EEE iiss aR a ge “ SR Bt arm gp os GONSTANTINOPEE FALLS BEFORE YOUNG TURKS Short but Decisive Battlle Ends the Old Regime. SULTAN TAKEN PRISONER Report That Abdul Hamid Was Forci- by Removed from His Palace. Constantinople.—The city fell into ike hands of the Young Turk’'s forces an the evening of the 24th inst. The Yildiz garrison surrendered on the following day to, the Constitution- alist forces. The commanders of these battlions began sending in their submission to Mahmout Schefik Pasha amd the whele of the troops protecting tke palace gave their formal and un- conditional surrender shortly after dawn. Niazi Bey, who is called the hero of the July revolution, is now in eommand of the garrison. Londen.—The Daily Telegraph’s Vienna correspondent sends the re- port that the Sultan was taken out of the palace by force at a late hour, and that Mehemmed Reschad Effendi, mephew of ‘Abdul, was installed in his place. The number of casualties probably will never be known, but it is estimat- ed far into the thousands. Around the Taxib barracks alone it is be- lieved that 1,000 or more men fell. The private houses within the line of fire suffered greatly. One of the keaviest losses to the parliamentary forces occurred through the misuse of the white flag by the besieged Tasch Kischla barracks. For more savagery of the fanatics has brought the people. Several warships are now in these waters, but the disorders are so far- reaching that the efforts of the pow- ers to restore normal conditions have at yet hardly been felt. The French eruiser Jules Ferry arrived here and eft almost immediately for Latakia, where swarms of refugees are pour- ing in. Marines Landed to Stop Riots. British, French and German war- ships are at other ports, and marines have been landed to quell disorders as far as possible at the more import- ant points. One of the missionaries at Alexan- dretta, Mr. Kennedy, with 450 Turk- ish troops, has gone to the relief of Deurtyul, an Armenian village of the eoast, where 10,000 people within the walls are besieged by immense bands of Kurds and Circassians. PARDONED BY GOVERNOR Court Record Cleared of All Charges Growing Out of Goebel Case. Frankfort, Ky.—Governor Willson cleared the Kentucky court records of all charges growing out of the murder in January, 1900, of Senator William Goebel, who was declared by the legislature to have been elected governor, except those hanging over State’s evidence witnesses in the al- leged conspiracy, by granting pardonse before trial to former Governor W. S. Taylor and former Secretary of State Charles Finley, who have been fugi- ! tives in the State of Indiana, for nine years; to John Powers, brother of Caleb Powers, who is believed to be in Honduras; to Holland Whitaked, of Butler county, John Davis, of Lou- isville and Zach Steele, of Belle coun- ty, who did not flee the State. These over whom indictments are left hanging are Wharton Golden, of Knox county now in Colorado; Frank Cecil, of Belle county, now a railroad detective in St. Louis, and William H. Culton, of Owsley county, said to have died in the West recently. These cases, with the possible ex- ception of that against Cecil, will be dismissed, leaving Henry E. Youtsey, now serving a life sentence in the State penitentiary, the only person to suffer for the assassination of Goebel. EIGHT DROWNED Steamer Eagle Mysteriously Goes to | Bottom of Mississippi River. New Orleans.—Eight people were drowned and seven others on hoard had a thrilling escape from death, when the towboat Eagle of the Louis- jana Petroleum Company went downs fn the Mississippi river about 40 miles south of New Orleans. The Dead—Captain George Joyce, Second Enigneer Charles Goodbub, Fireman Charles Martin, Mate Rich- ard De Blane, two negro deckhands, negro chambermaid, cabin boy. The accident occurred at daybreak while most of those on board were asleep. Without seeming reason the boat began to dip and take water, and soon went down, breaking in half as it sank. Without opportunity of giv- ing alarm to their sleeping compan- fons those on deck were thrown into the current of the deep channel. They caught hold of wreckage and kept afloat until they attracted atten- tion on shore. The Fagle was barge, which Bagle sank. conveying an oil broke away when the Destroyer Is Launched. Philadelphia.