J TT V j Earthquake Cities on Fires Break Out In Ruins and Add to the Destruc tionHundreds of Lives Lost and Many Persons Injured Losses Enormous. CITY'S WATER WORKS WRECKED The City Hall, Costing $7,000,000, It in Ruins. Magnificent Palace Hotel Burned. FALLING WALLS KILL MANY Frantic and Homeless People Throng Streets and Parks While Many Fled to Other Places. Earthquake and fire have almost destroyed the city of San Francisco and a number of towns along the Pacific Coast. The fire which broke out in the ruins of San Francisco got beyond control owing to the lack of water and the flames spread over three-fourths of the city. The num ber of lives lost cannot be accurately stated, but will not exceed 600. The property loss Is estimated at from 20o,ooo,0()o to $300,000,000. It was 5:13 o'clock on the morn ing of the 18th when a terrific earth . Btaoek rocked the- whole "city and sur rounding country. One shock appar ently lasted two minutes and there was almost immediate i collapse of flimsy structures all over the city. The water supply was cut off and when fires broke out in various sec tions there was nothing to do but al low the buildings to burn. Tele graph and telephone communication was shut off for a time. The West ern Union was put completely out of business' and the Postal was the only company that managed to get wire out of the city. About 10 o'clock the Postal was forced to sus pend. Electric power w'as stopped: and street cars did not run. Railroads and ferry bents also ceased opera tions. Fires raged all day and the fire department was powerless to do anything except dynamite build ings. Following the first shook there was another within five minutes, but not nearly so severe. Three hours later thore was a slight quake. Reports from districts outside of San Francisco indicate widespread damage. S.n Jose. 50 miles south, lost many buildings and from 15 to 20 persons were killed. The annex of the Vendome hotel collapsed and fires broke out. Stanford univer sity and Palo Alto suffered greatly. A message sent "April 20, 2 p. m. says: The fire is now positively stated to be under control, with the probability that one quarter of the -.city-lying west of Franklin street, and known as the western addition, north ward to the Presidio, will be saved. The stand made at VanNess avenue was generally successful, the flames crossing that avenue to the west in only a few places. The following message was receiv ed at Washington from Gen. Funston. In command of the Federal troops at San Francisco: "About 300.000 people homeless. Everything quiet. Troops are co operating with the police. Famine seems inevitable. All large supply stores have been burned. The most energetic efforts from outside can only prevent frightful suffering. I request that everything possible be done in the way of food supplies, tentage and blankets. No more troops needed tit present." At Sanford many of the handsome buildings were demolished, and two persons were killed. One of them was Junius Robert Hnnnu, of Brad ford, Pa., and the other was Otto Curts, -a fireman. Six other students are lying in the Palo Alto hospital with bruises, cuts and internal in juries, all California students. The court house at Redwood City and other buildings collapsed. Menlo Park, Burlingame and other fashionable places suffered greatly. Thousands of people are homeless and many are huddled in the parks and public squares beside the house hold goods they were able to save. The city is under martial law and all the downtown streets are patrolled by cavalry and Infantry. Details of troops are also guarding the banks. Most of the principal buildings have already been destroyed and others RAILROAD FINED Burlington Pays $40,000 and Each of Two Officials 10,000. The Chicago, Burlington and Quincy . railroad, Darius Miller and Claude G. Burnham, officials of the road, were found guilty in the Feder al court at Chicago, of granting re bates In violation of law. The rail road corporation was fined $40,000 and the two officials $10,000 each. The fines were paid at once, the defendants going to the office of Vnited States Marshal Ames, where a check was made out for the full amount of the three fines. First Steel Passenger Car. The first of the experimental steel passenger cars which the Pennsyl vania railroad is building at the- Al toona shops has been turned over to the motive power and transportation department