e PERSONS DROWNED | EE i HRN Two Fishing Boats Are Struck by | a Squall and Turn Over. | | 1 RAN ONTO TREACHEROUS BAR The Vessels Were Returning to An- | glesea, N. J., With a Party } i of Pleasure Seckers. Two vachts coming in from the fishing banks capsized on Hereford Inlet bar, off Anglesea, N. J., and so far 2s can be learned eight persons | Jost their lives. There were 32 per- | sons on one yacht, of whom seven | were lost and 12 on the other, all of | whém but one were saved. That not more fell victims to the rough sea was due to the heroism of | Captain Henry S. Ludlam, of the! Hereford Inlet Life Saving station, and a crew of five men. The drowned: Frederick Fisher, Sr. | Philadelphia; Herbert Hammell, Lansdale, Pa.; Walter Snyder, Phila- delphia; John Fogarty, Haverford, Pa.; J. ovwarkey, Philadelphia; Jerry | Ponohue, Philadelphia; unknown man. Missing: Samuel Lodner, Wood-, bury, N. J. Anglesea is one of the favorite fishing places along the Southern New Jersey coast and has seldom had a | dusier Sunday. Every excursion train from Philadelphia and other nearby | points came down crowded with visit- | Organs of whom intended spending the®day in fishing. The two that got into trouble were | the sloop vacht Nora, which had on board Captain Herbert Shivers, - his mate and 30 passengers, and the sloop | Alvin B.. with a party of 12. The ; Nora had gone to the fishing banks at Five Fathom bank, about 10 miles out io sea early in the day. When the wind began to freshen Captain Shivers decided it was time 10 make port, and with the assistance of a small gasoline engine and a good spread of canvas he had made good time towards Anglesea. As the sloop bowled along the wind was getting gtiffer and the sea rougher. Captain Qhivers., from long experience, knew how treacherous is the Hereford bar and approached it with his usual cau- tion. “fhe sand obstruction is about a mile from shore. Just as he was about to go over, a heavy squall struck the Nora. Despite the efforts of fhe cap- tain the craft heeled over and was hit by a huge wave. The wind and the | wave coming together was more than the vacht could stand, and it turned | eompletely over, throwing the 32 oc- eupants into the sea. WIFE AND CHILDREN SLAIN Husband Finds Bodies Still and House on Fire. While Samuel Pearce, an independ- ent oil operator and farmer of Venice, ‘Washington county, Pa., was driving his sister. Fanay Pearce, to the Can- onsburg station of the Washington pranch of the Panhandle railroad, shortly after.4 o'clock Sunday after- nova, ail unknown man entered his home, killed Mrs. Pearce; two children | one gn infant in a cradle, set fire to the house, is supposed to have robbed | §t ana then escaped. A 32-calibre re- wolver was used. alr. Pearce reached his home from | the railroad station shortly after 6 o'clock. He made the horrible dis-| eovery of the triple murder, gave the | alarm and an armed and determined | posse of farmers searched the woods | of that section for the muderer. Eimer Dempster, - a nineteen-year- | old negro, who lives about 200 yards | from the Pearce home, was arrested | by Coroner Sipe, of Washington | county, and Burgess Conley, of Mec- | Donald, on suspicion of having been | responsible for the murder. | After having been sweated merci- | Pessly by the two officers Dempster | eonfessed that he had entered the Pearce house during the absence of the father and committed the crime. Warm Three hundred Turkish troops at- qacked and dispersed a Greek band at Rakova, near Monastir. Fiverof the »and were killed. HUIDEKOPERS SENTENCED Meadville Men Fined $1,000 Each for | Fencing in Government Lands. A. C. Huidekoper and E. C. Huide- | koper, of Meadville, Pa., and W. 0.4 ¢ark. of North Dakota, who was their manager, were sentenced by Judge Amidon in the United States Court for fencing government land in | connection with the Little Missouri | Horse Company's ranch in the west- | ern part of the state. | The Huidekopers were sentenced to | pay fines of $1,000 each and clark | was fined $300 and to serve an im- | prisonment in the county jail for 24 | hours. | DEATH FOR MUTINEERS | Biack Sea Fleet Urising Has Usual | Grim Sequel. A naval court-martial at Sebastopol | pussed sentences upon the seamen | who were arrested for complicity in the mutiny of the