TRYING TRACY TACTICS Iloldlac Up Farmers in Missouri. Illinois and SHERIFFS' POSSES IN LIVELY CHASE. Tws Me Who Robbed Bank at Union, Mo., Threatened lo Murder Farmers' Wives and Children Unless They Oivt Them Food Officers Locate Then at Rlcbvlcw, but they Oct Away. St. Louis. Mo. (Special). William Rudolph and Frank Lewis, the Union, Mo., bank robbers, who were located in a cabin, near Richvicw, 111., have gain escaped, and posses of citizens in addition to that of Sheriff Howe arc being formed to pursue and capture them if possible. The entire commu nity is in arms. According to reports from cominu Siities through which the robbers have passed they have adopted Tracy tac tics, intimidating farmers and threaten ing to kill pursuers. The two men converse only with women and chil dren, from whom all the details con cerning them have been learned, ex cept the general description given by a lunter who encountered them in the woods Friday. They approach a farmhouse and. standing some distance away, call loud ly until someone makes his appearance. If it is a man, they keep on talking to him until he comes" up closer, and then they throw their rifles down on liim and order him to leave the prem ises. Like Tracy, they accompany this order with a threat to massacre the en tire family if anv attempt is made to summon help. In this way they have obtained food. At one farmhouse they found the far mer's wife and children alone. They ordered her to get breakfast, and chat ted freely while she was cooking the meal. All qustions concerning them selves they parried. The man suppos ed to be Rudolph stood on guard while the other ate, and Lewis then acted as picket. MUST WAIT THE LIMIT. Demands Immediate Pay mint of Venezuela Bowen Refuses. Washington, D. C. (Special). The German government, through its rep resentative here, Baron Spec von Sternberg, has made a request of Mr. Bowen for the immediate payment of the 5500 which it was stipulated in the protocol signed on February 13 should be paid within 30 days from that date as a preliminary to the raising of the blockade against Venezuelan ports and the agreement to send the question of preferential treatment of the block ading nations to The Hague for deter mination. Mr. Bowen promptly declined to ac cede to the request, but informed Bar on Sternberg that, as provided in the protocol, the money would be paid to the German representative at Caracas 30 days from February 13, which would be on March 15. The reason that animated the German government in making the request is siot disclosed here, nor is Mr. Bowen ware of it. The matter, however, has some significance perhaps, in view ,,j the fact that th'.- -.hip taken by the Germans during the blockade V,ave not jet been returned t - Venezuela. During the d-iy :,,, bowen had calls from the Frv.'.i'n ambassador, M. Jusser and, the Spanish minister, Scnor Ojeda, and the Belgian minister. Baron Mon cheur. in regard to the protocols that are in preparation for the settlement of the claims of the citizens of their countries against Venezuela. Rough drafts of these instruments are already on their way by mail to the European govern ment's interested, but there are certain provisions regarding them about which the envoys desired to consult Mr. Bowen. The protocols arc expected to reach their destinations the latter part of this week, pending which no final steps for their joint signature can lie taken. Orphans Brutally Treated. Binghamton. X. V. (Special). An in vestigation of alleged cruelties practiced t-pon the inmates of the Susquehanna : Valley Orphans' Home is in progress liere. The institution contains about 200 children and is under the care of the State Board of Charities. At the hearing butts of horsewhips loaded with metal and a dozen rattans were shown as the implements with which the boys were whipped by the assistant superintendent. Hotel 111 Furnace. Cedar Rapids, Iowa (Special). Ten jersofi are believed to have been burned to death and at least four times that number are known to be seriously in jured as the result of a fire which de stroyed the Clifton Hotel. There were son guests in the hotel when the fire broke out, and most of the dead are buried in the debris. .Owing to the de struction of the hotel register, the names of the missing have been unobtainable. Hundreds Washed Into Sta. Washington, D. C. (Special). The Department of State has received dis patches from the Consul at Tahiti, So ciety islands, reporting that the recent tidal wave completely depopulated Haio and Makemo, and caused great loss in Hikueru, where 400 people were washed Into the sea. Reported Bogaa Victories. Willemstad (By Cable). Advices re ceived here from revolutionary sources t Tucaeas, Venezuela, say that the re cms engagement between Revolutionists nd the government forces in the neigh' bothood of Rarquisimcto was a small af- tair. and the government troop, who in tended to force their way through the center of the revolutionitts, were driven berk. All thr victories recently claimed by the Venezuelan fovernmcnt are, ac- cnrdin" to the advices which have been received here, absolutely false. Killed by Bsrglars. Philadelphia, Pa. (Special). Archi bald McCurdy was shot and killed, pre sumably by burglars who had entered the department store conducted