120 SLAGHTERED IN IY Korean Soldiers Mutiny Against | Disarmament by Japan. WILL RECEIVE ONE: YEAR'S 1to Assured the Emperor of Safety—Body Guard Be Abandoned. Marquis Hic Personal Will: Not In one several conflicts he- tween Japanese troops and disbanded Korean soldiers, 40 or 50 were Killed and wonnded at the West Gates racks, including several Japan- ese. who were arresting and impris- oning them. The American Consul- ate was struck bv several bullets. No foreigners were injured, and the city appears to be safe. According to otheial reports by Hazegawa un to 9 m.. all told 120 cass as. a of the bhar- Seoul, receiv- o'clock 11- result ed yen. nD. there ties. among of the the disbandment troops. A Korean against the troons. with the sulate chine gin. At 10 troops su racks after an had been izsued ean army composed Several hundred Kore: gathered at the Great Bell during a thunderstorm were dispersed by a company of Jap: anesh coldiers. The outlets from the Korean army barracks were guarded with machine guns. Two thousand of the Seoul garrison were disarmed nd disbanded. The proclamation troops the disbanded will he cranted one year's pay. Emneror’'s body guard wil not be banded. Marquis Ito the Emperor his complete safety. vided the foreign guards at night. The imprisonment of fugitives from fhe Shia Wa regiments continues. The remainder of the Korean army disqributed throughout the country will be disbanded as fast as the im- were the Koreans crowing the day's fighting, out: of of hattalion moti disarmament of Ks fought for Japanese force near with rifles 1 and several the and a w'elock at night J rronnded the Korean imnerial dishanding of 7.006 proclamation the Kor- men. ns disbanding the soldiers The dis- £aVs with r of Pro- with in his audience assured the Empero Marquis Ito consulates perial rescript reaches the draft sta- tions. FORTY-ONE LIVES LOST Passengers on French Train Drowned Like Rats in Trap— Engine Jumps Track. passengers in a third:-class railroad car and the engineer were drowned in a railroad accident three miles southeast of Angers, France. The locomotive jumped the track when entering the bridge over the River Loire at Les Pontz-de-Ce. The engine phinged into the river, 50 feet below. dragging down with it the tender and the baggage and third- class cars. The coupling bet the second and third cars broke. conductor and fireman escaped swimming. Although Forty The by part: of the roof of the third-ciass car was blown off by the confined air as it sank, not a single passenger extricated himself. ~ JRAZIL HAS A BANDIT Brigand Picturesque Makes Rich Ha The nicturesque and raider. Antonio Silvino, in the tield. He has just eecaful haul at a sugar plantation miles from Pernambuco, Brazil, and is now on the trail with 400 govern- ment trooners his heels. Silvino descended on the plant at the head cf a small band of fol- towers. Iie quickly got $2,600 in. cash from the oflice of the proprietor. Only man made any resistance, and he was promptly killed. as the raid became known and feder:] authorities called diers to in pursuit. ul—Troons on Trail. bandit again made a sue- 200) Brazilian is af ation ona As soon the out state scl- 20 N CHALLENGES FORAKER Senatcr Proposes to Prove That Re- publicans Were Wrong TILLMA Senator Coshocton andience Tillman, in opening Chautauc before an of “2,000, fermally challeng- ed Senator TPoraker to a debate the negro question on platform in Obio before an-audignez composed of Renublicans. . Senator” Tillman said: : +171 tion and North admit the hrough. “I have put the pitchfork aker and other senators of the and turned it ‘round and ‘round, they always answer me at range. I'll force them yet to up this question on the floor senate.” Sena ua on some beat him on his own pi make the Republicans of the that the South has had the argument all the way ‘oposi- hest of into For- North but long take tor Tillman denied the South had brought the fifteenth amendment | on itself as Senator Foraker charged. | tHe declared: the legal aspect of the ease was in favor of the South, and that politics was all that kept North on the negro side. . Two Girls Drown Bathing. Two giris. Olga Hull, 17 years of age, and Edith Schwartz, four years vounger, were drowned in the Calu- met river at Chicago. Two others narrowly escaped. The girls were bathing. Robert Stubbs, for years butler in the home of Levi P. Morton, Pough- keepsie. N. Y., has retired from his position with a fortune of $100,000, partly made in investments, and has returned to England, his native coun- try. to live. Judge PAY | Indiana | i the Korean? | be bar- | Are i crime ween | of the | | Fertilizer I was the HEAVY FINE FOR STANDARD Oil Trust Maxi: Calls for Landis Gives Psnaitv and a mum Snecial alling Standard Jud Landis, vg District Com fined the andard Co. 229.240.0000 for violations forbidding the acecent- from railroads. ‘ recretted the punishment was in- outlined a course of proposed procedure which may land several magnates in jail. Judge Landis then started to carry out his idea of prison sentences bv ealling a special! grand jury for Aug. 14 to investigate practices of the Chicago & Alton Railroad Co. as involved in the oil case. It is said that this prosaecuticn will be made on the grounds ~onspiracy.. The federal statutes provide prison sen- tences of two for conspiracy. Judge Landis’ sentence was the heginning of the end of the first of seven cases against the. Standard. Should 2.000 counts untried proved and the imum fine im- the Standard i have 3 1O1¢ and a trast, Stat in nited t cnen, St Qil ol Kikins law ance of freight Judge Landis fact that the adequate and of years he yet 1 pesed, AQ .