—The torpedo boat de- stroyed Joseph B. Smith, built for the United tates government, was launched at the yards of the Cramp Shipbuilding Company. ; Ohioans Want High Tariff. Washington.—A protest of the La Belle Iron Works of Steubenville, O., against the reduction of rates propos- ed in the sheet steel schedule in ‘the tariff bill as passed by the house of representatives was presented to the genate by Mr. Scott and read at fength. Mr. Culbertson stated that in 1907 the entire product of the United States Steel Corporation was valued at $757,000,000, while the importation of similar products amounted to only 34,000,000. DESPERATE SITUATION State of Siege Has Brought People to State of Starvation in Sev- eral Places. Beirut.—The situation in As Turkey is one of the extreme gravity. How many thousands have been mas- sacred cannot even be estimated, be- cause the disturbances have been sO widespread that it is impossible to se- cure details of the happenings during the last ten days. The latest estimates of the number killed in the villayet of Adana reach- es approximately 25,000, and thou- sands have been slain in the towns of other districts. The state of siege which several of the places are undergoing has brought the inhabitants to the verge of star- vation, and each day brings its tales of further atrocities and the depths of misery and despair to which the than an hour, the machine guns of the attacking party poured a hail of shots into the garrison, and then the de- fenders hoisted the white fiag. In- fantry moved forward in the open and the gunfire was suspended. When the battalion was within 4060 yards of the barracks, the guns behind the walls opened up a deadly fire on them, 27 being killed and 80 wound- ed. In one quarter some 6,000 or 7,000 troops were engaged in the conflict, but with the terrific exchange of shots, few non-combatants were Kkill- ed. Half of the Saloniki chausseurs, who were brought from the country districts several months ago and placed in the Yildiz garrison by the committee of union of progress and who took a prominent part in the rec- ent mutiny, fell fighting in or near the barracks, where they murdered most of their officers only 10 days ago. In the pockets of some of the dead were found large sums of money in gold, which, it is assumed, was part of the price of their loyalty. TO STOP MASSACRES President Taft Takes Measures to Safeguard Americans. ‘Washington.— Realizing the impo- tency of the Turkish and the Persian governments to adequately safe- guard American lives and property in the present disturbed conditions in their countries, the state department has intimated that it will welcome any assistance in this direction from the governments of Great Britain and Russia. Diplomatic representations having this object in view already have been made to the foreign offices at London and St. Petersburg, whose ships and soldiers are at or nean the scene of the massacres and ready for active operations. At the same time efforts are being made to learn whether the powers of Europe have taken steps to check the horrors now being per- petrated against those people. President Taft is deeply stirred over the reports of horrible atrocities which have reached him regarding the Armenians and is anxious that no stone be left unturned to afford relief wherever possible. ral iret ot JAPANESE WARSHIPS HERE Expresses Friendship for Uncle Sam. Los Angeles.—For the first time in 10 years warships of Japan entered a Pacific caast port of ithe Tnited | states, when the cruisers Soya and { Aso, comprising the Japanese train- ling squadron, commanded by Rear | Admiral Ijichi, steamed into San { Pedro, April 25. The Aso and Soya are on a peaceful visit of some weeks’ i duration, which will take them to all |of the principal ports of the Pacific | coast. The Aso is the flagship of Amdiral Ijichi, a veteran of the war with Rus- sia. He said: “Personally I can only express my | pleasure at the increased evidence of | friendliness between the United States (and my country. I have no doubt jthat our visit here will be one of Admiral {lasting pleasant remembrances for us. | {We of Japan have great admiration | for Americans and I am glad of this {opportunity to return here for even !so short a stay.” UNLAWFUL MILLINERY Big Hats and Those of the Zoological Variety Barred by Proposed llinois Bill. Springfield, Ill.