he Omaha : Daily Bee Frcn Omaha llevsksjs TOO CENTS Frc.n Omsha .embays TWO CENTS VOL. XXVI NO. 303. OMAHA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 12, 1907 TWELVE PAGES. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. BRYCE TO STUDENTS British Ambassador Makes Address at University of Chicago. HE IS GIVEN HONORARY DEGREE Title of Doctor of Laws Conferred on ' Him by President Judson. SCIENCE VERSUS CLASSICS Revolution in Education in Some Places Has Gone Too Far. VALUE OP STUDY EMPHASIZED Every Pnraoa Should Hare Soma Par unit to Which Ha Mar Tarm Aside from Mia Reg-alar Vocation. CHICAGO, June 11. Ambasador James Lryce delivered the convocation oration at the graduation exercises of the University of Chicago today. The subject of the ad dress was, "What University Instruction May Do to Frovlde Intellectual Pleasures for Later Life." After the awarding of degrees to the grad uates President Judson conferred upon the Erltlsh ambassador the honorary degree of 'doctor of laws. The an.bassador opened his address by commenting upon the fact that production And transportation all over the world have been transformed by science and, he as serted, the effect of science la also strongly fp't In education. ' Sixty years ago, ha said, sciences was not given a prominent part In the curriculum of schools and universities, and now It Is try ing to relegate the study of language and literature to a secondary place. In some parts of the world, he aald. It la becoming necessary to Insist upon the Importance of the human as opposed to the natural or scientific subjects. I ask you to Join with ma In considering the value and helpfulness to the Individual man of scientific studies and of literary studies, respectively, not for success In any occupation or profession, nor for any other gainful purpose, but for what may be called the Enjoyment of life after university edu cation has ended. Two Bides to Education. All education has two sides. It Is meant to Impart the knowledge, the skill, the hab its of diligence and concentration which are needed to Insure practical success. It Is also meant to form the character, to Im plant taste, to cultivate the Imagination and the emotions, to prepare a man to enjoy those delights which belong to hours of leisure and to the Inner life, which goes on. or ought to go on, all the. time within his cwn heart. Every one of UC ought to have a second or inner, life over and above that life which he leads among others for the purposes of his avooatlon, ba It to gain money or , power or fame, or be It to aerve his coun . try or his neighbors. He ought to have soma pursuit or taste to wnicn he can turn from tha dally routine. Whatever the taste ' or pursuit may be, whether of a higher or common type. It la good for him, . but of course the more wholesome and elevating tha taste or pursuit la ao much the better for him. ' The speaker then asked Ma hearers to consider tha question of what can ba dona ,. by Instruction.' In haturaj .aclqnoa. and wh&t. instruction In tha human or literary pur suits can do to instil such taetea of suggest pursuits. Tha human subjects, ha declared, are best fitted to nourish and Illumine tha Inner or. personal life. Poetry and tha imaginative treatment of human themes, ha aald, where potent In this direction. Deduces Practical Lessons. "The practical lessons I would deduce," ' said Mr. Eryce In closing his address, "are that, tha ardor with which tha atudy of tha physical sciences la now pursued for practical purposes must not make us forget that education baa to do a great deal mora than turn out a man to succed In ' business. In tha second placa ' students must remember that la tha atudy of lan guages and history they must beware of giving exclusive attention to the technical philological work and to purely critical In quiries. Nowhere In tha world does thera aeera to be so large a proportion of tha people that received, a university educa tion as hsra in America, The effects ' of this will doubtless ba felt in tha next gen eration. Let us hope that they will ba felt not only In tha complete equipment of your clllsens for public life, and in their warmer seal for clvlo progress, but also In a true perception Of tha essential elements of happiness a larger capacity for enjoying t those simple pleasures which tha cultiva tion of taste and Imagination opena to ua all." MASONS MEETING AT LEAD Two llandrod Deleaate to Grand Lodge-Urm. t'onklln, Kaaterm tar Matroa, Attends. LEAD, a V.. June 1L (Special Tele grain.) Delegates to ths Masonic, grand bodies from every section of South Dakota are assembled In Lead today to the num ber of 200. bealdea scores of visitors. This morning tha grand lodge of Masons meet In Its thirty-third annual communication and tha Order of tha Eastern Star assem bled In Its nineteenth annual easlon. Mrs. Madeline V, Conklln, grand matron of tha world, was an arrival from Oklahoma yea terday and la a guest of the grand chapter. FORMER CAPTAIN A , FUGITIVE JaiMsa Gaaaoa, Es-Bfew York Polleo Officer, Leaves to Avoid Ganmaltag Charge. NEW TORK, June lk-Jamea Gannon, a rmcr captain of police, who recently waa llsmlHsed from the force on charges of .'allure' to close gambling houses In his ltstrict, today la a fugitive from Juatice himself. It Is alleged that a roulette wheel and other gambling paraphernalia were found in Gannon's saloon at Twsnty-nlnth street and Sixth avenue when tha police suddenly descended on tha placa today. Alansal Day at Iowa Cltr. IOWA CITT, Juna ll.