3 Mil MUST ANSWER President Arraigns tie Oil Octo in Special Message. LODGE AMENDMENT ADOPTED II. Oil Pipe Lines Placed Under Jurisdiction of Interstate Com merce Commission. President Roosevelt In a special message to Congress, made a drastic arraignment or the Standard Oil com 1any as 4 gigantic monopoly disre garding thl rights of all competitors profiting pjormously by conspiring with rallrcjuls to receive secret re oates andi!derlving great advantage through not being amenable to the Inter-State Commerce Commission. The Presdent announced that steps are being taken to prosecute the Standard Oil Company under the El lclns antl-rcbate " act; urged the speedy pasjige of the Knox bill, lim itlug immurtty granted the represen tatives of corporations, and especially asking for xich legislation as will give the lnter-Stato Commerce Com mission control of the company. The speciil message had been so timed as to have an important bear ing on the tmendment of Senator Lodge to thai Hepburn rate bill, mak lng pipe lins common carriers. Within two hours after the mes i 8age had beet rend to the Senate the Lodge amendment was unanimously adopted, 75 Senators voting for It, and all pipe sines carrying oil were placed under the jurisdiction of the Inter-State Commerce Commission as common carriers. This means that hereafter the Standard Oil Company must publish a)l its rates and submit them to the commission for approval and they can be increased or dim inished aj the commission considers proper. The oil monopoly will be under precisely th? same restraints as railroad corporations. H. H. Rogers and John D. Arch hold of the Stand ml 01! Company made an extended answer to the President, denying secret rates or Illegal methods land declaring their company Is the (victim of "the man with a muck rak" SUGAR TRUST INDICTED New York Central Railroad Charged Also With Rebating. Is The April Federal grand Jury, at New York City handed down seven sealed indictments in the sugar re bating cases. TI13 indictments are against the following: The New York Central railway. The American Su?ar Refining Com pany. The New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company and Nathan Gilford, vice president of the com pany, h. The American Sugar Refining Com pany, of New York,! and C. Goodlee, Edgar and Edwin Eafle, the latter two being wholesale sugar dealers of De troit, Mich. j vThe New York Central & Hudson RiWfRailroad Company! and Nathan Guilford7vlce presiirntl and F. E. Pomeroy, general traffic (manager. The American Sugar Rt-fining Com pany and the American Refining Com pany, of New York, nnd'C. Goodlee, Edgar and Edwin Earle, Nathan Full foil, Nathan F. Pomeroy and Edwin Earle. ' The nr3t six indictments were found tinder the "'Efkins anti-trust law," which provided penalties of a fine not exceeding $10,000 or imprison ment not exceeding two years, for giving, grnntlng. applying for or ac cepting any rebate or concension from the regular freight rates, as pub lished by a railroad company as a common carrier. The seventh indlctme.r. found against Guilford, Potnerv. Edgar and Bdwln Earle, charges the:.'. vith hav ing collectively conspired t violate the provisions of the Elkiks antt trust law. FATAL COLLISION Two Trains on Pennsylvania Railroad Meet Head-On. Because orders were misunderstood two fast trains of the -Pennsyvania railroad met head-on at 10:40 o'clock at night on the single track Iff the Petersburg branch, or tut-olft at Clover Creek Junction. 17 Initial east of Altoona, Pa. Both engine1 five 1 niall car3 and one coach were tlmol -ished. Beveu persons were killed, if cord ing to the reports received at til; su perlntendent's office in PitturJfcand 17 injured. (f The dead are: Brakeman Harder, of Harrisburg;" unl -woman, Duncannon, Pa.; TJnl man, whose body has been rei ed; Baggagemaster Kerr, of H burg; Trainmen Dougherty, ; S and Derrick, are also reporte4 1 Western Maryland Buys Car' The Western Maryland Rai Company has awarded a contrac 700 steel coal cars to the Pr Steel Car Company of Pittsburg contract represents an outlay bf V 000. The cars are to be deltv about the latter part of tile LOSE $13,150,000 Hartford Insurance Companies! F Up Liabilities Resulting Fom 'Frisco Disaster. The estimated net losses tf Hartford fire insurance companies! the recent San Francisco fire. Jan nut