sp ————— emg ee THIRTEEN PERISH IN MINE Explosion Occurs in Shaft Near DuBois, Pa. ONE MAN WAS BADLY INJURED Mine Officials Believe that a Blast of Powder Was Cause of the Explesion. | i | Twelve men were killed and one | man was badly hurt by an explosion | of powder in the mine of the Jefferson & Clearfield Coal and Iron Company at Eleanora, Pa. The dead are: George Kirkwood, leaves widow and six children; Adam Kirkwood, leaves widow and four ichildren; Joe Lodna, leaves widow and five children; Frank Schrum, leaves ‘widow and three children: Augustus ‘Wastcavitch, single; Martin Wast- ‘cavitch, married; Nick Froman- sky, single; John Fromansky, leaves widow aad three children; John Hop- kins, George Tansky, Leler Lote, John Taoli and Martin Rosack. Harry Mohney had his legs broken. Supt. Fleming, with a party, enter- ed the mine, but rescue work was slow, as the brattice work had been blown down and had to be replaced as they proceeded. At midnight the rescuers fouad Harry Mohney, a mo- torman. He was unconscious and did { a board of trustees, arms and not revive until morning, takea to the Adrain hospital. It was not until 9 o'clock next morning that any of the dead were found. An examination of the bodies indicated | that death had come instantly. Until the official investigation has been made it cannot be id what caused the explosion. The mining of- ficials are emph in the assertion that it was not caused by gas. claimed that this ally free from gas. of the officials that a charge of powd- er caused the disaster. Rue was in the west heading, near where the explosion took minutes before it occurred, and says there was not the slightest indication of the presence of gas. Thirty-two men were working in the mine when | the explosion let loose. Those who were uninjured had no difficulty in reaching the surface. STRIKERS RESTRAINED Federal Court Issues Injunction Against Chicago Teamsters. For the first time in Chicago since the strike of the American Railway Union in 1894, the government of the United States has been made a party to labor troubles. The government was brought into the teamsters’ strike by the issuance of an injunction by Judge C. C. Kohlsaat of the United States circuit court. The writ was asked in behalf of the Employers’ Teaming association, on the grounds that the organization is incorporated under the laws of West Virginia and is therefore under the protection of the federal court. The federal court order commands that all defendants refrain from any interference with the business of the Employers’ Teaming association, and commands the strikers to refrain from picketing, massing in streets with intent to interfere with the wagons of the complainant, and from interfering in any manner with non-union men in its employment. The injunction exerted a pacifying when he was | Fire Boss place, 35 | PENSION FOR PROFESSORS. Andrew Carnegie Donates Fund for Retired College Men. A gift of $10,000,000 by Andrew Carnegie to provide annuities for col- lege professors who are not able to continue in active service, was an- nounced by Frank A. Vanderlip, vice presideat of the National City Bank of New York. Professors in the Unit- ed States, Canada and Newfoundland will share in the distribution of the income of the fund. United States Steel Corporation 5 per cent. first mortgage $10,000,000 have been transferred to and steps will be taken at once to organize a corpora- tion to receive the donation. br, Pritchett, president of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, and Mr. Vanderiip have been selected by Mr. Carncgie to obtain data on the subject to be presented at the first meeting of the board of trustees, which will take place on November 15. Mr. Van- derlip sent the following letter to the press: “Andrew Carnegie has transferred to a board of trustees consisting, in the main, of the presidents of the most important colleges in the United States and Canada, $10,000,000 first mortgage 5 per cent. Steel Corpora- tion bonds. The purpose of the trust fuad thus created is to provide annui- | ties for college professors in the Unit- ed States, Canada and Newfoundland, who, from old age or other physical | disability, are no longer in a position to render the most efficient service. It is Mr. Carnegie’s belief that this fund will not only provide a dignified pen- sion system for a body of most worthy, self-sacrificing men, but that it will be of distinct value to the cause of education in offering an op- portunity to the trustees of a college to retire members of the faculty who have faithfully served the institution for many years, men with young, It § cient professars. is | shaft was exception- | It 1s the theory | DEATH OF FITZHUGH LEE | End Comes at Hospital in Washington | Following Attack of Apoplexy. Brig.-Gen. Fitzhugh Lee, United | States .army, retired, former consul | | general at Havana, and famous in the civil and Spanish-American wars, hav- | ing been a major-general in the .Con- | | apoplexy, influence, and there was less rioting | in the streets. made for interference with junction. the in- Young Lawyers in Pistol Dusl. R. L. Leatherwood and W. A. Den- nison, prominent young lawyers, en- gaged in a pistol duel in the street at Birmingham, Ala. Ten shots were fired, a negro drayman being wound- ed. He will probably recover. Lea- therwood is in jail. The shooting grew out of a feud, which began last year by each of the participants re- porting the other to the State Bar Association for alleged violatien of legal ethics. DEATH LIST IS 21 Laredo, Tex. of Tornado. Laredo is beginning to assume its customary appearance in spite of the great havoc wrought by the storm of Friday evening. Large forces of labor- ers have been busily engaged in clearing away the debris which filled the streets, and it is now possible to drive to any quarter cf the city. The number of dead remains at 21, of whom 16 were killed in Laredo and five in New Laredo. The storm made its from the southeast hood of Lampasas, from Laredo. wrought at Lamp s, althougl was no loss of life. When the struck Laredo the huts occupi the poorer al S were ra the wind increased in force the substantially = constructed build were unroofed and, fa many were demolished. King 