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THE EVENING STAR PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY, AT THE STAR BUILDINGS, 1101 Pennaylvania Aveace, Cor. 11th Street, by The Evening Star eamspepse Company, S. H. KAUFFM. , Prea't. ger ee Kew York Office, 49 Potter Building. ww ad ‘The Evening Star served to subscribers fn the eity by carrters, on their own account, at 10 cents Ber week, of 44 cents per mouth. Copies at the ¢cunter 2 cents each. By mail—anywhwre in the United States or Canada—postage prepald 50 cents peg teenth, day Quintrple Sheet Star, $1 per year, with foreign postage a 60. L, $3. (Futered at the Post Odice at Washington, D. 0., as second-class mail matter.) T7-All mall subscriptions must be paid tn advance. Rates of advertising made Enown on application. CHANGES MADE ——_+ A Partial Acreement on the District Appropriation Bill. ——+ AQUEDUGT TUNNEL ITEM SHOT CUT ———— ion as to the Use of Rapid Transit Tracks. New Provi CONN. AVENUE EXTENSION The conferzes on the District appropria- Yion bil! reached a partial agreement on the items still in dispute late Saturday afternoon, and the report being presented to the House it was agreed to without de- bate and a further conference ordered. Bimilar action was taken today in the Benate in a perfunctory manner, and the conference was granted. lirg to this report the Senate re- eedes from two very imp that appropriating n udemned for and that je aqueduct tu i on the amend- rd to the use of street rail- t of Colum! h any an for prov ept fre 5 or r auth un- ficut Avenue Extension. t of the extension of Con- + is compromised by striking ng for the exten- place In a line , and inserti Com- bia be, amine n of Connecticut wue to the District on or before er next, the ni n ground either exten- e until othe riated for the con- the Sei the rates to be icken out by the following a compromi: e District of Co- to report to r session, what trict of Co- overn- Phones in other ground and over! > of the appropria- o'clock this ected will be the It is probable ment will be reached some ternoon on all three, thus end- roversy between the two fter- A SHIP CHANNEL, rperate the Mzritime The Bin to Inc Canal of North America. The iirst tangible fruits of the many great conventions, naflonal and interna- tonal, held by the advocates of a ship channel from the great lakes to the Atlan- tic are contain in the favorable report just made by the Senate committee on commerce on the bill to incorporate the Maritime Canal of North America. Although but little has been said about this measure, there is a great deal of his- it. tory Several bills have been in- uced and pressed in Congress lo canal from Leke Erie to tidewater. joters, liscouraged with the treat- eived in Ce went to Canada, 4 from the do- a very elaborate and charter for a big canal around ‘alls and thence down the St. . ail on Canadian si to the tolls charg at the time on existing nO artificial w in that country tolls to be iim the government anal: in under this E jally interested to wait t trial i be made before the la power of our own country. Th and the « son drew the report of the ttee, and it is a documen able for many an portant facts to the internal commerce of the ally in relation to the want of adequate transportation facilitie for cheap and bulk products. The charte asks no aid from the government, but Is merely to incor under federal laws the largest domestic enterprise in the his- tory of private undertakings. No. 13,499. WASHINGTON, D. 0, MONDAY, JUNE 8 1896-TWELVE PAGES TWO OENTS rr — I THE STAR BY MAIL. Persone leaving the city for any petlod can have The Star mailed to them to any address in the United States or Canada, by ordering it at this office, in person or by letter, or postal card. Terms: 18 cents per week; 25 cents for two weeks, or 50 cents per month. Invariably in ad- vance. Subscribers changing their address from one Post-office to another should give the last address | as well as the new one. CAPT. BOURKE DEAD THE SILVER WAVE |oH!0 AN An Illness of Several Weeks Terminates Fatally Today. His Remains to Be Taken to Arling- ton — Soldier and Author. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 8.