Russian Black Sea feet of November, 1905. Four men were coudemned to death, one to life | servitude, 32 to varying terms of pen- al servitude and 50 to imprisonment. Six were acquitted. Say They Won't Die. | Heralding their presence with blasts af trumpets, four long-haired ‘‘mis- stonaries’” of the Israelites of the House of David, a new religious sect, are attempting Lo secure converts at New Castle, Pa. They came from Michigan and be- lieve they will not die, being purified from sin. Three men were fatally hurt in a | wreck on the Toledo, Walhonding | Valley & Ohio railroad, near Warsaw, ° | led with | they used. ler to the Moroccan throne, STORM AT ST. LOUIS One Man Blown From a Wagon Kifled While Excursionists Have Narrow Escape. A terrific wind and rain storm struck St. Louis and vicinity. Lightn- ing started seven fires in different parts of the city. A negro, name un- known, was blown irom his under a passing fire engine and was | blown | killed. Electric down, sheds and wires were a few frame houses were demolished and a number of peo- | ple were hurt by the debris. The excursion steamer Liberty, fill- pleasure-seekers, caught in the storm near Alton, 111, was driven through the Missisippi river at uncon- trollable speed and dashed into a dike | Rocking and | Missouri side. with the terrorized on the toppling passen- gers huddled in the cabin, the prow | of the boat was forced on the gov- ernment dike while the force of the wind hurled chairs into the river from the deck and shattered the cabin win- dows. The boat held firmly however, and when the abated sufficiently boat Lucia transhipped the passengers and landed them in Alton. on the storm had ORDERS DOWIE TO SETTLE Court Says “Elijah IL." burse His Former Backer. The California supreme court hand- ed down a decision on an appeal | made by John Alexander Dowie from a judgment of the superior court order- | ing him to pay Attorney Hugh Craig | | $1,764.90 with interest from 1888. The was | judgment of the lowei court aflirmed. Craig advanced money for Dowie to conduct a revivalistic meeting at the Grand opera house in San Francisco in 1888, for which Dowie agreed to re: imburse him from tife proceeds of the collection. The proceeds did not come up to expectations and Craig i brought suit to recover the money. RECORD YEAR FOR COKE Value Increased, Too, Because of De- mand for Pig lron. Not only was the amount of coke manufactured in the United States . e Oi - . during 1905 greater than in any pre- vious year, but the percentage of in- | that of | crease in production .over previous years was larger. The United States geological survey | will soon make public a report on the | subject in which it is shown that the coke production during the vear was over 32,000,000 short tons, an increase of 36.22 per cent. The value increased at a greater rate, this being due, it is said, | to the extraordinary but legitimate de- mand created by the unprecedented production of pig iron throughout the { United States. COLOR LINE AT RESORT Scuthern People Object to With Negroes at Atlantic City. Men helding $10,000,000 of beach- | front property at Atlantic City, issued | formal notice to all colored help that! they must give up bathing in the surf with visitors, and the: hint is conveyed that there will be wholesale discharg- | es unless the suggestion is obeyed.- Southern visitors are given as re- | sponsible for the notice, as they have | threatened to cease patronizing the city unless the negro is barred the privilege of the surf in any section The city has a section for the negroes and the negro life guard, but they will not use it. . 300 SLAIN IN BATTLE. Sultan's Trooos Defeat Forces of the Moroccan Pretender. A serious engagement has occurred between the forces under the pretend- Bu Ha- mara, and the Sultan’s forces, near Mulaya. The fighting continued 24 hours and resulted in the pretender being defeated. Three hundred of the participants were killed and many were wounded. The Snltan’s troops after the battle | with rebels’ bayonets, as district on their paraded the heads stuck | trophies of the victory. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Great Britain has decided te build and | ex-i pend $34,000,000 in strengthening its | three more Dreadnaughts navy. Miners and overators of the Fifth Ohio sub-district reached an ment al Wheeling, thereby ending a long strike. Judge Landis decided John Alexan- | der Dowie did not own Zion City and the property was placed in the hands | of a recciver. Three men were killed in the yards of the Erie railroad in Jersey City, when a spreading Tail sent a fast freight train plunging down an em- bankment. Disappointed because their parents would not permit them to Gustave Kathke, aged 19, and Miller, a girl of 18, committed suicide together by jumping into the Delaware | river at Philadelphia. The court has definitely decided that the hearing of the suit of Coun- tess Anna de Castellane against her husband, Count Boni, for divorce, shall be heard October 17th or Octob- er 24th, if the parties are not ready lon the first date mentioned. George V. Reynolds, Harry Brown and John Reynolds, all young men, were killed by a Frisco train near Puisa, O. 'T. Midshipman K. B. Killduff of the Fourth class at the Annapolis Naval Academy died at the academy hospi- tal from peritbnitis following an oper- ation for appendicitis. Miss Ma¢ Klemmer of Brooklyn, Miss Bertha Smith of East New York and George Lapp of Williamsburg were drowned on Lake Hopatcong by the capsizing of a rowboat off Halsey Island. and wagon | dike, | the government Must Reim-! * EVOLUTION 15 DELAYED Reign of Terror Inaugurated in the Czar’'s Realm. LEADERS ARE DISHEARTENED. Try to Conceal Facts—Reports of Disaffection in Army Are Grossly Exaggerated. Neither a general strike nor an armed uprising will take place in Russia in the near future if the lead- ers of the revolutionary movement have their way, but a reign of terror | has been inaugurated in the Czar’s capital. Almost within the shadow of the | great palace in Peterhof eight govern- ment spies were found dead one | morning and no clue has been found | to identify the assassins. The men in every instance had been stabbed or beaten to death. Information reached the minister | of the interior that extensive agrarian uprisings have begun in the govern- ments of Moscow and Tver. The au- thorities are imprisoning socialists and revolutionists in the endeavor to quell the disturbances. More than | G00 arrests have already been made. Advices show that in several vil- lages, where the manifesto of the duma has been distributed, the people have voted to refuse to pay taxes. To avoid being cut off from tele- | graphic communication with the coun- try and with the outside world, as it | was during the big strike last’ year, ! the government has recently estab- lished many wireless stations. There is no question of the fact that the leaders are greatly disheart- ened. While they try to conceal it, the fact remains that the reports of disaffection in the army have been grossly exaggerated, and no one knows this better than the revolu- | tionists. The minister of marine has sent | telegraphic orders to the commanders | | of Russian warships in foreign ports, | ordering them to return to Kronstadt on account of the unrest existing | among the sailors. | It is learned from a usually trust- | worthy source that the principal item | in the Czar’s reform program, which is now being drawn up, will be ex- tensive land grants to the peasants, | on easy terms of payments. | In l.odz there was an outbreak, | which was suppressed, but which re- FIGHTING WITH FANATICS infantry and Constabulary Attacked by Pulijanes. Colored A detachment of constabulary Lieut. Williams commanding, en- countered a ‘band of 600 Pulajanes near Buraen on the island of Leyte Sunday morning. Lieut. Worswick, 12 privates and Civilian Scout MMe- Bride were killed. The constabulary were driven back. The Pulajanes secured 14 rifles and two revolvers. The bodies of Wor- swicl, McBride and tem privates were recovered. Reinforcements of con- stabulary have been sent from the nearest station. A detachment of the Twenty-fourth colored infantry and a company of native constabulary were attacked by a horde of hundreds of Pulijanes while on the trail between the towns of Toloss and Damami, Island of Leyte, and a desperate battle took place, re- sulting in the routing of the fanatics with a loss of 50 killed and more than 60 wounded. Only one sergeant of the constabuiary was wounded. Captain McMaster of the Twenty- fourth, and Major Neville, of