I. - EIGHT PAGESSO COLUMNS. SCIt ANTON, PA.,' TUESDAY MORNING APRIL 9, 1895. TWO CENTS A COPY. DECISION ON INCOME TAX Opinion of United States Supreme Court on the Measure. THE JUSTICES ARE DIVIDED Their Decision Leave the Constitution Hty of tho Law Still Open-Ou Impor- tant Points the Count Stundu Four Against Four. Washington, April 8. The supremo court of the United States today handed down its decision on the constitution ality of the income tax. The decision loaves the question of the constitutionality of the lnw still open. It Is expected that the payment Of the tax will be respected, and that suits will result In United States cir cuit and district courts, and that what ever may be the decision of these courts an appeal will again be taken to the United States supreme court, when a full bench can hear arguments. On the question of the constitution ality of the tax on rents, the court by a vote of six to two holds that it Is a direct tax, and not being laid propor tionately among the states on the basis of, the last census Is unconstitutional. As to the tax on Interests from state and ' municipal bonds the court Is re ported to haV -,stood flvu to three agianst constitutionality of the tax, the majority holding that such a tax Is an Imposition upon the revenues of the municipality which authorized the bonds, and unconstitutional. On all other points the court divided evenly, Justices Harlan, Shtras and Brown (Re publicans), and Justice AVhlte (Demo crat), holding the law to be constitu tional, or rather that It had not been Invalidated as a whole by the constitu tional defect contained in the tax on rents and bonds. Four Justices, Fuller and Field (Democrats), and Grey and Brewer (Republicans), held the law to be unconstitutional In every particu lar. Justice Fuller began reading the decision at 12.10 and finished at 1 o'clock, reading the decision of the question whether or not the tux on rents from real estate is a tux on real estate and therefore a direct tax, and announced that the court has decided It is a tax on real estate, therefore a direct tax, and, as provided for In the present law, unconstitutional. The opinion of the chief Justice also de clares that the tax on municipal and state bonds is unconstitutional. On all other points the court Is equally di vided. The decision of the court below on these points Is reversed, and a sim ilar entry made In the case of Hyde vs. Continental Trust company. " Main Points of the Opinion. " The conclusions of the court were stated as follows: First That by the constitution federal taxation is divided into two great classes, direct taxes and duties, Imports and ex cises. Second That the Imposition of direct taxea is governed by the rule of apportion ment among the several states, according to numbers, and the Imposition of duties, imports and excises by the rule of uni formity throughout the United States. Third That the principle that taxation and representation go together was in tended to be and was preserved In the con stitution by the establishment of the rule of apportionment among the several states, sa that such apportionment should be according to numbers in each state. I fourth That the tates surrendered their power to levy Imports and to regu late commerce to the general government, and gave it the concurrent power to levy direct taxes In reliance on the protec tion afforded by the rules prescribed, and that the compromises of the constitution cannot be disturbed by legislative action. ', Fifth That thesa conclusions result from the text of the constitution, and are supported by the historical evidence fur nished by the circumstances surrounding the framing and adoption of- that Instru ment and the views of those who framed and adopted It. Sixth That the understanding and ex pectation at the time of the adoption of the constitution was that direct taxes would not be levied by the general gov ernment except under the pressure of ex traordinary exigency, and such has been the practice down to Aug. IS, ISM. If the power to do so Is to be exercised as an or dinary and usual means of supply, that fact furnishes an additional reason for circumspection In disposing of the present case. Seventh That taxes on real estate be long to the class of direct taxes, and that the taxes on the rent or Income of real es tate, which Is the Incident of its owner ship, belong