NDENSED ed—Frozen Lehigh’s )00. vere grant- Lebens B. hn T. Par- M. Hubler, an Greely, *hriner, - Al- de, Atkin- ‘Irvin, Ju- ops, Kelly Pittsburg, Run, $12; town, $10; {ensington, 1sville, $8; 8; Andrew 12; Peter *ob Harsh- A. Fress, 3 Hudson, nited Mine Shamokin, men and > employes: Ss been Te- vember 5. man made Haussman, cal instru- Erie. She while the n attacked ced to flee eel from a igns point- who is 80 up in the el for the announced road presi- re the tab- to miners’ ining com- yccountants figures for Jumberland - f another and David cation and iley struck ass knuck- rom which Bailey was .ehigh Val- . Philadel- hows earn- sources of $892,114, last year; ease $101,- , decrease, Miller at ing of his at Osceola, being out s returned the slecond by Miller r. nd Charles Armstrong tted to jail r chayged Tr with mis- he former he wife of ‘messenger | from the Company's they are no nto trains ostal Dboys rn ~~ Union Francis, at en by iour cs, highly were taken, ~~ The men rh wa front’ pen. t, a school 1e home of right,” near NOX. Miss in the east- . and was Om. ywn council e On Secur- ~ the Penn- ny reported ) behind in trance into S. Cross at n cash and ic Gettonie, - p also and ns of Pitts- he next few autiful First ing of Ford will be sold onnellsville, r farm ad- $25,000. A be located v industrial committed New Brigh- ) in stamps s McDanel onsburg has sition of su- 1 Tele- and headquarters nted- to the e Jr. 0. U, Prof. J. HH. ¢ schools of contributed the county known bar- found frozen tion, on the Metzner, of with con- to jail at » 5 Pr : Leading . Yale STUDENTS IN THE LAW'S CLUTCHES _ BREACH OF THE PEACE. College Undergradu- ates Must Answer Serious Charges—Ten Arrested. ¥or the alleged mobbing of a squad of New York speculators who came to New Haven, Conn, to handle tick- ets for the Yale-Harvard football game five of the most prominent students in Yale have been arrested. One of them has been charged with highway robbery, the other four with breach of the peace. The under- graduates who are awaiting trial are: John Alston Moorhead, Pitts- burg, class or 1904; Henry Barnum, New York, 1995: William Robert Orthwein, St. Louis, 1903; Harold Merriam Sawyer, Bridgeport, 1803, and Bradford Ellsworth, New York, 1903. Moorhead has played end rush on the the Yale ‘varsity footbail eleven most of the fall. He cracked his shoulder a month ago and was crippled for the rest of the season. He ig a member of the Yale ’varsily baskethall {eam. The arrest of Moor- head, Orthwein and Sawyer took place Tuesday. Ellsworth and Bar- num were arrested within, 24 hours after the riot occurred. All of the students have been released under bonds. Ellsworth’s bonds have been fixed at $1,000, those of the others $200 each. All of the students un- der arrest are attending recitations, but were not allowed to go home for their Thanksgiving recess. Wit nesses say that 500 students piled on the speculators, searched their cloth- ing, found 16 tickets, took these to the office of the football association and gave the speculators a piece of paper on which was written: “These are the men we took the tickets from. Pay them their face value” Landau Held. William Landau, of Buffalo, who was arrested yesterday in New York city in connection with an alleged cotton swindle, throuzh which Laden- burg, Thalmann & Co, bankers, were reported to have lost $200,000, was theld in $1,000 bail for examination on January 8 on the charge of grand lar- ceny. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. Among the President’s “callers was Cardinal Gibbons. The Cardinal was accompanied by Father O. J. Stafford. M. Carbon, the French Ambassa- dor, presented his letters of recall to the President, and will start for his new post in Spain. Senator Allison said he was in thorough accord. with’ the President’s ‘trust megulation policy and does not favor any attempt at tariff revision during the short session of congress. The President has denied 32 appli- cations for. pardon, has restored five “applicants who have served out their terms of imprisonment to citizenship, and has acted favorably upon six other cases. President Rocsevelt laid before the cabinet Tuesday his annual megsage to Congress in completed form. Only such parts of the message as had not been considered previously were read in full. The President has decided to ap- point Judge Francis M. Wright, now judge of the circuit and appellate court of Illincis, to the vacancy on the court of claims, caused by the death of John Davis. The President has announced his decision to appoint Ashby DM. Gould, of Washington, present district at- torney for the District of Columbia, ag associate justice of the supreme court of the