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W ' v Suggestion in I By Fred W. Hunter. "|T seems to be a rule that no tprl | put out a certain amount of 1 aKl A *ion sti^ remains what kind ness? Some successful busin been advertising their trade I business has been built up description sells goods and then back up t It is a fact that if an ad is written with a makes you imagine you can taste, smell sell goods. Suggestion plays a more important pai We see somebody wearing a certain kind baps we buy one like it. the hat was sold b store window. A favorable impression is because It was suggested to us. Had w< street, we would never have thought of tb We read of something In the advertis Bine, we make up our minds V?at we want everything we do in this world, has its or Environment has probably as great an in -a;*., a,Ts that we see about us he! merit. Suggestion plays upon our imaginati< We see an advertisement picturing a sui would look in them. We draw a compari ^ our clothes and the ones advertised, there ad is tested. It may be that the suit in t tound wanting. The result will be that i Impression has been made, but a suit is n< Is the case, the advertisement will probat the advertisement made the reader awar had not compared his suit with the one in months before having made a purchase, t how much he needs one and an immedia Descriptive advertising increases der verttseraents, let one be descriptive and trade mark? The one that tells of a prin in a hot oven and cookbd until a dark ricl it Is so tender, that you forget you are cl it is: or an ad with a picture of a tin car Suggestions can be given in a numb may be used or pictures, but the combina Too many advertisers do not consider tn enough interest. In selecting a picture ctretch their imagination just enough so tl The picture must tell its story in ordi always kept in mind that a picture is used than words could, and then the strongest i force the picture, many ads would be mo gestions to use the article would given in Russian iyran By Prince KropotVcii BROM 1894 to 1901 not one sin; a court of justice or an exai dealt with by police officer the Interior. As to the nui extravagant. Thus in 1903 concerning 5,590 persons, v which were pending. In thi C,450 persons, were terminated. Out of t ted, 45 were sent before court-martial, a submitted to various penalties, includin* ministration without the interference of a; than 1,502 were sent into exile, for term T?r.-vTr<n/?oc nt Rmeia and Siberia! Xot hin J/IWI.UVVM V ? Alexander III., the corresoonding figure fo 55 (in 1894). The Judicial law of 18C4 contained cei action of the police. But already in 1870 taken out of the hands of independent ex to the ordinary police an I the state pollc< have been issued since i: 64 for tearing tl rights of the courts, abolishing trial by jur At the same time the exceptional la reigns have given to every police officer light to arrest every Russian subject wi prisoned as a suspect for seven days?a pretexes?without incurr.ng any responsi licly vouched at one of t.h^ lawyers' mee mksse simple policemen receive in adva arrest and searching, on which they hav persons whom they chocse to arrest! I. and commands have been printed in full i papers, and that the figures are those of c * * Ihe Astor ..larc By Burton J. Henclric Astor properties now inci T(Xew York City), in the lasi per cent The city's popula mmmmmrnt year. In many sections Xew 1 headauarters of retail trade improvements initiated sint railroad terminals?aggregate in cost not a general movement of corporations tov newly organized combinations, for examp When John Jacob died, in 1S90. his < was estimated at $150,000 000. If it were 000 now. The estate of William Asor. wh ont John Jacob, was generally placed at acccurate figure, it must now aggregate Astor fortune thus increases with accelen years, at the present rate of progrss, it wil then it will go on even fatter, until the on tous figures. We have seen that the $2,000,000 Inve least two hundred times in one hundred y tive estimate. $430,000,000). If the same tury. the Astor fortune will attain the un We stand aghast at such a possibilit John Jacob's contemporaries had they fc John Jacob Astor was the only man in Ne Jars.?McClure's Magazine. Open Air Trej Reasons For Its Good Results By Dr. H. W. G advantage-, of the open ait I I thus briefly summarized: 7 III fresh air gains in appetite, as soundly and awakens more A * Q U'QQ f ^est aniipyren*.