—Capt. John G. Bourke, 3d Cavalry, U. S. A., died today at the Polyclinic Hospital, this city, where he had been under treatment for several weeks. Capt. Bourke had been suf- fering for a long while from the effects of disease contracted while campaigning in Texas and the far west. His condition be- came so bad that it was Anally decided that he should be brought to this city for medical treatment. Capt. Bourke was fifty-three years old. At the time of his deagh he was stationed at Fort han .Allen, Vt. He leaves a jow and three daughters. His wife was with him at the e of his death, but the three daughters were at Fort Ethan Allen, Capt. Bo "s remains will be interred in the National cemetery at Arlingwa. L Statement of the mili- pt. Jno. G. Bourke of the Fle served as a private in Companies and D, sth Pennsylvania Cavalry, in the Department of the and, from Au- t 1 to July 6, ably mustered ou when he was Tenn. was a cadet at the United S Mii- a Acalemy from October 17, 186, when he was graduated and second tenant, dd U. S. Ca’ Isto; lieutenant, May 26, Iss the brevet ranks of cap- 150, for gallant services Indians at the Caves, 2, and in the ampaign against Indians in Arizona, in April . and February 27, 1sH0, for gailartry in a n Pow- der river, M iin action against eek, Montana, June 1 h rved with it at F ruary 19, IST0; to July 2 Arizona, te t Craig, } at Camp Gran’ and in the fieid hostile In- Arizona, in var Pinal mp to Gen a, December 15, 157! M, 1872; E ry 16, 187: es, February ar Salt River perstition with Ton- oned for di and other a officer, IST5; act- nt general of troops in stant adju leld on the Big Horn and Yellowstone nd of the Pc River expeditions in Wyoming, May, be- to January, ing engaged in actio! Indians at Crazy Horse Village, March 1 Tongue River, June 9; Rose Bud, June 1 sim Butt Creek, W i in the ptember ovember campaign against Nez Perce tem be ovember, 1877. With burgh’s command in pursuit of s- 9, Willow In the and and Dakota, September and Octobe: ISTS; with the advarce of Gen. Merritt's omand, marching to the rescue of Maj. hornburgh's command, on Milk River, Colo., September, 1873; on the Yellowstone expedition, August and September, 18s order of the Ponca Indian commis: mber, 1880, to February, 1881 orders of investigating the ma ustoms of the Pueblos, Navajos Apache Indians, in the southwest, Apr 3881, to June, 1882; ng assistant adgu- tant general of troops in the field operating against hostile Indians and on Gen. Crook expedition into the Sierra Madre, Mexico, in pursult of hostile Apache Indians, April 6 to Juno 2 3_on sick leave July 9, 1883, to January 9, 184; acting aid-de-camp to Gen. Crook, March 24, 1884, to Juna Iss; also acting assistant’ adjutant general, Department of Arizona, March 24 to June 17, ISS4, and acting spector general of same department, 15, 1884, to June ¢ Rice, Texa: Aug . 1885; with troop at Camp ptember 18, 1885; on leave to O . when directed to report | Dece to the commanding general, Department of Arizona, for special duty ‘In. connection th Indians In Arizona and New Mexico, 3 engaged on that duty to March 81, . and was present at the surr ronimo and his band to General Crook the Canon de los Embudo, Sono. March 1S86, to April 1, 1801. He re- joined his regiment April 9,'1891, and com- manded his troop at Fort McIntosh, Texas, to May 14, ISM; commanded troop and post rt Ringgold, Texas, being frequently in the field in the operations against Garza’s band of disturbers ef the Rio Grande frontier, to March on duty in de- partment of foreign affairs at the world’, Columbian exposition to November, 18% commanding his troop at Fort Riley, Kai to July 8, 1804; at Chicago, il, during the rallroad strikes, to September 25, 1804; at Fort Ethan Allen, Vermont, to March 7, 1896; on leave to May 3, 1803, and on sick leave until he died at Philadelphia today. He was a member of the scientific soci- By England and the United and wrote much upon anthropology lore. Ong of his most valuable monographs upon the medicine of the Apa- was published by the Smithsonian In- titution. His most popular books, “On he Border With Crook,” “An Apache 5: and “The Snake Dance of the have had editions in New York nd London. At the meeting of the Amer- ican Folk Lore Society, held in this city in nber last, Capt. Bourke was chosen presid ———“.+—_—. Tag Boat Men Want Damages. OTTAWA, Ont., June 8.—Last fall the goverrment cruiser Petrel captured a De- troit tug and garbage scow in the Canadian waters of the Detroit river. Now Capt. Delpier of the captured scow and his crew have sent in claims to the British govern- ment fcr illegal seizure and imprisonment, asking $20,000 damages. The British au- thorities have referred the claim back to the Caradiaa government. ee _+—___ What the Republican Leaders Say About Its Force. THE SENTIMENT HAS NOT INCREASED pa Other Questions Besides Currency to Be Considered. —_-_—_. BUSINESS a A PARTY The republican leaders are by no means blind to the marked change that has come over the situation within the past few weeks. There is no talk now of a walk- over in November. They are beginning to believe, as Mr. Bailey of Texas assures them, that “they are going to have a run