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Washington — Andrew H. Nichols, Tacoma, track gauge and track claw; George Bronson. Seattle. lesc*. . California— Henry W. Ayre«, Lew Anireles, loowleaf ledger: Alden A. Bartlett, San FYan dBco, wool-cut tine machine; Guctav A. Bohrnd. San Francisco, building construction • Franz t3. Br«Sefeld, a»Klguor <.ne-hair to W. L. SjH-neor. San Franclcco, garment nupporter; Charles Cady. Berkeley, caplsed bottle cpaner; Harold Davene*. Sierra Madre, bee hive; Louis C. Qrauhner. San Francisco, concentrator; Charles W. Gross, San Francisco, box couch hlnre: Charles L. Orunderl and T. W. Tucker. San Francisco, crude oil burner; Samuel Ja ccby. San Francleco, hermetically sealed metal bcx; Thomas D. Joseph, apparatus for extraciinr metals by chemical Droceae; Man uel C. Marhano, ¦ Morro, riveting machine - Georre A. Mattern. Berkeley, under garment - Sarah Quee. Pasadena, match safe; Kdwln W. -Tucker. and C. L. .Grunnell, San Francisco, oil burninc system. WASHINGTON. D. C.. April 26.— Postmasters commissioned: California — Otto C. Heck. Oil Center. New postofflce^ — Charles A. Kall- Ktrom, Suffenholts, Humboldt County. War Department — Major Frederick G. Hodgson, quartermaster, will pro ceed from Vancouver Barracks to Fort. Casey, Washington, on official business pertaining to water supply of the latter -post, under instructions from the quartermaster general. The following patents have been is sued: "1 • - Grant Patents. Washington Departments Establish - Postofllce, Issue Army Orders and OF INTEREST. TO PEOPLE OP THE PACIFIC COAST Cockran had sat througa the entire speech of Dalzoll unmoved and waited for him to finish. Then, .rising from his seat, he was greeted with tumul tuous applause by. the Democrats. When order was restored ae bosan his reply by stating that •"from the posi tion of the newest and mc-st humble rnember of the House 1 seem to have i>een suddenly f-xalted with the. dig nity of a political -issue." Personally, he said, he did not care in engage In a war of nbuse with the "gentleman" from Pennsylvania, referring to Dal zcU's appellation, of himself. , Cockrau denied the charge that he had received $15,000 frum the Palmer end Buckner campaign committee, i He who, without conscience and without conviction, find an opportunity, now with one party, now wi.h another, to find a market f<T their peculiar wares, among which is not respectability." MrVV YORKKR INDIGNANT. Continued From Page 1, Colnnin 7 If Dalzell believed the charges he had brought. ' it showed him (Dal zell) in a pitiable state. He added: "I can always protect myself from the gentleman from Pennsylvania by choosing, my own side of the street. Before I sit down I shall ask this House to agree with me on this, that if what the gentleman has said is true I am unworthy of its membership;, if what he said Is false, he is unworthy of membership." Cockran was interrupted with loud cheers from his Democratic colleagues. He then read his resolution. A noisy controversy followed. The" chair declined to rule on the point of order until he has oppor tunity to examine the precedents. At 5:15 p.m. the House took a recess until 10 o'clock to-morrow.* He denied the charge that he ever was a greonbacker. and said that in i the campaign of 1896 he combated with ¦ all his energy what he believed to be i a heresy regarding the finances advo cated. by Mr. Bryan. also denied that he ever nad received money for supporting President AIc- Kinley's election in 18S6. DENOUNCES COCKRftK. flcial or otherwise, showing casualties on either side. SETS BOMB OX BATTLESHIP. Stranger's Suicide Follows Attempt to Destroy the Alexander III. KRONSTADT, April 26. — A sensa tional story is. t afloat* here of an at tempt to destro}^ the. battleship Alex ander III. According to the reports a sailor" saw a stranger, wearing the uniform of an officer, going down into the engine-room of the battleship, fol lowed . him .and saw. him attaching something, connected with a wire to the dynamos! After the. stranger left the sailor examined the attachment and" found it to be a bomb. The sailor at once cut the wires, ran upon deck to tell .what had occurred and found that 1 the stranger- had hanged himself. The crew of the Alexander III was instructed not to' speak of the occur rence and it is said the stranger was a madman or a member of some revo lutionary organization/" to whose lot it, had fallen to blow up the Alex ander III. . Unconfirmed 1 Report of Japanese At : tack Upon Newchwang. RUMOR OF BOMBARDMENT. TIENTSIN. April 2 6.