til TO DEATH my. BURGLAR Wealthy Pittsburger Killed in His Own House. THE MANY CRIMES ALARM CITY. Benry Firth Smith Shot to Death by Burglar He Surprised in the Act of Robbing Hia Father's House-Evl-dence of Desperate Battle Before the Barglar Got Away. Pittsburg, Pa. ( Special ). Henry Kirth Smith, 25 years old, son of Joa. Smith, a prominent and wealthy business man of this city, was ahot twice and almost Instantly killed t 4 o'clock Sunday morning by a burglar whom ho surprised In the dining-room of his father's residence, in the east end section of the city. Tha crime, following a little more than a week after the murder of James A. McMlllen. another wealthy business man of this Boctlon. has aroused the city, and, with a num ber of holdups by highwaymen dur ing the past fortnight, city officials have been importuned for 150 more policemen to suppress the wave of crime. That a desperate battle took plnce between young Smith and the burg lar Is evident from the disordered condition of the dining-room and hltchen of tho Smith home. In ad dition to the two bullets which were found to have entered Smith's body, live other balls were found lodged In the floors and walls of the two rooms. Three cartridges of Smith's revolver had been dlschnrged. Neighbors adjacent to the Smith home heard the shots and ran to their windows, but say they saw no one running from the house. Hun dreds of dollars' worth of silver plate had been gathered together by the burglar, who apparently had been In the house sometime before being heard by young Smith. The young man's father and mother were awakened by the sounds of the shots, and rushed down stairs, to find their son on the kitchen floor, with two bullet holes In his body. The entire police and detective forces are working on the case, but ao far no clue has been discovered. Kvery policeman in the East End district reported in civilian clothes. Superintendent of Police McQuaide Issued an order that any person act ing in the least suspicious manner was to be sent to the police station for examination. Another holdup was reported to the police Sunday. Miss Isabelle Livingston, sister of the chief ord nance officer of this city, was held tip by a negro near her home, which 1 a short distance from the Smith residence. The negro held a revol ver at her head until he took her purse and then disappeared. THE STUDENTS LEAVE Centenary College Forced To Close Its Doors. New Orleans, La., (Special). Cen tenary College, at Jackson, La., has closed its doors permanently in con sequence of the feuds in the faculty, the resignation of Its president, who is still lying in a critical condition from wounds inflicted by a professor of physics in a fight, and the with drawal of all its students. . Tho college was the oldest In Louisiana, hnving been founded In 1825 as the Louisiana State College. It failed, and soon afterward passed into the hands of the Methodists, who named it Centenary College, in honor of the centennial of Method ism. The college wns prosperous In 1U earlier days and among its distin guished graduates were Jefferson Davis, president of the Southern Con federacy: Jndah P. Benjamin, sec retary of State of the Confederacy, and most of the prominent Methodist clergymen of the Southwest. His hop Keener was for many years its president. The building will probably be used as an annex for the overllow of tlie State insane asylum, which is also situated at Jackson, near the college.. MCTIDERKD AMI HOME ROP.RKD. Woman Found AVilh Her Thoat Cut And Heml Haltered. Stafford Springs, Ct (Special). Mrs. Henry "Williams, about 50 years old. was found murdered in her home, near here. Robbery, appar ently, was the motive, and the mur derer is believed to be a tramp. The body of Mrs. Williams was found lying near a stove on the floor of the ! kitchen of her house, with the throat cut, head battered and a towel twist ed around the neck. Near the body lay a knife and a dub. The woman di-d after a hard struggle with her asr.ailnnt, who, it is thought, struck her down with a club and then cut her throat, after which the towel was wound about her neck. Following the murder' the man made a systematic search for money, for tho house was thoroughly ran sacked and a trunk in an upstairs room was broken open and about $100 in money taken from it. Part jf the money, later, was found on the lawn In front of the house. The husband of the murdered woman, who had been away from home, discovered the body. The Currency Problem. Washington (Special). Tho cur rency commit too of the American Bankers' Association, appointed in pursuance to a resolution adopted at the St. Louis meeting, will asicinlil'J here this week to discuss a plan for a more elastic hanking currency. The cimmltti-e will consider various propositions. It h; expected that Secretary Shaw and Comptroller of the Currency Rldgely will address the meeting before the final adjournment. Burglars