-. ^ |vX??m^?J symptom, usually ceases. C ^ patients leading an open air J of the comparative freedom of the air from to occur. Tolerance of outside air is very has tried the open air life will willingly stuffiness. I have never seen any one m Even during a thick London fog patients g< or in rooms with windows wide open ant tempts are made to shut out the fog by ke< A Street Scene. gii The teamster was not beating his he horses, but he was using pretty vigor- in; ous language. Jo "This cruelty to animali." declared i the woman with three birds on her hat. "is positively dreadful." i im "Oh. it's perfectly outrageous," j $3 agreed the wc^an in the Persian lamb ! is coat. by Anti ?thp vented her indignation by G1 Runt on the First National Bank of I Milwaukee, of which Frank G. Bige- be I lot low, a derauiter to tne amount or more than $1,000,000, was president, and on b the Milwaukee Trust Company, were 7l successfully withstood. c0 Mr. John D. Rockefeller, through his private counsel, has authorized a re- tb ply to Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden, q', James J. Hill has sent a letter de- t clining taf want of time to serve on j the committee named to investigate wi the Equitable Life Assurance Society. w. The body of Lieutenant Stark, who ya killed himself on the German cruiser, yas buried at Norfolk. ve Advertising. i matter what kind cf advertising Is Ousiness will be the result The quesof advertising brings the most business firms will tell you that they have mark for years and that an enormous by this means. Others will say that heir statements with their sales book, i good description?a description that and see the article described, it will rt in our lives than most of us realize, of hat and we want one like it, pery suggestion. We see something in a made, we desire it and buy it simply 3 walked down the other side of the s article and perhaps never bought it. ;ing section of a newspaper or magait?suggestion again at work. Nearly igin in what someone else suggested, fluenee on the human family as hereIp very strongly to make our environ >a first, the idea Is carried out later, t of clothes and we imagine how we soa (perhaps unconsciously) between is where the suggestive power of the he ad is imagined and by comparison to sale will be made, perhaps a good ot needed at the present time. If this ily be remembered later on. Possibly e that he needed new clothes. If he the ad. he might have waited several >ut by having compared them, he sees ite sale is the result, nand. Imagine two canned meat adthe other contain only the name and le roast from a big healthy steer, put a juice is ready to ooze from- it?until tewing it and think only of how good i and a trademark? * er of ways, in advertisements, wwds tion of both is usually more effectMe. e appropriateness of the picture w^ for an ad they are often inclined to hat the force of the suggestion is lost, er to sell goods. If the idea was because it describes the article better vord description possible used to reinre effective. It would mean that sugtwo wavs at once.?Printer's Ink. * n yTo-day. n. gle political affair was brought before mining magistrate. All inquests were s or functionaries of the Ministry of nbers of such cases, they are simply no fewer than 1.9S8 political cases, rere opened, in addition to all these e same year 1.522 inquests, involving his number 1.5S3 persons were libernd no fewer than 4,867 persons were * ; ?. hv flip ad > lmpi lMJumrui, tuuivivu wj ^ ? nv magistrate. Out of these no fewer s up to ten years, to various remote g on this scale was done even nnder r the last year of his reign being only rtain guarantees against the arbitrary and 1875 the preliminary inquest was amining magistrates and was handed ? officers. No fewer than 700 by-laws le Judicial law to pieces?limiting the y in numerous cases, and so on. ws promulgated during the last two in every province of the empire the ithout warrant, and to keep him imnd much longer under various other ibillty. More than that. It was pubtings that when arrests are made en nee printed and signed warrants of e only to inscribe the names of the <et me add that all these resolutions n both the provincial and the Moscow fflcial reports. :h To Billions. ilc. rease as never before. Land values I five years have jumped 50 and 100 tion grows at the rate of 100,000 a fork has been largely reconstructed; and business have developed: public ?e then?tunnels, bridges, subways, far from $300,000,000. There has been rard New York; practically all the le, have located there, jstate, inherited bv William Waldorf, worth that then, it is worth $300,000,o died in 1892. inherited by the prestax. rmn nnn if that were an ttWUUl ^WW,WV,VVw. -- at least $100,000,000. The combined ited momentum. In fifteen or twenty 1 have reached the billion mark. And linary mind is appalled at the porten sted by John Jacob has multiplied at ears. (It has reached, at a conservarate be maintained for another cenlimaginable total of eighty billions, y; but not more so than would have reseen the present reality, in 1S30 w York who was worth a million dolltment. i in Cases of Consumption^ . Mackenzie. treatment for consumptives may be 'he patient exposed continuously to isimilates his food better, sleeps more refreshed. Free exposure to