MORGAN MAY END STRIKE Secretary Root'a Report to President Roosevelt. ANOTHER MOVE FOR ARBITRATION. sported (hat President Cannatt. of the Penn sylvania, Will Assist la Bringing About Settlement. The Operator Likely to Sooo Aanoanc Concession of so Advance lo Wages. New York (Special). There are strong indications that the settlement of (he coal strike is in sight Both the President and the administration leaders In Washington are confident that the next 12 hours will see important devel opments and that there will be an end si the strike before Sunday. Secretary Root called on the Presi dent and told him some important facts. First. J. P. Morgan is working to end the strike, in connection with A. J. Cas satt, president of the Pennsylvania Rail road. , Second. There will he no settlement with, or account of, politicians, whether they are Governors, Senators or of lower degree. Third. Morgan acknowledges that soldiers cannot make the strikers go back to work, nor will their presence in the strike region make any apparent differ ence with the number of men who will go back. Fourth. Sccrctar- Root now believes that an announcement by the operators of a concession to the miners of at least 5 and probably 10 per cent, advance in wages will be made this week. Indeed, Mr. Root is inclined to think from what Mr. Morgan said to him that the an nouncement will come within two or three days. The notice of an advance of wages will probably be posted at the mines, as in looo, and the strikers will vote to go oack to work. , . Mr. Rcoscvelt is in possession of full Information concerning the stand Mor gan has taken in the coal difficulty. The President now h t definitely in mind to anpoint a commission to investi gate the conditions on the coal fields. Carroll D. Wright will be a member ot that commission. The President is seek ing one or two other members. The committee of manufacturers will he the medium of settlement. President Mitchell consulted with this committee In Buffalo, and the coal road operators met the committee and ' received its proposition in Philadelphia. KILLED BY BL'RGLARS. A Merchant of Lexington, Ky., Shot to Death In His Own Home. Lexington, Ky. (Special). A. B. Chinn, of the firm of Cliinn & Todd, dry goods merchants in this city, one of the most prominent business men in Kentucky, was shot to death in his home bv two masked burglars at 3.30 a. m. His son Asa. who heard the noise, rushed to his father's rescue and opened fire on the burglars through a closed door. The burglars returned the fire, and Asa was perhaps mortally wounded. Citizens and police are searching for the murderers, but no clue has been found. The battle in the hall was a sharp one. So close were the burglars to Asa Chinn that the powder burned his face. His room is near that of his pa rents, and he had scarcely gotten to sleep when his mother's screams arous ed him. The two burglars stood at the bedside of Mr. and Mrs. Chinn, and, striking a match, covered thrmtwith their revolvers, demanding money. It was by the light of this match that Mrs. Chinn saw their green masks. Her impressions of the personal appearance of the men is very hazy. A. B. Chinn, the murdered man, was a deacon in the Central Christian Church. DAMAGES FOR BROKEN NECK. A Mao Who Has to Keep His Head Bnc.d Awarded $35,000. Chicago, 111. (Special). Thirty-five thousand dollars for a broken neck was the verdict in Judge Kavanagh's court against the Union Traction Company and in favor of Frederick Thoerfel, a carpenter, formerly in the employ of that corporation. The suit has been ought bitterly for ten days. Thoerfel appeared in court daily, his head supported by a sort of cage known among surgeons as a "jury mast." With the pitiable condition of their client so apparent th,e attorneys opposing the company made the most of their oppor tunity. A "jury mast" is a brace of iron supporting the spine and at the top is a ring. In this Thoerfel is compelled to keen his head or else it would fall. A banddso supports, the neck, while straps are worn around the body to keep the mast in position. He is com pelled to use crutches. The case is one of the few on record where the victim of a broken neck lives. Roosevelt oa Crutches. Washington, D. C. (Special). Presi dent and Mrs. Roosevelt went out for a drive in an open landau at 11.30 o'clock the other morning. For the first time since his illness the President reached his carriage unassisted. In stead of being carried downstairs in n invalid chair he came down upon crutches. He descended the steps in front of the house without assistance and crossed to the carriage. He held up his injured leg so that the foot did not touch the ground. A large crowd io front of the house applauded as he took his seat in the carriage. He ac knowledged .the greeting by raising his soft felt hat and bowing right and left. Five Persons Injured. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special). Fire at Homestead, Pa., caused by an explo sion of natural gas, badly damaged the Seventh Avenue Hotel, postoffice and office buildings of the Homestead Im provement Company, and seriously in jured five persons. The explosion oc curred at 3.15 p. m., in the cellar of a confectionery store on the first floor of the Homestead Land Improvement Company building, at 614 Ann street. The loss was about $20,000. Another Mill lor the South. Boston (Special). The Merrimac Manufacturing Company has been au thorized to issue preferred stock to the amount of $1,600,000, which in creases the capitalization of the com pany to $4,400,000. The additional tock will be used for the construction of a new mill in Huntsville, Ala., whe'c the Merrimac already operates a sub stantial plant. It is the intention to build a mill that will give employment to from 1,500 to 3,000 persons and will supply the print works of the Merri mac in Lowell. SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. Justice Van Sickcl, in Trenton, N. J., filed his opinion in the case of Mi riam Bcrgcr against the United States Steel corporation in favor ol the latter. General Gobin declared that his sol diers have nothing to do in the coal fields, no calls having been made upon them for protection. James H. Lynch shot, with probably fatal results, james Morse, a Rainc's hotelkeepcr. in New York, who hid Lynch' daughter. Three members of the Board of Ed ucaiion of South Omaha have been arrested on the charge of receiving bribes. One man was killed and four were in jured by the collapse of the wall of a new hotel building at Jackson, Mich. A. K. Chinn, a merchant ot Lexing ton, Ky., was shot to death by masked burglars in his home. A colored woman died in Chicago who claimed to have lived 132 years. Governor Odcll sharply called down President Bacr. of the Rending, at the conference of the Governor. Senators Piatt, yuay and Penrose and the op erators in Xew York. The Governor said the Miners' Union should be rec ognized, and he intended to use all the power he possessed to remedy the in tolerable situation. Charles Cawly, aged 17 years, who displayed wonderful inventive genius, is accused of murdering his mother and sister and of injuring four other children at Homestead, Pa. He is be lieved to be insane. The police authorities of Camden, N. J., state that Paul Woodward, charged with the murder of Walter P. Jennings and John Coffin, has con fessed to complicity in 'the crime. Gus Bush, colored, was hanged in Macon, Miss., fur the murder oi Ern est Dismukcs, white. Two thousand persons witnessed the execution. An agreement has been reached be tween the United Mineworkers and the Sloss-Shcftield Steel and Iron Com pany ot Birmingham. Ala. Governor Nash, ot Ohio, granted a pardon to Mrs. P. V. Taylor and daughter, convicted of kidnapping lit tle Margaret Taylor. The National Convention United Or der Colored Odd Fellows, at New Ha ven, Ct., voted $75,000 to establish a national headquarters. The iliiit-glass manufacturers at a meeting in Piltsbitrg, decided to form a combination, to be capitalized at $30. 000,000. Ihe Reading Coal and Iron Com pany denies any aerccmcnt with other coal companies to regulate the prices. Five persons were injured and prop erty damaged by an explosion oi nat ural gas at Homestead, Pa. Striking girl boxmakers attacked those who had taken their places at the W. C. Ritchie plant, in Chicago. James Pendleton, mayor ol Gentry, Mo., was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary for bigamy. There were 13 deaths on the trans port Sherman, which arrived at San Francisco irom Manila. Jtre C. Hutchins. of Detroit, was elected president of the Strce' Railway Association. Forelga. At a meeting at Utrecht, Holland, in honor of the Boer generals, General Botha said, that President Kruger had not carried off state funds, and that he had contributed liberally to the Boer cause. Troops have been sent to the French coalfields to check the rioting. In an encounter between gendarmes and strikers one of the latter was killed and several wounded. The strike is ex tending. The Swiss Parliament authorized the mobilization of 2.000 troops, including a battalion of sharpshooters, should their services be needed, to quell strike disturbances in Geneva. Reginald Ward, of New York, pre sided at the annual banquet of the Dra matic and Musical Benevolent Fund, an old English charity, in London. In the English Church Congress in London there was an outspoken criti cism of the Bible's infallibility which caused considerable discussion. Adam Russell, a German subject, has been murdered in Venezuela. The crime is attributed to revolutionists. General Nord, war minister of the Haytian provisional government, has been defeated and is in retreat. Generals Corbin and Young are the recipients of much social attention in London. In connection with the increased mil itary measures taken by the Turkish government in view of the revolution ary movement in Macedonia, three bat talions of Redit's have been dispatched to the Djumabala district. At the opening of the German Co lonial Congress in Berlin Max Shickcl, a banker, adovcatcd the co-operation of Germany with the United States and Great Britain in securing and protect ing over-sea trade. The Workmen's National Convention decreed a strike throughout Switzerland. Soldiers have been ordered to hold themselves in readiness for an emer gency. The Boer generals attended a church service with Mr. Kruger at Utrecht, Holland, the occasion being his seventy-seventh birthday anniversary. The Pope said to Archbishop Chap pelle that Washington was the most loyal and generous government the Church had ever to do with. Rear Admiral Casey is trying to bring about peace between the contend ing