THE PLAN IS REJECTED lot Operators Say They Will Never Yield to Strikers. THE CONFERENCE IS A FAILURE. Itlae Owners Declare Thai Aoarchy Prevails la Pennsylvania -President Mitchell Will, lag to Submit the Entire Controversy to the President to Be Adjusted by Arbitration Throaga a Commission. Washington, D. D. ( Special). TVcm lent Roosevelt is satisfied tlui the coal (trilce is not to be settled through an ippeal to the humanity and patriotism f those responsible for the present in olerablc condition. The conference between the Fresidcnt ind the representatives of the contend ing forces has been concluded without a icttlemcnt or promise of a settlement by the action of those to whom the Prcsi Jrnt made his appeal. The "captains cf tapital" and the "captain of labor" were brought face to face in the presence of Jie chief Executive at tlie temporary (Vhite House and cnllcd upon to ;.; tsidc their personal differences in the in west of the whole country. Mr. John Mitchell, on behalf of the jiiners, proposed rending the matter to i board or commission of arbitration, ind offered to send the miners to work this were done, abiding without qucs Jon by the decision of such an impar tial tribunal. The representatives of the mine own rrs and railroads refused absolutely to have any dealings with .Vfr. Mitchell, or to pive any sort of recognition to the anion as having rights or interests to be reKDrcted, and proposed simply that any Individual miner having a grievance raiirht present his case for settlement by a judge of the Court of Common Pleas. Mr. Mitchell assumed the attitude of asking nothing but justice, and of being willing to leave it to disinterested par ties representing the public to determine what that justice should be. The repre sentatives of the mine owners and rail roads assumed the attitude of refusing So recognise that the organization repre lented by Mr. Mitchell had anv business whatever in the case. They could not be moved from this oosi'.ion, and with the conference'closed, kct to be resumed, the parties to the con trovesy are no closer than before. The conference, as such, was a failure, ret it may mark the beginning of the end, ss it is regarded as almost certain that the President will now bring the subject to the attention of Congress. It is not !elieved that the question will longer be considered with reference to the wishes and interests of the two warring ele ments, but will be dealt with, as best it mav, as a matter of vital public interest. It is no longer a question of what the strikers or mine owners w ill do. but one li what the representatives of the people ran do. The spirit in which the "captains cf capital" entered upon the conference was distinctly one of condescension, with an sir of self-conscious power, giving an impression of defiance. Remarks made by a member of the party to the effect '.hat if anyone knew f.hat the President would do now it was more than they did appeared little short of sneering. It is expected that the question will loon be uo to Congress. Two conferences were held, and the Interest displayed in both was intense. In his statement of the case the Pres ident impressed upon the operators and President Mitchell the great need to the country of a settlement. The min ers submitted their proposition, which tn effect was that whenever there should be differences between the operators ind their employes such lifrerences ihould be referred to a tribunal to be elected by the President for decision snd that both sides should abide by the decision which should be rendered by hat tribunal, regardless of its effect upon either side. The operators then submitted their proposition. It was: First That under no circumstances should thev recognize or transact busi ness with Mr. Mitchell, the president of the United Mine Workers, or any other sgent of the union. Second That should any differences arise between employes individually and tmployers such difference should 1 re ferred to the iudae of the Court of Con- mon Pleas located within the district where the trouble originated. The miners rejected the proposition made by the operators. The operators rejected' the proposition made by the miner. May Appeal to the Miners. Washington, D. C. (Special). A tnal effort, with hope of success, is to be made to end the coal strike. It has been discussed by the President and some of his advisers, and while the idea a still in an uncompleted state and the final result still uncertain, yet it offers a method which now seems to be the only solution of the problem. The suggestion is made that Presi dent Mitchell, of the United Minework trs, may be able to have the men now on strike return to work in order to avert the impending disaster which a lucl famine will cause, and that at as early a date as possible there shall be a complete investigation by Congress and by the State Legislature of Penn sylvania into the anthracite coal situa tion, with a view of bringing before the public the facts and conditions of the miners, with a view to legislation or recommendations for relieving the condition of the miners in the near fu ture; While it is not absolutely possi ble to guarantee such an investigation (here is little doubt that recommenda tions by the President and the Execu tive of Pennsylvania would be promptly irted upon by Congress and the Penn lylvania legislature. Typhoon Kills Hundreds. Victoria, B. C. (Special). Japan was visited by a heavy typhoon early in Sep tember, and the 'tcamer Tartar brings advices of dis-sters. From Kagoshima comes the news of the loss of 600 fishing marks and 1.500 men. The (governor of Yinaguchiken reports that 38 per sons weie d-owned and nine other" were killed. The Governor of Hiroshima Ken reports 65 lives lost. Twenty-rive casualties occurred in Akigori alone, the steamer Kairu-Maru was wrecked on Ushifuki September 10. Woman Drowned In Bathtub. Peoria, III. (Sp-cial). Frank B. Townsend, living at 1331 Hamilton Bou levard, clerk in the general freight office of the Iowa Central Railway, went into the bath-roc at his home to shampoo his head. The room was cold and he disconnected the pipe used to carry off the poisonous gas from an instantaneous Jieatrr. Within a few seconds he fell to the floor, overcome by gal. His wife rushed to his ass istance, ind she, too, w?.s overcome. She fell into the bathtub filled with water and was drowned. Mr. Towntend was discovered Ly a servant aod assistance was called. SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. Under the guard of troops a trainlond of coal was shipped over the Reading Railroad from Mahanoy City, Pa., for Philadelphia. The Reading will, it is said, make another attempt to operate mines this week. At Scramon and other towns in the anthracite region the homes of the mining officials are cloely guarded by troops. The Eric express on the Pennsylvania Railroad ran into the rear end of a freight train near Milton, Pa., and F.n ginecr Wheeland, of Harrisburg, and Conductor Stringer, of Sunbury, were killed. Two stockholders of the New Orleans Railway Company applied to the courts for a receiver with a view to forcing a settlement of the strike. John A. Sheridan, a fugitive member of the St. Louis House of Delegates, wanted on the charge of bribery, was arrested. Gen. William Booth, the head of the Salvation Army, arrived in New York and was given a grand reception by the army. Sir Michael Herbert, British ambas sador to the L'nited States, reached New York on the Cunard liner Cam pania. 1 lie body of the suicide at the Stur tcvant House was identified as that of Miss Elizabeth Hessey. a trained nurse. The long litigation between the City of Nashville. Tenn., and the street rail way company has been settled, the city granting franchises in return for the donation of Centennial Park to the city, payment of 2 per cent., of the gross !was wounded six times, but bolocd an receipts annually and the immediate American before he died. His follow expenditnre of $1,000,000 on improve- Crs were also killed, ment of the property. I In the darkness Wednesday night The miners of the Tennessee Coal 'Captain Pershing took his batteries and Iron Company at the Blue Creek ! within a httnderd yards of the fort, clos and Blocton Mines, in Alabama, have !cd jn hjs infantry lines and resumed the been ordered on strike because of the jattack. The Moros broke through refusal of the company to withhold as-!twice and attempted to escape by the sessments made by the ituion for the ; beach, but were discovered and many anthracite strikers from the wages of:0 them were killed. They abandoned those miners who object to paying it. 'the fort early Thursday, after 15 hours' The Maryland Society of Chicago , bombardment. Captain Pershing de held its annual meeting and elected istroved- tlic rest of the forts and re Harry Page Guyton president, and a turned to Camp Vicars, resolution was adopted to notify Rear! i, js believed the moral effect of the Admiral Schley of his election as hon- !dcCat of the Moros will be great. orary member of the society. The organization of a lodge of the Machinists' Union in Waynesboro, Pa.. 1 has resulted in two large manufacturing 1 establishments posting notices that they j will employ no union men. A temporary panic was caused in Wall street by the unfounded story that the Comptroller of the Currency had declared Sacretary Shaw's plan to abol ish the bank reserves illegal. The Massachusetts Republican Con vention nominated John L. Bates, of Boston, for Governor, and Gen. Curtis Guild, Jr., of Boston, for lieutenant governor. Stage Manager Harry C. Rose, of New York, who shot and killed his wife, was committed by the coroner to answer the charge of murder. Tom, the trick elephant at the Cen tral Park Zoo, in New York, became so unmanageable that the authorities were obliged to kill him. James P. Forshay, an actor, who in 1001 shot and killed his wife. Edna May Stokes, an actress, at a Chicago hotel, died in that city. An elevator fell four stories at the shoe factory of A. E. Little & Co., at Lynn, Mass., killing 2 persons and in juring 11 others. Gertrude Farrington, a member of a theatrical company, committed suicide in a New York hotel with chloroform. Noah Hale shot and killed his son and beat his wife with the butt of the gun with which he killed his son. The trial of Robert M. Snyder, ban ker and promoter, charged with bribery in St. Louis, was continued. Rain and wind storms caused another postponement of the army maneuvers at Fort Riley. Kansas. The battleship Oregon has received orders to sail from San Francisco for Manila about October 15. Foreign. The T.