for trial. The steel cars were ordered several months agd and for a time the Pennsylvania held Its 1906 passenger equipment order until It could be seen how the steel cars would work, but the demand for new passenger cars was so urgent that the usual wooden cars with steel frames were contracted for. Destroys Pacific Coast are in imminent danger. Over all the scene of desolation hangs a dense pall of smoke. The entire district surrounded by Vallejo, Howard, East and Sansome streets, embracing practically the entire wholesale portion of the city, has been swept clean by the fire. Also the district bounded by Market, Eighth and Folsom streets, has been devastated. In the latter district were included most of the city's fin est and most substantial buildings. The area covered by the (lames up to nightfall of the first day was about eight square miles, or several hund red city blocks. Most of the build ings untouched by the (lames wore greatly damaged by the earth shocks. ReporU from cities near San Fran cisco show the dest ruction was gen eral. Santa Rosa, tin miles north, was damaged to the extent of $1,000, 000. At Napa, many buildings were shattered and the loss will amount to $300,000: Xo loss of life Is reported. At Vallejo the damage was slight in comparison with thai suffered In other cilles. The loss will be about $10,000. News comes from Niles, a small town in the Santa Clara valley, about 15 miles from San .lose, stating that the earthrpiake demolished the State Insane asylum a! Agnews, near San Jose, bnring many of the Inmates in the ruins. It. is stated that San Jose suffered severely. This news was brought by an automobile from San Jose to points where wire communi cation had been established with liOS Angeles temporarily. A message from Salinas, at 11 o'clock at night gave the following Informal ion: One hundred and twenty bodies have been taken out of the Agnew insane asylum near San Jose, and thore are probably 150 more corpses in the ruins. The magnificent struc ture was demolished. Kight dead' Italian? wore taken out of an Italian hotel at San Jose. At. that place the Presbyterian church, St. Pal rick's cathedral and the High school were destroyed. The new hall of justice at San Jose. just, compil ed at a cost of $;:ri),noo, was demol ished. All hut Iwo of the iiniveisily build ings at l.eland Stanford are in ruins. At Ioma Priola. IS miles from San ta Cruz, a mine house slipped on the side of a mountain burying 10 men in the ruins. Not a town around San Francisco has escaped damage by eathquake. At Redwood City nil business build ings are in ruins. The now Carnegie library is totally destroyed. At Alameda, the terra colta and sewerpipe plant of Clark & Sons is in ruins. The huge chimney caved In. crushing the machinery beneath. The employes had several narrow es capes from death as a result of the earthquake. . According to Mr. Duffy there 'were about 300 persons killed In the des truction of the three hotels of Santa Rosa, and not fewer than 500 in the whole town of Santa Rosa. The busi ness section of Santa Rosa collapsed inside of live minutes. Then the fire burned Fourth street from one end to the other, starting at each end and meeting in the middle, thus sweeping over the ruins and burning the im prisoned people. Santa Rosa is 75 miles north of San Francisco. Latest reports show that 20 persons were killed by the earthquake' in San Jose. The Hall of Records is des troyed, as well as the Hall of Justice. All the main buildings are damaged. R. H. Tucker, in charge of the Lick observatory, says: "No damage was done to the in struments or the buildings of the ob servatory by the earthquake. California has suffered from seis mic disturbance, more or less, as far back as history makes record. In 100 years it is estimated that the subterranean forces have been made manliest 200 times, but the combin ed effect in that period is not com parable with the result of this ap palling catastrophe. It is a matter of dispute whether the convulsion of ixos was as great a calamity as that, of 1S72. In March of the latter year there was au up heaval in the Inyo valey which car ried devastation over an area of hundreds of square miles. Ten small villages were destroyed and the loss of life was between 30 and 50. FIRE IN PHILIPPINE Towns Destroyed and Thousands of ; People Homeless. Fire has swept the town of Mari- J quina, in Rizal province. Many