for their money.” They are thinking {t all over with the greatest care and concern. They must have a sound platform and a sound ticket to begin with, and then a union of sound money sentiment to end with. The platform is the rub. The ticket is as good as made. . The Silver Sentiment. While conceding that the silver senti- ment is rising, and that it appears just now to be threatening, the republicans do not believe that the tlde can sweep the demo- cratic party to victo: hey hold that the party is handicapped by a series of failures so complete and disastrous that, however pleasing its campaign promises’ may be, the country will not again intrust it with power. It has shown itself, the republicans say, Incapable of redeeming its promises, or of grasping a national situation in a national spirit. The tariff agitation is cited. That went cn for years. Great things were promised to business men and to the farmers if only a whack at the high protection policy could be secured. Finally it was proposed to wipe out protection al- together; and upon that issue in 1892 the democracy won. Democracy’s Record, With what result? the republicans ask. Answering their own question, they point to the delay in taking up the tariff ques- tion, to the bill the democrats introduced and passed—uneven and illogical in every important feature, they deciare, and un- equal to the support of the government. and to the depressed conditions of affairs ever since. Proceeding, the republi light of this’ histor: of all, the country can be mit the 8 ask if, in the in the minds spected to com- nent of the currency que: tion to. the arty. Suppose E ans here aml there who in ver, and would like te see the government inaugurate # free sil- Are they likely to Join hands With the democrats for that purpose ply be: the democrats in 2 1 ple declare themseives in favor of ft What assurance will the demo- crats be able to give such men of the abil- ity to carry out in case of coming into pow 1 be their “papers’—their recommendations? ‘The per- formances of the Fifty-third Congress on the tariff and other questions? No Stroi s&s Growth of Silver Feeling. ‘The republicans hold another opinion that ures them. ‘They doubt {f, strong and sweeping as it now appears to be, this sil- ver sentiment {s stronger now than it Yas been for some years. It has dominated ine south and portions of the west and portions of the middle states for a long time. But it has never won a national victory. It has never made men forget other issue: Free silver democrats who ure also free traders have never been willing to abandon their economic views, and free silver re- publicans have never been willing to aban- don protection. has prevented a union at the polls vlican leaders be- lieve that it will again prevent a union there strong enough to carry the day. There will be business of importance to attend to after the currency question has been dis- posed of; and the republican contention in the campaign will Le that history shows that the republican party is conspicuously the party of business. Sea GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. Th » and the repr Report on the Progress of the Work of Repair and Enlargement. Favorable progress is reported by Col. J. M. Wilson in the operations for the repair and enlargement of the government print- ing office. The work is being done by con- iwact and hired labor, materials being pur- chase by contract, except in cases of emergency. A complete survey has been made of the floors of the old H street sec- tion, and plans of the whole building are being prepared, showing the columns and girders and the location of the presses and other fixed furniture. Eleven doorways have been cut in the west wall of the H street wing, connecting it directly with the new fire-proof structure on the site of the old ables. Arches have been sprung, jams and sills constructed, and the open- ings practically completed. Rolling doors of steel or sheet iron will be placed at each of these openings. During the month from thirty to sixty mechanics and laborers have been em- ployed dally on the new fire-proof building, the number depending entirely on the char- acter of the work iy progress. It is expect- ed that the plumbing and heating appara- he elevators, the painting, the car- work and’ the basement concrete floors of this structure will be finished during the present’ month, Col. Wilson says that the bullding, as originally plan- ned, will be completed within the limits of the estimates, and that it will be trans- ferred to the public printer the latter part of this month, as originally contemplated. WILL PRESS THE BUTTON. The President to Open the National Snengerfest at Pittsburg. Quietly in the seciusion of the telegraph office of the Executive Mansion President Cleveland will this evening at 8 o'2lock press an electric button which will signal- ize the opening of the National Saengerfest at Pitisburg, Pa. There will be no special remonies at this end of the line, and it is probable that the President’s action will be witnessed only by Private Secretary Thurber and Mr. Montgomery, the gentle- man in charge of the telegraph office. The immediate effect of the President's ac- tion in pressing the electric button will be to illuminate in Saengerfest Hall an tm- mense American tlag, formed of huadreds of beautifully colored incandescent fights. Western Union operators today completed direct telegraphic connection between the White House an4 the music hall in Pitte- burg. ges The New General Deficiency Bill. The Senate committee on appropriations today decided to report the new general deficiency bill as it came from the House. The action of the committee was, how- ever, not unanimous, and it was made ap- parent that there would be objection to the passage of the bill through the Senate in this shape. Senator Harris of Tennessee has announced a purpose to fight for the ig of the Bowman act claims in the ‘bill P NEW YORK/HIGH WIND AND RAIN Democratic Conventions in Those Two States Will Be Interesting, Eastern Nebraska Swept by a Storm. MANY TOWNS REPORTED FLOODED Silver Likely to Have Its Way in One, but Sound Money in the Other, The New York democrats and the onio|A Tornado Causes Damage at democrats will be among the last to ex- . : press themselves before the meeting of Lansing, Mich. the Chicago convention. ‘They may ex- Press themselves on the same day. The Ohio people will meet at Columbus the 23d instant, and the New York peoplo at Saratoga the 2th, but as the former usually take two days for their work they may not pe in advance of the New Yorkers with thelr deliverance, Silver, 1t seems likely, will have its own way at Columbus, but what will the tidings from Saratoga be? WORST KNOWN IN ge YEARS OMAHA, Neb., June 8.—From all over the state belated news of Saturday night's and yesterday morning's territic wind and rain storm is being received. The storm covered the eastern portion of Nebraska, the wind blowing the highest in the northern counties. A report from Lynch, Boyd county, gives meager details of the demolition of that village. ‘The tele- phone wire is down and nothing can be learned definitely as to the extent of the damage. At Rushville the storm was accompanied by a sort of cloudburst and lasted twenty minutes. It tore a frame barn to fragments cast of the town and carried some of the timbers over a mile from the wreck. The Pine Ridge stage coach was caught in the gale cnd overturned. At Wayne several dwellings in the west part of the town are standing in two feet o water. Three miles west 300 feet of t The New York Deliverance. The New York democrats are for sound money. So much is granted. But how will they express themselves? Will they indorse the President’s course in toto, and add to that an unqualified indorsement of the gold standard? Wil there be any mention whatever of free coinage by in- ternational agreement? Or will | that straightout gold plank, so long expected, but not as yet presented by any state, be at last forthcoming? Will the New York democrats declare that gold, and gold alone, properly measures values, and that the double standard is not desirable. HAIL the Sound Money Leader. New York grows interesting again, for the additional reason that, as now seems likely, the sound money leadership in the | Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Chicago convention -will devolve on Sena- | railroad’ track washed out and all tra tor lil. This was the appearance of | Were delay Logan, Plum and © creeks Were overflowed, doing seriou age to crops on either side. t Madison cellars are full of water, side- walks torn up and telephone poles uprooted things several months ego. But then came lam- Pressure on Senators Gorman and Brice and others, who had decided not to attend the convention, and 1t Was announced that that | as a consequence of the most severe storm they had reconsidered their determination. | that has occurred in several years, Listed Now the report again is that they will not | corn te damaned baile ee crops suf- attend. So that, with those men out of it, | Gort,!8 damaged badly and other crops sut. Senator Hill, by reasoh of his ability, expe- | “The ‘section of the state near Beatrt Nence, locality, convietion and as the head | was vishted: by a pe deluge, the ra of the New York democracy, will be the beginning to fe a ‘cloc anc cep: most eminent opponent of free