-(Speclal.y-Nearly all of tha exercises at tha State Unlver ilty .of Iawa today were given over to the lumnl of the Institution, who were preaent n large Humbert. The vartoua classes hold tig rounlons had class breakfasts in tha mumtug at the various hotels In tha city. In the afternoon tha annual business meet, trig of the alumni of all colleges were held in the auditorium of the college ef liberal arts. The university band entertained tha rlaltora with a concert In the afternoon st 2; SO and at I tha exercises connected a'.th the celebration of the sixtieth anni versary of the foundation of tha atata uni reraity was held In ths university armory. . In the evening was celebrated tha fortieth innlyersary of Dean Amos N. Currier's lonnceiton with the faculty of the atata university. Dean Currier, who haa been dean of the college of liberal arta for sev eral years past, will retire from active work this year, having received a eusla from tha Caruegla fuu4 SUMMARY OF THE BEE Wedneeduy, Jane IS, 1BOT. too? June 1907 sua mom rt wee raa rai gi 1 !'T S 1 2 3 4 5 0 7 8 9 10 II (2 13 14 15 10 17 18 10 20 21 22 9io 24 28 20 27 28 29 TaTB WI1THE1I. FORECAST FOR NEBRASKA Fair and warmer. ' . . Temperature at. T; yesterday: Hour. IX Mr. Deg. .... iH .... 79 .... SO .... 81 .... K2 6 a, m. . la. m. . 7 a. m. . 8 a. m . . a. in.. 10 a. m.. 11 a. m.. m.., . 00 o , 66 , S , T2 76 77 6 1 Kl 1 no. U in ft r n p. m.. domxbtio. v Harry Orchard describes in d- tha explosion at tha Bradley resldoncj, ' San Francisco, tha attempt to assasslnata Governor Peabody and Supreme Judge Oabbert of Colorado, the defense attack ing his testimony atep by atep, bringing first show of feeling to Orchard In men tioning his neglect of one of hla wlvea. page 1 British Ambassador James ' Bryce In commencement addrena to students of Chicago University speaks of the mean ing of education and advises them to ac quire It in broad aenee. Fags 1 Howard Oould objects to alimony of quarter of a million dollars a year -for ma who uui win pay iuu,uvu annuauy. 'ago 1 Governor Hughes of New Tork vetoes two-cent passenger fare bill and at same time the bill for a recount of votea of the New Tork mayoralty election la pasted ,over the municipal executive's veto. Page 1 Acting Secretary of War Oliver urgjs the governors of tha various states to take necessary steps In connection with tha enlargement of the national guard as will place the same under tha provisions of tha Dick bill. Page 1 French government la determined to put a stop to wine growers' revolt In southern provinces but southern regi ments are muntinous. 'ago 1 X.OOAX Nebraska State Funeral Directors' as sociation which la holding threo days' convention In Omaha Is welcomed to Ihu city by Mayor Dahlman. age S Omaha architect,, will draw plans for a 110,000 edifice for St. Luke's Episcopal j church at Kearney.' . Page fl, Superintendent Park of tha Union Paoi- j to apply them to Great Britain If she. so the wool this year Is very heavy and mm flo says demand for coal has been vastly ( desired.' , " jparatlvely little' has been sold. The gm .-- Increased by steady increase in settle- The secretary said be was communlcat- . ,re asking-from 18 to It cents and In ment of west and that hdjustment of ilng with the board of trade with a vie- (most Instances The prices are higher than mine strike will guarantee normal sup- j to making the necessary, arrangements, (the buyers are willing to give. In the case ply. - Fags 1 He added that negotiations with tha 1 0f many clips the buyors ; will make no .Bishop Worthlngton addresses fourteen I United States, the nature of whleh ho j offers at all, preferring to purchase only young women . who receive diplomas at j was unable to disclose, were proceeding j the better ollpa. r Brownell hall. . Page ? under eectfon S of tha Dlngley act. The wool f the Platte VHey company. Arthur WUllama of Omaha mufc an-I awer to federal authorities ton the charge procuring; f roro. , foreign CDuntles,: Pars 5 . Coroner jury holUs Will .Washington, negro, for the murder of Anton Kaapar. v. Par 7 Society Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Swyth glvo dinner for 'Miss Mary Munchoff. Pago OOWlXJtCXAX AJT9 rXVAJICIAJk Live stock markets. Page Grata-markets. Page t Stocka and bonds. . Pago t POSTS. Results of the biui games; 8 Omaha vs. Denver 2. 4 Des Moines vs. Lincoln 0. 9 sloux City- vs. Pueblo 6. 7 Pittsburg vs. Brooklyn -4. t i Boston vs. Cincinnati 17. 8 Philadelphia vs. Chicago 6. 5 New York vs. St. Louis 7. S Boston vs. Cleveland 0. 10 Detroit vs. New York 2. 8 St. Louis vs. Philadelphia 0. 4 4 Louisville vs. Kansas City S 1, Columbus vs. Minneapolis 1. t i ua.aiiH polls vs. Alllwauke 2 3, tluln C Tl., . . 1 A y.g HASKELL CLAIMS NOMINATION His Friends Assert He Haa Landed Democratic Candidacy la State . of Oklahoma. f Oklahoma city, oh., June u.