—Big hats and those ornamented with the skins or bodies of “birds or insects” are prohibited under heavy penalties in a bill. intro- duced in the house by Representative Hilton. The bill provides that it shall be unlawful to sell or to expose for sale any hat more than 18 inches in dia- meter or with plume, aigrette, pin or other ornament projecting more than six inches beyond the rim, or bear- ing the dead body or stuffed skin of a bird, snake, lizard or other animal, reptile or insect subject to decay and likely to become a breeding place for germs. thoroughfares. The from $100 to $200. The bill was re- ferred to the committee on miscella- neous subjects. Family Too Large; Ends Life. Des Moines, Ja.—Peter M. Miller, father of 14 children, committed sui- cide by swallowing carbolic Shortly before taking the drug he told his wife that he coud no longer take care of so large a family. The widow is destitute. SCHIFF’S $100,000 GIFT Will Found Jewish Normal In Two Cities. Schools Cincinnati.—Announcement that Ja- cob Schiff of New York had made a donation of $100,000 for the establish- ment of two normal schcools for the training of Jewish Sabbath school teachers was made here by Bernard Bettmann, president of the board of governors of the Hebrew Union col- lega Wearing hats contrary to the sta- | tute is prohibited in public places or | penalties are | acid. | STORM STRIKES THE FOREST CIT Four Lives Lost, Three Persons Hurt and $1,000.000 Loss. SEVERAL TOWNS SWEPT OVER Woman Walking in- Park Is Blown into a Pond by Wind and Is Drowned. Cleveland, O.—Six persons killed and nine fatally hurt, and hundreds of thousands of dollars’ dorth of dam- age marked the path of a small-sized tornado which passed across the northern part of Ohio at noon Wed- nesday. Three. persons are known to be dead and a fourth is missing. The Dead. Jasper Cromwell, blown from a train at Cleveland Furnace Company's plant. Mrs. Olive Phalen, a nurse at State hospital; skull crushed by stone blown from building. Unidentified woman, blown into a pond at Wade park and drowned. Joseph Vessla, killed by falling smokestack. Louis Petro, crushed by falling roof. Joseph Slazek, struck in head by flying timber. The largest single damage was done to St. Stanislaus church, East Sixty- fifth street and Forman avenue. The wind almost demolished the structure. The loss is estimated at $125,000. The storm consumed only five min- utes in passing a given point, but dur- ing that brief period it was as dark as night, hail battered in windows, lightning set fire to hundreds of build- ings, one-fifth of an inch of rain fell, and the wind, which reached a veloc- ity of 66 miles an hour, razed build- ings and chimneys, tore off roofs, laid low many telegraph and tele- phone lines and demoralized traffic upen the steam and electric railways. The squall started in Indiana and gained force as it traveled rapidly eastward. It apparently had gathet- ed full force when this city was reached, and passed over the lake a few miles east of here. In neighboring towns considerable damage was done. Ten dwellings were reported to have been blown to the ground in the southwestern part of the city. Many homes were burn- ed, as the fire department could not attend to all the calls. AMERICAN SCHOONER FIRED ON Canadian Cruiser Captures Fishing Vessel on High Seas. Vancouver, B. C. — The Dominion cruiser Kestrel arrived in port, hav- ing in charge the American halibut fishing schooner Charles Levi Wood- bury, which she captured after firing four rounds from her machine guns +d threatening to sink the alleged poaching vessel unless she surrender- ed. The action took place Sunday after- noon in northern waters, alleged to be contiiguous to Canada. Five bullets tore through the air in the direction of the Woodbury each time the machine gun was fired as the vessels headed at full speed from the west coast of Vancouver Island toward the middle of the Pacific. The last series of shots meant bus- iness. The