silver in the Fame aie Clonee ange ieey ss it up till the latter part of the night. convention. At St. Pavl reports from the storm and His Probable Course. flooded @istric con to come in. What will he do? What can he do? sine siowmi Jot Ds reise com the rushing waters of Oak From Dannevirke precinet v corner of Howard ¢ pr of the storm di: hing n heard y AlL br: P gone, Munson creek so high that all cation is cut off. MILWAUKEE, Wi eck. in the north- , and in the is for gold r the circumstances that exist he justif ¢ sale of bonds fer that surpose. Lut some et his friends instst that tiat does not commit him to the whole Cleveland poliey. He is against free coiuage us an inue- 80 nd money. He in has and communi- » June pendent act by wnls government, and he | received here from the north advocates the retivement of the grec state that all th , but he admits the necessity of more Saturday night h: rt of the government. had been followed, the Wilson bill would have taken a differ- ent form from that whien it did take. He mwood the da ry for mile ted that th would have drawn a bill that would havi ‘ood have In supplied money enous of life in that part of the Bout the question remains: What will | Is reporte: Mr. Hill say at Saratoga and, later, at eae a 5 a Chicago? Such conditions as he could’ DANSING, | AliGh. Jane fA. torn struck this from the west Sunda i torm follow dolere in and scores of e a foot i rai be sire do not exist. those that do ex : ——— ACTS APPROVED. What will he do mia Ll uprooted. som which we of were broken off. S t Have Receiy Measures T! the | ings were overturned, an! Signature of the Presid s at the plant of th The President has approved the ny were leveled. granting pensions to Elizabeth Mar Mary Cray, Elizabeth A. Sargent, Caroline ge at Springweld, I. Purdum, Mary L. Aleshire, Annie H. | | SPRING Lb, Ii, June Po three echs, Elizabeth M. Wiliams, Hannah | Pours last night this city was swept N. Barrett. Peter Rafferty, Wm. T. Apple- | 0M@ of the most violent electrical and gate, Thomas M. Scott, Michael 8. Pettit, | t torms that ever occurred in this Elizabeth 'T. Beall, Solomon Hyams, Thos, | ection of Mlino's, Many thousands of Brewer, Elvin J. brown, Carrie H. Greens, | Cellars’ damage resulted. Delia A. Marsh, Nancy Gentry, Mrs. H. J. | 18 many cases the first fl on Kiernan, Julia A. Jameson, Ann C. Hull, SATU ele ae aan ee Elmira E. Dustin, Harriet C. Gregg, Ada oe nies Schwatka, Catherine Dillon, Eleanor C. Poe, Lue’ R. Brown and Elizabeth V Severs Sctherland, and the act removing the | terror of the charge of desertion now staading against | The sta Henry H. Bailey. molished, telegraph The following bills became laws without | hoards wer the President's approval: The act amend- | cone. ‘Thous of ing the act in regard to the appointment of grounds, the a judge advocate general of the navy, and iuge. mon river has risen five the acis granting pensions to Maj. ‘Get ancing. There has been Jos. R. West, U.S. .N., Gen. W. H. Morr age in th and Wilbur T. Cogswell. lowlands, —- . JULES SIMON DEAD. CLAY EVANS. = One of France's” Most Mlastrious Scholars and Statesme H. ‘Tennessee Republic ns to Give Him a Complimentary Vote for Vice | PARIS, June 8.—Jules Simon, the ¢ President. tinguished French statesman, formerly The Tennessee republican members of the | premier, who has been danzerously ill for House who have been booming the | some time past, died at 11:49 this morning, candidacy of H. Clay Evans for the vice presidential nomination say that they do not see any chance for his nomination, but as a compliment and for <he effect on aged elghty-three years. Jules Franc Lorient (Morbih s Simon Sui was born at ) on December 31, 1814. local politics his name will be presented | Ut 1846 he devoted himself to philos to the convention. Representative Gibson | cphy. He succeeded Cousin in the chair would be glad to see Mr. Evans nominated, | of philosophy at the Sorbonne, about the but believes that some other cunning mate | time he gave up the name of Su for McKinley will be selected. 