I mi it W THE VP INDIANS Brc American and Eleven Mexicans Murdered. RAILROAD MIN ARE IN TERROR. Employe of the Southern Pacific Ex cited Over New That the Yaquia Are on the Warpath Reported Several Americana Are Among Vic tim of the Blood-thirsty Red. Nogale. Mex. (Special). Details are arriving here of the massacre of a, party of Mexicans by Yaqul In d'aas near Valencia, 60 miles below Gnyamas. Eleven Mexicans and one American ware killed and, from all accounts, there were over a hundred Indians In tho attacking party. The employes on the Southern Pa cific. Railroad In thnt section are frightened. It Is sal.l many are leav ing, and that the massacre may de lay the road to Guadalajara. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special!. Col. H. B. Maxson, vice president of the National Irrigation Congress and lecretary of the Board of Education sf Reno, Nev., who has been spend ing the past few weeks In the State of Sonora, Mex., arrived here with a graphic story of a massacre of Mexi cans and Americans, which occurred at the little town of Lanrho, on the Cananea, Yaqul River and Pacific Railroad late Saturday afternoon. According to the statement of Maxson, hi train stopped an hour at Lancho. While there rumors were received that the Yaquls were upon 'the warpath and that the few peo ple In the neighborhood of the rail road were In danger. Tho station master, a man named Thompson, be littled the matter, and said he and his wife would remain at their post. The train bearing Colonel Maxson and party had not left the station for more than an hour when the Yaqul descended on the little party of Mexicans and Americans and murdered four of them. Station A,?ent Thompson and his rife defended themselves behind the barricaded doors of the station until a work train appeared, when the In dians withdrew. The train bearing Colonel Mnxson and party continued to a station about IB miles farther along the line and then, as the signs of the upris ing became more alarming, the party decided to return. The train start ed back toward Lancho, and when it arrived the station-house had been burned and demolished and four hu man bodies lay along the track. Tho party stopped a few minutes in the hope that the survivors might, be found and taken to a place of safety. While the train was at the ruins of the station the Yaquis ap peard In the distance, but did not tome within range of the few armed people on the train. , Mot many miles along the road the scene was duplicated. Four more dead bodies of 'Mexicans and Ameri cana were discovered along the .tracks. The little band at this sta 'tlon had been able to repulse the at tack of the Yaquls with the loss of but four of their number. The re maining members of the company refused to leave on the train, but aid they could stand off the Indians nntll the next day, when the rurales would raech tho spot and summary justice would be meted out to the murderers if captured. TOWNS ARK SHAKEN DOWN. Earthquakes Again Terrorize Tho People. Santiago, Chill (Special). Half of the town of Arlca, In the Province of Tacna, has been destroyed by an earthquake, nnd other towns in the neighborhood have suffered more or lea severely. The seaport of Iqulqui, 120 miles aouth of Ark-A, was not damaged. With the recollection of the August disaster fresh In their minds, the people In the earthquake zone are Kreatly alarmed. London (By Cable). Professor Belar, of the I.aibaeh Observatory, telegraphs the Dally Mail that trie instrument" at the observaory re corded another great earthquake at 7.11 Wednesday morning. The cen ter of activity was 1,876 miles o the west-south west. He adds tho sug gestion that the recent extraordinary atrong earthshocks may have dam aged St. Paul'? Cathedral, London Me recommends that, test measure ments be taken and repeated after every world-ahaking seismic move ment. He recalls that the roof of the Charing Cross Railway Station (ell the day after the lustrum. Lalbach recorded a great earthquake JAPAX1.SK TURNED RACK. THE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Domestic Joseph D. Snlsona was arranged before the 1'nlted States commis sioner In New York and held tn $t,000 ball as a confederate of Boehm and Orhera, who were ar rested last week on a charge of mak ing and attempting to make counter feit peo note of the Republic of Columbia. Mrs. Jeanne Trnutman, wife of Dr. Alexander Trantman, a promi nent physician, who wa arrested on complaint of Peter J. Hogan, who declartd she was a street walker, who had stolen $1.1 from htm, was honorably discharged In a New York police court, A rail for a second conference of the growers nnd manufacturers of cotton In October, 1907, has been sent out by .lames R. MacColl, the president of the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers. Former President Grover Cleve land and other Princeton residents have made application to the na tional government to stock Carnegie Lake at Princeton with game fish. A grand jury of New York has