-i. n. Haskell today claimed to have been nomi nated for governor of the new atata of Oklahoma at Saturday's democratic pri maries by a majority of 12,000, while Lea Crude's managers said It would require the official count to determine the winner, Both sides charged fraud. It Is generally believed that when all the counties have reported it will be found that Haskell haa won by a safe margin. GREEN BUG WORKS OVERTIME Report la Ohio Paper Haa Hoary Damage to Kansas Wheat Fields. CINCINNATI, O.. Juns ll.-A dispatch to the Times-Star from Clrclevllle, O, says: The green bug of Kansas Is at work in this vicinity, having already destroyed many fields of oats. Stretches of twenty miles have already been destroyed and fields of twenty acres have been destroyed within a week. The bug la apparently moving toward the southeast. ASK THAT -JURY TAKE CASE Motion la Mary Baker Eddy Case Sabotltnte . Jnrora for Master. t ' CONCORD. N. II., Juna 11. A motion asking for a trial before a Jury to de termine Mrs. Mary O. Baker Eddy's com petency to manage her affairs waa made today by counsel for( plaintiff In the suit 10 accounting or me property or Mrs. Eddy. The court bed yesterday an nounced tjfe Intention of appointing a mastsr In chancery to take testimony to determine Mrs. eddy's competency. Umhrella Trust la Meat. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Juns 1L Acting uion Instructions from Washington, 1'nlte.l States District Attorney Thomas will to morrow present Information to ths fedora 1 fraud Jury and ask that indictments be ound against members of the so-called umbrella trust. Conspiracy for fixing prirea Is alleged. i Regiment Abandons Trio. CHICAGO, June 11. The first regiment of Infantry, Illinois National Guard, of Otil rwo, which had been planning a trio to the Jamestown exposition the first week In July, lias abandoned It. - Colonel Banborn explains tn his order that the oanipiag grounds and other conditions are not suita ble for aucauipmeot oi a laiga bodjr of truopej ALBERT CHECKS HIS "PEOPLE Leader of French Wine Growers' Re volt ' Prevents Violence. TROOPS ARE BECOMING MUTINOUS ' Soldiers of Reglmeat la form Coloael Thar Refuse to March Against Friends and Relatione mall Riot Occurs. MONTPELLIER, France, June 1L After the announcement of the resignation of tha municipal council here laat evening In accordance with the wine growers' pro gram, tha arrest tf a youth for carrying a banner beating the Inscription "March on to Paris; long live tha revolution," led to serious disorders. Hussars were called out and charged the people repeatedly. Several iwranm w tnlured and calm waa only restored by the release of the prisoner. .. . . kfsrcelln Albert, the leader of tha move ment, has Issued a circular to all the com mittees Inviting them to take united action In obedience to the recommendations of Argelller's committee and to employ only peaceful, lawful means, adding: "No dis orders or violence." The hour haa not not yet coma We atlll hope that It will never come." NARBONNE, France, June 11. The' dis content caused among tha men of the Ona Hundredth regiment of Infantry by their confinement to barracks for the last five Sundays on account of the wine growers manifestation was brought to a head last night by a dispute between the privatea and ; noncommissioned offloers, who tried to pull : jdown men from a wall whence they were j cneertng passing trains loaaea wfsv wine i growers going to Montpelllef. The soldiers 1 Informed their cofonel that they absolutely refused to march against their friends and icibiiuiib. i ii n i u in uwceumi m kihwi - arlly calming the men by prornlstiig to In vestigate the charges of brutality brought against the sergeants, but tha military authorities consider that the spirit of tha troops Is bad, all the soldiers being In sym pathy with tha movement of the win growera. GREAT BRITAIN WILL PROFIT la to Secure Name Measure of Beaeflt as Germany frosa Trado - Asrreentent. LONDON, June 11. Foreign Secretary Grey Informed .the hquee of commona to day mat the United States had officially assured his majesty's government that It did not wish to make the administrative provisions of the German commercial agreement tha basla for discrimination against any pther State and was willing - Replying to questions the secretary said I ha hoped to secure for Great Britain' the hama advantages as Oermany . had e - celved TAKAHIRA IS TO NEGOTIATE Ex-Hlalster to United (Mates Will .Form Agreement Ret ween Japaa and -Italy. ' ROME. Juna 11. Jt is reported here .that M. Kogoro Takahlra, as-Japanese minister to the- United Statea, who, It la announced.' Is to be appointed Japaneae ambassador to Italy, is charged to negotiate an agree ment between Japan and Italy, connecting this country with the chain of ententes which Japan la making with European powera regarding tha far east. IRISH BENT' ON' REPRISAL Will Plght Government for- Not Pro. oslnisT Mora Liberal Bill for f Homo Rale. LONDON. Juna 11. At a meeting of the f JiiOH .m ii.uirij imi j Fml J ,icihiivii ll was aeciueu u iigni me government, both In the house and In tha constitu encies. In order to punish the liberals for falling to give Ireland' a broader measure of home rule than was contained In the rejected Irish council bill. ' TERRORISTS JflURDER YOUTH Raaatame Ezeeate Him on Theory Ho . Was Spy Bomb Factory Located. 