KIDNAPPED BOY WAS MURDERED Horace Marvin Found In Field Near His Home. WAS PLACED THERE BY SLAYER. A Duck Hunter Finds the Four-year- old Lad in a Spot Where All the Grass Had Bren Burned Away and Which Has Been Traversed Daily by Searchers. M— ———— pn —— MYSTERY STILL DEEP. The body of Horace Marvin, who disappeared March 4, was found near his father's farm. All indications point to the probability that it was placed there within the last few days. Dr. Marvin, the father is cer- tain the boy was kidnapped and murdered, and every effort will be made to solve the mystery. Dover, Del. (Special). .—Lying face downward of ground, which has been traversed re- peatedly he body of 4-vear-old who has been sought in many of the country since March 4, found Saturday afternoon. It his fourth birthday and two almost to the hour since he was last seen on a marshy piece disappeared, Marvin, parts since Horace dered and his body brought back re- gently is the belief of those concern- ed in the case, Dr. Horace N. Mar- vin, the father, being firmly vinced that the little fe dered. The body was in a state of pre- gervation indicating that the lad had probably been dead not more than a4 few days and was exactly as when he was last The only mark indicate foul play was a discoloration of the face. However, an autopsy is to be held and a rigid investigation made The spot where the body was found ifs about half a mile from Dr. Mar- vin's Bay Meadow farm, and the dis- covery was made by “Ollie” Pleasan- ton, a farmer. Pleasanton, who lives a adjoining that of the Marvins, upon the child's body while gunning. It lay face downward in a patch of meadow grass Pleasanton Baw it at a distance of 20 day several gunners passed over this land, but none saw the body, if was there then. The s the body was found is the Marvin home River. When “Ollie” on the body intact. The tiny buttoned securely about the and not an article of clothing which he bad on when he disappeared was missing. His knit cap was pulled over his face and his mittens on his hands. Had Been Marvin says he the same marsh nearly gince the disappearance, detectives, burned the gra place weeks ago, but signs of the body. The theory that the recently placed is supported by Marvin, as well on the spot tall sage dressed geen to came says he pot where midway and the Delaware Pleasanton came up- found the clothing woolen he Burned Over. Dr searched every and off Saw day with the four no child has been where was found the fact that Dr as detectives, stood when they burned the grass from it he Li led over time and again last week by neighbors, of the child was seen. Dr. Marvin went on a run place described by Pleasanton and gently pieked up the little form, pull- ing his cap from the face to make sure that it was his boy. Being satls- fled that it was his son, the Doctor wrapped the Lody in a sheet and car- ried it to the fle! the family. Dr. Marvin, shortly after the body was found, said: “Though I am ine Horace closely oner arrives, I am murdered, his body brought back and left lving on marsh to g the impression that he wandered out there and died. The clothing no signs of having burned, as undoubtedly have been the the body lain there when swept over the marsh.” There are within ad no sign to house, where he noti- unable to exam- until the -cor- certain he was 3 : the ive showed case the ome persons who sti marsh has the beginning these persons, in building their ry, are unable to the thorough searches made of the wohle and been froze to death, ed by them of the my conte since but theo- ster reconcile it with that of marsh. wore stretch Higher Rate On Meat, Washington An excep- tion to the general rule in fixing the rates of duty on American g { Special) ment now pending at the nimum extended to nations dppears to have been in the case of meats. In that ease the present minimum rates for “meats, except bacon, and edible entrails, ex- cept those of poultry, fresh or chill- ed,” Ig 27 marks per 100 kMos. The new rate on such meats is placed at 35 marks. other made Parade Of Protest, Boston (Special).—About 10,000 people participated in the parade and masg-meeting held by the labor or- ganizations of this city Sunday as a protest against the proceeding against Moyer, Haywood and Petti- bone for alleged conspiracy in the murder of Governor Steunenberg, of Idaho. A Beandanavian social club, which brought up the rear, displayed three plain red flags. A thousand or more women were in line. SCORES KILLED AND HUNDREDS HURT Gunpowder Magazine In Canton, China, Explodes---Massive City Wall a Wreck. Great de- ( The bodies recovered from the i ruins in the vicinity of the magazine Hongkong (By Cable) .- was struction of life and property caused at Canton by the explosion of a gunpowder magazine, Twenty-one bodies already have been recovered | m : a grt from the ruins. Hundreds of per-| I'he officer in charge of the maga- sons were injured. | zine wag among those killed, and Fifteen buildings were razed tol" hen his body was recovered a pipe the ground and over 100 were seri- was found clutched in his hand, | ously wrecked. A section, 200 feet which suggests the possible cause of | long, of the massive city wall was | the explosion. thrown down. The historical many-, The financial are enormous, | storied pagoda escaped with slight The city of Canton is about six| injuries. The officials and staffs of miles in circumference and Is enclos- | the hospitals are doing their best to ed by about 20 feet thick and | succor the sufferers. from 25 to 40 feet high There are | In the Shamien suburb, where the | 16 into the city, besides two foreigners live, a terrific shock, caus- wates gates. ed by the explosion, was felt, but | The ine-storied pagoda, | the residents were unharmed, dating from the beginning of the Mid Some idea of the force of the dle Ages, is situated in the plosion may be gathered from part of what known as fact that the roofs of houses a City The foreigners distant from the exploded magazine | Shemien were blown off. A number of im- rtificial portant Chinese and foreign mercan- the tile establishments were completely | of Ca 1d demolished. were shockingly mutilated. Many tcorpses of men and women were with. | out heads. losses walls gates famous n ex the mile We the in t 1850 tern | is Old he in on the Honan The 1 ulation estimated at about suburb, foun island river op G00 «| MNT DED ON [ee 1] OCCUrred MINE DISHSTER 0s 55h January that Colliery. FIFTY HAVE NARROW ESCAPE. |b Catastrophe Probably Due to an Extraordinarily Heavy Shot Were 64 Men in the Mine at the Time, but 53 Managed to Escape Unhurt. h the second shaft of th ther There The o 11 for as either dead, wounded or miss ing, the officials ink men are accounted and mine casualties co than 11 nn ii A 8Y! W. Va i : 23% COAL killed, | which is severely burned and four others are | valuable as a Charleston, (Special). men were four were r pt entombed and probably dead or Leap Creek coal n result of a mine disaster at the Whip- ple Mines in the Leap Creek district. The mine where the explosion ! ni shaft 450 feet deep. It and doubtless did much to Ip has two openings and belongs to the 1 ' from Dixon also own the Stuart an explosion of 0 inued working the OC ~ interests, who Mine, where WRECK OF A FLYER. Police Graft In Missouri. § ity, Mo mooial Disastrous Smashup On Ohio River 4 Division of B. & O. Parkersburg, WwW. Va. (Spe ial) Train No northbound, fiver on | Governor Ohio River Div of the ; and Ohio, was wrecked a “ 0 I } e are ere at Pleasant View, rimen rust 1} below here, while going at an About < and 716, x Austad ¢ : ins} § uO ision Bai- 14 1 crooks In found 2. ney timore 3.30 o'clock found out There at! hour. tions g wer of that Chains Little Girl To Wagon. The relief train arrived here ; Galveston of the wreck at 8 about a the ' * < ¥ fal Als a “ { Special ar oi the scene o'cl Special) Mary P. M jured, above, dozen of the in reese ned and including were {tal The i rail three mentioned removed to Bt wreck wag cal Not { of tured. Three was inj ” - ¢ * rolled over embankment. Honp ne a bal an OVER A MILLION IN OATS. and iim when dep the were . uty Cor | : pirited man nere
s Taha PY A nm ore _ im} = Ba in he oats market Jim Patten, the ifcago (Special) A five-day no t 3 wal W v “ + t . ¥ > grains’’ is sald to have nove pinned on the door of $1,130,000. estimated all way 15,000,000 bush- a profit averag- king of coarse Patten’s an unkempt of the Otis Building artist asking him to come or a pleture, tells the st days of D. P. C well room on the top floor cleaned up holdings are from 12,000,000 to els and he ing 11 Had bushels 1 days the and a note from anu to pose of the Stockel. 63 who re iy now has cents a bushel not Patten 2.000.000 of May during last few the price doubtless have or a higher level prices, the Pat- eoid to do. was He had Stockel ig said the President , and to have posed for stat. the room would 0 cents ate By manipulating the ten brokers have been enabled to keep around the $7-cent level, al- though it has been up as high as 48 cents, the highest 1802, when It is on in oats, will win Eckles Worth { Special) The os H. Eckles, pre Commercial Nztional of the amount to £150,000, gince May, peache «d 45% a and it Is expected out Chicago of | gident Bank | curs . estate big fight : that i ¢ of the and former comptroller is said to $150,000 The property consists chiefly of real estate and bank stock, and by his will goes entirely his widow and daughter rency., Suffragettes Take A Man, {By gecure mittance of in Parliament Women's Su that the Cable) Owing to the the Imm women to membership the National Union of rage Clubs has decided next best thing to be in the House Com- | man It will, HHamentary candidate of its the person of Hon. Bertrand who will contest the Wim- | bledon