found Indictments against two for mer officials of the New York Life Insurance Company, charging forg ery. An Indian massacre, In which Yaqul Indians attarked a party of Americans nnd Mexicans and killed eight, has occurred in Mexico. W. J. Atkinson, president of the defunct Lincoln Bank of Morton Park, was sent to jail In Chicago In default of $25,000 ball. Dr. Marker G. Dadarlan, of New York, has been threatened with as sassination by the "Dlack Hand'' unless he gives tip 110,000. The Lackawanna Steel Company has purchased the Ellsworth Coal Company's properties In the Pitts burg district. In Dayton. O., Roy Fowler was sentenced to die In electric chair for the murder of his sweet-heart. An effort Is being mnde tn St. Petersburg to compel the authorities to investigate the naval scandals of the Grand Ducal regime, which are said to be largely responsible for the defeat of the Russian at the battle of the Sea of Japan. Judge Duncan, of Ohio, in a decis ion rendered in the Standard Oil caBCs, decided that the probate court has no Jurisdiction to try criminal prosecu tions under tlM Valentine Anti-trust Law. The $5,000 fine imposed upon the Standard Oil Company Is there fore invalid, as well as all the pro ceedings in the Probate Court. The case will be carried to the Circuit nnd Supreme Courts. A mass meeting of citizens of San Francisco denounced .'.he position of President Roosevelt and Secretary Metcalf on the Califorlna school ques tion, declaring that state's rights is now the paramount Issue. J. G. Phelps Stolscs. the million aire, has refused to make hi annual donution to the Y. M. C. A., because of the creation of a class in real es eate and stock investment. D. J. Beresford, a brother of Ad miral Lord Beresford, of the English Navy, was killed In a train wreck In North Dakota. Nicolai de Raylan, the Russian woman who masqueraded as a man, was of noble birth and a mother. Ten persons died or were over come by the cold In New York. The Washington and Florida ex press on the Southern Railway, which ran into the private car of Samuel Spencer, Thanksgiving Day, was wrecked In the South, owing to a misunderstanding over signals. The fireman was killed and the engineer badly scalded. Five hundred horses and mules were burned in a Harper Brothers livery stable, Atlanta, Ga. The loss is about $100,000. The Are was started by safe-blowers, who explod ed the safe In the office, the shock overturning a lamp. T. E. Brady, a Great Falls lawyer, has been indicted by the federa'l grand jury in Helena, Mont., on a charge of unlawfully fencing a 13,-167-acre tract of public land In Val ley County. J. Plerpont Morgan, Dr. Lyman Abbott and other prominent citizen of New York, have addressed a letter to Secretary Root, calling attention to conditions in the Congo Free State. Frederick J. Schaffhauer. consider ed the most important witness In tho suit of the city of Philadelphia to re cover $5,000,000 from .las. P. Mc Nlchol on the filtration contract, Is dead. KING PETER MAY BE DETHRONED Dire Threats Made Against The Servian Ruler. WARNINGS SENT TO HIS PREMIER. Secret Meeting of the Antidynastlc Leader Indicating a Conspiracy Casting About for a European Prince to Succeed King Peter in Case He 1 Overthrown. Belgrade, Servla (By Cable.) The National Assembly finally ha accepted the Loan and Armament Bills, which were sent, for signature to King Peter. Tho debate on these measures was attended by disorderly scenes on the part of member of the Assembly, arising from the opening expression of sentiment agnlnst the present Karageorgevltch dynasty, which gave rise to report In German and Austrian quarters of a move ment to dethrone King Peter. Following the street dlsorderj of the last few days, the occurrences In the chamber have added to tho seriousness of the present situation. Tho King Is at present confronted with ninny difficult problems, not the least of which Is the renewed activity of the supporter of tho late King Alexander and Queen Oraga, who were murdered the night of June 10-11, 1903, and the popular Ill-feeling arotiHed by the recent es capades of George, the Crown Prince. One of the deputies opposed the loan on the ground that the members of the reigning family would per sonally pocket a large proportion of It. and the final debates brought out antidynastlc demonstrations, in which a number of riotous students sus tained serious Injuries. Premier Paslcs has received a number of threatening letters, Intimating that the present dynasty will meet a fate similar to that of Its predecessor. The late King Alexander was a mem ber of the Ohrenovits family. It. 1b asserted that secret meetings of the antidynastlc leaders have been held here for the the purpose of selecting a European prince as a successor to King Peter In the event of a success ful antidynastlc movement. AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL Some Interesting Happening Briefly Told. Many Keputtd Veterans Of Millfhdo's Army On Rio Grande Border. El Paso, Tex. (Special).