Wimp Foiled. Hill;,boro, Tex. (Special). While attention was directed to two fires in the outskirts of the city Sunday morning, the hardware storo of Smith tt Thomas, la the business center of Hillsboro. was dynamited and partly wrecked by robbers. After an ex change of shots, in which no on was injured. Walter Jeffries, of Worth, was arrested in the building where the explosion occurred. The fires de stroyed the lumber yards of Ole Wil kerson and several small building, causing- a loss of $40,000. THE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Domestic. The president of the New York Mutual Life Insurance Company secured an Injunction from the court at Frankfort, Ky., restraining the State Commissioner from revoking the company's license to do business In the Kentucky field. Frederick SchatThauser. a civil en gineer, was shot and fatally wounded in the City Hall of Philadelphia by Frederick llontberger, n pumping station employe, who accused the en gineer of wrecking his home. Miss Nellie O'Reilly, an opera sing er, was awarded $15,000 damages In a breech of promise suit against Dennis Sweeney, a wealthy resident of Long Island. An Inspection of work on the Panama Canal by the combined mer cantile organizations of the United Spates Is proposed. Five Incendiary night fires in the heart or New York caused A panic among thousands and death of a woman from shock. John Price Wetherill, of Philadel phia, who amassed a fortune in xlnc, died in Philadelphia. New York detectives found a child who had been chained to a corncrlb for n year and a half. The Standard Oil Company has raised the pay of all employes from 5 to 10 per cent- The special federal grand jury convened In Minneapolis, Minn., to examine into the alleged rebating system in use by railroads, and re turned 147 indictments. The mini mum penalty In each case is $1,00(1 and the maximum $.',000. In a shooting affair at Money, Miss., L. J. Henderson, a prominent merchant and planter, was Instantly killed by A. J. Money, a brother of I'nlted States Senator Money. Money was also shot, but Is not seriously wounded. A powder magazine owned by the K. I. Ilu Pont Company and situated at Tlnley Park, near Chicago, ex ploded with such force that window panes were broken in the home of the Midlothian Club, three miles dis tant. A receiver was appointed In Al bany for the North German Fire In surance Company of New York, which was crippled by the San Fran cisco fire. Proceedings 'were Instituted In Scranton, Pa., against three railroad companies for failing to have the re quired safety appliances on trains. Tulle Larrinaga. Unionist candi date for commissioner, of Porto Rica to the United Stales Congress, was elected by a majority of 4 2,000. The switchmen accepted the offer of the managers of the Western roads for an increase of three cents an hour in wages. Eighty girls, hemmed In by fire and smoke In a New York factory, were led to safety by the coolness of n policeman. Watson Ralne, an engineer at Proctor's Theater, New York, refuses to quit work though he has a legacy of $80,000. Miss Lucille McLeod, accused in Chicago of killing William T. New mann, was married to Fred II. Men hard. Herbert O. Squires, the new United States minister to Panama, was re ceived in audience by President Ama dor. One thousand coopers went on striko In Chicago, asking for a wage increase of three cents per barrel. A statue of Gen. Peter Gansevoort, the defender of Fort Stanwix, was unveiled in Home, N. Y. A dynamite explosion occurred in Carrick, near Pittsburg, Pa. Two men were killed and seven hurt. The Unionist party carried all seven -election districts in Porto Rico, leaving the Republicans without rep tesfntatlves in the next House of Delegate:;. The election was very orderly. Foreign. M. Briand, French minister of public worship, announced in the Chamber of Deputies that the gov ernment would give the clericals another year for reflection, and that the churches would not be closed next month. Prince Albert, of Flanders, nephow of Kim; Leopold, has been declared successor of the King as sovereign of the Congo Independent State. Karl Hau: of Washington, D. C, is still held in Lonoon on charge of murdering his wife's mother, Frau I Molitor, at isuaen-uauen. Count Castellaue's creditors are trying their utmost to prevent the granting of a divorce until their case is settled. .i...ns M. James, of New York, who is studying trades unionism in Russia, was arrested in St. Peters burg. , irit; Edward of England celebrat ed 'he sixtv-fifth anniversary of his birth. Agitation In Italy ugainst the ac tion of the government in placing an order for armour plate for a warBhlp, valued at $1,000,000, with the Mid vale Steel Company of Pennsylvania has assumed a seroius phase. The Rns-dan government Is nego tiating wltn other governments with the view of concluding supplemen tary treaties covering fugitives ac cused of the