thousands of persons are homeless , and starving. Two thousand dwell-; ings are in ruins. The government i is rushing assistance to the sufferers, j Fire also destroyed Pasil, near the I town of Cebu. Two hundred dwell- j Ings were burned and many persons are homeless. ' Degree for King Edward. King Edward VII., of England, through Sir Mortimer Durand. his ambassador, will receive the degree of doctor of laws from the Univer sity of Pennsylvania at the univer sity's observance of the bl-centenary of the birth of Benjamin Franklin. Dowie Gets Injunction. Dowie has executed a neat flank iiovemenl on bis enemies by secur ity 'against their interfering with his return to Zion City and prohibiting ant' demonstrations against him. MILLIONS FOR SUFFERERS Quick Respnse to the Needs of the Unfortunate on the Coast. PROMPT RELIEF OFFERINGS Congress Votes $1,000,000 and the People in All Sections Subscribe Liberally to the Fund. Operating through the army, the nHvy, the marine corps and the rev enue cutler service, the Federal gov ehnment moved with commendable promptness and energy to relieve the appalling distress attending the un precedented catastrophe at. San Francisco and in the surrounding cities and towns. Congress appropriated ' $1,000,000 available immediately foi relief of the sufferers. The secretary of the treasury au thorized the telegraphic transfer of $10,000,0(10 from the sub-treasury at New York to San Francisco. The cash will be deposited in New York and immediately paid out on the or der of San Francisco hanks entitled to the same. The war department officials have been making estiinaies of the losses sustained by the government. The quartermaster's stores in San Fran cisco wore in rented buildings and the loss in goods stored there by the quartermaster's department is rough ly estimated at about $3,500,000. The loss of the commissary supplies is estimated at $200,000. Among the larger contributions were the following: Mystic Shriners, $100,000; Andrew Carnegie, $100,000; James D. Phelan, ex-Mayor of San Francisco, $1,000, 000; State of Massachusetts, $500, 000; Canada, $100,000: . W. Astor. $100,000; Standard Oil Co., $100,000; V. S. Steel Corporation, $100,000; Chicago, $250,000; C. J. Barrage, $lo0,000: Woodmen of America. $100, 000; Philadelphia, $100,000; EL It. Harrlman, $200,000, and hundreds of other gave In sums of smaller amount. A subscription or $10,000 for the relief of the San Francisco sufferers was made by Robert Lebaudy, the French philanthropist, through the French ambassador. John D. Rockefeller authorized his agents In San Francisco to expend $100,000 for the relief of the homeless and destitute of that city. Ladonbcrg. Thalmann & Co., of New York, telegraphed to Thornwell Mullally, at San Francisco, to place at the disposal of Mayor Schmltz the sum of $75, (Hio as a contribution to the relief fund from the I'nited Rail ways Investment Co., Ladonbcrg, Thalmann & Co . Patrick Calhoun, C. j Sidney Siiepard and Ford, Bacon & Davis. hazard Frors and J. & W. Selig- j man have, each subscribed $10,000 i for the San Francisco sufferers. j Brown Bros. & Co., No. 59 Wall ; street. New York, subscribed $10,000 for the earthquake sufferers. M. Guggenheim's Sons notified Con. Funston that they had contri buted $50.ooo for the relief of the San Francisco sufferers. From ail parts of the country re- ports, of prompt and liberal offerings are "coming in. Over $iil,000 was j raised in Pittsburg the day following the disaster. ; PENNSYLVANIA DEMOCRATS Charles P. Donnelly, of Philadelphia, i Elected Chairman. Charles P. Donnelly, of Philadel phia, was elected chairman of the Pennsylvania State Democratic com mittee by acclamation to succeed State Senator J. K. P. Hall, of Ridg way, at its annual meeting. The committee also decided to hold the confirmation of candidates for Cov er and other State officers at Har rlsburg on June 27. State head quarters will be transferred from Harrlshurg to Philadelphia. The following were elected division chairmen, who constitute the State executive committee: John Waller, of Lebanon; E. S. Doty of Bedford; William J. Bren- nen, of Pittsburg; W. H. Kneib. of ; Erie: D. J. Driscoll. of St. Marys; W. T. Creasy, of Catawissa; James j I. Blakeslee, of Mauch Chunk; Frank; B. Rhodes, of Media. I EARTHQUAKES IN MICHIGAN One Man Killed in a Mine Buildings Rock and Chimneys Fall. An earthquake shock, which was felt