THE MUTINEERS STILL IN CONTROL Situation at Vladivostok Has Not Been Improved. FUMES ARE SPREADING IN GOMEL. At Lodz, Russian Poland, Thret Men Eatered i Hospital aod Slabbed to Dtith a Mao Who Hid Bcca Condemned By Revolullonliti-Tbt ( Value ot Caillei Burocd by (be Revolutionists In the Baltic Provinces li $4,000,000. St. Petersburg (By Cable). Beyond the fact that the revolt at Yaldivostok is not subdued and that the mutinous sailors and soldiers are still standing by the gnus at the Holy Innocents' Battery, the War Office had nothing to jive out regarding the situation at the fortress. The only further news available was n newspaper dispatch, stating that two squadrons of the Ncrtchink Regiment of Cossacks had arrived, and that many ar rests had been made. From the absence, of news it is concluded :hat General Mode, who is temporarily in command of the troops is awaiting" the arrival of Lieutctiant-Gencra Mistchcnko, who is expected at Vladivostok, before ventur ing on serious measures against the. mutineers. TL - . .. me seizure 01 arms Dy tne imui.iccrs was a sequel of a street fight, in which a number of sailors of the Sibiriaii con tingent were killed. The public takes only a languid in terest in the latest mutiny. The papers mercy print tlic news, which had no ef fect on the Bourse, without comment. The Government has been advised from Irkutsk, Siberia, that a number of officials and employes of the general of fices of the trans-'liaikal Railroad have been arrested on i!ie charge of being im plicated in abstracting from a Govern ment munition train 1.000 rillcs, 1,000 revolvers and 10.au cartridges and giv ing them to the revolutionists. A search was instituted for the cartridges, during which many of the rifles were recovered. The authorities also discovered nine bombs. A large number of summary searches and arrests have oecured lately at Tsars-koe-Selo. The store of a Jewish drug gist named Ahramovitch was r.r.isaikcd. but no seizures were made. The police say the affair was unimportant, and that they merely desired to keep an eye on all suspects in the immediate neighbor hood of the Emperor. The plot at Mos cow revealed by the arrest of the pseudo Princess Koslovaska January iH, how ever, was found to be really serious and to have wide ramifications intended to encompass the death of Governor-General DoubasofT. of Moscow, and all his staff at the biessing-of-thc-water cere mony. The authorities are convinced that the revolutionary leaders have elim inated uprising and street fighting from heir program for the time being, in favor of terrorist attempts against high officials, and have already succeeded in breaking up several conspiracies in em bryo. STOLE FOR WEDDING TROL'SSEAU. Pretty Woman Accused ol Shoplifting to a New York Store. New York, f Special) Tearfully con fessing that she was stealing underwear and ornaments for her wedding trous seau, and that her friend was helping her, Lottie Yedder, 26 years old, and pretty, was arrested with Florence King, a. dashing brunette, in a Sixth Avenue department store by the store detectives. Tucked in their shirtwaists, under their coats and in their muffs, they car ried two silk waists, two cut glass per fumery boitlcs, boxes of face powder, bottles of toilet water and more than a dozen pieces of lingerie. Both women 'aid they were mani curists by trade. Lottie Yedder told the police she had never been a shoplifter, but that she is engaged to marry a Vir ginia business man in a few months and is anxious to get together a trousseau. Kept 5 Yeere Reading; Bible. Geneva, N. Y. (Special) Dr. William R. Brooks, director of Smith Observa tory and professor of astronomy at llo bart College, discovered a new "comet in the northeastern sky. Its position is right ascension 16I1. 19m. 30s.; declina tion north, 47 degrees and 10 minutes. It has a moderat motion in a north westerly direction. This is said to be the first comet of the yeir and is the twenty-fifth discovered by Professor Broc ks. Moled Aeronaut bead. London (By Cable). Stanley Spencer, the aeronaut, died at Malta while on his way home from India. Spencer on Sep tember 19, 100.2, made a remarkable flight over London in an airship of his own in vention. It was estimated that he trav eled nearly 30 miles and had complete control of his vessel. Spencer's father and brother Percna! were also aero nauts of note. Nlae tlouri j Panama. Washington, D. C. ( Special). The House voted to adopt the rule nuking the provision tor the abrogation of the eight-hour lav; in the canal zone an or der in the urgent deficiency bill. Dila tory motions were made by the minority to prevent the further consideration of the bill. ; MUCH I.N UTILE. The Mexican lap dog is the smallest member of the dog family. Seal skins to the number of 3,128 were shiped from Alaska last season. The Christian population of the earth is estimated at 5S2.000.000, of which 43 per cent, is Catholic. An eminent sciemist has estimated that the average man's eyelids open and shut 4,000,000, times during the year. la Govan, Scotland, the health author ities have traced o wandering diseased cats recent deaths from diptheria. A man i:-. Portland. Ore., proposes to purchase fir logs wh.ch the sawmills of British Columbia will not us, build them info enormous raits, and tow them to San Dicfco, to be there cut into fire wood. Expir.iihcrts made with kites 'on the