air is ing at night, formerly so common a olds are practically unknown among life. Secondary infection, on account micro organisms, is much less likely quickly established, and no one who KortL- fn thn fnrmor mn/fltinnc r\t 5^ UUVI\ W 4W.U4V4 VVMUiVVIIO Vi ade worse by exposure to fresh air. ?t on better lying in bed on a balcony 1 a good fire burning than when at?ping the windows shut. riLg a street urchin, who had jostled r, a crack that sent him whimper; on his way.?Louisville Courierurnal. A young couple at Newport find it possible to live on an income of CO.OOO a year. The fact that poverty relative has just been illustrated the beef trust, says the St. Louis obe-Democrat. It is expected that this summer the dy of Lord Francis Douglass, who st his life during the first ascent of e Matterhorn, forty years ago, will > delivered up by the slowly moving mutt glacier, where Douglass and his impanions fell. King Edward took a great fancy to e chauffeur who drove him and the leen about during their recent visit Marseilles and gave him a jewelled n out of his scarf in shaking hands th him on departure, while the Queen ived farewell to him as the royal cht left the mole at Marseilles. Speculation Is when you lose; instaaeut when you win. ANOTHER lllISTRIAt" v . . |i Jury in Nan Patterson Case Failed to j Agree on a Verdict THE SAME RESULT AS FORMERLY E j L After Nearly 13 Hours' Deliberation,! 3 With an Interval For Supper, the D Jury Entrusted With the Fate of ^ Caesar Young's Alleged Murderess 3 Proves No More Able Than Its Pre- * decessors to Reach a Verdict. E New York, Special.?At 1:30 o'clock 3 Thursday morning the jury in the case Nan Patterson, tried for the third ' Sine on the charge of murdering Caesar j. Young, was called into the court room by Recorder GofT. When the 12 men were in their places and the court offi- 5 :ials had all arrivel, the recorder asked 3 why the defendant had not been brought into court. A deputy sherifT replied that she had been feeling 111 , ind had retired, but was then being * dressed. After a wait of 12 minates, ( Miss Patterson appeared looking pale C and in a highly nervous state. "Gentlemen, have you been able to i reach an agreement?" asked the re- j ;order of the jury. S "No, sir," replied the foreman. 3 "Is there any question of law or j evidence in which I can instruct you? * Is there any way in which the court j can help you?" The foreman looked for an Instant at his fellewmen, then turning to the recorder, said: "No, sir, I don't be- 2 lieve you can help us." r "Then you will retire to reconsider the matter." JURY DISCHARGED. [' The Jury filed out and the court room was cleared. Recorder Goft re- 3 mained in his chamber ready to re- . aeive a verdict if rendered or to fur- .' ther instruct the jury. Upon being as- ' sured that there was no chance of an agreement, he discharged the jury. < While the jury considering her case was still out, Nan Patterson sat in her cell in the Tomb3, buoyed up by the j hope that at the end of their delibera- ; tion the twelve men would agree to a verdict of not guilty. Miss Patterson's hope were based partly on rumors which were current about the Criminal Court building, that the first ballot ; taken in the jury room were decidedly In her favor. The jury had had the case since shortly after ^ o'clock Wednesday 1 afternoon. 1 During the afternoon the Jury sent to 1 the court rooms for articles of cloth- ' ing worn by Caesar Yotrag at the time he met his death, and the skeleton ? which was exhibited during the trial J by the prosecution in its endeafor to . show that the victim of the tragedy | could not have inflicted the wound himself. At 1.35 the Jury, recorder and other 1 court officials had assembled in the < court room. Recorder Goff demanded : to know why Nan Patterson was not present, when he was informed that , she was ill. He gave orders directing ! | that she be produced immediately. CHARGE TO THE JURY. Recorder Goff in his charge to the jury said: I uu IUUOU UUL C114M1V vuMVf . J of the humble position of this woman, [ ' you should not give her the same eon- | sideration as if she occupied a more | exalted position in society. Whatever her position, she is entitled to the same ! ; legal rights as the most prominent j I ; and most conspicuous. The recorder described the two de- : ' grees of murder and manslaughter in I: i the first and second degrees, which, he | said, he apprehended by the request to | charge, was thought by counsel to be | applicable in the case, and proceeded: "I understand that there is no claim on the part of the defense that if the defendant committed this homicide it . | was either justifiable or excusable. I 1 also understand that the defense 1 ! claims that rhe crime was murder in the first degree or nothing. But you ! are not bound to accept the arguments | I of counsel as to the nature of this | j crime. You