distinctly throughout Hancock county, Mich., and was most pro nounced in the Quincy mine, killed Timothy Leary and Injured four oth ers while working one mile below the earth's surface in that property. In numerous t" .ildings rocked, chimneys fell and dishes rattled, ter rifying the citizens and causing scores of men, women and children to rush from their inmes. Many miners on the day shift refused to go below again. Postal Clerks Rescued. Eleven postal clerks, all alive, were taken from the debris of the San Francisco postoffice. All at first were thought to be dead, but it was found that although they were bur ied in the stones, every one was alive. They had been for three days without food or water. Atl the mall in the postoffice was saved. Chinese Riots Were Local. Bishop J. W. Bashford of the Methodist Episcoiml church, who has just returned from China, presents what may be regarded as an authori tative and unprejudiced account of conditions in that country. Traveling 5,000 miles through China since the American boycott was instituted, he did not witness a Bingle manifestation of hostility on the part of the natives. Local causes, he declares, were re sponsible for the three riots which have occurred in the empire during the past year. ROAST NEGROES TO DEATH Mob at Springfield, Mo.,. Takes Awful Vengeance on Two Prisoners in County Jail. A mob of 3,000 men took Horace Duncan and James Copeland, negroes from the county jail, at Springfield, Mo., and hanged them to the goddess of liberty on the court house. A fire was then built under them and they were roasted to death. The men were charged with assaulting Mabel Edwards, but it is said they were probably Innocent. The mob further vented Its fury on the blacks by taking from the jail William Allen charged with the mur der of O. M. Rouatk last January. Duncan and Copeland were sus pended from telegraph poles In the public square Sal unlay night. The mob, to add to the horror of the oc casion, kindled bonfires under the negroes and they were slowly roasted to death, Allen, protesting his innocence, was taken from his ceil early Sunday morning, forced to ascend a statue called "Justice" and told to jump. The rope which had been placed about his nock, the other end bavin? been fastened to the tower, broke as Allen's weight fell on It, and the negro dropped Into the pyre contain ing the charred bodies of his former companions in prison, Duncan and Copeland. Allen was taken up the tower again and compelled to jump. This time his captors were more suc cessful in their work, and the nogrl) slowly strangled to death. The sheriff appealed to Gov. Folk and six companies of State Militia were sent to Springfield to prevent further trouble. TEN KILLED IN RIOT Controversy Over Proper Date for Easter Ends in Slaughter. Ton Greeks are reported killed In a riot at the little station of Gurley, Ark., 40 miles south of Helena, Ark. Others were injured. Gurley 13 at the end of the construction work on the Memphis, Helena & Louisiana rail road, on which the Greeks are engag ed. The 'rioting began in a dispute be tween Roman Catholics and adherents of the Greek Church as to the date on which Easier should he celebrated. Sunday afternoon shooting was general, and seven men were killed. This morning a message was received from Sheriff Kildeens saying that with his force of 20 deputies he could not quel! the riot, and asking that Gov ernor Davis be requested to send troops. He' added that three more men had boon killed. The Governor ordered a companv of militia to Gur ley. IMMIGRATION RECORO Arrival from Russia During March Were 24.202. Tho total immigration to the Vnited Slates from all countries during the month of March, mod, according to a statement issued by the immigration bureau was 133,215, or an increase of 70 per cent, over March, moi. The number arriving In March. 1005, is given as 120.932. The number debarred dur ing the same month was C50, an In crease of 40 per cent, over mm. The Russian immigra'ion to this country during March, mofi, was 24. 