- Japanese are flocking to the Rio Grande bor der attempting to get Into the L'nlted States, f ost of them are said to have been discharged from the Japanese, army. Thursday fifty-four were reft i admiEsion here. Later a num. were smuggled over to Fort Han cock, Tex., but they were recaptured by Immigration officials, who arc patrolling the entire border. The Japanese were turned hack at El Paso because .hey were without fui. l . and therefore likely to be omu paupers. The men arrested Were part of a party ro'used admls ilon at El Paso. Fell 300 Feet To Death. Bessemer, Mich, (Special). Ellas Lebtenan and Joseph Bardessono were Instantly killed ut the Colby iron mine hero hy falling 500 feet to the b trite m of the shaft, when a "Bklp,' on which they were riding to the surface, was dumped by strik ing on a projecting beam. Two other miners rldir.g In the skin naved their lives by catching hold of the rope and clinging to It. Ei'!.i Of Explorer! Found. El Paso, Tex. (Special). The bodies of Prof. Thomas Grlndell and Mi follower, who left Douglas, Ariz., Ill June, 1904, on an exploralng expe dlti n to Tlbuion Island, in the Gulf jUM California, but who were never afterward henid from, have been found. It was reported, In u desert JB Sonora, where they perished, evi dently for want of water Identifi cation was made through lotterH ad dressed to Grind.). I found with the bodies. Grlndell wa principal of the Douglas siiioolf. 1-oreign. The Princess Victoria Alexandra of Schleswlg-Holstein has been be trothed to Prince Augustus William, fourth son ot tho Emperor of Ger many. Governor Magoon declares that the dlBpatch of additional troops to Santa Clara province was merely a precautionary measure. 'he German Government small arms factory Is working overtime 1 1 . .... i . a new model rifle with which to rearm the Infantry. The Indian National Congress of Calcutta adopted a resolution of in dignation that they should be denied the rights of citizen in the Trans vaal. Bishop Turinoz, of Nnncy, France, was fined $10 for striking a gen darme on the occasion of the Bishop's expulsion from the episcopal resi dence. The Moroccan War Minister has established seven small forts around Tangier, and has ordered Kaisuli to cease "governing."' Major von Wledenbach Notitz Zu Jaenkendoi f , member of an aristo cratic German family, committed suicide. Colonel De Gelmann, Russian con sul at Liverpool, was found dead in bod, having shot himself. Eleven Mexicans and one American wei 3 massacrei. by Yaqul Indian) near Valencia, Mcx. The court martial In St. Peters burg condemned Vice Admiral .eho gntnff and other officer of hid squad ron to death for surrendering to the Japanese, but will aak the Czar to eoniBUta the sentence. The blizzard in England continue!. Bid a number of persons have per ished In the snow. James Bryce. who will Hiiececd Sir Mortimer Durand as ambassador at Washington, is arranging his affairs to leave England within a few weeks to as.iume hi diplomatic duties. Rulsull 1 reported to be arming men, presumably to attack the aultan of Morocco, and the latter U also making warkllke preparation. Colonel Obrourheff, commander of the Eighty first Infantry, has buen killed on bin estate, near Lukow, Po land, by an unknown nutn. Crown Prince Makes Trouble. King Peter is regarded a an ami able man, but not a particularly clev er one by no means clever enough for the extremely difficult position he has to fill. Many things aro against him. To begin with, he has no private means; they were all used up In his 40 years' exile. According to com mon report, the last remnants of hi fortune went in forwarding the con spiracy which resulted In the assas sination of Alexander 1 and Draga. King Alexander had not much money It Ib true only some $60,000 a year but It wa better than nothing, and King Peter would be glad If ho had as much. His Income a sov ereign Is only $240,000 a year, which is not a very great sum for the maintenance of a royal household. The people generally were dis posed at first to give the King a cor dial welcome, but when It was seen how completely he was under the In fluence of the conspirators, and the news of his implication in the bloody tragedy gradnally spread throughout the land, popular opinion began to turn against him. His want of tact and cleverness has made his position still worse. His Worst Misfortune. But the sorest trial and worst mis fortune 1 the Crown Prince, whose future accession to tne throne is viewed with positive alarm and ap prehension on all Bides. Prince George has many failings, but the worst, is his ungovernable temper. This has already led him into innum erable troubles - some slight aud some more serious. For several years Major Lavasseur wa the Prince's governor and the young ty rant mnde it hot for him. Shooting was Prince George's favorite pastime. The walls and ceilings of hi apart ments were covered with bullet marks, which were particularly num erous In the door leading to the royal