are the judges of the facts, , If there was murder, and in what de i j gree. The crucial question is, 'Did the i man kill himself or did this defendant 1 fire the fatal shot?' I "If the accused fails to take advan- | j tage of her privilege to make a dej fense, under advice of her counsel, her 1 failure to do so must in no way be ' , held against her. NEED TO PROVE MOTIVE. , Allien nas Deen saiu relating 10 me | motive which actuated this defendant,' he continued. "The prosecution claim? that she shot the man because he had I cast her off as his mistress. But it ii : not necessary to prove motive to con- 5 vict of murder. If it is shown that a motive existed, then it tends to sup i port the circumstances. But to do this j motive must be proved, not imagined.' Before giving the case to the jury Recorder Goff ruled on the requests tr ? charge interposed in Miss Patterson's ( behalf. He refused to submit one ol ( the requests, saying that it would b? a direction to the jury to acquit the defendant. He told the jury, however, ' that they might disregard the testi 1 mony of Julia Smith if they thought 11 ? right to do so. He also refused tc 1 charge requests concerning Pawnbrok 1 er Stern and the failure of the defensi to call J. Morgan Smith. He said thai t claims on either side were not to bi c considered. ( i Schooner Goes Down. Pensacola, Fla., Special.?Fishing vessels arriving here report that the fishing schooner Florida was lost in a * 1 I - ? ~ ~ ? T"? fl Hurricane near ^ampeacuee uanss j about ten days ago, and that entire I crew, consisting of six men. went down I with the vessel. The schooner wa; j owned ty E. E. Saunders & Company, \ of this city, and sailed out with a c number of other vessels on the morning j of Aprfl 5, bound for the Campeachee t Banks. ' i c Not GoAg to Vladivostok. a Tokio, By Able?It is rumored thai the destinaUin of Vice-Admiral Rojest s vensky's SMt is Petropavloski, on the 1 peninsulalof Kamchatka, instead oi VladivostM^^It is said that the Rus a sians have co^pted coal and stores al c Petropavloski. I It is regarded as improbable that th? L Russians intend to use Petropavlovsk to?any great extent, because its de g fense from land is considered impossi \ ble. t . ... ? . -r d'-'iif.'i --iiTai'ii ii-iaritfYrtmi Iewukougiou^^S? 1inor Happenings of the Week at Home and Abroad. Down In Dixie. Six hundred thousand dollars worth f strawberries have rotted at Chadlourn, N. C.. by lack of cars to move hem to market. Monroe Kelly, a Stafford county contable, was drowned in the Rappanhanock. Booker T. Washington, on behalf of tudents, presented Principal Frissell, f Hampton Institute, with a purse of 1,300. Trustees of the Catholic University lected Mr. Charles J. Bonaparte, of laltimore, treasurer, to succeed 'homas Waggaman. A Norfolk man offers to donate to he Smithsonian Instutlon the comiletely preserved brains of a soldier :illed in the Civil War. Caleb Powers, twice sentenced to im irisonment ror me, ana unuer ueam entence for over a year on the charge >f conspiracy to murder William Goeiel, has petitioned for a transfer of his ase to the United States Court. The fact has developed that John G. Carlisle. Jefferson M. Levy and the ither syndicate identified with them, vhich has been advertising for North Carolina special tax bonds, is really naking a collection of carpet-bag tonds, which have been outlawed by forth Carolina, and that apparently heir object is to institute suit for the ?urpose of forcing collection. The pedal tax bonds in question are said o m none other than the notorious ^ttj^efield-Swepson bonds which were Rated in New York at the time for faces ranging from 6 to 10 cents. At the National Capital. Vice President Bond, of the Baltlnore and Ohio Railroad Company, tesifled in the rate legislation hearing lefore the Senate committee. Secretary Taft has decided not to ake sides 'in the dispute between >oomis and Bowen. Mrs. Donald McLean made an adIress at the unveiling of the monunent to the army nurses who died in he Spanish-American War. The Railway Appliance Exposition vas formally opened in Washington. T?~~ uni nrooWpii t nf the Jttuico ?j Hill. f.vm.?v?v ? Jreat Northern Railway, testified beore the Senate committee on Inter;tate Commerce. Through the North. The Chicago strikers are reported is rapidly losing ground. President Roosevelt left for Washington Saturday night, bidding fareveil to his comrades in Colorado who lave been with him on his famous lunting trip. A. B. Spear, the cashier of the closed ?itibens* Bank of Oberlin. Ohio, from vhich Mrs. Chadwick obtained large sums of money, was sentenced to sev;n years in the penitentiary. Charles Hadfleld, a professional rainnaker, is held to have earned the revard of $1,000 for producing 18 inches )f rain in Southern California. Justice Rischoff has signed an order equiring the officers of the Equitable L.ife