WHAT'S WKMZD? rtt It. ky. butting a liH Wanted i Tftt3rclsnfitd lrttttrtctuaut. The Omaha Daily Bee. SUBSCRIBERS Faffing f gel The Btt regolirfr f rompfrr thouli report fo 'Plume IW. ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871. OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING,. JUNE 30, 190." TEN PAGES. SINGLE COPY THREE CENTS. RESIGNS BY RI UEST 4. History of the Betirement . t , Wallace from Panama Comi z a. ENGINEER IS OFFERED BE" POSITION Twelre Days After He Assnt ew Duties Ee Wishes to Quit. STORMY INTERVIEW WITH SECRETARY TAFT He is Acoused of Breaking Faith with the OoTernment CHANGES POSITION FOR MERE LUCRE Offer to Continue In Office In Advisory Capacity for Slaty Day ! Be ' Jected by the Presl-dert. 1 WASHINGTON, June 29-Charging him with changing hla position over night "for mere lucre" and with being Influenced "solely by personal advantage," Secretary Taft, In his conference In New York on June 28 with John F. Wallace, chief engi neer of the Panama canal, after addressing a severe rebuke to him, requested his resig nation on the ground that "public Interest requires that you tender your resignation at this moment and turn over the records of your offlce to the chairman of the commis sion." This fact Is disclosed In an official state ment Issued from the office of the secretary of war tonight, which reviews the relations of Mr. Wallace with the War department and the commission since the latter body's reorganization last spring, quoting the sev eral expressions of the chief engineer of bis satisfaction with the entire arrangement, and then gives practically a verbatim ac count of the conference between Secretary Taft and Mr. Wallace In New York, which concluded with the submission to Secretary Taft of Mr. Wallace's resignation. The statement Issued tonight concludes with the president's letter to Mr. Wallace, dated Cambridge, Mass., June 28. which reads: Your resignation as member and chief en gineer of the Isthmian Canal commission, tendered In accordance with the request of Secretary Teft, which request has. under me circumstances, my entire approval, is hereby accepted, to take effect Imme diately, Very truly yours, THEODORE ROOSEVELT. The statement shows that Mr. Wallace made no complaint against any of his as sociates. Secretary Taft begins with the statement of Mr. Wallace to Chairman Shonts lmme delately after the organisation of the com mission, that he would be ready to accept the position of chief engineer at $:!S,000 per year and a residence on the isthmus and would enter on his duties June 1. Twelve days after his arrival on the Isthmus Mr. Wallace sent the following cablegram to Secretary Taft: Important complicated business matters wnicn cannot be arranged hy correspond encs and which may affect my relations as enter engineer of the commission neces sitate' "Immediate return to the United States to conrer with you and others. An order from you to return for official con ference will prevent apprehension on the part of employes. Suggest Blionts remain until my arrival. Please answer. Secretary Taft replied: Secretary of war and Shonts, in accord ance with your request and without knowl edge of circumstances that Justify, approve your return for consultation with them at Washington. Action of Mr. Wallace. When they met In New York by appoint ment, the statement says, Mr. Wallace aid part of the Interview would be personal to himself and part would concern the gen eral canal work on the isthmus, to which Secretary Taft agreed: The statement continues: Mr. Wallace then said that a few days before he sent the cable to the secretary f he received a cable from prominent busi ness men In New York asking If tie would consider an offer to accept an lmportunt position In New York, and that ne had cabled In reply that It was "simply a question of terms and conditions" ana that he had requested particulars; that the par ticulars came ana that It proved to be a detlnlte offer of a position us president of a large holding company, controlling sev eral other corisiratlons with certain steady benefits and advantages to himself which, with the salary, made It equlvulent to SD0.U00 a year: that he did not at once accept the ofTer, but delayed it for a few days. In order to cable the secretary of war, during which time tne pintles In creased their proposal, making it equivalent to t&f.iXH) or Ju&.wjt). He stated that the position was an espe cially attractive one; that the duties of the . new position were especially agreeable and vnfforoed -opportunities to make money through Investments, etc.; further, that the position was such a good one that he did not consider that he could decline It; that life on tne Isthmus was lonely and accom panied with risk to himself ana wife and was another reason for accepting a better o trice; but that his new duties would not require all of his attention for the next two months and that he could close up his canal work In tho meantime. Strong: Talk from Taft. When he finished Secretary Taft thus ad dressed him:' "Mr. Wallace: I am Inexpressibly disap pointed, not only because you have tak?n tula step, but bcaue you seem so uttlerly Insensible of the significance of your con duct, luu come with the bald announce ment that you quit your tasu at a critical moment on the eve of Important work and In the midst of reorganisation plans under which you accepted youi position, with your deiwrtment unperfectea 111 organiza tion and when you know, too, that my pub lic duties call me to the Philippines lor several months. 