-iris fund for a monument to Zola amounts to $.1,400. including $60 from Dreyfus. Sixty thousand mem bers of various societies took part in the funeral procession. The Pester Lloyd, of Vienna, in com menting upon Kruger's willingness to make peace with Great Britain, sug gests that he induce the Boer generals to abandon their tour. The Grand Duke Nicholas arrived at Constantinople on a Russian ironclad which was permitted to pass the naval forts. Unusual wintry weather prevails in Germany. There was ice in Berlin and snow fell on the Swabian Alps. Crown Prince Constamin of Greece was badly injured by the overturning of a motorcar. May Yohe and Bradley Strong were married at Buenos Ayres October 2. A violent earthquake occurred at Terin, Italy, 50 miles from Rome, caus ing a panic among the inhabitants. The Turkish measures to suppress the Macedonian revolt, it is believed, may stir up the neutrals. Dreyfus will r.ot attend the funeral of M. Zola, at the request of Mme. Zola, who feared that his presence might cause disturbance. President Castro and his army fled before the revolutionists, and is now reported to be at Los Teques, in a very strong strategical position. The Birr County Court upheld the decision of the Crimes Act Court in the cases of Edmund Haviland-Burk and Michael Reddy. At a Salvation Army meeting at West Gunnedah, Nev South Wales, Edward Purcell confessed having com mitted three murders. Mme. .Zola was allowed to see the body of her husband. She swooned when his features were uncovered. It is stated in London that Premier Balfour will withdraw the government's education bill. Financial. Chicago hears that United States Steel wrfl take over American 1 m Lan very short v. The buying by Gates and his friends sent up Colorado Fuel from 81 to 85 in an hour. Big bankers are unanimous in the as sertion that speculation should be kept at a lower point for some weeks. Stockholders of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad will on November 10 vote upon a proposition to increase the bonded indebtdness by $18,000,000 of 4 per cent, bonds. The advisory Committee, consisting of Llnited States Treasurer Roberts, Comp troller of the Currency Kidgely and As sistant Secretary Ailes, appointed by the Secretary to pass upon the State and municipal bonds offered, decided to take as their general standard that of the New York state Favings banks. People who should lie accurately in formed on Pressed Steel Car affairs say that earnings are at the rate of 20 per cent, on common stock, but until the entire issue of $5,000,000 bonds has been paid off the present dividend rate of 4 per cent, will not be changed. These bonds are now being paid off at the rate of $500,000 per annum. PRIDE OF MOROS CRUSHED 1 , The Americans Capture and Destroy Forty of Their Forts. OVER A HUNDRED NATIVES FALL. It Is Believed the Moral Eltect ol the Defeat of the Moros W ill Be Great General Davis Has Ordered that Hostilities Be Stayed In Order to Permit the Sultan of Bacolod and other Hostile Sultans to Make Peace. Manila (By Cable). Capt. John J. Pershing's column has completely rout ed the Maciu Moros in the Island of Mindanao, killing or wounding a hun dred of them and capturing and de stroying 40 forts. Two Americans wore wounded, but none killed. On Tuesday the Moros retired to their largest and strongest fort, on the lake shore, and on Wednesday Cap tain Pershing attacked them with ar tillery, bombarding them three hours. At noon Lieutenant Loring, leading a squad of men, attempted to set fire to the fort. He crept under the walls and started a blaze, but the Moros discov ered him and forced the Americans to retreat. In the afternoon the Sultan of Cabu gatan led a sortie at the head of a band of fanatics armed with knives. They crept through the grass, sprang tip and attacked the Americans. The sultan General Davis has ordered that hos- tilities hp staved in order tn nermit the Sultan of H'acolod and other hostile Sultans to make peace. The Sultans of Miacu were confident of their ability to defeat the Americans and vowed be fore the fight to enter slavery volun tarily if they themselves were defeated. AMERICAN GUNNERS' FIRE EFFECTIVE. Colombian Insurgent General Herrera Tries to Explain Firing on American Flag. Panama, Columbia (By Cable). The government has received a shipment of Maxim guns of different sizes and large quantities of rifle and cannon ammuni tion. A gasoline launch brought into Pana ma a small boat flying a white flag. In the boat was a messenger from the in surgent General Herrera bearing a letter for General Salazar. governor of Panama, in which General Herrera ex plains how his troops came to fire last Saturday on the launch sent under a white flag by General Salazar with the hitter's answer to the insurgent gen eral s peace proposal. General Herrera s messenger re ports that the artillery fire of the American gunners on board the gov ernment gunboat Chucuito at the tunc when the insurgents fired on General Salazar's messenger resulted in heavy losses to the insurgents. CALL TO ARMS IN MACEDONIA. Insurgent Leader Issues a Manifesto Liberty By Fire or Blood. Sofia, Bulgaria (By Cable). The or gan of the Macedonian Committee has published a manifesto of Colonel Jan koff, leader of the Macedonian insur rection, announcing the revolution and calling on all Macedonians to take up ms in behalf of their country. I he Colonel points out that all the Balkan States won their liberty by fire and blood. At the same time he urges that considerate treatment be meted to peaceful Mussulmans. A public meeting convened