the con- stabulary, were in pursuit of the na- tives who cut up the constabulary in the first fight and killed Lieutenant Worswick and: Scout McBride and 12 men. Confident of the themselves after victory of the auy before, the Jula- janes swarmed from the jungle and the engagement became general. A large number of the enemy in the lead tried to rush in upon the troops and overwhelm them by force of numbers and fight in close action with bolos, but Captain McMasters, realizing the value of shock upon the fanatics, ordered his regulars to fire a volley, and before the natives could cross the intervening space, they were struck by volleys {rom the magazines, fol- { lowed by a steady fire from the con-| stabulary. The colored troops separated and the constabulary in columns of two, went forward and deployed for the charge. ers had the desired effect and Pulajanes turned and fled in wild dis-| order. BRYAN’S RIDER ADOPTED Inter-Parliamentary Union Amended Treaty. William J. Bryan's proposed rider to the model arbitration treaty discussed at a session of the inter- national council of the Inter-parlia- | mentary union at London and result- Their slaughter of the lead-| the | Adopts was, | still | Bathing | agree- | marry, | Ella | sulted in the burning of a factory |ed in its being recast, as follows. | with loss of $40,000. “If a disagreement should arise, ee | which is not included in those sub- HANGED ON ISLAND | mitted to arbitration, the contracting a | parties shall not resort to any act of Condemned Man Spirited Away From hostility before they separately or Mok Gy. Sheriff | jointly invite, as the case may necessl: i 2 y Srivt. | tate, the formatiag of an international William Lee, the colored youth who commission. of inguiry or mediation | was sentenced to death in Baltimore of one or more friendly powers, this | three weeks ago for assaulting two | requisition to take place, if necessary. women in Somerset county, Md., and |i, accordance with article eight of | who had been threatened with lynch | phe Hague convention, providing for DE ll > | a peaceful seftleraent of international : y Xs 5 | conflicts.” He hen SS After speeches by former Austrian ang Vas ’Qer'y. that had threatened to burn Lee at the The mob. Sheriff Brown apjeared in Balti more late in the afternoon, placed his | prisoner aboard a steam >1®@ and sailed | down the bay. He took with him a | gallows which had been borrowed from | | Baltimore count. NEW BRICK. TRUST FORMED $10,000,000 Merger Absorbs Fourtsen Plants—Two in Ohio. | Barly next morning the steamer Announcement was made that brick appeared off Smith's island, the pris- | plants in Findlay, O., Kansas s City, | oner was taken ashore and the scaff- Kan. Chanute, Kan., West Superior, been brought from Baltimore for that | Chicago, Kansas City. Mo., Philadel purpose. The culprit, accompanied by | phia, Washington, Toledo, Cleveland, his spiritual adviser, was led up the Minneapolis and Omaha, will be merg- scaffold, the noose was adiusted and eq into the Hydraulic Press Brick the execution was quickly over. Company, of St. Louis. under the Lee confessed hi: crime. | name of the Absorbing Company. The — | merger includes 14 companies. The capital stock of the St. Louis Acting Secretary Newberry execut- | company wili be increased from $3. ed contracts for building the twin |?500,000 to $10,000,000, and exchanged battleships Michigan and South Caro- | or the stock of the other companles. . lina. The awards were made some- | time ago. The Michigan is to be built | by the New York Shipbuilding Com- pany at Camden, N. J., and the South Carolina at Cramps shipyard, Phila Contracts for New Battleships. Premier Stolypin made official dec- laration that the Russian government will suppress revolution with a strong arm before it enters on any reform | delphia. | program. | CLOUDBURST IN FRANCE FORGED U. P. CERTIFICATE One Calling for 50 Shares of Has Been Discovered. Fifteen Killed, Sixty Wounded and Property Damage Is $1,000,000. a: A terrible cloudburst in the region Discovery of a forged certificate for Yor N ay 1 a rang 20 shares of common stock of the jof Moni Cenis tunpne caused great {jon Pacific ratlroad was announced loss of life and property. Almost the | phy George W. Rly, secretary of the entire village oi Fourneaux, at