elements in Colombia. The striking miners in France are trying to prevent nonunion men from working. Tao Mu, viceroy of the Provinces of Kwangtung and Kwanosi, is dead. The Boer generals declined to seek presentation to Emperor William through the British ambassador, and the fact has caused a sentiment aeamst them in German court circles. Financial The Japanese loan of $35,000,000 was over subscribed 5 per cent, in London. American Railways' gross earnings for September increased $34,819, or 30 per cent. Western Union's profits were greater in 190J than for any previous fiscal year since 1803. A New York bond house offered $300,000 long 4s to the Government at 138 1-4, but they were not bought. It is definitely announced that Phil adelphia city bonds arc accepted by the Government at 75 per cent. All railroad bonds offered to Sec retary Shaw as security are rejected. Investors have been selling Balti more & Ohio, Atchison and Union Pacific bonds to buy stocks with the proceeds. State and municipal bonds aggregat ing $5,000,000 have been accepted in place of Government bonds for United States deposits. At the annual meeting of the Greene Consolidated Copper Co, H. E. Hunt ington, of the Southern Pacific, and Henry Scott, president of the Union Iron Works of San Francisco, were chosen directors to succeed General Seatongood and William L. Greene. MASKED MEN GET $50,000 Express Car On the Burlington Road Hcld-l'p and Robbed. SAFE BLOWN OPEN WITH DYNAMITE. Two O'Clock in the Morning the Time and a Spot Four Miles Irom Lincoln, Ncb the Scene Three Men Wave Red Light and Stop the Train, Two Cover Engineer and Fireman With Revolvers While Third Wrecks Sale. Lincoln, Neb. (Spccial).-Thrce masked men held up the Pacific Coast express train of the Burlington road, four miles from Lincoln, shortly before 3 o'clock a. m. They used explosives on the express car, shattering it badly, and after wrecking the safe rifled it of its contents, securing booty ol an estimated value of $50,000. The train was a few minutes late and in charge of Conductor C. A. Ionian and Engineer A. L. Clayb'irg. On the crest of a hill midway between the city and the town of Woodlawn. the en gineer saw a red light waved across the track and brought the train to a stand still. Two men sprang quickly into the cab, covering Clavburg and his fireman with revolvers. They lost no time m giving their orders, and were just as promptly obeyed. The express car was cut from the balance of the train and sent ahead a short distance. The robbers found the door locked, and af ter commanding Messenger William Lupton to open it and getting no re sponse fired two or three shots into the car. The door was then opened. A heavy charge of dynamite tore the safe to pieces. The two men who were in the car politely bade the train men good morning, jumped from the car and disappeared in the darkness. The passengers were not molested, nor were the trainmen asked for their per sonal property. While the robbery in the express car was going on, a third robber walked along-idc the track by the passenger coaches, firing his revolver occasionally to keep inquisitive passengers quiet. Brakeman Moore, who alighted from the rear coach to go ahead, found a re volver pushed in his face with a warn ing to go back where he belonged. He ran the four miles to the Lincoln yards, and was the first to give the alarm. The robbers were cool, talka tive and apparently experts. The whole job occupied little time. The train was run back to Lincoln. The wrecked express car was taken out, and at 4 o'clock it resumed its jour ney, the original crew going out with it. Following it was an engine car rying Chief of Police Hoagland. De tective Malonc and his two blood hounds and three police officers. At the scene of the holdup the hounds took the scent, and the pursuit of the robbers was begun. Every town and village marshal and every county 'sher iff in Southeastern Nebraska has been notified of the robbery and told to be on the watch. The Adams Express Company says its loss is not large. The booty of the robbers consisted principally of gold coin. This made the burden of the robbers exceedinly heavy and accounts for a broad trail discovered by Chief Hoagland. The robbery was originally planned to take place at St. Joseph, and the railroad men were on the lookout. One of the criminals "tipped" the scheme off to the compr.ny, and this probably accounts for the shifting of the crime to Lincoln. DEADLY WORK OF SCHOOL TEACHER. Fatally Shoots His Pupils and the Trustees ol the Institution. Grand Forks, N. D. (Special). In a quarrel between a school teacher and the board of trustees at Altoona, a little station on the Great Northern seven miles north of the Canadian line, seven persons have been shot. One of them is dead and five others are dy ing. The school is near a little village in the settled part of the valley, which has a population of but a few hundred people. The settlers are all Mennon- nes. wno nave uvea in tne vicinity tor years. The school has been in charge of a Mennonitc teacher named Henry I. Toews. There has been some dis satisfaction with the management of the school, and this has led to a great deal of bad feeling in the community. Three members of the board oi trustees met at the schoolhouse during; school hours to talk over the trouble with the' teacher. Hot