1839. For years he was known Mr. Evans will, it is said, be the repub-]| the chicf scholars in. his = i lcan nominee for governor of Tennessee. | France. He was mace a knight of. the = se ie ee Legion of Honor in 1s. Perscuain: The next year he presentéd himself as a 8 candidate of the constitutional left in the Mr. Eckels, the controller of the cur-| assembly at Lannion, but. was defeated. rency, has gone to Chicago, to remain a] He was elected trom the Cotes-du week. Capt. E. S, Chapin, 15th Infantry, ts in the city on leave of absence. Lieut. E. H. Tillman of the navy is in the city for examination for promotion. Secretary Herbert has returned from An- napolis, and was at the Navy Department aiter the revolution of 1Si8 and classe: himself with the moderate left in the as. sembly After the coup d'etat his lectures at the Sorbonne were suspended, as he refused to take the oath of allegiance to the empire. He was returned to the corps legislatif in 1863, and continued a member unul the fall today. of the empire. He was the chief of the Mr. Terreira da Costa, former charge | republican party d'affaires of the Brazilian legatiun, and pleasantly remembered by his many friends, paid a flying, visit to Washington on his way to his new post as minister to Colombia and Ecuador. Postmaster General Wilson has gone to West Virginia. ———+2-—_____. A Newspaper Man’s Appointment. Henry C. Roberts, the well-known news- paper correspondent, for some time con- nected with the Houston Post and the St. Louls Republic, has been appointed an as- sistant secretary of the legation of the United States at -Constantinople, under Minister Terrell, und is accompanying that gentleman to the Turkish capital. It is expected that they will sail from New He made himself prominent as an advo- cate of free trade. He had the post of minister of public instruction, public wor- ship and fine arts In the government of na- tional defense. He received from Thiers the portfolio of public instruction tn the cabinet of conciliation. He was elected a senator for life on De- cember 16, 1875. He became premter of the new ministry in December, 1877. M. Simon was elected a member of the French Acad- emy in 1875, and the Academy elected him in 1880 to the new supreme educational council, He was elected permanent. secre- tary of the Academy of Moral and Political Science in 1882. His last appearance in political life was when he advocated free trade, in November, Isl. —. York tomorrow for Europe. PERSIA’S NCW SHAH. +2 —$_______ i, = , y One Presidential Nomination. Pasetes ot ie Secnally throned at Teheran, TEHERAN, June 8—Muzaffor Fd Din, the new Shah of Persia, was formally en- throned today at 12:30 p.m. His majesty will receive the members of the diplomatic corps in audience at 4 o'clock this after- poon, The President has nominated Richard M. Bartleman of Massachusetts to be con- sul of the United States at Malaga, Spain. Se No Aliens in the State Department. In reply to a recent resolution calling upon heads of departments for a state- ment of the number of aliens employed under them, Secretary Olney today wrote poet no aliens are enrolled in the State partment. SSS > - Killed by Railway Trains. Special Dispatch to The Evening Star. CUMBERLAND, Md., June 8.—Richard Wetherick and Thomas Larsent, both of Paw Paw, a small town east of here, were Government Receipts. struck and instantly killed by trains, on | nal bank yecelved today for | the Baltimore and jo last evening. The foumtees Were Siig? Government te, | accidents occurred about one hour apart and occurred on almost the same spot. The trains rounded a curve before the un- fortunates could get out of the way. —— ceipts from internal revenue amounted to $728,562; from customs, $446,552, and mis- cellaneous, $106,202. OVER THE PLATFORM Where the Real Strength Will Be at St. Lonis. Intention of the Gold Men — Silver Men Wi ‘Try to Prevent a Straddle. It is anticipated that there will be a very large attendance of members of the House and Senate at the St. Louis convention. The certainty that McKinley will be the presidential nominee does not seriously de- tract from the interest in the convention, nor render a spirited contest unlikely. ‘The contest will not be over the nominee for President. The friends of all the other candidates know that their case 1s hope- less. It will be over the platform that the struggle will come, and it is not expected that the lines will be drawn between the McKinley and anti-MecKinley fore but will be largely without reference to presi- dential preferences. Intention of the Gotd Hen. It is the intention of the gold men to make as stubborn a fight as possible to event any sort of declaration on the financial question which will squint to- Iver or be in any way doubtful. A ¢ on this subject Is to be held 1 St. Louis between some of the strong sound money” leaders before the conven- uon. The object of Reed, Allison aay in permitting their names to go before the onvenUon, when d t is certain, is to make a fight atform. It nticipated, how®ver, that this can be d into an anti-McKinley fight, since no reason to believe that Mr. Me- y will not to aveid a stra f ion are algo plann’ng to vote avainst jlattorm. ry to St. Louts. politiclans will be leaving Louis all through this week. Ge venor leaves this afternoon at 3: gley to reve to morning and not an committee £5 Will have to for St tonight or tomorrow. yeneral Grosvenor said he would stop a ‘at his home in Ohio before g0- to the st will leave for MeKAWS RE MR. He Wants Protection in Possexsion of Brids: an Do: appealed to the ytect him in his Doi 4 worth- can author- under a coaces- nad no dc right to mainta law office ted State: will be called depa consul at upon for ftor Hay of San Francise. Shot by His Paran AN FRANCISCO, Cal., &.