NEBRASKA NOTES MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS IN THE COMMON WEALTH. ABSTRACTS OF THE ASSESSMENT Eleven Counties Have Thus Far Made Returns—A Packing House for Be atrice—Other Nebraska Matters Here and There. LINCOLN—Though the state board of equalization does not meet until the third Monday in July, eleven coun *ies have already returned abstracts of assessment and by the latter part of June it is believed nearly all of the counties will be in. Of those received by the secretary of the state board, Furnas county shows the largest in -rease. $258,585, over the assessment of last year. So far not enough coun ties have reported to manke any kind of an accurate estimate of what the to taJ assessment will be. The increase in most cases will be in new personal progeny dug up and in the improve ments on real estate, as the assess ment of real estate made in 1904 stands for four years. The railroad property, with the exception of the in crease of $9fi 000 on the Union Pacific, will not increase the grand assess ment roil, as the beard returned this class of property at the same value as last year. The addition of the Great Northern cutoff adds some $300,000 to the grand total. This has not heretofore been assessed. Reports from out iu the state indi cate that few protests are being made by taxpayers over the assessment, and this is takeu as an indication that few objections will be made before the state board of assessment. Some re marks may be made to the board to secure an increase in ihe assessment of some of the counties, but it- is hardly probable that any county will ask for a reduction. Lancaster coun ty will probably try to get Douglas county business men increased, as tho Commercial club of this city is of the opinion, after an investigation of the Omaha assessment, that the county board there failed to properly appre ciate what Omaha merchandise is re ally worth. * Two New Bu**alo. DORCHESTER—The Gilbert park on Turkey Creek, south of town, has two recent additions of rare interest: two young full blood buffalo calves. They are this year's product of a herd af four old individuals owned for many years by Mr. John Gilbert, who keeps a free park where he has a dozen red deer and thirteen splendid American wapiti, or generally termed elk some Angora goals and wild aquatic fowls. This park covers a good sized tract of native prairie and forest where the animals are very much at home, and show up as in the wild state. The deer are quite inter esting just now from the fact that they are shedding their antlers, the new ones on several of the wapiti ate just in the velvet. Church Howe's Art Purchase. Church Howe of Nebraska. Ameri can consul general at Antwerp, was .the purchaser of the largest and most valuable painting of the seventy-three left by the celebrated artist. Andre Plumot. at a recent sale in Antwerp. The picture was known as "Crossing the Bridge" (in the Ardennes) and will be brought to Nebraska by Mr. Howe when he returns. The informa tion was contained in the European Express, a paper published in English at Antwerp. J. G. Lann Goes to Manila Again. MADISON—J. G. Lang, who served with the First Nebraska in the Phil- ' ippines during the Spanisb-Amerioan war and has been in the mail service at this place the past four years, re ceived notice from Washington of his appointment ?q a position in the Phil ippine department service. He has de cided to accept and will sail for the islands about August 1. The position pays t1.20n per year. Woman Saved Aqainst Her Will. NORFOLK—Mrs. Charles Eble, a widow of three weeks and mother of fifteen children, tried to end her life by drowning in the North Fork river, but was rescued, though resisting, by John King, a colored man. who chanc ed to be fishing a few feet from the place where Mrs. Eble went into the river. Struck bv Cars. PLATTSMOCTM—John Bajeck. an oia resident of this city, was struck by a Missouri Pacific passenger train and instantly killed. At the time of the accident the unfortunate man was crossing the track with a wheel bar row and failed to hear the approach of the train. Fifty Dollars a Month and Extras. I will give for a man of good char acter as my agent. Esther salesman, farmer, merchant or banker may ap ply. Write Lock Box 1325. Lincoln. Nebraska. Lincoln is After Omaha. LINCOLN—Tire business men of ; Lincoln, so it is reported, are very much exercised over the assessment i of Omaha property and they will, it 1 is asserted, go before the state board and see that the assessment is in creased. The business men sent a man to Omaha to look over the assess ment. and he reported Omaha was not ; near high enough as compared with ' the Lincoln merchants. Lancaster j county will soon have its report filed with the state board of equalization. | showing a substantial