by the Macedonian Committee voted by ac clamation to address a note to the powers calling attention to the critical situation in Macedonia, urging the ne cessity for putting in operation the 1 reaty of Berlin and recommending that the Macedonian question be sub mitted to the arbitration of the Inter national Court at The Hague. LONG LITIGATION SETTLED. Nashville Makes a Good Deal With Its Street Railway Company. Nashville, Tenn. (Special). The liti gation between the city and the street railway company, which has been pend ing for four years, was settled by agree ment between Receiver Percy Warner and Mayor James Head. By the terms of the agreement the city concedes the charter rights and franchises to the company in return for the donation of Centennial Park to the city, the pay ment of 2 per cent, of the gross re ceipts of the company annually, and an agreement to expend $1,000,000 imme diately on improvement of the proper ty. Centennial "Park, which the city gets in the deal, is the site of the I en nessee Centennial Exposition, and com prises 72 acres of, improved property, valued at $125,000. Death ol I Noted Violinist Chicago (Special). Prof. S. E. Jacob son, a well-l.nown violinist, died here after a short illness. Professor Jacob son was 62 years of age and prominent in musical circles here and in the Last. Killed His Own Son. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. (Special) Noah Hale, a market gardener, living six miles from this place, shot and kill ed his son, Frank, and badly injured his wife, beating her over the head with the bi'tt of the gun with which he had just killed his son. The murderer then fled to the woods, whither officers and posse pursued mm. Later a snot was heard from the forest and it is thought Hale had committed suicide. Domes tic quarrels led to the tragedy. Fatal Elevator Accident. Lynn, Mass. (Special). In an eleva tor accident at the shoe factory of A E. Little & Co., here, two persons were killed and II others more or less seri ously injured. A cable parted, and not only did the car, which contained 13 persons, fall four stories, but a 600 pound weight descended with great force on the top of it, breaking through and crushing, to death Benjamin C. Crane, foreman in the factory, and causing injuries to Miss Frances Her lihy, an assistant forewoman, from which she died within a short time. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS. Condition of the Banks. The Comptroller of the Currency just made public an abstract of the rcpor's of the 4.(01 national banks of the conn trv at the close of business on Septem ber 15, 1002. Tic following arc the principal items: Loans and discount". $3,280,127,480; bonds to secure circulation, $324,253.7(10; L'nited States bonds to secure public deposits, $124,685,150; United States bonds on hand, ?8.oo8,iod; stocks ami securities, $40,1.100.726: due from nation al banks not reserve agents, $264,616,105; due from reserve agents, $465,640,578; lawful money reserve in banks. $507, TO.I.738; capital stock paid in, $705,535.-417- Surplus, $.126,1Q,1,05.1 ; undivided prof its, $160,216,512; national bank circula tion outstanding. $.117,001,800; due to other national banks, $648,885.5.10: due to State banks and bankers, $285,221,520; due to trust companies and savings banks, $2,15.220,608; due to reserve. agents, $.11.01,1.564: dividends unpaid. $068,550; individual deposits. $3,209,273.- KO.i; United Mates deponts, $ 1 1 7.oo77'19 ! de-osits of the United States disbursing officers, $6,846,0,13; average reserve held, 25.74 per cent. 25 - per cent. War Against Hall. The State Department has received from Consul I. C. Covert, at Lyons, the official report of the international congress for the protection of that city agninst hail. In 1801 efforts were made to produce rain by the use of cannon, and a pro fessor of the University of Bologna in nugurated a similar process for pro tection against hail. The Consul states that in 1896 Albert Sticger, Burgcr- mcistcr of Y indisch r eistnts, is said to have turned a hailstorm into a fall of fine rain by the detonations from a number of mortars. About 10.000 cloud-firing stations were represented at the congress at Padua in 1900. At this congress it was unanimously voted to continue the war against hail, on condition that it should be done systematically. In the report of the international congress it is stated that the firing of cannon stopped the wind or diminish ed its force, perforated or cleared away the clouds entirely and stopped the electrical discharges above the protect ed zone, the lightning and thunder rag ing only outside of it. Friars Must Walt Three Years. Thnee years is the period of time now fixed in the minds of the officials of the War Department as requisite for a complete settlement of the Philippine friars' lands .question. Governor Taft, by direction of Sec retary Root, made a proposition to the Vatican to pay down a lump sum of money for the lands, the Philippine Government thereby assuming all risks of defective titles. That proposition, however, having been declined there was no way out of it but to fall back on the established method of title set tlement, and where, as in this case, the titles run back several hundred years, and are held under tenure unknown to English common law practice, the set tlement is bound to be very difficult. It would not surprise the officials here