- 000 806 fo pa OUS PROFITS IN'OIL Shows Standard M 000,000 a Year. Standard ©il C 24 cent \ vears from 1882 to collected CNOrmous 2500.000.000 on an invest- ment of $75,000,660, is enly in a num} of ‘sensational revelations in a report submitted to President Ycosevelt by. Commissioner of Cor: porations Herbert Knox Smith. As in the previous report cn the in- quiry into the oil trust's methods, the Pure Qil Co. of Pittsburg, the largest independent in the oil field, is again held up as an example of the way the oil business should be run. In a previous report the and methods of the Standard explained. The present report sets forth the results of those methods. It deals with profits and prices, show- ing just hew the manipulaticn of the oil industry by the Standard has af- fected the pocketbooks of the Ameri- can people. : ENORM nn ~ Uy Report ade & That average over that: in. the the = trust profits of the and 1996 per one er means were CAUSES OF CRIME WAVE German Scientist Claims Warm Wea- ther Has to Do With It. state that eruption of | Dispatches from Berlin the recent remarkable there has turned the attention of criminologists to the question whether there is not some connection | between the season of the year and crime. Dr. Placzek, one of the best-known | of these authorities, says the num- | ber of crimes that come to the knowl- | edge of the police is greater than in the colder months. It is not alone the heat of the sun working on men's passions which is responsible for this. but the differing social and labor conditions as well. For example. there is more alcohol consumed in the snmnier than in the winter, and alcohol is alwavs a fruit- ful source of erime. The struggle for existence not so keen in summer. There therefore. more idleness, and next to alcohol comes idleness as a cause of criminal aets. is is THIRTY WORKMEN SHOT Union Men and Troons Clash at Lo Poland. Todz. Tt an Poland, again tha scene of a strike movement. accom- panied by violence, disorder and death. Thirty men were killed or wounded in a fight with troops. The strike serious; it would near to be the: beginning of a labor war, and the workmen's are prepared for a long struggle. immediate cause of the outbreak w the course pursued by the police during the past eight days in making a large number of arrests in attempts to break up the unions. DRIFT TO DEATH is is ap- big unions The FIVE Over Dam When Disabled. drowned Des Moines In... The party on a bnicasure trin. became unmanageabl current, due the finally the engine Boating Party Goce Engines Are from river had Five persons a4 launch in the near Ottumwe started out The oat he Strong water, and down. The boat witl cunants then drifted and crashed onto the wore hizh broke 1elpless oe- the dam below. to rocks Turks Wine out Greek Band. There has been a pitched battle between Turkish troops supported by Rashi-Bazouks and a small band of (ireek insurgents, who had intrenched themselves in a house in the outskirts of Seres, European Turkey. The band was completely wiped out, but 30 men were killed before the sol- diers,. aided by artillery, captured the miniature fortress. The fertilizer plant of the Armour Co. at Jacksonville, Fla., destroyed by .fire, which was started by lightning. Damage $1055 060, fully insured. Editor is Fairbanks’ Secretary. George B. Lockwood, editor of The | Marioi: (Ind.) Chronicle, bas been ap- pointed private secretary to Vice President Fairbanks. The salary was increased by the last Congress from $2.200 to 34,000 a year. Mr. Lock- | wood was formerly private secretary to Gov. Durbin of Indiana. ram Goodwin, a Sumter county, (ia.. farmer dropped dead in a cotton field. His brother, Arnold, was sum- moned. and at the sight body he fell upon it 2nd B of the dead | ~aedned | ton. Lor | company for | had poisoned anybody, | that manufactured. | declared that the crime of which i lik had | the {aity. on i dered | partment | baek.” | conclusion, { such | Democrats of the two i United States senate, | to | governor | against Senator | ate | Alsbrooke | with a mowing blade. | Both are prominent planters of Hop- | kinsville, | Carnegie Palace of Peace i July PIVOER THT 1 Covernment Starts Rroceedings to Dissolve Bla Monopoly. =D TRADE THROTTLER of Being Plans Pont Accused Concerned ecure Moncpoly. Du Senator Directly in to S filed an States covernment anti-trust United Delaware, at E. I. Du & Co, the E. I. Du Nemours Powder Co. of New and 24 other corporations and 17 in- dividuals. The petition relates that all of the defendants