THEFT OF A MULE PROVOKED THE WAR Fanny Beginning of Central Ameri can Fuss. NATIONS BECAME VERY MULISH. Honduras and Nicaragua Having Be come Imbued With the Distinguish ing Trait of the Stolen Animal, Concluded to Fight It Out A Ques tion of Citizenship. Washington (Special) - One mule mule belonging to Senor Ireneo Balgado was tho chief object in dispute between Nicaragua nml Hon duras when they began the quarrel which finally ended In the war thai la threatening the pence of all Cen tral America, according to official communications exchanged by the minister!) of foreign affairs for the two republics, copies of which hnve been received In Washington The controversy began when Senor Augusto C. Coello, the Honduran minister of foreign affairs, wrote n note to Scnor Jose I), ifcimcz. the Ni caraguan minister for foreign affairs, on January 26. protesting against the theft of ti mule from Ireneo Sal gado by 35 Nlcaragunn cavalrymen who were charged with entering Hon duran territory. In reply, Senor (lamer said the Nlcaragnnns did not quite enter Hon duras, although they passed near to the little town of l.oa Manns. In chat republic. The taking of the mule was not denied, but Senor Gamez Insisted In his tetter that Salgado was not a Honduran citizen, but a Nlcaragunn who had to leave that country because of the part he played ill a revolution two years before. Consequently Nicaragua maintained that Hondurns had no right to fly to the defense of Salgado's mule. This note brought a spirited re ply from Honduras, the minister for foreign affairs, announcing that Ire neo Salgado, tho Nlcaraguan refu gee, was living In Tegucigalpa, hap pily engaged In trade there, while a man by the same name, a reputa ble and respected farmer, a Hondu ran of unquestioned citizenship, lived at Los Manos and owned the much mooted mule. Nicaragua replied that It was true jthat Col. Juan I. Uocha, who com manded a part of the cavalrymen, took a mule near Los Manos, but reiterated thet the animal was not taken In Honduran territory. Dis patches grew longer as the eontro Tersy waxed warmer. Other ques tions arose. Then the arbitration tribunal was opened and finally the break came when President Zelaya, of Nicaragua, withdrew his member of the board of arbitration and war between Honduras and Nicaragua actually began. Revolution In Venezuela. Wlllemstnd, Curacao (By Cable). A dispatch received here from Cu cuta, Columbia, announces that a powerful revolution has started in the State of Tachira. Venezueln. with Gen. Juan Pablo Penalosa as Its leader. IMPHISOM-.n on ROCK a Harrowing experience Of A New Yorker On Island CUff. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special). Im prisoned for two days and two nights on a narrow ledge of crumbling rock on Catallna Islund and unable to communicate his danger to boating parties almost within sound at hie voice, E. L. Sand, a tourist from Ardsley-on-lhe-Hudson, N. Y., was rescued by fishermen. Descending a steep cliff to bathe at the mouth of ah unfrequented can yon, Sand found hlmEelf unable to retrace his steps because of the crumbling character of the rocky cliff. During the daylight, boating par tie were almost constantly in Bight, but his predicament was not observ ed and he remained unrescued. He almost collapsed after his rescue. shot II is FRIEND, Doable Tragedy ItesiiltH From Slight Provocation. Birmingham, Ala. (Special). Ai the result of a shooting affray at Wylam, near this city, J. B. Brown la dying and W. M. Stlnaon, of Ens ley, is critically wounded. Drown ahot Stinson. but it is not known whether Brown's wounds ware in flicted by himself or by Stinson. Stlnaon and K. R Brltton, of Greensboro, Ala., who had been at Brown's house, are said to 'have he come offended at a request of Mrs. Brown, and went awas . I.ntei they decided to return and apologize. Brltton started to leave when he heard shooting In the kitchen, flrown bad evidently shot B tin ton and then tried to kill himself. Stinson and Brown had been friends for years. Another Nuva! Dlsuster. Paris (By Cah'.e ) . Tire French torpedo-boat No. 263 and the de atroyer Epe. while maneuvering with out lights near AJaccio. ran into each other. Two men were killed and one was fatally Injured The torpedo bout was beached. The Epe was able to re-enter the harbor. Glaiw Plant llunkd. New Martinsville, W. Va. (Special). The plant of the New Martinsville Glass Company and several adjoin ing buildings were destroyed by fir-, the loss being place at $125,000. On account of the flood the firemen were handicapped und for several honrH a large section of the city was threat -ii! Dynamite was used to prevent the blaze from communicating to the adjacent property. The cause of tho lire Is unknown, but it Is believed unslacked lime In the glass works absorbed water ar,d developed heat. Business Hertioii In Ruins. Birmingham, Ala. (Special I , The entire business section of SmltufMd. a part of BlOCtoH, Ala., was destroy ed by Are tonight, entailing a loss estimated at $100,000. In addition to the business homes Inn-neb, It residences were consumed. The fire etarted about 7. 