gun was pointed at the fish boat, which was then 200 yards away and making for the open sea. The bullets, which were aimed high, ripped the mainsail of the schooner and one or two knocked splinters off the mainmast. Captain Sinclair feared he would be sunk right there if he did not stop, and he | hove to. ~ Roosevelt Inland. Mobasa. — Theodore Roosevelt and {party left here on a special train April 22 for Kapiti Plains station, whence they will be conveyed to the ranch of Sir Alfred Pease for their first shooting trip. The party is ac- companied by F. J. Jackson, acting governor of the protectorate. Before leaving Mr. Roosevelt telegraphed to King Edward thanking him for the message of greeting read by Mr. Jack- son at the dinner given in Mr. Roose- velt’s honor at the Mombasa club. Award Contracts. Washington.—Among the contract awards announced at the war depart- ment were the following: To the Tredegar Iron -Company of Richmond, Va., for furnishing 1,200 12-inch cast iron shells, at $32 each. To the Beth- lehem Steel Company, for furnishing 1.600 seven-inch target shells at $10.48 each; 1,000 eight-inch shells lat $17.86 each, and 600 10-inch shells |at $32.70 each. Nineteen Sink With Ship. Christiania.—Nineteen persons were i drowned off Christiania by the sink- |ing of the Norwegian steamer Edith, {after collision with the Brtish steam- ier Oxford. Those who went down | with the Edith are the captain and | his wife, one passenger and 16 mem- { bers of her crew. The German emperor has extended | |an invitation to King Edward and | Queen Alexandra to visit him at Corfu. Gift for President. | Washington.—The President has received a unique present from the | Philippines in the form of a large suit | case which was used by John S. Hord, {collector of internal revenue, in | bringing to Washington statistics for |use in considering the Philippine leg- islation. The frame is of mahogany iand the front is made of small inlaid | blocks of native wood, about 120 dif- | ferent specimens, highly polished and {| bearing the initials “W. H. T.” in na- tive gold and the initials “P. 1.” in native mother of pearl | | | | WHOLE CITIES ARE WIPED OUT Moslems Declare Their Intention to Utterly Destroy the Armen- ian Race. : Alepho, Asiatic Turkey.—The entire population of Kirikan, located be- tween here and Alexandretta, even to the last babe, has been massacred. The French mission at Ekbaz is be- seiged -by fanatical moslems. The Armenian village of Deurtyul is sur- rounded, and according to a messen- ger, who crawled through the Arab lines at night and made his way here for help, the situation there is hope- less. The buildings on the edge of the town already were in flames when he escaped. 5 The massacres are being carried out with the greatest violence. Neither women nor children are spar- ed. ~The motto of the moslem is “no twig of the accursed race shall the suffered to live.” Reports are that 10,000 were slain at Adana. . Beirut.—Five American women mis- sionaries are in danger at Hadjim, in the villayet of Adana, Asiatic Turkey. One of them, Miss Rose Lambert, has sent a message down to the coast, asking for immediate help. The women are entirel y alone and de- fenceless. The villages surrounding Hadjim are in flames, and Hadjim itself is invested by Nomad tribes- men. Messages ffom the interior are being suppressed by the authori- ties. The situation in that country north, east and west of Alexandretta, aris- ing from the anti-Christian outbreaks is most serious. There has been mas- sacres and pillage at Antioch and riot- ing at Birejik. At Ayas, on the west coast of the gulf of Alexandretta, 4i8 murderers have been released from prison. They at once joined the mob and began committing repredations. At Tarsus 100 persons have been killed, 800 houses have been burned, and there are 5,000 persons without homes. SAYS CHRISTIANS ARE TO BLAME Head of Foreign Missions Throws New Light on Armenian Situation. Baltimore. — Terrible as are the cruelties being inflicted - upon Chris- tians at Adana, they have brought the trouble upon themselves, accord- ing to Rev. Dr. James L. Barton, for- eign secretary and executive head of the board of commissioners for for- eign missions. Ever since the new Turk party came into power the Armenian Chris- tions have been planning to revolt and set up a separate kingdom. It is this ambition for an Armenian king, Dr. Barton declares, that is at the bot- tom of the trouble. : Dr. Barton draws a sharp distine- tion between the native Christians be- longing to the Armenian church and the Protestant Christians connected with the various missions. He de- clares that the Moslems have no ill feeling toward these Protestant Chris- tions, of whom there are over 5,000 in Adana. . BUYS TELEPHONE SYSTEM New Association Will Own Plants Valued at More Than $15,000,000. Wheeling, W. Va.