Assurance Society to appear in he Supreme Court with the books. Mr?. Annie Holzapfel, an important vithness in the 'Bluebeard" Hoch case, s missing. Col. William W. Blackford died at Lynn Haven. James McCarthy, a Vermont convict. :estifled at Norfolk regarding Virginia jostoffice robberies. The bodies of Robert Rushton Shaw, in Englishman, and his wife, a Philalelphia woman, were found shot hrough the head near Blockpool, both laving supposedly eomimtted suicide jy mutual agreement. Foreign Affairs. Some fear is felt that the Nationalsts of Poland may cause trouble today, he aniversary of the adoption of the country's constitution Professor Roentgen is too shy to attend the convention now meeting at Berlin in celebration of the anniversary of the discovery of the Roentgen ay. Since February the prices of meat in Germany have advanced from 15 to 35 ?cr cent. The British House of Commons took ip and passed the Aliens Bill. With the customary pomp Ambassalor McCormick presented his credenials to President Loubet of France. The feeling of alarm over the situation in Poland is now pronounced at 3t. Petersburg, and the gravest results ire feared No'.hing definite is learned about the novf*nients of Rojestvensky or Nebojatoff. The Japanese profess to be making satis factory progress with the raising >f Russian snips ai ron Anuur ami rho^ulpo. Lord Dunraven has written a pamphet In which he declares that Ireland nust have home rule If she Is to be ?avc! from national bankruptcy In nan power, intelligence and materia] >rosperity. At the international congress to observe the tenth anniversary of the disoverv of the Roentgen rays many aires of cancer by means of the rays vere reported. Miscellaneous Matters. The New York Federal grand jury 1 r> instituted an investigation into the if irs of the American Tobacco Comjarty. i ..t a mass meeting held Friday night t was resolved to raise $30,000 foi he erection of an equestrian statue >f General Fitzhugh Lee, the plan beng to have the memorial placed and inveiled during the Jamestown Expos tion. The Russian armored cruiser Grom iboi, it is announced, has left Vladi ostock. ' The Krupp gun works at Essen have o many orders that the working force lad to be increased. Resolutions upon the death of Gen ral Fitzhugh Lee. of Virginia, were dopted by a rising vote in the Massa ] husetts House. General Lee visitec he Massachusetts Legislature jus: icfore his death in Washington. The Passaic Land company of Charsston was chartered. Capital stock 10,000. Wm. Bird, president; H. F Velch, vice president, secretary anc reasurer, m... Eruf^lF ?! All That Was Mortal of General Fitzhugh Lee Placed Under the Sod i WAS BURIED WITH GREAT HONOR * State Militia, Veteran*' Organizations, School Boys, Clergy, State and City Officials, Memorial Associations and Distinguished Visitoors Formed the Procession From St. Paul's to Hollywood Cemetery, Passing Between Sidewalks Lined With Spectators. j Richmond, Va., Special?Not in all its eventful history has Richmond witnessed a more imposing demonstration than that which marked Thursday the funeral of General Fitzhugh. Lee. Troops were pouring into the city all night ,and the military contingent which took part in the procession consisted of two full regiments of infantry, the Seventh and Seventy-first, the Richmond Light Infantry Blues, a battalion of artillery and seven detached infantry companies, making in all about 2,000 men. Added to this were the I veteran organizations, and nearly every carriage in the city had been engaged for the occasion. By noon the business section was practically deserted. Around St. Paul's church, in which the funeral services were held, there was a dense throng, and from there to Hollywood the sidewalks along the line of march were lined with spectators. The church was densely crowded, the throng representing all classes and all walks of life. The services were conducted by Right Rev. A. M. Randolph, bishop of the Southern Virginia Diocese, assisted by the Rev. Beverly Tucker, rector of St. Paul's, Norfolk; the Rev. Landon R. Mason, rector of Grace church, this city, and the Rev. E. E. Barnwell, acting rector of St. Paul's. The floral tributes banked about the casket were profuse and came from all over the country. At the outside of the casket, nearest the audience and at the termination of the main aisle, the Confederate battle flag in flowers gleamed in its field, red with the crossbars of blue bearing the stars of white. A great wreath of white, elevated on a standard of green, shed its perfume directly above the bier. It was four feet in diameter, elevated about six feet, and was made of Easter lilies, white roses, and white sweet peas. The de ?