30 o'clock In a negro restaurant and spreud rapidly, in cluded In the list of burned build ings were the city dispensary, a num fcwr of general merchandise stores two meat markets aud two restaurants. THE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Domestic The traffic managers of Western lines met In Chicago and considered the safety question of lengthening tho time of express trains, so as to decrense the number of accidents. After three days uf argumeut, the government wen Its light over the routing of oil In its suit against the Standard OB en charges of rebating In the State of Ohio. The Oliver Iron and Steel Works and 25 business bouses and dwelling! were destroyed by fire in Pittsburg. No clue hae been found to the $173,000 mlsalug from the Chicago Subtreasury. Floods have caused considerable damage In Western Pennsylvania. West Virginia and Eastern Ohio. The lower portions of Pittsburg and Wheeling are flooded. Twenty or more fatalities have resulted. Sixty dwellings In Majorsvllle, W. Va , were .-wept away. The Jury which heard the charges of rebating between the Delaware, Lackawanna nnd Western Kallroad and the Sugar Trust were unable to agree and were discharged. Edward Johnson, a llfesaveY, wns drowned In rescuiim part of the crew of the British tramp steamer Gowan burn. ashore off Long Island. John Alexander Dowle, rn a white robe, was conveyed to his grave In a white heurse drawn by white horses. James March, nged 100 years, the oldest citizen of Lebanon, Pa., is dead. Rachel Fisher, 2S years of age. was seriously Injured in the crowd of people who thronged around the bier of John Alexander Dowle, at Zion City, in the hope of being cured of their aliments by touching the hem of Dowle's shroud. State Highway Engineer W. W. Crosby, of Maryland, addressed the j American Roadmnkers' Convention in session in I'm -murg on me suujeci, "Ulazlng the Way In Maryland." H. O. McDowell, president of the Farmers' Dank, of Canton. O., shot himself In the head at his home, dy ing instantly. He left no note or ex planation of his suicide. William J. Bryan says the railroads prefer regulation by Congress to con trol by the state, as Congress Is far ther from the people than the legis latures. Miss Gertrude Harnlsh, aged 20, a stenographer, committed suicide by Jumping from the thirteenth story of an office building In Cincinnati. Speaker Cannon, In an address to the Porto Rlcans at San Juan, de clared It wns the universal desire of the people of the United States that the Porto Hlcans might demonstrate their capacity for self-government. Mrs. Eddy's second cousin and her adopted, son joined in the proceedings to have her declared Incompetent to manage her affairs. Shots were fired into the store Of Hargls Brothers, In which Jim Jett, a brother of Curtis Jett, the fuodlst was sleeping. Frank Rockfeller, brother of John D. Rockfeller, has sued to recover $265,000 invested in a lead mine. An investigation was begun into the charges of graft in the building of the Capitol in Harrlshurg. Pa. Admiral Beresford says the peo ple, and not potentates or parliament, declare war nowadays. Vice Prejtdent Fairbanks states the country will restrain dishonest com binations of capital. Twenty-two Greeks were drowned by the capsizing of a boat In the Sacramento River. A move Is on foot in New York I to abolish the death penalty. roreign. The celling of the old hall In the i Tanrldu Palace, St. Petersburg, In which the lower house of parliament meets,, collapsed. While there were rumors of a plot. It appears to have been purely an accident. Captain Rodie, of the Austrian Hungarian army, declares that Japan la feverishly rushing work on her military and naval establishments. The body of M. Petkoff, the pre mier of Servla, who was assassinated In Sofia, Bulgaria, March 11, was bu-led In the public cemetery. Vhe British armored cruiser Duke of Edinburgh grounded In the har bor of Dover, but was gotten oft without damage. The Dutch troops captured an im portant rebel stronghold on the Is land of Celebes. Dutch East Indies. Edouard Toudouze, famous as a painter of mythological subjects and landscapes, died in Paris. The Sultan of Turkey received the American ambnsaudor, Mr. Lelshman, in private audience. The semiofficial Temps newspaper of Paris says that It the question of limitation of armaments is discussed at the coming peace conference In ternational relations will become worse '.han before. In a conflict between police and strikers in Belgrade, Servla, five strikers were killed and 20 wounded. Lord Curzon, ex-vlceroy of India, was elected chancellor of Oxford University, defeating Lord Rosebery. The Grand Duke Michael, brother of the Czar, haH given $100,000 for the relief of famine sufferers. The Honduran revolutionists de feated President