h tha rtffinlnlu ni-o' IjVptl $2,700,000; Hartford Fire, $5,7 0,ol National Fire, $1,500,000: rlel $700,001;; Phoenix, $1,600,000; Sel tlsh Union and National, $1,0( O.OQ total, $13,150,000. J DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Violent Decline in Stdpk Market Not a Reflection of the fteal Business Conditions. R. G. Dun & Co.'s of trade says: Weekly review The violent decline i prices of 8e of business curitles Is no criterion conditions. Railway earnings have continued to surpass tiiose of the corresponding period irj any previous year, ti. -ain for April being 9.3 per cent's r the saijie amount of 1905 and Oi .er standiids of meas ure were unusually gratifying ex hibits. I Liabilities of failure last month showed a decrease of 6ver 40 per cent in manufacturing! and 12 per cent in trading branches of business as compared with the previous year. The only drawbacks regarding the future are the labor controversies and the stringency in the numey market, neither of which may prove of more than temporary duration. Manufac turing plants report Utile idle ma chinery, and trade in seasonable merchandise feels the impetus of set tled weather. Foreign commerce for the last week shows gains of $14,909,972 In exports and $2,943,729 in imports, as com pared with the same week last year, commodity prices are well maintained by a good demand and die crop out look Is fully as bright as usual at this date, while in many departments in creased acreage is under cultiva tion. Of greatest importance to the iron and steel Industry of all ewnts of the pa3t week was the strike of the longshoremen on the lake water front. If this struggle is not prompt ly settled it will soon become im possible to maintain pig iron produc tion at the highest point on record. Otherwise the strikes on May 1 were not of sufficient magnitude to affect the progress of the steel business. Failures for the week are 212, against 215 the previous week, 199 the preceding week and 212 the cor responding week last year. Continued favorable weather has allowed good progress In planting, the germination of crops, the enlargement of country retail trade, improved re orders for summer goods ami the placing with confidence .of a volume of fall orders fully equal to a year ago. Collections also have measurably im proved. Easier money for legitimate business needs is likewise foreshad owed. Railway earnings are large clear ings still make, records for this sea son of the year and the call for re placement at San Francisco is a feature helpful to trade In many lines. There are of course, some few unfav orable features in general industry. KILLED 3Y A BOMS Russian Students in Paris Engaged in Dynamite Plots. A bomb explosion occurred in the forest of Vlncennes n?ar Paris, kill ing a Russian named Striga and dan gerously wounding a companion nam ed Sokoloff. The two men were proceeding through the woods, each carrying a bomb, with the evident purpose of hiding them for future use. While so doing the bomb which Striga car ried exploded killing him instantly. Sokoloff was struck by fragments of the bomb and fearfully lacerated. The explosion occurred In the out skirts of the forest, on the road bor dering on the suburban town of Charenton, several persons witnessing it. Striga's right hand was torn off, his right leg broken and his ab domen torn open. The po'lee found revolver in Striga s pocket. Striga and Sokoloff both were stu dents of the School of Mines and members of the Rus-tian student's union. They also belonged to the Revolutionary society. , Neither of the men has figured in the police registars of suspected forelgnors. The residences of Russian revolu tionists have been searched, leading to the discovery of alleged incrimin atory documents. Two cousins of Sokoloff were arrested. IRON STRIKE AT BUFFALO Ten Thousand Men Demand Increase, Which is Refused. AH the employes of the iron foun dries of Buffalo. Depew. Tonawanda. i Lockport and Niagara Fall's, inclu'd- j ing molders, coremakers and helpers, j went out on strike. Thirty-six cor-! poratlons, employing about 1,200 ! molders and coremakers, are affected, r Altogether about 10,000 employes are I involved. ! The cause of the strike is a demand for an increase of wages for the mold ers and coremakers. The former want an increase of 20 and the core makers 25 cents a