each, to pre- vent the invasion of the city from its | three open sides, namely the canal, | the dam and the river Duna. Similar { plans have been drawn up by every commander of a garrison or city. PURE FOOD FINES SWELL The Western Pennsylvania Counties Have Collected $72,000. Pure Food Commissioner Warren has turned over to the State Treasury $1,290 fines collected in Allegheny { county from dealers who were con- | victed of selling adulterated oleo- margarine, codfish, olive oil and milk. Commissioner Warren says that since the recent crusade against doctored meats in this State 24 West- ern Pennsylvania counties have paid | $72,600 in fines for selling adulter- ated and doctored products of the big meat packers. COAL STRIKE SETTLED | i Increases of 5.55 Per Cent Allowed in | Central Pennsylvania Field. Virtua} ago | EN settlement of the strike of ! miners in the Centra Pennsylvania i bituminous field began last spring ! was made in Philadelphia, at a con- ference between representatives of | the United Mine Workers of America {and the operators in the field. + The principal terms of the settle- ment are: A 5.55 per cent increase in es for all mine workers over the scale which existed before the strike; application of the check-off system to m:ners, but not to laborers. | Jett Takes the Blame. At Beattyville, Ky., Curtis Jett | testified in the trial of Hargis and | Callahan on the charge of murdering | Lawyer Marcum that he, Jett, killed | Marcrum. Jett took ail the blame up- | on himself and said he killed Mar- cum because he was his enemy, Jett admitted that. the the murder was committed was given | him by Seidon Hargis, a brother of Judge Hargis, but that he killed Mar- cum of his own volition. Armor Contract Divided. Armor plate contracts for the bat- tleships Michigan and North Caro- lina were equally divided by Secretary Bonaparte between the Carnegie companies. Armor plate for ona ship will be furnished by the pistol with which | | i (8 | { Midvale and | | Midvale people, while the contract for! the other was awarded to the Car- negie and Bethlehem companies. Boston Wool Market. The wool market is moderately ac- tive, with deep interest manifested from all classes of the trade. Natur- ally the attention of the trade is turned toward the new clip. Prices ‘are held firm. Traders are remem- bering in conection with the increas- ed demand for wool that the coming Australian wool clip is reported as the largest ever shown in that continent. Territory wools are taken steadily. Pulled wools are in constant demand. Foreign grades are neglected. Prices run as follows: Ohio and Pennsylvan- ia, XX and above, 33 to 34c; X, 31 ite. 32e¢; No. '1, 37 to 38¢; No. 2, 37 to 38c; fine unwashed, 32 to 33c; Three-eighth blood, unwashed, 32 to { 33c; three-eighth blood, 33c: half- 33c; unwashed delaine, 27 to fine washed delaine, 35 to 36c. Immigration Record. More than 1,000,000 persons enter- | blood, | 28¢; ed the United States through the El- { lis Island station during the fiscal | year ending July 30 last. The exact number was 1,062,054, an increase of 199,075 as compared with the pre- ceding year. The largest number of immigrants of one nationality was 222,606 from Italy. The Hebrews were second with 125,000. A total of more than $19,000,000 in cash was | brought in by the immigrants. | | i | | | | | | UNCLE SAM WILL BE CAINER Carnegie . and Bethlehem, Companies Wiil Have to Lower Prices ‘0 Get Federal Work. Armor plate of the highest quality is to be furnished for the battleships South Carolina and Michigan by the Midvale Company at $346 a ton, which is below the cost of plate that is be- ing placed on battle-ships now in coastruction. The Midvale people will get the contract for the plating of both ships, and the LR and Bethichem plants will soon have to close unless they get orders {rom abroad. Each bid was a surprise to the ordinance officers of the navy. The Carnegie and Bethlehem companies for the first time said they would not ask the Government to pay royalties. The bids submitted by them were net prices. "he three companies made big cuts under the bids made by them a little more than a year ago. The Mid- vale people dropped 52 a ton on pres- ent prices, Carnegie $97 and Bethle- hem $62. These figures are on class A armor, which includes the heaviest plates. On class B armor