1 am astonished that you should be so dlsregardful of the splendid opportunities of the position which would have made you famous the world over hy the honorable performance of your duties of chief engineer. For mere lucre you change your position over night without thought of the embar rassing position In whlcn you place your government by this action, when the engi neering forces on the isthmus are left with out a real head and your department Is not perfected In organisation; when the ad visor! board of engineers Is to assemble under call of the president within two months and when I am departing for the Philippines on public duty. You have permitted the president and all of us to proceed In full confidence that you would perforin the functions of chief en gineer and now, In an hour, you drop your grtat duties and throw them bark upon us as If It were a matter of no consequence., snd all this for your personal advantage Solely. You make not the least complaint against your associates superior or Inferior. il know of ho possible ground for any). You are Influenced solely by your personal ad vantage. Resignation Is Demanded. Great fame Is attached to your office, but ulso equal responsibility, and now you de sert the in la an hour. Kven from a stand- ,m- point of policy, you are making a profound iimuixe. it you could witnuraw irum your new arrangements, which I do not suggest, 1 could have no confidence (since 1 know now your conception of duty) that you would not In the future repeat the same at a moment even more critical, when the consequences blight bo even inure em barrassing and Injurious to the govern ment. Under these circumstances, Mr. Wallace, and with great personal pain and disappoint ment, I am bound to say that 1 consider the public Interest requires that you tender yuur resignation at this moment, and turn over the records of your oftlue to the chair man of tbs commission. llv. Wallace's resignation as coramla- IDAHO LAND FRAUD CASES Federal Conrt Mill Consider Matter t Special Term In that State. WASHINGTON, June 29. - Land fraud cases In Idaho will be considered at a special term of the United States district court which will be held at Iewlston, Idaho, In the first week of July by direc tion of Attorney Oeneral Moody and through the request of Secretary of the In terior Hitchcock. The special term of court and special grand Jury are made necessary by the fact that the summer term at Lewlston hus ad journed without action having been taken In the land fraud cases and that a number of cases under Investigation will be out lawed by the statutes of limitation unless Indictments are returned before July 15. Inspectors of the general land office, working In conjunction with the I'nited States attorney for Idaho, have been en gaged for several months on a special In vestigation of alleged frauds In that state, and, according to the partial reports re ceived by the general bind offlce, It Is Intimated that a large number of persons will be Indicted. Secretary Hitchcock Is desirous that none of the persons against whom evidence has been gathered shall escape prosecution under cover of the statutes of limitation. WESTERN MATTERS AT CAPITAL Captain Fecliet Ordered to Omaha to Command Signal Corps De. tacliment. (From a Staff Correspondent.! WASHINGTON, June 29.-(Speclal Tele gram.) Monarch & Porter of Des Moines, la., were today awarded a contract for the construction of forty-three miles of branches and lateral canals In connection with the Minidoka, Idaho, Irrigation proj ect, at their bid of X194.826. Captain Eugene O. Fechet is relieved from duty at Bcnlcla barracks, California, to take effect as soon after September 1 as his services can be spared, and will then pro ceed to Omaha for duty as chief signal offi cer. Department of the Missouri. Captain Fechet will nlso exercise general charge over the signal corps property to bo shipped to Oranha barracks. Carl Lovo has been appointed postmaster at Male, Campbell county, S. D., vice Miner Ward, resigned. These rural routes have been ordered es tablished .September 1 In Deuel county. South Dakota: Clear Lake, route 3, popula tion 81t, 102 houses; Gary, route 2, popula tion 520, 104 houses. Richard H. Hazen has been appointed regular and Samuel Blrdsell substitute rural carriers for route 2 at Salem, S. D. PITTSBURG FLYER IN DITCH One Killed and One. Fatally Injured In Railroad Wreck In Ohio. CLEVELAND, June 19. A fast eastbound passepger train on the Cleveland and Pitts burg branch of the Pennsylvania road was derailed and wrecked near Atwater, O., today, causing the death of at least one passenger and the engineer,' while a dozen or more others were more or less Injured. The dead: C. M. MTNHALL, Cleveland. P. A. BALDWIN, engineer. The train is ono of the festest between Cleveland and Pittsburg, making the run of 140 miles between the two cities In three hours and fifteen minutes. When the acci dent occurred the train was running fifty miles an hour. A section crew was repairing track and It is said had removed a rail. A flagman was sent out, but for some rea son he failed to stop the flyer and the wreck followed. The train consisted of a combination bag gage car and smoker, one day coach, a buffet car and two Pullmans. All the Injured passengers were In the combination car. Relief trains were promptly sent to the scene