—At Fairmont, W. Va., Z. F. Robertson, acting for large independent telephone interests, pur- chased a controlling interest in the Consolidated Telephone Company, which operates some 4,000 telephones in nine West Virginia counties and two in Maryland, doing a local and long-distance business, with ex- changes at Fairmont, Mannington, Clarksburg, Grafton, Elkins, Philippi, Buckhannon, Kingwood, Terra Alta, Newburg, Parsons, W. Va., and Oak- land and Mountain Lake, Md. Robertson acted on behalf of in- terests that are allied with the Na- tional Telephone Company of Wheel- ing, which operates largely in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania, with between 12,000 and 15,000 telephones in use. This move is preliminary to the for- mation of the largest independent tel- ephone company in the United States, With plants valued at $15,000,000, cov- ering Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylva- nia, Maryland and a part of New York state. The new company will operate more than 150,000 telephones. Several meetings of the promoters have been held. and the final consum- mation of the deal will follow within a few days. Former U. S. Senator Dead. Indianapolis.—Former United States Senator David Turpie. born in Ham- ilton county, O., in 1829, died at his home in this city. He had been in ill health for 10 years. Mr. Turpie defeated - his Republican opponent, Benjamin Harrison, for the senator- ship from Indiana in 1887. He was re-elected in 1893. The legislature ‘of 1899 being Republican, Mr. Turpie was retired and Albert J. Beveridge succeeded him. Night Rider Cases. Paducah, Ky.—One hundred and fif- teen defendants were dismissed as the result of a compromise in the night, rider suits of Henry Bennett, A. H. Cardin, C. W. Rucker, J. M. Wood, Laura Tooney and G. W. Gor- don in the federal court. All the cases will be continued. Erie Awards Big Contract. Contracts have been placed with che McClintic-Marshall Construction Com- pany of Pittsburg, by the Erie Rail- road Company for the Hoboken via- duct and will require about 5,700 tons of steel. This road is arranging to place orders for about 6,000 tons, which may come to Pittsburg con- cerns, or be divided among different bidders. Cleveland.—By a unanimous vote, the 207 members of the Lake Seaman’s {union decided to zo on strike here. ROBBERS DIG TUNNEL 10 GET TREASURE Subway Under Bus.ness Houses to Reach Bank Vaults. ESCAPE WITH THE PLUNDER Robbers Had Been Hard at Work for Several Days in Driving the Tunnel. Suffolk, Va.—Tunneling their way under four other buildings to reach the vaults of a bank, robbers gained admission to the Bank of Suffolk, carried away with them a large amount of loose currency, gold and silver, and succeeded in escaping. Although the loss was discovered by the officials of the bank Monday morning no notification thereof was given to the police until late Tues- day. It is thought the thieves must have worked at least ten days before they succeeded in reaching the bank by their underground course. It is be- lieved that they finished their job and made their entrance into the bank either on Sunday or Sunday night. They attempted to break open the vault, but did not succed in this. They secured about $1,500. The police have no clew. Inside the tunnel were found empty bottles, cigar stumps and bits of food, which make it evident that they must have spent most of their time in the tunnel. Employes in one of the stores under which the robbers tunneled say that they have observed some peculiar noises beneath them during the nast week This is the first bank robbery in Suffold since 1876, when “Big Frank” McCoy, Tom McCormick and another were chased and run down in the Dis- mal Swamp. As they were wanted in Delaware, however, on a more Sser- ious charge they were given up by. the Virginia authorities. PRESIDENT AT BALL GAME Learns a Few Things About “Spit Balls’ and Eats Peanuts. Washington.