- ?A T'otoron PflV sigus wvre scut uj iuu > vw.. airy Association, Army of Northern Virginia. The order of the procession to Hollywood Cemetery was as follows: Chief marshal and aides, escort, State military, veteran organizations, high school boys, Soldiers' Home veterans, clergy In carriages, honorary pall-bearers, active pall-bearers, caisson with body, family and mourners State officials, city officials, distinguished visitors, memorial associations Richmond fire department, Colored Spanish-American Veterans' Association. On conclusion of the services at the church the line of march was taken up for the cemetery. The escort included the Seventh and Seventy-first Regiments of Virginia volunteer infantry and a provisional regiment of unattached infantry companies; the Richmond Light Infantry Blues Battalion, the Norfolk Light Artillery Blues, the Richmond Howitzers; the cadets of the Fork-Union Academy, Virginia; Lee and Pickett Camps, Confederate veterans, of Richmond; A. P. Hill Camp, of Charlottesville, of which Gen. Lee was a member, and representatives from almost every other camp in Virginia; the Association of veteran Cavalry, Army of Northern Virginia; Sons of Confederate Veterans; ladies' memorial organizations. Daughters of the Confederacy; aged and innrm veterans from the Confederate Soldiers* Home, in wagonettes; representatives of the Federal, State and city government and of the Jamestown Exposition Company, and distinguished persons from without the Commonwealth. There were 33 military companies in line and the procession was more than a mile long, taking about 35 minutes to pass a given point, the carriages I In line being driven two abreast and ! the military marching in double rank, company front. At the head of the escort rode exGovernor Charles T. O'Ferrall, chief j marshal, with his aides, and conspic uous in the procession were Governor i Warfield, of Maryland, and the Attor- j ney General of his State; the two . United States Senators from Virginia, riding side by side in a carriage; Gen. J. W. Hayes. Major R. E. L. Michie, and Col. J. C. Derapsey, United States army, in full dress uniform and Lieutenant Governor Willard, representing ; Governor Montague, who was prevented by illness from being present, i The casket containing the body of General Lee rested on a handsome catafalque built upon a caisson and was covered with flowers and emblems of the United States and the Confederacy. The caisson was drawn by six black horses with artillery harness and covered by black netting. Holding the bridle of each horse was a member of the Howitzer battery. Behind the I caL&son was led General Lee's own rid; ing horse, a thorough-bred black stalI lion with empty saddle and with the I upturned boots and the sheathed sword of the dead general. As the body left the church, minute guns were fired by a detachment of the Richmond Howitzers in Capitol Square. The streets along the line of march were packed with people and at the cemetery many thousands awaited the coming of the procession. There has not been such a popular outpouring j since the funeral of Jefferson Davis some year ago, and there were repre! sentatives of every part of Virginia j in the multitudes that thronged to pay I the last tribute of respect to Fitzhugh } Lee. At the cemetery the committal service was read by Bishop Randolph, the I Intn fho OTflVP thrift i ULTUJ vtas iuwuvu iiikv/ wuv o? w. w, ? infantry volleys were fired, taps were sounded and a salute of 17 guns was fired by the Richmond Howitzers from a neighboring height overlooking tba historic James river. Alleged Lynchers Indicted. Orangeburg, S. C., Special?J. H. ( Palmer, S. A. Saedon, Penny Martin, Andrew Martin and Benjamin Martin, the five accused in the "Eutawville | ' lynching case." who have been confined to the Berkeley county jail at | j Monck's Corner and who were brought I ] here Tuesday night, were arraigned in open court Wednesday morning. 1 Attorneys for the defense moved to 1 quash the indictment on the ground of irregularities, but the judge over- 1 ruled the motion. The accused plead- ' ed not guilty, and next Wednesday 1 wag the day set for the trial. '1 ;4 ' 9 , Th? Officiating Clergyman Dr. MeKil An Officer in General Lee'a Old Coi mand and a Life-long Friend?Tt Journey to Richmond. Washington, Special.?An affectic ate and imposing tribute was pa Monday to all that is mortal of Brig dier General Fitzhugh Lee, Unit States army, retired. Formal funei services over the remains held Richmond, Va., Thursday. Brief s< vices were held on Monday, howev< at the Church of the Epiphany, on ? Mnoennol QnH ni street, uiiiD> ui iuc pxji ouum w. cial friends embracing the opportuni thus afforded to pay a last tribute respect to the memory of the distl gulshed dead. Prior to the services, the remains General Lee. which had been lying their casket in the Sunday scho chapel of Epiphany Church since the removal from Providence Hospiti were conveyed to the auditorium the church. Throughout the night ai day they were surrounded by a guai consisting of members