8T. PETERSBURG. Juna ll.-The body of a youth found today In a wood in tha ! suburbs of St. Petersburg w)th his throat f5 fndf ""J, "recogn."b.y m-tll aed ha. led to the discovery of an open-air bomb ... , ... . factory with a large quantity of explosives nearby. It Is supposed that the young man was executed by terrorists as a spy. To Propose Alcohol Monopoly. PARIS. June 11. M. jaures, the socialist leader, will shortly propose tn tha Chamber of Deputlea in the name of tha socialistic party that a state monopoly of alcohol and sugar be eetablishhed from July L . TUCKER'S MOTION IS DENIED Jndgc Amldon of North Dakota Ralea Trial Shall Proceed at Leavenworth. LEAVENWORTH, Kan.. Juna ll.-Judge C. F. Amldun of North Dakota In tlu T Tn t tit it t gimiritt .r.,,-4 V k. I ' Ing denied the motion of H. H. Tucker, Jr., i for a postponement of the hearing on his j application for a dlschsrge of the receiver I of the Uncle Earn Oil company. The hear ing wss then resumed and probably will con sume two or three day' time., lit: Tucker, who last week was sentenced to Jail for ninety days for contempt In having filed a petition attacking tha acta of Federal jud(,es Pollock. Philips and Smith McPher- ; ,on. ... brouaht from tail Into court - day to give testimony regarding hla peti tion. ROAD WILL TEST FARE LAW Eighteen rrlaelnal Railroads tn Mis Marl Will Attack Two-Coat Faro Aet. ,, mIT'JZT United States district court here today Frank Hagerman. representing tha eigh teen principal railroads tn Missouri, filed an amended petition asking that tha in junction previously granted restraining tha atata from enforcing tha maximum freight rate law be extended to Include the 2-cent passenger rata law, which goea into effect next Friday. The equrt probably will paaa upoa th apftUcaUwa before Friday, COMPLAIN OF LUMBER RATES t'aee of Vital I a ferret to Nebraska Dealers Cornea ReTore later state Commission. WASHINGTON, June 11. A case of more than ' ordinary Importance to the Puget Sound territory was heard today by tha Interatate Commerce commissl6n. It whs that of tha Pacific Coast Lumber Manufacturers' association and other lum ber organisations In the state of Wash ington against the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern, the Oregon Short 'Lino, the Union Pacific and fifteen other mltway companies. The complainants allege that tha defendanta refuse to establish for thelr products a through route via Port- j land. Ore., betweefc ports In western i Washington and points In ' Wyoming. I Colorado. Nebraska, Kansas and other ! polnts In tha middle west but require them to pay local rates on ehtpmonts to Portland, the shipments there to ba trans ferred to other care for shipment to des tination on tha rata to destination from Portland.- It also la alleged that de fendant lines refuse to Interchange cars and that they do not furnish enough cars. The petitioners assert that tha lumber Interests In Washington are suffering be- ....... h.i iHim. . - causa of their Inability to secure trans- portatlon facilities for their products, al though other classes bf freight are hand led by the railroads with no more delny than la Incident to natural conditions. Tha complainants ask the commission to compel the defendants to establish through routes and Joint rates via Port land and to make such other orders aa Well facilitate the transportation of their business. .One of the difficulties. Is the lines of tha Harriman system refuse to change these cars with the lines of tha Hill system because of differences of the two heads of tha companies. On tha eon- trary It Is urged by tne raliroaas tnst they have been unable to supply the censary cars to transport the lumber traf- fc, because tbetr Increase of equipment unavoidably haa not kept pace with the development of tha lumber Interests in the state of Washington. . The case is ' lrne of the first to be brought before the commission under the provision of the new rate law whl(h re quires, carriers to establish through, route and Joint rates. WOLL CLIP IS MOVING NOW Bayers - I.oatn to Pwrvtiaae the Poorer Poallty of Clip' . HwfTr. DOirOLAfl. Wyo., June 11 Special.! Wool Is beginning to more more rapidly now tha net any time since the buyers 'have been In the state. Good, clean clips flnj ready sale and at prices satisfactory j fa the grower,' but dirty wool of heavy Shrink is not wanted by the buyers, unless Bt very low prices. In the Casper country 0f which Dr. J. M. Wilson ts manager, was sold a few days ago. .The price was not Lria(jBl wublle. htrtJ It, Is understood that it was the highest yt paid Tor . wool m central ""Wyoming!' or tn the entire state. When the weight of fleece Is considered. The wools of Haley, Patterson A Haley of Buffalo ware sold the other '-day for 22 It la underrfood the cents per pamnd, but sheep averaged less than six -rounds. The Plntte vaHey wool averaged . better than eight pounds per fleece and ihe price was almost aa good. It Is said, as that paid for the Haley, Patterson . Haley wool. The firm that got the Platta vnl'.py (wool has already bought more than ,1.000,000 pounds In Wyoming this year, among the ' other clips - being - that of J. A. Del f elder of Wolton, which aggregated 870.000 pounds. ATLANTIC