to the same class. Eighth That by no previous decision of this court has this question been ad judicated to the contrary of the conclu sions now and announced. That bo much of the act of Aug. 15, 1894, aa attempts to Impose a tax upon the rent or Income of real estate wlth put apportionment is Invalid. The Act of August I S. The court Is further of opinion that ' the act of August 15, 1894, Is Invalid so far as It attempts to levy a tax upon the income derived from municipal bonds. As the municipal corporation Is the representative of the state and . one of the Instrumentalities of the state government, the property and revenues of municipal corporations are not the subjects of federal taxation, nor Is the Income derived from state county and municipal securities, since taxation on the interest thereon oper ates the power to borrow before It Is exercised and has a sensible influence on the contract and therefore such a tax is a tax on the power of the states and their Instrumentalities to borrow money., nnd consequently repugnant to the co..vtltutlon. . l Upon each of the other questions ar- yed at the bar, to wit:' it Whether the void provisions as ats and Income from real estate ln- Ltes the whole act. d Whether as to the Income from property as such, the act Is un- lonal as laying dlmct taxes. K'hether any part of the tax. If cred as a direct tax. Is Invalid, uniformity on either of the Rested the Justices who heard nts are equally divided and I opinion Is expressed. It Is tht the decree of the I t is reversed and the cause 'with directions to enter a favor of complainant In re- ' of the voluntary payment of the rents and Income of Its Ite and that which It holds In on the Income from the cipal bonds owned or so held by It. The chief justice said that the Juris : Jlctlon . of courts of equity to prevent llverslon of. funds by breach of trust or Illegal payment of the funds had been frequently affirmed by the court. The question was not raised In the court below, but had been explicitly waived on the argument of the case, and the court felt Justllled In proceed ing to a decision of the case on Its merits. He said that the power to decide a law unconstitutional was used with re luctance, but the responsibility could not be evaded when the necessity arose. The contentions respecting this law were: First That a tax on ronts was a tax on real estute, and that not being luld accord ing to apportionment it was lnvulld. Second That it was not uniform and n violation of the constitutional require ments that such taxes shall be laid with uniformity. Under this head came the ex ceptions in fuvor of these persons who were not in possession of an Income of W.UtH); of mutual Insurance companies, sav ings banks and partnerships, all organized ior and doing the same business as that of corporations authorized by the states. These exceptions, It was held, were arbi trary ami capricious, and not based upon sound public policy. Third That Incomes from Investments In state and municipal bonds could not lie taxed, t Jiistlca Field's Opinion. Associute Justice Field read an opin ion declaring the whole Income tax provision of the tariff law of 1S94 to be unconstitutional. Associate Justice White dissented from the view of the court and protested against a re-open-lug of the decisions of the court of a hundred years past. Next In order the opinion considered the third objection to the law. That It Imposed a tax upon the Incomes derived from Investments In state and munici pal bonds, and was therefore Invalid. He concurred with the majority of the court, however, upon the question of the taxation of state and municipal bonds. Chief Justice Fuller re-asserted the general principle that a tax on govern ment bonds was held to be a tax on contracts and prejudicial to the public interest. It was therefore obvious that such a tax on the power of states or municipalities to make contracts was prejudicial to public policy, and there fore unconstitutional. On the other matters Involved, the case of Hyde vs. the Continental Trust company, of New York city, and In the case of John Q. Moore vs. Joseph S. Miller, commissioner if Internal reve nue, for an Injunction to restrain him from proceeding to carry out the law, appealed from the courts of the Dis trict of Columbia, Chief Justice Fuller stated that the court was equally di vided. The Judgment of the lower courts, as far as It related to the payment of the tax on rents and state and municipal bonds, was reversed. In the Moore case the effect of the court's action Is to aflirm .the refusal of an Injunction against the commissioner of Internal revenue.- GOVERNOR MARVIL DEAD. Delaware's Chief Magistrate Expires from llonrt Disease. Laurel, Del., April 8. After an ill ness from a complication of diseases that ha.3 lasted for several months, Qr vunoi Joshua Hopkins Marvll died at T.15 o'clock tonight. Just previous to his Inaugural a few months ago. Governor Marvll was stricken with heart disease and was too 111 to take part !n the ceremonies of his Induction Into office. Governor Marvll was born In Sussex county, this state, Sept. 3, 1835, and came of an old Delaware family. Governor Marvil's term of office would have expired January 1, 1899. By his death, William P. Watson, speaker of the senate, who Is a Demo crat, becomes acting governor. By the elevator of Mr. Watson to the guber natorial chair, the senate of this state becomes a tie, four Republicans and four Democrats. . GRADY'S DEFALCATIONS. It Is Thought That They Will Exceed $38,000. Lancaster, Pa., April 8. It Is now be lieved that the defalcation of T. H. Grady, cashier of the First National bank of Marietta, will reach. If not ex ceed, 138,000 which it is feared will be greatly swelled by sums secured in a semi-official way. While acting as agent for Mrs. Chris tian Hower, she gave him $3,300 to de posit In the bank. He credited the amount In her book, but failed to put any of the money In the bank, and It Is believed that more transactions of a similar character will be , brought to light as the investigation proceeds. The peculations were begun at least two years ago. THE CHAMPION DIPPER. Colored Baptist Minister Itreaks tho World's Ilaptilng Itecord. Harrodsburg, Ky April 8. Rev. Charles Davis, pastor of the colored Baptist church here, broke all baptiz ing records Sunday, when In twenty nine minutes he Immersed seventy-six colored converts. The water was exceedingly cold. TELEGRAPHIC TICKS.' Trichinae in pork will probably cause the death of Peter Marks' family of six, at La porte, Ind. Ex-Adjutant General J. G. Farns worth, of New York, is seriously III In a Wash ington hotel. ' The Rock Island road will furnish more money to C. B .Jewell for ralnmaklng ex periments In Kansas. By eating wild parsnips a child of E. Stucke, of Genoa, Neb., was fatally pois oned, but another may recover. Because of a recent third suicide on Ruf us Powell's farm, near Somerset, N. Y It has been named the "suicide place." The disappearance of John W. Wilcox, from'Auburn, R. I., Is laid to robbers, who are supposed to have killed him to get $700. Over 20,000 persons attended tho final service of the sixty-fifth annual confer ence of the Mormon church at Salt Luke City. Longshoreman J. M. Gregory, who killed his wife at. New York, was found terribly wounded at his home, having attempted suicide. While crazy with drink, Tom Nlfong, of Modesto, III., shot at the postmaster, slightly wounding, him, and tried to cut his wife's throat. -x - 1 . General George W.Jones, who was In the United States senate years ago, will cele brate his ninety-first birthday at Du buque, la., next Sunday, , PENROSE ONPRIZE FIGHTS Introduces a Bill to Kcrjulutc the Veiyht of Boxing Gloves. REGARDING WATER COMPANIES The Woods Bill to Compel Cities and Iloroughs to Purchase Water Plants, Is Discussed Other Measures Before tho Lawmakers. Harrlsburg, April 8. When the sen ate met at 8 o'clock there was less than a quorum present. A bill wus Introduced by Senator Penrose to prohibit prize fights and re-qulrlng6-ounceglovesto be used In box ing mutches; a bill enabling citizens and state corporations to hold and con vey titles which have been held by aliens; also a bill for the prevention of blindness by Imposing certain duties on mldwives and nurses. Mr. Brown Introduced a bill requiring tax collectors to make stated returns to to.il councils, also a bill defining Imitation butter. , Mr. Grady presented a bill authoriz ing municipalities to establish public llbrailcs. ' The bill creating the office of deputy auditor general, which Is on the third reading calendar, wus called up by Senator Grady and amended bo as to make the salary attached to theifflce $11,000. This Is a reduction of $1,000. Mr. Andrews presented a bill amend ing tne act for the Incorporation of third class cities, defining the duties of boards of assessors; also a bill amend ing the act providing for the assess ment and collection of damages and costs for municipal Improvements. Mr. Grady Introduced another bill authorizing the appointment of a sten ographer snd typewriter In the ofllce of the he.ilth office of the port of Phil adelphia at a salary not to exceed $1,000 a year. House Proceedings. In the house tonight Mr. Shuey, Schuylkill, Introduced a bill to com pensate N. B. Johnson, father of W. S. Johnson, of Company F. Eighth regi ment. National Guard, who died from typhoid fever contracted at Gettys burg. For the first time during the session a special calendar of senate bills on second, reading had been prepared, and among them which passed were the. following: To Increase the salary of the superintendent of public printing from $1,600 to $3,500; relating to Index ing of Judgments and decrees of United States court; for th publication of state library catalogue; to establish a state board of veterinary medical ex aminers. . The Woods act to compel cities and boroughs to purchase private water companies before going into the busi ness of furnishing water, provoked considerable discussion. Mr. Merrick objected to It on the ground that It was contrary , to all public policy and de stroyed competition, and Mr. Scalfe ad vocated the bill on the ground that it protects Invested capital and seeks to prevent a great wrong to existing cor porations. The debate on the bill was continued at length and amended' so us to permit cities and boroughs to vote on the ques tion of whether the private corpora tions shall be purchased, and passed second reading by C9 yeas to 03 nays. DROVE HIM TO SUICIDE. A Man Whilo Pinned Down by a Bowlder Cuts His Throat. Oelweln, la., April 8. A tragedy of a peculiar nature occuroed yesterday. ' A few miles east of this city a man named Baker, while excavating a hole for the purpose of sinking a bowlder weighing several tons, was crushed by the acci dental falling of the stone. He lay with both legs broken and the left arm mangled for probably six hours, no re lief coming. I In his despair he cut his throat from ear to ear with a dull jackknife. When found he was still faintly breathing. He left home about 1 o'clock, but not returning for supper a man went In quest of him, finding him In the de scribed condition. He leaves a widow and two small children. SKELETON DISCOVERED. Found Burled in a Yard at Jefferson Vllle, Ind., by Negroes. Jeffersonville, Ind., April 8. The find ing of a skeleton In a crude-shaped box in a yard In the heart of the city this morning was the cause of much com ment. The bones were evidently those of a woman, and th skull was crushed. Negroes made the discovery while they were laying off a strip of ground for a garden. From the appearance of the skeleton It Is supposed to have been burled sev eral yors. The box Is in a good state of preservation. Many are Inclined to the belief that a murder has been com mitted. FORTY DAYS WITHOUT I OOD. During That Time an Indluna Woman - Drinks Only a Cup of Wutor. Valparaiso, Ind., April 8. Mrs. Henry Burgess, of Hebron, this county, died last night. She had been bedfast for over .eight weeks nnd for forty days she was unable to take any nourishment. During all this time she only drank a cup of water. Her case bullied the skill of numerous physicians who were called to attend her. Before she was taken sick she weighed 180 pounds, but at her death she weighed ,only sixty-five pounds. Sho was 55 years old. BOY THIEVES CAUGHT. Leader of a Gang In Indiana Is Only 10 Years Old. ' Anderson, Ind., April 8. One of the most notorious gangs of petty thieves In the state was broken up this morn ing at 2 o'clock by the arrest of five boys. They have been banded together for the past year, nnd, under tho leader ship of Willie Blue, a 10-year-old lad. have been doing a wholesale house and store brenklng business. They entered three of the largest business houses In the city Inst night and looted them, and were caught In Harrlman & May's hardware store and landed In jail. Besides Blue the boys are; . Clyde Chapman, Ora Welch, Charles Stinnett and Charles Turner, all of whom have good homes and plenty of money. They wlll.be sent to the reform school. COFFEE MEN FORM A POOL. Capitalists in Prunce Will Try to Control tho Market. New York, April 8. Definite informa tion reached here Thursday of the formation of an extensive pool In Franco to control the coffee market. The most conspicuous figure In the deal Is Guzman Blanco, the former presi dent of Venezuela, who now lives in Paris. Blanco Is generally credited among coffee men of this city with having bought 200,000 bags or Brazilian coffee within the last few months. In addi tion to this he Is carrying an extensive line of futures. CYCLONE RELIC FOUNp. Oak Sill Recovered Which Kccalls a Ter rible Storm In 1858. Areola-, III., April 8. The removal of a building today unearthed a relic of the destructive cyclone which swept over this section In iMay, 1858. During the storm an oak sill twenty feet long and eight Inches thick was lifted from an adjacent structure, driven completely through the building above referred to, and entered the ground fully eight feet. Workmen who were excavating for a cellar today unearthed the sill and It will be preserved as a memento of the hurricane. REV. LANSING EXPLAINS. Ills Assertion Thut tho President Was Under Influence of Tanglefoot Was Based I'pon Common Report. Boston, April 8. Rev. I. J. Lansing, whose references to the president in his address before the New Englund con ference at Salem last Thursday night provokd extended crltlclam, gives out the following statement tonight: "My allusion made in a temperance address at Salem on Thursday, April 4, to the drinking habits of the presi dent of the United States was based partly on common report and partly on the testimony of eye witnesses. "From various and independent sources which I believed to be wholly reliable, I had been Informed that the president had been seen, on different occasions, and in the presence of many persons, In an Intoxicated condition. "From the circumstantial and de tailed character of these statements, I supposed there was no doubt as to the facts alleged. I therefore made this al lusion as a matter of common report, basing my confidence on the testimony of personal, and as I supposed, credible witnesses. "I must, therefore, say that if my statement reproducing such testimony Is not in harmony with facts, I regret having made it. I could have neither desire nor motive for saying anything unkind or uncharitable of the president or of any party whatsoever. The case being one-of conflict of testimony be tween witnesses of equal, credibility I cannot decide, and since I have no personal knowledge apart from the testimony, I withdraw the statement and tender apologies and sincere re gret to- the president of the United States, and to the public." SWINDLER ARRESTED. C. II. Badlln, Who Victimized Piano and Organ Men, Captured at Niagara. Niagara Falls, N.Y., April 8. Charles H. Badlln, a clever piano and organ swindler, wns nabbed here today by the police. Bndlln's plan of operation Is to write to different piano and organ man ufacturers and have them ship a piano or organ to him, giving good references, or asking them to draw on him In ten days. . Ho' would forge the references and Becure the instrument, reshlp to some place, there selling It and pocketing the proceeds. Among the firms fleeced by him are Tapper & Co., of Chicago; New man Organ company, of Chlcngo, and Packard Organ company, of Fort Wayne, Mich. A charge of forgery and an Indictment are against the man under the name of Day at Ogdensburg, this state. Chicago authorities also wanted the man. MAY INHERIT TIfE TITLE. Topcka Minister Called to London by Ills Father's Death. Topeka, Kan., April 8. Rev. Charles Rowland Hill, only son and heir of the late Viscount Hill, who died In Lon don, Is a resident of Topeka, an Episco pal clergyman, connected with Grace cathedral here. Whether the title de scends to' the son he will not state. J to declined to say what his Inten tions were, but he has received a num ber of ' cablegrams since his father's death, and probably will go to London soon. Before he came to Topeka he was located at Leavenworth. INSANE FROM EXCITEMENT. . Walters' Crime Drives Ills Mother and a Man Out uf Their Minds. Galena, Kan., April 8. Boston Mills, the scene of the killing of the Cox brothers by Newton Walters, and his subsequent suicide, Is still In a fever of excitement. Thursday Levi Rtnker, on whose farm Walters was employed, became InBane from the shock caused by the tragedies. The murderer's mother, Mrs. Wal ter's, huB also become a raving maniac since her son's crime bccalne known. STATE GLEANINGS. Beefsteak has gone up to 25 cents a pound at Easton. The slate operators of Bangor and vicin ity were never ao busy, Plnegrove, Schuylkill county, will have a new shirt factory, employing 100 hands. Hnzleton advocates of the Quay county bill will continue their efforts until the measure passes finally. Several Pottstown land owners will ex periment on a new form of charity by loaning land, for truck farming to poor people.. - . , " An Interstate fair for the colored people of West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsyl vania will be held at Conocogaeagne In September, - Because they created a disturbance at a class entertainment six members of Har risburg's high school graduating class will be refused diplomas. On the ground that one of the Jurymen who convicted him of murder In the first degree was prejudiced, 16-year-old Frank Morris has asked for a now trial at Union- town. . , . WINDISB JflURDER CASE Damaging Evidence Heard Before the , Coroner's Jury. TESTIMONY OP THE CHILDREN What the Neighbors Saw-Story of the Husbund's Brutality Threats Made Agulnst tho Murdered Woman. Wlndish Still Missing. Special to the Scranton Tribune. Plttston, April 8. The witnesses In the Wlndish murder case were ques tioned this afternoon at the ofllce of Justice Gibbons before Coroner John E. Perkins and County Detective Eck ert, both of Wllkes-Barre. The first wllnets sworn was Frank Wlndish, the youngest sun of the murdered woman. He testified that on Thursday morn ing last hu left home as usual for his work at No. 8 breaker of the Pennsyl vania Coal company. When he re turned about 3 o'clock he was not able to find any of the family about the premises. Ills oldest brother, George, returned ' from his work about 3.S0. Nothing unusual in the appearance of the house attracted their attention or aroused their suspicions, lie stated that his Bister, -Sophia, returned from school at the usual hour of 3. 4.".. The children on Thursday night thought that the father had left home for a short time and that their mother had fullowed him, as had been the oase be fore. On Friday morning the children overslept their usual time, and It was 10 o'cluck before they left the house for work. Frank stated that the "last time he saw his mother was on Thursday morning, before he left for work at the shaft. His father was in bed when he left for work Thursday morning. He said that his father always carried the key to the room where the body was found; and also said that his father had beaten his mother on the Sunduy pre vious to the day the crime was com mitted. The Father's Thrcuts. The testimony of the oldest son, George, only varied from thut of his brother. In that he said that his father had threatened to kill both the mother and witness on a previous occasion; and tha,t In a row lust summer had struck the woman with a mallet. He saw his father last on Wednesday, and his mother last on Thursday morning. James Kerrlgener testified thut he lived opposite the residence of the Wlndish family, and lirst discovered that something mut be wrong at the Wlndish home, as the boys had com plained thut their parents had not ar rived home. The boys told him they had. never been away so long before. Kerrlgener said that he had requested the boys, to look In the cistern and search the barn for their missing par ents. The children, he said, had found their mother's best clothes about the house-, but had not. entered the parlor, as they had never been allowed In the room when their father and mother were at home. Kerrlgener advised them to kick the parlor door in. About this time J'. F. Smalts, who lives nearby opposite the Wlndish residence, came over and looked In the parlor window and discovered the object on the floor which proved to be the dead body of the murdered woman. Smalts forced the door open. John Drummond, tho next witness, was well acquainted with the Wlndish family. He hnd frequently heard the couple engaged In quarrels. He last saw Mrs. Wlndish alive on Wednesday. Dr. 