words were exchanged, and suddenly Toews drew his revolver and shot down the three trustees. He then rushed into the schoolhouse, where he shot Kehler's two daughters, aged 8 and 10 years, through the body. They will die. The 11-year-old daugh ter of Rempt was then attacked, but the bullet struck her in the arm, break ing the bone. The suicide followed. MILLS I.N COTTON MERGER. The Frels Committee Ooes Carefully Over Vslues ol Plants. Greenslioro, N. C. (Sptc'al). Henry Fries, who is engineering the cotton-mill merger, is here assisting the committee in eliminating from the list of 70 mills those not considered eligible to enter the Southern Textile Company under the following clause of the option agree ment ; "No plant of business shall be pur chased in the organization of the new company except with the written unani mous approval as to the desirability of pucliase and as to the proprietary price." The nitmlitrs of the committee present were: T. W. Pratt, Huntsville, Ala.; S. B. Tanner, Henrietta, N. C. ; John Fries, Winston-Salem, N. C. ; C. G. Latta, Raleigh. N. C. ; A. W. Haywood, Haw River, N. C Twenty Killed In Riot. London (By Cable). In a dispatch from Gibraltar, the correspondent of the Daily Mail says the rioting which followed the closing of the Socialist club within the Spanish lines resulted in 30 men being killed and a large num ber badly wounded. The latter include a lieutenant of the Spanish Civil Guard, whose lilc is despaired of, Documents seized at the Socialist headquarters showed the place was the center of an anarchist group which had been in com munication with anarchists in towns of Europe. A Dangerous Plaything. Scranton, Pa. (Special). Robert Rankin, an actor; Lewis Dorsheimer and David Morton were experimenting with gasoline for illuminating a moving picture machine in the basement of Rankin's home. The gasoline exploded and the three men were horribly burn ed. At the Lackawanna Hospital it is announced that the men will not re cover. Earthquake la Texas. Austin, Texas (Special). A slight shock of earthquake was felt bt Gar field. K miles north of here. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS, Twenty Years lr .'cl:n:sf. The State Department made public a report from Consul Donaldson, at Managua, upon a law of the Nicarag uan Government regulating and defin ing labor in its relation with capital. Tbe law went into effect on June 30 last. A laborer is defined as any person, male or female, over 16 years old. not having a capital of $100. All laborers must have employers, and those found without employment will be imprison ed for 30 years. If a laborer desires money in advance his employer can give it to him only as a loan without interest, to be paid by retaining one half of the salary or wages until the debt is paid. A laborer leaving his employer with out satisfactory settlement of his debt will be imprisoned, fined and obliged to return and work it out. The Consul says the purpose of the law is. first, to do away with the prac tice of advancing wages to laborers on a contract which made the laborer a slave until he settled his accounts, and second, to prevent idleness and viciousness by obliging everyone with out capital to be employed. Deficit Eight Millions. The estimates forwarded by Post master General Taync to the Treas ury for the expenditures of the entire postal service during the fiscal year tnding June 30, 1904, aggregate $153. 010.53a The Postmaster General esti mates that the Postoffice Department will provide from its own revenues which accrue from postage and other sources $144767,664, leaving a deficien cy of $8,343,856 to be provided for out of the general treasury. The appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1003, aggregate $138,431,598, making an increase of $14. 588,933 for the following fiscal year. The deficiency for the fiscal year end ed June 30 last was $3,961,170. Among the items in the estimates are the fol lowing: Railway mail transportation $38,343,000, an increase approximately of $3,000,000 over the appropriations for the current fiscal year; pay of rail way mail clerks, $11,917,000; carrying mails in foreign countries, etc., $2,566, 000; printing postage stamps, $376,000; an increase of $84,000. Business ol $321,009,00. The annual report of General Supcr- incendrnt J. T. Metcalf, of the Money Order Bureau of the Postoffice Depart ment, for the fiscal year ended June 30 last, shows the money orders issued by the postoflices of the United States increased over the previous year 4.951, 171 in number and $41,907,073 in amount. The average daily sale of money orders during the year was $ 1, o.'8,i 60. There have been 2,843 domestic money order ofiices and 1,843 interna tional offices added to the list. There arc now 34.137 domestic offices and 6.046 international offices in operation. Although nearly 41,000.000 orders were paid, involving the disbursement of $331,000,000, the loss to the depart ment was but $65. Carroll D. Wright to Resign. Announcement is made here that Carroll D. Wright, Commissioner of Labor, who has been prominent re cently in his efforts made to settle the anthracite coal strike, will retire from office in about two years. For 18 years Mr. Wright has been the chief of the Bureau of Labor. He now is engaged in some import ant investigations, the completion of