CURRENTS COLD tlsssasl Conditions Prevailing; ata Re - anlt of Pnasaare of Low Baro ' , metric Pressor. NEW YORK. June 11. Opservat Ions of Atlantic steamers arriving recently at New York are very Interesting as showing that the waters of the ocean off other eastern coasts are now abnormally cold. The steamer Maracaibo reports that when four miles off Long Branch yesterday the sea temperature waa 54 degreea. On Saturday when the steamer Baltlo was 1C0 miles oast of Sandy Hook Its officers noted a sea temperature of 64 degreea. Observations made as late as Thursday night on the , steamer Caledonia show that the sea fifteen miles east of 8t. Johns, N. F., was well nigh Ice cold with a temperature of 24 degreea. The present cool ocean conditions are due to the unusually frequent passage of con tinental barometric pressures from Ontario eastward to New Foundland, the barometric - w Fundl towd I' . , . . ,, . , t the region of lower pressure off our At- I , . SUES SARPY COMMISSIONERS Connty Attorney Creates Sensation hy Filing Salt for Small ' Sam of Money. PAFILLION. Neb., June 11, (Special Telegram.) County Attorney Ernest R. Rlnco has created a sensation In Sarpy county 'by fling a suit In district court ' hpre on b'hHlf of th COUn,y of Brp,r for the sum of 251. SO, alleged to be due the county from County Commissioners Adolph Nielsen, Anthony Blanch! and Henry Peters for allowing wrongfully a bill to the county surveyor for the sum mentioned. Tha com missioners, acting without tha legal advice of the county attorney, allowed this claim of tha eurveyor for work on tha county plat book and In making county maps. Tha county attorney holds that this Is the work of the county clerk, for which he Is paid, and that the expenditure could not legally be made. The suit is a civil action merely to recover the amount of money mentioned. In accordance with a special provision of the statutes. ) ELM CREEK MAN IsTrOWNED J. II.- Vollmer, Ploaeer of Baffalo Connty, rails la Head Waters of Kearney t'oaal. KEARNEY. Neb.. Juna U.-(Speclal Tel egram.) J. H. Vollmer. an old resident of Elm Creek. CI years of sge, was drowned Kmey nJ auth of Elm wlllllUB WM wlth Mm Monday afternoon while fishing In ths head Creek.. His son William waa with him. but had taken a boat tor another part of the canal. The father got a separata boat, from which ha waa fishing. Ha fell head foremost into about tan feet of water. Tha accident wltnessed by boys on the hank, who were unable to help him, and j to paint the targets before ahe ahot. when the eon arrived the father waa dead. ' While he was at ths targets she wss ex He could swim, but wore rubber boots. ' amlnlng one of hla rlftea and It was dls . . , .... ... . , charged. The bullet struck Harris In Ut widen Impeded big attorU to nave tUmselt. sUa aad La died acveiel fcoura latex. PUT DICK BILL IN EFFECT , i Governors Requested to See that Its Provisions Are Followed. MEANS MUCH TO NATIONAL GUARD Acting- Secretary of War Calls At tention to Reqalremeate of State Militia - Before Appropria tion Become Available. WASHINGTON. June 1L-Actln Becre- UrT of wr Oliver Jiaa addressed a letter ""-iy"g governors or states and territories th,t on January 21, next, under the terms of th militia act, the mllltla organls- atlon must conform to that of the regular and volunteer armies of tha United Statea. He auggeats that the governors take ths necessary steps to secure such conformity. Says General Oliver: "Failure to meet this statutory requirement will result In debarring a state from the , use of tha al lotment of tha annual appropriation ' of 13,000,000 for the eupport of tha mllltla," Tha act requires that the number of reg- ,. .. , . . marly enlisted, organised and uniformed ac- .. . .nm- . ., . . . wv . each senator and representative of each state. General Oliver suggests to the gov ernors previsions for enactment by tha leg islatures In brief as follows: "Tha definition of tha dutlra of the ad jutant general and his assistants and tha quartermaster general and hla aaslstants. "Provision for the necessary ganeral of ficers and for a staff made up of adjutant generals. Inspector generals. Judge advo cates general, quartermasters, subsistence, medical, hospital corps, pay, engineers, ordnance and signal corps. "The guard must be divided Into divi sions, brigades, regiments, etc., to conform to the regular army organisation, reserving to the government the power of reorganisa tion and to make tha companies and num ber of officers . assigned to organisation, correspond to the regular army." The new law will have a far-reaching ef fect upon the national guard of the coun try for In very few statea do the organisa tions at present correspond with those of the regular service. The most Important change required will probably ba in the great Increase In the number of men In camps and regiments for It is a fact that in many states so-called regiments of mllltla Instead of being 1,200 strong, as they should be to meet modern service demands, number" scarcely more than a battalion, or 800 men, and skeleton companies are every where in evidence. WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN Precipitation .Haa Been Ahove Nor mal Except In onthwratern Oonnttes of State. LINCOLN. ' Neb., June 11. 