202, an increase of 75 per cent, over 1901, the immigration for March, 1005, being 1,318. t For the six months ended March 31. moo, tho immigration from all countries was 4t3,31i;, an increase of 3S per cent, over a similar period In 1904. For the same period the im migration from Russia increased 40 per cent, those arriving numbering 81,733. PACKER'S TRIAL A FARCE President Roosevelt Sends Special Message to Congress. In a special message delivered to Congress President Roosevelt declar ed that the result of the recent trial of the beef packers in Chicago was a "miscarriage of jiutlce," and that the interpretation placed by Judge Otis Humphrey on the will of Con gress "is such as to make that will absolutely abortive." The message, which is most sen sational in character, ts based largely on a letter to the President from Attorney General W. H. . Moody, in which the latter reviews the pro ceedings of the case of the govern ment against the packers. Mexican War Veteran Dead. Captain Upton H. Herbert, one of the few surviving veterans o the Mexican war died at Alexandria, Va., after an operation to remove a piece of shell or bullet that has at times made him almost - a cripple. He commanded the Fairfax Company in the fifties, and during the Civil war had chaige of Mount Vernon mansion and grounds. New Record in Wireless Telegraphy. A wireless telegraph message which traveled 2, MIS miles was re ceived at sea by the steamer Moltke, which arrived at New York. The message was sent from the Poldti wireless station on the English coast, and contained 83 words. ANOTHER NEGRO KILLED Young Man Held Up on His Way Home Shoots Assailant. ' At Springfield, Mo., Leslie Peters, 10 years old, shot and killed Ralph Burns, one of two negroes who at tacked him while he was escorting a young woman to her home. Peters drew a pistol and fired at the ne groes, who fled, as he supposed. Ha ran after them, not knowing he had hit one, and stumbled over the dead body of the man he had shot. - The other escaped. TO PSOSECUTE RAILROADS Department of Justice Sucures Facts from Companies' Books. HAS EVIDENCE IN HAND Decisions of 8upreme Court In Paper and Tobacco Trust Cases Aid Attorney General. Prosecutions of the anthracite and bituminous coal trust have been de cided on by the Department of Jus tice. Attorney General Moody engaged Charles E. Hughes of New York and Alexander Simpson, Jr., of Philadel phia, to conduct the cases. Hughes was the man who conducted tha searching into the Insurance scan dals. The coal-carrying roads, which own the anthracite coal m'ines, will bo defendants in the case. These roads include the Pennsylvania, Baltimore & Ohio, Reading. Lehigh Valley, Delaware & Hudson. Dela ware, Lackawanna & Western, Erie, New York, Ontario & Western, New York, Susquehanna & Western and the Central "Railroad of New Jersey. Proceedings will also lie brought against the different roads In the bituminous coal fields. This is the first action of the De partment of Jiutlce under the di rections of the Supreme Court In the paper and tobacco trust cases. In which the court held that corpora tions were not granted Immunity from punishment because the officials of the corporations furnished evidence on which prosecutions could be based, and that these officials must produce the books of the corpora tions. in the announcement of the Depart ment, of Justice relating to the selec tion of the two lawyers to conduct tho case it is admitted that the Government now has in its possession evidence which will enable the Gov ernment to go Into court and show that tho coal roads have engaged In the sale of coal in Inter-State com merce, which is forbidden by law, especially as there has been discrimi nations against mine owners not in the trust. The two lawyers have been engaged to advise with the At torney General and actually to con duct, the prosecution which will be brought. TANGLES UP PROPERTY i i Supreme Court Decision Makes Il legal 500 Divorces in' Chicago. It is estimated by Chicago lawyers that the decision of the supreme court of the I'nited StateE holding illegal all divorces, except . ..in both parties to the suit resided within tho i same jurisdiction, will make illegal 1 jito divcrces that have boon granted : in that city alone, and pave the way 1 for all manner of complications in j the next generation over inheritance, ! and the rights to property, j Several prominent attorneys de i claw that the decision means chaos, In regard to the title to personal ; property. Complications will arise, j particularly In the cases where men i who married after obtaining dl ! vorces now held to be illegal. Prop I erty left by men so divorced and so ' remarried must go to children of the first marriage, and cannot bo held by children born of the subsequent