by John McCurdy. s brother of the dead man. Shortly after midnight two policemen discovered that the door of the store was . opsin. Suspecting burglary, the sum snorted the uroorietor and. uoon inveiti gallon, found McCurdy's body lying on the floor witb a bullet wound in the head, McCurdy was acting as night watchman, It is believed he interrupted the burglars im their work. The cash drawer had Wen broken open and f 50 taken. THE LATEST NEWS IN SHORT ORDER. Domestic. The district attorney at San Fran cisco says the fact that the Delaware legislature is considcrng the appropria tion of funds to defray the cost of prosecuting Mrs. Cornelia Botkin for the killing of Mrs. Dunning and her sister will not interfere with the trial of the woman in San Francisco. Nearly 300 pieces of silverware, stol en recently from one or more families in Philadelphia, were found by detec tives in the possession of two colored burglars under arrest in New York. The Attorney General of Illinois is making inquiries into the plans of the Glass Trust, reprcscsentatives of which met in Chicago last week. Agreements were entered into in Chicago by labor unions with the em ployers' union, which will prevent sym pathetic strikes in the building trades. The steamer Brooklyn City arrived at New York, having required 28 days to make the trip from Swansea on ac count of hurricanes and gales. Boers have bought a large tract of land from the Southern Pacific Rail road in the Bear River Valley, Utah, on which they will settle. A passenger train ran into a freight on the Illinois Central, near Galena, III., killing three trainmen and fatally injuring a fourth. Dr. FYiedcrich Muller. Professor I.orenz's assistant in his bloodless op erations, will come to this country in March to attend to the after-treatment in the case of Lolita Armour, and to accept the chair of orthopedy in the Chicago Medical College. More sensational evidence was heard in the trial of Dr. Ellis Duncan for the shooting of Bruce Head in Pittsburg. A love-letter alleged to have been writ ten by Head to Mrs. Duncan was sub mitted in evidence. George H. Pell, who some years ago was well known in Wall street circles in New York and in fashionable cir cles, was sentenced to three years and six months in State's prison for grand larceny. Money sharks at Chicago have raised a fund to defeat legislation prohibiting the assignment of salaries as security for money loans to employes. Mr. Carnegie added $125,000 to the endowment fund of the Carnegie Labo ratory of Engineering at the Stevens Institute of Technology. A number of lives were lost and many persons injured in an early morning fire that destroyed the Clifton Hotel, at Cedar Rapids, la. The confession of Insurance Agent Foster in the New York insurance frauds made public some startling methods of the swindlers. An old resident of Morris, N. Y., has made the arrangements and paid his undertaker's bill, and also settled for his lo-niistonc. James Flynn. former assistant cor poration counsel in New York, was stricken with heart disease on an ele vated train and died. Count von Quadt, 'of the German Embassy, and Countess von Quadt, paid a farewell visit to President Roose velt. A man serving a term in the St. Louis workhouse who, as "Lieutenant Colonel Seymour Barrington, of the British nobility." married a woman in Kansas city, has been identified as George Barton, an English criminal. Thousands of acres of bottomland in Indiana, south of Vinccnncs, last week under water from the floods, are now covered with ice and many families arc destitute and unable to get away from their ice-bound houses. The extreme cold has so congealed the natural that niii'iy rcMdenv.es 111 Pittsburg and '.icViiity are without ht.u or In'1.. nd the people have to go to Mil to keep warm. Foreign. Gen. Sir Harry Macleair, commander of the bodyguard of the Sultan of Mo rocco, says the power of the pretender, Bu Hamara, who is reported wound ed, is completely crushed. . The court in Hamilton, Ont., cen sured the captain of the steamer Ma diana for not taking proper precau tions to prevent the wreck of the ves sel. The blizzard continues in Newfound land, and relief parties are making slow progress in trying to rcacn the snowbound passenger trains. The Canadians have protested to the home government against the appoint ment of Senators Lodge and Turner 011 the Alaska Commission. Emperor William cabled Commo dore Scheder, in command of the Ger man fleet at Venezuela, his apprecia tion of the manner in which the block ade had been conducted. The Polish leader in the Austrian Reichsrath made scandalous charges against I rince rnuip 01 saxe-oourg- Gotha, the husband 01 tne rrmcess Louise of Belgium. The wife of a dentist in Dresden has sued for divorce, charging that she found in her husband's pockets love- letters from the Crown Princess Louise of Saxony. A revolutionary army 01 sjsoo men has reached a point 20 miles south of Caracas. The revolutionists and the government troops both occupy strong positions. Pope Leo celebrated his silver jubi lee, and after performing the functions according to the program declared it the happiest day ot his lite. 11 is reported irom jaugicr wiui 1.1 Meneblue. the Moroccan minister of war, was killed in battle February 13. Mr. Cranborne