preparation of explosives for bombs. At a meeting of the lending mem bers of the Liberal party In Cuba it was decided to appoint a committee to express to the Governor the party's disastisfai tlon with recent appoint ments. Prince Joachim of Prussia has been ordered to German Southwest Africa for daring to oppose the Em peror's wishes in threatening to marry Marie Sulzer, the concent hall singer. A newspaper In Lubeck, Germany, states that a German steamer, Jan Minios, with a cargo of explosives for the Russian government, was Bred upon by a Russian cruiser. For instigating a revolt of the gar rison of Odessa the two revolution ary leaders have been exiled to Si beria, and eight others to hard labor for four years. Karl Strati, a Washington attor ney, was arraigned on etxraditlon proceedings in Iondon, charged with murdering his sister-in-law, in Ger many. Emperor William, is visiting the country seat of Prlnco von Eulen berg, leader of the court clique op posing Chancellor von Buelow. Terrorists derailed a train on the Vienna-Warsaw Road, killed sever al soldiers and got away with a large sum of money. Italy Is trying to compromise a Oermau-Servlan quarrel which threat ens a rupture, involving France and Austria. DERAIL MAIL CAR WITH BOMBS AND LOOT IT First Kill The Gendarmes and Place Sentinels. MARCH OFF IN MILITARY ORDER. Threw Threp Bombs at the Mail Car While Engines Were Being- Changed, Derailed the Car, Robbed It and Fled With a Sum of Money Said to Amount to $650,000. Rt.gnow, Russian Fortland, (By Cable). The Cossacks have thus far been unsuccessful In their pursuit of the revolutionist train robbers numbering a hundred well-armed men, who at. 9 o'clock P. M., sur rounded this station, threw three bombs at the mail car of a train while engines were being changed, derailed the car, robbed it and fled with a sum of money now Bald to amount to $050,000. Laid Their Finns Well. The station-master declares tho revolutionists hid In the neighbor ing forests and were excellently dis ciplined, their commander giving orders through bugle signals. When the robbery was completed the revo lutionists transported their booty to two wagons and marched off in mili tary order, singing Socialistic songs. Eye-witnesses confirm the state ment that the revolutionists were hidden in the neighboring woods, and when the train stopped the men, armed with rifles, sprang up on all sides. Shot The Gendarmes. Quickly executing the orders con veyed bv the bugle, the gendarmes standing In front of the station were shot and killed, and the revolutionists placed sentinels at all the approaches and cut the telegraph wires. While some of them overpowered the trainmen other attacked the es corts of the mail car. Of the three bombs thrown, two exploded with terriile force, blowing the cars Into matchwood, killing five soldiers and mortally wounding 11 others. .Marching Off In Military Order. The revolutionists then ransacked the mail car, transferred the bank notes, gold and silver to their own bags, and, unfolding tho red flag, formed up a military order, inarched out of the station, entered wagons, which were In waiting In the forest, and drove off. It was not until three hours later that a detachment of Cossacks, hur riedly sent for, appeared on the scene and started in pursuit of the revolu tionists. Rogow is now occupied by troops. Tried To Cntcli A Homh. The railroad station was practically destroyed by the revolutionists, who poured in regular volleys, the walls being pitted by hundreds of bullet marks. One of the mall clerks en deavored to catch the first bomb thrown at the car, but it exploded and tore off both his arms. The authorities officially admit the loss of only $14,000 in cash besides the unknown contents of the register ed letters. The wounded men have been sent to AVarsaw by special train. A Sad Double Tragedy. Hatboro, Pa., (Special). After stabbing his wife nine times with an awl, leaving her in a dying condi tion at her home, at Fulmer, a small village near here, Walter Y'erkes committed suicide byshooting himself In the head with a .32 calibre revol ver. The double tragedy occurred a few moments after the family had left the breakfast table, and was wit nessed by several children of the couple. The fact that Walter Yerkes Is the son of Squire Joseph B. Yerkes, of this place, was sufficient to turn the entire populace out in order to learn the details of tho crime. lias Not Resigned. Washington (Special). Senor Montagna, the Charge of the Italian Embassy here, while at the State De partment Thursday denied the story that Ambassador Mayor Des Planches had resigned, and stated that he ex pected the Ambassador to return to this country next month and resume his connection with the KJmbassy. Highwayman Holds Up Train. Kansas City (Special). A lone robber, heavily masked, boarded the rear sleeper of the eastbound combi nation Chicago and Alton-Rock Is land Canifornia