Increase. Wireless Reaches Boone County. ALBION—W. B. Watson received a wireless telegram from his son Fred, who for the past year has been In the government service on the Pana ma canal The message was sent from mid-ocean. Crops Damaged by Hailstorm. CREIGHTON—A terrific wind rain struck this section. Hall depth of six inches corerod the street. An area two nt ten miles long was cot damage was done. OVER THE STATE. The date for holding the Sheridan county fair at Gordi n nas been fixed for September 25, 26 and 27. Burt county will have a special elec tion to vote on the question of issuing bonds to build a court house. The dwelling house of J. T. Peters. Beatrice, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground, together with its concents. Miss Hattie Little, elected state president of the P E O. at Blue Hill received an ovation on her return home to Geneva. Sheriff Gillan of Seward county ar rested a presumed horse thief but found out later that the supposed horse thief was a lunatic. The 'otal assessed valuation of the personal property of Sarpy county, ex clusive of railroads, telephone and tel egraph. this year is $408,809. Last year It was $439,359 An abstract of the assessor's returns of Cedar county shows the actual value of persona! property as being $5,644 - 685 as compared with $4,843,800 in 1905 and $4,193,490 in 1904. Mr. Nicholson, head bookkeeper of the American Beet Sugar company in Grand Island, will leave in a few days for Madison. Wis.. to join the sugar company of that city in a like capacity. Coroner Armstrong was called to Bellevue to take charge of a dead body floating in the Missouri river. The body could not be identified, having the clothing all stripped ofr and being so long in the water. Mike Morris, a resident of Cass county, reported to the police in South Omaha that he had been slugged by unknown parties ar.d robbed of $65 and a gold watch by a couple of new ly-found friends there. At Fairfield funds have been sub scribed and organization completed for e farmers' elevator and grain company, with H E. Mcllowell as president; B. W. Campbell, vice president: E. T. Ccwen. secretary and F T. Swanson, treasurer. At Seward William Wilcox, tbirty five years old. applied to the county judge 'or a license to marry Grace Seaman, a girl of fifteen years of age. Judge Leavens refused to issue the license on the grounds that the girl was too young to marry. While he and an employe at the Taylor ranch in Hall county were try ing to teach a broncho how to wear a bridle, a halter rope broke with a snap and flew with great force into Mr Fagan's face, badly burning the flesh and injuring one eye. William Bitting, a Gage county boy. was oadly cut and bru’sed about the body while leading a cow. He had tied the rope around his waist and when the animal started to run he was unable to release himself. He was dragged about 100 yards. Within the pasi two years Friend has exr.ended in churches alone upward of $35,000. as follows: Catholics. $18,000; Congregationallst?. $5,000; Baptists. $5,000; Methodists. $0.21“'; German Methodists. $1,000. The Methodist church was dedicated June IT. Surveyors who are working on a railroad line west of Fremont are now in Colfax county about ten miles north of the line of the Union Pacific, the line being a straight one from where it leaves the northwestern corner of the town are abo it ten miles north east of North Bend, and an equal dis tance southwest of Scribner. I^eavitt is passed about a mile to the north. At Fremont Judge Hollenbeck de cided the divorce case of Cora G. Kei! against Rev. J. L. Kell in favor of the plaintiff, awarding her the custody of their children. The court reviewed the evidence at some length. He held that the evidence sustained the plaintiff s charges of cruelty. Rev. Kell is in good standing in the United Brethren church. At the mass meeting held by the cit ibens of Seward a* the court house, last Thursday night in regard to the Burlington leaving Seward four or five miles away from the main line of the railroad, speeches were made and a committee of nin° on conferring with the railroad offlcals was aopomTen The Denver & Omaha railroad, which is supposed to be the Rock Island, is likely to come through Seward soon. Ord has a candidate for a Carnegie medal A 3-year-old son of Nels John son fell :n an old well nearly stxrv feet deep. He was caught by a plat form before reaching the water and held thereby till Da'- Harris, who is working for Mr. Johnson, lowered a rope and climbed down. He put the child on his shoulders and climbed to the top. ttsing th“ rope and getting an occasional foothold on the rough sides of the well. A gang of workmen were put to work last week on the changes to be made in the Burlington yards at Ashland. The first work to be done is the