Mediterranean have shown that over a large surface of water ihe temperature and the rapidity of air movement de cline sujdtly 111 proportion to the alti tude. Representative Longwori'i. who will marry Misi KcosevcU in February, has a coi:rcti"iis of violins which includes a SlradivariusT a Giiillauus, formerly be longing to Yayc. and uu Amato, oikt the property of Theodore Thomas. An elephant hat 1 delicate a sense cf smell lha; when i-i a wild stale it ran scent an cruelty at a distance of 1,000 yards. TIE LATEST NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD. DOMESTIC Captain Van Schaick, master of the General Slocum, on which 1,000 lives were lost, has been sentenced lo 10 years in jail, lie has made an appeal from ihe decision. Nelson Morris & Co. and Armour & Co. deny the giving of bribes to Chicago newspaper men lo influence reports of the beef packers' trial in Chicago. Kcv. H. S. Little, just returned from the Orient, says the students of the Chinese universities are fomenting a rev olution and favor a republic. Mrs. Susan Day I'arker, accused of participating in the firing of the yacht Scythian for the insurance, has been declared not guilty. Charles L. Tucker, convicted of the murder of Mabel f'age, of near Cam bridge, Mass., has been sentenced to be electrocuted. Secretary Loch announces that the gov ernment may prosecute the wreckers of the Enterprise National Bank of Pilts burg. Norman Hapgood, editor of Collier's Weekly, was acquitted of a charge of criminal libel prelerred bv Justice Joseph M. Deuel. In the Grcene-Gav nor trial telegrams bearing upon the allegation that an at tempt was made to bribe a Government inspector were admitted. The miners of the Southwest at In dianapohs decided to stand by the de mand for the admission of the joint conference. There arc indications that District At torney Jerome is preparing to prose cmc cenani persons involved 111 in surance irregularities. Fire 111 the sanitaruin of Miss Anna L. Alston, in New York, endangered the nves of a number of patients who Had recently been operated on. Constantina Levi and Retro Forac ika, alleged secretaries of the Baird (id.) anarchist band, were arrested near Monongahcla, fa. Fourteen lives were lost in an ex plosion 111 the hittcv iile Mine, Indian lerritory, that was caused bv tire-dami. The Pennsylvania State Senate or dered an investigation of the Insurance Department of that stale. 'ihe Bank of S.in Luis Obispo, Cal., closed its doors by order of ttie bank commissioners. Charles Winn killed his wife, her sister and himself in Prov idence, R. 1. l'nited States District Attorney Morn- sun denounced the attorneys for the beef packers ot Chicago as trust lawyers and uint tneir defense 01 immunity is clap trap. Mary Mct'all, age 16 years, saved two Northern Central Railway trains t'roin a wreck near Harrisburg, Fa., by signaling that a bowlder had rolled on the tracks. James Debuys, for 32 years a member of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange and prominent in the social and business world of that city, died suddenly. The Mississippi compress, at Jackson, Miss., with 9,500 bales of cotton, was destroyed by lire. Loss $,-50,000, with insurance of $500,000. Seven St. Louis women have been stabbed by a "Jack the Cutter." Remarks by Colonel Mcldrin, of coun sel for Greene and Gaynor, now on trial in Savannah, were construed as a re flection on the court by Judge Specr, who ordered the attorney to his seat, and delivered a scathing address from the bench. The suit of Morris C. Mengis against Gen. Louis Fitzgerald for a fee of a million dollars in connection with the sale of the Western Maryland Railroad will come for retrial in Brooklyn in February. The wage scale committee of the Uuit ed Mineworkers Convention has report ed in favor of a ij'j per cent, increase in wages, an eight-hour workday and a working contract for a year. Mrs. Anna Howard, of Brooklyn, N. Y., known as the ' baby carriage thief," was sentenced to five years at hard labor. JoKKlUN Nearly 250 revolutionists in the Baltic region have been shot, several thousand are under arrest and 5,000 rides have been captured. The revolutionists have burned 200 castles, with an aggregate value of $4,000,000. i'rivalc conferences between the French and German delegate; 10 the Moroccan conference have developed a plan where by Italy would be charged with the or ganization of a seniimihtary police. A mass-meeting of Servians held to protest against Austria-Hungary's aelion in closing the frontier to the importation of Servian cattle urged a commercial union w ith Bulgaria. Twenty-live members of the diplomatic corps at Caracas haie notified President Castro that they cannot accept his atti tude toward M. Taigny, the recent French charge d'affaires. The Japanese Legation at Rome will he raised to an embassy and M. Uchida will receive the appointment. Trouble has been renewed in Morroco between Raisuh, the bandit chief, and the Anjera tribe-men. J he Kiis-ian government is abolishing the sinecure portions in the army and navy. Emperor William of Germany cele brated his forty-seventh birthday. Meager ne,v. reaches St. Petersburg of a mutiny among the reservists at Vladivostok. Colonel Prosorovski, chief of the gen darmes of Persia, East Russia, has been notified by revolutionists that he is to be assassinated. Thomas, HigKins, Irish Nationalist, elected to