which will occupy the two years he ex pects yet to remain at the head of the Labor Bureau. Mr. Wright a few days ago was installed president of Clark College, Worcester, Mass. At the ex piration of his service with the govern ment he will devote his entire time to his college duties. Overpayment Refunded to Cuba. An evidence of the scrupulous accu racy with which the United States gov ernment is dealing with Cuba in a finaiii cial sense was given when a Treasury warrant for the sum of $39,295 was placed in the hands of Senor Quesada, the Cuban minister here, for delivery to his government. This sum repre sents an overpayment by the Cuban government to the United States on account of the buildings erected during the military occupation and paid for out of United States funds. Printed Reports too Verbose. The President has instructed the Secretary of the Navy to devise some plan by which the present tendency to increase the number and size of nrint- cd reports and documents of all sorts nay. be curbed. He expresses the opinion that there is too much useless matter and a large number of unnec essary and expensive illustrations in cluded in many of the reports. Newsy Items ol Interest. Sir Michael Herbert, the British am bassador here, called at the S,tate De partment and arranged for his presen tation at the temporary White House tomorrow. President Roosevelt has determined to appoint Henry L, West to succeed the late John W. Ross as commissioner oi the District of Columbia. , ihe. executive committee of the Union Veterans' Union prepared a re port recommending the suspension of Gen, R G. Dyrenforth as commander-in-chief of the order. The charges on which this action was based were arbi trary use of power, and also bearing upon nis personal character. General Dyrenforth, who presided over the con vention, refused to recognize the com mittee in order that it might make its report. The anti-Dyrenforth delegates icit tne convention. President Roosevelt may appoint a commission to investigate the whole mining situation, with a view to bring ing the subject before Congress. He will not order United States troops to the mining regions unless -Governor Stone asks it. Chowfa Maha Najiravudh, the Crown Frincc of Siam, made a formal call on President Roosevelt at the temporary w nite uouse. The cornerstone of the proposed memorial nringe to connect Washing' ton with Arlington Cemetery was dedi cated in the White House lot. .miss Alice risner, a youne womar. employed in the Government Printing Office, was shot and instantly killed by William Dougherty, an employe of the same office. Dougherty then shot and killed hnnselt. Jealousy was the motive, The affair occurred at the home of a friend of the young woman. Owing to the urient need of naval officers, the Navy Department has sent telegrams to all senators and renrcsen tatives with vacancies for midshipmen to nil advising them ol another exam ination on November 12. The President has so far recovered that he was able to walk to his car nage unassisted. THE SULTAN OUT FOR WAR Rejects the Friendly Overtures of Gen eral Sumner. FORTIFYINQ ALL HIS STRONGHOLDS. The Ruler ol Bscolad Determined to Maintain the RcHgloo of Mohammed. "What We Wsnt Is War," Says the Sultan; "Ws Do Not Desire Your Friendship Fortifying Ills Strongholds to Resist Attack ol Americans. Manila (By Cable). The Sultan of Bacolod, Mindanao, has rejected the friendly overtures of General Sumner, commander of the American forces on Mindanao, in a defiant letter in which he invites war. The Sultan says "The Sultan of Bacolod desires war forthwith. He wishes to maintain the religion of Mohammed. Cease send ing letters. What we want is war. We do not desire your friendship." Friendly Moros report that the Sul tan of Bacolod is fortifying his strong holds. He is in possession of many ritlcs. It is cxocctcd that an American column will be sent from Camp Vicars to capture and reduce the Bacolod stronghold. It has not been decided when the move is to be made. Countcit'eit American silver dollars arc being made in China and circulated here extensively.. The suspicion is held that some of this money was ship ped from San Francisco. The dollars arc of silver and of standard weight. They have been detected throtieh the improper stamping of the word "Lib erty" on the Goddess. The low price of silver insured the makers of this counterfeit money a profit of to per cent. American silver circulates as gold in the Philippines. OUTBREAK OVER COAL FAMINE. Trouble la tbe Tenement District ol New York Relief Coal Yard. New York (Special). The first out break due to the coal famine occurred here Sunday, A great horde of men, women and children gathered at the relief depot in Delancey street. Anger ed at finding the coalyard closed, they started to force the doors. That the outbreak was not more ser ious was due to the good judgment of Joseph Cohen, proprietor oi the yard, and the action of policemen irom the Eldredge Street Station. Cohen calmed the excited mob by promising that each should get at least one pail of coal. The policemen, instead of clubbing, as at the Rabbi Joseph funeral, pleaded with the peo ple for order, and peace was restored. For about 10 minutes, however, it looked as if there would be a serious outbreak. No. 56 Delancey street is one of the yards selected by the coal operators