— It is reported "upon good 'authority that the. Japanese fleet . bombarded the town of • New chwang last night. The Russians deny that there. 1p any truth in. the report. , ST. PETERSBURG, April 26; — The authorities here have no news to con firm the :. reported, bombardment • of Newchwang last night. Press Boat's Servants Released. A NEWCHWANG, April- 26.:— After having been . detained for ;¦ two' weeks and thoroughly examined by the :Rus sian authorities, the two Japanese ser vants who'came into port on the press boat Fawan) have been released. They were deported to Chefu to-day. Rumored Plain of Japan to Intercept Scuodron. MAY OCCUPY CHINESE SOIL. PARIS. April 27.— *A dispatch to the Petit Parlsien from its Shahghal cor respondent says: ; ! "A rumor la current here that Japan intends .to occupy a. i portion I of the Fukien coast, opposite Formosa, with the cbfect of;, preventing ( the Russian Baltic J < squadron /passing through . the Formosa Strait.'.' ./• _ - Alleged Spy Not a Soldier. "LONDON,- April 27.~The Tokio correspondent of j the Times says that one of the Japanese spies shot by the Russians at Mukden was identified as Sonde,'a'*Japanese^ Judge, ;and not a military man. as had been stated. •' Skrydloff Soon to Start. ST.* PETERSBURG." 'April 26.— Vice Admiral i Skrydloff ; will leave to-mor row for Sebastopol, from which place he will start on May 5 for the Far East. ' ' ' " ¦•" " ; ¦¦¦:¦ ¦...;-, Plan for.: JPurchase of -Warships. ST. PETERSBURG/. April On account of' the . refusal ,.tp , deliver the Argentine cruisers before the -money is paid, it ; is ; said - a"; dompany*4si being organized in_ Paris to", arrange I to"r : the sale of the vessels 'through Charles R. JTllnt ; of , New '. Y6rk^<3g?SS3£ Youns ladies should dress well. If you have a «ood position BARON, the ladles' tailor of "P!i Market street, will clothe you stylishly at reasonable flsrures on wr«kly payments. • • BISHOP COS ATX TO LECTCTRi:.— Right Rev. Bishop Canaty of Lc« Angelea will de liver * puMlc lecture next Monday evening tn the Alhambra Theater under the aa*p!c?» of the Catholic Truth Society. Great Interest Is taken In the lecture, as Bishop Conaty la one of the foremost orators and scholars of the Catholic church In the United States. . .^ -. Fire Devastates a Town. LEMBERG, Austria, April 26. — About 200 houses of the town of Buczacz were destroyed by a fire which broke out at midnight April 25-26. Some 3000 of the inhabitants are homeless. FIGHTING AT THE YALU, Continued From Page 1, Column 4. ¦ GUTHRIE. O. T.. April 26. — A tor nado struck the town of Pawhuska, the capital of the Osage nation, yes terday. The Catholic school building, a large three-story stone structure, lo cated on a high bluff a mile from town, and outbuildings were wrecked. The building was filled with teachers and pupils, but all escaped injury. In town two livery barns and two resi dences were wrecked and many small er buildings blown down. Only one person was seriously Injured. Cyclone Strikes a Town in. Oklahoma and Many Buildings Are Demolished. SCIIOOLHOUSE WRECKED, BUT IXMATES ESCAPE The guards were preparing them selves for a fight, but this proved to be unnecessary. Deputy Sheriff World walked ur> to "Mother" Jones as she was leadirfg the mob -with song and shouts and declared her under arrest. The crowd made a threatening demon stration, and the deputy was in a dan gerous position for a time, but Mrs. Jones told them not to injure the offi cer and submitted to arrest. She is now in jail. PRICE, Utah, April 26.— "Mother" Jones, celebrated as a breeder of trou ble in strike regions, to-day broke a smallpox Quarantine and renewed her agitations.