8pectal. The weekly weather bulletin for the woek ending June 10 followa: The week was tool and cloudy, with heavy showers. : Tha dally mean temperature averaged about S degreea below tha normal. The maximum ' temperatures . were between 70 and 76 degrees nearly the whole week at most stations. At some southwestern ata. tlons temperatures aboya SO degreea oo-. curred .the latter part of the week. Mini mum temperatures below 40 degreea . oc curred In tha northern cbustlea Wednesday morning. t : ' .Showers occurred very generally In the eastern countlea on fotir oi Ave, days. Thursday, however,' waa the day with tha heaviest showers and the greateat rainfall. . m . 1 , (..I I I Inn -u aVuM. .h. A no weei-iy 4Jicviifcwwn " . normal, except In the southwestern coun tlea, -where It was slightly below tha normal. The rainfall ranged from qna to slightly more than three : Inches In the eastern counties, while It waa about three-quarters - of an inch . In the southwestern. Tha total rainfall . from April 1 to date ia about three-fourths of the normal in most of the, state O. A. LOVELAND. Section Director. WIND- UNROOFS. BUILDINGS Hoary Storm. Again Vlalta Port lone of Keatuky and Extends Ipto Ohio. . CATLETTSBURG, Ky., June 11. This city was in total darkness last night and there la scarcely a whole roof or window In town. A number of houses were com pletely unroofed and one dwelling house waa blown from Its foundation. The streets are, strewn with debris and tangled wires. No casualties have been reported. Tha steamer Cando turned over on lta side and went down tha river, The i roof waa blown from the court houae, tha Methodist Episcopal church and a number of other buildings. IRONTON, Ky., June 11. A violent wind and hall storm swept over Ironton early today. At South Point the windows of all houses were broken and roofs blown off. Hailstones as large as eggs felL SPRINGFIELD, O, Juna 11. Following one of tha Worst storms that has visited this city Mil) run, an ordinarily quiet stream which runs through tha city, broke loose last midnight and caused much dam age. Tha Big Four and Detroit, Toledo tk Ironton railroad, yards were several feet under water. A freight train was ditched and untold damage was caused to residence and business- houses In a large district. QUARTER MILLION TOO HIGH Howard Goald . Considers This Entirely Oat of Qaeerloa aa Allmoar. am NEW YORK, June 11. Anounoement waa made today that Howard' Gould Is consider ing ths advisability of starting a counter suit for separation sgalnat his wife. Such an action, ha thlnka, would lessen ths chancss of Mrs. Oould's obtaining a court . OBCI.M for alimony of 2280.000 a year. One j or ur. Gould's friends Is quoted today as ; saying that Mr. Gould would be willing to j set aside a sufficient sum for tha support of his wife, but that ha certainly would not entertain ths demand for 2260,000 a year. Ha thought It likely that Mr. Gould would be willing to give his wife S10O.0OO a year alimony and fait sure that Mr. Gould would consent to settle the ault on that basis, al though Mr. Gould had never aald so di rectly. Briefs of the argument between Deiancy Nlcoll, attorney for Howard Gould, and Clarence J. Shearn. counsel for Mrs. Gould, wera aubmltted yesterday to Supreme Court Justice McCall and a decision is looked for lu a few days. This argument took place last Thursday and waa on a motion by cCaU to atrtk. out three allegation. from Mra. Gould's bill of complaint Woman Kills Mas hy Accident. ENID. Okl., Juna 11. -While painting hla target board here yesterday A. O. Harris, proprietor of a shooting gallery, was ao- cldentally shot and seriously wounded by m viiiiiiir wnrnnt n n Th ear-, rr at n ABnratrt l-I at 4ai VETOES TWO-CENT FARE BILL Governor Hashes of Neve York Dis approves Red need Railroad Rate Meaaaro. ALBANY, N. Y., June 11. Governor Hughes today vetoed the bill Instituting a flat passenger rate of 2 cents a mile on every railroad system In the state more than 150 miles long. In his veto message, the governor pointed out that the passsge of the bill waa tjot preceded by legislative Investigation or suitable Inquiry. Nor Is the fixing of this rata predicated on reporta which would permit a fair conclusion as to the Justice of Its operation. The governor also said: "Injustice on the part of the railroad cor porations toward tha - public does not Justify Injustice on ths part of the state toward the railroad corporations. The action of the government should be fair and Impartial and upon this every cltisen, Whatever his Interest, is entitled to Insist. Tha fact that thoae In control of railroad corporatlona have been guilty i of grossly Improper financiering and of illegal and In jurious discriminations In charges points clearly to tha necessity of effective state action, but does not require or warrant arbitrary reprisals. "In dealing with these questions democ racy must demonstrate Its capacity to act upon deliberation and to deal Justly. "It Is of the greatest Importance not only that railroads ahould be compelled to respect their publlo obligations, but also that they should be permitted to operate under conditions that will give a fair re turn for their service. Nothing could