Limited train known as No. 4 4, between Slater and Glas gow, Mo., shortly after midnight, robbed several passengers and escap ed in the darknesB. She Found Tho I.cuk. nuffalo, N. Y. (Special). Miss Catherine Keener, aged 21 years, wag awakened by the odor of gas. She lighted a match to investigate. The explosion which followed blew away one side of tho house, and Miss Keener received burns from which she died. Killed On The Track. Alexandria, Va. (Special). Wil liam A. Fuller, 4 4 years old, of Washington, who was employed ss a car Inspector in the Union freight yards here, was instantly killed by a Southern Railway engine a mile north of this city. He was terribly mangled. Millionaire's Nephew Sentenced. Worcester, Mass. (Special). Ro bert L. Hunter, of Roxbury, Mass., aged 18 years, was sentenced by Judge H. E. Hitchcock in Superior Criminal Court to not less than six nor more than eight years in state prison for stabbing to death his friend, Charles H. LaCrosse, here Juno 25. He is a nephew of James P. Tlinllty, the millionaire Boston contractor. KUscd Dead And Died Herself. Trinidad, Col. (Special). Because she kissed the face of her dead father, whom she had nursed until death claimed him, Emellne Mar tinez, 20 years old, followed him to the grave. Several days ago Isadore Martinez died from blood poisoning. When be had been prepared for bur ial his daughter could not resist the impulse to kiss him. The next day she fell ill, and her sickness soon developed into blood poisoning and In 12 days from the death of her father she died. They lived at Ban Mlnguel, 16 miles frptu this city. DEATH IN TENEMENT PANIC Mother and Four Children Die In The Flames, New York (Special). Penned in by fire, four children and one woman were burned to death in a tenement-house Are on the East Side. When finally the blaze had been ex tinguished and the firemen could penetrate the building the bodies of the victims, charred beyond pos sibility of recognition, were found lu the ruins. The Are started on the second floor of the five-story tenement at 366 Mndlson Street. The building is the oHest type of tenement-house con struction, with narrow halls and stairs and lots of seasoned wood work. Beginning in some rubbish near the stairs, the Are spread rapidly through the hall and was soon licking its way through the upper floor. Most of the 15 families in the building were at supper, and there was the wildest kind of excitement. Policemen were on the Bcene immedi ately, and as soon as the firemen ar rived helped them In carrying women and children from the upper floors down the fire escapes and ladders. More than B0 women were taken down the ire escapes by firemen. When the firemen arrived on tho scene almost every window of the building was crowded with women and children calling for assistance. The fire in the lower floors had filled the halls and stairways with smoke and cut off the means of escape. The fire was very hot, and there were many heroic rescues in the few minutes during which the people were being taken from the building. When the firemen had rescued every one they possibly could they turned a deluge of water into the upper floors, but a half hour made little headway In extinguishing the flames. When finally they had the fire out the search for victims was under taken. Only on the second floor did the search reveal bodies. There, huddled in a corner of one of the fiats, were found the body of a woman burned to a crisp, and nearby in a group, the remains of four children. HAVE NO SPIES IX JAPAN. General Staff Not Seeking Informa tion In This Way. Washington (Special). Officers of the general staff of the Army endea vored to discount the rumor that plans and other information relative to the defenses of Japan had been gathered recently by agents of this country. While the best - informed military officials readily admit that war with Japan is among the pos sibilities of the future, they declare most emphatically that tho general staff has not hnd military spies in Japan, such as it is evident Japan has had in tho Philippines. It was explained at the War De partment that, the function of the general staff is to make preliminary plans for war with all possible ene mies of this country. It is unques tionably true that tho general staff has considered plans for military operations against Japan, but it is equally true that such plans have been discussed in connection with England, Germany, France, Italy and practicaly all tho nations of any con sequence in tho world. It is the business of the general staff to gather military information about nil coun tries, and Japan has not been left out of the calculations of this body ajiy more than have the other war like powers of the world. A Family Asphyxiated. Leighton, Pa. (Special). ;Coal gas fumes caused the death of Harry Bowman, 23 years old; his wife, 20, and a little girl of 10, at their home on South Second