- "Mother" Jones has been stirring up the strikers in the coal re gions here for some time, urging vio lence, and the Sheriff called for troop* as a result of her. work. Troops were denied him, and he is seeking to main tain order with the aid of a large force of deputies. "Mother" Jones visited a striker who was quarantined for. small pox. The local he'alth authorities promptly quarantined her. She re fused to observe the quarantine and as a result of the dispute 120 strikers were arrested for rescuing her from re straint. She promised the State au thorities she would observe the quar antine, being told of the dangers which might result from her spreading the disease. To-day she broke her promise and escaped from quarantine. Eluding the guards which were watching the house, she went to the camp of the strikers and called upon the women to rally to her aid. They gathered about her, paying no atten tion to the perils of infection. Children came also. Men were added to the throng. Armed with whatever weap ons came handy— clubs, revolvers, shot guns and a few rifles, with many knives— the mob marched on toward Price to rescue the prisoners held un der guard by the deputy sheriffs. Marching through the main street of the town, she gathered followers as she went. Special Dispatch to The Call. "During the flreship attack of March 27 , 1 went out with Makaroff, in a, launch." , ' . . . . ¦ The reports that the Emperor's health „ is unsatisfactory are untrue.. He transacts business with his Minis-; ters as usual, takes his customary walk in the garden of the Winter Pal ace in the afternoon and later almost dally takes a drive about the city. A letter dated April 4, written by Colonel Agapeieff, a member of the staff of Vice Admiral Makaroff.who was lost at the time of the Petropavlovsk disaster on April 13, throws consider able light on the conditions prevailing at Port Arthur. He said: "Our squadron suffers from the great disadvantage of. not being able to get out of this harbor except at high tide, which \js especially awkward if it is high water before dawn. The enemy has not failed to profit thereby, com ing up with impunity on the ebb tide and attacking the whole. morning . if the squadron Was Inside. I mentioned; this to Makaroff. thinking, he would not take notice of it; but the next time it was high water before daylight he ordered the squadron out the previous afternoon, by which he spoiled the Jap anese game and also avoided thedan ger of collision In going out'a narrow entrance after dark. "During the cruise to the Miaotao Islands j on March 25 we overhauled four British steamers going to Yinkow and a Japanese steamer with some Junks. The. wireless telegraphic elec tric bell at that moment reported' the enemy's fleet in sight, and we hurried ly sank the steamer and Junks. We afterward found it was a false alarm. In the haste. of going into battle order the Peresvlet slightly rammed the Sevastopol..- , .,..,.;. •,• i-v.,^ "The present war is unlike any pre vious war in that the whole nation is following its phases with j breathless anxiety. Our nerves are strained much as are those of the defenders of Port Arthur. We weep over our reverses and rejoice at the slightest success. Like the English in the Boer war, we are one of the greatest of the world powers fighting a smaller one, and the sentiment of patriotism overwhelms all other considerations." ' MAKAUOFF'S HARD TASK. "The nation understands them just as well and learns from" the ~ first lesson the necessity "of a refofni of the per sonnel of the^nai'y/* The. present sys tem of promoting officers according to the number of . nautical miles they sail may work well in a highly efficient navy, but it is absurdly dangerous for ours, where the .capacities of officers fluctuate. As a result, many of our best officers are discouraged into' re tirement. "It would be wejl to put an obelisk in front of the admiralt? inscribed 'Re member Makaroff.' His death should be the signal .to destroy the old order of. things, of which he fell a victim after heroically doing his best with the defective weapons at his disposal. Makaroff 