division in behalf of suffering London + to ediate ad- to Fall (Special) Killed By Down Stairs, York, Pa. entangled In a blanket which she was | in of therefore, Becoming mons by carrying, Mrs. Rebecca Bixler, city, tripped and fell down stairs. | She died shortly afterwards Mrs. | Bixler was just recovering from a severe sickness, and was alone in the i house at the time of the accident. of this | in 100.000 Driven From Homes, Odessa (By Cable). —One hundred thousand are estimated to have been driven from their homes by the overflowing of the Dnieper, Dniester and Dvina. The inunda- tions are more widespread than usual and have caused extreme distress over an enormous area. IN THE FINANCIAL WORLD, Secretary Cortelyou has put $4, 000,000 in Washington national banks, to remain during the tax-pay- ing period. Since January 1, 10068, United States Steel has taken $64,600,600 from earnings to spend on new econ- struction work. In nine months of this fiscal year the Reading's net surplus was $1. 503,000 less than in the same period of 1906, which is a decrease of just Millionaire Gives 835,000, ! York, Pa. (Special). Theodore | Helb, a millionaire business man of | this city, presented $5,000 to the | endowment fund of the theological | seminary at Lancaster. The presen- tation was made through Rev. H. Apple, of this city, Mr. Helb's pastor. people Chas, J. Steedman A Suicide, Paris (By Cable). Charles J. Steadman of New York and Philadel phia, son of the late Rear Admiral Charles Steedman, commmitted suil- cide by shooting at the Hotel de "Orient here. Mr. Steedman and his wife, who is a daughter of a former Governor of Rhode Island, reached Paris on April 80 from Italy. They had been touring in an automobile with Senator Aldrich of Rhode Is land. Since his arrival here Mr. 20 per cent. Steedman had become despondent, THE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Domestic. : Another complication in the dis- tribution of the fortune left by the late James Henry Smith, the “Silent” millionaire, who died while in Japan on his honeymoon, is promised through ‘ the discovery that Smith had an older brother in Chill More than $43,000,000 in improve ments and work on every building in Philadelphia is at a standstill as a result of fruitless conferences of with bricklayvers’ and stonemasons’ unions divigion of work. J. B. over a Sullivan, agent of the Ala- Birmingham, Ala., Frank Richardson shot and kill ed each other during a quarrel over freight Cyrus D. Foss, son of been removed from the of the Philadelphia Commission 1 Mayor Jishop Fos ha taryship Service burn Count Otto von of geore Civil yy Rev- Waldstein, a noble- Austria, was shot and killed for a desperado by a wsse in Callfornia District into all ins to in the investigations in William B ley, a r of the New ed a petition ol iy ghntersg in man : ] i Attorney Jerome ig to urance companies SEW York former mem Stock Exchal in 1 autos in Secretary Shaw redicts war Pacific Thornton, am W. Baker, Hamilton } control of the Ocean Charles note-tel bookkeeper tank, Peniten- ONAL the Sat HICARD, Were ent to embezziement n the Suicide irowned Koenig Louis and Fourteen steam bert 3 immi Wilson band of Yerkes, was in a divorce reme Cou President H and Vice Carrol i Short, yt was shi Paul The Pe Pennsyly Undér the now abolished 8ONE Were the executed, 79 condemned Biberian mines for and rma of imprisonment to 1if« i 10 to minor ts In anti-European riots at Rawal- Punjab, India, a Hindoo mob burned the mission church, looted the postoffice and smashed the win- dows of the residences of Europeans At the stration in head squarely pindi, demon- ex-Premier Bal- Unionists, came of protection York, Admiral Charles Primrose League London of the out in favor Charles J. Stead m the late Rear Steedman., committed four an, of New son of enielde Two Americans are among the sus- Guatem in attempt upon Cabrera. pects arrested in with the life of President battalions the Twenty new The British colonial portion of at Portamouth, Preadnought. The Sultan of Turkey has as last {ssued an irade in regard to the American schools and othér ques- tions. The British Cabinet is considering premiers the nation’s including the pro quo for their preferential treat- ment of British goods by subsidizing lines of steamers between England and the more important colonies. Professor Curtis, who Incurred the imperial displeasure by his publication of the von Hohenlohe memoirs, has resigned the presideney of the Prot- estant Consistory of Alsace, General Botha, premier of the Transvaal, at the imperial conference in London declared hig uncompromis. ing opposition to a commercial con- ference within the empire, Harry Gullam, a professional golf player, after quarreling with his wife and striking her at Edinburgh, com- mitted sulecide by throwing himself over a precipice. MEXICO'S DEMAND ON GUATEMALA Strained Relations Causing