day. Alleged Fraud Involves Millions. The American Bond Company, a $3,000,000 corporation with palatial offices in the Chamber of Commerce building, Chicago, was thrown into the hands of a receiver, through ac tion of the Federal court. Two ap plications for receivers for the com pany also have been filed in the State. courts, and one complainant, William Seweli, alleged that the concern, on the face of its statements of business mdtttons, Is promoting what will prove more than a $1,000,000 fraud. as its present liabilities will exceed its assets by that enormous total, he says. $33.22 PER HEAD IN U. S. er Capita Money Circulation Beats All Former Records. The per capita circulation of the l,;nlted StateB lias reached the unpre- ttdented record of $32.22T This is &.sed on a population of 84,428,000. e former maximum record was t0t.8S, attained February 1 of this Mr. On April 1 tf this year the per PMta circulation -iwas $31.75, on tOrch 1 $31.72 and on January 1 i82. Czar Supplants Count Witte With a Reactionary Politician. NEW MAN IS A WEAKLING When Fresh Crisis Comes Czar May Be Obliged to Call Count Out of Retirement. Premier Witte has resigned and former Minister of the Interior Gore mykin has succeeded him. Minister of Justice Akymoff is also booked for retirement. M. Goremykln's elevation to the premiership created amazement. He is not only regarded as a reac tionary, but the general opinion Is that he Is not equal to the task of facing the coming crisis. Count Witte's retirement from public life iB complete. There is now no question of his ap pointment to be president of the coun cil of the empire. He will again as sume the role of a spectator of the great events which are taking place, returning to private life, from which be was summoned last summer to ne gotiate the peace of Portsmouth. While reasons of health are assign ed for his retirement, it must be ac cepted as a victory for the reaction ists at court. Count Witte simply served the em peror's purpose as a barrier between him and the people, during the try ing months of the revolution, and now that the uprising is suppressed and the treasury again replenished, the count has been ignomihously dis missed. M. Goremykln is considered a mediore man of insignificant appear ance as well as capacity. While for some time he has been called a lib eral, it was only In contrast with such men as Von Plehve and H. Slplagu ine. the late interior minister. He began his career in the ministry of justice, becoming assistant minister, from which post he was called In 1895 as a protege of the dowager em press, to become minister of the interior. PANIC IN WALL STREET Prices of Stocks Fall Rapidly on Enormous Transactions. Wall street on May 2 passed through the most, exciting crisis since the great panic of May 9, 1901, when Northern Pacific sold at, 1,000, and when a short time half the great banking houses in Wall street were insolvent. The transactions, aggre gating 2,500,000 shares, were the lar gest since that memorable day. Rumors of hou?es in trouble added to the excitement, but investigation proved them to be the Invention of the bears. Only one failure was an nounced, that of Charles W. Saacke which created comparatively little comment. ' His total liabilities are estimated to be between $20,000 and $00,000. Prices cmmbled rapidly with each offering and stocks continued to pour out in enormous amounts until into the afternoon, when just before 1 o'clock the bears began to notice that everything they offered was being ab sorbed. The turning point had come: London was buying stocks by the thousand. The banks sent in an abundance of call money at 4 per cent. In the last hour a complete change of sentiment took place and at the close the gen eral belief was that the crisis had passed. IRON WORKERS STRIKE Move Promises to Stop Work on Large Buildings in Chicago. Just as the wreckers started the demolition of old structures to make room for $6,000,000 of new buildings in the Loop district of Chicago, a strike was called which promises to tie up the building industry of Chi cago. One thousand structural iron work ers, following orders dropped work and their idleness will precipitate the first important labor disturbance in the building trades since the 1900 lockout. The strike promiaes to stop nearly all construction work tjf a large character. Boston Wool Market. Foreign wools attracted the trades this week in the absence of domestic, which are especially scarce. The bulk of sales has been in foreign cross breds, both South American and Australian, and a demand was noted for New Zealand. The firmness of the foreign markets is reflected here. Territories are so scarce that there are hardly enough sales to make a price. Pulled wools are , quiet, al though some transactions of a sup erior grade at 00 to fi2c are made. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, 34 at 3414c; X, 32 to 33c; No. 1 and half blood, 39 to 40c; one-eighth and one fourth blood. 39 to 40c; fine unwash ed, 25 to 2Gc. Public Debt Statement. The monthly statement of the pub lic debt shows that at the close of business April 30. 1906. the total debt, less cash in the Treasury, amounted to $984,413,247, which is an Increase for the month of $2,789,809. Five Are Drowned at Sea. The British steamer Blanefield, which sailed from Junln, March 10, for Dover was sunk off Beachy Head by the British bark Kate Thomas. Five persons were drowned. The cargo of the Blanefield was valued at $250,000. Professor Israel C. Ruasell, aged 54, head of the geology department of the University of Michigan, died of pneumonia. Professor Russell was widely known as a scientist. LARGE LIBRARIES LOST Millloni of Books Destroyed In San Francisco Fire. Among tho greatest losses from the fire are the magnificent llbrarhw of San Francisco. Library after library holding in all more than a million volumes, disappeared in the fire. It is believed that their market, value ex ceeded $3,000,000. The public libra ry was the eighth in size In the Unit ed States. Librarian George W. Clark said: "We have available $750,000 that Andrew Carnegie gave us. We have a block of land bounded by Van Ness avenue, Hayes, Franklin and Felt streets, and we have $1,000,000 avail able for a new library building. Doubtless the building of a new home for San Francisco's books will begin soon." The Mechanics Institute library and the Mercantile library were burn ed, with 100,000 volumes. The Sutro library of 200,000 volumes collected by the late Adolph Sutro, was destroy ed. The library of the Society of the Pioneers Is gone. One of Its priceless features was the typewritten reminis cences of pioneers bound in 12 vol umes. The.nohenilan club lost its lib rary of 5,000 volumes, many of them autograph copies from noted authors. The French library of 10,000 books, which was in the Spring Valley build ing, is no more. The B'Nai B'Rith library contributed 10,000 volumes to the pyre. The flames took the cost ly library In the Crocker mansion. Nothing remains of the 33,000 vol umes of the San Francisco law lib rary. The supreme court lost Its lib rary rf 10,0(10 volumes and the fine collections of Appellate Judge Harri son, and of Dr. Tyler, dean of Hast ings law college, are In ashes. Of all the big libraries In San Francisco, one nlone is intact. The Bancroft library, containing an im mense collection of histories.1 works, was stored at Twenty-sixth and Valencia streets and is undamaged. This collection was purchased some time ago by the University of Cali fornia and doubtless will be taken to Berkeley for the use of the students as soon as possible. BIG SUM FOR INDIANS Cherokee Lawyer Gets Enormous Fee for Conducting the Case. Robert S. Owen, a full blood Chero kee Indian and a lawyer of ability, will receive a fee of a little less than $750,000 for winning a case which was decided by the Supreme Court of tho United States. The case is that of Eastern Chero kee Indians of the Indian Territory, against the United States. The amount involved is about $5,000,000, and, of this. Attorney Owen will re ceive 15 per cent., the largest fee ever received by a lawyer in a Su preme Court case. The award against the United States is the largest ever given in favor of private parties. The claim of the Indians grew out of the treaty of 183$, under which the government agreed to pay the cost of removing the Cherokees from Georgia and oth er Southern States to the Indian Territory. The Government did ,not pay the cost of removal, as agreed in the treaty, and after years of litigation the supreme court decided it must do so, with interest at five per cent, for 68 years. Robert L. Owen, the attorney who has bandied