stated in the House of Commons that Great Britain had had 110 correspondence on the Mexican and Chinese proposals to the United States for the establishment of a fixed relation ship between the moneys of the gold standard countries ana tne silver na tions. President Castro asked the United States government that the gunboat Marietta be permitted to convey the of cers and men who are to man the Ven ezuelan craft captured by the blockading fleet. Financial , Money is lightening up a bit. Time loans a shade stronger. New ork banks have lost this week to the Subtreasury $2,436,000. America sold 9,100,000,000 more goods abroad last year than it bought. The Bank of France notes ol circula tion decreased $7,500,000 for the week. The chairman of Wisconsin Central says Grand Trunk will not buy his road. A higher price for copper metal has helped boost the quotation for Copper shares. John W. Gates will, it is now report ed, remain in his brokerage firm at least another year. The Transvaal loan which will be is sued by the British Government in April will be Sjoo.ooo.ooo at .1 per cent A contract for 25,000 tons of steel rails will be placed in England for the Intercolonial Railroad of Canada, on account of the inability of the two steel mills in the Uomunon to make them. Of all high priced stocks, New York Centra has been the weakest since Jan nary 1. it has declined about , 10 points. So much for the plans to in create the capital stock or bonded debt. SCOOPED IN MILLIONS How the Turf Tipsters Public. Gulled the A TRACK "TOUT" THAT STARTED IT. Jack Sheehan Sold Thres Winners for Tea Cents on the Long Island Race Trains The Originator of Scheme That Has Been Worked by Shsrpers on dlganflc Scale All Over the Country. New York, D. C. (Special). Con servative racing men estimate that $200,000,000 has been garnered from a gullible public during the past two years by the get-rich-quick turf tip sters and "Racing Commissioners," who are now being raided by the po lice in all the big cities from New York to San Francisco. Jack Sheehan, a racetrack "tout." who six years ago started in by sell ing three winners for 10 cents on the Long Island race trains, was the orig inator of the general scheme, which has since developed and grown to such great proportions. The idea, born in his active brain, developed into the great concerns which took in millions, where he had accepted dimes, and which sought out their victims in everv nook and cor ner of all the States in the Union. The uprising of the public against these so-called speculators and the publicity given their peculiar meth ods have in a very brief time scattered them to the winds. Those who have not been forced out of existence by the police have rushed to cover. It seems likely that the "turf speculator" and his get-ridi-quick circulars will be want ing. To such men as William C. Whitney, August Belmont, James R. Kecne and J. G. Follansbee, all lovers of clean racing, is due the credit of cleansing tfle turf of these people, for it was the action of the Coney Island Jockey Club in refusing the entry of Gold Heels in the Suburban that first directed atten tion to the owners the E. J. Arnold Co., of St. LouTs. With the downfall of this concern the war against all of them began. WANT PRIZES RETURNED, Venezuelans Ask Bowes to Intercede Wltb the British. Washington, D. C. (Special). Minis ter Bowen received a cablegram signed by the "Prize Sufferers, Trinidad," re questing his good offices with Great Brit ain in securing the return of the prizes taken by that country before the raising of the blockade by the allied powers. The cablegram is as follows: Port of Spain, February 21, 1903. Minister Bowen, Washington: All prizes returned by Germany and Italy. L'se kind influence with England. Nearly all prizes belong to poor fisher men, who have lost ail and are penniless here. ( Signed) PRIZE SUFFERERS, TRINIDAD. . Minister Bowen sent a copy of the rablegram to Sir Michael Ilerb'-rt, the British ambassador, requesting him to transmit it to his govrninent, ,1 )1H earliest convenience. .L ANOTHER COLLISION. Passenger Train Runs Into Freight Train, men tbe Victims. Galena, 111. (Special). Three train men were killed and one fatally injured in a head-end collision between the Chi cago and Minneapolis passenger train and a southbound freight train on the Illinois Central Railroad. The freight train had stopped to take water. It was about to pull out from the .water tank, when the passenger train, consisting of a combination baggage car and four Pullman cars, rounded a curve and crashed into the locomotive of the freight. All the men on the locomotives, except Engineer Lake, of the passenger train, were crushed under the wreck of the locomotive. Lake escaped uninjured. The combination library and baggage car was wrecked and crowded from the rails, Villing Brakeman Clock. The sleeping cais held to the rails, and the occupants were uninjured. Swept By Fire at Night. Roanoke, Va. (Special). Fire de stroyed the business portion of Clinch port, an enterprising commercial village in Scott county. Nine buildings were leveled to the ground, entailing a loss of $.10,000, with but little insurance. The blaze started from a defective flue in the store of Head & Sloan, and quickly spread to adjacent buildings. The