Leaders of Irish Party in Com- mons Vote for Autonomy. URGED TO BOYCOTT ENGLAND Redmond Anticipates Great Ponular Agitaticn With Home Rule as the Sole Piank of Platform. tives of ° the of the a meeting of the June Sixty-four representa districts -of 17 of Commons the national Irish League at the organ members’ d directory Dul meeting attends United lin, object of steps to against {he government It wa papular Ireland the nation: short isfy Peace. ant for of the entment, impress states § some cn men accep: question The the to the sid planks lution pressing \and a the bv a the from strong mass influent cabinet North Mona No ers in the strike result advance in shect because ¢f. 1h f the conf burg. Facing the alt shutdown ani work under tl resentatives of latter." The representatives Association of Workers and » American Tinplate Co. The July: 1, lockout, ontinue 18 present scale the rep- chose the settled hy Amalgamated Steel and Tin Sheet and on convention decided present terminates and at the annual in Tolodo last month it to ask for a general aflvance in both departments after that date. An in- crease of from 6 per cent to the roller to 16 per cent for the heater and catcher were demanded the tin scale. In the department it was proposed to place all hands on a tonnage basis and abolish all per diem wages. This meant a slight advance for some of the me: last vear’s scale will again obtain. This decision affects all the sheet and tin workers in the eountry, about 15,- 000 men, as the other manufacturers accept whatever settlement made at this conference. HARK FROM THE TOMB Ventriloquist Creates Panic at Fun- All Flee. ment at a Md., ventrilo- was il sheet 1S eral and excit negro Danton, There was funeral near when Samuel “threw: the casket was being *L.et me down mourners thought it we who and fled. The o frightened they Johnson, a his voice into the grave lowered, easy.” quist, and The corpse as said. 1s the pallbearers dropped INnnke SPOKE the explained and derly con- He says give a perform- and Johnson was eld in 1 duct he A ance and mali 111 never 1 in a cemetery. No Grievance Against America. The five commerce of Japan lutions expressing the San Francisco affair was due to defective local control, from which the Japanese were not the sole sufferers. Therefore it is urged that there is no ground for iting the matter: as an international question, Put the Blame con Arahitect, In the Per vania Capitol inves- tigation at PY former Gov- erngr Samuel W. Pennvpacker and ex-Auditor General FE. B. Harden: bergh testificd before the capitol probers, saying they trusted all de- tails to Architeet Huston, in whom they had implicit confidence. Gov. Hughes ini: pak chambers of have passed reso- the opinion that princi tro: honored a requisition from Pennsvlval for Louis A. Fuhr, alias lL. William Albert, who was ar- rested in New York on a charge of bigamy. House £1 1 CONTRACTS FOR WARSHIPS and Fore River Com- Build Monsters. News News, Va Shipbuild panies Will The 1-Co. of Fore i Quincey, { bidders the two monster battleships. popularly { naughts. The Fore River ceive $4,480,000 for builds, and he Newport | will get $3,987,000 for the one i structs. | Armor will be Steel Co | armor | | | Newport News i Newport Newport River Mass., for Shipbuilding and the Co. of were the successful contract to constr American 20,000-ton called 1 Co. wars the wend the News it con- for these two hig battleships furnished by the Midvale at $410 per ton if Class A to be used. The hids of the and Tethlehem Steel” Com- amoupting to 7,956 per the Car- 10h is I Carnegie | panies for armour {tons for the battleships were $110 ton. For the armor required for | turre ts, known Class: B. the soje and Bethlehem companies. e: an 1 i Hid was $ as per. ton, 110 per tons and $400 tons For 392 Carnegie h hid For 1.078 12 itehen company Midvale 3410 and the C ates no bid. officials of ti were gratifled lowness of ditions” nointed out News -Co. 20.000G-ton Sa m the Midval Class D hid 3 Dethl and of i ar 1{ arnes ane The ment Ine in the grea tween $400,000 correspending any, hut than the the 16.000-t conn jess building lossy tha 1 the ST RIKE AV ER Companies Make Concessions. and had been decide d which : woul 2 h: ed the Posto dnd through Neill; Labor, repiesentati 1t averted ih ssioner United States of who' went to as ithe Roose | eo an- Fr and 28th of thi tended at once. if and. President Small of cial Telegr: oie nion who went to. Si 1 { davs ago to manage notified "by Deputy Pre amp that thosstrike was the executive committee declared officially off within dav or two. Mr. Neill informed committee that he from President and Clowry of the West which he agreed to mak cent-advance in wages, ann have gone into effect on ar versal, and to include the the “waiting list,” to abolish slid- ing scale, to make a standard of wages for all wires, and to pledze the company that there would be no dis- crimination against union operators. After a short consultation with the members--of the executive committee Deputy President Konenkamp agreed, in consideration of these and other concessions, to waive the demands that the company furnish the type- writers and the demand for the eight- hour day. h in .S month, : X not 4 the received Gene ern nouncea men on the rate TROOPS JOIN INSUR France Excited Over Mutiny of Bat- talion of Soldiers. A battalion of fantry regiment, France, deserted with its arn ammunition, and joined the insurg wine-growers at Pe the quarters of the regiment. The tineers, who wera maostly recruit: among the wine-grcwe num about 400 men. Gen. Bailloud ter an interview they decided to ment. : GENTS In- Aade, an the ilf gtationed at Seventeenth ne STS hea bee arrived ther». and af- with the return to mutineers their regi- HORRIBLE CRIME The Body of a Kidnaped Boy Found Minus Head. Two. miles in the interior swapm near New Orleans, less body of Walter LLamana, an ian-child between 7 and 8 who was kidnaped and held for 35.000 ransoni, two weeks found police and vigilants had bee strangled to death, tl confession of one of held by the police. The b supposed to have been 1} he was strangled, eausing to become separated from when decomposition set in. was found a short distance body. : Five Italians are under arrest, accomplices to the details of police and maintaining order in the fan quarter of the city. of a “hig the head- Ital- vears old, ago, H accor several neck wh head the body The head from the oy's jroken the on women, being two of them charged with murder and extra deputies are excited Ital- Watterson was the princinal of the was Henry speaker at the commencement Indiana University. A degree conferred upon James Whitcomb Riley Identified Bombs. i Judge YL.uther Goddard on the | ness stand, in the Haywood trial | Boise, Idaho, identified the bomb dug {up at his front gate last year, which {Rarer Orchard previously testified he had planted there for the purpose of | killing the judge. Hon. Augustus E. Louisville was nominated matipn as Republicar governor of Kentucky at convention. wit- Wilson by candidate The of for the state net | PLCC. mu- | Ware at | | James DIL accla- | | more than $5,000. SAFE NOT BURGLAR PROOF Expert Testifies that He Drilled a | Hole into Capito! Vault. i OVERCHARGES MONSTROUS Bills Were Not Audited Before Pay- ment, Although They Amount- | ed to $4,900,000. bore through a the state | with That an burglar expert can £¥ proof’ vault in four hours, drill, was testified before the capitol investigation committee by Chas. D. Montague, a metallic fur- niture expert.: He actually had done | the then demonstrate that Con- sel’'s Pennsylvania com- | hed an inferior ar- for fabulous prices. Two in the building 000, and their real -alue was about $29.000. Mr. Monta- that no chrome steel: had been nsed in the ordinary steel, which any with As to ert said: excessive bills which es more than without treasury in a one- eighth inch to Ca state: $66, einto ca’ the hasement contain- ate $1,182: subject floor metal- $229,231.10, and Ww On the entresol loo 151,688.40, and : 65. These estimates ste and: ird trade price tague never heard of sold hy the urg. Montague oe and ement of the allie ~ two than- specified. swinging doors for sliding cost 20 per found. in many in- metal was “or- substituted. ect Huston rniture for rooms contain any at all, and f ielr Hutson “ecol- if 380.000 from were prepared supplied the Pennsylvania cast+tlio st list 01, dizer unt pric o to oc as a] at House he met in are cases besened the “design- aid- the worth bronze on the "$245,000. The 060: former cashier testified regard- sheets for the pay- | contracts which: he Inring the incumbeney 1 surers’ Harris and. Ma- thues. 