tho case before the su preme court and who gets the Im mense fee of about $750,000, while a Cherokeo by blood, was educated In Eastern colleges and is a man of marked ability. A justice of the supreme court has said that his ar gument before the court in the case was one of the best he had ever heard. For winning a case for the Choctaws and Chickasaws against the 1 government several years ago, got a fee of $265,000. Owen GOLL FOUND GUILTY Jury Finds Nineteen Counts in In- dictment Are True. Henry G. Goll, formerly assistant cashier of the First National bank of Milwaukee, was found guilty by a jury in the United Stales District Court on 19 counts out or 34. The cpunts in the indictment against the defendant on which he was found guil ty relate to false entries and the mis-1 applications .of funds in the hank. The amount of money which Got! I was alleged to have misapplied was J about. $250,000. The trial lasted three 1 weeks. The most Interesting test! mony was offered by the former president of the bank. Frank G. Blue low, who is now serving a 10-year sentence at the Leavenworth prison, he having pleaded guilty to looting the bank. POLICE FIRE ON MOB Three Foreigners Shot Down in Anthracite- Coal Region. The first serious collision in the an thracite coal regions since mining was suspended April 1 occurred at Mount Carmcl, Pa., between a mob of Idle mine workers and a platoon of the state constabulary force, and re sulted lu the injuring of 20 men, three of whom may die. The dis turbance was ciiused by an attack on a detail of the constabulary by sever al hundred foreigners, who became incensed at the presence of the po lice. The crowd threw stones at the officers, who were forced to fire on the crowd. Oil Lands Sold. The Fisher Ol1 Company has sold to the Pure Oil Company all of Its producing properties, located in Greene county, Pennsylvania, Marlon, Wetzel, Monongahela and Tyler counties. West Virginia, and In Mon roe, Washington und Belmont coun ties, In Southeastern Ohio. The lease holds consist of about 20,000 acres in the counties named, -m which are 300 producing wells with an aggregate net production of 1,000 barrels a day. The consideration was $1,000,000. Mounted Troops Disperse Mobs and Crush Revolutionists. MANY INJURED IN ONSLAUGHTS Soldiers Suffer From Attacks of the Rioters Police and Military Act With Toleration. The long-dreaded May Day failed to bring the revolution which in flammatory Journals predicted, in France, but none the less it brought scenes of extreme violence. The labor districts, which thous ands of troops controlled with difft culty, and even central portions of Paris have taken on the appearance of a Beige, with regiments of infan try and cavalry camped about the Arc de Trioniphe, the Bourse, the Bank of France and the great rail way station, while military sent! nels paced before the banks and pri vate establishments. The main thoroughfares in the residential por tion of Paris remain tranquil. In the West End, far removed from riotous scenes, people were disposed to treat the evenls in the labor quart era as harmless effervescence. It was, however, much more than that, Throughout the afternoon dragoons, republican guards and cuirassiers charged disorderly masses, sweeping the Place de la Republlque and the board Boulevard de Magenta. To ward nightfall cavalry charged with drawn swords and many persons were wounded on both sides. The manl festants overturned omnibuses and threw up hasty barricades. Over 1,000 arrests were made dur lng the day. At no time did the demonstration reach the magnitude of a revolt, but was rather a leader- less tumult in which the serious la bor element, struggling with revolu tionists, anarchists, roughs and a large number of the curious, was hopelessly confused. Reports from the provinces show that there were violent demonstra tions at Marseilles, Brost, Bordeaux, St. Etienne, Lyons and Rouen. At Marseilles processions carrying red Hags and creating violent disorder came in collision with the troops and a number of persons were Injured. At Bordeaux processions paraded the streets singing revolutionary songs and the cavalry charged them, wound ing many. At Lyons a crowd of manlfestant's attacked the street cars, breaking the glass windows down, whereupon the dragoons charged the rioters, wounding a large number. There were