—President Taft went out to the baseball game Monday, saw Washington walloped, 8 to 4, by the Boston American leaguers, was ini- tiated into the mysteries of the ‘spit ball,” shared a five-cent bag of pea- nuts with Vice President Sherman, who sat in the box next to him, wish- ed hard for Washington to win and said sadly that he hoped he wasn’t a “hoodoo.” No one in Washington could recall just when it was that a President of the United States last attended a ball game in this city. With all of his love for outdoor life and sports, Mr. Roosevelt did not go within the ball grounds during his seven years at the White House. Vice President Sherman, a dyed-in- the-wool “fan,” kept a detailed score of the game, supplying the President with such statistical information as he asked for every now and then. MILLIONS SMUGGLED Prominent Women Said to Be Back of Offer to Loeb. New York.—Further investigation of the systematic smuggling of Paris gowns into this port led the custom house officials to declare the syndi- cate had probably smuggled in $1,000,- | 000 worth of goods each year for the last 10 years, thus defrauding the gov- ernment out of $600,000 annually in customs duty. Tfforts to avoid criminal prosecu- tion and to shield from publicity the prominent women for whom the $55,000 worth ®of recently seized gowns were intended resulted in the offer by reputable attorneys represent- ing anonymous clients of $260,000 to the government to drop the investiga- tion. The federal grand jury ¢s in- vestigating the’ case and it is inti- mated the identity of the smugglers will be revealed. * COAL ROADS ENJOINED Must Not Increase Freight Rates in West Virginia. Richmond, Va.—Court action es- topped the proposed increase in freight rates on coal shipped from the New River and Kanawha districts of West Virginia to lake ports. On the petition of the Cabin Creek Consolidated Coal Company of Kana- wha county, W. Va., United States Circuit Judge Goff issued an injunec- tion restraining the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad from filing a schedule with the Inter-State Commerce Com- mission increasing the rate. Settlement With Venezuela. Washington, D. C.—President Taft sent to Congress a report hv Secre- tary Knox regarding the settlement of the Venezuelan claims necotiated by William I. Buchanan. To hear the claims submitted to the arbitral tribunal at The Hague that tribunal will meet on February 13, 1910. Ven- ezuela has selected Senor Roque Saens Pana of the Argentine Fepub- lic as the judge to represent her at The Hague. Steel Wire Price Cut. Cleveland.—The American Steel and Wire Company announced ~ cut of 10 cents per 100 pounds, or $2 a ton, in the prices of all classes of steel wire. The plants of the Amer- ican Steel and Wire (Company are now running at about 75 per cent of. capacity, and it is thought that this reduction will stimulate business. The ant can draw twenty times its own weight—and so can a mustard | plaster plaster. FIVE MEN MEET DEATH Steamer Collides With Ice Floe and Almost Immediately Goes to the Bottom. Mackinaw City, Mich. —Five men were drowned when the steamer Eber ward collided with a heavy ice floe and sank five miles west of here. The dead—John Hern, James Perry, John Meberoth, Kinney McKay and an unknown deck hand. Captain T. LeMay, First Mate A. P. Galine, Chief Engineer Frank Bald- win, Second Engineer S. R. Shipman, Charles Lester, Frank Gutch, August Palmer, John Winterhaler, A. Quinn and Mrs. Winterhaler escaped in a yawl boat. The boat went to the bottom in one of the deepest spots of, the Straits of Mackinac and will be a total loss te gether with her cargo of corn. She was bound from Milwaukee to Port Huron, Mich. So completely was the bow of the steamer shattered by the collision with the ice floe that she was flooded from stern to stern al most instantly. Five of her crew were caught with- out