Emillo's forces, ac cording to Nlcaraguan reports. Itohbers hourid and decapitated the proprietor, hve laborers and u woman of a Russian estate. Mrs. 8. N. Castle, an early mis sionary in the Hawaiian Islands, Is dead at the age of 90. An Inventory of the late Shah's Jewels puts their value at $50,000, 000. In a disastrous train wreck Dr. Adam Jamleson, ex-minister of publlr lands, and 1 1 others, all ef tbcm prominent South Africans, were kill ed and 11 others Injured In a wreck on the DelagoaLlne. Five executions dally are said to have occurred In Russia as tho result of drumhead courts martial. Lord Beaucliamp Nevlll was ar rested In lndon on the charge of se curing diamonds by a trick. A decisive engagement between the Honduran and Nlcaraguan forces is said to be imminent. Fifteen hundred longshoremen have takdn the places of the strikers at Hamburg. Two thousand peasants were made homeless by a lire at, Borsano, Italy. The minors of the Charleroi ( Bel gium) district In a referendum vote decided to adopt tae elgh-bour work day. The Woman's Enfranchisement Bill was practically killed in the British House of Commons for the present session. TJie gallery of the House was crowded with women. A peti tion signed by 21,000 women protest ing against suffrage to their sex was presented. THEY WILL NOT GO TO THE WHITE HOOSE The Railroad Presidents Have So Decided. MANAGERS NOT IN PERFECT ACCORD. McCrea, Mellen, Hughitt and Newman, It Is Said, Do Not Feel They Could As sume thePosition of a Self . const it ii I cd Commission to Present fhe Views of Hundreds of Railroad Companies. RAILROADS AND MARKET. While hundreds of brokers were cheering at the close of the trading on the New York Ex change over the end of the panic, i the four railroad presidents whom ' Mr. Morgan had asked President 1 Roosevelt to meet were in con- Terence In New York. They finally decided not to go j to Washington, for the reason thai ail the railroad manager! In I the country are not in perfect ac cord and they could not secure B consensus of opinion on what to suggest to the President. The result of the rally In the market shows that the 20 lending railroad stocks which so sharply declined Wednesday and Thurs day made a net gain of $6.30 a share, nlmost half the total loss of the two preceding days. Thomas F. Ryan helped to save the situation. He is said to have bought $4,000,000 worth of se curities when at the lowest level. The endurance displayed by the New York brokerage houses during the panic is said to have been unprecedented. E. H. Harriman denied rumors thnt control of Union Pacific had passed from him during the vio lent slump. New York ( Special) .Messrs. Mc Crea, Mellen, Hughitt and Newman, the four railroad presidents for whose visit to the White House J. Plerpont Morgan arranged before his departure for Europe, held a confer ence at the Grand Central Station In this city. The whole situation was canvassed with great care, and It was finally decided not to go to Washington. It Is understood that, the reason for this conclusion was that the four gentlemen Involved did not feel that they had any proper mandate from the railroad corporations to repre sent them. They felt that they could not assume the position of a self constituted commission to formulate or present the views of the hun dreds of railroad companies, which In turn are owned by millions of shareholders. They recognized that the railroad managers of the United StateB aro not themselves In perfect accord, and that until some method could be adopted for securltTg a con sensus of opinion a visit to the Presi dent would be Idle. At the conclu sion of the conference the various presidents left for their homes. From another source It was learned that the presidents were utterly un able to agree on a statement as to what position should be taken. It was held by at least one of them that as no invitation to the White House had been given to them by President Roosevelt and that he had said mere ly that !'.,- would see them If they came, they would be put In the posi tion of suppliants asking the Presi dent to modify the attitude of the federal government toward the rall roudB. I'pon the other hand, If they Went to Washington at the Invita tion of the President they would be on equal ground with him and could discuss the railroad situation without embarrassment. Thomas F. Ryan, when asked his opinion about the meeting arranged by Mr. Morgan between the Presi dent ami the heuJs of the great rail roads of the country, said: "I believe that if Mr. Morgan's visit to the President Is followed up. as It should he, by all of our great business Interests, It will do much good. "I also believe that the President's attitude toward corporations Is much misunderstood by the general public. It Is unfair to assume that It is his desire to hamper the business .Inter ests of the country. I am. however, convinced that he purposes to enforce the laws as he flnds them upon