quarters. The reason for this was that the Prince, in order to keep his governor from coming into the room took the door for a target. HON KEY STARTS 1 PANIC. Lights Matches, Catches Fire And Scares Audience. New York (Special). Sweet Wil liam, a clown monkey of an educated Simian troupe at Proctor's 58th Street Theater, was accidentally un fettered during the matinee, and get ting hold of a stage carpenter's coat which contained in a pocket a box of matches, lighted three or lour and with one set fire to the carpenter'! handkerchief. Presently he was on fire himself. When ho d Baked out on the stage hi brick-rod cat-fur surtout a-craekle the women and children who filled the house started to rush for the ex It In a panic. Two men In the audience sprang to the stage and besought the terri fied people to elt quiet, the orchestra struck up nnd a fireman dashed in and from one of the stage boxes hulled a philippic at the multitude that, taken with his blue uniform, brought it to it senses. It calmed, cooled and sat down to get the rest of its money's worth. llfMOO.OOO Hie In Denver. Denver (Special). The Ernest Crammer Building, one of the finest office buildings in the city, located at Seventeenth and Curtis Streets, was greatly damaged by fire, the seventh and eighth floois being en tirely destroyed. The total loss to the building and tenants is estimated at $200,000. The upper floor! of the building were tenanted principal) by lawyers, and one of the most val uable luw libraries in the Wej'. was housed on the top floor. 5(H) Home Are Burned Atlanta, Ga. (Special I. Five hun dred horse a.id malei were burned In Harper Bros.' livery stable. The lo Is about $100,000. The fire waa started by afe blowers who explod ed the safe In the office, tho shock overturning a lamp i .n ill. i i. it. In Miirti-iUiic. Port De Franc?, Martinique (By Cable). An earthquake shock oc curred at a o clock A. M., an. I con I tinned for twonty second. No dam i tga waa done. President Roosevelt left Washing ton for his holiday vaca.ion at Pine Knot, the Virginia cottage owned by the Roosevelt, near Charlottesville. With him were Mr. Roosevelt and their five children, also Assistant Secretary M. C. Lattn, Surgeon General of the Navy Rlxey, Secret Service Agent James Sloan and Ml Landon. of Oyster Bay, a friend of Miss Ethel Roosevelt. Secretary Shnw has Issued a cir cular that no surety company shall be accepted on bond In which the government I Interested for an amount greater than 10 per cent, of Its paid up cRpltal. The Department of Agriculture I determined to have enforced tho law prohibiting railroads from confining live stock beyond the 36-hour limit. Sir Mortimer Durand, the retiring British ambassador, called upon Sec retary Root. The aword of Paul Jones ha been deposited In the Library of the Navy Department. Brig. Gen. J. Franklin Bell will be promoted to be a major general. The Supreme Court decided that, the succession tax of $7,000 assessed against the bonrd of education of Kentucky Annual Conferenro of tho Methodist Episcopal Church Is valid. The Supreme Court decided that It has jurisdiction to try Sheriff Shipp and others, of Chattanooga, Tenn., for contempt of court In connection with tho lynching of Ed Johnson. The constitutionality of tho North Carolina statute forbidding the oper ations of a bucket ahop wa upheld by the Supreme ' ijp-t of the United Stntes. Justice Moody, formerly attorney general, has been assigned to the Third Circuit, embracing Pennsylva nia, New Jersey and Delaware. The Inheritance tax of Louisiana was declared by the Supreme Court of the United States to be constitu tional. Anton Winter, who made the new counterfeit two dollar certificate, wa arrested In Rochester, N. Y. The Enterprise Transportation Company of Jamestown, R. L, filed complaint with the Interstate Com merce Commission against the Penn sylvania Railroad Company and the New England Navigation Company as to existing transportation rates. In his annual report Rear Admiral Rae, chief of the Bureau of Steam Engineering of tho Navy Department, say that the steam turbine presents one of the greatest problems of the day. Captain Marix, of the Navy, re ported experiments for coaling ves sels at sea to be unsuccessful. Edwin T. Sanford of Knoxvllle, Tenn., will Eiiccecd J. C. McReynolds as an assistant attorney general. President Roosevelt will spend a portion of the ( hristmas holidays at Pine Knot, Va. NINE MEN DEAD I RACE RIDTS Mississippi Mob Still Slaying Negroes. HURRYING TROOPS TO THE SCENE. Troops Withdrawn, When Rioting Break Out Afresh at Scooba and Five Negroe Arc Slain in Fight Between White and Black Wagons Meeting In Narrow Road Cause of Trouble. STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Latest News Gleaned From Various Parts. INDIAN WHO IS A PRJEST. RAISULI TO BE DISPOSED. Bandit chief So Longer To Govern Tangier District. London, (By Cable). The Tan gier correspondent of the Times says that Sid Mohammed Gabbas, minis ter of war, with practically his whole army, will go to a spot three miles east of Tangier, on the border of the Anghcra territory, and there read to the neighboring chiefs a let ter from the Sultan deposing Raisuli from the governorship of the Tan gier district, and calling upon the tribesmen to submit to the maghzen, or Moroccan foreign office. This they nre believed to be reaJy to do. Ex cellent order Is being maintained In the Moroccan camp. Mohammed Gabbas is unsparing in his efforts to restrain his forces from any acts offensive to Europeans or natives. Toulon (By Cable!.