if the Vatican would suddenly de cide to expedite settlement by accept ing a lump sum. Determined to Crush the Boxers. Minister Conger's dispatches to the S'ate Department show that Yuan Shi Kai, the viceroy of Chi Li, is really in tarnet in his expressed determination to crush the Boxers in his section of China. A proclamation issued by him to the people declares that the heresy of boxerdom has done great harm to the land ; that from ancient times to the pre sent this heresy always meant ruin. The boxing and incantations they practice amount, after all, to not much more than a kind of jugglery the swallowing of knives and fire without any skill. The charms they pretend to possess are or no avail when they come in collision with troops. Russian Consuls Must Pay Duty. The Treasury Department has decid ed that hereafter official supplies sent from the Oovcrnment of Russia to its consular offices in the United States are subject to duty the same as goods imported by private parties. This ac tion is taken upon official advices from the Russian Government that such goods sent from the United States and other foreign nations to its consular of ficers in that country are subject to duty. Gunner Connelly's Promotion. Gunner Louis T. Connelly, attached to the receiving ship Constellation, at New port, having passed a satisfactory ex amination, will be commissioned an en sign in the Navy under the provision of a special act of Congress authorizing such advancement of a limited number of qualified warrant officers. An Inland Water Route. Secretary Root has approved a pro ject for a survey between Norfolk, Va., and Beaufort, N. G, to determine the most advantageous route for the estab lishment by the government of an inland water route between the places named. Newsy Hens ol Interest Attorney General Knox said that in an article written some time ago Vice President Wilcox refuted the argument he made before the President. The War Department has arranged for the transfer of the telegraph sys tem of the Philippines from the mili tary to the civil authorities. Secretary Moody issued an order cre ating the new Caribbean Division and placing Rear Admiral Coghlan in com mand. Minister Conger's dispatches to the State Department iihow that the Vice roy of Chili province, China, is really in earnest in his determination to crush the Boxers in his section. The Secretary of the Nvy awarded the contract for the building of the bat tleship Louisiana to the Newport News Shipbuilding Company at its bid of $3,090,000. The Mexican government is lending its authority and assistance to a strong effort making by Mexican commercial interests to capture a share of South American trade. The remains of the late Admiral James E. Jouett were buried in Arling ton Cemetery. In recognition of their long and hon orable service in the Army President Roosevelt has directed the advancement to the grade of brigadier general Col. Amos S. Kimball, Col. Chambers Mc Kibbin and Col. Charles C. Hood. According to the monthly statement of the Comptroller of the Currency, 38 national banks were chartered during September. Arthur Raikes, first secretary and charge d'affaires of British Embassy, Washington, will soon be recalled to London. BODIES BURIED IN CELLAR Medical College Connected With Robbery of Graves. EVIDENCE THAT QUICKLIME WAS USED Detectives Armed With A Warraut Search the Medical College ol Indiana, Much Against the Will of the Medical Authorities, and Find Ten Bodies Concealed Under the Cellar Floor. Indianapolis, Ind. (Special). Sensa tional developments came to light in this city in the investigation of the wholesale graveyard robberies that have occurred in this vicinity during the last f;w months when detectives unearthed o bodies in the cellar of the Medical College of Indiana. A gang of 10 ne groes was arrested several days ago, charged with the ghoulish work, and their leader, Kulus Cantrcll, since his arrest has confessed to many of the robberies and informed the authorities that other gangs have been operating in cemeteries in this and adjoining counties, and that many of the robber ies accredited to his following really have been committed by others. People who recently have buried rel atives in various cemeteries are greatly excited, and since the developments of the last few days many graves have been reopened to sec if the caskets have been tampered with. Investigation in several of these cases have revealed empty caskets. Every medical college in this city has been thoroughly search ed for stolen bodies, but to no avail. Six bodies were found in a pickling vat at the Medical College of Indiana, the officials of this institution proving they have been lawfully obtained and assert ing that there were no other bodies about the building. Detectives went to the college Satur day with a search warrant for the body of Wallace Johnson, which had been stolen from the grove in the Ebcnezcr Cemetery, northeast of the city. The college officials were reluctant to allow them to make the search. The detec tives, however, instituted a rigid search of the building, and, as a last resort, raised the floor in the cellar. They soon uncovered the remains of 10 bodies. An attempt had been made to destroy the remains with lime. The college officials are very indig nant at the latest phase in the situation, and claim the bodies unearthed are those of subjects dissected by the