lesser disturbances at many points. ANOTHER TEXAS TORNADO Three Counties Struck by a Hard Wind Storm and Much Damage Done. A tornado swept over parts of Brown. Wise, Denton and Greyson counties, Texas, doing damage to crops and farm property, killing two persons and probably two others. At the village of Cowen one house was destroyed and a Mrs. Parks killed. Two other occupants of the house were badly injured. Half a dozen other houses were partially demol ished. At the village of Stoney the house of Joseph Foster was blown down on the family and the ruins took fire. Mrs. Foster and the children crawled out of the ruins safely, but Mr. Fost- er was pinned down and so badly burned he died. At Sherman a Methodist church was blown down and at Brownwood several houses were partially wreck ed. At the last-named place and in the surrounding country there was a terrific fall of hall which did much damage to all kinds of crops and hurt much live slock. Some of the hail stones measured 10 Inches In circumference and weigh ed eight ounces after having laid on the ground for a period of 10 min utes. Longshoremen Strike. Dispatches from Lake Michigan ami Lake Erie ports indicate that there has been an almost unanimous response among the unions to Presi dent Kenfe's strike order. Unofficial estimates set the figure at 20,000. It Is estimated that about 40 vessels are tied up in Milwaukee, and that RoO men are idle as a rasult of the longshoremen's strike. The strike of the longshoremen put un effective embargo on Lake Erie commerce and it Is expected traffic will stop at all upper lake ports. Big Lumber Failure. The National Lumber Manufactur ing Company, having large Interests in West Virginia d Alabama, was placed In the hands of a receiver on a petition filed in the United States District Court at Chicago, by a num ber of small creditors. The assets of the company are said to be $100,000, but the liabilities are not given. The failure of the Bank of America In Chicago several months ago is said to have been responsible for the em barrassment of the lumber company. Engineers Get Better Wages. A new schedule of wages and agreement for the betterment of the condition of the locomotive engi neers on the Delaware & Hudson railway system went into effect May 1, which means a substantial increase of 10 per cent on every 100 mile run, and one haur less for day work, for switch engines. The Norwegian authorities expect Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth to be present at the coronation of King Haakon. INSURANCE RATE INCREASED General Advance to Replace Losses on Pacific Coast. There will be a general advance in fire rates In all cities of the Unlt- ,ed Slates in the near future to en able the companies to recoup In a measure their San Francisco losses Rates have already been raised by more than a score of companies on property in New York, the advances ranging from 5 to 50 per cent. A committee of five has been ap pointed by the Fire Insurance Ex change to deal with the question of advancing rates. Without awaiting the decision of the committee a large number of com panics have increased rates, with the Intention of reco.uplng their San Francisco losses as speedily as pos sible. The eaample Bet will undoubt edly be followed by all of the other and the Increase will be general, ap plying to property in all cities and sections of the country. Hall & Henshaw, New York repre sentatives of seven foreign and out State companies, announced they had advanced rates from 5 to 50 per cejit. on property In the congested districts of New York and Brooklyn. The Fire Association of Philadel phia advanced Us premium rates In the congested central district of that city 25 per cent, and the American Fire Insurance announced that it had reinsured In the Commercial Union Company of England Its entire out standing risks, except the perpetual Insurance! They nl3o had ordered a 25 per cent, advance In premiums of risks in the business of New York and similar action will be taken else where. With the advance in prem iums the Fire Association also re duced from 15 to 10 per cent, the commission allowed insurance brok ers.. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Gov. E. W. Hock was renominated by the Republicans of Kansas. A band of robbers in the guise of soldiers robbed the treasury at Dus hot, near Tiflis of $117,500. The bottle blowing plant of the Evansvllle, Ind., Glass works burned, causing a los3 of $110,000. James C. Dahlman, Democrat, was elected mayor of Omaha over Eras tus A. Benson, by a surprising ma jority. Sir Henry Taschereau, chief justice of Canada, has resigned. He prob- nbly will be succeeded by Charles Fitzpatrick, minister of justice. The isthmian canal commission met and decided toi ask for an appropria tion of $25,43S,2Sl to continue the construction of the canal during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1907. The Tenth regiment of the Penn sylvania volunteers, which was camp ed in San Francisco at the time of the Spanish war, has sent a donation of $10,000 to the relief committee. Max Diltrlch, a leather worker, of Dresden, Saxony, who was arrested recently on the suspicion of murder, confessed, that he had killed eight persona in the course of seven, years. Steamers which arrived at Lelth from Iceland, report that Mount Hec la has been in eruption, ashes being scattered over a wide area. The disturbance, however, was not ser ious. The Allin Steamship Line has plac ed an ordor with a Glasgow firm for the construction of a 10,000-ton pas senger steamer for the company's ser vice between Liverpool and Glasgow. By the explosion of a .large quan tity of dynamite which they were en gaged in thawing out over a fire, four river drivers were killed and their bodies horribly mangled at a point on the Arlstook river, about five miles above Oxbow, Me. According to Coroner Walsh of San Francisco, the deaths in the earth quake and fire of April IS will total 1.500 wheu the debri3 is cleared away and a final accounting of the bodies already recovered and those yet miss ing, Is made. Professor W. H. Dickey, super intendent of the Deming public schools shot and instantly killed Pro fessor U. Francis Duff, superintend ent of the Luna county schools, one of the most prominent educators In New Mexico. According to a preliminary report on the production of anthracite in 1906, made public by the United States geographical survey, the ton nage during that year was the larg est in the history of the industry. The amount was 69,339,152 long tons; value $141,879,000. New Zealand Offers Aid.. , President Roosevelt has gratefully declined New Zealand's offer of $25, 000 for San Francisco on the ground that outside assistance is unneces sary. Premier Seddou has conse quently sent $6,250 to New Zealand's agent at San Francisco for the relief of the New Zealandera there who suffered from the earthquake. L. & N. Gets Panama Contract. One of the first large contracts for material for Panama, anticipation of which has led the Pennsylvania, New York Central and other systems to seek lines to gulf ports, has been awarded to the Uiulsville & Nash ville, which will hattl 20,000 cars of cement from Louisville to New Or leans, The road's management fig ures on putting a car of cement into New Orleans every 45 minutes - Peasants Dispersed and Two Killed. A number of peasants invaded the town of Kallasln, Russia and de manded the release of one of their number, who hnd been arrested. The authorities thereupon summoned troops, who fired upon the peasants and dispersed them with their bay onets. Two peasants were killed and one was wounded. The volcano of Stromboll, after a period of quiet, is resuming activity and la emitting smoke and solid ma terial. MARKETS. PITT8BURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat No. I rod .' f m Kye No. 2 73 Corn No. 2 yellow, ear ftl No. 8 yellow, shellecl 55 Mixed ear 5-1 Oats No. ! wblte 87 No. 8 white 84 Flour Winter patent 4 10 Fancy straight winters 4 00 Hay No. 1 Timothy 15 00 Clover No. 1 10 is Feed No, 1 white mid. ton M 4 111 is a 11 m ntt Met 21 N tN Ml lirown middlings 19 M Bran, bulk H 00 Straw Wheat. 7 R IS) Oat Dairy Product!. Butter Elgin creamery I Ohio creamery Fancy country roll Cheese Ohio, new New York, new Poultry, Etc. Hens per lb $ Chickens dressed Eggs Pa. and Ohio, (resh Frulti and Vegetables. Apples bbl Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... (4 JO 19 ID 12 It la 17 8 81 73 18 00 IM t IBM U L-anoage per ton . . Onions per barrel go BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent t m si Wheat No. II red B2 Corn Mixed 2 E J; Butter Ohio creamery g, , PHILADELPHIA. FlourWlnter Patent I 5 m in, Wheat No. red. M J Corn No. 2 mixes 8ft 84 Oats No. S white 85 M Butter Creamery at Bggs Pennsylvania flrats n , NEW YORK. Flour Patents 5 0 U Wheat No. I! red 89 Corn No. 2 87 84 Oats No. 8 wblte 88 1 Butter -Creamery 28 28 fugs State and Pennsylvania.... It U LIVE STOCK. Union 8tock Yard, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,460 to 1,M0 lbs Prime. 