the statute book, and I think the sooner the business Interests of the country conclude to up to work to aid the President In solving the difficult prob lems that confront him evejy day. the sooner confidence will be restored and the business of the country move on without interruption. So far as general business Is concerned, the only fault to be found with It Is that It Is too active." MADE ROOSEVKI,T LAUGH. Explanation Of Sudden Thunder-clap By .Man In Street ( nr. Washington (Special). Represen tative Gardner, of Massachusetts, told President Roosevelt a story. "I was coming down town in a street car," said Mr. Gardner, "when .everyone In the coach was startled by a clap of thunder. The man next to me pointed over in the direction of the White House and exclaimed: 'President Roosevelt must have shot another railroad president.' " When the President heard the story he fairly roared Vlth laughter. Entire Train Demolished, Meadvllle, Pa. (Special). The second section of freight train No. 75, on the Erie Railroad, was ditched six miles east of this place, and En gineer R. u. Logan and a brakeinan were kllbtd Several other trainmen were seriously injured. The train was composed of two engines aud 21 freight cars. It was running at a fast rate of speed, when the cross beam on the forward engine dropped to tho track, derailing the train. The entire train was demollthed. Houses Flouted Away. Steuben vllle, O. (Special).- Six to ten members of two foreign families are roported to the officials at Mingo Junction to have been drowned in the flood. The houses floated away with their occupants. Every house In the east side of Mingo Junction Is sub merged, and i. people there are homeless. Flood sufferers ate belna sheltered and fed in the mayor's of fice, lodgerooms and schoolhouaas. At Empire every house but three Is submerged und 500 people are homeless. DISASTER IN FRENCH NAVY One of Franca' s , Finest flsttlcshlps Rlnwn Up. Toulon (By Cable). A terrible disaster occurred here. The powder magazines on hoard the .French bat tleship lena blew up at l.Jfi, nnd as a result Captain Adlgard, the com mander of the battleship; Captain Vertler, chief of staff of the Medi terranean Squadron, nnd from 70 to so bluejackets are dead, while Rear Admiral Mnnceron nnd hundreds of other men are suffering from In juries, some of them horrible In their extent. Naval circles are aghast and the puhllo Is stunned, by the appalling catastrophe, coming so soon after the loss of the French submarine boat LattB, in which 16 men met death. The entire after part of the lena was blown to pieces. The bodies of the victims were hurled through the air by a succession of explosions, and the panic-stricken workmen at the arsenal Bed fsom the vicinity of the drydock for their lives. Scores of the men who were on hoard the lena jumped either overboard or onto the stone quays, nnd suMalned serious In juries. Torpedo Starts It. The primary cause of the accident, wns the explosion of a torpedo. What caused the explosion is not known, but the powder magazines of the lena were set on fire, nnd their con tents. In exploding, practically de stroyed what was considered one of the finest vessels In the French Navy. The lena had Just undergone a final inspection of her hull and ma chinery, the latter having been com pletely overhauled preparatory to joining the squadron. The crew was in Its fnll strength, being composed of the rear admiral 24 others officers and CIO men. The magazines had been replenished re cently, and contacted many tons of both smokeless and black powder, as well as a number of charges for torpedoes. The crew had finished their mid day meal only a short time before the explosoln and had dispersed to various parts of the vessel. Most of the men were engaged In work con nected with the approaching depar tare of the warsh,p, but quite a large party had been detailed to attend a j lecture that was being given forward, j Punic Follows Explosion. The explosion came without warn- i ing. The first shock was extremely Violent and shook the vessel fore and t aft. It was followed Instantly by other shocks. Tho crew were thrown Into a condition of panic. They rushed wildly hither and thither about the deck. The men forward who had been attending the lecture clambered over tho bulwarks and Jumped down, some of them Into the dock and others to the stone quay. Many of the men who Jumped sus tained fatal injuries. JAPANESE LABORERS ARE EXCLUDED Executive Order Issued By The President. THE BARGAIN IS CARRIED OUT. AT THE MOTS CAPITAL Some Interesting Happenings Briefly Told. Coal operators and miners from Southern Indiana nnd Illinois pro tested before the Interstate Com merce Commission against the raise in rates declared by certain Western railroads. A formal protest will be made. The President appointed Seth Low, of New York, and Thomas G. Busch, of Alabama, members of the Admin istrative Hoard for the Promotion of Industrial Peace, thus completing that body. A rumor has been circulated to the effect that men employed at the Government Printing Office may de clare a strike because of the alleged supplanting of skilled workmen with apprentices. Secretary Garfield Issued an order Intended to expedite to the utmost the Issuance of patents to 30,000 cn trymen whose applications have ac cumulated In the General Land Of fice. John Mitchell, president ofthe Mlneworkers' I'nlon, and a dozen coal operators complained to the Presi dent against the Western railroads that have announced a raise on coal. Shipping commissioners' offices on the Atlantic sealoard are to be ex amined by a committee designated by Secretary Straus, of the Depart ment of Commerce and Labor. The apportionment of 600 addi tional postofflce clerks at $000 per annum was announced at the Post office Department. Secretary of the Treasury Cortel you has Instructed collector of cus toms at places where It Is thought desirable to deposit their recelpt3 in national banks with a view of relieving the financial situation. Senator Warren, chairman of the committee that is Investigating the Brownsville affair, received a letter from Senator Culberson contradict ing testimony given by Capt. Ktl burn, of the Twenty-sixth Infantry. Official denial was given to the report that the President had re quested the governors of states In which railroad legislation Is pend ing to come to Washington to con fer with him. Secretary Taft refused the applica tion of the Chicago Sanitary Hoard for a permit to divert the waters of Lake Michigan Into the drain age canul through the Calumet River. The constitutionality of the Em ployers' Liability Act has been sus tained by Judge Trleber, of the United States District Court of the Eastern District of Arkansas. The Navy Department rocelved word that the gunboat Princeton left Acapluco, Mexico, for Corlnto, Nica ragua. Rowland Osborne, poBt quarter master sergeant, testified In the Brownsville investigation that when the white soldiers were transferred to make way for negro troops tbey left behind much ammunition lying loose In storehouses and barracks. Secretary Taft's proposed visit to the Philippines In September to at tend the opening of the first Philip pine Assembly has directed special uttentlon inward the new legislative body to he created for the Islands. The President gave his hearty In dorsement to a federated movement locking to the revival of religious sentiment umong the working classes of New York. Former Senator Blackburn, who Is to be a member of the Isthmus Canal Commission, will probably assume his new duties April 1 next, taking sta tion on the isthmus. Settlement of the Fastern Question in California Accomplished Japanese Who Expect to Fitter Through Mexi co, Canada or Hawaii Will Not He Allowed to Come In. Wnsshlngton. D. 0. (Special). President Roosevelt. Issued an exe cutive order directing thnt Japanese or Korean laborers, skilled and un skilled, who have received passports to go to Mexico, Canada or Hawaii and to come therefrom, be refused to enter the continental territory of the Uhtted Stall's. This is practlrnl !' the final chapter, except so far as the question may be taken up In treaty negotiations with Japan. In the Issue growing out of the differ ences with thnt country over the ac tion of the San Francisco authorities In prohibiting Japanese school chil dren attending the schools set aside for the whites. Authority to refuse permission to the classes of persons cited by the President to enter tho continental territory of the United Ctnte.i Is con tained In the Immigration RID. ap proved February 20. It was Incor porated In that measure at the re quest of the President and In ful filment of a promise be made to Mayor Schmltz nnd the school hoard of San Francisco during their nego tiations at the White House, If the San Francisco authorities would re scind their action on the school ques tion. The promiBe of the President nnd that of Mayor Srhmitz and his as sociates brought to a close the con troversy over the school question, which had given the Washington au thorities considerable concern. The President's order In full Is as fol lows: "Whereas. By the act entitled 'An Act to Regulate the Immigration of Aliens Into the United States,' ap proved February 20, 1907. when ever the President Is satisfied that passports Issued by any foreign gov ernment to Its citizens to go to any country other t.hau the United States or to any Insular possession of the United StateB or to the Canal Zone, are being used for tho purpose of enabling the holders to come to the continental territory of the United States to the detriment of labor con ditions therein, It Is made the duty of the President to refuse to permit such citizens of the country Issuing such passports to enter the continen tal territory of the United States from such country or from such in sular possessions or from tho Cannl Zone. "And, whereas. Upon sufficient