warning asleep in their bunks and went to the bottom with the sinking steamer. The survivors, who happen- ed to be on deck at the time of the accident, had barely time to float a yawl boat. They were picked up by the steamer Kennington. DIES AT MARRIAGE ALTAR Miss Hart of Washington, Pa., Ex pires in Colorado. Denver, way from Washington, Pa., for health: and also to become the bride of W. H. Ferguson, one of the leading attom neys of Colorado, Miss Ethel Leona Hart, dropped dead at Boulder, Colo, ust as she was being led to the altar. Miss Hart is the daughter of Birt Hart, a former member of the Penn- sylvania legislature. She came here about a week ago. ’ Just as the wedding march was be- ing played the young woman was stricken with an attack of heart trom- ble due to her excitement attendant to the marriage and died within a short time. The body was taken to her old home in Washington by Mr. Ferguson for burial. TILLMAN CALLS ON TAFT South Carolina Senator Visits White House for the First Time in Séven Years. Washington, D. C.—Senator B. R. Tillman of South Carolina paid & long- deferred call at the White House today and incidentally got his first glimpse of Booker T. Washington, who was waiting to see the President. This was Tillman’s first visit to the executive office in seven years. He Taft. “I came,” said Senator Tillman, “to see if the office seekers had fried any fat off the President, but they haven’t fried a pound.” - Asked why he had not visited the White House in the past seven years Senator Tillman replied: “I waited until a gentleman got here.” President Makes Nominations. Washington.—The President made the following nominations: Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- of Towa; collector of customs for the district of Miami, Ohio, George W. Huntley; citizens to be assistant sur- geons in the navy: John G. Ziegler, of Pennsylvania; Glenmore F. Clark, of Kentucky; William M. Kerr, of New York; George A. Riker, of New York; Thares Harlan, District of Columbia. ' Pennsy Buys N. & W. Stock." New York. — Announcement was made in this city that Kuhn, Loeb & Company have sold approximately $19,000,000 worth of the stock of the to the Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany. This, together with the pre- vious holdings of the Pennsylvania and its subsidiaries, gives the Penn- sylvania possession of about $37,500, 000, or 37% per cent of Norfolk & Western stock and practical control. To Buy Waters-Pierce. Houston, Tex.—It was authoritively announced here that the Houston Oil Company will soon take over the Texas property of the Waters-Pierce Company. Official announcement is expected within a few days. The Houston Oil Company, which is cap* italized at $30,000,000, last Friday passed out of the receiver’s hands. The company will maintain its head- quarters in Houston. Will Welcome Japs. San Francisco.—Plans for entertain- ing the officers and men of the Jap- anese training cruisers Azo and Soya, were discussed at a meeting in Mayor Taylor’s office. Nothing will be left undone to give the Oriental guests a welcome that they will not soon for- get. The United States court of appeals at New Orleans denied a rehearing in the railroad rate cases of Alabama, recently decided in favor of the state. As a result, the roads must secure in- tervention by the supreme court of the United States or obey the law. Visible Supply of Grain. New York.—The visible supply of grain in the United States Saturday, {April 17, as compiled by the New York® produce exchange, was as foi- lows: ‘Wheat 32,628.000 bushels, de- crease 2,234,000 bushels; corn, 5,051,- 000 bushels, decrease 1.260,000 bush- els; oats 8,916,000 bushels; decrease 487,000 bushels; rye 522,000 bushels, decrease 80,000 bushels; barley 3,716, 000 bushels, increase 33,000 bushels. The visibly supply of wheat in Canada last Saturday was 9,050,000 bushels, an increase of 303,000 bushels. Colo.—Traveling all the was cordially greeted by President . tentiary to Chile, Thomas C. Dawson, - Norfolk & Western Railway Company”, on their way to visit American ports, Ae use Br F &o. Cov firn tha Oa’ 8 $s i act fac fre k a GpeseneEn Ho . re OFREEE 1 a] 49 AD ANI ~~ [A BA I B-4 pe PREY - ®t bie BB a Fria A