1.SU0 to 1 ,00 lb (Jond. 1.VOO in 1 Mm 11.. . 13 40 . 60 . 8 00 . i 8.1 . 4 8A . 4 00 . 2 74 , 2 50 , 2 00 . 2 80 . 16 00 ISM :ir t M 4T 4M 4 80 4 14 X4 M Noil 1 Tidy, 1,080 to 1.160 lbs".'.'.'.",'. iir, wou 10 1.1UU 10s Common, 700 to DOO lbs Common to good fat bulla..'.'.', unimon 10 good rat cows , Sellers, 700 to I, lOOlbs Freeh cows and springers Hogi, Prime heavy hogs Prime medium weights.. .., . Best heavy Yorkers Good light Yorkers "" Pigs, as to quality "' Common tOffOOd rnuuha t m ... e wi .. e go m ,. s m ,, 8 40 . 4 W t U ' t r t M 4 80 Stags 7.. "" Sheep. irime wethers Good mixed 7. Fair mixed ewes and wethers" . 5 SB . s 10 . 4 60 . 2 00 . S 60 t 8? M a so t IM vuiiaaaa common Culls to choice lambs Calves. Veal Calves Heavy and thin calves. $4 SO ,. 8 00 St 408 B. Hoffman, executor I In Orphan t of W M. hotter, do- L Court of Jeffersoq For Discharui, term, 1)06. April Oth, 1906, netillnn of Frank 8. floffmaa. executor, presented, praying that he be for ever discharged from his said office as -ecutor, etc., whereupon the said court mada an order that notire of aald application bw given by publication In the Hiiynoldevllls) Htar as re. 1 ui red by law. Returnable on tbt 21st day of May at 10 o'clock a. m., when ajxl where all nartfns Interested ran he hn&pd tn show cause, if any. why the said Court should not mane an order discharging the aaUl Frank 8. Hoffman as executor. J08SPH B. Means, Clerk of the Orphans' Court. Petition of James . Kellv Johnston and 1 v ' Otis "Howard John- f '." l"B. aton, executors of V n",,' v . " ,7 822i R9ynold9- ft. tOB DISCI! ARGR. ' Anril 0th. 190(1. netltlnn of .Turn.. Kmllm Johnston and Otis Howard Johnston, nxao- utors, presented, prayinu that they be forevet discharged from their said office napxiw.titnr etc., whereupon the said Court made an or der that notice of said application be given yj iiuuuuuiioii in me tteynoiasvuie Star as renuired By law. Returnabla on the 21st day of May at 10 o'clock a. m.. when and where all nartles lnterMtri can be heard t ahow mnnA. if an i aid Court sli uid not make an order, dis charging me a lu James Kelly Johnston ana Otis Howard Johnston as executors. - JOHKPH B. MlCAKS, Clerk of the Orphans' Court. CLEAN GLOVES AT HOME. Now that the wearing of white and delicately tinted gloves is so much. the fashion, many women clean their own gloves. Gasoline or naphtha ta generally used, and the glores 'are cleaned on the hnnds. The chances are that the naphtha saturates the kid, and often does much harm to the skin, irritating the hands and leaving them red and sore. Women who clean their own gloves will be glad to know of something en tirely new a substitute, in faot, of their own put upon the market which, solves the difficulty of glove-cleaning Is a wooden hand to be used In place of one's own hand. To make it easy to slip the glove over the wooden, hand, and also clean It, the two mid dle fingers are so arranged that they can be moved, and the thumb has a pivot at tho lower edge which fits into a hole In the wooctea sjandard. ' -In this way the thumb may be moved hack and fort during the cleaning pro cess. Ceorgo Wyndham made after-dlnnei speeches the subject of an aftet-dtn. nor speech of his own before a society at Dover, England. He complimented Americans on their skill at poat-pran-dial oratory, and then went on to dis cuss the possibility of boring an au dience. He said tho severest reproof for a bore which he recollected was that administered 'by the great Talley. rand while driving with a friend, who kept telling him' stories As they passed through the streets of a Conti nental town, Tecalls the New York Tribune, which In those days were po liced by many sentries, they observed one sentry yawn at his post, and Talleyrand said to hla friend, "Hush, w art overheard." The elephants In the London leo- iDattGAl aTAtvlana aarn t i AAA . vunriiig visitors aooui on backs. ' v.. M T ft M M M I M 1 la III II It ) is their I , Ml