be more opposed to the Interests of the com munity as a whole than to cripple th transportation transports by arbitrary r,. ductlon of earnings." . The senate today passed the New York Cltv recount hill nv th. veto of Aettne Mayor McGowan. The bill now goes to the governor. Seven democrats and one republican voted to sustain the veto. The senate also passed tha supplementary bill which would permit Mayor MiClellan to secure a recount In districts not asked for by Mr. Hearst and at the city's expense. "Considerable difference exists between the railroad Corporations with respect to the territory they serve and the cost of service, and It Is manifest that what would be fair (or one might be far from fair for another." The message reminds Che legislature of the newly created public service commis sions under a law providing for Inquiry Into freight rates and passenger fares and for the fixing of such rates as shall be found Just and reasonable. SCHMITZ TAKES THE STAND TestlJes tn Case Aa-alnst Him, nyingf All Allegations Made br Res eran. De- SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. Juna 11. The trial of Mayor Schmlts proceeded today, and -with reasonable cross-examination It Is expected that the defense wilt complete Its case today. Should Schmlts go on tha stand to prove that hla character is spotless it (nay be necessary for ths prosecution to play Its trump card and call Abe Ruef to testify. Ruef ia all that Is needed. It is said, to etneh the case against Schmlts, but there are other prosecutions to toe considered, and ft might ,be .considered poor strategy to spring the climax tn the first act of this presentation of the local graft situa tion. . The grand Jury Intended to begin an In vestigation yesterday of the shipments of dynamite to San Francisco. The United Railroads had ' blamed the car men, and the car men In turn had blamed the United 'Railroads. In view of the fact that tha Bchmitx trial la nearlng completion It la atated that no session of the - grand Jury will be held unttl the case against Schmlts shall have gone to the Jury. Mayor 'Eugene Schmlts took the atand In his own behalf today, denying Reagan's allegations. . SEEK ADMISSION FROM WHITE Attorneys la Holmes Cotton Case Try to Make 'Him Party to LeakaeTC. WASHINGTON, Juna .-Attorney Worthlngton, . representing Edwin S, Holmes, Jr., In tha trial of tha latter on the charge of being a party to the leakage of the cotton crop report of the Department of Agriculture, tried today to compel Special Agent White to admit that he had au thorised Statistician Hyde to change tha figures in his (White's) reporta which Mr. White had yesterday testified had been done, but did not succeed. At first he de clared ha waa positive ha had not given any such authority,, but later modified tha state ment to tha extent of aaylng that ha was quite sure. Miss Emma 8. Thompson, a clerk In ha office of the statistician, said that in 1904 and tha first part of llKC tha reporta from tha field wera generally handed to her by Mr. Holmes, with whom aha had frequent conversations concerning the work. The telegraphic crop reporta always came In "coda." SIX MEN REPORTED MISSING Five Seamen and aa Oflleer Believed to Hare Drowned Near Jamestown. NORFOLK. Va., Juna 11. Five seamen and an officer who came ashore last night In a amall boat from the battleship Minne sota to attend a ball at the Jamestown exposition, together with live seamen, are missing. The party Included Lieutenant Ranteall of the United States marine corps and Midshipmen Field. Ulrich, Holden and Stevenson of the Minnesota and Midship man Holcomb of the battleship Connecti cut. The Mlnneaota'a launch la known to have left Discovery Landing at the exposition grounds shortly after midnight, - and the theory of the omcere or me neei is mai the launch struck something and went down, and that all were drowned. . , . . PRISONER COMMITS SUICIDE Henry Oilman, Accused of faeeet at Stanton, Hangs Himself on Eve ef Trial. STANTON. Neb.. June U.-fSpoclal.)- Henry Oilman, charged with Incest upon his W-year-old daughter, hangsd himself In the county Jail last night with his belt. His trial was to havs come up today. The ,Ur.We.aa"a !f. h. auIcZ ot th w. of th. aulclda. TWO OFFICERS ARE KILLED BlaeAeld Railroad Man Haas Amuck While Being Taken to Jell. BLUEFIELD, W. Va.. Juna 1 Lee Ta bor, a railroad man. resisting arrest last night, shot and killed Officer James Fran rtoco and shot Tom Hunt, another officer. Feeling la running high as a result of tie gnootlug gad Tabu may he lBulaad, SIX DAYS ON STAND Haywood Defense Continues Attacl on Orchard's Story. WITNESS STANDS STRAIN WEU His Examination Will Continue Until Thursday. ORCHARD DENIES POVERTY Attempt to Show that He Received No Money from Anyone. ATTEMPT TO KILL PEABODY Bays Ooal Wagon Drorc Across Stria Just ns the Governor Passed Over the Mine ' Reference to Mrs. Adams. BOISE, IdarV, June 11. Tim attack of tha Haywood defense on the testimony of Harry Orchard goes on unremittingly, and the witness will probably be continued on the stand for two full days more. Orchard withstands the strain with remarkable fortitude and at the end of six days shows no Indication of mental or physical ..eg ging. This day began with