District of Columbia, In an address before the National ‘Geographical society Lieutenant Robt. BE. Peary said the north pole could be reached by way of Smith sound, and that it should be done by American dollars and American energy. President Roosevelt has informed several of his congressional callers that he intends making George B. Cortelyou, his secretary, the first head of the new department of com- merce, a bill for the establishment of which is pending before the House. Representative Cannon, of Illinois, has announced his intention to intro- duce in the House a bill for an ap- propriation of $50,000 for the pay- ment of the expense of the anthra- cite coal strike commission and com- pensation of the members of the com- mission. Colonel Emmet Urell, commander- in-chief of the Spanish War Veter- ans, has urged the President to place under the civil service all the Span- ish war veterans who are now serv- ing the government in a clerical ca- pacity in the Philippines. President Roosevelt promised to consider the request. Private advices from Valparaiso report that the Chilean congress will consider the treaty with Colombia, which recently was made public, and in which, it is stated, a clause exists guaranteeing Chile certain conces- sions on the isthmus should the Pan- ama canal be constructed that are to be embodied in the canal convention. Justice Harlan. of the United States supreme court, cn December 9 will have completed 25 years of ser- vice ag a member of that court, and friends have arranged to express their appreciation of his services by a dinner in his honor at the new Willard hotel, The President and his cabinet will attend. The following appointments under the department of justice have been agreed to in the cabinet: Judge L. I. Lewis, Richmond, Va., United States district attorney for the eastern dis- trict of Virginia; Sol Betica, United States dis attorney for the Chi- cago district, and Morgan H. Reach, United States distriet attorney for the District of Columbia. The coal situation in Washington will be made the subject of an in- quiry under the supervision of a com- miitee of the commissicners of the District of Columbia. RUSSIA PAYS INDEMNITY. Owners of American Vessels Seized in Sealing Dispute Recover Value of Ships. Prof, Asser, the Dutch jurist, at The Hague, Holland, who has been arbitrating the claims of American sealers for the seizure of their ves- sels by the Russian government, about ten years ago, has delivered his award in favor of the United States. He appraises the damage in the case of the American schooner C. H. White at $32,444, in the case of the James Hamilton Lewis at $28,. 5&8, the Kate and Anna at $1,483%and the Cape Horn Pigeon $38,750. Prof. Asser delivered his judgment in the arbitration court in the presence of the representatives of the United States, and of Russia and others,, in- cluding the foreign minister of the Netherlands, Dr. Van Lynden. In giving his reason for the award Prof. Asser held that the schconer C. H. White was seized outside Russian territorial waters, and that the Rus- sian contentien that a warship of one nation was entitled to pursue beyond the boundaries of its territorial seas a ship of another nation guilty of il- legal action within those waters was untenable. The arbitrator ° declared that the jurisdiction of the state could not extend beyond its terri- torial’ waters, except by , special treaty. The seizure and confiscation of the C, H. White and the imprison- ment of her crew was therefore il- legal, and Russia was condemned to pay the C. H. White $32,444, with in- terest at 6 per cent. The oase of James Hamilton Lewis is governed by the same decision, while in the case of the Cape Horn Pigeon Prof. Asser, in fixing the damages of $38.- 750 and the interest at 6 per cent, held that the general principle that damages should include the prospec- tive profits of which the victim had been deprived, applied equally to in- ternational litigation. In the case of the Kate and Anna the arbitrator de- cided that the captain could have continued seal hunting, and that therefore Russia was not responsible for the prospective profits. USE TROOPS IF NECESSARY. Roosevelt Ordered the Cattlemen's Fences to Be Torn Down. Colonel John S. Mosby, special gov- ernment inspector at Omaha, Neb. says concerning his proposed raid on the cattlemien who have been fencing government lands: “There will be bloodshed in Nebraska over that fence mailter before it is done with, but I propose to have the fences torn down if I have to send a cavalry force there to do it. President Roosevelt hos as- sured me that the fences would be removed. He said: “This thing must stop or there will be bloodshed over it. And President * Roosevelt knows just as much about this Western land question as anyone in the country, for he lived in the West a number of years.” EUROPE’S TRADE ADVANTAGES. Can Sell Machinery in Cuba Much Cheaper Than Americans. Information has reached the state department at Washington that deal: ers in Cuba in machinery have a de: cided advantage in buying in Europe instead of in the United States, Be- cause they get lower prices, from 10 to 20 per cent, according to the class of machinery: lower shipping rates; quicker delivery and more advanp- tageous terms of payment. Eurc- pean manufacturers -are willing to sell on lime where Americans de- mand cash. A preferential tariff would not overcome these disadvan- tages. ALABAMA MILL'S WORK. First Time in This Country 12 Heats for Channel Made. The record for bar mills has been troken by the Southern Car and Fcundry Plant ,at Anniston, Ala. Twelve heats of 12-inch channel were made successfully for the first time in the United States. One hundred clannel, which is used extensively in 12 heats and rolled without accident. Previously, this particular size of channel, which is used extensively i building freight cars, has been made and shipped almost exclusively from Pittsburg and Youngstown. AMATEUR TRAIN ROBRERS. Hold-Up Near , Kansas, a Mess of It. Two men made an unsuccessful at- tempt to hold up the eastbound Cii- cago & Alton train, which left Kau- sas City. Mo., for St. Louis at the Alton station at Independence, a se- cluded spot in the easiern suburbs of that town. The train had stopped at the station and the two men, arm- ed wih rifles, boarded the rear of the train there. As the train was pulling out at 10 ¢’clock the men cov- ered a brakeman with their rifles and commanded him to throw up his hands. The brakeman refused to ohey. and one of the bandits shot him in the leg. The report of the fir- ing was heard by other trainmen, wko hurried to the rear of the train. The {wo robbers evidently were discon- certed by the turn events had taken and leaped from the train before it had gained much headway. They evi- dently were amateurs in train rob- bing. They were not masked, and the injured bral san was able to give the police a good description of them. but Make Jailed Her Generals. - Three genenald wede arrested at Lisbon, Portugal, by order of the queen regent for inciting the army to demonstrations against the govern- ment. The generals! Mad informed the ahsent king that the present cab- inet must go and Carles telegraphed his wife to deal with them according to her pleasure. The queen at once arrested their excdllencies. Portu- gal has not had such an energetic ruler for 20 years. (CATILE NEW ECLARD DISEASE IF NH, Cargoes of Live Beef on From Boston Will Quarantined, the Way Be Cable advices from Liverpool state that the establishment of a quaran- tine on cattle and sheep in the New England States and prohibiting their export from Boston have caused much excitement along the Mersey in Eng- land. The Mersey dock board derives a large revenue from the slaughter of Boston cattle at Birkenhead. Man- ager Lairages, of the board, says the restrictions will have far-reaching consequences, and that the cargoes of cattle now cn their way to Liverpool from Boston will be quarantined. In speaking of the effect of the depart- ment of agriculture’s ‘order, Dr. Samuel E. Bennett, inspector of the United States Bureau of Animal In- dustry, said: “The British govern- ment would close her ports to all our ships on slight pretext. All that they would look at is that there is a foot and mouth disease in the United States. It makes no difference whether the cattle are yarded in Mas- eachusetts or in Kansas or Iowa. It was only a short time ago that the Argentine Republic was shipping a great many cattle to Liverpool. Those ships were on the sea when the word was carried ahead that there was a cattle disease in the Argentine Repub- lic, and when the vessels got there they found every British port closed against them. Those ships had to put to sea, slaughtar their cattle in mid- ocean and throw them overboard. The ports were closed to them for three years. In three years’ time that wouid mean the loss of upwards of 2,000,000 of export cattle from the ports of the United States.” The Cunardar Sylvia, which sailed from Boston, Mass., for Liverpool, was booked te take 664 cat- tle and 750 sheep; Sagamore sailing for Liverpoel, 600 cattle, 1,074 sheep, and the Columbian, fcr London, 500 cattle and 1,200 sheap. Other book- ings of live stock for steamers leav- ing Boston, Mass., within the next ten days are as follows: Englishman, L.iverpoci, 331 cattle; Merion, Liver- pool, §00 