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Suggestion in By Fred V. Hunte T seems to be a rule that put out a certain amount tion still remains what I ness? Some successful bi been advertising their tr business has been built description sells goods and then back It is a fact that if an ad is written wi makes you imagine you can taste, sm sell goods. Suggestion plays a more important We see somebody wearing a certain 1 baps we buy one like it, the hat was so store window. A favorable impressior because it was suggested to us. Hc street, we would never have thought o1 We read of something in the adv zine, we make up our minds Rat we w everything we do in this world, has it Environment has probably as great ai dity and the ads that we see about us ment. Suggestion plays upon our imagit We see an advertisement picturing a would look in them. We draw a comi our clothes and the ones advertised, ti ad is tested. It may be that the suit found wanting. The result will be th impression has been made, but a 'suit i is the case. the advertisement will prc the advertisement made the reader a 'bad not compared his suit with the oni months before having made a purchas how much he needs one and an immi DescriptIve adverti'sing Increases vertisements, let one be descriptive a trade mark? The one that tells of a : in a hot oven and cooked until a dark it is so tender, that you forget you ar it is; or an ad with a picture of a tin Suggestions can be given in a nt may be used or pictures. but the com Too many advertisers do not considei enough interest. In selecting a picti stretch their imagination just enough, The picture must tell its story in always kept In inind that a picture is u than words could, and then the strong( force the picture, many ads would be gestions to use the article would giver Russian fyra By Priice,Kropotl ROM 1894 to 1901 not one a court of justice or an dealt .with by police off the Interior. As to the extravagant. Thus *in I concerning 5.590 person which were pending. In 6,450 persons, were terminated. Out sted, 45 were sent before court-martiE submitted to various penalties. inclu ministration without the interference i than 1.502 were sent into exile. for t provinces of Russia and Siberia! Not Alexander TI, the corresponding figur 55(in 1894). The Judicial law of 1864 containet action of the police. But already in 1 taken out of the hands of independen to the ordinary police and the state p have been issued since 1864 for tearin rights of the courts, abolishing trial by At the same time the exceptiona reigns have given to every police off zight to arrest every Russian subjec1 prisoned as a suspect for seven days pretexes-without incurring any resp licly vouched at one of the lawyers' masse simple policemen receive min arrest and searching, on which they nersons whom they choose to arrest and commands have been printed in fi prpers, and that the figures are those re Astor Ala: By Burton J. Hendc -IE Astor properties now (New York City);sin the 'per cent. The city's po year. In many sections NI 11'eadquarters of retail tr; improvements . initiated /railroad terminals-aggregate in cost a general movement of corporations5 newly organized combinations, for ex When John Jacob died, in 1890, I was estimated at $150,000.000. If it w 000 now. The estate of William Asor ent John Jacob. was generally place acccurate figure, it must now aggreg Astor fortunle thus increases with acca years, at the present rate of progrss, i1 then it will go 'on even faster, until th1 tous figures. We 'have 'seen that the $2,000,000 least two hundred times in one hundr tive estimate. $450,000,000). if the s tury, the Astor fortune will attain thi We stand aghast at such a possi' John Jaco'b's nontemporaries had the John Jacob Astor was tihe. only man ix !ars.-MChrrf se' 'Magazine. Open Air Tr4 Reasons Fo'r Its Good Rest By Dr. H. W HE aflvantages of the opel T tits briefly summarized fresh air gains in appetit soundl.y and awakens m the best antipyretic. SI . symptom, usually ceases patients leading an open of the comparative freedom of the air1 to occur. Tolerance of outside air is has tried the open air life will willie stuffness. I have never seen any on Even during a thick London fog partien or in rooms with windows wide open tempts are made to shut out the fog b: A Street Scene. The teamster was not beating his horses, but he was using pretty vigor ous language. "This cruelty to animals." declared the woman with three birds on her hat. "is positively dreadful." "Oh, it's perfectly outrageous." agreed the wcman in the Persian lamb coat. .An r~n vented her indignation by Runt on the Filrst National Bank 01 Milwaukee, of which Frank G. Bige low, a defaulter to the amount of morE than $1.00.000. was president, and or the Milwaukee Trust Company, were successfully withstood. Mr. John D. Rockefeller. through his private counsel, has authorized a re ply to Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden. James J. Hill has sent a letter de clining for want of time~ to serve on the committee named to investigate the Equittle Life Assurance Society. The bod:. of Lieutenant Stark. who killed himself on the German cruiser, was byuried at Norfolk. Advertising. no matter what kind cf advertising Is of business will be the result- The ques ind of advertising brings the most busi siness firms will tell you that they have demark for years and that an enormous up by this means. Others will say that ip their statements with their sales book. h a good description-a description that ell and see the article described, it will part in our lives than most of us realize. ind of hat and we want one like it. per d by suggestion. 