-The trans port Lanlve has sniled hence for Al giers, Oram! and Merselkebir, where she will take on board 1,000 colonial Iroops and 200 horse. She will join Admiral Touchard's squardron at Tangier, where her troops will b landed to take part with the Spanish soldiers in the joint noticing of Mo rocco, under the Algcctras conven tion. ( Astro REPORTED worse. If He Dies, Gomez's Slice-ssion Will Be Oppoeed By Largo Element. Port of Spain, Trinidad (By Cr ble). Latest Caracas advices Indi cate that President Caatro is much worse, and It is even claimed that he cannot live more than a week longer. Should he die. First Vice President Gomez will immediately assume the Presidency, and will be supported by a large section of the army. A very large element of the country, including the Andino8, or mountaineer supporter of Castro, however, will he opposed to Gomez. Gen. Alrantaru, president of the State of Aragua, l.as accumulated a large army and considerable war material, and Is determined not to recognlia Qomefl, but lo raise a revo lution for the purpose of obtaining the Presidency. In the meanwhile, the rebel force headed by (Jen. Rafael Mont ilia, which recently captured Barquesi meto, 160 mile from Caracas, Is daily Increasing !: st -cneth The condition of Vrnezula Is de- plorable. Outrage by bandits are increasing daily and the country 1 threatened with anarchy. Woman Robbed Of 7,,r,(W. New York f Special)- I'liaddeus K. Green, a wealthy Aqueduct contrac tor, and one of the Democratic lead er in Westchester County, notified Sheriff Janus S. Morrltt that his mother. Mr. Hester Green, of Kato nah. was robbed of $.",. "i00. A young man I raployed on the Aqueduct Ik suspected, and hi arrest Is expected hourly. The booty con!ted of $2, oO In Jewelry and $3,000 in gold .Ins, which Mrs. Green had beeii nvlng tor year. Voting student Put To Dctathi Hadoin, Russia Poland l By Ca ble i A youth named Werner, seventeen years old, and a student it the technical school, was tried by dmnibead court-martial 'here, i ou rlcted and shot to death for basing killed Col. Plotta. commander of the gen-'armerle of the government ot Radom. Werner threw a bomb it Dot. I'lotta, Decembi r 16, and the colonel died the next day of his Injuries. Meridian, Mlgs. (Special). Nine dead and three wounded Is tho record of the race riot In Kemper County Blnce the trouble started Sundny morning. Eight of the (lend are ne groes, while but one white man was killed. When the troops arrived at Wn halak Monday night they found the little town in a fever of excitement over the clash between the races enr ller In the day. Colonel McCants, the commander of the 8econd Regi ment, was Informed that the negroes had fortified themselves two miles from Wahalak and a parly of sol dleis went out to dislodge them, but. when the troops arrived on the scene the blacks had disappeared. Two negroes were killed noar Wnhnlak by whites early Monday night, but no further trouble occurred there during the night. All of the negroes in that section had either fled or se creted themselves In their homes, and believing the trouble over Colo nel McCants returned to Meridian with the soldlerB this afternoon. Tuesday rioting broke out at. Scooba, a town In the same county, five miles south of Wahalak, bb a re sult of which five negroes were killed. The sheriff of Kemper County was unable to control the situation, and sent Governor Vardaman an urgent appeal for troops. The Governor Im mediately notified the militia at Meri dian, Macon and ColumhuB to pro ceed to Scooba by special train. All of the white people In the country are up In arms, nnd a deadly clash is on between the races. The negroes are said to be heavily armed with rifles and shotguns, and It Is believed that much blood will be shed before the troops arrive. Two of the alleged slayers of the negroes at Scooba have been placed under arrest, and Governor Vardaman has ordered a company of state troops rrom this city to prevent their es cape. The race war Is an outgrowth of the killing of two conductors on Mo bile and Ohio Railway trains by ne groesone Sunday and the other Tuesday. Another White Man Killed. Conductor Robert Harrison, of this city, was shot and killed by an un known negro at Crawford, a station above Wahalak, where the race riote occurred Monday. The assassin was Immediately killed by R. O. Mims, formerly yardmaster of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad. When