Parhmcnt Thursday, died of heart disease F'riday. The chairman re-pectively of the French and the German delegations to the Moroc can conference held a private meeting to 'discuss the situation. It is nrobable that Switzerland or some oilier small neutral power will be intrusted with the organization of the Moroccan police. Jules Jaluzot, former member of the French Chamber of Deputies, charg ed with illegally using funds for spec ulations in the Paris sugar market, thereby causing a panic, was sentenced to one year's imprisonment. Five foreigners three Frenchmen, a German and an Austrian have been convicted of conspiring 10 disturb pub lic order and expelled from llayti. The British House of Commons contains a larger representation of Jews than ever before. Sir Edward Grey, the new foreign secretary, has been returned by a large mr.joriiy. It is reported that the Panther in cident has caused the Brazilian gov ernment 10 ignore ijrnrrin siupyards in placing contracts for warships 1111 ,'er the new plans for the enlargement of the navy. In reply to an interpellation Chancel lor von Buclow informed ,he Prussian Mouse of Lords that he did not think special legislation was necessary in deal ing with the Socialists. Alexander Barry, a naturalized Ameri can and a manufacturer of Moscow, says ,0 per cent, ot the Ktissian workmen will be idle this year and proverty will make them turn to lawlessness. SIX HOWL QUESTS DIE IN FLAMES Chief 4foui in Lowell, Destroyed. Mass. Is SEVERAL BURNED AND INJURED. The Rlcbardsoa Hotel, One ol Lowell Lead log Hostelrlei, la Partly Destroyed by Fire Rapid Sweep of Flamaa Through tbo Building Cut Oil Those 00 Iba Upper Floora. Lowell, Mass. (Special). Several per son, are thought to have lost their lives and more than 20 arc injured in a fire which partially destroyed the Richardson Hotel, one of the leading public houses in the city, early Saturday morning. The fire started a few minutes before 2 o'clock and by the time the firemen reached the scene the flames had pene trated to all of the floors and dense smoke was issuing from the windows, to which many of the guests in the upper part of the structure had fled to escape suffo cation. A second alarm brought assistance to the firemen within a few minutes, and dozens of police officers were hurried to Middlesex Street from the Central Sta tion. The firemen and police rescued many guests 20 or more of whom had been injured, but during the first half hour that the fire was in progress it was not known that there had been any fatali ties. At 2.30 o'clock the firemen reported that they had seen a half dozen bodies of women on the fourth floor. There is some doubt, however, about the number of fatalities. It is thought that several more persons lost their lives, but up to 3 A. M. it has been impossible to tell the exact number, as the hotel continued to burn fiercely in places, and an investigation was out of the question for the time being. Few of the guests had time to carry away any of their clothing, and most of them left their valuables behind. In the panic which ensued during the excitement attending their escape many people were severely injured and burned. The most seriously injured were re moved to St. John's Hospital. Within half an hour after the fire broke out more than 20 of those hurt had been re moved to that institution. Shortly after 3 o'clock the bodies of two unknown women were removed from the burning building. It was then be lieved that there were more bodies in the hotel, but the fire was burning so fiercely that a search was impossible. The Richardson Hotel is a moderate sized structure of brick and of four stories in height, with a flat roof. The hotel is situated at the corner of Middle sex and Dutton Streets, directly opposite the Middlesex Street Station of the Bos ton and Maine Railroad. The hotel was usually largely patronized by commer cial travelers. CUBANS' 0IFT TO MISS ROOSEVELT. Senatt Authorizes President Palma lo Ex peod $25,000. Havana, (Special) The Senate un animously passed an appropriation of $25,000 for the purchase of a wedding gift for Miss Alice Roosevelt. Just be fore the conclusion of the session the secretary of the Senate read a bill which had been introduced iointlv bv Senator Mendez Capote, the vice president-elect; senator av-as, president of the Liberal party, and Gen. Manuel Sanguily, the leader of the independent party, direct ing President Palma to select a wed ding gift for Miss Roosevelt and appro priating $25,000 therefor. Each of the senators introducing the bill spoke in a similar strain to Senor Zayas, who said that Cuba owed some evidence of appreciation to her unfail ing friend, Theodore Roosevelt, and that the wedding of his daughter afforded opportunity to demonstrate Cuba's love for and appreciation of her illustrious father. Each speaker pointed out that all parties had agreed to the propriety and appropriateness of the making of such a gift. Before the vote was taken General Cis- ncros, who has been called the most anti-American man in Congress, voiced his approval of the bill, and moved that it be passed by acclamation. It was so passed. Assurances arc given that the 1 louse will take similar action. Killed Wrong Colonel. St. Petersburg (By Cable). Colonel Prosorovski, chief of the gendarmerie at Pensa, East Russia, has been inform ed by the local revolutionary organization that the recent murder of Colonel Lis sovski, commanding the Seventy-eighth Infantry Division, by members of the or ganization, was a blunder. He had been mistaken for Colonel Prosorovski, and the organization has notified the latter that the error will shortly be rectified. Costly Staircase Unsafe. St. Paul (Special). Pearl Hall, aged ii years, who was adopted when a baby by her grandfather, Anton Myers, here, has spent the last five years of her life mainly studying the Bible. The girl did so on a bread-and-water diet, with an occasional bit of boiled rice. Since she was 6 years old her grandfather com pelled her to read the Bible at. all hours of the day. The girl would would not even be allowed 10 go out and play. Her health has been seriously injured. The Humane Society interfered in her behalf and the court placed her in an other family. Another Brooks Comet. York, Pa. (Special) Colister Morton Craig, an architect, of this city, has been awarded second prize a silver medal given by the Architectural League of New York in a design competition which was open to all architects, stu dents, and draftmen under 30 years of age and residents of the United States. The winners of the first and second prizes have been invited to at tend the annual dinner of the Architect ural League in New York, when the medals will be presented. York Men Wloa a Medal. Alabany, N. Y (Special).-The As sembly staircase in New York's $30, 000,000 capitol, which has been under suspicion for several months, was order ed closed on the ground that it is un safe for use. It is believed by those familiar with the conditions that the sit uation is exceedingly serious, and that the best part of the building will be out of use for two or three years while repairs are being made. The engineers have in formed the State Architect that the in tegrity of the capitol building as a whole should be investigated. LIVE WASHINGTON AFFAIRS. " 1 1 1 1 ' Nearly $3,000,000,030. The foreign commerce of the United States approached surprisingly near to the $3,000,000,000 point in the calendar year, 1905, according to a report issued by the Bureau of Statistics of the De partment of Commerce and Labor. "The total imports and exports of mer chandise," the report says, "is $2,806, 000,000, against $2,307,000,000 in 1000, an average increase of $100,000,000 a year in the five-year period. If to the $2. 806,000,000 of foreign commerce in 1905 were added the figures of trade with Hawaii and Porto Rico, formerly for eign territory, and included in our state ments of foreign trade prior to 1901, ihe total would approximate $2,900,000,000, or about $600,000,000 more than five years ago and $1,200,000,000 more than 10 years ago. "Another notable characteristic of the year's foreign trade is the fact that the exports in the month of December were practically $200,000,000. the lareest month's exportation in any year prior to ucccniDcr 1905, being that of Decern ber, 1004, when the total was $174,810. 500- 1 he report adds : "The import record for loos is also in excess ol that of any preceding year, Demg tor the 12 months ended with De cember $1,179.840, against $1,03?, 009,190 111 J904. The growth of imports, while not rapid, lias been steady and con tinues to be so. kecnine pace, annroxi- mately, with the growth of population. "The commerce with the noncoiitigu ous territory of the United States also makes a new high record for lOOs. and win amount to about 5110.000.000 in value, against a little ess than $100,000, 000 last year." Year to Complete Bridge. The Senate Committee on Commerce, through Mr. Frye, of Maine, submitted report to the venate in favor of the passage of the joint resolution providing lor an extension of one year m the time in which the highway bridee and ap proaches across the Potomac River at W aslungton is to be comnlcted. ay a joint resolution approved Feb ruary 18, 190?. the time for comnletina the construction of this bridge and its approaches was extended to February 12 1900. While the work on the bridce proper will be completed by that date and the opening of the bridge and ap proaches need not be delayed, it is esti mated by Secretary Taft and the Chief of Army Engineers that it will require the entire working year of 1906 to fin ish all the work on tiic approaches, the most important work being the construc tion of a steel, and concrete bridge over the. Washington channel in the Wash ington approach. $1,000,000 Philippine Boods. The PhilipLine government has author ized the Bureau to Insular Affairs of the War Department to sell $1,000,000 gold public improvement bonds of the Philip pine Islands, under authority granted rjy tne act ot umgress approved Febru ary 6. 1905. These bonds are redeemable at the pleasure of the Philippine fiovernment after 10 years, and will be payable in 30 years alter date. Principal and inter est at 4 per cent, are payable at the Treasury of the United States. The bids must be received in the Bureau of Insular Affairs of the War Department not later than 3 o'clock in the afternoon ot February 15. Wider Market For Cotton. The Senate Committee on Commerce heard arguments by a number of reore sentatives of the cotton growing and manufacturing industries in support of Senator Lee S. Overman's bill providing for the appointment of a commission for the extension of American markets in the Uncnt. Among those who presented their views were Senator Overman, of North Carolina; former Senator A. J. Mcl.au rin, of South Carolina; Editor William Whittam, Jr., of the American Cotton Record, and Dr. J. F. Crowell, statisti cian, ot this city. Col. Isaac Henry Wing, a wealthy retired lumberman ot isconsm, ha given $50,00 to endow a college of matnematics at iiowdoin. The House passed the Urgent De ficiency Bill with a provision that the eight-hour law shall not apply to the istnmus ot I'anama. Secreary raft defended before the Senate committee his fiscal agreement witn tne ranama government. The Isthmian Canal Commission sub mitted its report to Secretary Taft re commending a lock canal. Imposing ceremonies are to attend the unveiling of the McClcllan nianument in Washington, October 18. The members of the Imperial Chinese Commission were entertained at lunch eon by Secretary Root. Democrates in the House filibustered in vain against the adoption of a rule which will have the effect of suspending the Eight-Hour labor law in the Panama Canal Zone. Members of the House are workina for an omnious public building bill to carry an appropriation ot about $12, 000,000. Chairman Theodore P. Shouts, of the Panama Canal Commision, acknow edged that he draws $12,000 a year salar from the "Clover Leaf" Railroad. President Roosevelt makes public tin caarge of Government Attorney Mor rison that a Beef Trust attorney ha: been offering bribes to influence publi. opinion in Chicago. President and Mrs. Roosevelt issuci invitations to the marriage of theii daughter to Congressman Longworth Secretary Taft explained to the House Committee on Insular Affairs a pend ing bill for the purchase of coal lands to enable the United States to mine fue for its own use in the Far East. The Philippine Commision lias de cided to sell $i,oooxx of the 4 per cenl. bonds. The Commision has acceptec the bid of the White syndicate to buih railroads in the sugar distrhts. The House of Representatives b a vote of 194 to 150, passed the bill pro viding for the admission of Oklahoni; and Indian Territory and Arizona an New Mexico as two states. Secretary of the Navy Bonaparo has presented to the House Committe on Naval Affairs a bill giving the Sec retary power to summarily dismiss an cadet guilty of hazing. Members of the American Car. Growers' Association testified before th Senate Committee m opposition to th lhilippine Tariff Bill. Arrangements are being made fn the dedication of the monuments mark ing historic battle grounds in Cuba. Governor Wright, of the Philippine told the I ferine aommittea what is If ing done with the rccendy acquired f r i lands. GALLANT OLD . S0LDlTi DEAD General Jce Wheeler Succombs to Pneu monia in N:w York. WAS A HERO OF TWO WSV. Mis Brilliant Career aa Cavalry Commander In the Coafederata Array and His Valuable Services aa One of the Principal Comman ders of Iba American, Army la tba Spanish American Campaign. New York (Special). Gen. Joseph Wheeler, the famous Confederal caval ry leader and a brigadier general of the United States Army since the war with Spain, died at 5.35 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the home of his sister, Mrs. Sterling Smith, in Brooklyn. The veteran of two wars was 69 years old, but in spite of his age, there was hope until I hursday, of his recovery from the attact of pneumonia which caused his death. General Wheeler was taken ill six days ago at his sister's home, where he has been living recently. He contracted a severe cold, which developed into pleurisy and pneumonia. F'rom the first his age told against him, but the fami ly did not give up hope until Wednesday night, when the disease was found to have affected both lungs. General Wheeler's immediate relatives were all with him. His daughters. Mrs. W. J. Harris and the Mises Anne, Lucille and Carrie Wheeler, had been sum moned from the South and arrived ear ly in the week. His son, Major Joseph Wheeler, Jr., now stationed at West Point, was also present," as well as Gen eral Whcjler's sister, Mrs. Sterling Smith, and her son. The family was summoned to the bed side of the patient at midnight, when the doctors in consultation concluded that the end was but a matter of hours. The General was then awake and con scious, and his mind was apparently active. He seemed to know that death was approaching, and, though too weak to speak, he succeeded in giving signs of recognition and encouragement to his children. 1 Later the General sank into a peace ful slumber, and, at the request of the doctors, tlc family quietly withdrew from the sick man's bedside. Gener al Wheeler was never again more than semiconscious. He lingered until even ing, and passed away quietly. Gen. Joseph Wheeler ranked high among the brilliant cavalry leaders de veloped by the Civil War. When he surrendered as a lieutenant general in the service of the Confederacy -he was only 29 years old, yet he was senior cavalry officer in the Confederate Army. Trirty three years later, as a major general of Volunteers, U. S. A., he was leading American cavalry against the Spaniards in Cuba. For accepting a commission from President McKinley he was severely criticised by Southerners of the "unreconstructed" type. In the Ala bama Constitutional Convention of8i90i an effort was made to deny him the cour tesies of the floor. He was snubbed by the presiding officer qf a convention of Confederate veterans at Charleston, S. C, in 1899. The same thing happened at a Confederate reunion at New Orleans in 190.3. Southern newspapers comment ed unfavorably on his accepting comrade ship with men who had fought against the South. It is very probable, however, that General Wheeler's reputation was enhanced among oouthcrnern people gen erally, just as his popularity was increas ed among Northerners, by his patriotic action at the outset of the Spanish-Amer ican War. In his last service he showed the same dash, the same capacity for sudden, brilliant movement that worried federal generals in the Civil War. OIFTS FOR MISS ROOSEVELT. Maganlllcent Silver and Jewelry Being Made In New York. New York (Special). Rare jewels in unique designs, which friends of Miss Alice Roosevelt have selected for her wedding gifts, are bing set by skilled workmen at Tiffany's Forest Hill plant. The largest presents are a maenilicent silver service, one of the most beautiful ever made by Tiffany, which has been ordered by the. Rough Riders' Associa tion, and a Krag-Jorgensen rifle, fash ioned of 22-karat gold, an exact full size working model, to be presented to her by the officers of the United Stales Army. Among the other jewels are a Dearl collar of 10 strands, the largest ever made by the company, and worth $31,000. r diamond tiara, containing Wo stones. is said to be another, and there are two diamond collars and two bowknots of dimonds. Two diamond lockets arc believed to have been ordered by Secretary of War William H. Taft. Miss Carow, sister of Mrs. Roosevelt, is having jewelry made, as is also Mrs. Douglas Robinson, sister of the President. Most of the gifts have been ordered by well-known persons living in New York, Washington and Cleveland, Hid $200,030 Worth of Oold. Albuquerque, N. M., (Special). In dismantling the old Albermarlc mill, in the Jeme Mountains, north of this city, Morris Brothers, contractors, discover,! hidden under the foundations a big, solid gold brick, supposed to be worth about $200,000. It is supposed to have been stolen and hidden there by some former employe of the mill, when the latter was in operation 10 years ago. The contrac- ors have been taking out the machinery o ship to the United Verde Mine, in rizona. Pistol Duel Fatal Montgomery, Ala. (Special). A spec- al to the Advertiser from Florida, Ala., ays: "Grady Miller, the 16-ycar-old son if Dr. S. L. Miller, was shot and killed y the negro porter ot the Lake View lotel. There were no eye-witnesses to he shooting, but the pistol shots were leard. A search was made, and near y was found the negro, in a dying con liiion. He lived long enough to say that c ana Miner nau engaged in a pislol Itiel. There is no way to ascertain the tiuse of the tragedy. Filipinos Alarmed. Washington, D. C. (Special). The ollowing cable message has been receiv- (1 by the Secretary of War from Gover or General Ide at Manila: "Natives inch disturbed by cable slating Am issador Wright has been authorized to cBotiate sale of island to Japan. Au- hentic denial from you might be useful.'' ccretary uu replied 10 me came mes ii7 follows : "The cablo tntrmni uforivff to ill vmir cable tnrtcacr ha. nnt he sUtfk.t vestige of truth. It is nol :ily uanrua, dim aDsuroeaiy so. ALIGNMENT OF THE POWERS. The Morocco Conference Seems Doomed to Fail. Algcciras (By Cable). The. confiden tial exchanges now going on among the representatives of the powers in the Mo roccan conference disclose the extremi difficulty of arranging an agreement thai both France and Germany would accept The German delegates put forward the attractive principle of disinterested ness and the equal privilege for all coun tries. The French delegates, on th other hand, maintain that France cannot be disinterested. They affirm that, hav ing followed an active policy in Morocco for eight years mid having obtained num erous advantages, France should not now be asked to lake the same posi tion as all the rest of the world. F'rancc virtually cnnimriates in a mod ified form the principle of the Monroe Doctrine in Northwest Africa. She has acquired and holds a position toward Mo rocco that, according to her v iew, makes rqtial political influence with other pow ers impossible. On life question of eco nomic equality she says "yes," but on that of political equality she answers "no." Germany insists on political equality with even more lenacily than she docs on the question of economic equality. The real struggle, however, is over the political future of Morocco. -France would rather withdraw from the confer ence than lie up the political destiny of .Morocco by international control. While this is not an authoritative offi cial utterance, it unmistakably represents the feeling of the French delegation. F'rancc refuses fo be excluded from what she holds to he the legitimate expansion of her influence in Northern Africa. The F'rcnch delegates appear 10 realize that the current of the conference is against them because neutral powers, such as the l'nited States, lean toward the idea of disinterested equality lather than toward I" ranee's special geographi cal and historic paramouutcy. France therefore may strive for a neg ative result, so far as political questions go, accepting fully a commercial equal ity and joining in the eliort to reach just economic conclusions but resisting sug gestion;; or the iuternatio;v;!uaiion of any of the publi. services of Morocco. Germany will press for the internatioif alization of Ihe police. It should be un derstood that this question of police does not refer to the ordinary force for the maintenance of local order, but, in tin larger sense, .to the .