evidence produced before me by the Department of Commerre and Labor, I am satisfied "at passports Issued by the government of Japan to citi zens of that country or Korea, and who are laborers skilled or unskill ed, to go to Mexico, Cannda nnd to Hawaii, are being used for the pur pose of enabling the holders there of to come to the continental terri tory of the United States to the detriment of labor conditions there in: "I hereby order that such citizens of Japan or Korea, to wit: Japanese or Korean laborers, skilled and un skilled, who have received passports to go to Mexico, Canada or Hawaii, and come therefrom, lie refused per mission to enter the continental ter ritory of the United States. "It Is further ordered that Sec retary of Commerce and Labor be, and he hereby is, directed to take through the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization such measure and to make and enforce such rules and regulations as may he necessary to carry this order Into effect. (Signed) "Theodore Roosevelt. "The White House, Washington, Match 14, 1907." Coincident with this order the President has directed dismissal of the two suits filed in San Francisco at the direction of the Department of Justice which had In view the testing of tlie question of tho treaty rights of Japanese children to enter the white schools. This step the Presi dent had promised to take when the school board rescinded Its original action barring Japanese children from the white schools. WASHED THE BRIDGE AWAY Three of Freight Crew Lost In Flooded River. Pittsburg, Pn. (Special). Three men drowned, a railroad bridge washed away, a county bridge In dan ger of following the railroad bridge Into the Allegheny River, and an en gine and five freight cars In the itjater are the first results of the rapid rise during the night of Deer Creek, near Harmarsville, Pa., on the West Pennsylvania Railroad. About 4.50 o'clock A. M., a freight train, enstbound, entered on the bridge, but got no further than the second pier when It suddenly gave way. Before the engineer, fireman or a brakeman on the front part of the train could realize what had hap pened the bridge went down, carry ing the engine, trainmen and five freight cars with It. So rapidly had the Deer Creek ris en during the night, that It had at tained a height of 16 feet instead of tho normal, from 4 to 0 feet. So great, too. was the force of the cur rent thai one of the five freight cars, b avily loaded, was carried down the creek a distance of over a quarter of a mile before Its progress was stayed. The engineer, fireman and brakeman had no opportunity of escaping, but wore Immediately dragged into the current, and drowned. Traffic on the railroad has been disorganized by the collapsing of the bridge, Hut the official-, expect to linvo a temporary structure erected In a few hours. Creeks Ilnging Torrents. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special) Dispatch es from all sections of Western Penn sylvania report heavy rains and rap Idly rising waters. At many places the downpour resembled a cloud burst, and the streams are already beyond their banks. . Much territory Is submerged, nnd fears arc enter tained of dangerous floods. In the Connellsvllle region the strenms rose at an alarming rate. Dttnbnr was Inundated, and several buildings have been washed away from their fundatlons. Numerous hrldges are treatened. In Allegheny County Cha'-tlers Creek. Rohlnson Run. Pine Creek. Deer Creek. Turtle Creek and Glrtys Run are raging tor rents. The towns of Oakdnle, In-, gram, Carnegie, Wllmerding, Sharps- i burg nnd Turtle Creek borough arc- already partly under water. At the latter place the rise camo so qulckl thnt many persons were rescued from their houses In skiffs. Jamestown stamps. Washington (Special). The Post master General decided to add a five cent stamp to the ones and twos al ready determined upon to constitute the commemorative series for the Jamestown Tercentennial Exposition. The five cent stamp will bear a like negs of the head of Pocahontas, print ed In blue. Eight million stamps arc to be isseed of this denomination, tc supply the demand for foreign post age. The head of Captain John Smith, In green. Is to decorate the one cent stamp, of which 10,000,000 are being printed. Ditched By Spreading Rails. Springfield, O., (Special). The C. II. D. eastbound passenger train, which was being detoured over the Pennsylvania- Road, was ditched at 12.15 P. M., three miles east of Jamestown by the spreading of the rails. Melvln E. Clancy, engineer, and Clark Griffin, fireman, were kill ed and several passengers Injuied. The train consisted of two das coaches and n baggage car. Dismissed For Hrtfg Mexico, Mo., (Special). Twenty three cadets of the Missouri Military Academy, many of them members of prominent families, were expelled from the academy for hazing Cadet Czane, of Peoria, III. Czane, 16 years old, was seized by his fellow-students and thrown