stu dents of last year; that some of them are cadavers which were in the dissect ing room when the building was burned several years ago. The detectives claim the bodies have been but recently buried and that the evidence of quicklime is very apparent. The bodies are of both men and women, but are in such a state that identification is impossible. Search for the stolen bodies will be continued. NO BREAK IN MINERS RANKS. Such the Sentiment of (lie Strikers- -Legal Action Against Operators. , Wilkcsbarre, Pa. ( Special). The striking miners here have recovered from the first bitterness of disappoint ment. Their chagrin at the failure of the conference called by President Roosevelt between the representatives of the opposing forces in the greatest industrial battle the world, has ever wit nessed has been succeeded by a spirit of grim determination to fight it out until they obtain recognition of their grievances, either through compromise I or arbitration, or go down together in ; defeat, conquered, but not subdued. I The operators have explained their in ability to get certificated miners be hind the stockades proceeded from two causes intimidation on the part of the strikers that made a man hesitate be fore submitting himself to loss o! life or limb or his family to insult, and the settlement rumors circulated from time to time which prevented many from de serting the union who would otherwise have long since returned to work. CLASSED WITH CHINESE Under tbe Law a Japanese Cannot Be Naturalized. Chicago (Special). After vainly searching for some legal precedent that would justify a different decision, Judge Carter has refused to grant nat uralization papers to Lee Guy Dean, a Japanese, who made application with a view to becoming a citizen of the United States. "The statute "on nat uralization," said Judge Carter, "reads that any free white man, or any native of Africa, or any alien of African de scent may be naturalized, but that docs not apply to Mongolians, and a Japa nese is surely a Mongolian." The only decision bearing directly on the case which Judge Carter could find was one made by a Massachusetts court, and that was to the effect that an application from such a source could not be granted. Leaving the Coal Fields. Ashland, Pa. (Special). The result of the conference at Washington was received with bitter regret and the feel ing against the operators is growing steadily. Many who were heretofore in sympathy with the operators are an gry. The public sentiment against the operators is so openly pronounced that the men on strike were distinctly en couraged. Hundreds of good miners, who since the conference have given up hopes of getting work, are preparing to leave the coal fields forever. It is said that dissatisfaction exists among the deputies at the various collieries and a break in their ranks is looked for. ODDS AND ENDS OP THE LATEST NEWS. William Dickinson, a Brooklyn al derman, was arrested, charged with bribery. He is said to have offered to vote for a measure in which the com missioner of the street department was interested on condition that the lat ter reinstate one of the former's con stituents. Evelyn B. Baldwin, the arctic ex plorer, arrived in New York. In an interview he denied the charges that had been made against him. President Mitchell sent out warning notices to the district secretaries say ing He had evidence that the operators had fathered a conspiracy to circulate a pamphlet to arouse race feeling among the non-union English-speaking miners. Superintendent of police of Minne apolis was sentenced to six years and a half in the penitentiary for accepting a bribe. Proceedings were instituted against the coal operators before Attorney General Davis under the Anti-trust Laws. Snow fell in the Hartz mountains and tome parts of Germany. WEST VIRGINIA COMPROMISES. Seventeen Kanawha and Hocking Valley Mines to Start Again. Montgomery, W. Va. (Special). Sev enteen mines which have been idle since June 7, because of the strike, will start up this week and 4,000 miners who have been idle that length of time will begin work. Such an agreement was arrived at in a convention of miners held here. It was a delegate convention of the United Mine Workers of subdistrict No. 1, Division 17, and was held to consider a proposi tion made by the Kanawha and Hocking Valley Coal r mnany, the largest coal interest in this immediate region. The terms provi-'e for nine hours work, pay every two weeks and give the miners the right to organize. They will be paid by the weight of 2.0CO pounds to the ton, will have the right to employ their own check-wcighman, end will not be com pelled to deal in company stores. This is a compromise. Severe Strain Upon the President. Washington, D. C. (Special). Secre tary Cortelyou, upon being asked as to the condition of the President, said: "The conference was a severe strain upon the President. While, in the judgment of his physicians, his pro gress toward toward recovery has been satisfactory and continues so, they feel that to avoid the risk of a setback he should be relieved of any undue tax upon his strength. Therefore the next week or 10 days only such matters will be brought to his attention as it may be imperatively necessary for him to consider." Invasion of Japanese. Faris (By Cable). The news that a Japanese judicial official from Osaka has just been given a high post at the Bangkok