from which to sell to the poor at the rate of 15 cents a pail. Tenements abound on every side, with 20 families, or about a hundred persons, to each house. The outbreak was in the morning Several women in search of coal had wandered from one street to another, pleading for a pail of coal for 25 cents, but none was to be had at that price, as the regular price was 45 cents. GIRLS IN A PITCHED BATTLE. Two Are Trampled tin During a Great Strike Riot. Chicago (Special). Riot calls, fights among hysterical girls and arrests of the girl leaders marked the girl boxmakers' strike at the plant of the W. C. Ritchie Company. Patrol wagons responded to the calls and the wagons also were used to convey many of the girls beyond the picket lines of the strikers and their sympathizers. When the cirl employes of the plant left the building they were charged by the crowd outside, and in the struggle Mary Hillman and Edith Marsh, who had refused to quit work, were thrown to the ground, trampled on and severely beaten. Rose, Anne and Marclin Zitic. sisters, were arrested 011 charges of being leaders of the riot. They were taken to a police station and the injured girls were sent to their homes in car riages. DEATH FOLLOWS OPERATION. Laryngitis and Not False Teeth Caused Buetl- ner's Death. Cleveland (Special). Frank Buett ner, a well-known contractor of this city, died as the result of an operation performed to remove a set of false teeth which it was supposed he had swallow ed while asleep. An X-ray machine was used on Buettner, which, the surgeons de clare, showed the teeth to be in the oesophagus. Just as the latter had been opened its entire length a relative of Buettner rushed into the operating room with the missing set of teeth, which had been found in Buettner's bed. It was then learned that Buett ner was suffering from a severe case of acute laryngitis. The pain in his throat led him to believe he had swal lowed the teeth. I'sed Arsenic for Bskiog Powder. Omaha (Special). Arthur Moran and three children, aged 7, 9 and 11 years, were poisoned by eating cakes in which arsenic had been placed by the mother, who mistook it for baking powder. The two youngest children are in a critical condition, and it is thought they will die. The oldest child and the father probably will recover. Coffin In a Bigamy Case. Emporia, Kan. (Special). James Pendleton, Mayor of Gentry, Mo., con victed of bigamy, was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. Pendleton, under the assumed name of Coda S. Morris, married Miss Grace Obley, of h-mporia, a tew months ago. Later, under the name of John Cox, he buried a coffin containing ice at Orlando, Okla., and circulated the report that Morris had been killed in a runaway. Pendleton has a family at Gentry. More Money for Miners. Portland, Ore, (Special). The unions of Portland have already pledged $2,300 to heln the Pennsylvania coul miners, A meeting of the presidents of the vari ous unions has been called for, and it is expected that $10,000 additional will be raised as a result of the meeting. Congressman Sbeppard Dead, Washington, D. C, (Special). Con gressman John L. Sheppard, of Ttxar kana, Tex., died at Eureka Springs, Ark., after a long illness. The Sneaker of the House hat been notified, but as yet has not appointed a committee... MANIAC TRIES TO SLAY FAMILY.. Charles Cawley Kills li s Mother, Sister and Brother. Pittsburg, Ta. ( Special). While lab oring under mental aberration, the result of the strain of perfecting an appliance for patents on an airbrake which are pending in Washington, D. C, Charles Cawley, a 17-year-old boy, of Home stead, Pa., killed his mother, sister and brother, and fatally injured three other children, lie also tried to kill his two older brothers, but was detected, over powered and turned over to the police. The weapon used was an ax, with which he crushed and hacked his vic tims beyond recognition. The Cawley family live in a neat six room house on Second avenue, Home stead, and all the members retired about 10 o'clock. Mrs. Cawley and Belle oc cupied one bed, while the others, Joseph, Adeline, Raymond and Agnes, occupied other beds and cribs in the same room, which is on the second floor rear Charles, the murderer, his brothers, James, aged 20, and Harry, aged 14, oc cupied the front room, second floor, ad joining their mother's room. Some time about 3 o'clock Charles quietly arose and, dressing himself but not putting on his shoes, crept down to the cellar and secured an ax. Coming up stairs he went into his mother's room, where the victims were all sleeping. Af ter turning up the light the maniac ap proached his mother's bedside, swung the ax high in the air and brought it down with such force that the skull was crush ed. 