and the Injured taken to Alliance. WHOLESALE MURDER BY MOB 1 Seven Negroes and One White Man Taken from Georgia Jail by Mob. ONE NEGRO ESCAPES WITH . HIS LIFE Jailer Compelled to Give Keys Vnder Threat of Death and Mob Dis appears When Crime Is Accomplished. WATKIN8VILLE. Ga., June 29. Elgnt prisoners were taken from the Jail here this morning and seven shot to death by a moh of masked white men within 200 yards of the center of the town. Eight men were carried to the scene of the lynching, but one miraculously escaped death by falling to the ground when the volley was fired and feigning that he had been killed. The names of the prisoners who were killed are: Lewis Robertson, Rich Robinson, Sandy Price, Claude Elder, Bob Harris, Jim Y'early, all negroes, and Lon Aycock, white. Joe Patterson, negro, feigned death and the mob left him, think ing he, too, had been riddled with bullets. Four of the prisoners were charged with being Implicated In the murder of Hol brook and his wife several weeks ago, and one was held for attempting criminal as sault. The others were in Jail on minor charges. The members formed quietly Just after midnight and marched In order to the Jail, where the keys were demanded of the Jailer. The demand was made at the point of rifles and the Jailer realized that resistance was useless. With the keys the mob opened all the cells, ordered the trembling Inmates out and lined them up In single file, tying them with ropes. The prisoners, eight in number, were marched to a corner lot-within 200 yards of the Jail and In the heart of the town, where they were bound to a fence with their hands tied behind them. The work had been so quietly done that the sleeping residents of the town had not been aroused. One Man Escapes. At a command by the leader the mob stepped back a few paces, took deliberate aim and fired a volley from rifles, shot guns and pistols Into the line of prisoners. Every man la front of the mob fell at the first volley. Believing Its work had been made com plete, the mob quickly dispersed. Examination by the Jailor, who had been forced by the mob to accompany It to the scene of execution, showed that seven of the men had been riddled by bullets, but Joe Patterson was found to have been only j slightly Injured, Patterson's escape from death was as by a miracle, for tbe fence post to which he had been bound was torn Into fragments by the bullets. He pos sessed the presence of mind to fall with his Ill-fated companions and remain mo tionless upon the ground. The rattle of the volley aroused the town. Scores of citizens sprang from their beds In alarm to find the mob nowhere In evi dence, however. The strength of the mob had been vari- oualy estimated. The Jailer declares that there were many armed men all wearing masks. He says he delivered the keys to the men; believing It was better 16 do this than to resist, which he was told would mean the dynamiting of the prison. Gain ing admittance to the Jail the mob first sought Sandy Price, who was arrested late yesterday afternoon by a posse from Oconee canity and delivered to the Jailer. y,t the time of his arrest a lynching was narrowly averted. Price was charged by Mrs. Weldon Dooley, who lives In the sub urbs of Watklnsvllle, with having at tempted criminal assault Wednesday after noon. No further trouble Is anticipated. MUTUAL LIFE ASKS PROBING w York Concern Desires an Official Investigation of Its Present Condition. NEW YORK, June 29. It was announced at the office of the Mutual Life Insurance company of New York today that 6tate Superintendent of Insurance Hendricks 1ms made arrangements to investigate that company along the same lines as bis in vestigation of the Equitable Life Assurance society. The Investigation Is at the request of Richard A. McCurdy, president of the company. An officer of the Mutual com pany who was authorized to speak for President McCurdy gave out the following statement: "The Investigation of this company by the state superintendent of Insurance at the request of President McCurdy will bs as thorough as It Is possible to make It. The request for the Investigation was prompted by a desire on the part of tho Mutual Life company to have the exact status of the company made, clearly known to the public. The life insurance ntmns phere has been so befogged by the troubles In the Equitable that many persons are la boring under the Impression that others of the big companies are In the same position CZAR'S THRONE IN DANGER Haste to Stop Bevolution Before it Spreads to tbe Army. LAST BULWARK OF THE AUTOCRACY With Revolution In Poland, Mutiny In the .avy and Civil War In the Caucasus the Bureaucrat Are Ilnay. NEBRASKA WEATHER FORECAST Partly Cloudy Friday! Showers In Southwest Portion. Saturday Fair. Temperature at Omnha Yesterdayi Hour. Ilea. Hour. Dear. R a, m 1H i p. m...... NI a. m IH 3 p. m .At T a. m (M 3 i. ni fi N a. m HH 4 p. ni MO On. m TO ft p. m SI 10 a. m T4 O p. m SO 11 a. tn. . . . . . M) T p. m HO 13 m 8 p. m TH n p. ni TT ST. PETERSBt-RG, June S0.