are violating the Sherman act. It seeks to tha existing monopolies. Henry A. Du Pont, senator Delaware, who one of the defendants, is. declared in the plaint to be directly responsible the trust's methods. Tho court asked to determine yublic ests will be bet- ved by appointment of to take ssion = of = the y with «a to. bringing conditions will in har- with the law. stated in court, for Wilming- Pont, De Pont-De Jarsey in the rict of Del., Nemours the Dist against dissolve | from | chief com- fol is is whether p inter fer subser receivers DOS view that nreperty abont mony Tt bho that in concerns United of driving other ] un by he petition the in the the abject hree of ives with of of business methods. £11 ved 3 and pe rations out competitive l i 1esociation uninter- rYonind said, - until 1821. when a new: agreement was en- tered into with: the object of prevent- inz new manufacturers from engaz- ing in the powder business. in the monntinte, the three” “would-be” com- tors are declared to have been selled to join the monopoly. It is declared that there were suc- ceeding associations in 1886, 1891 and 1896, each with the same general ob- ject "and composed of the same mem- hers and their succes The 1386 association continued until 1902. The trust then controlled 95 per cent of the explosive trade. The petition then recites the organ- | ization. in May, 1303, under the laws New Jersey, of the E. I. Du Pont- | Nemours Powder Co., with a capi- stock of $50,000,000 as a holding | the purpose of acquiring the capital stocks of every corpora- {ion in the United States engaged in | manufacturing and dealing in high ex- oporation, pe {it CGINy SS0rsS De al : plosives. BILLIK IS TO HANG Death Sentence Passed on Chicago's Wholesale Poisoner. Herman Billik, recently convicted in Chicago of the murder of Mary Vzral by poisoning, was sentenced to | hang on October 11. Before sen- tence was passed Billik broke down and cried. He then denied that he and declared gainst him was | the evidence Jarnes in passing sentence Bil- been convicted was one of that ever occurred in the persons are said to have result of the condemned Judge worst Five died as the man's plot. ROBS IN SWELL DRESS Supposed Pittsburg Crook Caught as Burglar in Milwaukee. . Kdward Clark, .a lar. aged 23, is under with having robbed the Bartha Schmidt ot 2111 nue. Milwaukee. Wis. He was dre ed in evening clothes of the very and being gentleman burg- arrest charged grocery of North ave- lat- est ent, immaculate linen freshly shaven He was caught just crawling through a window in Schmidt's He was armed the teeth, the copper got the drop him 2nd he mode no i enly information the police could out oi him that he came from Pittsburg. as he store. tO nt The oct is Acting Secritary of’ Navy Accepts Findings of Board. the Navy findings Acting Secretary of the stigated - the July 15, result- 10 oflicers and of a number berry acted upon of which inv explo- the the and board Ceorzia on 1t deat the ion on ing in sailors ‘Of others. Almost proved by them all of Mr. the findings were ap- Newherry, who has or- put ‘into eficet.. The De now convinced that the of the accident was a “flare which it regards as a welcome because it is believed that “fare backs” can be dealt with by additional precautions, Senator Pettus’ Successor Named. Joseph F. Johnston nominated in joint is Se safely was unanimous- caucus of the houses to sue- Pettus in the his time to run was: twice gnee ran the sen- Iv ceed the late Senator Johnston Alabama and Morgan for 1915. Mr of Enemy With Squirrel Shot. Ephraim attacked James Dunning Dunning fired two loads cf squirrel shot into Als- | brooke’s breast, killing him instantly. Kills Renewing an old quarrel, Ky. The foundation stone of the Andrew | was laid | 30 at Zorgvliet by M. Nelidoff, president of the second peace comfer- ence. five | the | board, | occurrences as Font Casablun {| punished, {ls a Lunatic When | which is now | cision | ler. appealed to | with "| One by One | present. | and his suite { vice { Russian | the SACRE MAS IN MOROCCO ha That His Head Fan- ance Notifies Pas Will Be Price of Further atical Outbreak. with 1 rnnielt nassacre by fanatics of eight foreizners of whom Brunel fight- were Frenchmen, has government almost to ing point... This is thd which the Fronch ern conveying to Casablanca. The cruizer Forbin, now i the Azores, also has been ordered to proceed to Casablanca immediately. The Gali- lee has been ordered to ta all Europeans desiring refuge. The French newspapers generally demand that the government adminis- ter ‘a lesson to the sultan. They de- clare: that the maghzen, or governing is directly responsible for the Casablanca, as—it per- tha - present the protests at Tan- ic ney sisted pasha of the gier. The in maintaining there in spite of diplomatic corps attributes the outbreak toa lack of in Morocco. It fact that the Mauchamp. a was kilied in Nor- March. have not been the governor - of has been im- charged. It con- of action with Ger- sngeance in 1395, was killed. action is a well as a’ duty the Temps action the Dr. isive Fienel calls