1fe approved settlements to the amount’ of hut $800,000, which were never audited. He said he never made any effort to ascertain if the goods delivered, or whether they wer the specifications, 2449 g approval was purely O up tO that his ory, Keim, ment of bookkeeper in the | public grounds and | buildings, testified that bills amount- | ina to more than $4,900,000 had been paid without the approval of the board of grounds and buildings. The 'sergeant-at-arms of the com- ission took the stand and told of offorts to find Architect Huston Contractor Sanderson. Huston was reported ill and Sanderson could net be found. Their attorneys refus- ed to accept the service of subpenas. and TEN DEAD IN SMASHUPS Passemger Runs Into Worktrain—Four Persons Are Killed in Roches- ter (N. Y.) Wreck. killed and 40 train Six workmen were injured when a passenger the Highland division of the New New Haven and Hartford rail- crashed into the rear of a work tliat backing into Hartford, Conn., “from: New "Britain, ‘at the :Si- gourney street crossing. Of the in- jured two will probably die. Some:of victims within reach were dead, but were left while the rescuers tried to extricate the living. Four persons are known to have nn killed, three more are thought to be dead, and eight were badly in- jured in a wreck about 11 o'clock at night, at Mitchell's Farm, about a east of Pittsfurd, on the Auburn of the New York : Central he train was No. 230, go- It met a freight head-on. seriously injured includes Roy of Youngstown, O. FOUR DROWNED Rocks the Boat and Death Takes Her and Party. Hammer, Ola Peterson, Lydia Olin Anna Johnson, all residents of Muskeg AMich., were drowned in Muskezon lake Sunday. The quartet hired a rowboat for a pleasure trip on the lake, and it was capsized. The accident is said to be due to one of the party rocking the | heat. A party in a launch passed the quartet shortly before the accident and declared that one of the girls was standing up, rocking the boat. Expo Changes Hands. Directors of the Jamestown Exposi- Co. accepted the resignation of W. E. Cottrell, practically made Barr director general, with full powers, and indorsed a second bond issue for $700,000 to cover all I the exposition company’s liabilities. on Yor road train was the easy mile nch road. bra west. The ank aK Girl Gus and tion Gov. Jurglars entered the mansion of Craig Lippincott in the fashionable section of Philadelphia and secured jewelry and bric-a-brac valued at { until coal lands in West V { day, | and | the crime. { and did | business rand Michigan show a particularly ! Butte, | the streets were a mass of slush: GOULD AND’ RAMSEY SUED Charges Misrepresentation tion of Little Kanawha Syndicate. Suit was filed in the Circuit Court at St. Louis, by John F. Jones against the Little Kanawha syndicate and Joseph Ramsey, Jr. former preside of the Wabash railroad; Gould and Wm. E. Guy, principal | defendants, and others-as nominal de- | fendants, because they were stock- holders in the syndicate. : The action started to receiver and an accounting, junction asked in order to tie up after the avcounting of “$3,000, 000, alleged to be on deposit in the St. Louis Union Trust: Co. to the credit of the syndicate. The petition alleges and Gould organized the 1501 for the purpose. of irginia lines in Forma George J. as is secure a and an in- is that Ramsey syndicate in buying up and Ohio railroad. undertook to. sell to the extent of and did sell amount, of y for $3.1 and several short of