-2:5S a. m The Russian government, although It has been almost paralysed by the terrible events at Odessa and the news that the sailors at Llbau have mutinied, Is making desperate and even frantic efforts to meet the situa tion and to stamp out the flames of revolu tion before they ran spread to the army, which Is now the last bulwark of the autocracy. With Poland red with the spirit of revo lution, tho Caucasus already almost In a state of civil war, agrarian disorders sprendlng rapidly, the whole country pro foundly stirred and the Intelligent classes as the Equitable. We decided that the best ! Boll11' arrayed against the government, all w-ay to convince the people to the contrary, at least so far as the Mutual Is concerned, would be to have Mr. .Hendricks make a searching Investigation. If he finds every thing all right the public should know it. If he finds anything wrong that knowledge should be equally the property of the pub lic. Since the troubles of tho Equitable we have received many communications from our agents In various parts of the country telling us that It was becoming more and more difficult to secure business on account of the growing distrust of the people of all life Insurance companies, and we decided that the best and quickest method to do away with this distrust would be by an Investigation. We have notified all of our agents that the Investigation is to be made and that no matter what the outcomo Is the public shall be fully Informed of It." FATAL WRECKJN KANSAS CITY Two Are Killed and Several Injured When Trains Strike at Croaslnnr. METHODS OF OIL COMPANIES Dealer at Jefferson City Testifies that Railroads Refused to Handle Ship ments from Certain Concerns. ST. LOUIS, June 29. The examination by the state Into methods pursued by the Standurd OH company, the Waters-Pierce Oil company and the Republic Oil company was resumed today. L. C. Lohman. for thirty years an oil dealer at Jefferson City, was the first wit ness, saying that on one occasion he had written to the Standard Oil company ask ing quotations on oil delivered to him, and had received a quotation of $1 less than he was paying the Waters-Pierce company. This letter, however, he said, was soon followed by another In which the Standard Oil company declared It could not sell oil In his territory. He said he had been forced to abandon his patronage of independent oil companies because the Missouri Pacific and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas roads .had refused to accept oil for shipment to him from tho Independent companies. J. S. Willis, a clerk In the office of the Board of Railroad and Warehouse Com missioners, was introduced to prove that neither the Standard Oil company nor the Waters-Pierce company seeks advantage Jn railroad rates. (Continued a Second. Pa.). LOUIS FITZGERALD STEPS OUT Iatlmate Friend of Elder Hyde Severs Connection with Equitable Life Society. NEW YORK, June 29 Oeneral Louis Fitzgerald sent his resignation as a di rector of the Equitable Assurance society to Chairman Morton today. Qtenral Fitzgerald was an intimate friend of the late Henry B. Hyde and was long associated with him In the Equitable so ciety and a number of other corporations Chairman Morton of the Equitable Life Assurance society announced today that I'nited States Senator Depew's retainer of l:S.0itt a year and the retainer of for mer Governor David B. Hill of SoO.ooO, both as attorneys, have been discontinued. George H. Squire, a former employe of the society, has been notified that his pen sion or salary of 11,000 a month will cease July 1. ARGUMENT FOR MITCHELL Attorney for Senator Telia Jury that Testimony- Against Client la Untrustworthy. PORTLAND, Ore., June 23. Judge A. S. Bennett opened the argument for the de fense today In the trial of United States Senator John H. Mitchell. He took up the evidence and alleged It Is a case of persecution. Bennett alleged that the theory that the two partners, Mitchell and Tan ner, worked on was that It was all right for Tanner to' prosecute land matters In any of the land offices, receiving fees there for, which were divided between the two partners, -as was right. .Bennett alleged that the testimony of Tanner was untrust worthy and was given under pressure ap plied by United States District Attorney Heney. Bennett contended that the testi mony of Mitchell's secretary was false and that undue Importance was attached to the letters between the two partners that had been Introduced as evidence by the prosecu tion. Judge Bennett did not conclude In time for Mr. Thurston to speak today and court adjourned until tomorrow. Many times In the course of Judge Bennett's argument tears stood In his own eyes and In the eyes of the Jury and other persons In the court room. It Is doubtful If the case will go to the Jury before Saturday. KANSAS CITY, June 29. Eastbound Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe passenger train No. 4, the California limited, and a heavy Kansas City Southern stock train, westbound, collided head-on. on tho Belt Line tracks at the Oillls street crossing, two miles from the center of the city, early today. Two persons were killed and three Injured. The dead: WILLIAM FRAfER, Independence, Mo., fireman of Kansas) City Southern train. MICHAEL DrjVINE. Kansas City, switchman riding Sji Kansas City Southern cab. J The Injured: C. F. Willis, MsWline.' Mo., aged 52 years, engineer of Siinta Fe Limited, badly scalded; cannot HveJ Jesse M. Tabbutt, baggageman of Santa Fe Limited, scaldeif and hurt Internally; may die. ( One passenger, ' niie, unidentified; be lieved to be seriously ','lhurt. Several passengers jlvere severely shaken up, but otherwise untiyjured and were able to continue the trip jxo Chicngo. Both trains were riiinlng at a good rate of speed. Both enginel were badly wrecked, the forward combine lted was slightly darti a dozen