the freight train on which were Harrison and Minis reached Crawford, a hot box was discovered, and Harrison and Minis got off the train to Investigate. As they stepped to the ground, the negro stepped out from concealment and fired point blnnk at Mlms, but the shot struck Harrison. Mlms Is said to resemble the young fireman who was with Conductor Cooper Sun day morning when the conductor was badly slashed In trying to eject an Intoxicated negro who raised a dis turbance, following which Cooper pulled his gun and killed a negro companion of the drunken negro and mortally wounded the latter. This case of mistaken Identity Is believed to be the cause of Tuesday's fracas. According to advices received, the moment the negro shot Harrison, Minis drew his revolver and killed the assassin, who has not been posi tively Identified up to the present time. At 10 o'clock Tuesday night, the Meridian troops ordered out by Gov ernor Vardaman to prevent a repeti tion of race riots, confiscated a loco motive on orders of the Governor, and twenty-five were rushed to Scooba, five miles this side of Wahalak. A coroner's Jury has derided thst Mnrtln Chascheck was killed hy a Shamokln-Edgewood Park trolley car running him down at Trcvorton. It was Ihoueht first he had been mur dered and the body placed on the j ... n0w known Father Nohmnnnot i. ... j- - tne only living Roman TTatholIc prlet A Pottawatomie Who Spoke In the Tongue of HI Father In Rome. To be the first full blood Indian to become a Roman Catholic priest I the unusual distinction of (he Rev. Father Albert Negnhnquet of Kan sas, now conducting religion laoors among hi fellow racnmen In Okln- noma and Indian Territory. So fir FIGHT WITH maim: QUARDI. Three Dead And Four Wounded In Battle At Owens bo ro, Oweniiboro, Ky. (Special). Throe men were killed and four prohably fatally wounded In a fight between guards employed by tho West Ken tucky Coul Company, at Sturgla, Pnior County, and the striking min ers at the place. The tight occurred In a downtown Street about one mite from the mine, but Just what precipitated the fight Is rot known. It bioke out suddenly aud continued until 23 tshots were exchanged. The members of the Miners' Union WVe been on strike for the pa:t year. The coal company has been work ing nonunion men under guards nnd serious trouble has been long ex pected. The fight caused a panic and n reign of terror existed for an hour. There 1 only one officer tn town but the sheriif of Union County and deputies have arrived at Sturgis. Summoned Hy Hoimpiirtc. San Francisco I Special ) , United States Attorney Robert T, Devlin hns gone to Washington In response to a telegram from Attornev General Rpunpni'te, who : ummoned him there for consultation, presumably In con nection with the Japanese question. Tragedy In .liuksonville. Jacksonville, Fla. (Special). John N. Benjamin was shot and killed here by Charles Church. Church had been drinking, nnd while quarreling with his wife drew bis revolver and at tempted to shoot her. She screamed for help. Henjamln, who had a room in t iie same apartment house, rushed to her assistance. As he entered the door Church Bred four times n rapid succession, each bullet lodging In Benjamin's body The wounded man was carried to the hospital, but died shortly after reaching I here. Women Demand franchise. Memphis, Tenn. (Special). About twelvo women sul.'raglsts. represent ing organizations In a many South ern States, formed an organization to be known as the Southern Wom en Siifftaglsts. Miss Laura Clay, ol ""ntucky, was elected president and Mrs. Nance Curtis, of Texas, per manent secretary. It whs decided to adopt resolutions demanding that women tie allowed to vote In ali elec tions. It is claimed that the grant ing of the right of suffrage to wom en will go far toward alleviating the :ace feeling In the South. t racks Fire from a defective fine totally destroyed the residence of David Grtihc. near Lexington. Lancaster County. I-'rozen pumps prevented the use of the water supply. The loss Is $2,000. Qaorge w. Wfhehold has been again r -elected president, of the Laurel Kite Company of York. The vice preait'ent! are: M. S. Gotwalt and Throd ire R. Helb: secretary, 8. P, W'eli-i". treasurer. Otto Geucke; foreman, t'nrge 8. Cro'.l; chief en gineer. Joseph rt. Hlrsh: clerk, W. T. Mauri; aslstant engineers, Sam uel Smith. Joseph F. Lelh and An drew Bellati; chief fireman, Chnrle E Noiberk; assistant fireman, Wil liam Wagner andJoha P. Amig: chief plpeman Ivan K. Walllck; assistant plpemen, Penree Spnngler. AlexanJct ClOUdsey, Charles Land" William llison. Leper Gemnilll. John Ware ind William J. Gardner: chief hose director, Harry Messersniith. Hereafter Darby will have llltle leniency for corner loungers. Squire Simpson has Usued an edict against them and from now on they will Slther leave town, go to work, or go to jail. Preparations are nearly completed by the members of the Sharon Hill Methodist Episcopal Church for the celebration of their twenty-fifth an niversary, which will take place dur ing the week of January 20 to 27 Many prominent speakers will be present. The members of the Ladles Aid purchased new china and sliver ware, which will be used then fot (he first time. Remarking that what was proba bly her last Christmas was one ol the happiest of her long life. Mrs Catharine Helnkey, SI years old: went to bed early Wednesday morn Ing carrying a candle. The flam EOmmUttlcated to her clothing wher he leached her room and before helf arrived she yvas burned from hear' to foot. 8he died a few hours latet n a hospital. Mrs. Manna Stlllyvagoner, wht Ives near Wrightsvllle. is Ml year? )ld. The aged lady has knit I nnm aer of presents, such as scarfs, glove? ind other useful apparel, for a nutn tier of her desceudants and friend is Christmas presents. Her sight is nuch better than that of other per- j ons at SO years, It is said Hint she has never been 111 a day of her life, j She Is a great walker and has spent much time In taking long walks i She wa born in Chester County. The Increase of wages in what Is ; known a the Pittsburg district Is ! stlmatod at over 16,000,000 during . 1907. Almost every class of labor I is afferted, especially iron and steel ! workers and railroad men. Some , of these have already received ad vances, while others expect them abottt the first of the year. "Tho ; year 1907 will be the most prosper out In the history of the steel busi- j ness and In fact all lines of busi DMI," said Wilis L. Klr.g. vlce-prcsl-dent and general manager of the 1 Jones & I, an:, hlin Company. The j Jones & Laughlin Company 1 the I largest Independent steel corporation In the United 8tates and the opinion i of Mr. King Is significant. "Great as has been the business prosperity ! of the steel industry this year, It ' will be even greater next," he contin ued. "This is due to the general prosperity nnd great growth of the country. The greatest prosperity has 1 not yet. been reached." Higher Wages, more work and an increase of prosperity are predicted with the utmost confidence by the officials of ' all the large Industrial and railroad corporations In the Pittsburg district. Many corporations have already an nounced Increase In wages, some of j hlcb were instituted during the present month and others are to take ! effect on the first of January. Other I corporations are to follow although they have not yet mado official an- 1 louncemcnt. An old love letter from a Chum- tiersburg girl which he left behind him when he left Altoona suddenly I a week ago. resulted In the arrest of i Lloyd Shatzer, an alleged boarding ' house thief. Shatzer got board on 1 ih. East Side. He stole $8.4S from M. Thui-Bton and $4. 7a and a gold ! who 1 s full blood Indian. Father Negahnquet was born on the Pottawatomie Reservation near St. Mary's, this State, In 3 877. Boon afterward he was brought to Topeka by his parents, and In the Church of the Assumption here be was baptized. He was the youngest of a family of ten children. His parent nd members of the family removed to Pottawatomie County. Oklahoma, where there are now many members of that tribe. In the southern part of that county the Catholics In an early day estab lished a great rommunlty a monas tery, school and the like. The mis sionaries of that church naturally esme and worked among the Indians near by. Father Negahnquet, as a boy, was sent to the school. He wa an interesting child, readily tracta ble, and ho applied himself to his studies. Mother Katherlne Drexel, daughter of the millionaire Drexel, of Philadelphia, on the occasion of one of her periodical visits, took notice of this particular little Indian boy. She never forgot him, and when he became old enough she sent him to the large Indian school at Carlisle, Pa. Later he was transferred io the Catholic College at Washington, D. C, with the purpose in view of edu cating him for the priesthood. He was the honor man at Wash ington, and from the he went to Rome. He Btudled philosophy and theology there In the Propaganda College, being one year in the Col lege of the Pope. Before the depar ture from Rome of priests of this class It Is customary for each in his mother tongue to glvo an address. It must have been strange when the young American Indian priest came forward and In the tongue of bis fathers, the warlike Pottawatomles, spoke. Then Father Negahnquet sailed away to Oklahoma Territory, and for a few weeks was the guest of his parents In their rude home. Soon afterward he sang the first mass giv en by a full blood Indian priest on American soil, in the big Catholic Church at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Hi consecration was by Bishop The ophlle Meerschaert, of Guthrie. Okla homa. The Bishop spoke proudly of the honor of consecrating the first Indian priest and pf having him in that diocese. Since coming back to America, three years ago, Father Negahnquet haB labored faithfully among his peo ple, and those efforts have been well rewarded. Topeka