—John ". Hay, ant editor of the Journal of Commer and killed Nina Macdougall, wife of a am ed wire company. The ot herself through the man had } a seve days, when hi that h ‘as going to leay Then she shot him and kilied hersel ——e WORRALL’S DEATH. MAXNE Post-Morte amination Has Failed Solve the Myws *O, June 8. Worrall, the weman w 1 suddenly at tne I Hotel Saturday, are still at the unde = parlor iting some word or order trom her or relatives in England concerning. their d itt thing is of the young woman aside from her The mystery surrov id unatter erone is not her acquaintances amon, passengers are able to furnish, autopsy has added more mysiery case. The post-mortem examination upsets the ory that she died from heart dise Whitney was called in attendan i the young woman a few minutes re she died, and found her in a spasm. The symptoms indicated heart trouble, and after her death Dr Whitney expre Pst view heart trouble was the of Dr. Nathan found in perform! that the heart and ail oth were in a healthy condition, and the shows conclusively that death wi by any organic dis¢ T removed, and wili be sub- chemical examination, wil! a ining Whether death resulted autop: guns result not caus stomach Miited io a view to dete trom pcisening. LONDON, June thester Lod ; Mayne Worrall, the h girl who died at the Patz 0, yesterda 3 , is a neat ¢tached house on the Gi Kensington, this city. It} joned garden, ML upset at the new: a The oniy intormation wiica they have on the subject is contained ii the newsoe They say Miss Worrall wes eng with some lady friends. Her father is dangcrovrly ill. WALLING GAINS A POIN Rony Against the Ruled Out. June &—The prospect orn ing brought 2 much fuller attendance of listeners to the trial of the man tnyolved in Pearl Bryan’s murder, bet they were disappointed. The court was engaged in hearing motions until 10:40, and after that hearing arguments on ‘the motions to e out the evidence given by Col. Deitch and Ed. Anthony. The judge finally ruled that all the testimeny of these witnesses cercerning what Walling said to them should be striken out, for the reason that Deitch fa the beginning advised Wallinz Pass eh ee. Moscow Festivities Ended. The New Mexican Funding Act. MOSCOW, June 8.—The imperial family The President has signed the bill amend- | jeft here today for St. Petersb.rg, where a ing the New Mexican funding act. round of visits is expected on June 21. that it would be better for him to tell everything, and that Anthony had repre- serted himself as an officer. ‘Walling’s testimony may be heard this afternoon. . TESTED IN COURT An Expert Says the Holt Will is Not Ten Years Old. THE = INK CLOSELY — EXAMINED a Interesting Day in an Interesting Case. ——— ees MR. CARVALHO’S METHODS The fourth week of the famous Holt will trial began this morning, with a probabil- ity of its lasting a fortnight longer. It will go down in the history of Washington ae one of the fic t and longest of legal bat- tles. Certainly there are few, if any, civil cares that have equaled It in sensational features and developments that have held the public interest. When court adjourned last Friday after- noon there was a general im that, with ths exception of so: expert evidence, the caveators, eT ‘s-at-law, had about exhausted their direct testimony #nd would be through when Mr. Wash. D. Holt had finished telling the st his relations with late Jtdge Holt The next st the cavea ine Holt dence ia r will and The Expert & ston offer H ded that the evidence Another Expert. The first this morning was Mr. the famous > Da w York When asked his profess Was “an examiner of writing and ink.” He has mad @ specialty for twenty-o' m: w York to the N ¢ aied in 1 partic mo ho testified this morr A small table chair where the Mr. Cavalho was placed in told the from a ¢ per which fs in He spoke of the number of Ii A Fine Distinction. nber of words, loop ter to Mr. Thos. H ow said that e his judgment was upon the exce use of he sr the paper in disjy He said that the will w a pers: ho forearm mov: nt. cramped handwriting, as though there t ument. Yet writer, for the written words could cramped writing, but a on Ww ualiy writes in a imitate the free or At first glan he continued, or say that the will was 4 hastily written rm styl