stock carl, collision has not beetil train apparently had Thomas Fltzmorrls, e train, who Jumped an could not be found lrbtnediately following the wreck, Later Engineer Fltzm duty slightly hurt. It engineers were at fault ing orders to stop at thl crossing to await the signal of a flagman! conditions seem ripe for the long predicted revolution. The first act of the government after dis patching Admiral Kruger's squadron from Sebastopol was to summon the Knlnz Po temkine, whose mutineers have now been Joined by the crews of the two torpedo boats which accompanied It to Odessa, to surrender under the threat of firing upon and sinking the vessel. This, was followed by the declaration of martial law at Odessa and Llbau and the clothing of the military commanders with plenary powers. The newly formed council for Imperial defense met last night, under the presidency of Grand Duke Nicholas, and was In session long after midnight. Beyond the fact that the temper of the army was considered at length, nothing Is known as to what oc curred In the council or regarding the de cisions at which It arrived. Great fear Is expressed that many regi ments are honeycombed with sedition and there Is grave doubt of their loyalty should they be called upon to fire on the revolu tionists. Indeed, the most startling stories Involving the unreliability of the troops are being repeated In St. Petersburg, but the truth of many of them Is more than ques tionable. What effect the news of the happening at Odessa will have upon the troops and the people In general Is problematical and Is puzzling the press. Tho precautions taken by the authorities to keep the news from the public have been In vain, the revolutionaries and the liberals everywhere spread it by word of mouth and within twenty-four hours It will be known In the uttermost confines of European Russia. When the news reaches the armies In Manchuria It Is bound to create a deep Impression. t The authorities, however, realizing that It was certain to leak out and that there would be exaggerated versions of It, and perhaps to prepare the way for a public announcement, are now sending some dispatches to the newspapers, but these only contain Information not for publication. At the admiralty, where the temper of the Black sea sailors Is known, the orders sent to Admiral Kruger's squadron were by no means unanimously approved. Among others. Vice Admiral Skrydloff openly ex pressed the opinion that the blue Jackets of Kruger's ships would not fire on their n car on the Llm- j comrades on board the Knlaz Potemklne, ged, as were half Blame for the fixed. The Limited the right-of-way. fclneer of the stock d escaped Injury. ,1 Wturice reported for eveloped that both n disobeying stand- SIX KILLED, TWENTY INJURED Great Destruction tt Property and Crops In Storm Vfhlch Visited Kansas Town. PHILLIPSBURG, Kiln., June 29.-Six persons were killed aild twenty Injured, sixteen of the latter seri jusly. In the storm that struck here and ir this vicinity last night. The destruction of property and crops will run far Into the thousands. The dead: MRS. ROBERT ALEXANDER AND Twu UAiiitni'.its, afceu t and 4 years X4 U Q I A V V II IWlt'ia'D tl" u .... 1 . J 1.1, .i-, i. 1 . , ELJIKK LAN MAN. DANIEL WEAVER. The seriously Injured H. B. Morgan, wife &id two children. unanes i:asweu, wite kind daughter. Arthur Caswell, wife and baby. Mrs. E. A. Mitchell. Robert Nelson. 'i Rutherfosd Alexander. John Alexander. , Mrs. J. F. Tombllen 4nd brother. The course of the tornado was fifteen miles long and one-half; mile wide. It dis appeared Just east of this city. Not a building In its path withstood its fury, and the-terrible force of the wind waa Inten sified by the violence of electrical dis charges and a terrific fall of hall and water. Hailstones measuring fifteen inches fell and the precipitation Is estimated at three inches In a space of thirty minutes. Over central and southern Kansas a se vere wind and ralnBtorm was general, doing more or less danage to corn, trees and property. TON OF DYNAMITE EXPLODES Kin Men Killed and Twelve Injured by Serious Accident at Emporium, Pa. EMPORIUM. Pa. June ffl.-Nlne men were killed and frcm twelve to fifteen others were Injured by an explosion of a ton of dynamite today at the -plant of the Emporium Powder company, three mllea west of this place. The dead men were all employed at the works. Several buildings were Wrecked. Although some of the lu Jured were seriously hurt, ail art ezpecud to recover. TWO MURDERERS ARE HANGED Leo Furman and John O'Brien Pay Penalty for Killing Samuel Ressler. LANCA8TER, Pa.. June 29. Lee Furman and John O'Brien were hanged today for the killing of Samuel Ressler, an aged toll gate keeper, on the night of July 1, 1904. Furman, O'Brien and a man named Craig, after shooting and slightly injuring several persons at Gordonvllle, near here, were pursued by citizens. Craig was captured and sentenced to twenty years In the peni tentiary, but Furman and O'Brien escaped. They reached the Ressler toll house after dusk. Ressler answered their knock and as he opened the door he was seised, dragged from the house and shot. One of the men held Ressler while the other did I the shooting. Mrs. Ressler escaped through a window and gave the alarm. The men robbed the house of a small amount of money and escaped. They were arrested ten days later In , Norfolk, Va., while stealing a ride on a train, ahd Identi fied as the Ressler murderers. Furman was 22 years old and his home was in Trenton, N. J. O'Brien was 25 years old and his horns was in Baltimore. COUNCIL BLUFFS MAN CHOSEN John Mehlop, Jr., On of Secretaries of National Wholesale Grocers' Association. MILWAUKEE, June .