'We see something in.a is made. we desire it and buy it simply we walked down the other side of the the article and perhaps never bought it. rtising section of a newspaper or maga nt it-suggestion again at work. Nearly origin in what someone else suggested. influence on the auman family as here help very strongly to make our environ ation first, the idEa Is carried out later. suit of clothes and we imagine how *e rison. (perhaps unconsciously) between ere is where the suggestive power of the n the ad is imagined and by comparison at no sale will be made, perhaps a good s not needed at the present time. If this bably be remembered later on. Possibly vare that he needed new clothes. If he in the ad, he might have waited several e, but by having compared them, he sees diate sale is the result. demand. Imagine two canned meat ad ad the other contain -only the name and )rime roast from a big healthy steer, put rich juice is ready to ooze from. it-unti chewing it and think only of how good can and a trademark? mber of ways,.ln advertisements, words ination of both is usually more effective. the appropriateness of the picture with re for an ad they are often inclined to ;o that the force of the suggestion is lost. >rder to sell goods. If the idea was sed because it describes the article better st word description possible used to rein more effective. It would mean that sug in two ways at once.-Printer's Ink nny To-day. ci-i. single political affair was brought before xamining magistrate. All inquests were cers or functionaries of the Ministry of numbers of such cases, they are simply 903 no fewer than 1.9SS political cases, , were opened, in addition to all those the same year 1.522 inquests. involving of this number 1,583 persons were liber 1. and no fewer than 4,867 persons were ling imprisonment, inflicted by the ad f any magistrate. Out of these no fewer ?rms up to ten years, to various remote hing on this scale was done even under for the last year of his reign being only certain guarantees against the arbitrary 70 and 1875 the preliminary inquest was examining magistrates and was handed lice officers. No fewer than 700 by-laws the Judicial law to pieces-limiting the jury In numerous cases, and so on. laws promulgated during the last two er in every province of the empire the without warrant. and to keep him im -and much longer under various other nsibility. More than that. It was pub neetings that when arrests are made en .dvance prinfed and signed warrants 'of have only to inscribe the names of the Let me add that all these resolutions il in both the provincial and the Moscow of official reports. ch '1h Billions. rick. increase as never before. Land values lst five years have jumped 50 and 100 ulation grows at the rate of 100,000 a w York has been largely reconstructed; ide and business have developed: public since then-tunnels, bridges, subways, not far from $300,0.00,000. There has been toward New York; practically all the mple, have located there. s estate, inherited by William Waldorf, re worth that then, it is worth $300,000, who died in 1S92, inherited by the pres Iat about $65,000,000. If that were an ate at least $100,000,000. The combined derated momentum. In fifteen or twenty will have reached the billion mark. And oordinary mind is appalled at the porten invested by John Jacob has multiplied, at dd years. (It has reached, at a conserva ie rate be maintained for another cen unimaginable total of eighty billions. ,iity; but not more so than would have ~-foreseen the present reality. In 1830 New York who was worth a million dol satment. Llts in Cases of Conlsurnption, G. Macken zie. air treatment for consumptives may be :The patient exposed continuously to ~.assimilates his food better, sleeps more ore refreshed. Free exposure to air is eating at night, formerly so common a Colds are practically unknown among air life. Secondary infection, on account rom micro organisms, is much less likely ery quickly established, and no one who gl go back to the former conditions of m ade worse by exposure to fresh air. ss get on better ly.ing in bed on a balcony and a good fire burning than when at keeping the windows shrut. gviig a street urchin, who had jostled her, a crack that sent him whimper ing on hais way.