of the loc camp of Confederate veterans. The church services were conduct* by the rector of Epiphany Churc Rev. Randolph H. McKim, D. D., wl is chaplain of the Washington can of Confederate Veterans. He was i officer in General Lee's old commai in the civil war. and the two we life-long friends. The services we very simple, being in accordance wl the burial service prescribed by tl ritual of the Episcopal Church. J funeral oration was pronounced. The church was thronged wl friends and acquaintances of Gener Lee rmd his family. The casket co talning the remains was covered wi floral offerings which had been i eeived from individuals and organiz tions with which General Lee wi GENERAL FITZHUGH LEE. identified. Among them was a han some wreath sent by the President ai Mrs. Roosevelt The details of the arrangement the services and escort of the bo< were completed by Major Genei Gillespie, Brigadier General Burtc Major Kean, and Captain Mitch! United States Army. The detail of eight non-commissic ed officers of the Sevent United Stat Cavalry acted as body-bearers. C< John T. Callaghau, commander, ai the members of the camp of Confed< erate veterans constituted a guard honor for the remains while they we being taken to the Pennsylvania si tlon. The military escort consisted a squadron of the Seventh Cavali a battery of field artillery and ti companies of engineers. United Stat army. Shortly after noon, the c< lege, headed by a band, moved to t! railroad statoion via Pennsylvac avenue. In the column, in additii to the military contingent, were re rc-sentatives of the civic societies which General Lee was a memberOn arrival a tthe railroad static the casket containing the remains w conveyed, with due ceremony, to t funeral car. in which it was convey to Richmond. The escort then w disbanded. Mrs. Lee was accompanied on t special train to Richmond by h brother, Major B. H. Fcwle; Genei Lee's brother, Captain D. M. Le Miss Virginia Mason Dorsey, Mi Laura Lee Dorsey, Dr. Robert F. It son and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Minor. In addition to these membe of the Lee family, many promine army officers, including several w served in General Lee's Seventh Arr Corps during the Spanish-Amerie; war, also accompanied the funeral pj ty to Richmond. The train left f Richmond at 1 o'clock. The hoc bearers of the Seventh Cavalry i mained with the casket until Alexa dria was reached. There they we relieved by a detail of an officer ai eight enlisted men of the Alexandr Light Infantry. In turn, this detac ment was relieved at Fredericksbu by a similar number of soldiers. Remains Arrive at Richmond. Richmond, Va., Special.?The sj cial train bearing the remains of G? FKzhugh Lee reached Richmond abo 5.30 o'clock Monday afternoon ai was met at Elba station, at the hei of Broad street, by an imposing am of State military. Confederate vet< ans, State and city officials and mei orial organizations. The casket co taining the body was placed upon black caisson drawn by six bla< horses, at the head of each horse beii a member of the Richmond Howitze in full dress gray uniform. A proce sion was formed and the march wi taken up for the city hall to soleir strains of music from a band. T1 bells of the city were tolled as tl orocession moved, flags on the bull ings were at half mast, and at fr quent intervals along the way spec! emblems of mourning appeared drapery over store fronts and oth< houses. The procession was made r of the Richmond companies of tl Seventieth regiment, Virginia Volu teers; the Richmond Light Infanti Battalion; the Richmond Howitzers Lee and Picket Camps of Confederal veterans; the Veteran Cavalry Ass ciation. Army of Northern Virginij the Sons of Confederate Veterans, an the various ladies' Confederate memo ial associations of the city. On the arrival at the city hall tt casket was borne Into the rotunda < the building, which had been suitabl draped for the occasion, and place upon a bier covered with black broai cloth, the band meantime playin Onward Christian Soldiers," Con pany A. of the Seventh Regimen (vent on duty as guard for the remain: rhe public was soon admitted to loo for the last time upon the face c the distinguished dead. Governor Montague issued a pro< amation reviewing the distinguishe services of General Lee, and ordere ?ll State offices closed on the day c Jie funeral. ? ? Russian Narsl Forces Gettu^^^H FiflitlBf Trim u JUNCTION OF FLEETS * - V. t. W J 'T al Naval Officers at 1|t. Peter^Prg Of J in clare That While Hojestvensky May I*' Lose Half Hi* Convoy, the Japanese I Q Cannot Seriously Oppose the Ad- ~1 vance of the United Squadrons to \ of Vladivostock, Where Further ReJnQ" forcements wait of . ' in ol St. Petersburg, By Cable.?Admiral (ir Nebogatoff's junction with Vice Admiral Rojestvensky is now considered ?d by the Admiralty as practically assurd, ed, and hope for a successful