-The Wholesale Grocers' association of the United States was organized today with the following officers: Chairman, William Judson of Grand Rapids, Mich.; secretaries, Alfred H. Bcckman of New York, John Mehlop, jr., of Council Bluffs, la-, and C. 8. Jwr.a of iWiJ, ill t I ,THREE KILLED IN KANSAS I'nlon Pacific Paxsenger Strikes Freight at Ellis, Killing; En. Blneer and Tramps. ELLIS, Kan., June i:V Westbound pas senger train No. 101 on the Union Paclfio railway, which left Kansas City last night, crashed Into a freight train in the yards here early today. J. H. Kinney of Ellis, engineer of the passenger train, and '.wo strangers, be lieved to have been tiamps, were killed. The engine was badly damaged, the mall car was thrown from the track and wrecked and the cabose of the freight train was demolished. The other cars on the passenger train remained upright and none of the passengers was injured. THREE PTOPLE B'JRN fb DEATH Collier Hotel at 1. irking, Mo., De stroyed by Hre-Orlgln of th tilas Xot Determined. LICKING, Mo., June 29. Three persons Perished In the burning of the Collier hotel here. The dead: inJlnf-H'- h BHELP of Rolla, Mo., and infant daughter EMMETT STICER, Willow Springs. Mo. The cause of the fire is unknown The hotel was a two-story frame uructure and burned quickly. but that on the contrary they might revolt should they be ordered to shoot. Admiral Skrydloff was of the opinion that the best course would be to allow the crew of tho Knlaz Potemklne to remain on board until It had been starved Into submission. In this connection the story is current that the crew of the battleship captured two English ships loaded with provisions and is holding them alongside. As far as known here. Admiral Kruger, although due at Odessa early last evening, had not arrived up to midnight and this gave rise to rumors that the crews had actually seized the other ships of the squr.dron. Dispatches received here from Odessa do not make the situation very clear. Millions of dollars worth of property. Including ships, has been burned or otherwise de stroyed. The city Is terror stricken, and many, probably hundreds, have been killed or wounded In the street fighting. The fact that the troops and police made no attempt to interfere with the burial of the martyred sailor Is considered to be conclusive evidence that they either felt themselves powerless or feared to make the attempt on account of the attitude of the populace. Late dispatches from Llbau say that property losses there are considerable and all workmen have gone out in sympathy with the action of the blue Jackets. Pri vate reports are said to have been received, according to which artillery was employed against the mutineers, but this has not been confirmed, nor Is there at hand any statement giving the number of killed or wounded. Four lake submarine boats are moored at quays In the harbor, but a dispatch from Simon Lake says they are under guard and are "yet" undamaged. Critical International Situation. LONDON, June 30. Should the report that the Knlaz Potemklne Is bombarding Odessa be confirmed the Incident probably will precipitate a critical International situation and the foreign consuls there will almost certainly demand the protection of warships if they have not already done so; and, as the treaty of Paris bars any but Russian or Turkish men-of-war from entering the Black Sea, the Dardanelles question might as a result be revived In a novel and unexpected shape. In the opinion of the London morning papers the situation could hardly be more serious. The outbreak of mutiny at Llbau appears to have been the result of con certed action on the part of the blue Jackets and Is full of menace for the future peace of the Russian empire. Up to this morning no further dispatches from Odessa have reached London and It Is evident that a strict censorship Is being enforced. The Black Sea fleet consists of nine battleships, three cruisers and eight smaller vessels. There are also several volunteer cruisers and auxiliary warships in the Black Sea. Danish Steamer Sunk. BATAVIA, Java, June 29. The Danish steamer Princess Marie was overhauled June 23 by the Russian auxiliary cruiser Terek (which on June 6 sank the British steamer Ikhona) and after the cargo of the Princess Marie had been declared contra band the ship was sunk. Its crew Is safe. The Princess Marie was last reported at Singapore, Straits Settlements, bound for Japan. It waa Insured for 35ft.iM In London and there also was a large Insur ance on its cargo. Huaalan Ship Off Madagascar. PORT LOUIS. Island of Marltaus, Juno 2. The Russian transport Anadyr has ar- (Conttnued on Second Pago.) BOY LAYS THE FIRST BRICK Ervlne Ilrnndels, Grandson of Founder of Boston Store, Starts Masonry on Great Structure. The first brick In the new Brandels store was laid yesterday morning and the master mason was Ervlne Brandels. son of Arthur D. Brandels, and representative of the third generation of the Brandels family whose Interests have been' centered In the great Omaha enterprise. The simple ceremonial, which took place at 8:15 yesterday mornjng, was witnessed by hundreds of passers-by and by More em ployes numbering hundreds more, who cheered