LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH IXIIM AND MINIMUM RATES Domestic The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad haB closed a $3u, 000,000 contract to electrify Its lines from Rochelle to One Hundred aim Twenty-ninth Street. New York; thence by tunnel under the East Klver to Atorla; then on to Long Island City, with another East River tunnel and subway to a huge pas senger stntlon, to be constructed at Fourth and Lexington Avenues and Thirty - second and Thirty -third Streets, New York. In a stirring speech to the dele gates of the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ In America the Rev. Charles Stelzle, of New York declared that the churches must look after the religious and moral wel fare of lmmlgran's in order to pre vent the onward march of socialism. Freed from Spindle Rock, at the wes'ern entrance of Buzzards nay, where she had been Impaled for 10 M.ba the rnlted States cruiser Yankee again Bank In six fathoms enr uh.it is known as the Sand Spl while being towed to port for ro- Formal notice of a contest before the Coneressional Committee on vitin. r,f the Slxtv-flrst Congress In the Tenth Massachusetts district has been served on Congressman Joseph F. O'Connell, Democrat iii,.,..ivn....i It Is said, over finan- ini ., m. .. former Mayor Adolphu aanhohn nf Pomerov. O., shot hint- self In the head at a hotel In Galll noils, and died Instantly. After three days' effort at Toledo - o .mi ijinUlnz in the cn.se f Rami Hull, the 17-year-old matricide, under Indictment for mu der in the first degree. ih r Mrl.tan. 67 years old. who saved a ferryboat laden with scores of passengers during the St. Louis tornado of 1896, died in East St. Louis. While the official count of the vote of Oklahoma was being made an error of l,5o0 votes was discov ered, the revision reducing Bryan s plurality to 11,848. J J. Juesserand, ambassador of France to the Cnlted States, unveiled a bronze memorial tablet at Newark to the memory of Andre Marie Am pere. Will Be a Feature of the Tariff Bill. TILTS ENLIVEN JTHE HEARING. Colonel Mnlhsll Breaks Into the DIs cusslon to Tell About Van Clave s Trouble With His Labor-Dingley Law Assailed as the Creator of I rusts Leather Trade. Washington, D. C. (Special). Schedules in the new tariff bill win provide maximum and minimum rates of duty. Thnt was the Bub- Btnnco of a statement made by Chair man Payne at the session of me Ways and Meaus Committee. Judso Taft has also advised that the new bill take that form, Instead of having fixed rates of duty as has been the rule In tariff laws or tne past. With nvaxlmum and minimum ratea the United States will be in a position to make concessions to a foreign nation that favor this country in tariff matters. Most of the session was occupied by H. E. Miles, of Racine, Wis., sec retary of the National Manufacturers' Association In a denunciation of the Dlngley law as the creator and sup porter of trusts. He said, however, that he did not speak for the associa tion. Miles declared that the law ' in finitely wronged" the consumer, was, In somo respects, a blow In the face of labor, injured the Independent, 'uon-truBtlfled" manufacturer and gave the farmer a stone labeled iiiwiri. He charged that the bill legislated $25,000,000 annually from the pockets of the people into the trensury of the Standard Oil Com pany and gave mo aieei num. v.. trol of the market in this country with the result that through exor bitant prices it was driving Indepenu i.iit nuinu fnoturors to the wall. There were exchanges of shots on facts at Issue between Mr. Miles and Mr Dalzell. of Pittsburg, me rauica. protectionist of the committee, at the atart, but when Mr. Miles had been pounding along for five or six hours in a continuous assault on the steel schedulesMie was doing so with less resistance. JERSEY CITY BOY JURNS TO STONE A Case of Sclerema Neonatorum Discovered. New York (8peclal). One of the most remarkable medical rases on record, In which the limbs of a baby six weeks old have turned to stone, was reportod at the meeting of the Hudson County Mcdlcnl Society, In Jersey City, by Dr. Karl H. Gold Btone, of 179 York Street, Jersey City, who haB charge of the chil dren's clinic at Mount Slnal Hospital In this city. The child so appallngly afflicted is Benjamin Gordon, whose parents live at 310 Kast One Hundream sstnw. Dr. Goldstone reported to nis coi loneneii that the child's limbs had now become almost entirely as hard as stone after gradually solidifying since Its birth. The disease which Is Bringing about this Is known to science as sclerema neonatorum, a very rare ail ment. The child has been removen to the children's clinic at Mount Sl nnl Hospital, where It Is under close observation by physicians. The reading of the report created a stir among the medical men, as there are only eight known similar cases, according to Dr. Goldstone, on record. , According to Dr. Goldstone, four days after tho child's birth Its moth er noticed an unnatural hardness In its feet and hands, which gradually spread upward In the legs and arms, until, two weeks after its birth, the limbs up to the knees and elbows were amazingly hard and cold. Oth erwise the infant has been in ap parent good health, giving very little trnnhle. feeding regularly and hav ing no apparent trouble In digesting itB food. , Ti.n lmrflntioo Vent soreadlng until n fnw'davs ago. when it was removed m Mount Slnal Hospital. The arms i,, -i.rht nn to the trunk of the body were hard as rock and stone cold. Moreover, Dr. Goldstono reports that Its little race was un hnrdenlne. as though a flinty mask were being drawn slowly down over Its forehead. The cheeks were al ... . i. i.ocri.inlnif to stiffen up when the treatment was commenced. The child Is the subject of constant study by physicians at the hospital. STEAMER LOST WHOLE CHEW PERISH The Soo City Goes Down With All Hands on Board. WRECKED BY A FIERCE STORM. From Eighteen to Twenty-eight Men Bald to Have Perished With the lll.fated Ship -Wreckage Washed Up at St. Johns Is the First Evl denea of the Catastraphe. Henry Bose, a salesman, employed hy an electric company, died in ins room at San Francisco under circum stances that indicate he was the vic tim of poison. Roy Van Housen, formerly a book keeper of the wrecked People s Na tional Bank of Franklinville, N. Y-i was sentenced by Judge Hazel in the United States District Court to five years in the Federal prison at At lanta, Ga. John D. Archbold testified that after the Standard Oil Company was ordered dissolved by the courts Of Ohio is moved to New Jersey as the state having the "most reasonable corporation laws. John T. Jenkins, jr.. lurmwnj president of the Jenkins Trust Com pany, of Brooklyn, N. Y.. was found mm trniltv of nnrirooriatlng to his own use $5 0,000 of the Institution. Robert F. Maddox was elected trrnvfir of Atlanta. Ga.. over James LYNCHBURG DRY BY 195 MAJORITY 1,958 Votes Cast Amid Great Excite ment, But No Disorder. Lynchburg (Special). By a ma jority of 195 out of 1,958 votes, Lynchburg elected to do away with the licensed, liquor saloon, and, un less a contest should Intervene, the 3 4 saloonB, 1 Wholesale house and 3 beer agencies will go out of busi ness. Tho followers of the AntlBaloou League, by and through whom the LOSS OF THE 800 CITY. The steamer Soo City, bound from Michigan City to New Or leans, was wrecked off Newfound land Coust. Capt. John G. Dillon was In command of the boat. He, with more than eighteen other men, went down with the ship. . Tho steamer was of 485 tons net and was vp.lued at $35,000. The vessel had been used as an excursion boat on the lake for more than twenty years. Captain Dillon leaves a widow and three children. THEY WILL MAINTAIN THE OPEN OOOfl American-Japanese Declaration Made ubllc Washington, D. C. (Special). The notes exchanged between the United States and Japan "declaring their policy In the Far East," which have been the subject of correspond ence between Secretary Root and Ambassador Takahlra for some months, were made public at the State Department. Accompanying the declaration are two letters, one from Mr. Takahlra and one from Mr. Root, the former expressing the belief that a frank avowal of the aim, policy and Intention of the two countries In the Pacific would not only tend to strengthen the relations i PRESIOENT ROOSEVELT COMMERCIAL GOLOIH SAYS CHURCH IS WEAK ! Wsekly Review of Trade and Latest tsii iii i r.u sw viiwnmum 1 1 sripr I Market RsDorts. ship. IS LAGGING BEHIND THE NATION. Deprecates Falling Off In Theological Students Small and Narrow Minds j in the Church -Declares the Times Demand Strong Men and That I he Workers Are All Too Few. Altl. BOM S OF (HANTS. Itemed builders Had Peculiar Heads Wheeling, W. V. (Special). Prof E. L. Lively and J. I WlilHameon, of Friendly, have made an examina tion of the giant skeletons found by children playing near that town The femur nnd vertebrae were found to be In a remarkable state of pres ervation and showed the persons to be of enormouB stature. The skele tons ranged In height from 7 feet li inches down to feet 7 IneheB. The skulls found are of peculiar formation. The forehead is low and slopes back gradually, while the back part of the head Is very promi nent much more so than tho skulls of people living at the present day. fight was made against license, are The legs are exceedingly .o..B jubilant the bones unusually large. The flnd- r wn... miliar, nr earlv in the ; lne of the skeletons has created a forenoon that the -wets'' could not t great deal of Interest ana tne g"- I Wn, and from that time their lead- eral impre ers worked as tiiongn uiey Knew uivj G. Woodward, after an exciting cam-I a fhp troJanlc t.fr0rt palgn in which the character I tained until the city cl were already defeated. Tills, how ever, dirt not came mem iu w, fforts were main- lock struck 5. Woodward was an issue anflaalnon ' League cnrrled A Jewelry store In Pittsburg was i cvery ward and three of the Beven robbed while hundreds of persons j pr0clncta. The ihreo precincts car were in the street. The robber was i ried uy tne ii..n30 advocates nggre pursued and captured, and the Jewel- ated only 23 majority. Tho vote ry recovered. was not as large us expected, some The Federal Council of the voters evidently remaining away Churches of Christ In America was Irum the polls, and some are report- opened 'in Philadelphia with nun- 0d to have paired off. In addition to I dreds of delegates from 30 rellglou . this fully 500 recently registered I bodies present. voters were prevented from voting The America! Mining Congress by a decision of the Judges, which; will urge the establishment of a 1 decision was to conduct the election , i, n,in. in r-nnnectlon with ' under the Ward law. which Is in the Department Of the Interior. I the Supreme Court of Appeals, be ing ana' Ken as io in nviiiymiii - Ity. on Is that the bones are the remains of the people who built the mounds, the largest in the coun try being located at Moundsvllle, Marshall County. St. Johns, N. F. (Special). Wreckage which haa come ashore at Cape Ray leaves little room for doubt that the sturdy little steamer Soo City, which for 20 years piled as an excursion vessel on the great lakes, went down with her . crew in the midst of the gale that lashed the Newfoundland Coast for two days The Bteanier was In command of Cant. John G. Dillon, of Brooklyn, who was formerly commander of the United States government transport Missouri. A wife and three small children await ed his return home. The exact number of the crew is In doubt. It Is known, however, that no less than 18 men were on board. and it has been reported that tho crew was recently Increased to Z men. Golug To Gulf. The Soo City was recently sold by the Indiana Transportation Company to Felix Jackson, of Velasco, 'lex and was being taken to New Orleans where It had been planned to put her in service between that city and Texan ports. She carried no passen gers. She was to De nrst overnauieu In New York and for that purpose had been consigned to Agent T. H. Franklin, of New York. The Soo CltyBaileU from Michigan City on November 1, and reached Og deiisburg, N. Y., November 11. At (hut port she took on coal and added four men to her crew. Up to that time the stenmer wat In charge of Capt. F. V. Dorlty, of Milwaukee, but at Ogdensburg the command was turned over to Captain Dillon. She was last reported at Quebec, November 14. A week later, when nothing had been heard, much anx iety was felt, and on Wednesday last the vessel was listed by the Maritime Exchange among the missing. Today a deck cabin and fittings and 1G life-preservers came ashore. These all bore tho name Soo City or other marks Identifying them as belonging to the lake steamer. Dur ing the day life buoys, deck boards and other gear unquestionably be longing to the steamer were washed In. New York (Special). A letter from President Roosevelt to John R. Mott, general secretary of the World's Student Christian Federa tion, expressing sympathy with -Mr. Mott's book, "The Future Leader ship of the Church," published by the student department of the Young Men's Christian Association, was mmle mihlln hAro in exlllanatlOU ol of friendship and good neighborhood the President's letter, dated Octobet betwien the two nntlons, but would i 12, 1108, Mr. Molt says: I materially contribute to the preset- , "When the need MM on i aciua , . i tit: in, vi in ti i c merit niw vatlon of the general peace, and the mosl v,Boro, ty))a of men toi latter declnrlng that "this expression i christian-leadership was brought tc of mutual understanding is welcome I the attention of President Roosevelt to the government of (he United and his aid was ame.i in nuiigim. , ., that need before the young men In "tales. I nllr ,,nlvorBlH.a nnrt eolliT'es. ho WBt Each letter, In which Is included i the declartion, Is dated Novembei 1 30, tho day on which the exchanges took place. Itnron Takahlrn's Letter. Some changes were made In the draft, of the letters passing between Mr. Root nnd Mr. Takahlra as orlgi- . . ... .. . . I . V. 1. ., , I I nauy wruien, copies ui wubwi DEATH IN A IlIilZZARD. Burglars blew open the vault In the First Nntlonal Bank of PepperiU, Mass., secured $14,000 and escaped in ail automobile Margaret Illltigton, who has been, aieriiig in "The Thief." Is obliged! t.) retire Irom tho stae owinc to 111 health. r oreiern The steam l'ghtshlp Mangorlra, first of the Beet of tendets and light ships that sailed trom New York goptcmber 21 on voyage to the Pa r'fle Coast, arrived at Valparaiso. The militant section of the suf fra?ttte of London indulged In B f'.tree detuonstra Ion against David LUiyd-Gcorge. chancellor of the ex chequer. NO HOUSE FOB EVANS I Seventeen Lives Lust 111 Storni Off Newfoundland Const. St. John's. N. F. (Special). Sev enteen persons have perished In the storm which has lashed the New foundland coast of 4S hours. In all, 10 fishing vessels have gone ashore, i.iost of them breaking into frag ments on the rooks. The victims of the cale were members of the crow of three of these craft. The fisher men were all residents of Newfound land fishing villages The Btorni began Tuesday evening and developed into a blizzard. A northerly gale caught many small schooners and sloops off the coast, and In scudding for harbor before the blast many of the crows lost Vlctoiy For Honapartc. Boston (Special).- The certificate of Attorney General Bonaparte re questing that the ease of the United States government to compel the New York, New Haven and Hart ford Railroad Company to relinquish Its holding of stock of the Boston and Maine Railroad be expedited, was granted by three Judges of the United Stales Circuit Court and the contention of tho uttornoys of the railroad that the expediting act 1b unconstitutional was overruled. M Fighting Bob" Decline Gift From People Of IiOS Angeles. I..-H A in- c-ii. i pe-inl ) . Rear their bearings In the thick storm. Admiral Koblei I). Evans, retired, dot . nut de, .iv the people of Los Pacific llullroiids Guilty. Angeles or any other place to make gaU Laka utah (Special). , a p. ... of a house, or anything I Qnm wa the verdlct of the Jury , i -...) Qtotoa rtftttrlnt Cnuvt i " . i . . u i ii ir tl. or mm 'a inntnt vp i -" vmmww - ....V.:. ' -i; T; T ehlrn.an here before which the Union Pacific Austrian Crisis Itumor. London (Special). A circumstan tial rumor flashed through the Stock Exchange Just before the closing, that Baron Von Lena Aehrenthal had resigned the portfolio of the min istry of foreign affairs in Austria. Confirmation was lacking, and it could not be obtained In time to have nny serious effect on the stock markets. Otherwise there hod been a sharp rally. been sent to Europe. Ambassador Takahlra's letter as finally drafted was as follows: "Sir: The exchange of views be tween us, which has taken place at the Beveral Interviews which 1 have recently had the honor of holding with you, has shown that Japan and the United States holding important outlying Insular possessions In the region of the Pacific Ocean, the gov ernments of the two countries arc animated by a common aim, policy and intention In that region. "Rxlievlnu: that a frank avowal of that aim, policy and Intention would i nnt nnlv tend to strengthen the rela- Hons of friendship and good neigh borhood, which have immemorially existed between .Tapnn and the Uni ted StateB, but would materially con tribute to the preservation of the nfiil nence. the Imperial govern ment have authorized me to present to you an outline of their under standing of that common aim, policy and intention: (Here follow the five articles of the declaration.) "If the foregoing outline nccords with the view of the government of the United States. I shall be gratified to receive vour confirmation. "I take this opportunity to renew to Your Excellency the assuraance or my highest consideration. "K. TAKAHIRA. "Hon. Ellhu Rtiot. "Secretary of State." Secretary Roofs Acceptance. Secretary Root's letter was as fol lows: Department of State, Washington, November 30, 190S. Excellency: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your note of today setting forth the result of the ex change of Views between us In oui recent interviews defining the under at.Titinir of the two governments In regard to their policy in the region of the Pacific Ocean. It is a pleasure to inform you that this expression of mutual under standing is welcome to the govern ment of the United States as ap propriate to the happy relations ol the two countries and as the occa sion for a concise mutual affirma tion of that accordant policy respect ing the Far East, which the two governments have bo frequently de clared In tho past. I am happy to be able to confirm to Your Excellency, on behalf of tht Unitod States, the declaration of the two Governments, embodied In the following words: "1. ft Is the wish of the two governments to encourage the free and peaceful development of their commerce on the Faeinc ucean accentance of n position as chairman of tho board of directors of the Los Angel .-; Harbor' Company, u friend addressed u letter to Adu.iral Drang, asking his views regarding the pos sible presentation of a house to him 'by admiring friends In Los Angeles. 5ev..n men ne: ished by the sinking In re-Jiionse the Admiral declined the of a barge owned by the Barrett gift fully and finally. Manufacturing Company, of Huston. Railroad, the Union Pacific Coal Company, the Oregon Short Line Railway, Everett Buckingham and J. M. Moore have been on trial for nl gl 1 conspiracy In restraint of Inter sl : commerce and thereby violating the laws of the United States. REQUISITION REFUSED I'l.rigl.t Life Par Been Years Saves Anarchist To Be Deported. St. Louis, Mo. (Special). Judge David P. Dyer, in the federal ijib Alleged Forger. of tho southern coast of Nova SCO tia. A Chinese Imperial edict pledges the throne to continue the policy in augurated by the late Emperor Kuaog-Hau, and especially the pro-g-.am which provides for tho graft ing of a constitution at the end of nine yecra. e.i.,li:iliv-.itmri . reher released from eus- Houkkc.-p.-r Lowden Sentenced. lbs title of a now corporation Which tody. Cincinnati, O. (Special). Edmond ai taken over a niiinl"': of iron viiiH di - lsion was readied on the i (. j0Wden, former bookkeeper of the limits in Canada, nnd will operate piM f Archer'g attorneys that he prm ident Savings Bank, of this city, ii c-ii under a Joint ruatiac.eiucnf lia , hurt seven years and was wJjo wag arrested In Baltimore on a 'i t:e captain of the Britii.. sri o. e i- llallil)( a upright life, nnd :tiat it , clla,go 0f embezzling $.i,000 from trlct Court, sustained an order of Secretary of Commerce and Labor Seattle. Wah, ISpeclnl). Cover- B'raus. directing that Samuel Baeh Bor Mead who refused to honor re- moua be deported to hie old homo n tor the return to I In England for preaching anarchistic N, v. Jersey el Ellio t A. Archer, teachings on the streets of Belle wanted In Newark on the charge of vllle. 111. lo.-gery to the amount of J.U.UuU, j ordered Archer released from eus-i Steel Mills Reopen. Chicago (Special). After an Idle ness of 13 months, the old open hearth department of the Illinois Steel Company plant at South Chica go was reopened and 1,000 men re sumed work. Preparations are mak ing to open five other blast furnaces:. greatly Impressed, and without heel tntlon, consented to help. President Roosevelt writes that It Is a matter of grave concern that In this country there should lie a tend ency In the number of students at the lending graduate theological schools to fall off ai the very time that the communicant membership of the church is markedly increasing. The President says he speaks dot only of ministers, but of all who take part In a bryad and catholic spirit in work for the essentials of Christianity. Call For Strong Men. The letter In part says: "Small, narrow, one-sided men, no matter how earnest, cannot supply leaderships for the moral and relig ious forces whiejjl alone can redeem nations. They can do good in their own wny; but In r.ddltlon to them, and especially for thlB particular work, the strongest are needed men of marked personality, who, to tenderness add force nnd grasp, show capacity for friendship, and who, to a fine chalracter, unite an Intense moral and spiritual enthusiasm. "Particularly do we need such forces In a nation like ours, which on the one hand in many places Ih only jiiat emerging from the old pio neer conditions, und which, on the other hand, has developed to a pe culiar degree the tense and highly complex industrialism which Is char acteristic of the present ago of the worid. Our territories and our new Btntrs are still plastic; they are still near enough to the pioneer days to be In the formative period; und It s tranBcendant Importance that the iilgheet Christian Ideals shall pre dominate and determine their civili zation. Field Of Work Is Wide. "But it is at leaBt as important that this should be true of the older states. Every great city calls with insistent longing for loaders, able nnd willing to suffer and fight, to show fortitude and daring, to grapple with Iron will and undaunted front, the terrible evils that grow up where men are crowded together, when life Is led under a constant and fe verish strain, where great wealth and lilting poverty Jostle one another. The service can be rendered In the ministry, as 1 tjave known It to be rendered by Protestant clergymen and Catholic priest, aye, and by Jew ish rabbi, or it may be rendered by laymen, by nurh men as Jacob Rils. by many a man and woman I could name. who. with infinite self-devotion, with love for mankind, but with a wisdom which prevents this love from becoming hysterical or sentimental, work steadily fof the uplifting of their kind, ( . "The field tor work Is very broad and very diversified, and those jrho work In It are all too few. Immi grants come to our shores by t.h million to begin here a new life They have been torn up by the roots from their ancient associations, and Biich uprooting gives peculiar oppor tunities to the pnv.-erb of evil. Every possible effort should be r ad, fot Sradstreet's says: "Wholesale trade, crop and indus trial developments are generally In the direction of Improvement, there Is less idle machinery and the tone of affairs generally Is still cheerful, but there are numerous Irregular ities In conditions In different sections and Industries. The situation as a whole, therefore, lacks some of the uniformity which characterized It some time ago. Most optimism and strength Is exhibited In the lead ing lines of domestic manufacture and wholesale trade, particularly as to the outlook for next year, and manufacturers are buying more free ly of most raw materials, while wholesalers report evidences of scarcity In many linos, especially cot ton goods, for spring and later de livery next year. "In retail trade there Is a good ,1cal of Irregularity, though the ad rent of ralnB and snows, followed by colder weather, helped to Im prove conditions as the week ad vanced. Southern trade, however, was rather dull throughout, duo to warm wenther and the low price af cotton, and even In parts of the West, as well as the enure eastern hnlf of the country, retail trnde buy ing might be better. In Borne lines Df trnde, especially Iron and steel, :here is a disposition to regard tariff llscuaslon as a bar to fullest activi ties. Collections are better, and tponey Is In better demand for busi ness purposes. "BuslnesB failures In the United States for the week ending November 2G number 193, against 273 Inst week, 2T.8 In the like week of 1907, 17 In 1900, 188 in 1905 and 184 in 1904." 2. The policy of both govern- their sake and ours, too, to supply Led Kensington has arrived ai 3. i .v., ,. mat:cr of civil debt, in wli VHJ ent. and reports that his vessel lil(J v;,.sari( authorities were tryiug v,us seized by Venezuelan officials. lo farM collection. The American deleguies to the ! " Pi a-American a-ientinc Congress, I Enqseror And Premier Clash. w.Itb Is to open at San iugo, Chile, Vienna (Special).- Emperor Eraiu I. c last l art tt tnic nn:.. ' ., r ;,, ;m a ai ssat to .Marquis I ai- lavluelnl. Austrian ambassador at not to withdraw thai institution, was sentenced to the reformatory on an Indeterminate seotesso. Robtaen Beat Krnil Woman. Chicago (Special). Two robbers walked WtO the house of A. Vander- kloot. In the North Shore suburb of Lake Bluff, and beat and kicked Mrs. Vanderkloot, a frail woman of 05 in entertained in Buenos Ayr.-i. at .. .,-. i.uio ni ts Hint r-. em ions. , ..,... Pnri no Prtnre I Constantinople i. ri "'inildwod the taking of tho! trom hia post us a protest against ..,'u'i hv th revolutionists, but the I..,., Tnrtttiii boycott against Austria. ; ...uru lata Insensibility, and then authorities succeeded In res. or- : , ,,,,,. atmnat to n Ala- . anaaked the house for diamonds ooiei alter the troops had killed , , , , ,,. mmnarnr uinl Huron I which they supposed to be there - I IIUl" u- ' " -. . - . . . . I -. . V. : ,tn,ii iiia fuii' ifti ill in liter. F:n He to n:iu mo auuuuuua " ou . .... man l., uov- wbo htt.l ordered canavincini io ; api ropr u -u - ,, leave Conwanllnople, at least tem porarily, In an effort to check the boycott. M men. Germany and the United States have arrang'd for a two-cent postal late, to go Into effect at the begln ulii". ef the year. henry Vignaud, secretary of tho American embassy In Paris, has been elected president of the Society Of Amc.kanls'S. In sucesslon to the late l':o'i:ssor Haray. M Clemoiiceau, defending Prin (ess do Sagau In the suit of Bout de Csstellane for the custody of the (hl'.dreu, severely urralgued Count Uonl for his protlgacy. The Liberals suffered another dis astrous parliamentary defeat In the bye eld Ion for a member of the House of Commons held In Chelmsford The Russian Douma appropriated Crulicr Yankee Afloat. Newport. EL I- (Special ). The Unl'ed States cruise-.- Yankee, which baa been aground on Hen aud Chick ens SUoala lu Buzzards Bay for the last 10 weeks, has bt eu flouted und has started for New B.diord In tow, according to a wireless message re ceived at the naval station her.j from ber commando.-, Charles C. Marsh The Yankee will undergo minor repairs at New Bedford, after wldch Tt Is planued that she will nroed under her own steam to tbs . - - v.. A f 5 000.000 for sectarian snd $3.0(10,- New York Navy Yard for a coin toil for secular schools Diete overhauling. era I pieces of silverware and walked away, leaving tueir viuwiu uutuu scions. Coaaaer Cattle Disease. Phiiadeltihla ( Special ). Officials of the Btale Live Stock Sanitary Hoard are confident that they have the foot and mouth disease under .......nil There have been no new cases for more thsn 56 hours, while attention Is being given to tracing ,.ti. ahluned Into the State from Haffalo no bow case has been found. Where suspicious cases, wmcii are numerous, are reported the cattle sr.. quarantined aud placed under ob servation. Mosl of the agents are working in LaiAaster, but oases are becoming rare. DOINGS AT THE NATIONS CAPITAL Representative James R. Mann, of Chicago, has polled the Republican members-elect of the next House of Representatives on their choice for speaker and has reoelvcd replies from ahout two-thirds of them, nearly all favoring J. U. Cannon. Cattle barons whose ranches in the Weat are gradually being cut up for agricultural purposes are Investi gating Mexican lands with regard to the advtanges they offer for the rais ing of cattle. This couatry now exports shoes aud boots far In excess In value over those exported by any other country, although the number of pairs is, not so great as thoBO exported by the United Kingdom. Postmaster General Meyer an nounced that the President had re appointed Mrs. Helen Longstreet, widow of General Longstreet, as postmistress at Gainesville, Ga. It is understood in Washlnglou that aeprosentative Burton, of Ohio, can be Secretary of the Treasury un der Taft If bo will accept. His pref erence, however, Is Foraker's seat In the United States Senate. Governor Magoon, of Cuba, had a talk with Secretary Wright with ref erence to the best method of bring ing back the American troops now stutloned on the Island. United States Treasurer Treat, In his aunual report, shows a deficiency of $fi8,070,201, against a surplus of $84,230,580 the year before. Speaker Cannon defended the Rules Committee of the House as a piece of machinery necessary to carry out the will of the Speaker Governor Curry, of. New Mexico, arrived lo Washington to renew the light for statehood for New Mexlo and Arizona. The House Ways and Means Com mlttae decided to ask the House for authority to have witnesses subpoen aed. ments, uninfluenced ny any aggres sive tendencies, Is directed to the maintenance of the existing status quo In the region above mentioned and to the defense of the principle of equal opportunity for commerce and industry in China. "3. They are accordingly firmly resolved roclprocally to respect the territorial possessions belonging to each other In said region. "4. Thev are also determined to preserve the common Interests of all powers In China by supporting by all pacific means at their disposal the Independence and Integrity- of China and the principle of equal op portunity for commerce of all na tions in that empire. "5. Should any event occur threatening the Btatus quo as above described or the principle of eqnal op-portunity as above defined, It re mains for the two governments to communicate with each other In or der to arrive at an understanding as to what measures they may con alder It useful to take." Accont. Excellency, the renewed assurance of my highest consideration. ELIHU ROOT. His Excellency, Baron Kogoro Takahlra, Japanese Ambassador. Cnrrle Nation Abroad. Dundee, Scotland (Special). Car rie Nation, of saloon-wrecking fame, I bogan her antlllquor crusade here, making visits to sovcrnl drinking re orts. She has left her hatchet home, and merely approaches the barman and demands to aoo the license. Af ter she hai perused it, she points her Index finger at him und speaks against the drink evil. Mm Nation expects to make a systematic campaign of the cities of Scotland. Wholesale Market. New York. Wheat Receipts, 1 12,000 bush.; exports, 183,128 bush.; spot firm; No. 2 red, 1.1 1V4 1.12 elevator; No. 2 red, 1.114 f. o. b. afloat: No. 1 Northern Du luth. 1.10 f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter, 1.15 f. o. b. afloat. Corn necelpts, 81,700 bush.; ex ports, 17,030 bush.; spot steady; So. 2 new, 71 elevator and 72 !. o. b. afloat. Option market was without transactions, closing Vic. let lower. December closed at 72, Slav closed at 71 H, July closed at 70. Oats Receipts, 27,000 bush.; ipot steady; mixed. 20 to 32 lbs., 54; nntural white, 26 to 32 lbs.. 54 57; clipped white, 34 to 42 bs.; 55 61. Poultry Alive steady; spring hickens, 11; fowls, 11; tur teys, 1 4 ; dressed unsettled ; Western raring chickens, 1 2 Or 20; fowls, 11 14; spring turkeys, 13 21. Butter Steady; receipts, 2,139; jrocess thirds to special, 21 26. Philadelphia. Wheat Steady; :ontract grade, November, 1.04 1.05c. Corn Steady; November, 68 59c. Oats Firm; good demand; No. 2 white nntural, 55fr56c. Butter Firm; good demand; ex tra Western creamery, 32c; do., nearbv prints, 34. Eggs Steady; fair demand; Penn sylvania and other nearby firsts, f. 34c. at mark; do., current re :eipts, 32(3 33 nt mark. Cheese Firm; good demand; Sew York full creams, choice, 13 14c; do., fair to good, 1313. Poultry Alive steady; fair de viand; fowls, 10llc; old roosters, 8; spring chickens, 10 11; ducks, 1112; turkeys, 14 I I voAtn S . ' IO Baltimore, Flour Dull and un changed. Receipts, 14,861 bbls.; ex ports, 491 bbls. Wheat Firmer. Spot, contract, 1.04; spot, No. 2 red Western 1.06; November, 1.04; Decem ber, 1.04; January, 1.05; steam r No. 2 red. 1.01. Receipts, 45, )4 9 bush. Southern, on grade, 1.01 1.04. Corn Steady. New spot, mixed, 68 68; new November, 68 r, $8 ; new year, 67 68 ; new farmery, 06 67; February, 67; Steamer, mixed, 65 65. Re ceipts, 73,173. New Southern white om. 03 68; new Southern , c!!ov corn, 63 fi 68. Outs Firm. No. 2 white, 54 fP65l No. 3 white, 53 54; : I, mixed. 