Midvale dropped $48, Carnegie $73 and Bethle- hem $62. On class C Midvale made a reduction of 344, Carnegie $41 and Bethiehem $30. The blds were as follows: Carnegie Steel Compan, 7,328 tons, aggregate bid, $2,733,560, which was upon a basis of ih a ton for the bulk of the armor. Bethlehem Steel Company, 7,328 tons, aggregate bid, $2,813,568, upon a basis of $381 a ton or all the armor except a small amount used for bolts and nuts. Midvale Steel Company, 7,328 tons, aggregate bid, $2,555,470, based upon $345 a ton for the bulk of the armor except bolts and nuts. The bid of the Midvale Company is thus $178,090 less than the bid of the Carnegie Company, its nearest com- petitor. CROPS ABOVE THE AVERAGE Government Report Shows Increase In Acreage and Marked Improve- - ment in Condition. The crop reporting board of the bureau of statistics of the department of agriculture finds, from the reports of the correspondents and agents, of the bureau, as follows. Preliminary returns show the acre- age of corn planted to be about 95,- 535,000 acres, an increase of about 1,524,000 acres, or 1.6 per cent. as compared with the estimate of the acreage planted last year. The av- erage condition of the growing crop on July 1 was 87.5, as compared with 87.3 on July 1, 1905, 86.4 at the cor- responding date in 1904, and a 10 year average of 86.4. The average condition of wheat on July 1 shows an improvement over the condition June 1. The acreage of potatoes, excluding sweet potatoes, is less than that of last year by about 36,000 acres, or 1.3 per cent. The average condition on July 1 was 91.5, as compared with 91.2 on: July 1, 1905. Can Make Their Mail Boxes. Postmaster General Cortelyou has issued an order to go into. effect August 1, rescinding the regulation under which patrons of rural mail routes are compelled to purchase boxes from one of the 200 listed man- ufacturers. Patrons of rural routes will be permitted to construct their own boxes, provided they conform to requirements. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Drydock Dewey has reached Philip- pines after a perilous voyage. Harry Thaw issued a statement in which he denies he is insane. It is expected that Japan will open Dalny to international trade the be- | ginning of September. Evasion of law by corporations was | shown at the Cleveland hearing in oil prosecution. A message from Rio Janeiro, says: The revolutionists in the state of Mat- to Grosso have occupied the capital of the state, Guyaba, murdered the presi- { dent of the state and seized the government. Russian Cashier Robbed. Ten armed men attacked the cash- ier of the Vistula railway, who was proceeding to the State bank to de- posit the day’s receipts. He was ac- companied by an attendant and two soldiers. The assailants stopped the carriage, shot the soldiers dead and got off with $50,000. The cashier es- caped, saving $400,000. Georgia Negro Lynched. About 100 heavily armed men took Edward Pearson, a negro, from Deputy Sheriff Fields at Swainsboro, Ga., carried him to the Canoodhen swamp and lynched him. The night before Pearson was found by Miss Maude and Ida Durnen hiding under their bed. Brazil Reduces Tariff. Secretary Root’s proposed visit to South America has begun to bear fruit. Brazil has just announced a new tariff, which reduces the duty on flour and many other American ex- ports 20 per cent, and is designed to promote the development of commer- cial interchange between this coun- try and Brazil. Small Nations Clash. Hostilities between Salvador and Guatemala have broken out anew on the border between these countries, where peace was supposed to have been established pending a settlement of the trouble between the two coun- tries. Leslie M. Combs, the Ameri- can minister to Guatemala, who was on his way to the United States to assist in settling the difficulties be- tween Salvador and Guatemala, has been ordered back to Guatemala City. n Whi mis: Disease Cons Pinkt Je It: break. over a: pi a the a vousng 1 woul severe health. “We advise table ( and sc better two m suffer Morris 85 KE. I An the v sailed seas. voyag 16 n voyaeg Canto the w Will Cof "y that from they fee 1 up Cc eatin coulc and I ha alon; alma stom if 7 little walk “aq and as tc affid: Post my | thin, incre welg not ach Why dige; at fi had ing one Post Co., Tr of ¢ and son. fam Wel