cattle; Ultonia, Liverpool, n42 cattie; Armenian, Liverpool, 650 cattle, and 1,000 sheep; Kingstonian, London, 380 cattle and 1,800 sheep; Virginia, London, 425 cattle. The shipments figure up more than $45,000 in freight charges. New Hampshire has closed its doors to cattle from the other New England States. NATIONAL FOOD LAW. * Agreed Upon at Columbus Meeting, Will Be Introduced in Congress. The committee appointed at the last session of the National Associa- Joseph E. Rlackburn, state dairy and fcod commissioner of Ohio; O. H. Jones, dairy and food commissioner secretary of agriculture of Pennsyl- vania, met in Columbus, Ohio, and framed a bill for a national pure food law which will be introduced at the opening session of congress. The bill will provide for a food commis- sioner at $5,000 a year, a head of the chemical department at a salary of $2.00 a year ana an assistant com- miscioner at $3,000 a year, besides var-ous inspectors and examiners. Tie act will be remodeled on ths Ohio law. The bill will be introduced in the senate by Senator Quay of Pennsylvania and in the house by lepresentative Warner of Illinois. INCREASING M’KINLEY GUARD. An Army Post With Accommodations for Sixty-Five Men. Major Miller, U. S. A., quartermas- ter of the department of the lakes, visited Canton, 0O., to investigate the matter cf increasing the guard at the temporary tomb of the late President McKinley. It is expected to put the garrison on the basis of an army post. Hospital and dispensary facili- ties are to be increased and a new site selected to accommodate 65 men. To Build a Railrecad. The Indiana Harbor Company of Indianapolis has filed articles of in- corporation to build a railroad from Rast Chicago and Lake Michigan in a southerly dircction through EBenton, Newton, Warren, Vermillion and Vigo counties, to Sullivan county. The length of the proposed road is 21() miles. The capital stock is $200, 004. Celebrate Old Christian Movement. The Philadelphia Society will hoid commemorative exercises at Prince- ton, N. J., on December 6 to cele- brate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the formation of the American and Canadian Student Young Men's Christian Association movement, which originated in Princeton in 1877. Representatives from nearly all of the student associations in the United States and Cpnada will be present. Dissatisfied With Welsh Coal. brought up the St. Lawrence river in large quantities, going to Western points. Dealers are anxious to get it off their hands, as it is 20 per cent dust. Negroes to Sue for Franchise. The colored contestants of the new constitution who * were denied regis- tration in Richmond, Va., will civen all opportunity local registration boards judges at local precincts. Blanks for this purpose were being distribut- ed by John S. Wise, counsel for the contestants, | cept a transfer to. the United States. ticn of Dairy and Food departments, of Illinois, and Prof. John Hamilton, Welsh coal, ordered during the coal| strike for Montreal, Canada, is being | be | to bring suit] against every member of the conven- | tion, the governor, three members of | and three) LATEST NEWS NOTES. Colonel Thomas P. Ochiltree died of heart trouble at Hot Springs. Three negroes were sold at Lan- caster, Ky., under the vagrancy. act. Charles V. Herdliska, of Ohio, United States consul at Callao, Peru, resigned. = Franz von Lenbach, the famous German painter, is very ill with apo- plexy at Munich. - . John Dillon, at Chicago, the Irish parliamentary leader, has practically recovered from his illness. Oom Paul Kruger has asked Colon- jal Secretary Chamberlain’s permis- sion to return to South Africa. The United States Steel Corpora- tion will concentrate offices of sub- sidiary companies in Pittsburg. Anarchistic waiter in Brooklyn at- tacked the guests and attempted to kill the proprietor of a restaurant. S. H. Hayes, of Bloomington, IIl., was killed and his son fatally injured by a railroad wreck at Portal, N. D. Steamers arriving at New York and English ports report having en- countered fierce gales on the At- laatic. Governor Stone, of Pennsylvania, will appoint three additional mine in- spectors for the bituminous coal re- gions. Thirteen persons were killed and scores injured by the explosion of a boiler in the plant of Swift & Co., in Chicago, The grand jury at Honolulu has in- dicted William H. Wright, treasurer of Hawaii, for embezzlement of pub- lic funds. . Job Williams was hanged at Bridgeton, N. J., for murdering John S. Holmes and Catherine Shute on August 27. The United States war vessels Montgomery, Osceola and Uncas have arrived at San Juan, Porto Rico, from Culebra island. Panama canal negotiations were brought to a