-Louisville Courier A young couple at Newport find it impossible to live on an incom~e of $360000 a year. The fact that poverty is relative has just been illustrated by the beef trust, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. It is expected that this summer the body of Lord Francis Douglass. who lost his life during the first ascent of he datterorn. forty years ago, will be delivered up by the slowly moving Ziutt glacier. where Douglass and his companions fell. King Edward took a great fancy to th chaufeur who dro; him and the Queen about during their recent visit too arseilles andl gave him a jewelled pi out of his scarf in shaking hands with him on departure, while the Queen waed farewell to him as the royal yacht left the mole at Mfarseilles. Speculation is when you lose'; In ANOTHER MISTRIAL Jury in Nan Patterson Case Failed to Agree on a Verdict THE SAME RESULT AS FORMERLY After Nearly 13 Hours' Deliberation, With an Interval For Supper, the Jury Entrusted With the Fate of Caesar Young's Alleged Murderess Proves No More Able Than Its Pre decessors to Reach a Verdict. New York, Speial.-At 1:30 o'clock rhursday morning the jury in th'e case af Nan Patterson, tried for the third 1me on the charge of murdering Caesar Young, was called into the court room by Recorder Goff. When the 12 men were in their places and the court offi 2ials had all arrivel, the recorder asked why the defendant had not been trought into court. A deputy sheriff replied that she had been feeling Ill i nd had retired, but was then being dressed. After a wait of 12 minstes, Mdiss Patterson appeared looking pale and in a highly nervous state. "Gentlemen, have you been able to reach an agreement?" asked the re corder of the jury. "No, sir," replied the foreman. "Is there any question of law or evidence in which I can instruct you? [s there any way in which the court can help you?" The foreman looked for an Instant at his fellewmen, then turning to the recorder, said: "No, sir, I don't be lieve you can help us." "Then you will retire to reconsider the matter." JURY DISCHARGED. The jury filed out and the court room was cleared. Recorder Goff re mained in his chamber ready to re seive 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 cor.sidering her case was still out. Nan Patterson at in her cell in the Tombs, buoyed up by the 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 5rst ballot taken in the jury room were decidedly In her favor. The jury had had the case since shortly after 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. During the afternoon the jury sent to the court rooms for articles of cloth ing worn by Caesar Young at the time he met his death, and the skeleton which was exhibited during the trial by the prosecution in its endeavor to show that the victim of the tragedy could not have inflicted the wound him self. At 1.35 the jury, recorder and other court officials had assembled in the court room. Recorder Goff demanded to k.now 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: "You must not think that, because of :h~e humble position of this woman. yor. should not give her the same con sidration 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 and most conspicuous. The recorder described the two de grees of murder and manslaughter in 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 also understand that the defense claims that the crime was murder in the first degree or nothing. But you are not bound to accept the arguments of counsel as to the nature of this erime. You are the judges of the facts, if there was murder, and In what de gree. The crucial question Is, 'Did the man kIll himself or did this defendant fire the fatal shot?' "If the accused fails to take advan tage of her privilege to make a de fense, under advice of her counsel, her failure to do so must in no way be held against her. NEED TO PROVE MOTIVE. "Much has been said relating to the motive which actuated this defendant, he continued. "The prosecution claims that she shot the man 'because he had cast her off as his mistress. But it ii not necessary to prove motive to con vict of murder. If it is shown that a motive existed, then it tends to sup port the circumstances. But to do this motive must be proved, not imagined." Before giving the case to the jury Recorder Goff ruled on the requests tc charge interposed In Miss Patterson's bealf. He refused to submit one of the requests, saying that it would be a direction to the jury to acquit the defendant. He told the jury, however, that they might disregard the testI mony of Julia Smith if they thought it right to do so. He also refused to charge requests concerning Pawnbrok er Stern and the failure of the defense to call J. Morgan Smith. He said that claims on either side were not to be considred. Schooner Goes Down. Pensacola. Fla., Special.