Street. It is be lieved that fire started In the stove which supplied the sleeping apart ment with heat and that the fatal coal gas entered their bedchamber and killed them while they slept. Curzon Humor Unfounded. London (By Cable). In connec tion with the rumors from America that Lord Curzon, the ex-Viceroy of India, is to succeed Sir Mortimer Durand as Ambassador of Great Britain at Washington, the Foreign Office here says there ia absolutely no foundation for the reports. Typhoid Ascribed To Oysters. Middletown, Ct., (Special). An other case of typhoid fever making six in all, has developed at Wesleyan University. Tho victim is John C. Day, of Paterson, N. J., catcher on the Weslyan baseball taem. The out break Is thought to have been due to oysters eaten by the students. AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL Some Interesting Happenings Briefly Told, President Roosevelt will present a gold medal to Major George F. Shields for saving a wounded Philip- pino irom between the tiring lines. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion Is to Investigate the alleged holding company for the llarrlman railroad In the West. Minister to Portugal Charles Pago Bryan may succeed Lloyd Grlscom as American minister at Rio Janeiro, iirazll. In hlB annual report Brlgadicx General Crolzer, chief or ordnance, says the Array is being well supplied with modern urms and ammunition. San Francisco policyholders have appealed to the State Department for aid in forcing German fire Insurance, companies to pay losses. President Roosevelt awarded a medal of honor to Edward Murray, a Pennsylvania Railroad conductor of Pittsburg. It Is hinted that Lord Ctirzon may become British ambassador to the United StateB. President Roosevelt directed that Chief Moon be reprimanded for transferring a printer who had been expelled by the typographical union. President Roosevelt discussed the Pearre Anti-injunction Bill with Gompers and other officials of the Federation of Labor. Secretary of theInterlor Ethan Allen Hitchcock will retire from President Roosevelt's Cabinet on tho 4th of next March, and James- It. Garfield, of Ohio, at. present commis sioner of corporations, will succeed him. The President has approved the report of the special committee that exonerated Governor Frantz, of Okla homa. Friction bctwecji the Russians and Japanese in Manchuria Is continuous. THE PRESIDENT OFF FOR CANAL ZONE "Going To See How The Ditch Is Getting Along." SECRET SERVICE MEN THERE. A Distinguished Gathering at the Navy lard to See the President Off on His Unique Expedition At the White House There Wat a Contest Among the Roosevelt Children. Washington, D. C. (Special). "Good-by. 1 am going down to see how the ditch is getting along." shouted President Roosevelt as he stood on the after starboard deck of the yacht Mayflower nt the Wash ington Navy Yard as the vessel was leaving the dork with the President for his Panama trip. Accompanying the President were Mrs. Roosevelt and her mnld: Sur geon General Rlxey, of the Navy, and M. C. Latta, one of the nsslstnnt sec retaries at the White House. The Mayflower took the party to Wolf Trap light, at the mouth of the Rappahannock River, In Chesapeake Bay, where a transfer wan made to tho Battleship Louisiana, which Is to convey the President to and from the Isthmus. When tho President steps ashore at Colon it will bo the first Instance In the history of the republic, where the president of the United States has put his foot upon foreign soil during his Incumbence of office. The Canal Zone is held to be American soil, but Colon Is outside the zono, ns Is also the City of Panama, where the President and Mrs. Roosevelt will for a few homy be the guests of President Amndor, of the Panama Republic. Besides Mr. Roosevelt, the only members of his party on the trip are Rear Admiral Rixey, surgeon general of the Navy, and Assistant Secretary Latta. The President spent a busy dny nt the White House winding up affairs of statd before his departure. Root On The Lid. While ho is away Secretary Loeb will be in charge nt the While House, and Secretory Root will occupy the seat "on the lid." usually held by Secretary Tnft when the President is away on an extended trip. Despite the fact thnt the President Is afloat, he will he In close com munication with affairs at Washing ton. The Louisiana has been fitted up with the most complete wireless telegraph apparatus nvllablo, and Lieutenant Evans, of the Navy, hos been assigned to special duty in chnrge of the instruments aboard the vessel. He will communicate from time to time with the wireless stations along the coast, and thus the President will be kept advised of tho trend of events. There was quite an effecting fam ily scene as the President and his wife drove away, for all the children except Kermlt were home to say good-by. Theodore, Jr., came down from Harvard and Ethel came In from the Cathedral