issue In al the approaching struggle for mastery of the sea is greatly encouraged ^ thereby. lo Naval officers are prepared to see ip Rojestvensky lose half his convoy, but 111 In face of the united divisions it la ^ believed that Togo will accomplish litre tie' or nothing in the way of opposl* th tion to the advance to Vladivostock and that he must be content with the s0 aid of the army, to try and invest by tb land and sea and make Vladivostock al another Port Arthur. If the fleet reach-^^^ es Vladivostock intact, howevirr-navil | officers here claim that victory is won. ;a. Although there is a little more than as 100,000 tons of coal at Vladivostock, ? the re-enforcement of the fleet, by the ' Cromobio, Rossla and Bogatyr, and the torpedo boats and sub-marines now In I harhnr thorp thAV tlglm thlt Ro jestvensky could drive Togo off the and leave Field Marshal Oyama's armyY' .% stranded in Manchuria. Seizes Small Jap Vessel. Tokio, By Cable.?Four Russian tor- ^ pedo boat destroyers appeared west- . ward of Hokkaiddo, off Subu, Saturday. They seized and burned a small sailing vessel and imprisoned the captain and disappeared to the northwest. They M y were evidently returning to Vladivoe' tock. There is a possibility that they have destroyed other small craft, although no reports to that effect have been received. The object of their visit i3 not clear. ? It is thought that probably they hoped to torpedo the Japanese patrol at night, and it is also suggested that the Vlad- j ivostock vessels planned a diversion to assist the fleet of Admiral Rojestvenad sky. > fS ?y President Bids Farewell. al Glenwood Springs, Col., Special.? President Roosevelt Sunday enter' tained at dinner his companions on his in- three weeks' hunt in the Rockies. At Vm es ter the dinner, the President bade them oh an affectionate farewell and promised _jj that all would live forever in his foml0f est memory. At the dinner were P. B. re Stewart, of Colorado Springs; Dr. Alexa ander Lambert, of New York; Guides of Jacob Borah, John GofT, "Brick" Wells,' 9 ^ John Fry and G. M. Sprague; Conner es Elmer Chapman, and Secretary Loeb. | >r- In describing the function, Chaphe man said: "We sat just as we did in [la camp. Mr. Loeb was the only duke at ^ the party." P* ' of Veteran Publisher Dead. Mobile, Ala., Special.?Co). John Lawrence Rapier, president of the ^ l,e Register Company, died Sunday morned ing at 2:30 o'clock, aged 66 year^. as Colonel Rapier fought with distinction in the Confederate service during the er Civil War. He was the founder of al The TJobile Times, which paper wag . \ e; later merged with The Register. He rss was a 'mother of Thomas G. Rapier, l*" editod ui The New Orleans Picayune. He i9 survived by his wife, four sona trs and one daughter, nt hO r> ti ni_* u guiiic ncv* uioiui Warsaw, By Cable?This city Sunday ir- celebrated the name day of Empress ^ or Alexandra Feodrovna. The Socialist 'y* warnings not to display flag3 was genin. erally disregarded in view of the heavy re penalties imposed upon householders who fail to decorate their houses on >ia such occasions. This led to some dig- . >h_ turbances, angry mobs tearing' down rg and burning flags at different places. Otherwise the city was' quiet. Fatal Railroad Wreck. ^ Houston, Texas, Special.?A Galvev- ' uj ton, Houston & Northern train, comad ing from Galveston, left the track at 1(1 a curve near Harrisburg, shortly before midnight, the engine turning a. turtle, and taking all of the coaches >n- ofT. Engineer Frank Cox was cremata ed under his engine. Fireman Daaneton is missing, and it is believed that rs he was also burned. While several ol ;s- the passengers were bruised, -cone were 13 badly hurt. The coaches were wrecked and caught fire, the train being near* ly destroyed by fire. A spreading rail . caused the wreck, d e* First Train Over New Road. ln Dublin, Ga., Special.?The first train er from Eastman over the Dublin ft , Southwestern railroad reached DubHn Sunday afternoon. The train conn. slsted of ten soi.'d car loads of freight ... from Eastman. President Rents. Gen? ,. eral Manager Kissler and Superintendent C. E. Renr were on board. II q. will take a week or more to surface up i; the track. As soon as that has been l(j accomplished, regular schedules will r. be put on between Dublin and Eastman. A ie ^ 5f \ Oceam Steamer Sunk, g ly Vineyard Haven, Mass., Special.?The d steamer Aransas, Captain Rood, of the 3- Joy Line, was sunk in a collision ^tb S the barge Glendower, one and a half miles southeast of Pollock Rip lights' ship Sunday night One life was lost j." The survivors reached this port in the jj lifeboats of the steamer. The Glendower was in tow of the Reading Railroad tug, bound east from Philadelphia^ tj* The Aransas sank almost immediately , after the collision, but it is said thA the tow kept on. Sixty-five personi have been landed here. . . A- xi