the New York stoek exchange. The c2r- French end, was destroyed | tificate is numbered 9658 and is dated Twenty-two houses were completely | September 14, 1905. It is in the name demolished and 15 p-rsons were kill- | of Marun J. Hannah, bearing what | ed and 60 injured: The damage is purports to be the signatures of E. H. | estimated at $1,600,000 S8€ 1° Harriman ard Alexander Millar, w.th- | @8 , ) . | Se ie a qr c | From Modane to Bardonneche the out official title, and the seal of the | country was ravaged by the storm. At Union Pacific’company. Mr. Ely said Fourneaux the torn destroyed the | that it is not known -whether’ or not | electric cables causing a lack of light there are any more forged certificates lana ower i = $'*" | in circulation. i = can The price of Union Pacific stock is | . | $147.25 per share. Shot on Their Own Porch. ! ri: Mrs. H. A. Leaptrot was shot and | instantly killed and her husband | probably fatally wounded while sitt- | have been ing on the porch of their residence |having beer near Cherry Valley, Ark. The shoot-| case Of ple 2 . ing was done by three mounted men. | the time the quarantine was lifted the Five Woolbridge brothers have been | Federal authorities imposed restrie- arested. Two years ago, it is said, | tions on the boarding of through ves- Leaptrot killed a member of the Wool- | and required fumigation of car- bright family. 8 Stock Quarantine Lifted. All shipping quarantine restrictions lifted at Henoluly, the city absolutely free from any e for a month. Up to Will. | Three Drowned. Russell Sage’s The will of Russell Sage was filed | Michael It bequeathes all of his | Hattie Bannon, estate to his widow, Margaret Olivia Edward Gryka, Sage, after the payment of $25,000 to Qrowyneq 3 each of Mr. Sage’s nephews and | City, Mich., he 1 nieces and $10,000 to his sister, Mrs. | boat near Crawion Fanny Chapin, of Oneida, N. Y. Mrs. light | Chapin died since the will was made. Bannon, aged aged | for probate. were Rogers of a sail - during a squall. Six at One Birth. While there was nothing in the will | to show the value of Mr. Sage’s es- At Kingston, in Williamsoh county, | tate, attorneys for Mrs. Sage esti-| Tenn, a negress gave birth Jo six mate it between $70,000,000 and $80,- | children. The children are well form- 000,000, of which amount about $30,-|eq | 000,000 is outstanding in loans. were alive at last ac- and all counts. Minister of Commerce Von Plener and | | es Mr. Bryan, warmly supporting the | stake was completely ouiwitted by the ana rider, it was unanimously sheriff. adopted. | | ld erected by a carpenter who had | wis., Zanesville, O., Rochester, N. Y., | TAXES AGAINST FIELD HEIRS Property Valued $105,0Q0,000 Escaped Assessors. $2,800,000 DUE TO THE CITY Value of Chicago Millionaire's Estate for Purposes of Taxation Fixed at '$213,000,000. Marshall Field's executors will be asked to pay taxes amounting to about $2,800,000. This will be by far the greatest tax ever levied upon the property of an individual taxpayer, and is the practical result of the de- cision by the board of review fixing the personal property on which the eld estate must pay taxes at $130, 000,000. The real estate’ is. worth about $50,000,000 additional, making the total amount of property on which that estate will have to pay taxes approximate $180,000,000. The larger portion of the assess ment against the Field estate is for back taxes on personal property up- on which the late Mr. Field is held by the board of review to have avoid- ed paying taxes. The board has gone back for seven years and levied back taxes against the Field estate for the entire period ‘of the existence of the present taxing machinery, which was created in 1899. - During the first 2,500,000 of personal property an nually, and last year on only $2,500, 000, a total of $17,000,000 in all. The reviewers declared it their opinion | that the late Mr. Field escaped taxa- | tion on $103,000,000 more. In addition to taxation on sthis | $195,000,000, and penalty falls by law {upon the Field estate for the taxes | which have been dodged in the past. | Under the provisions of the revenue | law interest not compounded must be levied upon all back taxes assessed at the rate of 10 per cent a | This interest adds almost a third to | the back taxes the Field