53 53. Receipts. 1,600. 1 ye Quiet. No. 2 Western ex port. S21r82. liny Steady and unchanged. r.utter Firm. Fancy Imitation, 34 $5; fancy creamery, 32 33; Icncjr ladle, 2021; store packed, 18 fret 9. Eggs Firm and unchanged, 32 Cheese Firm and unchanged. Silver sold at 47 cents, which is 1 New large, 14; new flats, 14 ft; new tics o lornllty. of rnlieion. ot honorable obligation ns between man and man. to replace the old ties they have sundered. In Ihc country dis tricts, too. there is' a pecttlinr neod for tho cuir-h to serve ns revivify ing nnd sicinl influence, and to jo It3 part in giving broader oppor tunities for Interest and usefulness In country lire, und to do this will put a stop t-i the unhealthy drift toward the elM?s." IN THE WORLD OF FINANCE Dead Numher 18f Now. Marianne, Pa. (Special). The death list at the Ill-fated Marianna mine now numbers 135 victims, 11 bodies having been brought to the surface. Both the recovery of bodies and their Identification are proceed ing very slowly. Heat Prostrates Man. Pittsburg (Special). Isaac Care, 25 years old, Is In a critical condi tion at a M.-Keesport hospital, suf fering from heat exhaustion. He was prostrated Monday, and about midnight became unconscious tho lowest price on record. I-ant month 27,400,000 of bank notes were redeemed. Bank clearings In tho Unitod Stfltca fcr November Increased 3 1 per cent, over November, 1907. H. H. Rogers' "personal" railway the Virginia, hat sold $X, 750, 000 5 per cont. notes to Redmond & Co. President Noviu, of (J)e Cobalt Central, nnnoiintei Ihnt the company will declare on Initial dividend this month. J. Warren CoUston. Jr., Is the Philadelphia manager o the newly organised banking Prm of Hooper, Kimball & W.llianis, of Bunion. " i Receipts of the Wonder Extension I for the last fiscal year were $3,102. Officers and directors are Identical 1 with those of tho Nevnda Wonder. The Philadelphia officers of the Red Mountain C-iper Mines, of Col orado, say that devalnpment work Is going ahead rapidly. Among its other assets this company owns u roilfond twenty-tw. miles long. London has shipped to India an average of nearly $1,000,000 losa sliver each month this year than in 1907. The failure of India to buy Is largely responsible for tfce low price of the me'al. Walter C. Lourhhelm A Co. will ' take over the Philadelphia business I of J. S. Bache & Co. on January 1, , Mr. Louchheim will then retire from the latter firm. Speyer Co. are offering to In vestors at 89 and accrued Interest yielding 4 per cent. Income $9,- 000. 000 first and refunding mort gage 4 per cont. bonds of the Chi cago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, free of taxes. The bonds are redeemable at the option of the company at 105 on or prior to April 1, 1811- 1 0 uew small,' 14. i.lv Sines. Kv York. Beeves Receipts, 713 itriI Steers strong; good to choice. 1 5c. to 25c. higher; bulls, stendv to :ong; thin cows, steady; others hv. to 25c higher; all sold. Steers, I 7.00; oicen, 2.35 to 4.60; culls, 3 00 to 4.05; cows, 1.25 to 4.00. Calves Receipts, 607 head, vol.. "."ic. hlaher: barnyard calves, I steady; Western gelling more free ly; about all sold. veais, o.uu w 0.50: choice. 9.75; culls, 4.00 to 1 4 50; barnyard and fed calves, z.du I ... ... . of, I .- AAA IT ; on; western, j.ou iu Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 2,- $03 lead Choice sheep steady; I common and medium slow; lambs I 'tin te 25c higher; about all sold Sheep, 2.60 to 4.00; culls, I 1 50 to 2.00; lambs, 5.75 to 6.75; 1 Pi.iia rt 00 to 4.50. Hogs Receipts, 3.829 head. Feel ing firm. . ( 'hi capo. Cattle Receipts ( estl mated). 25.000 head; market 25c. to 35c. Irrwer. Steers. 4.60 (ff 7.75; cows, 3 00 5. 26; heifers, 2.50 4 CO- bulls. 2.754.50; calves, 8.00 ;H!7.50; stockors and feeders, 2. 50 94,11. Hogs Receipts (estimated), 80, .100 head Market 16c. to 26c. lew er. Choice heavy shipping, 5.85 j, T5- butchers. 6 . 7 0 vf 9 " I "syj mixed, 5 305.45; pacWng, 6.60 5 80; pigs 4.00 4.75; bulk of salos, 5.405.75. . . I Sheep Receipts (estimated), l. 1 ft 00 head. Market steady to atrong I Fbeep, 4 25rt6.00; lsnlbs, 4.161? j $.60; yearlings, 4. 2696.76. The government of Bom-bay Is urg ! h,g the nntlves to plant tapioca 1 ,1 of rtea to prevent Ue famtnet due to drouth. a