Into the Icy waters of a luke. He narrowly escaped drowning. Will Not Take Train Off. New York (Special). The New York Central Railroad Company It not going to take oft" Its 1 S-hout trains between here and Chicago un less the public refuses to buy ticket for them. Vice President C. F. Daly, of the railroad, made tho above de claration when asked about the pe tition from Chicago men addressee to the New York Central and Penn sylvania presidents, requesting them on the ground of safety, to make th time of the fast trains 20 instead o' 18 hours during the winter nth:! New Canal Commission. Washington (Special. After th reorganization of the Isthmian Cana Commission, with Colonel Goethalt as chairman, It Is probable that al seven of the cannl commissioners wll live on the Isthmus and the com mission will become more of an ad ministratlve body than It was undei Chairman Shonts. Under Mr. Shonti the commissioners were advisory of flclals rather than executive officials They were consulted on' englneerlnp problems, and In some case.; on ad ministratlve policy. limning Building Blew Up. Pittsburg (Special). The four story building on Second Avenue oc cupied by the Pennsylvania Door ttnd Sash Company and the Penn sylvania Paint aand Glass Company, allied concern, was destroyed by fire. Shortly after the Are was discovered there was a loud explosion In the cellar of the building aifd tho rear part of the front and one side wall collapsed. Beveral firemen who were working In the front of the building had narrow escapes. Japanese Admitted. San Francisco (Special). Nine little Japanese girls who had applied tor admission to the Redding Prim ary School were admitted after an ... ii. inatlon us to their knowledge of the English language. iQ ac cordance wilh instructions from Washlugton. t'nltod States Attorney Devlin had a formal order of dis missal of tho Japanese cases enter ed In the federal court. Similar action was taken In the state Su preme Court. Easy On Captain Stogsdall. Omaha, Neb. (Special). Gen. A W. Greely approved the findings ol the court martial which last week tried dipt. R. R. Stogsdall and Lieut A. L. Clark, of the Thirteenth In fantry. Captain Stogsdall, who plead ed guilty to drunkenness, was reprk maned. Lieutenant Hlack, whoso of (ansa was neglect, of duty while officer of the day, Is sentenced to be con fined tc the limits of the post for three months npd fined $100. Gen eral Greely lectured the court on Its leniency toward Captain Stog3dnll. IN TIIK FINANCIAL WORLD. London sold 45,000 shnros of American stocks. U was suld thut much of tho selling was for Ameri can brokers. Asked whnt he thought was the matter with Rending, Wlnthrop Smith replied: "Reading Is virtual ly cornered." In Redmond & Co.'s security list are three of the. new short-term notes which yield the Investor 6 per cent, or .better. American Tobacco's not earnings In 1906 were $26,40t;.()00, a gaitl of $1,194,000. Tho company now lius a surplus of $30,550,000. President Fred T. Chandler, of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, said: 'Many big men have been hurt In the recent severe decllue, und plenty or them who, a abort while ago, were firmly Intrenched on two logs and even Imagined they h-id half a dozen legs to walk on are cripples today, and are willing to trade on much smaller lines. This may tetard any rapid Improvement," Fanshawe, Cadwalader ft Co. have on hand a small lot of unsold 5 per cent, bonds on which tho net profits for the first six months of 190C amounted to over eleven tlmee the Interest charged. Stuyvosnni Fish's election HS K director of Could a Missouri Pacific Kullroud was given us one of the many reason for the slump in the market. It was construed to mean a stiff "wur" botweeu the Gould line to the Pacific aud Harrliuan'a roads. However, there was not much faltli put In ths excuse for the break In stock prices. STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. Latest News Gleaned From Various Parti While Patrick Maloney. n memner of the Willlamsport police force, was chasing a burglar from the Mosser tannery, at Newberry, at 5 o'clock the other evening, the man turned and fired, killing the officer with the first shot from the pistol. Tho man was evidently trying to gain entrance to tho tannery nnd the policeman became suspicious.. After chasing the man for a short distance and af ter coming close to the fugitive's heels Maloney was shot down, dying almost instantly. It Is believed that the man was one of the professional burglars that have been working In the city for several months. Tho murderer Is still at large. The towhoat Cruiser, one of the largest in the coal shipping trade on the Ohio River, struck the pier of tho dam near Sewlckley and sank In eight minutes. There were twenty-two men on the boat at tho time and they clambered to tho roof as the vessel went down. The rag ing flood In the river made the work of rescue dangerous, but n steamer went to the