mar j Wage. i LADRONES MAKE ATTACK Three Members of Luzon Constabu lary and One Outlaw Killed. The headquarters of the Philippine constabulary at Molos, Island of Luzon, was attacked several days ago by a band of Ladrones. Three native members of the constabulary and one Ladrone were killed. The affair creates no alarm here, where it is regarded as merely an incident of the effort to establish order in the islands through the employment of a native conlabulary. Similar conflicts biVweem local i outlaw bands are of more or less fre j quent occurrence. j WARRANTS FOR DOWIE'S ARREST - The Prophet Must Kesp Away from ! Zion City. ' j ' Overseer Wilbur G. Vollva. j swore out warrants for the arrest of I John Alexander Dowie charging him with three serious crimes, i ' An ultimatum has been served on i Dowie that he must remain away from Zion or the warrants, which are in readiness, will be served. The warrants, drafted by Judge y. V. Barnes, accuse Dowie of violation of the banking laws, obtaining money under false pretenses and fraud. la a formal announcement. Dea con Fielding H. Wilhlte and his wife. Deacon John Lewis and Deacon James Peters were expelled from the church and banished from Zion City for remaining loyal to Dowie. Boiler Explosion Kills Three. i Thiee members of the crew of the British battleship Princess of Wales I were killed and four were Injured by a boiler explosion while the vessel I was undergoing her speed trials. The connecting rod bolts on the high pressure engine and the top cylinder coverings were fractured. Federal Official Indicted. Fred O. Murray, recently appoint ed collector of the port of Buffalo, and former treasurer of Erie county, was Indicted by the grand jury on a charge of stealing from the county of Erie sums aggregating $38,870 and receiving stolen property in a like amount. In all, 17 indictments were handed in by the grand "Jury, which has been investigating alleged graft ing in connection with the purchase by the county of the North street cemetery as a site for the Sixty-fifth regiment armory. THREE 8TRIKERS KILLED Fatal Results of Battle With Officer at Wlndber, Pa. Rioting, ending in bloodshed, was the climax of the troubles between the striking miners and the officers of the law at Wlndber, Pa. The indignation of the strikers at the arrest of soma of their comrades blazed forth Into fury that resulted in a conflict with deputy sheriffs, in which three were killed and at least twelve seriously Injured. Twenty charged with re sponsibility for the riot are under ar rest, closely guarded, and Wlndber ia now practically under martial law. The dead: Mike lonovan, Steve Slonovich, Maro Dentzgo, Paul Zllls. Seriously injured: Eugene Delaney, chief engineer of tho coal company; Charles Foster, 12 years old: shot In the abdomen; Charles Stizak, shot In the leg; Four Foreigners, wounded by bullets and carried away by the rioters. MORE KEARSARGE DEATHS Court Is Appointed by Admiral Evans - to Investigate Explosion. Two more deaths were reported to the navy department as the result of the explosion on the battleship Kearsarge. Frederick Thomas Fish er, chief gunner's male, died Sunday night, and James S. McArdle, elec trician, first clnss, died Monday. Hear Admiral Evans has cabled the navy department that be has appoint ed a court of Inquiry, consisting of Rear Admiral Browuson, Capt. Ing ersoll and Lieut. -Commander Brad shaw, to investigate the accident. SOME EARTHQUAKE RECORDS. Year. Place. Ma Lost. iru.1 Teddo I90 0CD ITIl l'Bkln U50UO ITM t'nlro 40 000 lr.Vi Matron A. 00U lr'.T Uilitn 41 000 111 rnmla 18 000 MM Julian 10001) V.iH St. I'lnrre, Mnrtliiliiia DO 000 llH Keruliana, Turkoman 10000 HI". India 15000 !!Kl". Calabria. Italy 270 liili Hlmmakalia, Cancanla WW li" Tamaznla, Moxlno 100 Sentenced to Jail. Judge Humphrey in the United States circuit court at Springfield, 111., declared Col. James Hamilton Lewis, corporation counsel of Chica go, In cDntempt of court in the Alton water works case, and sentenced Col. Lewis to tiO days' imprisonment in the Sangamon county jail. The sent ence is to be remitted If Col. Lewis within the next five days will dis miss certain suits which he brought in the Madison county circuit court. WASHINGTON NEWS NOTES. The senate confirmed the following appointments: Charles H. Keating, Ohio, deputy auditor for the post office department: postmasters: Pennsylvania A. J. Sutton, Smith