The organizers stock in the ecmpany $H.000.000 $R.000.000 stock up the latter vhich Gould subscribed (GO. Jones cash on a b most of the-ether ing ‘oveY 50 per cent Jones alleges the part of Rami ] that ] subse ibe yr to to s to 70.000 claim have paid =$ su ription of $100,000, subscribers not pay- cash. smanagement ~Gould and se on Guy to Slates Tid prospective erties ultimately railroad. In 1¢ ac a sold to - the \Wabas be Wah: money ox- 103, however, after had spent lax sums of tend its «road into Pittsburg. managers. of the syndicate avers, did not wish to turn properties to tha Wabash and gave the work of developing and ali the railroads and coal lands An instance of the the Zanesville, M: bureg-railroad:-after’t $800,000 is cited. the buildi of this because the syndiea it. would not be to t other enterprises in entangled. ash the Jones the up over WINS abandonmen a: & 16 expend Park ita: claims was stopped te managers found advantage they: were ers 1 » of Joiies that road he Ol which FATHER KILLS FIVE Domestic Troubles End Father, in. Deaths of Mother and Th Children. W. Barton, a ct almost instantly children aud be home at Jasper. Fla... One vietim, child. 5 : years. . eld. survived enough tell that Parton killing. The shots o'clock at night, paid to the matter when neighbors body lying on that -of his wife The children the pistol held close. to the mouth stance, and the faces marked. Domestic troubles: are Dbe- lieved to have been responsible for Barton left home Tuesday not return until late Wednes- when he found the doors nailed him. He: battered - them ce ce three at to heard about no attention were but until early the discovered the front on the were found having in = each were ton's po back in a been in- powder perch. bed room. day, against | down. Beston Wool Wiarket. Yecent large sales in imported fine wools have increased the volume of in the local market, although along domestic lines con- tinues quiet. There have been some arrivals of spring Te stock, but the Arizona new wool is about all taken. Recent heavy sales in quar- ter-blocd fleeces have exhausted the stock of fleece wools and dealers are awaiting the arrival of the new clip for quotations. Advices from Ohio ac- are pay- trading Xas and buyers there as 26c for Michigan. and 28 to 20¢ for mediums, while in Ohio they have exceeded 30c¢ for medium wool in several instances. The lead- ing domestic quotatiens range as fol- lows: Ohio and Pennsylvania fleeces —XX, to. 34c: 2X. 31 to 32c¢c;:: No. 1 washed, 3S to 89c; No. 2 washed, 37 to usc: fine unwashed, 25. to 26¢ fine unmerchantable, 27 to 2Se¢; half- blood clothing, 27 to 28c¢: half-blood combing, 32 33 tive market ing as high 00 D0 to 33c¢: three-eights blood combing, 32. to .-33¢, PEACE PROBLEMS ier? America Reserves Right to Propose Limit of Armaments. The surprise of the of the peace conference at was the formal reservation Gen. Horace Porter, on behalf the United States, of the right to present the question of limitation of arma- ments. He also reserved ht to session Hague ond The by of Sec the right introduce the subject of the collection of contractional debts by force. Sir Edward Fry also served notice that Great Britain reserves the right to introduce subjects outside the pro- gram. Trying to Remove Trouble. While the French using the troops to on the part of the wine growers, it at the same time is enacting legisla- tion intended to cure the evils caused by the adulteration of wine and other practices complained of by the strik- government is repress disorder ers. Fourteen inches of snow Mont., Sunday, but by fell in nightfall Five Dead in Automobile Wreck. A most appalling automobile acci- dent ocurred at Caianello, about 100 miles from Naples, five men being killed. The motor car, which was go- | ing at high speed, ran into a rock and was demolished. Among the killed was Prince Pescasa, a member | of the Italian nobility and related to the Spanish royal house. The Michigan Legislature adjourn- | ed at noon June 19, after having been | in session since Jan. 1, and having | appropriated $9,100,000. : negie | should be withheld. INY KILLEDBY EXPLOSION None Left to Tell the Story of a | Wrecked Powder Mill. SEVEN KILLED IN COAL MINE Mine Gas Lets Go in a Pennsylvania Colliery With Fatal Results. “Five men were killed and the plant demolished by an explosion in the mixing room of the Sinnemahoning Powder Company's plant. near Sinne- mahoning; Pa. The mixing room was blown to atoms. The dead: Edward Nelson of Empori man of the plant. Edward Cole, marr eral small children. Cole, brother um, fore- ried, leaves sev- £ of - above, Summers married, leaves man, Sinnemahoning, The the victims were hor: it. was with that sufficient of the remains could be found for identification. The “explosion wi felt f. around. ive men mixing room the of ribly nzled, and vr Ta cuits 1S wor the exph S men 3 killed injnred in two exnlos 3.in: the. Johnson. No. burg, Pa. The first ex the carelessness leaving cihers mine Prix at he in the ignition seeond dea ed of Whi : plosion. CARNEGIE GIVES MORSE WAKATSUKI IS OPTIMISTIC Vice Minister of Finance ‘Says His People Feel They Have Ameri- can's Good Will. Reiziro Wakatsuki, Japanese minister of finance, who is in New York, on his way to London and | Paris, talked about the Japanese { troubles ii San Francisco. “Americans,” said Mr. Wakatsuki, “should remember three things: That no citizen of Japan can forget that it was America which opened up Ja- pan to the world, and western civi- lization; that there are in both Ja- pan and America sensation mongers, and that in Japan, as well as in Am-. erica, there: are politicians out of power, who seize upon anything, how- ever inconsequential, which may help to discredit their political oppon- ents.) { Vice Minister Waka appointed special sioner by the a to visit: ‘Europe and America, for "nNOS e their financi iness conditions and as much as possible wit] same conditions in Japan. "AS ag itmogt “vice suki has been nancial commis- government incidentally of studying panese have American the ‘nited nation confidenc the people. hey ha yf the 1 Ve siders as small cael: and Stop. ids of al of con 00n worked up at I er thex>may do a gréat. d 0 both i > DEATH Dropped .in Wal Will Pay Cost of Branch Libraries 17 New. York. -~ + anounced ‘that Andrew Car has notified the trustees of the York, Hbrary : that they incre number of branch erected under __his by and that h It was public ase the buildings Lolo 000, 22 he: billy Cita > will bring the total of*t city to 6.750.000, and > the pumber hraneh ‘ovided: for under the terms from 75,10 1060 of libra: of bu 1d iginal 0} OVA TION To KNOX Senator Attends Retrion of Alumni at. Mit. Unicon Coliege. Pp ovation given. a ) of his nion College. An- Mr. Knox, who was class of ‘72, wanld largest: crowd the commence- the college for Senator great alma nouncemetit a member be present, which has ment exercises years. He was dential Mt. that the mater, of drew attended at the to as our ‘“presi- by Judge: J. A. who in- indi- in Wil- referred candidate’ Martin of Columbiana county, troduced him, and the audience cated that it would support him preference to Ohio's favorite son, mH. Taft. : Senator Knox ped the honor thus ing forth into a non: He ‘eulngized the war speaking of the latter's efforts in be- half of universal peace and of his great work in the Priinpines. DENCE OF FouL PLAY Police Discover Negro Burying His Wife's Body. A Philadelphia policeman detected tohert: Maloved, a negro, digging in his back yard, and-.in answer to ques- tions, was informed by the negro that he was burying his wife. The police- man entered the house, and in an upper room found the corpse of Mrs. Maloyed, which had been dead apparently about three days. The body showed evidences of foul play, and the negro was arrested and to await the action of the coroner. POWDER EXPLODED ALL RIGHT graciously paid him, yolitieal secretary in launch- EVIC Miners Settle An Argument at Heavy Cost. coal mine on Wheeling, ‘three upset some powder in a pool and this started a discussion vet powder would explode. ttle the