's death marks a new era for the Russian navy. The old days, marked by a muddle of carelessness and' ineffi ciency, are over, and we have learned our lessons. The Novoe Vremya to-day contained a remarkably free criticism of the Rus sian navy, as follows: 'Twenty-eight years ago I went with your predecessors to fight for the Em peror's country against the Turks. It is now the . monarch's wish that I Should lead you again, as commander in chief of the , -fleet which ypu are going to join on board the battleship Alexander III." . CRITICIZES RUSSIAN. NAVY. : The entrance into service of, four sub marine boats at Port Arthur means, the addition of a new and formidable weapon for defense of the stronghold. The* dispatch of the boats in sections over the ¦ railroad has been shrouded in secrecy and even to-day many in St. Petersburg are inclined to doubt the report by officials of their presence at. Port Arthur or to accept, the in formation as trustworthy. An . effort bow to close or blockade Port Arthur will be too dangerous, \i is thought, for Vice Admiral Togo to attempt! . j The report that the Baltic fleet Is to leave Libau on Thursday for the East is incorrect. Some of the ships are going into commission and those being completed cannot be. finished before July. ' . « Vice Admiral Skrydloff, recently ap pointed commander of the Russian naval forces in the Far East, to-day visited the barracks of the naval guard. Addressing the latter, he made his first uublic reference to the going out of the Baltic fleet, saving: ST. PETERSBURG, April 26.— It is stated in railroad circles that the Gov* ernment has/decided to 'double track the Trans-Siberian. Railroad and that Prince Khilkoff, Minister of Railroads, has submitted to the Emperor, an esti mate according to which this work can be completed in eighteen months. A telegram from Port Arthur jsays: "Experiments, with' submarine* boats here have been attended .with brilliant success. All is quiet in the region of the fortress." Before sinking the Goyo Maru the Russian commander signaled: "Re move crow and passengers: will attack immediately." and' then, after allow ing a reasonable time, fired on the steamship, which sank near the harbor entrance. No lives were lost. Up to this hour the Russian ships have not reappeared. ST. PETERSBURG, April 26.— The Emperor has received a dispatch from the commander of the Vladivostok squadron, confirming the reptrrts of the sinking of a Japanese transport of 600 tons at Gensan. The object of the squadron's cruise is to' destroy all transports traversing the Sea of Ja pan, show the Russian flag in Korean waters and Impress the population ad vantageously; also to compel the Jap anese to guard all their transport ex peditions. The Foreign Office denies that Rus sian ships have been sent to guard neutral territory west of the Liao Riv er. The report may have grown out of the stationing of a. force on the west bank of the river, opposite Newchwang. to defend the. city in that direction, command the river and prevent the Japanese ascending the river. No pro test has been received from the Chi nese Government, and it is said China has no ground for a protest. The garrison at Gensan. which.num bered about SOO men, was reinforced last week and the troops now there are engaged in throwing up breast works. There is some artillery at Gensan. "While the Japanese author ities here consider the situation at Gensan to be serious, they are not ap prehensive. | GENSAN, Korea. April 26.— There were two Russian destroyers concern ed in the sinking of the Japanese mer chant steamship Goyo Maru in this harbor yesterday morning. The de stroyers entered the harbor, sank the steamship and then rejoined threq cruisers lying outside the harbor en trance. ¦At '4' o'clock the Russian cruisers were seen approaching the harbor, and fears were entertained that tlw town wa> ¦ to be shelled. The townspeople hurriedly gathered their valuables and sought the protection of the inland town, and, as the harbor is unprotect ed and has a large Japanese settle ment, valuable property was left: to the mercy of Russian i-.tv.'lls. It