Court is a piece of informa tion which is arousing in Paris a large amount of anxiety which is not alto gether a matter of pretense. That por tion of the press which seeks always to pour oil on the flames expresses its conviction that this appointment is the forerunner of a general invasion of Japanese into Siam tinder the friendly eye of England. Mob Lynches a Negro. Columbus, Miss. (Special). UJtt Duncan, a negro, was taken from the county jail here by a mob of several hundred men and hanged to a nearby telephone pole. Late at night Duncan entered the telephone office at Eagle Lake, where Miss Lena Harris, night operator, was on duty, and conducted himself improperly. Duncan w.is ar rested and brought here from Eagle Lake for safekeeping, but a mob of men succeeded in forcing their way into the jail and removing Duncan. Sheldon Declines to Run. Topeka, Kan. (Special). Rev. Chas. M. Sheldon filed with the Secretary of State a formal declination of the nomi nation for Congressman-at-large on the AlHed Populist ticket. Mr. Sheldon previously refused the nomination, but in some way his name had been filed with the remainder of the ticket, making his latest action necessary. Most of the nominees of the Allied Populist have de clined, and it is probable that another convention will be held. Engineer and Conductor Killed. Williamspor Pa. (Special). North bound passenger tr-in No. 9, known as the Erie express, while nmni:ig at a high rate of speed crashed into the rear end of a freight train near Milton, Pa. Pas senger' Engineer Wheeland, of Harris burg, and Freight Conductor Stringer, of Sunbur". were killed. Passenger Fireman Shaffer, of Harrisburg, was seriously hurt. None of the passengers, it is reported, was injured. Killed by His Brother-ln-Lnw. Shrevcport. La. (Special). While threatening to murder his own wife, Samuel Long, a carpenter, was killed here by his wife's brother, F. M. Fuller. Long had sent word to his wife that he intended to kill her. When he arrived at her home Long was met by Fuller, who shot him. Fuller surrendered and was released on bail. Railroad Track Blown Up. Tamaqua, Pa. (Special). A section of track on the Silver Creek branch of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad was biown up with dynamite. The explosion shook the houses in New Philadelphia and Silver Creek. When the workmen's train reached the scene of the explosion, a force of 50 deputies were on hand to escort them to the colliery. "Well Done I" Says the Emperor. Berlin (By Cable). The papers here print a letter from one of the crew of the Gcrmon gunboat Panther saying that Emperor William sent the following cable dispatch after the sinking of the Haytian revolutionary gunboat Crete a Pierrot : "Brave Panther; well done." Big Contract to American Company. London (By Cable). A contract tc the value of $2,500,000 has been awarded to an American company for the equip ment of two generating stations in the Clyde Valley, intended to supply electri cal power for industrial purposes over an area of 755 square miles. Earthquake in Italy. ' London (By Cable). A dispatch from Rome announces that a violent earthquake was felt at Terni, about 50 miles from there. The inhabitants were panic stricken and fled to open spaces. A number of houses were damaged, but there was no loss of life. A Voung Woman'! Suicide. New . York (Special). A young woman, who registered as Gertrude Farrington. New York, was found deat1 in bed in the Sturtevant House. tShe had committed suicide by drinking sev eral ounces of chloroform. Furious Snowstorm Id Colorado. . Denver, Col. (Special). A furious snowstorm, with a high wind, is raging in the mountains, being particularly se vere in the vicinity of Comp and the Al pine Tunnel. It is feared that prospec tors living in tents will suffer severely. May Lose Steel Mill. Lebanon, Pa. (Special). Following the departure of the"3oo negro iron workers from the American Iron and Stcet Company's plant here during the night, a rumor spread that the. com pany will wt its mills to Pittsburg, and that no further effort is to be made to settle the strike in the puddling de partment. The company, however, will continue to operate its factory depart ment here, manufacturing nuts and bolts chiefly. An official stated that unless the strikers return at once, the puddle mill will be closed for the winter THE KEYSTONE STATE News Happenings of Interest Gathered From All Source. Pensions granted: William W. You Altoona, $10; Benjamin F. Murphy Marietta, $8; John Riehcl, Soldiers' Home, Erie, $8; William K. Myers, Ty. rone, $8; George A. Allison, Allegheny, $8; Edmund Sliaw. Altoona, $10; Mar) E. Parks, Cohcmaugh. $8; Elizabeth Robb, Bcllcfonte, $8; Maggie E. Long Altoona, $8; Mary A. Fleming, Boston, $8; Sydney A. Foster, Jeannette, $8 George M. Metz, Altoona, $10; Williart Simmers, Glasgow, $10; Marshal D Hartshorn, Utica, $10; John C. Green, Brownsville, $S; Robert Adlcr. Pitts burg, $8; John Cornell, Trowbridge, $10; James Archer, Titusvillc, $12; Car oline Peters, Pittsburg, $8; Lydia Sib Icy, DuBois, $8; Jane Belie, St. Augus tine, $8; Nancy Parkehill, Pittsburg, $8; Kate L. Patterson, Ricktown. $8; Jane Mershimer, Princeton, $12; Petel Shafer, Etna, $8; John Shay, Watson Farm, $8; Henry Franze, Soldiers' Home, Erie, $8; William E. Dennis, Lincsvillc, $6; Lyman Richards, Rome, $6. The recent marriage of Walter Huff man and Mrs. Ida