-Fishing vessels arriving here report that the fishing schooner Florida was lost in a hurricane near Campeachee Banka about ten days ago, and that entire: crew, consisting of six men, went down with the vessel. The schooner wa.: owned by E. E. Saunders & Company, Iof this city, and sailed out with a number of other vessels on the morning of Apdll 5, bound for the Campeachee Banks. Not Going to Vladivostok. Tokio, By Cable.-It is rumored thai the destination of Vice-Admiral Rojest ve'nsky's fleet is Petropavloski, on the, peninsula of Kamnchamha, instead o: V'adivostok. It is said that the Rus sians have collectedi coal and stores ai Petropaioski. It is regarded as improbable that th, Russias intend to uso PetropavlovskC to any great extent, because its do iEWS THROUGUOUT TUE COUNTRY /lInor Happenings of the Week at Home and Abroad. Down In Dixie. Six hundred thousand dollars 'worth >f strawberries have rotted at Chad >ourn. N. C., by lack of cars to move l'em to market. Monroe Kelly. a Stafford county con table, was drowned in the Rappanhan iock. 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 3altimore, treasurer, to succeed [homas Waggaman. A Norfolk man offers to donate to he Smithsonian Instution the com )letely preserved brains of a soldier illed in the Civil War. Caleb Powers, twice sentenced to im risonment for life, and under death ;entence for over a year on the charge >f conspiracy to murder William Goe )el, has petitioned for a transfer of his se to the United States Court. The fact has developed that John G. arlisle. Jefferson M. Levy and the Aher syndicate Identified with them. which has been advertising for North arolina special tax bonds, is really naking a collection of carpet-bag onds, which have been outlawed by 6orth Carolina. and that apparently gheir object is to institute suit for the surpose of forcing collection. The ipecial tax bonds in question are said 'D be none other than the notorious Littlefield-Swepson bonds which were Boated in New York at the time for prices ranging from 6 to 10 cents. At the National CapitaL Vice President Bond, of the Balti nore and Ohio Railroad Company, tes tified in the rate legislation hearing before the Senate committee. Secretary Taft has decided not to :ake sides In the dispute between Loomis and Bowen. Mrs. Donald McLean made an ad Iress at the unveiling of the monu -nent to the army nurses who died in ;he Spanish-American War. The Railway Appliance Exposition was formally opened in Washington. James J. Hill. president of the areat Northern Railway. testified be ,ore the Senate committee on Inter tate Commerce. Through the North. The Chicago strikers are reported s rapidly losing ground. President Roosevelt left for Wash ington Saturday night, bidding fare well to his comrades in Colorado who have been with him on _.3 famous hunting trip. A. B. Spear, the cashier of the closed Citibens' Bank of Oberlin, Ohio, from which Mrs. Chadwick obtained large sums of money, was sentenced to sev n years in the penitentiary. Charles Hadfield, a professional rain maker,- is held to have earned the re ward of $1,000 for producing 18 inches >f rain in Southern California. Justice Rischoff has signed an order requiring the officers of the Equitable Life Assurance Society to appear in the Supreme Court with the books. Mrs. Annie Holzapfel, an important withness in the 'Bluebeard" Hoch case, is missing. Col. William W. Blackford elied at Lynn Haven. James McCarthy, a Vermont convict, testified at Norfolk regarding Virginia postoffice robberies. The bodies of Robert Rushton Shaw, an Englishman. and his wife, a Phila ielphia woman, were found shot through the head near Blockpool, both having supposedly comimtted suicide by mutual agreement. Foreign Affairs. Some fear is felt that the National ists of Poland may cause trouble today. the aniversary of the adoption of the 2ountry's constitution Professor Roentgen is too shy to at tend the convention now meeting at Berlin in celebration of the anniver sary of the discovery of the Roentgen Since February the prices of meat in Germany have advanced from 15 to 35 per cent, The British House of Commons took up and passed the Aliens Bill. With the customary pomp Ambassa dor McCormick presented his creden tials to President Loubet of France. The feeling of alarm over the situa tion in Poland is now pronounced at t. Petersburg, and the gravest results are feared. Nothing definite is learned about the movements "of Rojestvensky or Nebo gatff. The Japanese profess to be making satisfactory progress with the raising of Russian ships at Port Arthur and Chemulpo. Lord Dunraven has written a pamph let in which he declares that Ireland must have home rule if she Is to be sav.ed from national bankruptcy in mmn power, intelligence and material prosperity. At the international congress to ob serve the tenth anniversary of the dis (overy of the Roentgen rays many 'res of cancer by means of the rays were reported. Miscellaneous Matters. The New York Federal grand jury iss instituted an investigation into the ' airs of the