the act that begins the construction of the greatest mercantile building In Omaha. The 9-year-old grandson of the late J. L. Brandels, who wielded the trowel, bore his responsibility with self-reliance. He was clad In overalls and flourished his trowel with dexterity. His experience as "first brick layer" for his father's handsome residence In the West Farnam district, a few months ago, put him outside the ama teur class. The brick was a common red clay brick made In Nebraska. Many of the contracts have now been let on this mammoth commercial structure. The contract for fireprooflng reaches $100, 000 and la the largest contract of the kind ever let west of Chicago. The contract for the Iron work, secured by an Omaha con cern, calls for $200,000. The partners of the firm of J. L. Brandels & Sons expect to show Omaha people a revelation In rapid modern construction In the erection of this building. After the ceremony of brick laying was over Ervlne Brandels surveyed his handi work and remarked confidentially to a by stander: "I think I should like the bricklaying business because I nm already pretty good at It, and I hear a good one gets B5 cents an hour. I nsked papa if he got that much, but he couldn't say exactly. I know lota harder Jobs than bricklaying." OPENS FIRE ON ODESSA Battleship in Bands of Mutineers Throw ing Sheila Into City. SITUATION STILL MOST CRITICAL Shipping, Quays and Central Railway Sta tion Burn Dnring the Day. NUMBERLESS CONFLICTS WITH TROOPS Hnadreds Killed and Wounded y Machine Guns of Soldiers. ADMIRAL KRUGER'S FLEET ON THE VAY Ships iMTe Sebastopol at S O'Clocte Thursday Mght St. Petersburg; Officials Alarmed by the Delay. CHANGES ON ILLINOIS CENTRAL W. If. Brill and Snm North of Omaha Come In for Promo tions. In the wholesale changes which are being made among the high officials of the Illi nois Central road, Captain J. F. Merry, assistant general passenger agent, with headquarters In Dubuque, is transferred to Manchester, his home, and made Immigra tion agent. H. J. Phelps, city passenger agent In Chicago, becomes district passen ger agent at Dubuque, W. H. Brill, divi sion passenger agent In Omaha, succeeds Phelps In Chicago. Sam North, traveling passenger agent out of Omaha, becomes district passenger agent In Omaha. J. T. Hudson, formerly traffic manager, Is made general traffic manager. F. B. Barnes, assistant traffic manager. Is made freight traffic manager. A. II. Hanson, for the last twent'y-slx years general passenger agent, Is made passenger traffic manager. S. G. Hatch, assistant general passenger agent, is promoted to be general passenger agent. HOLDUP SUSPECTS ARRESTED Ralph Dillon and Charles McLaughlin Charged with Park Line Job. Two suspects have been arrested In con nection with the street car holdup of last TuoBday night, when the crew of a Hans corn park car was robbed at the west end of the line. The two suspects were ar rested at 2:30 this morning by Captain Haze, Sergeant Slgwart, Detective Drummy, Detective Malnney and Officer Fahey, who went to a house at 1315 Martha street and arrested Ralph Dillon and Charles Mc Laughlin, who both reside at that number. The police say they tally exactly with the description given by the motorman and conductor who were robbed. Tho police received the Information of the whereabouts of the men from some source which they do npt care to make public late last night, and at 2:30 the men were brought to the station. They will be arraigned before Judge Berka this morning. BEEF TRUST INDICTMENTS Grand Jury Expected to Make Return Today or Tomorrow-Xrw Evi dence Discovered. CHICAGO, June 29. It Is expected that either tomorrow or Saturday Indictments will be voted In connection with the in quiry into tho beef Industry which has been In progress for several weeks. It Is said that the chief factor In causing these Indictments which are expected has been the evidence of W. D. Miles, a former confidential employe of Armour & Co. Miles, It Is said, left the employ of Ar mour & Co. because of some disagreement and while In Washington told to President Roosevelt and Attorney General Moody many of the details of the Inner workings of the beef business. The president and attorney general sent him back to Chicago, and he recently ap peared before the grand Jury. It Is said that he disclosed to the Jury knowledge of facts and agreements held in various parts of the United States. OMAHA YOUTHS IN TROUBLE Two Arrested In Oregon Charged with Robbery Claim This City as Home. ROSERURO, Ore., June 29.-Two youths, each about 17 years old, are under arrest here, charged with highway robbery of a drunken man. The young fellows . gave their names as John Thompson and Frank Reed and state that their home is n Omaha, Movement of Ocean Vessels June 8. ..At ?,?w York-Arrived: Madonna, from Marseilles; Cltta dl Napoll, fr0m Naples; Graf Waldersee. from Hamburg. Sailed HaniburK. for Hamburg; I.a Loralne for Havre; Prlnzess Alice, for Hremen At Liverpool Arrived: Haverford. from Philadelphia: Saxony, from Boston. Sailed' Bavarian and Dominion, for Montreal At CJueenstown Sailed: Noordland, for Philadelphia: Majestic, for New York At Cherbourg Arrived: Grosser Kurfurst, from New York. Bailed: Kaiser Wilhelm II. for New York. At Naples Arrived: Cretlc, from New York. At Hamburg Arrived: Deutschland, front New York. LONDON, June So. The Pally Expres prints the following dispatch from Odessa, timed midnight: "A second mutinous warship