Capital. Diplomatic Silence. The recently published "Addresses of Frederic R. Coudert" contains a story of Benjamin Franklin that is probably new to most American read ers. It was first related by Mons. Gabriel Hanotaux. formerly Minister of Foreign Affairs of France, at a Fourth of July banquet held by the American Chamber of Commerce at Paris. When Franklin arrived in France he was somewhat astonished at the luxury, noUe aud bustle of the court of Versailles. The courtiers, who are by nature effervescent and vola tile, made much ado over him. He was himself inclined to be taciturn. The Society Ot Friends, to which he belonged, had, as you know, estab lished a rule of silence. Vergennes, the French Minister of Foreign Af fairs, also was of a reserved, circum spect, uncommunicative nature. The Introducer, having presented Franklin, withdrew. The two states men, left alone, bowed to each other. Vergennes, with a gesture, invited Franklin to be seated, and then waited. Franklin, however, said not a word. Probably he wished to put his companion's gravity to the test the French had t.lway been pictured to him as so loquactotiB. The French minister fwit th.n h ilng from William Gearhart, fellow was on the verge of overstepping the . , . It (a . ...... i ....I I . .. - - .' , R ,i u . ' ,UJ' , rules of courtesy and hospitality, setting to take an old coat, in the i Ho ,wof,. ,i, v.- v. and Invited Franklin to take a pinch 1 of snuff. I Franklin complied, reflected pocket of which was found a love letter, written at Chambersburg. After a brief suspension the "Mln er's Dally Journal" resumed publica tion at Pottsvllle under the old man agement. The "Journal," whose his tory dates back to 1825, caused the greatest astonishment by Its suspen sion a few days ago. Tne dlfflcultiee of tile management Is the result of an instant, and took his snuff In silence. Vergennes, on bis part, did the same, and then the compliment was re turned. After a brief flash of silence Franklin rose; so did Vergennes, wncrcupon, after a farewell obel- I'cctill; idltion ol the times, sauce, they parted. This was thoen- ioi m;'. .1,1 ii whs rusnea wun pa tronage, the high prices of materia) made the publication unprofitable. Falling from the steps of a horns ffhere be had meen visiting, Harry 0. Sbaner broke his neck nnd died tire sum and substance of their first Interview, which, happily, was to be followed by others of a more fruitful character. Kleptomania. Kleptomania is occasionally In duced by continued and close appli cation to the study of a particular subject. A singular case wan recent ly reported from Germany. A well-known professor waa found to have transferred to his own pri vate collection many of the valuable butterflies of which lie had ch his official capacity. The existence of mental ment, says the Boston Tra was clear fisjm the facts th ater John Jenkins. aioi r,:t, of Union wut 111 th! course of the investigation n a few minutes. Shaner was re garded as the heaviest man In Potts own. He weighed about 250 pounds. Some years ago he wai tenter on the Pottslown football earn nnd was one of the organize if the Pottstown Athletic Association (e was 26 years of age. George W. Ammerman, aged 25 earB, a laborer, was killed on tbc 'ensylvanla Railroad at Union Furn ice, by a train, while his family vas waiting the Christmas dinnei or him at Pemberton. Half an bout j 'lirnare, wai cut to pieces at Bane 'our miles away, and was Identified y a letter in his pocket. Becoming wearied of his duties as me of tho three borough policemen if Darby, Dennlc Quinu, who Iish ieen a policeman for several years, ins resigned. Crazed by religious zeal, Mrs. Prank Schoenberg, a "Christian Holl ies" street evangelist, attacked her husband with a butcher knife ut Iceland, Inflicting an ugly wound n his face. When arranged before he burgess he quoted passages from he Scriptures to show that her hus nind was unworthy of her. A phy tlclan, ha declared tho woman In itio and she will bo commltt.d t,j I retreat. For many years Mrs. Ichoanberi took an active Interest n religious work aud was the leader if a band which held forth on the Itieet corners exhorting the populace o come and be -saved. large in derange- nscrlpt. at came afterward made In the museum au thorities. .., It wa found that the professor had often sent his wife out all day to catch butterflies, so intense was his passion for these lusects. On one oc casion the professor, while bunting a butterfly, was nesrly run over by an express train; at another time he fell into a river, and once both he nnd his wife foil Into a pond. Diuiuoiids in n k. disks. It Is reported thau diamonds ot fine quality have been discovered in Plko County, Ark., about fifteen mile fiom Nashville, aud that there will be a thorough prospecting ot the field, wblch was described years ago as containing old lava, pumice and other evidences of volcanic no ttlon similar to conditions in th Bouth African diamond fields.- South' i ii Farm Magazine.