American Tobacco Coin At a mass meeting held Friday night it was resolved to raise $30,000 for the erection of an equestrian statuE of General Fitzhugh Lee, the plan be ig to have the memorial placed and unveiled during the Jamestown Expos The Russian armored cruiser Grom bohi, it is announced, has left Vladi vostock. The Krupp gun works at Essen havE so many ordars that the working forcE had to b~e increased. Resolutions upon the death of Gen eal Fitzhugh Lee. of Virginia, werE aiopted by a rising vot in the Massa! cusetts House. Cenera! Lee visitec te Massachusetts Legislature just Lfor his death in Washington. The Passaic Land company of Char leston was chartered. Capital stocli $1000. Wmn. Bird, president; H. F Welch, vice president, secretary anc HERO LAID TO REST All That Was Mortal of General Fitz hugh Lee Placed Under the Sod WAS BURIED WITH GREAT HONOR State Militia, Veterans' Organizations, School Boys, Clergy, State and City Officials, Memorial Associations and Distinguished Visitoors Formed the Procession From St. Paul's to Holly wood Cemetery, Passing Between Sidewalks Lined With Spectators. Richmond, Va., Special.-Not in all its eventful history has Richmond wit nessed 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 con sisted of two full regiments of infan try, the Seventh and Seventy-first, the Richmond Light Infantry Blues, a bat talion of artillery and seven detached infantry companies, making in all about 2,000 men. Added to this were the veteran organizations, and nearly every carriage in the city had been engaged for the occasion. By nooa che 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 Hol lywood 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 con ducted by Right Aev. A. M. Randolph, bishop of the Southern Virginia Dio cese, 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 cross bars of blue bearing the stars of white. A great wreath of white, elevated on a standard of green, shed its perfume di rectly 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 signs were sent by the Veteran Cav alry Association, Army of Northern Virginia. The order of the procession to Hollywood Cemetery was as fol lows: Chief marshal and aides, escort, State military, veteran organizations, high school boys, Soldiers' Home vet erans, clergy in carriages, honorary pall-bearers, active pall-bearers, cais son with body, family and mourners State officials, city officials, distin guished visitors, memorial associations Richmond fire department. Colored Spanish-American Veterans' Associa tion. 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 Regi ments of Virginia volunteer infantry and a provisional regiment of unat tached infantry companies; the Rich mond 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 vet erans. of Richmond; A. P. Hill Camp, of Charlottesville, of which Gen. Lee was a member, and representatives from almost every other camp In Vir ginia; the Association of veteran Cavalry,' Army of Northern Virginia; Sons of Confederate Veterans; ladies' memorial organizations, Daughters of the Confederacy; aged and infirm vet erans from the Confederate Soldiers' Home. in wagonettes; representatives of the Federal, State and city govern ment 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 min utes to pass a given point, the carriages in line being driven two abreast and the military marching in double rank, company front. At the head of the escort rode ex Governor Charles T. O'Ferrall, chief marshal, with his aides, and conspic uous in the procession were Governor Warfield, of Maryland, and the Attor ney General of his State; the twe 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. Dempsey, United States army, in full dress uniform and Lieu tenant Governor Willard, representing Governor Montague, who was prevent ed by illness from being present. The casket containing the body of General Lee rested on a handsome cat afalque 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 cov ered by black netting. Holding the bridle of each horse was a member of the Howitzer battery. Behind the caisson was led General Lee's own rid ing horse, a thorough-bred black stal lion with empty saddle and with the 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 since the funeral of Jefferson Davis some year ago, .and there were repre sentatives of every part of Virginia in the multitudes that thronged to pay the last tribute of respect to Fitzhugh At the cemetery the committal ser vice was read by Bishop Randolph. the body was lowered into the grave, three infantry volleys were fired, taps were sounded and a salute of 17 guns was fired by the Richmond Howitzers from a neighboring height overlooking tb3 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 ecn ined to the Berkeley county jail at Monck's Corner and who were brought here Tuesday night, were arraigned i open court Wednesday morning. Attorneys for the defense moved to quash the indictment on the ground of irregularities, but the judge over ruled the motion. The accused plead ed not guilty, and next Wed.nesday was the m et inr' the trial. FUNERAL Of GEN. FITZiUGH LEE The Officiating Clergyman Dr. McKim An Officer in General Lee's Old Com mand and a Life-long Friend-The Journey to Richmond. Washington, Special.-An affection ate and imposing tribute was paid Monday to all that is mortal of Briga dier General Fitzhugh Lee, United States army, retired. Formal funeral services over the remains held in Richmond, Va., Thursday. Brief ser vices were held on Monday, however, at the Church of the Epiphany, on G street, many of the personal and offi cial friends embracing the opportunity thus afforded to pay a last tribute of respect to the memory of the distin guished dead. Prior to the services, the remains of General Lee, which had been lying in their casket in the Sunday school chapel of Epiphany Church since their removal from Providence Hospital, were conveyed to the auditorium of the church. Throughout the night and day they were surrounded by a guard, consisting of members of the local camp of Confederate veterans. The church services were conducted by the rector of Epiphany Church, Rev. Randolph H. McKim, D. D., who is chaplain of the Washington camp of Confederate Veterans. He was an officer in General Lee's old command In the civil war, and the two were life-long friends. The services were very simple, being in accordance with the burial service prescribed by the ritual of the Episcopal Church. No funeral oration was pronounced. The church was thronged - with friends and acquaintances of General Lee rand his family. The casket con taining the remains was covered with floral offerings which had been re ceived from individuals and organiza tions with which General Lee was 40 GENERAL FITZHUGH LEE. identified. Among them was a hand some wreath sent by the President and Mrs. Roosevelt. The details of the arrangement of the services and escort of the body were completed by Major General Gillespie, Brigadier General Burton, Major Kean, and Captain Mitchie, United States Army. The detail of eight non-commission ed officers of the Sevent United States Cavalry acted as body-bearers. Col John T. Callaghan, commander, and the members of the camp of Confeder erate veterans constituted a guard of honor for the remains while they were being taken to the Pennsylvania sta tion. The military escort consisted of a squadron of the Seventh Cavalry, a battery of field artillery and two companies of engineers, UnIted States army. Shortly after noon, the cor tege, headed by a band, moved to the rairoad statolon via Pennsylvania avenue. In the column, in addition to the military contingent, were rep resentatives of the civic societies of which General -Lee was a member-: On arrival a tthe railroad station, the casket containing the remains was conveyed, with due ccremony, to the funeral car, in which It was conveyed to Richmond. The escort then was disbanded. Mrs. Lee was accompanied on the special train to Richmond by her brother, Major B. H. Fowle; General Lee's brother, Captain D. M. Lee; Miss Virginia Mason Dorsey, Miss Laura Lee Dorsey, Dr. Robert F. Ma son and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin S. Minor. In addition to theee members of the Lee family, many prominent army officers, including several who served in General Lee's Seventh Army Corps during the Spanish-American war, also accompanied the funeral par ty to Richmond. The train left for Richmond at 1 o'clock. The body bearers of the Seventh Cavalry re mained with the casket iuntil Alexan dria was reached. There they were relieved by a detail of an officer and. eight enlisted men of the Alexandria Light Infantry. In turn, this detach ment was relieved at Fredericksburg by a similar number of soldiers. Remains Arrive at Richmond. Richmond, Va.. Special.-The spe cial train bearing the remains of Gen. Ftzhugh Lee reached Richmond about 5.30 o'clock Monday afternoon and was met at Elba station, at the head of Broad street, by an imposing array of State military, Confederate veter ans, State and city officials and mem orial organizations. The casket con taining the body was placed upon a black caisson drawn by six black horses, at the head of each horse being a member of the Richmond Howitzers in full dress gray uniform. A proces sion was formed and the march was taken up for the city hall to solemn strains of music from a band. The bells of the city were tolled as the rocession moved, flags on the build, ings were at halt mast, and at fre quent intervals along the way special emblems of mourning appeared in drapery over store fronts and other houses. The procession was made up of the Richmond companies of the Seventieth regiment, Virginia Volun teers; the Richmond Light Infantry Battalion: the Richmond Howitzers; Lee and Picket Camps of Confederate veterans; the Veteran Cavalry Asso ciation, Army of Northern Virginia; the Sons of Confederate Veterans, and the various ladies' Confederate memor ai associations of the city. On the arrival at the city hall the casket was borne into the rotunda of the building, which had been suitably draped for the occasion, and placed upon a bier covered with black broad cloth, the band meantime playing "Onward Christian Soldiers."