estate will | have to pay. The back taxes total about $1,365, 1 000, while the interest charge approxi- mates $433,000 more, making the to- tal of almost $1,800,000 that the Field estate will be mulcted for the taxes the multimillionaire merchant did not pay during the last seven years of his life. The board decided on a valuation of $25,000,000 for the personal prop- erty belonging to the Field estate on April 1 last, and not consisting of national bank stocks and stocks of Illinois corporations. Attorney W. G. Beale reported to the board a list of | stocks exceeding that amount. While the amount of property on which the Field estate has been ord ered to pay is officially $180,0u0,uu0, | the big interest charge has the same | | effect as if an additional $33,000,000 ! was incorporated in the list of | | property for purposes of { thereby practically increasing the to- | | of taxation to $213,000,000. FATHER OF 25 TIRES OF LIFE { | Asks Judge to Put Him Away For- | ever; Gets Six Months. | Father of 25 children, Valentine Yonkowski of Brooklyn said to Mag- |istrate Furlong, in the Gates avenue | | court: | world, Judge, 'send me away for life.” He was ordered to He said he He was of abandonment. | pay his wife $5 weekly. | could . not pay the mpney. committed for six months to Kings county penitentiary. Fatal Conflict in Russia.” The news of the dissolution of par- liament has been followed by much rioting in Kharkoif, Russia. The ex- citement was increased by the escape of 40 prominent politicians who had been thrown into prison. Twenty per- sons were killed or wounded in the efforts for their recapture. The mob threw stones at the police and sol diers and many were wounded. Boston Wool Market. There is an improved tone in evi- dence in the wool market! - Although the wcolen mills are not as yet large buyers, they are showing much more interest than for some months. Most REFUSED TO PAY 'FRISCO CLAIMS Company Maintains Its Policies Carry Earthquake Clauses. The Phoeni% Royal Insurance Com- pany, of Vienfa, which carried about 2,500,000 insurance in San Francisco, has decided to not pay any loss grow- ing out of the conflagration of last April. The company’s policies carried an earthquake clause. The following official notice to the claimants was issued by the delegate sent from the home office, and the adjuster: “We wish to convey to you the in- structions received from the home office of this company at Vienna, Austria, viz.: “That all elaims which have been filed against ‘this company by reason of the earthquake which occurred on the morning of April 18, 1906, are in- valid, as all policies of this company became null and void by said earth quake, as the same was wholly re- sponsible for the conflagration that followed.” DEATH OF A FREAK Man Who Had Two Hearts, Three Legs and Sixteen Toes. After living for two weeks with one heart dead George Lippert, 62 years old, whose two hearts, three perfectly formed legs and 16 toes made him one of the wonders. of P. T. Barnum’s six years of that | period the late Marshal] Field paid on | year. | taxation, | tal value of the estate for purposes Jured in a | freight wreck three miles from Val- | Yonkowski was arrested on a charge | the | shows died at Salem, 'Ore., from tuber- | culosis. Surgeons who performed an autop- sy declare that had it hot been for the | consumption, which already had the | upper hand, the death of Lippert’s | right heart would not have materially affected the like organ on the left side. ; Until seven years ago Lippert’s life | had been spent in the show business. | He could speak five languages and | any number of dialects. FEDERATION CAMPAIGN FUND | 30,000 Labor Organizations Are Asked to Contribute. | The American Federation of Labor is preparing to raise funds with which to carry on its political campaign. Appeals are being sen out to 30,000 labor organizations asking for contri- butions, and setting forth the reasons for the request. An’ intelligent campaign looking to the election of members of State Legislatures and the National Con- gress friendly to the interests of la- bor cannoli be affected, it is argued, without incurring some expense. Con- tributions from $1 up are solicited. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Don Pedro ‘Monte was elected president of the republic of Chile for the ensuing term of five years. The Democratic executive commit- tee of the Eighth congressional. dis- trict of Mississippi formally declared John Sharp Williams the party candi- date for congress from this district. Two men were killed, one fatally hurt and three others seriously in- Northern Pacific railroad ley City, N. D. The men were steal- ing a ride in a freight car. The warehouse of the McFadden- Weiss-Kyle Rice Milling Company, at Beaumont, Tex., containing 50,000 sacks of rice, was destroyed by fire. J : J : | The rice was valued at $200,000 and “I am sick and tired of being in the’ so I wish you "would the building and contents at about $115,000. By order of the President the pre- visions of the eight-hour law have been extended to the navy depart- ment. Acting Secretary Newberry at Washington issued detailed instruc- tions to that effect. The Philippine adopted a commission has resolution favoring the | scheme of the Hawaiian Planters As- sociation to transport Filipino laborers and their families to Hawaii to work ion the sugar plantations. The expenditures on account of the service of the postoffice department for the quarter ended March 31, 1406, showed a material decrease from those of the corresponding quarter of last year. MORE JEWS KILLED Outhreak in Odessa Follows Manifesto of Russian Duma. The first actual violence since the members of the Russian duma issued of the trade for the week has been their defiant manifesto occurred at ffrom the worsted manufacturers. Odessa. Several Jews were killed and Pulled wools are in- steadv demand. many wounded. Cossacks apd rowd- Medinm territories have had the calls. Foreign grades are steady. Leading | quotations follow. Ohio and Pennsyl- | vania. XX and above, 34 to 3be; X, | No. 1, 41 to 42¢c; Ne. 2, 42 to 43c; Oro PETo ies plundered deserted Jewish houses and shops. In Srednaia street three Jews were killed. and three wounded in attempt- ing to defend their property, while the fine unwashed, 26 to 27c; quarter | police looked on. Another bloody blood. unwashed. 33 to 34c; three- conflict was reported in Stepoval eightls blood, 34 to 35c; half bleod, street, where two Jews were killed 25 toi34c. Queer Things in Corner Stone. When the condemned Methodist Episcopal Church at Grovepoint, near Columbus, O., was torn down the members of the congregation were shocked to find in the corner-stone not the bible and history of the church that were supposed to have been placed there when the church | dealers’ exchange. was built in 1851, but a tobacco box and a deck of cards. It is supposed that some practical joker ~ switched i the articles when the stone was laid. 2,000 ARE IMPLICATED Tax Stamp Fraud in New York of Huge Din Five men who were arrested in New York held im $1,000 bail in police court for further examination in con- nensions. | nection with the washing and re-sell- | ing of State tax stamps. 000 men and boys in the Wall street district are implicated in stamp frauds, in which the State government | has lost about $200.000 {and many wounded. lig in a state of panic. it was stated by the police that 2,- | The whole city lce Men Indicted. : Sixteen indictments of charges of restraint of trade inthe matter of ad- vancing the price of ice were returned by the grand jury at Cincinnati. Ten individuals and five firms were indict- ed, all being members of the ice Those indicted are members of the exchange who attend- ed a meeting of May 30, when a gen- | eral advance in the price was decided { upon. | | Panama Bonds Oversubscribed. 3 1t was announced at the Treasury | Department that the Panama canal i bond issue, bids for which were open- ed last week, was oversubscribed | nearly 15 times. The total amount of bids reached the enormous sum of $445,000,000. Two men were kliled and two others were seriously injured at Iromton, O., | when drunken excursionists on the | steamboat Bonanza began shooting without provocation at a crowd on i shore. ARR scat a. WO Bs aA WS Il Pro: Co., Lea witl agaj cess as ly 1 witl 2. fres ing. reg half eve and day for gan is f wh out sim Wo! ings be Mol are star his ful in. mai pos: ers Her pin as | tryi . mot sult mo par the wat Cro: gol tim staf wel car. the mi1 nin 1,0¢ Tha the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers