mi to';: .-Y- LAST I "1 ii r i voluhh co. Vr -:?RALriGII-N; d; : iMMlAt I7t 1907. : - , ' '.v .-' -d.' 1 , :: v." TV' -';''' " " 'V'tA'C ..-.V"? IV" - v J. i V?V T,rn7J:" '.Lj, .L'J .Willi; : i;i TV0 CITIES .--.), J v.'Jersejf'Dlyj r ago also lv; c:aa Acwiy.'roHr xnoasana . Htri kj-rs are , at Work'nt the I New "Scale of , Wages and Further .Victories are : Looked for before' the : tJlose of the Day. ' XBy Leaned Wire to The -Times.) New York, May n.The striking 4: longshoremen won a decisive victory In Brooklyn and Jersey City today. .. ' Michael Tarkl, the largest employ lng stevedore In Jersey. City, went to strike headquarters early today and j , signed an agreement to pay the long shoremen the new scale of 40 cento , . an hour for day work and 60 cents -t an hour for flight work and ; holl- , nays, . " ' Jn Brooklyn, following the surren der by fifteen firms of stevedores yes- , terday. three- steamship companies -, whose piers are In South Brooklyn, . v surrendered today and signed agree ments to pay the new scale, 'j Nearly 2,000 men have been rein i'-i stated In Brooklyn at the new scale , of wages and almost as many-In Jor- -fsey City. , The strikers were confli A "dent,: today ; that further' 'overture for peace would come, ' from the steamship lines In Manhattan before -nightfall.- - , - s- -V Strlkc-nreakors' VIn Kash. . Scores of -strike-breakers who baa ' been slaving day and night since, the ' longshoremen's strike' began,, battlod y - with tho armed ' private detectives ; stationed on the: White Star Line pier - today lnnu effort to eaca & K Weakened ,by long wofk, llttfe rest Snd Improper food, they were-unable r ' to batter down the line at the doors of the pier, and thoy were driven baclf into snbmission.i i . , Tho rush for liberty started when one-of the strike-breakers, Angelo I'hllllpo, collapsed " from overwork , and was probably fatally hurt by the ; - 100-pound 'case which' he was carry ing falling on him. ' - ' Phllllpo had worked ceaselessly for six days and nights, with only a few moments' of sleep sandwiched In. . , :.:,: Just before the Codrte was due to , sail, today, Philllpo's body, could do no more, and he sank unconscious under the case' ho was carrying. , ' fi During theexcitement the other strike-breakers seized tho opportunity ; 'to escapo and rushed for the great . .doorways. There was a short, sharp flghtfin which tho hired guards boat '- back.' tho weakened strike-breakers. -Phjllfpo was sent .' to Bt, Vincent's ' Hospital,: where It was said that he v had sustained a .fracture of the right lea and-probably, fatal -internal lnju 'rh.."'u iii 'H i . r THH LOCUST- APPHAK.. ' M.A COJfPKTITiV! PKlLL. (i94 Special to The; Evening' Times.) , iliKjBurllngtoh, J. C; May 17. Farm--! living a fewr miles oAth, of Bur .fHinfrron'' hsvo ; .reported Mat .locusts ' have -put itf their appearance in that section, usffldent ' : in i. number, 1. is . tcared,to result in much damage. -k A asiK fe. drill, in j Khlch, a v largqfpct'oentnge of the enllstei li bersii jlsSj$(f t Jii'f portlipalod, and 'attended by a jargo aSrifl Kar of iVMnctniarA Including' many,- ladles, ''Jv.jiJtMdSat if $ VLTh& night. I if -.'Milan C'ikjln was I lolsuccess v' Idf'cfcnAwAltor'aiitl waS pUtlJimed by ' the judges the- best' drilled man 'in the company, and. -was awarded a handsorae"vsolid gold -medal,): ta be worn'Hintll at some future like event 'another proves -himself a. better sol ' dlor.' . ' 'm i." : . ' ' " sv . - it. ' tJUAnUATINQ CLASS WENT 1 ON BYMPATHETIP STRIKE. ' , (I?y Leased Wire to Tbe Times.) .: 1 Ottawa, Kns., May lWThe, members of the hit: h school graduating class. , lyal to one of Its. members, went on I a striRo last nwht and refuse to al low the common cement exercises to go on until tho faculty .had .Issued, a di ploma to a neglected member and had allowed him to take his place on the platform. ' .. ' DEATH OF A1-.I.E " . ; . .CHARLOTTE rnrsiCTAN. ';'.'-".."' - . " j congress of. Mothers were yesterday for Cannon frorrf beginning to the end. (Special to The Evening Times.) ' 'given the freedom of Pasadena. ,Ar-iSeator Cullom thinks.' that .Cannon Charlotte, N. C," May . nr. . Pirn- Hvlng In Pasadena from this city in-j would be: : the most appmpriattti "suc mnns B. Jones, one of the able.it phy- the forenoon, the women .were met by'cessor to the president could have, ad slclans of this, city, died at St. I'e- ter's Hospital yesterday, of rheuma tism. . ' ' n . mm i ilr- - l (,-: r. tvv X. tW' U - If 1 1 il. maw s . m r- ; rri" li' I I FRISCO IP ri f IIIIUj III llljfl.lil lv v : : . . . t i ' I 1 - it t Office ttf Mayor.. Surrepdjr AN INDICTMENT FOUND Such, at Least, thcrport tt Is Said That Not Only Schmits Bat Four Officials f the United Railr roods Have Been Indicted by'; the Grand Jury. (By. Leased Wire to: The Times.) San Francisco,- Cal., May " IT.- Charged by "Abe" Ruef before the grand Jury with: receiving a bribe of $B0,00a from 4be United Railroads Company, Mayor Schmitc has' reltn- quishod the. reins of San Francisco government to a committee of seven, representing the live- great commer cial organizations of the ci(y. ' . , The capitulation .of the mayor Is complwto. i He has transferred in writ ing his authority, tantamount to a power of attorney, - to the .following j Dohermann, Percy T. Morgan, P.iW. Van Slcklen, Louis E. Rosonfeld, C. B. Beptley and Charles W Slack, v Todnxhe details- of the plant of tiift city's now eustodlans wUl.be made publlcus x )ui - ,f ' Thisflt npB all tho troutlo In store for Mayor Schmita. : Fpllowing Ruefs story to-the grand Jury, which bared all .details of ,blg bribery and boodle (ylots, nnd,-it .la jlficlarcd.-acouKed the iveatt: ouiciais oi puDIlc, service corno-"j rations,; a movement .was started kq pf'the republican party in-Illinois, will farce the mayor to resign 'nd U :. InJ receive, the, solid backing of 'the Illl tall Frederlolr,: W,T'DoUi)rmann, Bf'-n(8 aelegatkin in theatipnat cohven- prominent wnoiesaio merennnt, in tne mayor's chair. It was reported today tdatltfiif feVnnclI jijrri befores mljonfn- nwuirBsuv'gni. vji'ieii a new in,jict- ment against MayoVScWi.audttlso 'fndrotmepjs nprtBst four hjgji officials ot tflo IjtoiJ IiUlryad3 Qowpany. V ' Over a flnndrcd Conversions. ;. (Special' to' The- Evening TlmesA ; t Stntesvill; Vt; May lf.-A vei?n-,ldw,TA 8Uch talk. successful 'revival meeting hlch hasj Kenator Shelby. M,tCtillom," of ,1111 been: in progress about two weeks at nols, 'declared yesterday .he ..was , lined Race' Street Methodist Church, 'con- . up In the movement designed te'ptac ducted bv Rev. E. C: Glenn of Greens- boro closed lABt night, and about one hundred ot more have given - their 1 names as candidates for1 membership In tho chnrch. - . .:: -"J i s AN OVTIAU IU TK . .' f CONGRESS OF MOTHERS. "'):,; '. .in - 1 ' - ill j Representatives Prince and: Chapman. ' (By Leased. Wire to The Tlmes.); J of Illinois, both of whom declared on Los Angeles, Cal.,, May. ;.17Three! Wednesday that the Illinois delcga) hundred delegates of the National tloft to the convention would . vote solid enrrltifres, automobiles and tallyhos. . Bu i ui "1 shortly , before nooh fvt n il "e about the city. werp v . ,' If til " - - " "ya- Ik:. : Photographs of three society .wo men who are "taking ', part in the 1 1 . ' ' v . ' i ACtors- una r ir. , incu . high- road to success. In tho .tapper left is photograph of Mm. John A. Drake, who has charge of a popular booth;, on wp!H?i'' Wght is a: photei gcaph of Miss 1 Rose Stahl, Who I Working hard to make, the Fund Pair sncccas, and: below, on. f the right is-a photograph M Miss Mando Knowlton, . and . oi uie assuiani nt Mrs. Prako'S booth. CANNON'S DOOM , Wi PRESIDENT S'.rV P3jk. Leased WlrO to The Times.) Washington. -May, It "Uncle Joe Cannon,"' according to" the war. horses tlon next Vear fo Boad the nresldeatlal ticket,. The Cannon boom for'presl- dlmtt theee admirers, of ha, speaker de- , j ,L ' '- cla.rfiiha JHfh - 'pcrlment. a4 there is ho sropplng' the tMts In .tilfj favor. - Friends and support brs of, f'tpjpsj J" scout jcjrltfi great emphasis the Idea that he is In league with the 'reactionary forces, -and hiqn of -farrfei m Mie republican party Speaker Cannon-? at the head or, the ticket" to succeed president Roosevelt nd ,,nutron5fh4l" an,!a A11'.119 speaker could be termed a reaction ary." 1 (,!C'i':.V 0.m . f.11s,m ' vt. ',,I.U4 , .1.. " ' 1 with the iresl(tent. said he was ! In ''sympathy with the views expressed by eIfPVes tne movement to put. Mm at the nemi or me ticket is steadily gain' lng grotinO.' . r - , ' ... :. Ia, ,vy : erim Reiidrt on its Tn. Chariotte ,4srinnt Has Been J Acted i 'ib5!:; Eighy-Kive Presby 'Jleon ) ffprned-f Ovor to a Special Comtniff ee'by the Assi'mbly. (By.; Leased' Wire to The Times ) Birmingham, AIsL May n. The fore noon, SBficlon' of the general assembly qf tlio Southern Prcsbyierlnn Churetl was cane' to ordor uy Dr. Mceili Ma I Kay, of Fdrt' Bmfth. Ark. Shortly at tr hl8 Modefator Howcrton took the ehalr and road, i the standing comhilt tees and the chalnrien of the most lm portnnt committees. The. -prenentAUoit of the elphty-nvc reports from nresbyt cries on the Charj Iatt- aCTccmnnt provoked Immedlatetv lively niuinimt as to tho method of proeeduro;' Pr. J, 8. Lyons, Dr. F.. BL GlaRfepw; Ir. Tnon,lBml. and Pr. Me- vheotera leading' the discussion. Pend ing discussion, greetings were received from: thn Cwrq norland Presbyterian firfvnArni iitflflointilV In lieftfiinn ni Tlvoil.. .The) report, of the theological sernt- nnry at, icin(nij was also presented. . Thk. presbytery renorts on the Char. lotte agreemmit were finally placed in vuarKB,.;. ui. . q i-oniinuiee con?. slating of a minister and layman; 'from eachVgytmd, with special Instructions to report ' n- the' constitutionality of the agreement).:' '- Texaikan, :. Ark., Atlantic City, Loulpv)ll nnd Denver "bonster olubs' ttnded Invitations for the. next as sembiy. . Among? the overtures present ed : teda:- was 4on froht ; the .' foreign mission board ssklnu that bantism be reftjsed 7hosantrtsgsn: IMdwM..ptM'1tyUnX'fW;.': Aj permanent committee:!' on. temper ance la asked for by several presby teries. The Tuscaloora, AI. presbyr tery asks for further aid for BtiUmas : Institute for the education - of negro ministers and white evangelists to b placed. In the negro evangeltstle ,tle)d. The chairmen of the. moat Important committees appointed aretas foUowst: Bills and Overtures.' Pr. . , A'b- ' I Halt, ' Nashville; JudiclaV ; Dr". Egbert smith, Kentucky; Foreign Correspond? i ence, on.' rnomas- mcttae.-. rKapsarj j Foreign Missions, Dr. OlusseU Cecil; Vlrgmia: Home Mlslsons.' Rev.cW J Alexander, Louisiana, M j TnnllcJttlon, Rev. Ncal Anderson, Alabama: "Minis terlal Education, BrJ M.i . IX";. fiardlh, Kentucky; Colored f' Evatigellsatio Rev. D. Clay Lilly, South s Carolina; Theological Seminary, vW. " C. Camp bell, Virginia: Assembly Home " -and Schools. Rev. J. B. Mark; . Atlanta Women's ' Societies, Jf Joseph" Rennie, Virglnta; Narratives? Frank-Wa Lewis,, Bible Cause. James . P.,' Smith, .' Vir ginia. 4;-;''-"'- 1 ' :v--' '-"''3': V' 'J i ; The Northern Assembly j:i ;j' By Leased Wire ttf? The Times.) . Qbhimbus, O., May if .Despite: the tact that the generaliProsbyterian A rembly began Its sessions 'Thursday with the transaction!, of some business and . considerable . preliminary Work, the formal opening. did not take plaoe until this morning when the, assembly was. welcomed to th city by Governor Harris and Mayor Banger. . The work of the assembly proper be gan at 10 o'clock, with - the. presenta tion of reports by -various standing committees. At the meeting of woman-s board of home missions the work. in Mexico '-was discussed by MissHMary Rassell; Alaska by Mrs. E. 0 Camp bell; Cuba by Rev. James- McAllister, and the Indians by Revv F. 8. Hern- The general assembly elected as Its moderator for this year ( Rev. ,W.- H. Robertson, Philadelphia, no opposition at all being made to hlra. Ir.' Charles Manton, of Parts, Texas, . wap, named as vice moderator, - , . SEATS' GO UOWN WITH V ... ,'..:-; '' HUNDREDS. OF VEOPLB. V;. '-. . -;-4i -iwi-ff .4 ' ( Tty, Leased Wire to The Tlrnn.) . ; ' Clay City, Indk,' May 17Uurlng a circus performance her last night, k -section of seat gave way., nreclpl-, Uting 250 persons to ' tha ground. About twenty vpeopl .were - Injured; flv seriously $ For a tints the audl ence was on the -verge of a panlci ."v; CmZBNS OF APEX WILL i . : votk rii;tAij cauoij tax. Superlhtendettf 'Joyner and Captain Duckett went to Apex yesterday after noon, and-spoke,' there, last: night . In the' lnteresfe of the-i local tax .election which is to be. held there In the peat few days.' Indications point to th elrtctloa-belns carried, by. substantial majority., as the people of. Apex, have mi Intention ?bf iltnrrlnir: behlad-ln the greattedacatlonal iiA-mnit which 1 I as by mor OF it 1 ".'. flage JccklteSa Bridge 4 MV-XPC'ASim- usa nssjnj i rain : PiltUTDBE J;':-, j'.f . ii ..V, jf r.:'-':" v? Three Men jtillWl Outright and Three 'Destroyed-..-' ' and j OtliMr; Rain . FroUjsht!by tfib FoK-fhf the Dyna- (Ry Leased W,lm to The Tlmrs.) CJiattanooga, Tofttt. May -17. Three mert kiled outrfeht, two others seriously Injured ,and three badly In iJurody & addition to the crashing of tho. Southern Railway freight engine No)' 30C and eleven cars through a brlIgo into Chattanooga creek, the destruction, or. a pile driver of the K,"ftf: -fcf.&c. h. Railroad, a half dozen cabin cars Or tho same road, and the partial destruction of threo residences is .the record of" death and do'struc thn following in tho wake of a pre- jhjature explosion of a- blast On the Stevenson extension' of tho Southern HallWaY, near the mouth of the tun nel CthroUgh Lookout Mountain, at p::;ieioek yesterday afternoon. According to eye-Witttesses; the Southern Railway freiBt train which 1b. known as first No. . 1$ wa on the eastern" approach ot the bridge Just a second" prOylous; to the' hurting of a iw-n. v rftguiufi v ui ctt . lvaib ; vu tun bmg&'W&nmi-ft 'thtraii..j,The engine eMttj',iwnt1(r0a Into the ereeki-ompletely -atllhg the streaia jafewjuiaWjIehj, nginoer. McMahoo who war ou on the run hlhjg boftrd Hlde f he boiler' of itho engine, managed Ho J6mp o the. aafe Side' of ' .the l bridge as ;1t Crashed ) through The: negro fireman, is up- posed to have Jumped into the creek 'The dead; 'Xty''-. M'illlam Hydw. residence "' Alton Parki fireman of N. (D. & St. L. pile W river. . V r v i.Cllnt Schafer, Dickson, Tenn.. en' glneer of the pile driver. ' Henry Fitzgerald negro fireman on Southern Railway, The seriously Injured: r Chris Costa,. Greek laborer. -Tfandell : Brothers, skull crushed, may die. Chris Goorge, Greek laborer. Yaadell Brothers, skull crushed. Injured: ( I ; Samuel P. McMahqn, Tnscambla, engineer Southern Railway, ' ribs broken, bruised.' about hedi( t , ; Hi Styles John, Greek laborer; bruised about head and body. Peter John, Greek laborer, bruised about head and legs, i;? rr' Hocks were hurled. In every diree- Wpn, some going Into the -midst of gangs of laborers and others striking houses 600 yards away. The man who touched ' oft the blast has dis appeared. - ; ... " ..' . ' " ''- rr rt ' COLUMBIA WILL ROW ' i ' . V AGAINST ANNAPOLIS. By .Leased WIreVo The Times.) New York. May: If. The Columbia Varsity crew left this morning for Am napolls, where they wlll-jrow tUe An napolis crew tomorrow.' : The Colum bia, men slnee thehr-defeat of Harvard last Saturday 'are confident ' they will beat, the1 middles. - . Jsf '4''" (.'lt 1 (By.'Leased -Wlr to The Times.) ' -Deg Moines,' la MajT' If .Two more tragedies were "added to' the Suicide Ciab list yet(Wirday,when two .women "both said"; to bsr'menibetB of the.tsiub;' ehded-'theif- lives, M Both took, carbolic, acrd at 8,o,clock, in fthO mortilnlfc'" ahd both-'are .' deaoi. ! The list 6 victims Of the clttb how. num ber eight, it Miss Lid Golden; daugh of, a farmer near iTJagler,: Iowa, awaUowedr the- poison. -( Saei wati de- kpotfdettt. i Mitt' Katta Keasler-took the same poison at the same.'bbur in. loa 'Cny.-NotOrrety' over a lawsuit wn's givieit aHhercatiBe. C - FltzRimmom to Fight Negro., , f (Btf Prised' Wir-t Ttte Tildes 1 "New. YftrkV: May lTj-Bv Sttssim- inews) today lsssedra ehallenge -te? fight Jek Joknsonn the- negro. tr.v " t -1, U EXPLOSION 1VII4T ANTI-TIIEODOIIE ?iM'i'i?y ,ri-.:'J..i:i-.;;. f,,, jf;, ---;2 iPIBLOM "r--v: GoDveoliOQ THIS PORTENDS I'Pr: If This Convention Lines Vp Soljdly Against the Administration,, the President's Plan for Contro,f the National . Convention Will be Kaoeked fnto a Cocked Hat. .'.,... - " (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Washington, May 17. Oa June 18, 1 and 20, In Denver, will be held a convention of 2,000 delegates. which csuld be accurately described as the trans-Mississippi Anti-Roose velt Convention. The national administration knows what is going on, and is fighting at every point In the effort ito secure control: of ' the convention. It is realized that If - this convention, in Its discussions and resolutions, by substantially unanimous expression lines up against the administration. the 'president's plans for. control of the national convention In 1908; for nomination of Taft.and for perpetua tlon of Roosevelt policies, will have received a blow far more severe than any yet delivered. f : Governor Henry A. Buchtel, ;, Of Colorado, called the convention, In pursuance of a resolution . adopted by the Colorado legislature last , win ter. " That resolatlon - wasJ adopted by the same legislature which elected Simon Guggenheim to, ; be ' United States senator. " Ouggenhulm is member of the famous Guggenheim family that ' controls ;the -Bmelter trnM. Jtt is'Alleged that tha. jUust, In league with the powerful business interests of the inter-mountain coun try, is interested1 in the movement, j" i'The Cnufof hev Matter, r, r At te: bdttomVbf ,,thV troAblef is the policy of activei persistent war fare On big Interests that have been charged; with getting--' -special ad' Vantages out of the pHblie lands. At the1 same time, the policy of hedging off forest reserves has been carried to a point ; widely regarded as ex treme. The forest reserve policy is not Popular In the west: It is charged that an empire bigger than Prance is bow laid oft in forest re serves. Senator Clark of Montana charges that - the administration of forest reserves and of other public lands Is driving the American immi gration' to Canada. In short, land fraud prosecutions have alienated the big Interests, and the forest' reserve policy with the restriction.-of public land entries and alienated many of the plain peo ple of the west. By skilful handling of these elements it is hoped at the Denver convention to get the west squarely on record as opposing the administration. Forester Gilford Pinchot, whom the western senators described last winter as the "feudal lord of a do main larger than France, and more absolute ruler of it than the car Is of Russia" will go, and will make Trojan efforts to stem the tide of opposition to himself and the presi dent It Is expected that . Commis sioner Bellinger of the general land office will address the gathering and that many other representatives of the administration Iwil take par , QUEST FOR EDWARDS, HISS SCOTT IS GONE .H.-4.llnf ' (By Leased Wine to The Times.) Washington, D. C, May 17.-Central office detectives are stilt scouring the city: for, Colonel Charles A; Edwards, a welt -known newspaper correnpond ent and secretary of the democratic congressional campaign ' committee, who they charge, stabbed Senor Al elandro.Carlaod.t -an ' attache of the Peruvian legation ' earlyt ; Thursday morning: as a result of rtvalrly over a young Woman named Louise Bcott.' ' " The search for ? Colonel Edwards by vtha . detectives :. continued all : last night' and wHl?- be f ' preseeuted ' ' with vigor today, the 'police apparently.-l- Ins4etrtMnea to gOvto ihe bttom of. the affair and prosecute, even if Mr. Garland fails to make a complaint. The whereabouts ot. MIsst Scott, re mains a mystery. It is Believed-," how ever that, after reaching the De Soto, she .packed up her. belongings and left' town;, r,- "V. I . t " llEfiLtsit: . , , v : - -.V:r-r .'"'"''. ; ,'. V-'-- ' - ' ' ;. "'.'" -'-:'."' ') ".,:'!&. . ' Rnef Says He "Gave-the Mayor Fifty , ' Tholislind" Dollars Atf Mis fciose H'f ; V bf ""tiim'l8loir. Rue Sinks "feeieatj ti t j. the' ' Wright of His VghAiae And .' ' Gnnt.' II (By Leased Wire to The Times.) San Francisco, Cal., Mayr17. Abram :. Ruers latest confession to 'the grand v jury Is that he'sold fhe overhead trol-, ley privileges f San Francisco to Pat- rick Calhoun for 1200,900" In cold cash. He . swore on his oath ' that out of '. this bribe moneys he had paid Mayor Schmita 150.000 for bis ffictar sanction , to the secret sale. -'He confessed that - he had given $100,000 to the fuperv!s ors as payment for. tbelr votes: in pass lng the ordinance-legalising what be and Mayor Schmits had" done. f ':':u:-.:-' Pale and "broken, he : was scarcely ' able to tell his story upon the witness stand. His voice "broke when he con- f eased to ; the 'compact I with r' Mayor a Schmits. His eyes were swollen With " '. teaTs as hs told how Tlrey ti Ford. ' of the United. Railroads,1 had paid him ' the money out of his: own. hands, for Tlrey J"ord had - always - been 1 Ruefs close friend, and- It burned his soul W -bring this man to a sure Indictment : for his " crime. - V' ' 1, '. When" ha had finished J with the United - Railways he nearly t fell : from- . his Chair. Four " granA Jurors - rtiahed to help. him and .held ;hlm, until ha - - could . regain sufficient,, strength -'to standalone. ' - "J'i'.c "My Qod," said Grand ,, Juror-ties e , Coffln, thts Is awful.' I never want to pass through another hour lffe this," - ;,!.. ma. screngtd, ione. ,: Euef stood in ths' grand Jury room for ten minutes before he could trust himself to walk to the street.- To test ify further was Impossible,'-his strength , was gone, and further racking meant ' couapse. But proud as ever, Ruef. walked oat Into the halt front whers 'sat the news ' -paper men, giving ' no sign of the tor. ' tures of the hour, within the. grand Jury chamber" He smiled ths.. same .smlls that ever made interviewing him sj . pleasure, and nodded -cheerfully to v, those he knew there," He got Into this automobile quickly and' rode away with Detective Burns' and Elisor Big-. ' gy. 1 Only when ' outiof sight -' did : hs lean back In the tohneau-. and close his eyes as though trying to hide from :t his sight the memory of the. day. ' And the, gcand Jury, adjourned a Short time -afterward. The members walked' sol- , ' emnly from the chamber without "ths usual jesting to. the halLv' Th awful 7 spectacle of a powerful man's break- ' ' lng down before their eyes had on-1 nerved them. , Kuef will appear again today. s -"Please don't ask u any questions," said Some of ths, grand Jurors.': Ruefs .' confession implicated Patrick Cal houn and Tirey Ford. It also involved ' ' although to a lesser degree William ' Abbott, who. Is a member of Tirey Ford's legal staff. ' . i The confession was complete as .to : details. It outlined every step taken from the time the first money was paid ' . to Ruef by Ford until the last pay ment had been placed In James , L. Gallagher's hands ' to be distributed ( among the. supervisors. t . . . " THE; BAPTISTS OUtlfPllCE (By Leased Wire teXThe times.) , v Richmond.. Va- May. It. The South- ern Baptist Generals convention, which . opened , its sessions here-lSst night re-; : opened this mbrnlngr at-1 9:80 o'clock, '. Harry A Pollard, flirst vles-presldetit, . presiding.--i FTre' thouaaWlw delegates attendeds. The raomlagf Was spent in hearing th reports of:tb' borne mis- slon, foreign mission and Sunday . school boards, all of . which "showed increased accompjlshment over '- last : Jsx,-k-''ir-''.?t!fi r Rev.'! Goode,. president Of the Vir- . glnia Baptist Aaoseiattom colored,-was ' Invited to address the convention. He acknowledged the great aid of - white Bftpttsts-1" evaneHMK' Work among , hl racej ai-'hromlseV, hearty co-op-ertioa.i Thar Rev. Dnv, t. B. Haw theme. addreaeedn th' gathering ,' on . Some things on which It behooves Baptists of this generation to put su preme -emphaslsr . There- waa much complaint of the bad accoustlcs of ths Mew auditorium and many 'left ' tho hail because they were unable to hear. , -. ....... . .