only buildings left in the business section of the town are the depot and two hotels. Friends Thought Hla Dead. Clinton, Iowa (Special). Wm. Mar shal, a wealthy farmer, had a narrow escape from being buried alive. He had been ill for some time and was de clared to be dead by doctors. The supposed corpse was laid out when, to the terror and amazement of those who were sitting by the body, he stirred and sat up. His illness had almost al together disappeared and later he was up and about the house. Miss Roosevelt Belhrotbed? Dallas, Texas (Special). Friends and relatives of the Mcllhennys are said to be authority for a rumor that Miss Alice Roosevelt, now visiting in K,yu Or aans. is encaged to John Mc- llhenny, 6ne of the "Rough Riders." Members of the Mcllhcnny family, when shown the Dallas dispatch, dccltn cd to make any statement. Seeing Things Is lbs Sns. Lanorte. Ind. (Special). Alexander Young, of this city, says that from ob nervations made by him he is confident that the sun is inhabited; that with his instruments he has seen on the sun s surface mountain sides, with great and precipitous rocks which glow with pris matic colors, mingled with the verdure of a perennial vegetation, and with a floral radiance more beautiful than that on earth. Beyond these mountains he says he saw valleys and plains where people live. Th Slats Mllltla. Washington, D. C (Special). Militia reports from various states show an ag gugate of 11859 commissioned officers and enlisted men organised and 10,853, 306 men on whom the country can call in an emergency not in any organization. New Stamp Unsatisfactory. Washington. D. C. (Special). Third Assistant Postmaster-General Madden aays the new a-cent postage stamp is generally unsatisfactory in appearance, both to the Postoflice Department and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, sod new design bat been ordered. WITH THE NATIONAL LAWMAKERS. Currency for Philippines. The House Committee on Insulr.r Af fairs, by a st -ict party vote, authorized a favorable leport on the Philippine cur rency bill as it passed the Senate, hut recommend that it be amended by strik ing out the Senate provision for an in ternational commission ; also by insert ing at the end of section 3 the following: "Provided, That debts contracted prior to the 31st day of December, 1003, may be paid in the legal tender currency of said islands existing at the time of the making of said contracts unless other wise expressly provided by contract." General Pension Bill Reported. Representative Sulloway introduced a bill reciting "that in the administration of the pension laws any enlisted man in the military service of the United States during the war of the rebellion shall be held to be entitled to pension for any disability contracted by him during any and all enlistments recognized by the War Department as valid, provided his disability or disabilities were contracted during the performance of military duty within the meaning of the pension laws, any ruling or decision of the Secretary of the Interior to the contrary notwith standing." Congress Invited to St Lonls. The Speaker laid before the House the invitation of the St. Louis Exposi tion Commission to Congress to be present at the dedicatory exercises, April 30-May 2. Mr. Tawney offered a joint resolu tion, which was adopted, accepting the invitation and providing a committee of 7 Senators and it Representatives to represent the two houses. Retirement of Enlisted Men. The House Committee on Naval Af fairs authorized a favorable report on the bill which has passed the Senate provid ing that service in the army, navy, and Marine Corps shall be credited in com puting the necessary thirty years' time for the retirement of petty officers and enlisted men of the navy. State Laws Regarding Trusts. The House Committee on Printing favorably reported the resolution which passed the Senate providing for the com pilation under the direction of the Attor ney General of all State laws relating to trusts and to the organization and regu lation of corporations. Not a Unanimous Report. Mr. Hoar, from the Committee on the Judiciary, reported in the Senate the Littlefield anti-trust bill as amended. Mr. Piatt, of Connecticut, a member of the committee, stated that it was not a unanimous report, and that he was op posed to the measure. He said a large proportion of the bill has been more wisely and appropriately treated in legis lation recently enacted. Concerning the new features, there were, he said, un constitutional provisions in them. Even if they were within the constitutional authority of Congress they are mischiev ous, and will work great injury to the business interests of the United States. Status ol tbe Isle of Pines. A resolution was agreed to in the Sen ate calling on the President for informa- ion regarding the present status of the Isle of Pines and what government is exercising authority and control in said island ; what instructions, it any, regard ing said island were given at the time when the military occupation of Cuba by the United States was terminated ; and what action, if anv. has been taken for the protection of the interests of citizens of the United States who have purchased property and settled in the Isle of Pines. Grecian Treaty Ratified. The Senate, in executive session, rati fied the treaty of friendship recently ne gotiated between the United States and Greece. The portion of the treaty relat ing to consular trials was slightly amended in language to meet the criti cisms of Senator Hoar. Life-saving Station at Nome. The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce authorized fav orable reports on the bills which have passed the Senate providing for the con struction ot a lite-saving station at Cape Nome, Alaska, and to increase the num ber of lighthouse districts to eighteen. Free Importation of Thoroughbreds. The Senate Committee on Finance agreed to report favorably the bill pro viding for the free importation of thoroughbred live stock for breeding purposes. 