attenti real assas=ins Crenchman. oceo. city last and that Moroce city ne prisoned nor dis trasts this quick. Vv German deci e Of who co ner course many’s when a It in i natural duty DOWErs. The enc as 10 department at Washing- ton received from Unitad States Min- ister Gummere. at Tangier; i ablegram stating that several for- eigners had been murdered at Casa- blanca. It is believed at e state de- partment that there no native born Ainericans-in Casablanca. The Spanish government draw- ing up a plan for concerted action with France to obtain reparation for the-murders in Casablanca. A Span- ish warship has been ordered to pro- ceed immediately to Morocco. are is CHANLER'S QUEER FIX in Sane in Virginia. Armstrong Chanler, the Anielia Rives, chance John er husband take . the sent to an he comes to New York to prosecute. a legal pending. Chanler is a state of New York, under ment of the supreme court, the same time is a sane man niust being of of again the insane if nest October, action asylum for now a commit- and at under the rulings of the court of Virginia. to have in custody restored to him. Fearing that steps would be taken to restrain him under the lunacy de- if ho entered the state, Chan- Judge Hough in the United Statesscourt for an order re- straining any person from interfering his liberty when he comes to New York next October. Judge Hough said Chanler He his property, of a trustee, proposes could i avail himself of a writ of habeas cor- pus. BALLOONISTS DREW LOTS Four Russian Officers Leaped to Death. Russian military July 19 has There were when it The body who in the from Tsarskoe Selo picked up at sea. officers in the balloon Four davs later the bal- was found. emply at sea, body was discovered July offi- bal- of another Cor went un loon heen four ascended. lcon itself and one a2%ih: Lvidence in the Kovauk shows that drew lots and themselves from water in order of the airship as vossible, are of Gen. officers threw into the weight long why tho far sion four DOSS tne successively the balloon to reduce the and Kk: up This explains being en it hodies picked $0 apart, 4CC PER CENT TOO MUCH Metallic Furniture for tate Canitol fair Charged for at Harrisburg. An honest, price for the metal in bi lic farniture itol wold sylvania Const e107 2;000). common- wealth was forced te al 400 per ordinary brought person. out be- cent: moe "These the ting Beech Haveuw, No J. Charles I}. Montague, to inguire into the ture end of the capitol head of the estimating the Ari Metal Co., the builders of the furniture. He knows exactly what the stuff costs, and his report will be very valuable in the suits which will be brought against Congressman Cas- sel’s company. Effort will be mad2 to compel his concern to return $1.- 600.000 it has taken from the state. The commission believes it can prove (his money was illegally sec- facts were fore investi coimmitice in ‘the report of expert eniploy- metallic furni- job.. He was denartment of ed eured. Divine Service: Races Later. William - conducted divine board the yacht Hcehenzollern 11 o'clock Emperor Nicholas was At noon Emperor William attended a special ser- had luncheon aboard the royal yacht Standart and afternoon witnessed races between launches and cutters from warships. The two emperors presented the prizes to the vieterious Emperor services on roval at Sunday morning. and during the i crews. ke on board | | for the Republican presidential nom- | the tach a tors Foraker I ment was New York, ! form- | Led i would pleas ing lost, lunatic in the | in favor i Lawrence, ! was accompanied by I tle [TFT GETS INDORSEMENT War Secretary Wins at Colum- bus, but Voie FORAKER MEN The Resclution Complimenting For- and Dick Came Near Being Defeated. aker a vote of 15 the Republi- ran state central committee of Ohio at Columbus, adopted a resolution declaring for Secretary of War Taft al of HASeS. langear, the ins the MPS, were New Hough The claims dismissed on the had f{ail- their ac- ended at to reonen previously had been that the osecuie showing cl ants pr proverly CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. conducted Service raid tog. Seiret Taylor, fie wicted of Commis- publicly = de- came cere- the case of p liceman before was the lin rinece. much Dr Vene: © Ian funed arbitration. of clai for damages P a nt Castro's agen predicted by the late is expected. The firm one of the Capt. The government re- five American and trouble -with government, long John Hay, of Edward Gilbert & Co, Targest building and con- tracting concerns in the country, with headquarters in Norfoik, Va. has heen placed in the hands of -a re- ceiver. Steel Earnings Larger. The financial statement of the United States Steel Corporation for the second quarter of this year shows the largest net earnings for the like period in history. They exceed $45.500,000. For the six months the net earnings are also larger than for any similar period in the history of tle big company, reaching over $84.- 000 000. Despite this showing there is a decrease in total surplus, fully accounted for by appropriations to censtruction account. its new