School to see the last of tholr parents. The Presi dent spent the morning at his office and quite a number of officials and friends came to say good-by. Tho members of the Cabinet dropped in during the morrfing. Colonel Brom well, the President's milltnry old, and Lieutennnt Commander Key, the President's nnvnl aid, drove nn In automobiles just before the Presi dent started and wished him "bon voyage." SUICIDE COSTS THREE LIVES. A Girl, Disappointed In Love, Turns On (ins. Chicago, 111., (Special). Because she hud been disappointed in a love affair, Aloysiu MarsI, aged 17, under took to kill herself by turning on the gas in n room at the German Hospital. In the dormitory with her were three other girls. Two of them are dead and the other dying as a result of Inhaling the gns fumes. The girl who desired to die will recover. At the Larrabeo Police Station her lover is held prisoner pending a rigid investigation of the entire affair. All the girls- were employed at the hospital. At night they attended a party and returned lute, letting them selves Into tho dormitory with a night key. The Marsl girl had met her faith less lover at the party, and it Is sup posed she was so discouraged after an interview with him that she deter mined to end her lifo. Shu Is yet in such condition thnt she cannot givo a connected story of the tragedy. Ear ly in tho morning other attendants at the hospital smelted gas and finally broke into the room. Two of tho girls were then dead nnd Mir.s Lotrl was beyond resuscitation. By hard work Miss Marsi was partially re vived and admitted that she hud closed all the windows, locked the doors and turned on the gus with the Intention of killing herself. She had hoped the other girls would he awakened by the smell of gifs In time to escape. Bridge Tender Responsible. Atlantic City, N. J. (Special). After a stormy scene, lasting several hours, the coroner's jury agreed to placo the blame for the Thorough fare wreck of Sunday, October. 28, upon Daniel Slewurt, the aged bridge-tender. The Jury disagreed on many points. According to the coroner, Stewart will bo nrrested on tho charge of criminal negligence. New Hotel Collapses. Long Beach, Cal., (Special): Thi new Bixby being erected on tho beach here caved in supposedly from weak construction, and possibly a score of men are buried in the ruins. The building is of reinforced concrete. The whole structuro cavad in wit li on t warning from the basement to the fourth floor, leaving but one wing standing. Estimates of tho number of dead range from 10 to 25. Indian And Ballots Gone. Reno, Nev. (Speclul). Tom Big foot, an Indlun runner, to whom the election ballots and returns of tho Wonder Mining District were givon Wednesday, bus disappeared, and deputy Bherlffs are scouring the coun try to miles east of Reno for him. Upon tho returns rents tho futo of the candidates for judge in the Sec ond dliitrict ami of several Church hill County candidates. It Is beliovod that the Indian was Intercepted and robbed of the returns, and that he fled to the hills for fear of projection. FAVROT KIM HIS FRIEND Congressman-Elect Shools HI life time Comrade. Baton Rouge, La. (Special) Dem ocratic Congressman-elect Judge Geo. K. Favrot, shot and Instantly killed his 'lifelong associate and school mate, Dr. H. H. Aldrlch, one of the best-known citizens of Baton Rouge. Hundreds of persons were near the scene of the shooting, but none knew what had passed between the two men. Judge Favrot refused to tnlk beyond letting it be known that the matter was a private quarrel. The shot was fired in tho Ray mond building, opposite the Istrou ma Hotel, out of which a crowd of society women was pouring, hnving Just left a reception. Among them were the mother nnd sister of Judge Favrot. Judge Favrot. was arrested In the building where he had held court. Judge Favrot is 3h years old, and In the recent Democratic primaries ho defented for the nomination 8 M. Robertson, who had been a rep resentative in Congress for 20 years Shot Ills Sweetheart. Carlisle, Pa. (Special). Clarence llgcnfitz, aged 20 years, shot Ills sweetheurt, Mary Kutz, and then committed suicide. Tho shooting oc curred at Drytown, near here. Ilgen fit z had been paying attention to the girl for several months, but becausf they were first cousins. Miss Kutj refused to marry him. Ilgonfitz Ins In wait for the girl and her grand mother as they were returning home Trom church. As Ihcy passed he shol the girl twice, one bullet entering her head back of t he ear and an other entering her left thigh. . ITEMS OF INTEREST. A panic was caused by the collis ion of the passenger steamer Maine and the ferryboat Maryland in Hell Gate, the Maine being run on the mud flats to prevent her sinking. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad has won a decision thnt it may run Its tralnB through villages of Western Pennsylvania at a speed greater than 10 miles an hour. Directors of the Illinois Central Railroad elected J. T. llarahun presi dent, to succeed Stuyvesant. Fish. United States Senator Depew is reported to have regained his health and will resume his senatorial duties. Tho Pennsylvania Railroad will Increase the wages of 165,000 em ployes 10 per cent, on December 1. John Adam, of Chicago, recovered his 13-year-old daughter in a band of gipsies in Massachusetts. The Railway Switchmen's Union may arbitrate the demand for more wages. About 600 houses were burned at Shsmeon, the Island suburb of Can ton, China, nnd the losses aggregate $1,0,00,000. The liabilities of McFadyen & Co., bankers, of London, amount to $2, 350,000. Seven nationalist workmen were shot down by socialists at Lodz, Po land. Kingsland, a New York automo bilist, was sentenced to three months' Imprisonment In Chaleaudrun, France, for running over and killing an old woman. Herr von PobdlelsHI. German min ister of agriculture, has resigned. The crew of the Norwegian baric Adeona, which was wrecked off the New Brunswick coast, are believed to have been lost. An imperial edict providing for the reorganization of the Chinese) government was published in the of ficial gazette. As nothing came of the attempt last year to raise in Balaklava Bay tho British Ironclad sunk with her treasure during the Crimean War, tho Russian Admiralty offlciala at Se bastopol now propose to intrust the tusk of bringing up the treasure to a Russian salvage syndicate. Tho Nawab of Bahawalpur, the principal Mohammedan ruler of Northern India, is going on a pil grimage to Mecca with all the mem bers of hl3 family of both sexes and a majestic retinue. Considerable po litical significance attaches to this pilgrimage. On tho railways of continental Eu rope and the Rhine steamers there is no mli-cellnneouB scrambling for meala. Instead n steward goes through tho train or boat and lists tho poople who want to eat. Each gets a number and thin insures a seat without crowding or delay. Virginia has found It nececsary to pass a law declaring that for all legal purposes the wordu "railroad" and "railway" are to be considered syn onymous. FINANCIAL WOULD. . The Rockefeller contingent are re ported to be buying Northern Pacific. It is donied that United States Steel will dismantle its Homestead armor plate plant. American tobacco declared the regular quarterly dividend of o.i the common and an extra dividend of 7 Va per cent, t It seemed to be the consensus of opinion among leading conservative bankers that there is to be no big bull market Just yet. Assistant Secretary of State Hacou retired from the Burlington direc torate and J. T. Talmugo was chosen to succeed him. The Pennsylvania's increase in wugos will effect 125,001) employees and will mean an extra outlay by Hie company of several millions annually. ' ' Directors of the Merchants' Na tional Bank, Philadelphia, declared ii semi-annual dividend of 4 luir cent, "ut of profits of the past six months. Tills i-alacg the annual rate from 6 ho first time In many yenrs hat one inr cent, to 8 per cent. The dividend ii payable on demand. The hu.ik's capita) is $600,000; surplus $600,000 and undivided prohts $160,737. Those who banked upon Hearst's lbfeat to send up the prlco of Brook lyn Rapid Transit were fooled. The prlco fell a couple of points, showing "early that once more all the good effects had boen fully discounted. Poor's Manual shows that ct the end of 1805 there were In the United States 215,608 miles of railroad which earned during the year $2, 112,000,000. Theio waa paid in in terest and dividends or rental $644, 000,000. The total capltul stock is $3,741,000,000 and the bonded debt Ii $7, S21, 000,000, which, along with -tber liabilities, make total of i U 3, 068, 000, 000. STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. , in I Latest News Gleaned From Various Parts.. A breach of promise suit was. started In the Prothonotary's office at Allcntown by Miss Katie Hart man of Macungie, against Dr. O. K. Hoppes, of Tamaqita. Miss Hart man is 29 years old and asks for $5,000 damages. She allages thnt Dr. Hoppes began courting bor eight years ago, and In last February, for no reason, ceased his attentions. On March 4 he was married to Miss Sue Brode, and Is now practicing dentistry In the coal region. Alleging great mental distress and physical sufforlng, Mrs. Harriet Low ry has entered suit for $10,000 dam ages against four women who hazed her at her East Sandy home sevoral days ago. The defendants are Mrs.. Verda Lowry, a sister-in-law; Mrs. Nellie Glaze, Mrs. Bertha Grlgman and Mrs. Hulda Pherson. The plain tiff alleges that the women eamo to her home, daubed her face with stove polish and then gave her a coat of molasses and feathers. When Sher iff McElhlnney went to East Sandy to serve the summons he found that tho four women, having learned of his coming, had left tor the hills. They remained in hiding