is rumored that the Japanese have succeeded in luring the Russians from the protection of the Vladivostok guns and that there is another Japan ese squadron between them and their retreat, but this report apparently is unfounded. SEOUL. Korea. Monday, April 25. — Further details of the sinking of the Japanese merchant steamship Goyo Maru at Gensan, Korea, this morning by vessels of the Russian Vladivostok squadron have reached here. The Russian vessels entered the harbor of Gensan at 11 o'clock. The crew of the Goyo Maru- was ordered ashore, but It is not known that it went, and whether the seamen escaped or^ not has not been reported. The townspeo ple took refuge in the hills when the Russian warships came in and the garrison made preparations to resist a landing party. After the Goyo Maru had been sunk the Russians retired. No attack was made on the town. This movement is regarded here as supplementary to the recent Russian occupation of Songjin. which is about 150 miles northeast of Gensan, by a detachment of Cossacks and for the purpose of determining the strength of the Japanese on the east coast of Korea. It is also considered as a di version from the activity on the Yalu River. KOBE. Japan, April 26. — Under full steam, a strong squadron of Japanese armored cruisers was observed this morning making its way. north in the Japan Sea. It is believed that the ves sels are on their way to attempt to cut off the Russian sQU.idron that ap peared at Gensan, on the east coast of Korea, yesterday. It is feared, how ever, that, as the Czar's cruisers are superior in speed to those of this squadron, they will escape in safety to the shelter of Vladivostok. .Speel*] Cable to Tl>* Call and New York Her ald. Copyright. 1004, by the New York Herald Publishing Company. Her Followers March to At tack a Prison, but She Is Soon Placed Under Arrest GATHERS AX ARMY DUBLIN;, April 26. — King Edward, Queen Alexandra and theh ; suites landed " aW Kingstown from the royal yacht Victoria and Al be %£" before noon and soon afterward proceeded to the Punchestown races", hie Th'e" sovereigns were accorded -a splendid reception arid large crowds assembled" to greet them. The vessels In the harbor were gayly' 'trimmed with bunting, while Kingstqwh was bright .'with Venetian masts and festoons. -; Several "addresses were presented to the King, replying to- which' he ex pressed his delight at finding the same spirit of hopefulness, in tlie future as evinced on the occasion of his last visit. With the improvement in agri culture and industry, the "King con fidently anticipated a growth of better feeling throughout the country. He believed that the greatest hope for the future^ of. Ireland lay jn education, for the wide diffusion or cultivated intel ligence was the surest guarantee of so cial peace and the most fruitful source of self-reliance. His; Majesty Expresses* De light : at Good Conditions "of the 'Country and People CHEEKS FOR SOVEREIGNS Norman,' after seeing King Edward, said that any personal or national at tempt to step in between the combat ants seemed to him to be out of the question and that he would be very much surprised indeed if the King had done or said anything which would give rise to any such rumor. King Edward arid the Foreign Office are* fully aware thai any offer of even suggestion { looking to- peace at the present stage ..would, be /esented by both Japan find Russia,' and it -is em phatically "denied that the rKlng, even in the.family .circle at "Copenhagen, has suggested mediation, much less inter venUon^ His -Majesty..: Ms expressed sympathy with his royal relative over the losses sustained by . the Russian fleet, but he :iias, been "equally thought ful toward the Mikado. It is believed, here that all rumors bearing upbn "the subject of pacific ef forts,'royal'or otherwise, are due to misapprehension concerning the nego tiations outlined in the press dispatches of April 9,' which said that, after King Edward had. given his personal assur ances to Emperor Nicholas that the anti-Russian comment in the British press did notrrepresent the feeling of his