1 he bill extends the pnvi lege to such live stock imported for sale. Is Iks Departments. The cornerstone of the Army War College was laid with impressive cere monies, speeches being delivered by President Roosevelt, Secretary Root and Gen. S. B. M. Young, president of the war college. Representative Gaines introduced resolution calling upon the Secretary of the Navy for information as to the con tracts made for plans for the new Naval Academy buildings. The General Deficiency Appropriation Bill as reported by the House Committee contains provisions for additional assist ant attorney generals to carry out the anti-trust laws. Minister Combes, of Guatemala, has cabled the State Department that Senor Arias was elected president of Guatemala by Congress. Secretary Moody ordered the trial of Lieut. Chester Wells, of the tug Leyden, and of Ensign Wortman, ot the battleship .Massachusetts, by court martial. The House Committee on Naval Af- fairs laid on the table the bill to give Admiral Schley the pay and allowance of s rear admiral on the active list. The House adooted the Fortification Bill and the Legislative, Executive, and juuiciai Appropriation Din. Secretary Cortelyou, as head of the Department of Commerce and Labor, attended his first Cabinet meeting. Mr. William Loeb, Jr., assumed his new duties as secretary to the President and Secretary Cortelyou went to his new olhce. Upon the advice of his physicians President Roosevelt has postponed hit Western trip until May. Conrad N. Jordan, assistant treas urer of the United States, is reported to be seriously 111. The General Board of the Navy clan ned an extensive program for building 110 the Navy. Solicitor General Richards was nom inated by the President to the United States Circuit Lourt ot the Sixth or- cuit, and Assistant Attorney General Hovt was nominated to succeed Mr. Richards. The nomination of Judge Day for the Supreme Court was also sent to tbe Senate. BOY AND 7 GIRLS KILLED Lackawanna Fast Express Cuts Newark Trolley In Two. MAIMED SCHOOL CHILDREN IN SNOW. Brakes Failed es s Dangerous Orade and Allowed Crowded Car to Slip Down the Hill 00 lb Icy Ralls la Front sf th Oncoming Train Twenty Were Severely Injured. Newark, N. J. (Special.) A fast ex press on the Lackawanna railroad cut through a trolley car crowded with school children at the Clifton avenue crossing. Eight children were killed and a score or more of them injured. The motorman of the car, who stuck to his post, will die, and the engineer of the express was so badly hurt that there is little hope of his. recovery. Both the express and the trolley were on steep grades, going at right angles. The express was signaled and the cross ing gates were lowered while the trolley car wa3 half way down the hill. The motorman shut off the power and ap plied the brakes, but almost immediate ly the car began to slip along the icy rails. It gained tremendous momentum and ot the bottom of the hill crashed through the gates directly in the track f the oncoming train. I he locomotive plowed its way through the trolley, throwing the children in every direction. the accident happened within three blocks of the High School building, and in the car at the time were nearly 100 pupils. As many as thirty others had managed to throw themselves from the car before the crash came. The trolley was one of the specials which every day ring the children to school. It had more than its ordinary load owing to the cold. contained every child that could squeeze inside, and others stood on the rear platform. Peter Brady, the motorman, promptly hut off the power and applied the brakes. The speed of the car was checked, gut it continued to move slow down the incline. 1 here was no thought of danger. Then it began to move faster and faster. The ice covered rails afforded no hold for the wheels, and although Brady jammed his brake harder and then swung on the reverse, the momentum of the car grew" at every yard, and the car shot down toward the railroad. hen it was right at the gates the express thundered into view. Warned by the cries of those afoot and by their own sense of danger those on the platforms began to throw them selves off into the snow, and as the car sped along the few remaining feet to ward the rails, perhaps one-third escaped death or injury in this way, but there was no time for those within the car to do more than crush toward the rear door. The gates were swept aside like toothpicks, and before the cracking of the gates died out the air was tilled with frantic cries of those who saw death dashing down upon them. 1 he wreck of the trolley car was com plete. The pilot of the engine struck it almost amidships and turned it partly around, and then the ponderous' engine cut it in two. The upper part of the trolley was reduced to fragments under the drivers of the locomotive. Une-halt of the car was thrown to one side and ay on the tracks. The other section was hurled some distance away. In every direction lay the injured and dead. Ihe engine was brought to a standstill and from the train and from ncarhy houses men rushed to the rescue. The specta cle was appalling, and many who .started to work had to give up unnerved.