Is reported to be at Cape Fontaine, ten miles from here. "A 'transport with Russians from Port Arthur and a Russian steamer wero held up by the Knlaz Potemklne at 5 o'clock and compelled to Ho up under Its guns for two hours. "At 7 o'clock the rebel warship steamed two miles off, but shortly afterward re turned to Its former anchorage and fired several shots at the suburbs of Langrand, where there Is a detachment of Cossacks. It then swung around until Its guns pointed to the center of Odessa and fired a blank cartridge. "A steamer which the Knlaz Potemklne stopped was seen to burst Into flames. "A bomb thrown in a street this evening killed six persons. "The city penitentiary. In which there are 2,000 prisoners, had a narrow escape from being blown to pieces last night. Five men had Just succeeded in placing a number of powerful fuse bombs In the outer wall when they were arrested." Reign of Terror In Street. ODESSA, June 29. Evening. A semblance of order has been restored, but the situa tion Is still most critical. The Central railway Btatlon was destroyed by Are this evening, many persons being in jured and taken to hospitals. The populace Is still In a vengeful mood and unless the situation Is handled with the utmost caro anything may yet happen. Thus far the only Incident reported this evening besides the burning of the Central railway station Is the explosion of a bomb In a private house, by which several persons were injured, but it is Impossible to get precise Information or permission to visit the actual scenes of conflict. Sensational accounts, which cannot be definitely con firmed, are current regarding Wednesday night's rioting. In these accounts It In stated that no fewer than 1,000 persons were killed. The troops faced a portion of com plete anarchy, thousands of desperate in cendiaries trying to set fire to every build ing. They were compelled to adopt the , sternest measures nnd employed machine guns ngalnst the mob. It Is alleged that at S o'clock this morning a largo body of rioters tried to enter the central part of the town bv way of Polish hill, and that a terrific fusillade was kept up by both sides with rifles and revolvers. It Is also alleged that hundreds were killed and that when the mob tried to ascend tho steps near the Church of St. Nicholas to reach the Roulevard St. Nicholas, Cossacks and other troops fired repeated volleys into the crowd with terrible results, wagonloads of dead being carried away. Many lives, It is said, were lost In the endeavors of the military to stop Incendiarism. The con flagration extended for over a mile and thousands of tons of railway sleepers and all the trestles supporting the elevated rail road surrounding the port, together with all the contiguous buildings, were consumed, the troops In the meanwhile firing vol!eys to compel the rioters to desist. It is stated that three officers of police, ten policemen, twenty-three Cossacks and ten Infantry sol diers were killed in these encounters. Funeral of Omlltchnk. The funeral of Omlltchuk, which has Just been held, became an Imposing popular demonstration which fortunately was with out disorder. A procession of many thou sands of persons followed the body from the harbor along PreobrajensKy street to the military cemetery. The coffin, which waa covered with the St. Andrews flag and on which there were numbers of wreaths, was carried by eight sailors. The proces sion was headed by priests. Neither police nor troops were stationed along the route to the cemetery, owing to a wise direction by the authorities and by which the possi bility of a collision was averted. In the most unruly section of the city the popu lace treat the proclamation warning people to remain Indoors after 9 o'clock In tha evening with the greatest derision and con tempt and freely announce their intention to burn all public buildings In the course of the night. Cossacks guard oil approaches to the town and troops patrol the streets and guard public buildings, and especially the banks, within and without. As showing the strong military hold over the city, many councillors were prevented by troops from reaching the town hall to attend a meeting of the municipal council. It Is quite Impossible as yet to obtain any accurate estimate of the number of killed or Injured. Nothing had yet been heard of Admiral Kruger's squadron. Shipping; and Quay Burned, Practically the entire harbor was de stroyed by the fires started by the mob last night. All the warehouses, with large quantities of merchandise, as well as four or five Russian steamers, were burned. The losses are estimated at many mil lions of roubles. The remnants ot tha wharves and warehouses set on fir last night are still burning today and th city Is enveloped In a thick cloud of smoke. Several explosions occurred in the port during the night and fierce conflicts took place between troops and rioters. Th dead are now reckoned in tho hundreds. Th hospitals are overflowing with wounded per sons and the medical aid avullabl Is quit Inadequate. The shops are closed and busi ness and traffic Is suspended. Th streets are occupied by troops. Many resident at leaving Odessa. The crew of a government transport which arrived here today from Nlckolirft mutinied, seised their officers and Jollied the crew of the battleship Klai Potem klne, to whom they turned over th cap tain and other officers of tha transport. It ' Is reported that th rorelgn consuls i I J r