Some Anxiety. REVOLUTIONARY JUNTA IN MEXICO. Should Guatemala Hefuse to Extradite Gen. Lima, Diplomatic Relations Be- tween the Two Republics Will Be Ter- minated, but There Will Be No Decla- ration of War by Mexico. The Mexico the fail D. C relations Washington, (Bpecial) strained between and Guatemala arising from of the extradition proceedings for Mexico General Lima, complicity in the as President Barrillas, is a the officials desirous ure latter to surrender under trial ir god with char assination of ex- matter gsrious concern to gincerely of peace in all Americas nding the fon otherwise certain bj by the U loge much of its With this in view has gone efforts to are conclu of the of fon ment in to terminate and Hon other its Nicarauga spread to countries aganist further 3 comm ragua The rangement, pe igsion narticularls particuiari place, are ex) i reats convention reaches Hence the officials prehension the Mexico are frequen \ would intolerable, nea financing in Guatemala ing government, out that General inated because h hat junta FACTORY GIRLS IN PANIC, A Hundred Penned In A Tex tile Mill By Fire, Nearly Bruner had n flames attacked the The second floor, which was of of yarn, and spread whe ors ¢ i giructure fire was discovered on the us : storage rapidly The themsel wratives : their fire Those had little 1 i among \ recond floor leaving the and fourth stories at work. th for the exits, and 1 wests Front coniront the 100 girls stampede the dense smoke building ¥ On wi ere here was a in od them several gi trampled on and 1 vied ceoeded in atives wet were knocked down and The er mills police from oth- restoring order and the e got out with- our ser Tornado In Memphi Tenn Tennessee, (Special) - A the om Covington, a tornado struck hat place, causing considerable dam- but, so far as could be ascer- tained. no lives were lost. Two com- presses owned by the Gulf Compress Company were unroofed, and among the other buildings damaged wag the Illinois Central Depot. An Moots Central southbound passenger train was detained at Covington for sev eral hours by the storm and accu- mulation of debris along the track. meager report was received by Appeal 0: of which Railroad President Angry. New Orleans, La. (8pecial).—Be- eause he could not secure an annual pass over his own line, former Gov. H. C. Warmoth resigned the presi- dency of the New Orleans, Fort Jackson sad Grand Isle Railroad, a 80-mileline extending down thebanks of the Mississippl River. Bondhold- erg took over the property In 18086, and since then have been forced to economize on every item. The rall- road extends past the plantation home to Mr. Warmoth, who makes dally trips to New Orleans, 4 —— UNDER CHARGE OF CONSPIRAC Manager International Policyh clders’ Committee. New York (Special). Sensational results have quickly followed the In- the distict attorney's office into the recent election of directors of the New Insurance Company. George R. Berugham, the International Policyholders’ Com- mittee, which inspired the present in- making grave charges those who conducted was himself placed under Albany and put aboaml a train, leaving : York at 1.15 SBcerugham | he with quiry by York Life manager of vestigation, against the election, arrest at o'clock piracy, and identified feyholders into custody Carri a nacity ! capacity | election Conspiracy vo { I's ROSSI CUTS OUT HIS TONGUE. His Voice came And Insane. Lost Recently Bee cisco du who. as experient endeavore erformance the Metr broke down i rious luring a I le” at nervous t ing again with Mr Company AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL itiago diffic Cabinet mes before the 4 - igation of i the proposed forest reserve American manufactures unusual record of their foreign industrie i General M« unveiled Ow in the wid- bf the Ad- ident 5 the Soclet Pot (+. A made by and members Armies of and the “8 the oma R Pre # the PY BOO Qrosses were Roosevelt and General Dodge Statements were made the In- land Waterways Commission by Rep- | resentative Burton and er of Corporations Smith The Equitable Life Insurance Com- pany applied in the Supreme Court for a writ of review in the of J. Willeox Brown, The Navy Department was adviged of the death of Naval Paymaster James E. Cann, at Portsmouth, N. H The Society of the Grand Army of the Potomac adopted a resolution favoring arbitration to avoid war. The Interstate Commerce Com. mission received from the California Fruit Growers’ pRGpange a com. plaint, filed hy telegriph, against the Sonthern, Pacific and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroads. President Mellen and First Viee President Byrnes, of the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad, had a talk with President Roosevelt. They declined to discuss purpose of visit, f W. T. Willoughby will be promot. od to the secretaryship of Porto Rico. He is now treasurer of the island. to Commission case