'Barrett testilled to having ex amined the body of the murdered wo man, and stated that he had found a number of wounds upon her head, any one of which would have caused death. The cuts appeared to have been made by some blunt Instrument like a dull chisel. A l ink in tho Chain. Louis Welntz went by the Wlndish residence between 12.30 and 1.30 Thurs day and met Wlndish walking toward the central part of the city. Wlndish was nicely dressed at the time. Welntz hailed Wlndish, but the latter, making no reply, walked hurriedly away. Charles Heinselman testified that he had known the Wlndlshr family ten years. On Wednesday night he met Wlndish- In a place kept by a man named Reynolds. Wlndish and Hein selman hud not spoken to each other since last summer, but on that evening Wlndish began conversation with Heinselman and during the evening be came very confidential. During the course of his remarks WlndlHh intimat ed that he would dispose of his wife In some way In the near future. After listening to the evidence the Jury rendered a verdict to the effect that the said Elizabeth Wlndish came to her death by the hand of her hus band, Oeorge Wlndish, at noon on Thursday, April 4. Officers working on the case have not been able to locate Wlndish. WOOD HEIRS SUCCESSFUL. Come Into Possession of Mining Prop- crty Valued ot $10,000,000. Denver, April 8. The famous Wood heirs' litigation thas been settled and the plaintiffs have come Into mining property In Aspei! valued nt $10,000,000. It was claimed that W. J. Wood, a poor Canadian, who located the Emma mine, was defrauded of h!s Interest in that property. All the heirs except Captain James O. Wood, of Chicago, have signed the agreement, and he Is expected to do so. ROBBED BY MEXICANS. American and English Tourists Fare Budly In Chiapas. V Cordova,' Mex., April 8. Henry'West fall, a young English tourist of prom inent family, has arrived here from 'an overland trip to the Isthmus on TehuanV tepee. He states that he was attacked by a band of renegade Indians and out laws In the state of Chiapas and robbed bf all tho money and valuables that he carried. Ills American companion, named Goodwin, was wounded by the bandits. i COAL PRICES FIXED. Result of tho Solos Agonts' Conference . Yesterday. New York, April 8,-rrThe coal sales agents" at their meeting today recom mended the following basis ot anthra- clto prices for New York tidewater points to take effect Immediately: Grate, chestnut and egg, 93.35; land stove, $3.1)0. Western prices were placed at $4.60 for grate, egg and chest nue, and $4.75 for stove. In some cases these prices show ad vances of 60 cents per ton. The New York tidewater points are considerably below the lust circular, but a good deal abovo the prices recently prevailing. Compared with April 1, 1894, prices show a decrease of 15 to 40 cents. NO HOPE FOR QUEEN LIL. England Will Not Interfere In the Case of the Dusky Prisonor. London, April 8. In the house of commons today Sid Edward Grey, under secretary for foreign affairs, re plying to a question, said the govern ment could not Interfere In the case Of ex-Queen Lllluokalanl, of Hawaii. Replying to a question by Blr George Baden-Powell, Sir Edward said that the government had not yet received any response from Venezuela in regard to England's demand for txn explanation of the recent Insult to the British flag In British South American territory. out suipTatIiayti. Admiral Meade's Squfdron Will Leave at once for Port An Prince Amerleun In terests to Bo Protected. Washington, April 8. Admiral Meade cabled the navy department this morn ing from Kingston that his squadron would leave at once for Port Au Prince, Hayti, with the exception of the Cin cinnati, which would go to Port An tonio. This dispatch was somewhat surprising to the naval authorities, as the fleet Is already overdue at Colon, where the admiral asked to have his mull sent after April 1. It Is explained, however, that Minister Smythe, at Port Au lrlnce, was greatly disappointed when the squadron sailed directly from San Domingo for Kingston omltlng Port Au Prince, which had been om the fleet itenerary, and he complained to the navy department of the omission. It was considered very harmful to American Interests for the warships to avoid the Ilaytlen port, and It Is thought the admiral has taken this op portunity while the squadron was In the vicinity, to rectify the mistake. It Is also explained that Admiral Meade was competed to hurry from San Do mingo to Ivngston because the fuel of the ships was running low and the coal