'Ihe mother evidently never knew what struck her, but the crazed son, thinking that his first blow did not do its work, pounded the dead mother's head almost to a jelly. Belle, the eldest daughter, slept throughout ti.e time. The dull sound of the ax on her mother's head did not arouse her. Charles hurried to her side of the bed and struck her with the ax. It is thought that the first blow slipped and awoke the girl, but only for a sec ond. She did not have time to scream, for the next blow killed her. The fiend then turned to the smaller children and struck each one over the head with the bloody weapon. AMERICAN DENTIST EXPELLED. Philadelphia;! Ran Counter to a Curious Austrian Law. Vienna (By Cable). John W.' Mead ows, a dentist of Philadelphia, has been fined $50 and expelled from Aus tria under an old law which prohibits foreigners from practicing dentistry in Austria. Mr. Meadows acted as assistant to Carl richler. a prominent dentist of this city. The American was appar ently the victim of a plot of one of his former employers, who sent his servant to Pichler with the special request that Mr. Meadows extract a tooth. This is ccntrary to the law. .which permits foreigners to act as assistants, but for bids them 10 perform operations. The judge expressed regret at be ing compelled to inflict sentence upon Mr. Meadows. Anthracite from Russia. Philadelphia (Special). The Braucr Line Steamship Company, operating be tween Philadelphia, New York and Hamburg, is reported to have purchased for importation to this country 20,000 tons of anthracite coal from Germany and 15,000 tons of anthracite from Southern Rufsia. The latter is to shipped from Marinpol, Russia, in October and No vember. The bulk of the coal that will come from Germany 'will be reimporta tions of Pennsylvania stove and chestnut grade exported to Germany and purchas ed from the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company. ' Killed by Tornado. Quincy, 111. (Special). A tornado struck this city, sweeping in a north easterly direction and destroying much property in the city and in the country. A large number of houses and barns were destroyed and great damage was done to orchards and standing corn. Wires are down and communication is shut off. It is impossible to get exact information of the extent of damage to night. One man at Camp Point was killcl and Henry Koetters, in the out skirts of Quincy was fatally injured. The smoke stacks of the electric light power house were blown down and the city is in darkness. Found Dead in tbe. Belfry. Washington, D. C. (Special). Ed ward T. Krantz, aged 65 years, was found dead in the belfry of the Trinity Methodist Church, corner Fifth and C streets southeast. He was hanging by a rope around his neck, that had Been fastened to the round of a ladder. The coroner deemed an inquest unneces sary, as the case apparently was one of suicide. George Huston Cooper, aged 61, committed suicide at his home, at 1132 Fifth street northwest, today by hanging himself to a closet door. He had been suffering from acute mel ancholia. Mr. Cooper was a clerk in the Fifth Auditor's Office of the Treas ury Department. Slam's Crown Prince Arrives. New York (Special). Prince Chow fo Maha Vajiravtvlh, the Crown'Prince of Siain, arrived here on the steamer Furst Bismarck, irom Southampton and Cherbourg. He was met by Herbert H. D. Peirce, third assistant secretary of state, and D. B. Sickles, of New York, formerly consul general at Bang kok, representing President Roosevelt and Edwin V. Morgan, of the State Department, secretary to the Presi dent's commission. ODDS AND ENDS OF THE LATEST NEWS. One thousand men are affected by a strike of the glass-chimney workers in Pittsburg. State Game Commissioner' Ilarrit was shot and wounded by Indians in Colorado. The public schools in Schenectadj were cloted because of the scarcity ol coal. Five rioters were killed and several wounded in the Spanish., lines neat Gibraltar in a fight resulting from the compulsory closing of a socialist club. E. W. Tourey has surrendered himself at Wilkesbarre for a murder committed 20 years ago. Two men jiow residing in Montana have already served Seven years for the murder. The' steamship Apache collided with the Iroquois in Charleston bailor. The Apache was beached and the Iroquois returned to her wharf. Both bclonj to the Clyde Line. Hon. Carroll D. Wright, commissioner of labor, was inaugurated us president of Clark L'niversity, at Worcester, Mass. Colonial Secretary Chamberlain warn ed the Liberal Unionists that unless they pass the desired Education Bill the government would be smashed. THE KEYSTONE STATE. News Happenings of Intertst Gathered From All Sources. Patents granted: Ellsworth Altemiu, Atwood, match box; James A. Arnold, Allegany, valve ; Adam Berninger, Pitts burg, tobacco pipe ; William H. Blairc, Erie, quadruple pump; John W. Cabot, Johnstown, self-cleaning hot-blast stove; John W. Gone, Barncsboro, boiler clean er; Alfred J. Disscher, Pittsburg, appa ratus for slitting and piling sheets; Jas. Horslcy, Glade Mills, oil well pump; Noah Johnson, Sheffield, cutter; Everett J. Kennedy, Tyrone, spike extractor; Wil liam J. Knox, Edgcwood Park, lining for converters or furnaces; Christian E. Lcotzcr, Towanda, automatic air valve for water mains; Lavellette L. Logan, Rcbertsdale, lubricator for car axle bear ings ; John R. L-ong. Warren, bench vise; Patrick N. Mack, Bradford, casing per forator; Leopold Newman, Bradd'ick, apparatus tor hemming garments; John A. Titscl, Franklin, electric motor or generator; William Wright, Allegheny, draft and buffing mechanism for car3. Pensions granted : , Joseph Fisher, Pittsburg, $6; David L. Rorkcy, Wil liamsburg, $6; James S. Flickinger, Homer Citv. $6; James S. Munnell, New Castle, $8; Lewis Swab, Venus, $to; Samuel H. Reed, Charlcroi, $10: Wil liam Miller. McMinn, $10: Jeremiah H. Hummell, Moniteau, $8; Daniel Snauld ir.g. Ogdensburg, $8; George