argument one of the fire to the powder. The ex- communicated to a. nearby and the result was the house and the serious injury of one of the men, who was removed to the Martins Ferry hospital, while his wife and a board- received minor Injuries Florence the opposite At t Ohio miners of water, whether To se trio plosion keg of dry powder the wrecking of he side, SOL er Says Yellow Races Will Rule. Gen. Wm. Booth, head of the Sal- vation Army, has returned to London, after his trip to the Orient, greatly impressed with the possibilities of the vellow races. In an interview he de- clared that the Chinese and Japanese will completely capture eastern trade and commerce. ‘There are features about the Chinese and Japanese,” he said, “that are bound to make them the conquerors of the world, but they will do it by peaceful means.” Supplements Carnegie Gift. A gift of $45,000 to Buchtel College at Akron, O., was announced at the comniencement, the condition of the gift being that the donor's name The money will be added to a fund of $50,000, half of which has been given to the college | by Andrew Carnegie. The Porte has addressed a com- munication to the United States Em- bassy removing the final obstacles in the way of United States’ adhesion to the three per cent customs increase side-step- | speech. | held for Africa. Pastenr Insti- Louisiana ards’ will I.ouis- Al- The Cam- will with ~“Louisiana Wasps request of ti ance, t Commission to exterminate horseflies. were gath in Pe S to which parish, near > fn refrigerate askets, pupae of the wasps, eron leans. he sent the le insect. CURRENT NEWS ITEMS. | killed and one was ailment of a North- iin near Detroit, were the dr WORK Ire len injured by Pacific AM nn J st ern of the Eleventh in. ithe Civil by 1stroke at at nworth, Stewart Infantry killed Home Wm, ate War, “has ‘been the Soldiers’ | Kan. The dry season ha prolonged and the general rains been late in the ma canal zone vear, . prod conditions unusually favorable breeding of mosquitoes. \t annual alumni Van University. “at Nashville, Tenn.,. Chancellor J. HH. Kirkland: an- | nounced a eontribution of $100,000 from Win. K. Vanderbilt, grandson of the founder Official s heen unusnally have Pana- wing to the comparatively this the dinner . at rhilt niocratie June 8 of the Di primaries, held in Oklahoma, show that C. N. Haskell was nominat- ed for governor and T. I’. Gore and Robt. Owen were named for United States Senators. : figures Mayor sc hmitz “Ousted. Mayor formally | moved from he the board of supervisors, first move on the part - of graft-hunters to establish good governmnient ii San ‘rancisco. The mayor was oni the gronnd that becius his imprison- ment in the county jail, which follow- ed his conviction for extortion, he is no longer able to perform the duties of his office. Supervisor James Gal lagher, chairman of the finance com- mittee, who occupied the mayor's chair while Sehmitz took a vacation in Kurope, was chosen 2s. acting mayor. Schmitz re- A the as as noved BUILDING NEW RAILROAD Western Allegheny. to Have New York" Central C-anection. At a cost of $1,540,000 Allegheny Railroad will mile extension, running Brady. in Butler county, burg, in Mercer county, Many en- gineering difficulties are to be over- come and several long bridges will be making the cost of con- struction $50,000 a mile. The West- ern Allegheny road will then connect with the New York Central, which is constructing a line that will touch the Western Allegheny between New Cas- tle and Franklin. the Western build a 30- from East Pa., to Lees- necessary, Mrs. Sage Aids Lincoln Memorial. Mrs. Russell Sage has sent to the Lincoln Farm Association a contribu- tion cf 325,000 for the preservation of the Abraham Lincoln farm and log cabin, and for a memorial building on the farm. She has intimated her will- inzness to give more if necessary. Pavard Wyman of 3Jlichigan has heen selected to fill the office of super- intendent of postmasters’ appoint- ments, a place created by Congress at the last session and paying a salary {of $3,000 a year.