supply was at Kingston awaiting him. It Is not so easy tu explain the mission of thp Cincinnati to Port Antonio. This Is situated on the northeast coast of Jumacla, not over a hundred miles from Kingston, and Is Important as the land ing place of the cable, and the stopping point of many American fruit steamers. It Is ulso directly opposite Santiago Da Cuba, and would be an ideal point of departure for tillibusters who might tranship arms and ammunition from fruit steamers to Cuba schooners. It is said at the navy department that the admiral has a perfect right to order the ships of his command wherever he pleases without explaining the reas ons, the sole restriction being that he must Inform the department of their whereubouts. BURNED TO DEATH. Horrible Fute of u Child who Fell Down Stairs with a Lamp. Special to tho Scranton Tribune. Forest City, April 8. The thirteen-year-old daughttir of David Thomas, who lives on the Warren tract, between here and ltlchmondule, met with a frightful accident Friday evening, which resulted In her death Saturday morning at 6 o'clock. The child went up stairs about 6 o'clock Frldoy eve ning and started to come down again with a lighted Inmp. In some manner she tripped nnd fell to the bottom of the stairs, the lamp breaking and tho burning oil scattering over her clothes. She ran out of the house Into the yard and the wind fanned the flames until she was nbluze from head to foot. S. T. O'NcIl heard her screams and running out of his house, which is sit uated neair by, he called for a quilt or blunket. A part of a quilt was brought to him and he enveloped the upper por tion of her body In It. Assistance came nnd the flames were smothered, but not until the clothes were nearly burned off tho child. She lingered In great agony until Saturday morning when death ireileved her sufferings. ; At the time of the accident the girl wns not at home, but was working for a neighboring family. BURGLARY AT MAYFIELD. Thieves Gain Entrance to tbo Storo of (l A. M. Place. . Sneclal to the Scranton Tribune. Maylleld, April 8. Sometime during Saturday- night thieves entered the store of A. M. Place, on Poplar street. gaining an entrance through the upper part of the front door by taking out a pane of glass. They secured some shoes and a few trifling articles. There have been so many burglaries In this place of late, it would seem as though the borough officials 'should do something to apprehend the guilty par ties, or put a night officer on duty to patrol the streets. Cucsnr Is Indicted. New York, April 8. The grand Jury this afternoon ordered an Indictment for mur der in the first degree against the negro, William Caesar. Caesar Is charged with the murder of Mury Martin, whose dis membered body wus found In an areaway cn Sixth avenue a week ago. FOREIGN NEWS NOTES. - Russia has just sent her first diplomatic representative to Chile. The Duke of Aosta, who Is to wed Princess Helena of Orleans, has arrived In London. The Trlesto chamber of commerce has asked Austria to subsidize a direct steum shlp line to America. By the Intervention of government of ficials the great shoe strike In England will probably be settled this week. Many bodies of tramps, frozen to death during the Murch blizzard, have, been un- vered by the thaw in Eastern Germany. esplte the repeated expulsion of Mor- moil missionaries, several women from Brandenburg, Germany, left for Utah last week.l Count Taaffe, the retired Austrian prem ier, hua published for private circulation a novelueallng with political history of his time. WEATHER REPORT. For caster Pennsylvania, rati FOLEY'S EASTER GLOVES. Our stock is complete, comprising the latest and most popular colorings and embroidery, White on Black, Black on White, Black on Ecru, Black od Pearl, Etc. ALSO. The Cleopatra cewiu.it. The Regencc, The Alexandre, The Abbott, The Centimeri gt.) And other popular makes in Ladies', Gents' and Children's. FIN LEY'S 510, and 512 Lackawanna Ave. H. A. KINGSBURY AGENT FOB .IJCMCK LEATHER THE VERY BEST. SIS SPRUCE ST., SCRANTON, PA. Wc arc selling more Shoes. You ure helping us. OUR $2.00 Hand Welt Shoe in one of our trade stimulators II WHOLESALE AND RETAIL REPAIRING OF WEICHEl the Jeweler, can repair your watch to give per fect satisfaction, having had ten years' experience in our leading watch fa- tories. LLYHES ie mm GIVE US A TRIAL :V:.:. . L.'v