re moval of a large hill south of the sta tion and the extension of the vards to a distance of a mile with added track age. This will be followed by a com plete change in all the service build ings. the moving of the present sta tion to be used as a freight house, the creation of a new passenger depot, and the huilding of a subwav. i Sterling Kay. the 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrsr. John Kay. was drowned in the Bikhorn river while fishing for minnows with a din net. The boy lost his balance and went into twenty feet of water. James Wiltse of Rulo was kicked by a vicious horse and perhaps fatally in jured. Joseph McDonald, who lives two miles south of that place, was kicked directlv over the heart also while attempting to lead a vicious horse from the barn. It is thought that three or four ribs are broken and his injuries may terminate fatallv. The total assessed valuation of earn ing county of the personal property for the year 1.906 is $1,185,972, aa com pared with $1,118,621 for the year 1906. ROOSEVELT ALWAYS DID LIKE GOOD SPORT. —Indianapolis News. THAW PLEADS “NOT GUILTY” TO MURDER Xew York.—Harry K. Thaw entered a formal plea of not guilty when ar raigned in the court of general ses sions on the charge of murdering Stan ford White. The plea was entered with a reservation that it may be with drawn. May Plead Insanity. The action of Thaw's counsel in re questing leave to amend the plea of not guilty has been taken as a possible indication that the final line of de fense has not been fully determined, although it is still considered probable that a plea of temporary emotional in sanity will be offered. One of the most interesting develop ments in the case was the statement published in an afternoon paper that White instead of being, as was general ly supposed, a man of great wealth, in fact owed $300,000 to one young mem ber of a prominent family, as much more to other persons, and had so greatly overdrawn his personal account with the firm of architects of which he was a member that he was notified he STANFORD WHITE. (The Millionaire Victim of Gotham Tragedy.) could draw no more and must be con tent with a certain fixed weekly allow ance. Mrs. Thaw held a long conference with her husband’s attorneys during which she is said to have related at length her whoie life history, especially that portion pertaining to her ac quaintance with White prior to her marriage. As a result of this conference it was decided thar former Gov. Frank S. Black will take a leading part in the defense. Book Up White’s Bongs. The investigation by Thaw's counsel into the career of Stanford White and the John Doe proceedings instituted by the district attorney's office, designed to probe every possible avenue that may throw any light on the motive of the tragedy, promise to result in some startling disclosures of the so-called Bohemian under world of the metrop olis. Scores of detectives are now delving in this under world on behalf of prose cution and defense. Among the many witnesses examined at the district at torney's office were Thomas McCaleb, a Californian, who was with the Thaws at dinner in the cafe Martin on the evening of the tragedy, and Truxtun Beale, who was with Mr. White and his party in the restaurant at the same time. Assistant District Attorney Gar van stated at the conclusion of Mc New Spanish Minister. Madrid. — Senor Perez Cabellero. Spanish ambassador to Italy, has been appointed minister of ferign affairs in succession to the late duke of Almo- | dovar. The minister was associated | with Almodovar at Algeciras. Sad Death of Aged Couple. Millersburg. 0.— While James Pat terson and his wife, both nearly 80 ; years old, were visiting their daughter j the old man fell down the cellar steps, breaking his neck. His wife fell over j with heart-disease. : Caleb's examination that McCaleb had accompanied Mrs. Thaw from the gar den after the shooting and had escort ed her to the house of one of her friends. He also said that McCaieb had made a very complete statement of everything he had observed during the dinner and afterwards on the roof of the garden when White was shot. A witness was found by counsel for Thaw, whose tesriniony will, they say, be of the utmost importance to the de fense. This man, whose name is with held, is said to be an old friend of Thaw and will testify that he talked on Monday night on the garden roof with Thaw who appeared to be quite normal in his demeanor and entirely at his ease. Suddenly, according to this in formant, Thaw turned pale, his eyes , glared and turning suddenly away be walked towards where White was seat- j ed and the shooting followed almost i immediately, -■ ^*l,r White Laid to Best. Stanford White was buried Thurs day with simple ceremonies at St. James, L. I., where he had a summer ; home. The services were held in the St. James’ Episcopal church and the interment was madp in the graveyard surrounding the quaint little edifice. ; In the opinion of the physician who ! performed the autopsy on White's body the life of the architect was shortened not more than two years by the bullets from Thaw's pistol. He was found to bo suffering from Bright’3 disease, from incipient tuberculosis and.from fatty degeneration of the liver. Probe Evelyn Nesbit’s Life. The district attorney has completed the examination of the more impor tant witnesses so far discovered, and has shifted his attention to the in vestigation of the relations between Evelyn Nesbit Thaw and White prior to the girl’s marriage and the atti- ! tude assumed by Thaw after he made her his wife. i am investigating every story re garding the life and dissipations of the parties to the tragedy." Mr. Nott j raid. "There are many of them. I ; get a new tale every minute, but so . far neither the police nor the force j of this office has been able to substan tiate one cf them. "The report that White made an in sulting remark about Mrs. Thaw the! night of the shooting which was over- \ heard bv her husband is groundless, so far as I have been able to learn. ; "I am perfectly satisfied that noth- j ing that happened Monday night had ; anything to do with the shooting. The deed was planned before then. ( That White talked. about Mrs. Thaw, i after her marriage, is heard on all sides, but I have been unable to run down a single specific instance in which her name was mentioned by him in a derogatory manner. “I never knew of a case in which there were so many rumors which were without a grain of truth.” Murdever Declared Sane. New York.—That Harry K. Thaw. : the slayer of Stanford White, is per fectly sane was the report made by the alienists retained by the district at- j tomey's office to examine into the ! prisoner's mental condition. This re port was made after the physicians had spent an hour with Thaw, who. in defiance of the advice of his coun sel, former Judge Olcott. refused to anyswer any questions and declared that nothing short of actual force would compel him to submit to a phys ical examination. Admits Murder When Dying. Waukesha, Wis—N. H.—Beston, who died in the penitentiary last week, made a deathbed confession that he killed an aged couple at Black Earth years ago for money, and afterwards burned their home and bodies. Dies for Dove. Stillwater, Minn.—Edmund F. Lotz j aged 30 years, son of James D. Uotz, of • this city, committed suicide at Huch inson, Minn.. Wednesday, after, it is reported, he had attempted to shoot a Miss Dunbar, his fiancee. WINTER WHEAT CROP WILL BREAK RECORD. ESTIMATE OF H. V. JONES.; Government Expert Figures Cereal i Will Show au Increase of 60, 000,000 Bushels Over Yield of Last Year. Minneapolis, Minn.—National pros perity far in advance of the high est known reearJs is emphatically ; indicated in ine *rop estimate of H. V. Jones, crop estimator, who gave out , his annual bulletin at noon Thursday. The winter waeat production of the I'nite-l States he gives as 420,000,000 bushels, 60,1100,000 bushels over last j year, and the record crop of winter wheat ever produced. Cotton and corn are in exceedingly good condition, and ; with a ho: July and August may aho break the record; but nothing but a wet harvest can lower the wheat crop, says the Jones estimate. In company with John Inglis. Mr. Jones has just completed a careful tour ot the winter wheat producing re gions of the country. Grain merchants and railrc&ds throughout the country awaited the publication of his report with great interest. The crop of Illinois is estimated at 28,000,000 bushels, of Indiana 38,000,000.. and Ohio 32,000,000, all much in excess of last year. Michigan is slightly be hind. The west and southwest double their production. I poa- the crop production the whole material prosperity of the country for the year depends, the report proceeds, and especially the welfare of the rail roads, which are peculiarly dependent on the crops. Wide extension through out the northwest and southwest is in dicated, and general expansion. The report gives Texas this year 14, 000,000 bushels, or twice the yield of last year; Oklahoma, 28,000,00! hush- j els, or more than double the yield of i last year, and a record crop for the new state; Indian Territory, 4,000,000 | bushels; Kansas, 72,000,000 bushels, i about the same as last year; Nebraska, 35,000,000, bushels about the same as last year; Missouri, 30,000,000 bushels, same as last year. California it given 20.000,000 bushels, or twice last year's crop. On this basis the southwest raises about 25, 000,000 bushels more than last year. The southern and eastern statas and Oregon make up the balance, all the states having a good average yield ex cept Michigan, which is probably the lightest in average yield. For Oklaho ma government acreage is increased in this estimate 400,000 bushels. ROOSEVELT OUT OF RACE President Will Not Be a Candidate for Reelection During Next Camp aign. Colorado Springs. Col.