W. Pitzer, Mahoningtow n, $8; Mary A. Hammer, Pittsburg, $12; Amelia Wilhcltn, Cam bridge Springs, $12. The annual conference of the Penn sylvania Chapters of the Daughters ol the American Revolution came to a close at Bellefontc. The conference vis ited State College as the guests of the Sons of the American Revolution of Bellefonte. At State College they were met at the station by the college Cadet Band and escorted by the fac ulty and a large body of students they proceeded to the chapel, where a large audience awaited them. Seats were provided for the Daughters on the platform. Prof. Buckout delivered an address of welcome, which was re sponded to by the State Regent. Miss Sv.san Carpenter Frazcr, of Lancaster. An address was delivered by Profes sor Gill, giving the history of the col lege. Mrs. McCartney, of Wilkes Barre, then spoke, urging all the local chapters of the D. A. R. to present pe titions to the Governor asking for a larger appropriation for State College. Blairsville College for Women, which had to close on account of an outbreak of diphtheria, has resumed. About half of the boarding students have re turned and word has been received from the remainder that they will be on hand as soon as the period of quar antine has expired. Recitations for the present tire being held in various public halls in the town and when the college buildings have been thoroughly fumigated the students will again in habit the dormitories and recitations will be heard in the regular recitation rooms. All the patients attacked with diphtheria are now entirely convales cent. John Palmer, for several years an in mate of the Mercer county almshouse, was struck by a Pennsylvania express and instantly killed. He was deaf and did not hear the approaching train. Richard Valentine, aged 48, was in stantly killed in South Canonsburg while employed in tearing down a blacksmith shop, the wall of the build ing falling upon him. The third company formed for the purpose of building an electric road be tween Blairsville and Indiana filed ar ticles of association in the prothono tary's office. Their plans are to build a line between Indiana and Blairsville Intersection, taking in the towns of Twolick, Homer City, Graceton, Coral, Blacklick, Blairsville and Cokcville. The capital is fixed at $115,000 and the directors are J. N. Langham, assistant United States District Attorney; Sher iff D. E. Thompson and W. F. Elkin, the latter a brother of Attorney Gen eral John P. Elkin, both of Indiana, and A. F. Cooper, of Homer city. Lapierre Boyles, a boy aged 15, while sitting alone in his home at Greenville, heard someone outside the house. Tiptoeing out of the room, he secured a rifle and fired at a man who was standing at the window. There was a groan and then the figure dis appeared. A -trail of blood led from the window to the road, where it was lost. Miss Ellen E. Eldrcd, who says that she hails from New York, played the Carrie Nation act in New Castle by trying to drive men out of saloons. At the saloon of Patrick Boyles she refus ed to obey the commands of the bar tenders to get out, and was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct. George L. Strayer, a well-known Al toona character, shot himself in the head with suicidal intent to escape trial in court with several companions on the charge of forging an order for beer on the Hoster-Brewing Company, Strayer is i'l the hospital in a serious condition and is not likely to recover. The Coltinrjia Plate Glass Company, of Blairsville, has about finished the erection of a block of 50 brick houses in which to house their employes, and within a short time will begin work on another block of 50. Contractor Payne, who will con struct the new Capitol, was in Harris burg with some of his engineers to es tablish the boundaries and arrange for the preliminary work. It is his inten tion to begin work as soon as pos sible. Governor Stone, acting by au thority of the commission, has approv ed Mr. Payne's bond in the stun of $1,752,838, the largest ever filed in the State. In a fight at West Chester, in which a bulldog was pitted against a horse; the latter finally won, but not without assistance from "several men. The horse was severely injured, but the dog escaped with some bruises. Dudley Debolt, a Baltimore & Ohio fireman, was struck and killed by a train east of Newark. 1 Solomon Gilbert, father-in-law ol Judge William F. Sally, died at Norris town, aged 71 years. For many years he was a marble quarry operator. Lately he lived retired, although keep ing in touch with active affairs as direc tor in several local enterprises. The body of the woman found dead at Milford was identified as that of Clara Frederick, who escaped from the State Hospital for the Insane at Nor rtstown several weeks ago. Professor Robert A. Townsend, for twenty-one years a member of the fac ulty of the Boys' High School, Read ing, died at his home in that city, aged 58. Johnl.eary, aged 28 years, a lineman employed by the Bell Telephone Com pany and residing at Conshohocken, fell beneath a moving train he was attempt ing to mount at Lansdale Station and had both legs severed. Four farmers' institutes will be held in Chester icounty this winter, as fol lows: Lyndell, January t6 and 17; Par kerford, February 14: Cedarville, Feb ruary 20 and 21, and at West Grove, February :3 snd 3K.