- Paid $IB for It, Wants $60 0)0 St. Louis (Special). A reputed Leo nardo da Vinci painting of a Madonna was sold by a second-hand dealer in Crondolct for $9 to a St. Louis man, who sold it to James Hilton for $10. Hilton declined an offer of S15.000 for the picture a few days after he bought it, and now holds it at $00,000. It is pronounced a genuine one. and one of those stolen from the Vatican over 100 years ago. Canada Loses $40,000. Montreal (Special). Andreas Mar- tineau, a civil servant in the Militia Department at Ottawa, has victimized the country to the extent of $40,000, according-to discoveries made in a search of his accounts. hen arrest ed in Ottawa he was ready for flight, having $12,400 on his person. the charge against him will be forgery and embezzlement. Having charge of blank checks, Martineau filled one occasion ally to Charles Da Cota, under which name he had an acount at the Sov ereign Bank, and speculated in stocks. Carnegie's Peace Palace. The Hague (Special.) It is said here that negotiations have been opened be tween a financial syndicate of The Hague and Andrew Carnegie for the sale of an estate here, which formerly be longed to the grand ducal family of Saxe-Weimar, upon which Mr. Carnegie proposes to erect a "Palace of Peace." Elkln's Rebate Bin Signed. Washington, D. C. (Special). The President has signed the Elkins antire- bate bill. This bill, which has become a law. in addition to the two previous measures which metwilh the executive approval, completes the administration's program for antitrust legislation. Only One List Printed. Washington ( Special.) Commission er of Pensions Eugene F. Ware with held from the newspapers the usual list of pensions granted during the day. Mr. Ware says he will save something like $4000 a year to the government by this ii.novation. Explosion Is Fort Lafayetfe. New York (Special) Three,men were killed outright, one so injured that he died later, two others fatally and at least seven seriously hurt in an explo sion in the workroom of the naVal stor age magazine at Fort Lafayette, in New York bay, about 2 o'clock. The dead : George Rotham, Brooklyn ; Gustave Doz ler, Bay Ridge; John Mason, Brooklyn; unknown man, thought to be Martin Thargensen, Brooklyn. Held UpTrolWy Car. Los Angeles, Cat. (Special). The daring deeds ol highwaymen who seem to have invaded Los Angeles in force, reached s climax when the unmasked men held up and robbed a carload of passengers on the Los Angeles-Pasadena electric line. Thirty-two patsen gers, one-half of whom were women, were forced at points of, revolvers to surrender cash and jewelry to the amount of between $500 and $700. The robbers performed their work quickly but effectively, 1 The car was held for 10 minutes. The men then left it and disappeared in the darkness. NO RIQHT TO INTIMIDATE. Labor Leader os the Rights of thj Union- Strike Without Lawlessness. Boston, Mass! (Special). A winter series of lectures on economic ques tions, under the auspices of the Twen tieth Century Club, was brought to a close here by an address on 'Strikes," by E. E. Clark, of Cedar Rapids, la., a member of the Anthracite Coal Strike Commission. Mr. Clark is the representative of organized labor on the commission. In his address he defended ttie union and the right to strike in support of a demand for bet ter conditions. He said, however, that all such con flicts must be conducted with a propel respect for the law. "If organized la bor cannot work out its salvation with out resorting to unlawful acts," he de clared, "its existence cannot be de fended." In the course, of his address Mr. Clark said: "If by divine right some are given charge of many and great interests, it is not, that they may exalt themselves above all men and reap great personal profit and reward, but that they may, by the exercise of the talents intrusted to them and the opportunities given to them work out the will of the Master by ele vating and improving the condition of mankind. "It should be done by encouraging order, industry, thrift and self-rest. "There are certain rights of property and of personal liberty which must be recognized and defended and protected. The worker has a right to quit or to strike in conjunction with his fellows. He has neither right nor license to de stroy or damage the property of the em ployer. Neither has he any right ot license to intimidate or use violence against the man who chooses to exercise his right to work. "If the employer rids himself of the service of an employe either by dismissal or by filling the place where he struck or quit the employer has no right, legal ot moral, to hamper or defeat that man's