-.cini-military body which is lo exercise a powerful genera! control. F'rance still counts upon Great Britai;-, Russia, Spain and Portugal, but her ear liest hopes that the United States would be with her are beginning to diminish. Germany believes that her view as to international control has been accepted in principle by the United States, Aus tria and Sweden. Belgium is noncommital through fear that either France or Germany will raise the Congo question into an international issue after the conference if cither should consider itself offended. The foregoing tendencies arc the out growth of constant private meetings of the delegates. The British villa is one of the centers for these meetings and the French and American delegates are frequent visitors there. The American delegates have aKo conferred with the Germans and the French. The conference accepted all the articles of the report of the committee on con traband relating fo Ihe prevention of the trade in contrahr.ind arms and passed to the consideration of economic ques tions. TROUBLE IN ISLAND OP PINES. Amer cans Back Up J. M. Steere lo Resisting Ihe Order ol Ihe Court Ilavanna (Special). It is reported from Nucva Gerona, Isle of Pines, that trouble is expected on account of the refusal of James M. Stcerc, the so-called territorial secretary, to comply with the order mf the court. Steere is the cus todian of a warehouse in which the conn has stored certain chatties involved in pending litigation. Steere refused lo de liver these until the storage charges had been paid. He was arrested for defying the order of court, but was allowed his liberty until Monday last, when he was called into court and instructed to appear each Monday, as well as to fur nish bail. Steere refused to comply with the or der to furnish bail, and, according to the last adivces, was given a day more in which to do so. Letters from Nueva Gerona assert that Americans in the is land are backing Steere. Gen, Freyrc Andradc, the secretary of the interior, and l.eneral Nunez, gover nor of Havana province, said 'that the number of rural guards and police in the vicinity of Nueva Gerona was amolv sufficient to put Steere in jail, notwith standing any assistance he might be able to muster. Cleveland Won't Resign. New York (Special). The Times has the following from Princeton, N. J. : "F'x-President Cleveland was asked at his residence about a report that he is thinking of giving up his post as arbiter of rebates for the insurance companies. Mr. Cleveland dictated this statement: 'There is not a particle of truth in the report nor any excuse for its circula tion.' " Owner aod Cuesta Die la Mine. Owensboro, Ky. (Special) The Belle, wood Mines, near here, caved in instant ly killing William Burnett, the proprie tor, and Edward Pierce and Herbert Waldon, his guests, who were inspecting the mines. There were 110 miners in the mine at the time of the cavein. Mystery al Slraager'a Dealb. ' Huntington, W. Va., (Special). A neartly dressed man was found dead in rt alley in the rear of the Bennet block, in the heart of the city, here, at 5 o'clock. Bruises and cuts about his throat indicate foul play, and the officials are investigating. There is not a paper about the man's person that may lead to his identification save a tclegrafn which indicates that he was E. E. Tur ner, of Newark, O. The telegram was sent from Newark to E. E. Turner, "Bcis." $75,000 Worlb ol Collon Destroyed Jackson, Miss. ( Special). The Mis sissippi compress, with 9,500 bales f cotton, was destroyed by fire, cntailin;; a loss of $750,000, with insurance cover ing about two-thirds of that sum, The origin of the fire ,is not known, but when it was discovered by the com press employes it had gained great head way and when the fire department ar rived it was beyond control. The firemen directed their efforts to saving the sur rounding properly, which they succeeded in doing. The compress plant was worth $I0.000. I THE KEYSTONE STATE Tba Latast Pennsylvania Ncwa Told la Short Order. "Good -by, L'.'.ie, I'm going to he'!," said 11. G. Gibson, a business man of Monongahela, to his daughter, as they were crossing a bridge over the Monon gahela River. Gibson ihen leaped over the bridge rail into the river and was drowned. Domestic difficulties promp .ed the deed. On the mantel in his din ing room was found this letter to his wife: "Good bye, Nell. You have ruiti ;d your family and sent mc to hell. I see your finish. Will sec you later." Lananaco Gungherno, an Italian, i rears old, of Mount Joy, in a tit of pas sion struck, with a pick and probably fatally ' injured his fellow-countryman, iniseppe Norlorana. .,.1 years old. The iffair happened while the two men were preparing breakfast in their shanty cast A town, and was the result of a dispute over placing a coffee pot on the stove. Because their working hours were cut from fen to nine hours, .sixteen laborers t-uiploycd on flic Reading Railway near" Lansdale, went on 'trike, and marching Jown l!ic railroad as far as Ambler, in imidatcd and compelled a number of vidow living nt Plum Run, seven miles j lorlh of Hancock. Washington County. louse and contents were