Stewart, a relative ol Postmaster W. E. Harrison, of Mc Keesport, is causing the varioiu branches of her family to rack theii brains in an endeavor to untangle the iamily relationships. The difficulty be gins with the marriage of George Huff man, Walter's father, to Miss Marj Stewart. The 'latter's brother Issac narried Miss Ida Smith, Isaac died, 'caving a widow and two children, Then the widow married Walter Huff man, a son of her brother-in-law, Geo. Huffman, who then became her father-in-law. Her husband is also her ncph iw, being the son of her brother-in-aw, and he. who was cousin to her chil dren, now becomes their father. She becomes cousin to her own children by carriage and aunt to her husband. In a close range battle with burglars, Mem Bly, engineer and watchman at he powerhouse of the Montoursville Trolley Company, at Montoursville, tilled one of the resperadoes and orobably wounded several others. The :ngineer escliped with his life in a ihower of bullets, although twice A-ounded. It was a battle of one igainst six, but the plucky engineer stood his ground until his ammunition was exhausted, and then with bullets lying all around him made his way out af the building and sounded an alarm. The five other members of the gang got away just in time. A dress-suit case containing an ev tning suit belonging to United States Senator Kean and an evening suit and 5air of trousers of Governor Murphy's, shich was stolen during their visit to Gettysburg at the dedication of the slocum monument, on September 13, was recovered in Harrisburg. Edward Miles, of Harrisburg, who is alleged to have stolen the case from the hotel at Gettysburg, has been arrested and was taken to that place for a hearing. Charles M. Woodward, a fireman on !he Baltimore and Ohio railroad, died aged 25. Typhoid fever was the cause. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Woodward, of Honey Grove, Juniata county. Owing to the increased cost of raw materials, especially coal, the Easton gas and electric companies announced an increase of about 15 per cent, in prices for light, fuel and power. Rev. J. R. King and wife, who have had charge of the United Brethren mission in Beaver Falls for the past year, will go as missionaries to Africa and will set sail on Saturday. The body of Thomas Spragg. a wealthy and prominent farmer of Oak Forest, was found hanging from a joist "in his barn, life being extinct. Mr. Spragg was the only occupant of the house, and had arisen and partly pre pared breakfast for himself, then com mitted the rash deed. Eastern capitalists who are supposed to represent the Gould or Wabash in terests have negotiated a deal with Da vis A. Palmer, who holds options on 30,000 acre, of coal land lying between Kittanning and Indiana. They propose to test the field and buy up all the farms which show good veins of coal. On account oi the death of the Blairsville College for Women of a stu dent from diphtheria and the fact that three other cases developed there, the buildings are under strict quarantine and entire suspension 01 recitations nan been ordered. Fifty-five Odd Fellows of Norristown spent a day in Tamaqua as the guests of Harmony Lodge. An unusually large crop of apples ha? resulted in Hamburg county, because of freedom from the caterpillar pest. Solomon Shearer, of Vinemont, ex pects to pick nearly 10,000 bushels. A stab wound in the arm caused the death of Peter Mahallo. of Pittsburg. He was cut during a Polish christen ing. His assailant used a penknife which he twisted about in Mahallo't arm, severing an artery. The victim bled to death at the hospital. Ira Iloltzman, engineer, and Edwarc' E. Weaver, fu-eman, on a local freight 'pusher," botli of Tamaqua, were badlj peppered with shot at East Mahanoj (unction. While waiting for orders ind while Holtzman was oiling his en gine, the fireman strolled a short dis :ance away to gather a few chestnuts Suddenly a farmer appeared and open ed fire on both men with a shotgun. Holtzman was wounded in the bad1 ind arm and Weaver caught a big part of the load in his side and hand. John Martin's 4-year-old daughtei was struck by a trolley car at Scran ton. The fender rolled her some dis tance on the track and then releasee1 her. She was taken from beneath th car, having been seriously injureC about the head, though she escaped the wheels. Robert H. Vance, junior member ol the firm of Bates & Vance, died sud denly at the City Hospital, Harrisburg, to which place he was taken for an op eration for appendicitis. Deceased was 67 years of age, and one of the most prominent business men in that citv. Frank Innis, who was recently elect ed State Councilor of the Junior Or der of United American Mechanics, was tendered a formal reception a' Chester. Prominent leaders of the order were in attendance. There was an interesting program of speechmak ing and music and a lunch. Engineers are at work in Blairsville surveying for the extension of the Buf :alo, Rochester and Pittsburg fro"1 BlackMick to that place. Thenew iron bridge under construc tion by the Lehigh Valley Traction Company at North Wales, fell upon the tracks of the Bethlehem branch of the Reading Railway. The 55" ou.th" bound train narrowly escaped being wrecked. It is said the recent heavy rains of the last two days weakened t" new foundations. The Bank of England's percentage of reserve to liabilities is now '44.03, against 53.87 a week ego.