efforts to earn a living in the service of another employer by secretly blacklisting him. "The employer who uses the blacklist cannot be heard to complain that the em ploye uses the boycott. And the employe who uses the boycott beyond the exer cise of his own free will to trade where he chooses cannot be heard to complain that the employer uses the blacklist." Girls Rob Hen Roost. Derby, Conn. (Special). Because they wanted pin money, Nellie Hawks and Bertha Mahoncy, schoolgirls ol Huntington, raided the hen coop of William Piper. With a pullet under each arm, they went to the home of a Sister of the Hawks girl, and, tying the chickens in a bag, hid them in the cel lar. In the morning they tried to sell them. When arrested and taken be fore Deputy Judge Hubbard (hey broke down and confessed. Kansas to Stop Lynching. Topcka, Kas. (Special). The House has recommended a stringent law against lynching. It provides that a sheriff permitting a prisoner to be taken from him shall immediately for feit his office. Any person participat ing . in a lynchuig may be punished by death -or impris onment for life, and any member of a mob at a lynching, whether he par ticipates in the deed or not, may be imprisoned in the penitentiary for twenty-five years. Explosion Kills Two. Bowie, Ariz. (Special). At the Buck eye mine, nine miles south of this place, two men Wm. Steel and O'Donncll were killed ; T. J. Miller and Wm. Gavell were seriously injured, and a number of others were slightly hurt as the result of an explosion of dynamite. Steel and O'Donnell had been .told to thaw out the two boxes of frozen dynamite. Steel gathered up all the dynamite he could hold in his hands and dropped it into n bucket of hot water. An explosion fol lowed immediately. Memorised tbe Bible. Saratoga (Special). Thomas Canty, who was serving his third term as a member of the village board of trus tees, died of consumption at his home here. When a boy he began the study of the Bible, which lie gradually com mitted to memory until ne uaa ac quired the whole of it, and at a mo ments notice could repeat verbatim any chapter or chapters. Victim ot Robbers. Carlisle, Pa. (Special). Mrs. Alex ander Duncan, of Leesburg, who a short time ago was bound and gag ged and treated roughly by robbers, died, it is believed, from the effects of the assault. She was 75 years old. The perpetrators of the crime were tried last week and sentenced to nine years and six months in the peniten tiary. SPARKS FROM THE WIRES. Howard T. Goodwin, confidential clerk to the Philadelphia banking house? of Cassatt & Co., who committed suicide, was a defaulter to the amount of Soo. ooo. Four men were killed and nine others seriously injured in an explosion at Fort Lafayette, on Long Island. The explosion took place in the workroom. The coal operators in the Middlesborc district, Kentucky, have granted thcii 1500 employes a voluntary increase of 10 per cent, in wages. A committee was appointed by Presi dent Hardy, of the American Bankers' Association, to consider proposed changes in the currency system. One man was burned to death and 18 others narrowly escaped death on the fishing schooner Gertrude, lying at Boston. The new Y. M. C. A. Building. Foun tain Square Theater and several mer cantile houses in Springfield, O., were destroyed by fire. The ferryboat Pierrcpont went ashore on Governors Island, New York, and the passengers became temporarily panic-stricken. ; . Miss Anita Rosecrans, daughter of the late General Rosecrans, died at the horns of her sister, in Helena, Mont. The trial of Dr. Ellis Duncan, of Louisville, Ky., charged with the shoot ing of Bruce Head, was begun at Pitts burg. ' Fernand H. Du Martheray, the Swiss minister to th; United States, arrived at New York on the Kronprinz Wil helm. , , All the powers ' having given their consent the Russian-Austrian note de manding reforms and the protection of Christians throughout Turkey was pre sented to the Sultan. It is reported from The Hague that Carnegie is negotiating for ai estate there upon which he proposes to erect a "IVlace of Peace." ,' . . ' . THE KEYSTONE STATE. Nwa Bappenloj-s of Interest Gathered Frta All Sources. These pensions were granted Pcnn- sylvanians: Daniel Nicol, Hastings, $8; Charles Lenigan, Moon Run, $6; Israel Hart, Saxton, $10; Andrew J. Knipple, Johnstown, $.14; Danie? schlottman. Mingovi e. $10: Benia- min F. Markle, Maze, $12; Joseph airotip. inner. $to; Louis bnyder, t ittsourg, h; Daniel Lutz, New Cas tle. $8: William If. Clark. Erie. Sij- John H. Brown, Ruffsdale, $12; Johr n. uodds, Heaver halls, $12; Albert .'Ill, WTTVUtl, Dill, V , . IILAUII der H. McKclvey, Warren, $24; Mary crone, Altoona, $12: Henrietta Mnr rclls. Huntingdon. $8: Marv Guthrie. Callery, $8: Maria A. Brown. Ruffs- dale, SH; R0se Kcifer, Indiana, $8; William Drexler, Pittsburg, $8; George w. Myers, altsburg. Sto: William C. Barnctt, Kittannlng, $8; Reubei Knetsn. Yeaeertown. Stcnhcn Sawyer, Apollo. $12; William Serenca, baltsburg. 