~ Com pany A, of the Seventh Regiment, went on duty as guard for the remains. The public was soon admitted to look for the last time upon the face of the distinguished dead. Governor Montague issue1 a proc lamation rev-iewing the diss iguished services of General Lee, and ordered all State of!!ces closed on the day of TOGO NO Russ'an Naval Forc Fighting JUNCTION OF FLEETS I Naval Officers at St. Pet clare That While Roje Lose Half His Convoy, t Cannot Seriously Oppos vance of the United Squadrons Vladivostock, Where Further Re-in forcements wait. St. Petersburg, By Cable.-Admiral Nebogatoff's junction with Vice Ad miral Rojestvensky is now considered by the Admiralty as practically assur ed, and hope for a successful issue in the approaching struggle for mastery of the sea is greatly encouraged thereby. Naval officers are prepared' to see Rojestvensky lose half his convoy, but in face of the united divisions it is believed that Togo will accomplish lit tle or nothing in the way of opposi tion to the advance to Vladivostock and that he must be content with'the aid of, the army, to try and invest by land and sea and make Vladivostock another Port Arthur. If the fleet reach es Vladivostock intact, however, naval officers here claim that victory is won. Although there is a little more than 100,000 tons of coal at Vladivostock, the re-enforcement of the. fleet, by the Cromoblo, Rossia and Bogatyr, and the torpedo boats and sub-marines now in the harbor there they claim that Ro jestvensky could drive Togo off the sea and leave Field Marshal Oyama's army 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 were evidently returning to Vladivos tock. There is a possibility that they have destroyed other small craft, al though no reports to that effect have been received. The object of their visit is not clear. It is thought that probably they hoped to torpedo the Japanese patrol at night, and it is also, suggested that the Vlad ivostock vessels planned a diversion to assist the fleet of Admiral Rojestven sky. President Bids Farewell. G!enwood Springs, Col., Special. PresMent Roosevelt Sunday enter tained at dinner his companicns on his three weeks' hunt in the Rockies. At ter the dinner, the President bade them. an affectionate farewell and promised that all would live forever in his fond est zftemory. At the dinner were P. B. Stewart, of Colorado Springs; DrdAlex ander Lambert, of New York; Guides Jacob Borah, John Goff, "Brick" Wells, John Fry and G. M. Sprague; Courier Elmer Chapman, and Secretary Loeb. In describing the function, Chap man said: "We sat just as we did in camp. Mr. Loeb was the only duke at. the party." Veteran Publisher Dead. .Mobile, Ala., Special.-Col. John Lawrence Rapier, president of the Register Company, died Sunday morn ing at 2:30 o'clock, aged 66 years. Colonel Rapier fought with distinction, in the Confederate service during the Civil War. He was the founder of The Gobfle Times, which paper was later mnerged with The Register. He was a 1 -other of Thomas G. Rapier, editod m The New Orleans Picayune. He Is' survived by his wife, four sons and one daughter. Some New DIsturbances. Warsaw, By Cable-This city Sunday celebrated the name day of Empress Alexandra Feodrovna. The socialist ~warnings not to display flags was -en erally disregarded in view of the heav penalties imposed upon householder , who fail to decorate their houses on - such occasUips. This led to' some dis turbances, angry mobs tearing down 1nd burning flags at different places. Otherwise the city was quiet. Fatal Railroad Wreck. Houston, Texas, Special-A Galvee ton, Houston & Northern train, com ing from Galveston, left the track at a curve near Harrisburg, shortly be fore midnight. the engine turning turtle, and taking all of the coaches off. Engineer Frank Cox was cremat ed under his enginet Fireman Daane ton is missing, and it Is believed that4 he was also burned. While several of the passengers were bruised, none were badly hurt. The coaches were wrecked and caught fire, the train being near ly destroyed by fire. A spreading rail caused the wreck. First Train Over New Road. Dublin, Ga., Speci.-The fi. from Eastman over the Southwestern railroad ln Sunday afternoon. T sisted of ten solid car 1o from Eastman. Presid eral Manager Kissler dent C. E. Renz wer will take a week or m the track. As soon accomplished, regxla be put on between man. Oceam St Vineyard I-aven, steamer Aransas, Joy Line, was su the barge Glendo miles southeasto ship Sunday nigh The survivors reac lifeboats of the st dower was in towo road tug, bound eas The Aransas sank after the collision. the tow kept on. have been landed h