destroyed, nnd Mrs. Carhiugh's daughter, Miss Mary 1'rabaugh, was perhaps fatally burned, ihe was carrying a lighted lamp, which txploded, scattering burning oil over her. Jthcr workmen 10 trikc with them. At the Lyttlc colliery there was an cx ilosion of mine gns, in which three uiners were badly burned. They are John orinsky. August Lugan and Jacob Or ufsky, all of Minersvillc. They were ranght by a body of gas, which cman led from a "pocket" opencp by a blast. The men threw themselves upon the 'round and escaped death. Annie Komensky, of Scranton, a small" Polish girl of 12, went into frenzied Inance on her own account in conncc jon with the commissary department cs ablished by the operatives of the Klots silk mill. She look .1 contract to buy aoonday dinners for twelve of her com panions from a woman of her acquaint ance, in the vicinity of the mill. She tollected 25 cents apiece from each girl ind was supp lsed to pay for the meals .vith the money, but instead of this re .ained $2 or more a (lay until the amount Wed was $40. Little Annie was con fronted with her up-to-date methods Thursday. On promising to work and li'.y back every cent, she was not prose cuted. While watching patiently at the bed-, .ide of her sick husband Mrs. lleury Weaver, of New Tripoli, fell asleep anil died. The husband wishing some atten ion, called 10 his wife, and not being hie lo awaken her, summoned his sons. When they entered the room they were horrified to find their mother dead. Because Mrs. l'annie Light, of Pitts burg, is an Anarchist and believes in Ihe doctrine of "free love," Owen S. Cecil, the master in divorce proceedings, recommends that Harry Light be grant ed a divorce from her. As it appears to the master, the husband is .1 man very submissive, quite and unassertive of his right. His wife is the stronger of the two, and is extravagant in her demands. She professes anarchistic principles, he says, attends meetings of Anarchists and believes in "free love." Though not drunken nor profligate, she lorded it over her husband, says the report, con tinually quarreled with him, threatened to take his life and did actually inflict bodily punishment upon him by striking and scratching him and tearing his clothes. In the testi mony Light told an almost incredible story of being abused by his wife. Re latives and neighbors corroborated his statements Once the pair fought all night because Light said he needed a shave and his wife contradicted him. As the drill penetrated to an oil pro ducing sand, showing that his farm is worth a fortune, Mack Day, a farmer of Video, Greene County, dropped dead. The excitement incident to the discovery of his pood fortune produced heart trouble which killed him. Thirty of the best Jewish families of ork have organized with Lee Rcinc berg as president, Max Grumbacher treasurer "and Martin Lehmaver as sec retary. They will erect at $15,000 church edifice with the next few months. The Spring inspection of Company I, Sixth Regiment, N. P. G., was held in their armory. The inspection was a hard one and the command made a creditable showing. The New 1 lope-Perkasic1 Trolley Com pany, which propose to build a line from New Hope to Perkasic, via Doylestown, connecting with the Willow Grove branch of the Rapid Transit Company's line, was granted a franchise by Norristown Coun cil to lay its tracks on the borough streets. The company expects to start lo work this Spring. Altoona merchants have joined the movement against the $10 excess charge for mileage books. At the meeting of the Merchants' Association the question was discussed and it was unanimously agreed that the extra charge was nothing more than a banking business by the Pennsylvania. Fire at Garland for a time threatened the town with destruction. A bucket brigade saved the village. It started in the hotel and spread to a number of dwellings. Loss, $5000; partly insured. Frank Caum, General Manager of the Hartford Consolidated Street Railway Company, has been appointed manager of the Scranton Railway Company, recent ly acquired by the American Railway Company, of Philadelphia. The Socialists of Wilkcs-Barre nomi nated the following candidates for city offices: Treasurer, Harry Rafter; City Assessor, Cms Adlcr; School Directors, J. G. Roth and Andrew Dulgosh. Under the will of Mrs. Annie Hart myer, probated in Lancaster, $500 is be queathed to Si. Joseph's Hospital, of that city. Under the will of Mrs. Rachael McSparran $100 is bequeathed to the Chestnut Level Presbyterian Church, Lancaster. At the nineteenth annual convention of the Lancaster County School Di rectors Institute, held at Millersville, these officers were elected : President, J. ,C. ij.vlin. Paradise Township; vice president ; W. P. Briton, East Drumore.and Ainos Ziebler, East Druegal; secretary If. F McCloud, Manheim; treasure Alfred Wood, Fulton Township. Two passenger trains' on the Northern Central Railway were saved from being wrecked by Mary McCall, 16 years old, ihe daughter of a track walker living at Clark's Ferry. The girl saw a boulder roll down from the mountain side over the tracks near- her home. Taking a lantern she ran down the track and stop ped the Erie express within a few yards of the obstruction. - She then hurried up the tracks in the other direction and stopped the Erie flyer. The tracks were cleared of the mass of rock by a wreck ing crew several hours later. !