for several hours and until the Sheriff had taken the last train back to the county seat. The women say that the good name of the town demanded that. Mrs. Lowry be driven from It, and that they adopted the hazing method. A number of freak election bets were paid in Reading Wednesday. On Oley Street a young woman dreBS ed in the lightest and flimsiest or Summer clothing was hauled a dozen times up and down the street in a wheelbarrow by a young man. On Walnut Street, a young woman set tled a wager by publicly kissing a man a dozen times. That the Unlontown & Wheeling Bhort line, the road projected from Wheeling to Unlontown by J. V. Thompson, the millionaire coal man or Fayette County, is to be built soon was Indicated when the Briar Hill Coal & Coke Company let the con tract for sinking four mine shafts and the construction of 1000 coke ovens at Khedive, Greene County, at approximately $2,000,000. Those coke works will lie on a spur of the proposed road, which will provide the only outlet for tho production. It will be the first attempt to coke the Greene County coal. Dr. James Oliver Flower, 64 years old, a prominent dentist and widely known in the East and West, died in Pittsburg of tuberculosis after an illness of four years. He was the father of Dr. W. S. Flower, who several years ago eloped with a daughter of Charles Lockhart, the Standard Oil magnate, who disin herited her. George W. Haskins, 64 years old, senior member of the law firm of Haskins & McCllhtock died suddenly at his home in Meadvllle of apoplexy. He was for several years professor of Latin language and literature in Allagheny College and resumed the practice of law twenty years ago. He -was widely known. Battling with her husband, who was evidently insane as the result of a long illness, Mrs. Walter Yerkes was stabbed nine times and serious ly wounded at the Yerkes home, at Fulmor Station, Ilattboro. When the woman dropped exhausted on tho bed the frenzied husband believed he hnd killed her. Then he placed the muzzle of a 32-caliber revolver in his mouth, fired one shot and dropped to the floor dead. .Mrs. Charles Ilagenbuch, her two . daughters, Misses Salome and Eva, nnd her Hon, Harry, had a narrow escape from asphyxiation from the , fumes of coal gas at their home in Shenandoah early the other morn ing. The damper on the stove pipe wrvi closod, allowing the deadly fumes to penetrate the whole house. The barking of a pet dog down stairs awoke Miss Eva Jtrst in the nick of time. She was so badly overcome that she was scarcely able to grope her way to the window and let in fresh air. She soon revived and then hurriedly ran and opened windows In the rooms occupied by her mother, sister and brother, but found tbem In deep stupor. Physicians were summoned and after some hard work every one was revived. The timely barking of the dog saved all their lives. President John Mitchell, of the United Mine Workers of America, who intimated in a' speech at Coal- dale, on October 29, that he would not remain at the head of the organi zation much longer. Is a candidate for re-election at the annual con vention to be held In Indianapolis next January. Close friends of Mit chell in Mahanoy City, say that he has made up his mind to remain leader until the expiration of the present agreement with the opera tors in April, 1909, In the hopo or forcing further recognition for tho miners in the hard coal fields. Charles Mitchell, a young man, of Three Tuns, near Ambler, owes his escape from death after a train crashed into his horse and wagon, at a local crossing, to the fact that the train was slowing up for the Ambler stop. Mitchell drove on the tracks and the slowly moving train smashed into hlB wagon. The horse was bruised, the wagon practically wrecked, commuters oik the train were thoroughly scared, and Mitchell escaped with several bruises and shock. ; Forty boys employed at the Dla- niond Glass Works, Royorsford, struck for un Increase in wages. They have been receiving $5 a week, and demand $1 u day. The plant, with the exception of one shop, was Compelled to close, throwing about fifty blowers and a number of other hands out of employment.. - While lighting a kerosene lamp with a taper, Mrs. Rebecca Becker, 69 years old, of York, accidentally Ignited her clothing and was so severely burned about the back, chest and arms that her recovery is in doubt. t John B. Wise, Jr., a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, was appointed superintendent Wednesday of the new Consumers' Electric Light ft Power Company, of llazlotou. For Ave years ha has been superintendent and general manager of the Electric Light und Power Company. Norman Watklns, aged 18 years, a driver at the Mid Valley Colliery, near Mt. Carmel, was caught in an explosion of gas and blown to pieces. By the colliding of a car on the street railway with an undertaker'!) wagon In Scranton, three persons were seriously Injured.