—W. A. Conant, of this city, who was a delegate from New York to the first national Republican convention more than 50" years ago. recently wrote a letter to President Roosevelt asking if he intended being a candidate for the presidency at the expiration of his present term. Mr. Conant has just re ceived the following reply; “My Dear Mr. Conant: The president thanks you for your letter of the 17th instant and cordially appreciates your kind expressions concerning himself. He says, however, that you will have to vote for some other Republican can didate next time. Conveying to you the president's best wishel'. I am, sincerely yours, Wiliiam Lceb, Jr., secretary to the president. Michigan Mine Strike Settled. Bay City, Mich.—The differences ; which have existed between the coal : operators and miners of the Michigan j district since March last were formal- j Iv settled Tuesday afternoon at a j joint conference. The scale of T90S, | carrying an advance of 5.55 per cent.. ! was adopted. The initiation fee, which | the union had placed at $50. was re- ! duced to $25, $10 to be paid down and I the balance a the rate of $2.50 each ! pay day. The mines will be reopened j at once. The new agreement holds until April 1, 1908. Board Illegal for Years. Peoria. 111.—Judge Worthington In the circuit court here Thursday morning handed down a decision declaring that the election of member. of the Peoria school board has b:en j illegal for the pafet 25 years. The opinion Is a result Of ' proceedings j brought to oust eight hold-over rnem- j bers of the board. There will he an- j other election called immediately to select a new school board. Failure to allow the-city council to call elections in the past v.as the basis of the deci sion. J. N. Free Is Dead. Toledo, O.—J. N. Free, known ail I over the country as the “Immortal .1. N.,” died Wednesday at the Toledo state hospital for the insane. For years ha traveled all over the United States, paying neither hotel bills nor railroad fares. -— . ! Respite for Murderer.'’' Columbus, O.—Dr. Haugh. of Dayton, sentenced to be electrocuted for killing three people, won’t die at least until the snow flies. The supreme court sus tained the tr.c-tion for leave to file a pe tition in error. Noted Churchman Dead. San Anselmo. Cal.—Rev. William Alexander. D. D. LL. D„ professor of church history in the Presbyterian the ological seminary, died at his home here Friday. He was horn in Pennsyl ,,onfp iti 1WV DEATH UNDER CIRCUS TENT WINDSTORM CAUSES CANVAS TO COLLAPSE. Two Deaths, One Fatally Injured and Seven Others Sustaining Bruises Summary of Casualties. Aurora, 111.—Ten thousand people were thrown into a wilu panic Fri day afternoon during the perform ance of Ringiing Bros.' circus in thia city when a violent and sudden wind storm partly ‘wrecked the lna.n tent. Swinging quarter poles, lifted from the ground by the swaying canvas, mowed oown people in scores from their seats. One man was instantly killed—a cripple, who was unable to save himseit—another man died of fright as he hurried from the scene of terror with his family, and seven per sons were injured, at least one of them fatally. There were present in the tent at the time holiday people from all sec tion;* or Kane county, l'he schools in Aurora uni in the rural regions and in neighboring towns were ci.sed for the summer, and it was a gala crowd, including many children, that u-sem bled for the circus. The acc-iden; cast the town into gloom. Fifteen elephants ^rere going through their performance in the three huge rings of the circus when the wind, by t peculiar freak, tore a 5b foot hole in the c-euter of the top of the great teat. Instantly the big beasts began wird trumpeting as they huddled in the cen ter of the tent and added to the .terror cause 1 by the coliapse of the canvas. The lions and tigers and other wild beasts in the animal tent adjoining, al though the canvas over them remained intad, were driven crazy with fear by the happing canvas, the noisy ele- 1 phant3. and the shrieks of the panic stricken people. That more persons were not hurt is regarded as almost miraculous. A rescue force was organized quickly and men began pulling people out from under the seats, and the crowd, | for til-'- most part unhurt, made its way out through the side walls, some of j which had been torn open by the wind. The tent was emptied in an incredibly short time, some persons said in less than three minutes, though others said 1 the time exceeded five minutes. RICH YOUTHS ROB MANSION Young Han Out on a Lark Lands in Jail and Implicates Compan ion in Burglary. Pittsburg, Pa.