standstill by Colom- bia’s refusal to accept Secretary Hay’s latest oifer. Richard J. Cartwright, minister of trade and commerce of the Dominion of Canada, has been made a privy councilor of England. The decision of the miners of the Loire district to resume work ends the coal strike in France, which em- braced 100,000 men when it began, Lawrence Murphy, formerly treas- nrer of the Journeymen Stonecutters’ Association of New York, was ar- rested, charged with the larceny of $25,000. ! The arrest of C. T. Richardson in Texas on a barge of ingdurance swindling, possibly involving murder, was the result of a detective’s clever work. ; i Charles D. Bourcrat, Swiss minis- ter to Great Britain, declined to ac- THe has been thrice offered the change. The Bancroft bank of Bancroft, Neh, was robbed. of between $3,000 and $4,000 in cash, the safe being blown open. Much commercial pa- per was destroyed. Ex-Speaker Kelly, of the St. Louis house of delegates, charged with re- ceiving bribes, was arrested in Phila- delphia, having just arrived from Europe via New York. The Indiana supreme court decid- ed that the law providing for week- ly payment of wages is constitution- al, but that the law against “pluck me” stores is invalid. Safe blowers made a ‘successiul raid on the State bank at Stanford, a village ten miles southwest of Bloom- ington, Ill, and $3,000 was taken. The thieves escaped. A syndicate headed by Banker Seligman is trying to induce this gov- ernment to guarantee a loan which is proposed to be made to Venezuela to wipe out foreign claims. The Trades Assembly at Schenec- tady, N. Y., declared off the boycott against the Schnectady Railway Company. The vote in favor or rescinding was three to one. The Atlantic Coast Line Railway “company is considering the issue of $9,260,000 of new stock, in connec- tion with the purchase of control of the Louisville & Nashville road. A stay restraining the removal from office of Fire Chief Croker, of New York city, was granted by Jus- tice Fitzgerald pending a review of the evidence by the supreme court. J. E. Blackburn, Ohio food and dairy commissioner, will locate a truck and fruit colecny of Ohio farmers on a 5.000-acre tract he has purchased at Theodore, Mobile county, Alabama. J. Ogden Armour, of Chicago, will give $3,000,000 to establish institute of blcodless surgery as a thank offer- ing for the recovery of hig little daughter from congenital hip disease. Conductor Sweeney was killed and Motorman Frank Pitts, John Heck- man and Bertha Young were severely injured by a collision of a street car with railroad engines at Indianapolis. President John Mitchell, of the TJnited Mine Workers, is to write a book. It will deal with the question of capital and labor, and give the detailed history cf the 1900 and 1902 strikes. Three additional informations al- leging perjury were filed in court at St. Louis, Mo., against Charles E. Kelly, Adolph Madera and John A. { alias “Kid” Sheridan, former mem- bers of the house of delegates, under | indictment for alleged perjury and bribery. Grays Inn, a summer hotel in the White mountains, was burned to the ground, together with Woodbury hall and all outbuildings, including two cottages and the casino. The loss will be $175,000. DISASTER 10 ROYAL BLUE FLYER | CONGRESSMEN BRUISED. Famed B. & O. Train Runs Into Open Switch—Trainman Killed—Sev- eral May Die. The Baltimore & Ohio's famous “Royal Blue” limited, due in Pitts- burg at 7.30 Sunday mecerning, laden with a score oi congressmen and fa- mous men and rushing toward New Castle, Pa., over the Pittsburg & Western railroad at more than 50 miles an hour, dashed through an open switch and crashed into a freight on a siding at Carbon, five miles west of New Castle, before dawn Sunday. One man was in- stantly killed, three trainmen sewvere- ly injured—one probably fatally—and a dozen passengers mcre or iess hurt. The engine and one car were reduced to fragments. ‘The brakeman, whose carelessness caused the disaster, has disappeared. Engineer H. S. Brad- ley was killed. The injured are Wal- ter Miller, H. E. Thompson, Kent, O., fireman; Frank Miller, Cak Harbor, 0. fireman; and Miss Frances M. West. The flyer consisted of a heavy locomotive and six Pullmans, an ex- press car, a combination haggage and day coach, a ladies’ coach and two sleepers. The big train was late and running at frightful speed. In the rear sleeper was almost a carfull of congressmen, €n route to Washing- ton to attend the opening session of Congress. Among them were: Sena- tor J. P. Dolliver and Judge Walter I. Smith, Republican representative, both of Iowa; Representative John S. Snook, of the Fifth Ohio district, from Paulding, O., with his wife; John J. Feely, representative from the Second Illinois district, from Chi- cago, the youngest man in the House, and Representatives J. Ross Mickey and A, J. Hopkins, also of 1llinois; Representative Chester 1. Long, of Medicine Lodge, Kan.; Representa- {ive John 3. Stephens, of Verona, Tex., and Howell Jones, of Topeka, Kan., general counsel of the Santa Fe system, and one of the best known railroad attorneys in the country. The train struck Carbon siding at 5:20. 1t was nearly half an hour late. There was a frightful roar as it leaped through the switch and into the en- gine of the waiting freight. Both en- gines were almost entirely demolish- ed. Engineer Bradley, of the fiyer, was crushed beneath his engine; which turned ccmpletely over. His fireman, Thompson, tried to jump, but was badly hurt. The express and haggage car, and forward ddy coach were all smashed. The express car was reduced to fragments. How Miller, the express messenger, es- caped instant death is a mystery. The passenger ccach was partly tele- scoped, but none of the passengers seriously hurt. Half the sleeping passengers were tumbled rudely from their berths. There were cries for help from the women and a mad rush for the doors by everybody. Half the occupants of the two sleepers were bruised more or less. The coaches had not left the track, however, and after the scare was over all the oc- cupants returned. An hour after the distinguished travelers were on their way to Pittsbung. They were quickly switched through the Baltimore & Ohio’s local yards and whisked on toward Washington. OIL FOUND IN GAS WELL, Ontario, in the Throes of Oil Excitement. The excitement under which Ra- leigh, Ontario, Dominion of Canada, has been laboring since the recent discovery of oil has reached fever heat. The cap of a well which was sunk in the center of the business portion of the city four years ago fcr gas, hut which revealed neither gas nor water, was removed and the well was found to be full of cil to within six feet of the surface. Pumping of the well showed a steady flow of oil, and arrangements are being made to explore the find. The effect on the city is startling, and the price of property has already taken a big jump. Rigs are going up at Raleigh and Talbury, and the whole county of Kent is oil crazy. Chatham, MINERS GAVE $2,500,000. Total of the Assessment to Support the Strikers. When the United Mine Workers meet in National convention at In- dianapolis Ind., in January to pre- pare a new wage scale, Secretary Wilson will report that the amount of money given by them for the strike was more than $2,500,000. The con- vention last January changed the constituticn of tke organization, so that the cfficers are elected by the referendum plan. It is not likely that President Mitchell, Secretary Wilscn or Vice President Lewis will have any serious opposition, although it is rumored that W. D. Ryan, secre- tary of the Illinois miners, and J. P. Reese, president of the Iowa miners, might be brought out for Lewis’ place. New Process of Reducing Copper. ¥. H. Knox, of Pittsburg, is said tc be the inventor of a new process of reducing copper ore. George West- inghouse is interested in the inven- tion. which is being tested at Mr. Westinghouse’s mines in Vermont. Special Venezuela envoys ir Europe have taken steps to settle all foreign claims in a lump; the plan is to be submitted to the United States gov- ernment before it is broached to Euro- | The French government hag Dbe- stowed decorations of the Legion of| Honor on Generals S. B. M. Young | and John R, Brooke for their connec- | ion of the Rochambeau monument | in Washington. | William H. Murray, alias Howard, | was arrested at Dunlap, Tenn., by an | lllinois officer on a warrant charging Murray with the murder of a man pean cabinets. Faith Cure for Cow. An earnest the Black Rock police station, Ruffalo, N. Y., that his neighbor, Mr, Thonip- son, had left his cow unshelteregd in a lot and had refused to get a vet- erinarian for it. The police sum- moned Thompson, who explained that he was a Christian Scientist. of citizen complained at} re mp i a EE RI SS Ta pment, NATIVES’ QUEER IDEAS. Mindanaons Expected to See Amer icans Ten Feet Tall With Horns and Tails. Captain Pershing, with 60 men, has completed a march across the Island of Mindanao, Philippine Is« lands, from (Camp Vicars to Yligan, This is possibly the first time that white men have mafle the journey. Captain Pershing visited the villages of Madava and Marahui. On his way to Madaya he found the Moros were surprised to learn that Americans were not monsters 10 feet tall, with horns and tails. At Marahui he ad- dressed 500 Moros telling them of the friendly purposes of