18- Levi Kncoo. Airydale. $12; John R. Belts. Johnstown. $8: las. P. Fleming, Pittsburg, $12; France uoyd, hittannmg, $10; bophia Law rence, McKccsport. $8. General orders were issued from th headuarters of the National Guard an nouncing the following appointments on Governor Penny-packer's staff: As sistant adjutant general. Col. Lzra 11. Kipplc. Lackawanna: inspector gen eral, Col. Frank G. Sweeney, Dela ware; judge advocate general, Col. a rrank Lshleman, Lancaster: quarter master general, Col. Samuel Moody, .Beaver; assistant quartermaster gen eral. Col. Thomas Potter, Jr., Phila delphia: commissary general. Col. Al bert J. Logan, Allegheny; assistanl commissary general, Col. Horace L. Maldeman. Lancaster; surgeon gen eral. Col. Robert Gricr Leconte, Phila delphia: general inspector of rifle prac tice, Col. Frank K. Patterson. Alle gheny; chief of artillery. Col. Sheldon Potter, Philadelphia; aides-de-camp, Col. James Elverson, Jr., Philadelphia; Harry C. Trexler. Lehigh; James M. Reid, F'ayette; Ned Arden Flood, Crawford: Charles C. Pratt. Susque hanna; Daniel B. Shcpp. Philadelphia; Louis T. Brown, Allegheny; Paul S. Reeves, Chester; Walter T. Bradley, Philadelphia; George Broole, Jr., Berks; Edward R. Chambers, Centre; Homer J. Lindsay. Allegheny. Non commissioned staff Color sergeant, Jacob Green, Philadelphia; chief musi cian. Edgar N. Major, Dauphin; quar termaster sergeant, William L. Hicks. Dauphin; commissary sergeant, Ear) R. Marvin, Allegheny. By the provisions of a bill introduced in the Senate by Mr. Scott, of Philadel phia, the city of Philadelphia will be en abled to accept the Andrew Carnegie offer toward the establishment and main tenance of free libraries. The bill is a supplement to the act of 1895 for the establishment of free libraries, and au thorizes cities of the first class to cuter into contracts and agreements with the donors of funds for the erection of tree libraries or branches and to provide sites for the erection and funds for the maintenance thereof. Contracts relative to the management of the libraries may be authorized Ey Councils to be executed by the Mayor. Mr. Hutt. of Philadelphia, introduced a bill in the House appropriating S500,- 300 for the erection, equipment and main tenance of two sanitariums for incipient cases of consumption, one to be located in the northeastern region of the State and the other at Mont Alto, Franklin county, each to have a capacity of 2500 patients. 1 he bill provides for the ap pointment of a commission of five by the Governor to select, the sites and deter mine the manner of arrangement and equipment of the buildings and shall re ceive no compensation. T. K. Beaver. Juniata: S. S. Gibbcl, Lykcns; C. G. Engle, Columbia; Charles A. Miller and Jacob u. Miller, Lancas ter, representing the ownership of large wiap manufacturing plants at Pittsburg, Buffalo and Cleveland, will apply for a charter in March for a corporation to be known as the Pennsylvania Soap Company. The object of the concern is to purchase other scap plants 111 dif ferent parts of the country. It will Le capitalized at $625,000. The Montgomery County Commis sioners at a special meeting have decided to offer a reward for the detection of the slayer of Kegina Currie. The com missioners met in Jcnkintown. District Attorney Hendricks says that diligent efforts are being made to hunt the cul prit. Mr. Hendricks, from a study of the case, does not believe Bernard tin zuilty person. It was for that reason he attended the meeting of the commis- iioners and urged them to offer the re ward. Owing to the sudden death of Albert M. Patterson, of aharon Mill, which re tulted from diphtheria, the Board ol Health has closed the public school the" fot a few days and had it thorough!; 'umigated. The Indiana Trust Company, com posed of John S. Scott, J. H. Eaglr Henry Hall, S. F. Telford. John S Fisher, J. Wood Clark. J. C. Wallacf and other prominent business men ha been organized. The company has purchased part of the Wilson buildinn for $12,500 and will be ready for busi ness May 1. William Byassee, of Finleyville, ac cused of the killing of William J. Gil ford, was acquitted in court at Wash ington. As a result of the election at Sharon ex-County Treasurer C. A. Ashto-i made information against James E Davis charging him with attempting t wound him with a knife. Canonsburg. a town of 5000 inhabit nnts. will be without a hotel after Apn 1, the site of the Central Hotel havtnt been purchased by the Citizens Triif Company tor a new banking house, In a bailer explosion near Grecnvil'f Claire Cathcart was. killed and l' brother seriously injured. A convention of the superintenden:' and principals of the public schools & i-huvlkill countv was held in Pott ville. Every district was represented I he principal addresses were made p' noerintendent H. H. Snavd. of Mis frsville and Professor J. N. Newlin, ol fottsville. Charles E. Jefferson, colored. W tcquitted in court at Washington or the charge ol committing an assault the 3-year-old daughter of Dr. Con gcr, at Taylorstown. Giles Gibyon. who was held by th' coroner fan causing the death of Js McClemciW, near Indiana, was " leased on bail. 1 J J. V. Thompson and others, e Uniontown have sold 1000 acres ot Cop land fronting on the Monongahtl' river to the Wheeling Steel and Company for $500 per acre. Factory Inspector Delaney says th' more applications for appointment ' deputy lactory inspectors have been n ceived than for anv other position der the State government. There n 700 abdications on ble from all Y the State. Ihey are all relerred to u uovcrnor.