—Frank S. Galey, son ol Mrs. Samuel Galey, widow of a millionaire oil operator, was arrested Thursday night and is locked up, charged with an attempt to 1 rob the residence of James B. Laugh- j lin, president of the Jcnes & Laugh- j lin Steel company. Others were implicated in the mat ter. and while Galey is the only one I under arrest, search is being made for others, among them Joseph Boyd, also j son of a millionaire. The young men had been subpoenaed ; as witnesses in the superior court, but the trial for which their testimony was to be taken, did not come up. A visit was made to a cafe near the court he use, and It is said that while in the cafe, Boyd suggested the rob bing of the Laughlin home as a lark. The Laughlin home Is in the fash ionab'le East end section of Pittsburg. The family is out of the city at pres ent. Later, while in the lockup. Galey i confessed to breaking into the Laugh- : lin home and implicated Boyd. Gloats Over Army Agitation. St. Petersburg.—M. Gamarteli, a member from the Caucasus, expressed satisfaction at the fact that the revo lutionary agitation in the army and M. Feodorovsky in behalf of the ministry, repudiated the assertion that there was dissatisfaction in the army. A priest named Afanasieff. implored the Cossacks to cease being the scourges of Russia, and to join the Russian masses in the movement for freedom. State to Make Acohol. Topeka, Kan.—Gov. E. W. Hoch is in lavor of the establishment of a state denatured alcohol distillery in Kan sas. "Such a distillery," said the gov ernor. "would furnish uifeans for em ploying a large number of convicts. It would have the same effect that was expected of the oi! refinery meas ure. in that it would reduce the price of light and tuel to consumers.” SitrucK by a Train. Bellefontaine, O.—John Burke and wife and baby, traveling by wagon from Indiana to Bucyrus. O.. were struck by an Ohio Centra! train v/est cf here Wednesday and all fa tally injured. Burke was asleep on the seat holding the baby in his arms, and Mrs, E'.tirke was lying on the bot tom of the wagon when the train hit the wagon. Traction Hen's Pay Raised. Springfield, O.—A general increase in wages of all the employes of traction lines of the new Morgau syndicate, has been announced. The advance will average seven cents an hoar. . Flood liars King’s Birthday. London.—Most -of the arrangements for the public observance of King Ed ward's birthday were canceled because of -the severe rainstorm. Mote than two inches of rain fell in London in eight hours. Advance Insurance Rates. San Jose. Cal.—On the authority of the president of the San .Tore board of underwriters, th? announcement is made that the insurance nt‘3 in San Jose will be raised from Z-t to 100 pet '■ent. Murder and Suicide. Comfort, Tex.—In the presence of guests at the bride, Joseph to have married Miss Ernestine shot himself. Safety Appliance Suits. Washington. — Attorney General j Moody has directed that suits be brought against a large number ol railroads for violation of the safety ap pliance law through failure to keep their equipment in proper condition. Must Fumigate Warships. New Orleans.—Warships from sus pected yellow fever ports which enter the Mississippi river must submit to the same quarantine regulations as any other vessel, according to decision of the Louisiana board of health. Girls’ Dormitory Burned. Knoxville. Tenn—The girls' dormi tory of Knox County Industrial school, 'just beyond the city’r limits, was total ly destroyed by fire Thursday. ' Fifty eight girls sleeping in the building es caped without injury. Peoria School Board Illegal. Peoria, ill.—judge Worthington Id the circuit court here Thursday morn ing handed down a decision declaring that the election of members of the Peoria ’ school board has been Illegal for the past 25 years. XllKiilCLk A*iU( ill. Paterson, :v. J.—Two firemen were seriously injured, eight horses burned and- $50Jjt»0 worth of property de stroyed Thui-sday by a Are at the yards of the A. Hubbard Lumber com pany here. Jap Laborers Are Hurt. Cheyenne, Wyo.