Government, Foreign Secretary Lansdowne informed the, Russian Am bassador that he would' be glad to re open negotiations looking to a settle ment of all matters In dispute between Russia and Great Britain. Lord Lans downe did not stipulate any basis or enter into any "details. Einbassador Benckendbrff expressed his * pleasure at •¦ the offer and trans mitted it to St. Petersburg, where Lord Lansdowne's proposal, was' understood to have been taken as a material ex pression of King Edward's personal wishes and therefore the matter was dropped. These negotiations are now progressing satisfactorily, though no immediate completion of them can be expected. y Henry Norman, M. P., who was-re ceived in special private, audience by King Edward yesterday, "on his . re turn from Russia," as the court cir cular, to-day puts it, says, he was amazed at the grasp of detail dis played "by King Edward in dealing with matters connected .with Russian policy at home and abroad. He re lated details of his audience with the Emperor of Russia and intimated that King Edward has set his heart on settling forever the long grievances be tween the two countries. • L6xbON,:>Jfpril;' 26.— Inquiries' here reveal ho' trace of /any effort Inten tionto- intervene inrthe Russo-Japan ese Avar.* -No ; step looking 'to a * pacific settlement of. I the conflict; has > been taken by the' Foreign Office, nor, so -far as known in : riowning ; street, \by/ King Edward^.himsert., Those who have.dis T cu3se^tV?6>War ;^\vf th ; the King within the last* f ewi/days ssfy that such -action is the^lastVthing lie contemplates"; " : Such' aV/step, however informally taken,-;so It is'held here, might, serious ly encTarigetvthe vital negptiatibns now progressing; between' Russia, and Great Britain with a view to. the. settlement of outstanding 'differences- between the' two 'countries.- ' ' ' : - Great Britain Will Not At tempt to Arrange .for . v! Peace. ' Slav Commander Spares the Town -the Horrors of a Bombardment. Far East Stronghold Reports That All Is Quiet at • ;• Present. Woman Agitator, Exposed to Smallpox, Breaks From Quarantine in Utah Town Port, of Gensan Is at the 3Iercy of the Russian Successful Tests of Sub marine Boats at Port Arthur. JAPANESE SQUADRON SPEEDING NORTH TO INTERCEPT VLADIVOSTOK CRUISERS KING EDWARD ON ERIN'S SOIL No Movement Toward In- ! tervention: by Any of the Powers. Boyal * Party Arrives at Kingstown and Proceeds to the Punchestown Races MOTHER JONES DIRECTS MOB THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 190i: 2 ADV^TISEMENTS. Are the only authorized agents iq -San Francisco for the cele- brated English- made leather specialties of the MARK CROSS CO., LONDON ftflr^prta PH BJ B[ QB k pB tSx V^J New Invoices Just Received The Mark Cross Glove Men and Women Saddle stitched, hand sewed, in all the newest shades-Adopted by the fashionable set of London and New York. Also novelties in fine Leather Goods, Suit Gases, Hat Boxes, Cigar and Cigarette Gases Card . : : Cases, Toilet Sets, Travelers' Kits, Puttees, Automobile Gloves, etc. All. of the: very best and highest , class of manufacture.' R0Q5 BROS. KEARNY AT POST.'", ' ADVERTISEMENTS. ' After the cold winter r. hot sum- mer is predicted. Prepare for it by building up your system now. Get Hood's to-day. Of all the good habits which people follow, ,no other is sup- ported by the same amount of sound common sense, or bro- duces such beneficent results, as the Spring Medicine Habit, for, after all, good health :s the great- est earthly blessing. Of the medicines used for the Spring Medicine Habit Hood's Sarsaparilla is by far the best. It exceeds all others 'in general use, as it does in general excellence and medicinai merit. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, clears ' up the complexion, re- moves the cause of pimples, boils and other eruptions, creates a Rood appe- tite, gives strength and tone to-' the whole system. Cures, positively" cures,' Scrofula, Salt Rheum, . Dyspepsia, Ca- tarrh, Rheumatism, Blood Poisoning, etc ' Spring Habit. Get the ADVEBTISEMENTS. 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