field; M. K. Strawn, Star Junction. The President sent the following nominations to tho senate: Major general to be lieutenant general, Henry C. Corblu; associate justice of the supreme court of Oklahoma, Milton C. Oarber. Postmasters: Pennsylvania H. D. Patch, W'ilmer iling; C. W. Houser, Duryea; H. S. Williams, Fairehance. Ohio C. M. Ingram, Marysvllle. The Supremo court of the United Slates dismissed for want of juris diction the case of J. N. Searle vs. the state of Georgia, involving the validity of the Georgia state law pro hibiting the running of freight trains on Sunday. In the supreme court Attorney Ed mund F. Richardson of Denver, Col., entered a motion to advance the hearing in the cases of Charles H, Mover, W. D. Haywood and George A. Pet.tibone, in custory in Idaho on the charge of assassinating former Gov. Steunenberg of that state. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Henry II. Rogers, or the Standard Oil company, has presented the Gran view institute, a hospital at Oil City, Pa., for tile treatment of consump tives, with a check for $1,000. The stockholders of the New York: Central & Hudson River Railroad Company voted to increase the capi tal stock of the company from $150, 000,000 to .$250,000,000. The old board of directors was re-elected. The House passed the Shartel bill authorizing national banks to loan to Individual depositors 10 per cent of their capital stock and 10 per cent, of their surplus, providing the total Bhall not exceed 20 per cent, of the capital stock. The religious troubles between the catholics and Mariavits. the new catholic sect. In many places In Po land are assuming a serious phase. Marconi Wireless Telegraph reports gross earnings of $32,209 for last year, an increase of over 100 per cent, as compared with 1904. President Wants Insurance Law President Roosevelt transmitted to Congress an Important message re lating to Insurance legislation. Ac companying the message were the report and recommendations of the insurance convention held In Chicago last February. Among the recom mendations Is the draft or a bill which Congress is urged to enact in to law, with such amendments as Its wisdom may suggest. Boat Struck a Snag. Tho big side-wheel excursion steamer Louisiana, carrying 400 passengers, struck a snag In the Ohio river near Evansvllle, Incl., and will bo a total loss. The passengers were panic stricken, but by running the boat at full speed into the bank ail were rescued. The new Christian church at Fol lansbee, W.' Va., was dedicated.' The sermon was preached by President T. E. Cramlett, of Bethany college. Rev. Herbert Smith is the uastor. The Ohols sf Faint. ' Fifty yean ago a srelt-palnted hems was a rare sight; to-day an unpalnted bouse is rarer, if people knew the real value of paint a bouse In need of paint would be "scarcer than hen's teeth." There was some excuse for our fore fathers. Many of them lived in bouses hardly worth preserving; they knew, nothing about paint, except that it was pretty; and to get a bouse painted was a serious and costly job. The differ ence between their case and ours la that when they wanted paint It hnd to be made for them; whereas when we need paint we can go to the nearest good store and buy it, In any color or quality ready for use. We know, or ought to know by this time, that to let a house stand unpalnted is most rostly, while a good coat of paint, ap plied iu season, is the best of invest ments. If we put off the brief visit of the painter we shall In due time have the carpenter coming to pay us a long visit at our expense. Lumber Is con stantly getting scarcer, dearer and poorer, while prepared paints are get ting plontler, better and less expensive. It Is a short-sighted plan to let the val uable lumber of our houses go to pieces for the want of paint. For the man thnt need paint there are two forms from which to choose; one is the old form, still favored by cer tain unprogresslve painters who have not yet caught up with the times lead and oil; the other Is the ready-for-use paint found in every up-to-date store. The first must be mixed with oil, driers, turpentine and colors before it is ready for use; the other need only be stirred up in the can and it M ready to go on. To buy lead and oil, colors, etc., and mix them into a paint by hand is, in this twentieth century, about the same as refusing to ride in a trolley car because one's