—A high wind Thurs day blew over a train of 11 cars a! Weir. The cars were used as charters for Japanese laborers. Tweuty of the Japanese were injured, seven of them seriously. APPROPRIATIONS TOTAL AMOUNT SPENT BY LAST CONGRESS. TAWHEY ANALYZES THE LIST Total Appropriations for This Session $830,183,301 — Nearly Hundred and Forty Millions Not Chargeable to Budget Next Year. WASHINGTON—Chairman Tawney of the house appropriation committee made the following statement as to the appropriations V. r the fiscal year 1907: "The total appioprlations made at this session of congress, including those carried in the regular appropria tion act. all deficiencies. miscellaneous matters and permanent annual approp riations, aggregate $880,183,301. "This is an apparent increase of $60, 000.000 over the appropriations made at the iast session of congress. "This is more than accounted for in the three following items: “For the Isthmian canal, $42,447,000; under the statehood bill, $10,250,000; Toward the construction of new build ings authorized at this session, $10,321, 000. making a total of $63,018,000 to which might proper*:.' be added $5,000, 000 for San Francisco. "Other notable increases are $3,o00, 000 for inspection of meat products and $1(1.600.000 on account of the. postal service. "The total apparent appropriations Bsacie at this session. $380,183,301, do not constitute in their JnUrety a charge against the revenues of the government for the next fiscal year, for the reason that there must ne de ducted deficiencies that are*chargeable to the service of the current year anu to meet the expenditures already in curred on account thereof, approximat ing at least $35,000,000. This sum in cludes $16,000,000 for the Isthmian canal. "There should also be deducted $57, 000.000 for the sinking fund, which may or may not be met in whole or in part, as it is purely a matter of discre tion with the secretary of the treasury to utilize the surplus for that purpose. "There should also be deducted $22, 000,000. wnich is estimated and In cluded in the whole sum of appropria tions to be paid out of deposits of na tional banks in redemption of circulat ing notes of banks. The deposits are not credited as a pan of the revenues of the government, and therefore re demptions made from the fund thus arising should not be charged to ex penditures. "The $25,456,415 appropriations for work on the isthmian canal is payable from or reimbursab'e to the treasury out of bonds that are authorized to be sold for that purpose and should also be deducted from the approriationse foi 1907. "The sums mentioned amount to more than $139,000,000 and when de ducted lea’ e apparent appropriations ot only $741,000,000 to be met out of the revenues of the next fiscal year. "In my judgment the ordinary rev enues of the next fiscal year will amount to at least 1600,000,000. Tht postal revenues are estimated at $181, 973,000 for 1907. making the total ap parent resources of the government foi next year not less than $78i ,573,000; or at least $40,000,000 in excess of ap propriations that may be chargee against them.’’ SESSION AT AN END. Both Houses of Congress Adjourn Sat urday Night at Ten O’clock. WASINGTON — Promptly at If o'clock Saturday night Vice Presidenl Fairbanks in the senate and Speakei Cannon in the house declared the flDa‘ adjournment of the first session of tht Fifty-ninth congress. For the first time congress ad Journed on the day which closed the fiscal year. Other sessions had ad journed before and some after June 3ft but the Fifty-ninth congross ended its first session on the day when the gov ernment strikes its balances anc closes its books. There were some ia teresting features to mark the end which came when there was less that a quorum in either house. Many sena tors and representatives, believing that the adjournment would come early it the day. made arrangements to lean in the afternoon and did not rentals for the ’losing scenes. Thompson in New Quarters. MEXICO CITY—Minister Thompsor has moved the Aerican embassy to s papafial building on Congress avenue a house of recent construction with twenty rqpms and ample accommcda tions for the growing work of the em bassv. The United States has never be fore had its diplomats so handsome!) housed. The old quarters in Buenr Vista had been occupied some nin« years. American residents in the large in terior cities will observe the Fourth Oi July with ball3, picnics, reading of tht Declaration of Independence anr speeches Tourists in a Wreck. SALISBURY.-England—Driving at a mad pace over the London Southwest era railway,’the American line express carrying torty-three of the steame: New York's passengers from Plymouth to Ixmdon. plunged from the trad just afte- passing the station here a Lfi' Sunday morning and mangled tc death in its wreckage twenty-three pas sengers, who sailed tram New York oi June 23. and four of the trainmen Be sides Jhose to whom death cam* speedily u dozen persons were injured some serious'.-. New Town on Mount Vesuvius. NAPLESS—The duke and dnebess oi Aosta an-1 the local officials ascende* Mt. Vesuvius to lay the cornerstone * the new village of Ottajano. The affai was marked with g-eat enthusiasm, i large number of people from San Guis seppe, Sorama, Santanna and other vil lages injured by the eruption of th« volcano last AprU witnessing the cere mony. The weather, however, was ui» favorable, there being a heavy rain storm, with lightning and thunder, ani the heat being oppressive.