the story of the dynamiting of Fred Bradley In San Tran- ! Cisco, and the defense made a long and determined effort to expose several festnrea of It to doubt. Improbability and further Bna IO v,""l " " y "v" ' ht Plnkertons. Then the play went back tb Denver for the winter of 1904-06 and the spring that followed, and there was an extended effort to show that Orchard had practically no communication with the leaders of the federation; that ha received no pay for the Bradley crime or anything else, and that with Steve Adams, In a period of extreme poverty, extending over a period of several months, he waa reduced to the necessity of stealing a sheep from the Olohevllle stock yards that ha might have food. Orchard Denies Poverty. Orchard to a laughing court room seri ously confessed that 'lie stole the sheep, but stoutly denied that It was because of want. He Insisted that all through that supposedly hard winter and spring he con tinued to draw money from Pettibona through Adams, and explained that If ha did not see .the federation leaders often It was because he wss lying low to avoid capturee for previous crimes. This Globe vllle Inquiry developed a more shocking crime. At this Denver suburb there was a diabolical plot Orchard swore It was In spired by Max Mallch, the defense claimed that Orchard was Its author to dynamite a boarding house where ISO nonunion men lived, and In preparation for1 the murder on bloc Orchard, Adams and a man named Joe Mahallch broke Into two magazines and stole 600 pounds of dynamite, which they lugged home at night and buried In their cellar. Tha crime was abandoned. Orchard aald. In one of those flashes that make his testimony remarkable, because Haywood Intervened and forbade him te have anything to do with R. - Carrying out the' lines of testimony to how that ' Orchard, regardless of tha great hold which it is presumed he had on the federation leaders, was frequently without finds, tha defense showed that from late in 1908 until tha middle of 1(04, Orchard continually drew strike relief t Cripple Creek and then dramati cally invited Orchard to explain tha In consistency to the Jury. Orchard replied that Haywood. Moyer, Parker and Davis all advised him to continue to draw relief because if he displayed money he would excite suspicion. ' . - Attempt to Kill Peabody. Tha examination next covered a review of the early attempt on the life of Gov ernor Peabody and the making of tha bomba to kill him, and tha plota against Judgea Gabbert and Goddard, with an effort everywhere to lighten and cat doubt upon the testimony of tha witness. Orchard told a dramatic story of tha first attempt to assasslnata Peabody n early morning drive through the snow to place the bomb and await for the victim who waa spared by tha unexpected appearanae of two coal wagons that, coming from an alley way were driven across the trigger string at the moment that Peabody was croaslng tha mine field. Orchard brought Mrs. Steve Adams Into play today. He said that while he and Adams were watching Judge Ooddard's house Mrs. Adama went with them a cou ple of tlmea aa a blind to divert suspicion from them. Mrs. Adams, who had a seat among the witnesses, laughed when Orch? ard told the Incident. Orchard who confesses that ha hesitated at no crime and took a hundred desperate chances In those committed made an inter esting contribution to the psychological study of Ms personality when he called him self' a coward. eH said ha was too cow ardly to openly kill Judge Gabbert; aald that he regarded all hla assassinations as cowardly. ' In five minutes today Orchard showed mora emotion than any time since he began his testimony. It was when the defense. In a roughshod digression, asked him If ha had not deaerted his Cripple Creek wife, stripping her of every nickel aha had, and leaving her In poverty, that Compelled the sals of her waahtub to buy bread. Orchard's lips quivered and with tsars near he falteringly denied that he had dona ao, and said that federation leaders had prom ised to care for her In hla absence. Details of Bradley Crime. By noon today Harry Orchard under cross-examination, had described In detail the explosion at the Bradley residence In San Francisco and was giving tha partic ulars of the attempt in Denver to aasassl- , nu aovernor Peabody and Supreme Judge i Gabbert of cJbiorado, in December, ISO, j continuing Its examination of Orchard, the defense In the case of William D. i Haywood, attacked the testimony of tha witness a. to tha dynamiting of Fred j Bradley of San Francisco snd besides en- de,vortng to show ths discrepancies and improbabilities In It, sought to make It appear that It had been in part inspired b Dt)UjCUve McPartland. Tnere wa flrl . tort to ,now th.t' 0rrhd , ev or hsmrd 0f the wnJ c,eaned th, " Unforlh flat, the morning Brad- MrPhrtlW- Old ! Wm 0rchar(J &en th) ! n",,"!1 ')ot VlTs 'jaTanem 'Cleave ths porch befors ha placed the bomb. The defense endeavored to discredit tha story of the purchase of dynamite from the Judson Powder company and tha entire claim that a bomb waa used by showing ths walla of the Llnforth building were blown outward and that Bradley had been blown Into the street. Attorney Richard Sua (Umatided that tha witness explain