the Americans. Representatives of the Nato and Bocayutan tribes, which are now at war, asked Captain Pershing to arbi- trate the difference between them. The captain agreed to visit them and give hig arbitration on his return journey to Camp Vicars. No hos- tility was shown toward the column on the march. The constabulary in the Zambales province reports a re- pulsive incident of cruelty perpe- trated by Ladrones. Several columns of constabulary had been chasing the Ladrones with the assistance of friendly natives. Five of the friend- lies straggled from the column and were captured by ILadrones, who amputated the tongue and gouged out the eyes of one friendly and then sent him back to the constabulary. The fate of the other four is unknown. Fatality Season Closes. The season for hunting deer in the northern woods has closed. Fatali- ties have been unusually frequent in the woods this season, 14 men hav- ing been killed while hunting deer in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michi: gan. At least 11 others have been seriously wounded. CABLE FLASHES. The steamer Yare, which arrived at St. Thomas, Danish West Indies, passed Mont Pelee, Island of Mar- tinique, and reports that the volcano was then erupting violently. The Duke and Duchess of Con- naught, who are to represent King Edward and Queen Alexandra of Iingland at the coronation Durbar, have started on their journey to India. A supposed anarchist was arrested in the park of Huxinograde Castle, at Sofia, Bulgaria, on suspicion that he intended making an attempt to as- sassinate Prince Ferdinand of Bul- garia. The Rev. Dr. Joseph Parker, min- ister of the City Temple, London, Eng- land, known as the Henry Ward Beecher of England, and also “The Grand Old Man of the Pulpit,” died at his home Friday. ; A large delegation of farmers, un- der the auspices of the German Agri- cultural Society, is going to the United States in April for a three months’ tour, studying American agri- cultural methods. Colonial Secretary Chlamberlain and Mrs. Chamberlain sailed for South Africa on the cruiser Good Hope from Portsmouth. They were bidden farewell at the railway sta- tion by a large party of friends. The German steamer Acli, from Bal- timore for Hamburg, which passed Seilly island November 28, signaled that she had on board the crew of the abandoned British brig Blenheim, from Cadiz August 23, for Cape Cove. REdward F, Croker, chief of the fire department, of New York, and nephew of Richard Croker, was dismissed by Commissioner Sturgiss after a trial on charges of failure to enforce the law for properly safeguarding the Park Avenue hotel and other charges. Work at the quays at Marseilles, France, is at a standstill, owing to the stnike of the stokers, and 39 steamers lie deserted at their docks. Crews of steamers which have arriv- ed at various ports of France from Marseilles have left their ships in sympathy. The British award in the boundary arbitration between Chile and Argen- tina consists of a compromise be- tween the claims of the two coun- tries. The area in dispute amounted to about 58,374 square miles. The award gives Chile about 33,534 and Argentina about 24,840 square miles. The Czar of Russia has conferred the grand cordon of the Saint Alex- ander Newysky Order on Ambassa- dor Tower, and the French govern- ment has made Mr, Tower a grand officer of the Legion of Honor for his book on the “Marquis of Lafayette in the American Revolution.” President Castro, of Venezuela, in an interview said that after their de- feat at La Victoria Matos the revolu- tionists would nct venture to renew the struggle. He declared that the government would be magnanimous to the insurgents, and added that he would proclaim peace by January 1. A dispatch received by Minister of State Perdomo at Panama announces that all the political prisoners at Pogota have been sel free, and that Gererals Vargas, Santos and Focio Sota, respectively supreme war direc- tor and sub-war director of the revo- lution, have accepted the terms of the amnesty decree. Twenty-five Waziris killed, taken prisoners, two wounded, 59 towers and three villages destroyed, 6,000 head of cattle and 68 guns cap- tured is the net result of the British expedition recenlly sent against the rebellicug tribesmen of British India. The effect of this punishment upon the offending tribes is caid to have been salutary. : 202 The admiralty at England, handed down a = decision holding the North Lloyd Liner Kronprinz Wilhelm entirely to blame for her collision with steamer Robert Inghem during a fog conrt London, Fermin tha in ihe English channel last month. The court ; the Kronprinz was going at e sive speed at the tima the collision occurred.