grandfather had to walk or ride on horseback: when be wanted to go anywbere. Prepared paints have been on the mar ket less than fifty years, but thoy have proved on the whole so Inexpensive, bo convenient and so good that the con sumption to-day is something over six ty million gallons a year and still grow ing. Unless they had been In the mala satisfactory, it stands to reason there would have been no such steady, growth In their use. Mixed paints are necessarily cheaper, than paint of the band-mixed kind, be-' cause they are made in a large way byi machinery from materials bought ia large quantities by the manufacturer. They are necessarily better than paint mixed by hand, because they are mora finely ground and more thoroughly, mixed and because there Is le'i chance of the raw materials In them being adulterated. No painter, however care ful be may be, can ever b sure that the materials he buys are not adulter ated, but the large paint manufacturer does know In everv case, tiasaiise everything he buys goes through the" chemist s hands before be accepts it. Of course there are poor paints ok the market (which are generally cheap paints). So there Is poor flour, poor cloth, poor soap; but because of that do we go back to the hand-mill, tha hand-loom and the soap-kettle of tha backwoods? No, we use our common sense in choosing goods. We find out the reputation of the different brands of flour, cloth and soap; we take ac count of the standing of the dealer that handles thtm, we ask our neighbors. So with paint; if the manufacturer boa a good reputation, If the dealer is re sponsible, if our neighbors have bad satisfaction with It, that ought to be pretty good evidence that the paint la all right. "Many men of mnny minds" Junny paints ot many kinds; - m I but while prepared paints may differ f t considerably in composition, the better, 4 grades of them all agree pretty closely, "V-y In rpstiltii. "All roods lend to Rome. V and the paint manufacturers, starting by different paths, have all the same object 1o make the best paint possible to sell for the least money and so cap ture and keep the trade. There Is scarcely any other article ot general use on the market to-day that can be bought with anything like the assurance of getting your money's worth as the established brands of pre pared paint The paint you buy to-day, may not be like a certain patent medi cine, "the same as you have always bought," but If not. It will be because the manufacturer bas found a way ot giving you a better article for your money, and so making sure of your next order, P. O. As Good as the Mothers of. Old. New York and its people are not half us bad as they are painted. The doings of the people in olden times . make the weaknesses of the "smart set." of to-day look as mild as the do ings of a well-ordered Sunday school convention. All this and more Mrs. Frank Cronise told the Minerva club at its meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria. She also said that Rev. Dr. Park liurst and Kev. Madison C. Peters are the Jeremiahs of our time. And there are the Jeremiahs In) every age. At this the audience burst into ap plause, for the club has had troubles of its own, and bas no use for Jere miahs of any kind. v. "You see a few women drink and gamble, and therefore we forget the millions who do neither, and the hun dreds of millions of men who do both," remarked Mrs. Cronise, ad drsslng figuratively Rev. Dr. Peters, whom she called "the apostle at large to the women of Gotham." "I . contend," she went on, "that we are quite as good wives and mothers as the women ot past generations. We differ in degree and not in kind. The standard of living has changed, and we have changed to meet it." ' Mrs. Cronise ventured tbe asser tion that the clubs of our country and city contain as fine housekeepers as ever managed a household, whose cooking would make the best profes sional chefs turn green with envy. Millions of Cantaloupes. Twelve million six hundred thou sand is the estimate of tbe number of the famous Rocky Ford canta loupes shipped from the Rocky Ford district in Colorado last season. Sev en hundred cars were sent out, as against 593 carloads the previous year. Parents too Strict. Fearing that he would be punished for spending 7 pence on sweets Instead of buying fruit for his mother a schoolboy at Adorf, Saxony, threw himself la front ot s train and was killed. r .(... A...