aid of the Imperiled men and twenty of them were taken off. It Is believed the two missing men were drowned. The Messchort-Esenhower will con test at Reading is to be tried by Jury In an unusual manner In order that the issues framed by Judge Bland, of the Orphans' Court, may be con sidered. Lee L. Esenhower, of this city. Is suing the estate of Col. M. H. Messrhert, the late millionaire, of Douglasville and member of the Philadelphia bar. for $100 wagered that the writings offered by him wero written by Col. Mcsschert and were part of his will. The case Is framed so ns to hold' the Mesgchert estate liable to this sum. Mr. Esenhower asserts that the executors agree to pay him $50 If the writings are found part of the will, while Mr. Esenhow er himself agrees to pay $50 If the writings are not found to have boon written by Mr. Messchert. The writ ings In question are letters promising; Esenhower $10,000 and Messchert's eBtatc In France. The two became arqualntnneeA through traveling dnlly to Philadelphia. The estate claims that the letters are forgeries. Jeremiah fettle, of Poe Valley, Is tho champion trapper In Center County. Since the cold weather set In last November he has trapped enough foxes, minks, wildcats nnd skunks to bring him an Incomo of more than $80 a month from tho sale of their pelts, and he still has a good stock on hand. Mr. Zettle Is a veritable backwoodsman of the most pronounced typo. Tall and angular, he stands over six feet In hlB stocking feet, nnd notwithstand ing the fact that he Is well up in years still retains the vigor of young manhood. He can scent the haunts of wild animals almost with the ac curacy of a trained hound. In speak ing of the variotiB animals Mr. Zettle said that wildcats were unusually plentiful and were one of the most destructive of any wild animal now frequenting these parts. The home of George Shupp, at Edison, Berks County, burned down while the family was attending a church entertainment. Within sight of his home, Mark Tarento, of South Bothlehem, aged 37 years, was struck by a passenger train and almost Instantly killed. A companion who was with him escap ed uninjured. Theodore F. Labauch's large saw mill in Lower Saucon was destroyed by Are of unknown origin together with its contents. The loss is $10, 000 partly covered by Insurance. Shamqjdn carpenters have decided to demand of contractors an eight hour work day and ten per cent, increase. Their present pay Is $2.54 dally and contractors feel they cannot grant sucft concessions. Franklin E. Eckman. of Lancaster, who fell a distance of twelve feet from a building a week ago, died from his Injuries. Deceased was fifty-seven years of age. Fire In the grocery store of L. G. Walker ft Son, In York destroyed about $1000 worth of property. The building In which the store is located is owned by J. J. Shellmeyer. The dwelling house of Mrs. J. Henry Burg, adjoining, wns considerably damaged by smoke and water. The model kindergarten at the Jamestown Exposition will be con ducted by a Pennsylvania young lady, a committee from the National Congress of Mothers having engaged Miss Sylvia Ziebach, of Pottsvllle, for the purpose. She is the princi pal of a highly successful school of that character at that place. Churged with starving a horse to death and with feedlug cattle In sufficiently, George T. Beecher, a North Mlddleton farmer, was com mitted to jail by Magistrate Hughes to await trial. A number of neigh bors testified to Beecher's lack of care of his cattle. John Rodgerson, aged 83 years, was struck by tho "Queen of the Valley," tho Central Railroad ot New Jersey's express, near Macun gle thrown fifty feet Into the Swab Ian Creek and lnstuutly killed. Tho man made his living by peddling among the farmers and lived a her mit's life. Michael McGlnley, of Rheems, stepped In front of a freight train at Rheems In an endeavor to evade a passing passenger train and was Instantly killed. Starting a fire In the stove In his father's workshop, Charles, the 4-year-old son of George Kershner, of Auburn, burned to death, nnd a 6-year-old brother was painfully burn ed. The building was all aflame before help camo and It was impos sible to save the younger lad. Word hus been received In York of the serlouB Illness of Horace Kees ey, the recent Democratic candidate for Congress from the Twentieth District, who is now at St. Augus tine, Florida, for the benefit of his health. He hao been stricken with an attack of pneumonia. A scheme Is on foot for creating a Japanese agricultural colony In the heart ol Alberta, sn s the China Tele graph. Well-to-do Japanese farmers are to be taken out, ... , ordlng to the project, and thoy will turn .heir attention to the raising of wheat and the cultivation of sugnr beets and anything else that will thrive In tho climate. Vice Consul R. M. Sladden, ot Mauaznlllo, reports ou the cultiva tion of the pocuote tree, which pro duces a fine flier known in Mexico as silk floss.