2dward exchan visits with the French presiden was given a state dinner at Paris. Strikers Acpeal to Pres:dent. Appeal to President appearance Mexico, 72 haves 1+ Hh storm Roosev Governor Deneen and Mayor was made by the Chicago Federation of Labor on behalf of the strikers. A | held between Mayor | Punne’s peace committee and the Em- | ployers’ Association to effect, if gible, a peaceful solution of the strike, but without avail. Later a com- | mittee representing the unions met the peace committee and re ed with it the entire strike situ No plan for s ment was formed meeting was Twelve arrests were | qopiatives of the strikers and of the | WhitakerGlessner Iron Company took | part, it was announced that a basis of | settlement had been reached and that | the strike was at an end. Recovering from Effects in the neighbor- | miles was | that he | federate army, died at Providence hospital, Washington from a stroke of with which he was attacked early in the morning on a train from Boston. After General Lee had been remov- ed to the hospital it was evident to the attending physicians that his case was very serious, but they believed his strong vitality and will power would assist materially in a partial recovery at least from the attack. His condition remained fair during the day, but shortly after 9 o'clock he be- gan to grow weaker, his breathing became more rapid and his pulse, ter- minating in less than {wo hours in death. The end was peaceful and without pain, the General remaining conscious until within five minutes of his death. Gen. Lee was 68 years old, and al- ways had enjoyed robust health. However, he had led an exceptionally active life, being a veteran of three wars. Since he took up the work of the Jamestown exposition he had made his official residence in Nor- folk oLD EMPLOYES RETURN. Settlement of Dispute at Whitaker- Glessner Plants, Wheeling. After a conference, in which +the business men’s committee ‘and repre- The old employes, members of the Amalgamat- ed Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, are to return to their posi- tions at once. The strike has been running for the | past five weeks, and has been attend- ed by considerable disorder, the worst occurring when Strike Picket McKin- ney was shot by Hill Guard De Vaughn. plant, the 1,500 men. LEAVES UNION PACIFIC. strike has affected George Gould Resigns from Directer- ate to Build Competing Line. George J. Gould, president of Missouri Pacific and head of Gould system of railroads, the tee of the board of directors of the | Union Pacific, and also as a director of that company. Mr. Gould’s action the successful cf the $80,000,000 of Western railway bonds, the Western Pacific being es (Gould extension to San Francisco, this road paralleling the Central Pacific at'a distaace varying from 150 to 50 miles all the way from Salt Lake City to San Francisco. Mr. Gould 5 the Mis i a number fact that his Mi follows underwriting - directorate for Paific was in 3 | many ways a competitor of the Union | Pacific, he abstained from any. offi-| action in the Union Pacific's af- | gs. His position, however, Union Pacific has been anomal- and it was to put an end to such a situation that he resigned. ASTOR TO HAVE AERIAL YACHT Pleasure Aircraft the New York Millionaire. Col. John Jacob Astor, head of the Astor family in America, expects soon | to have the first pleasure airship ever Col. Astor has just word from Santos Dumont has solved the difficulties in making a perfectly safe and used. ived the way of dirigible airship; that work om the raft is well under way, and that ¥ A wild have it as soon as i to take to the air in e: RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AT LAST Russian Subjects May Worship in Their Own Way. CHANGE OF RUSSIAN POLICY Protestants and Followers of All Sects Allowed to Worshin as They Desire. and to replace such | vigorous and effi-| Including the Martins Ferry | about | the | resigned | membership in the executive commit- | Pacific | a member of | owing to the | with | is Being Built for | bonds for | | Real religious freedom, eccnferred | upon his subjects by Emperor Nicho- | las of Russia as an Easter gift, is an | historic event of the highest signifi- cance, in comparison with which the remission of millions of dollars of taxes to the peasantry, a long list of decorations and six pages of promo- tions of bureaucratic officials are hard- ly worth comment. Liberty of conscience has been repeatedly proclaimed and Procurator Pobedonostzeff, in his famous reply to the evangelical petition of 1888, contended that it existed in the em- pire. The fact is that as a trysting place all religions have been toler- ated in Russia, but none has been allowed to trespass upon the Ortho- | dox faith as enunciated from the mosque that faces the church on the Nevsky prospect in St. Petersburg. | People were free to remain true to the religion of their fathers, but were | forbidden to make proselytes. Every- body might enter, but none might leave the Orthodox church without forfeiting their civil rights, including the right to inherit or owa property. The Emperor's act will affect about 40,000,000 belonging to alien faiths, such as Jews, Catholics and Luther- ans of Poland and the Baltic provin- ces, the Protestants of Finland and the followers of Islam and Buddha in the Urals, the Crimea, the Caucasia, Turkestan and Central Asia. These figures are only approximate as probably millions who are nomi- nally Orthodox, secretly profess other | religions. Whole villages of Mussul- mens, baptized into the Orthodox com- to be permitted to return to Moham- medanism. Logically the Emperor's action in- volves a complete reversal of Russian policy—the seeking of national unity in conquering provinces through re- ligious unity. He has accepted tha axiom of the metropolitan Antonius, “You cannot hold strange children in the church against their will,” and recognizes in religious variety good for the nation, as well as for the church itself, a principle which, if acknowledged politically, would mean a’ federated Russia. AID FOR SOUTHERN COLLEGES. Chicago Man Distributes $135,000 Among Five Institutions. Dr. D. K. Parsons of Chicago an- nounced gifts to five Southern col- leges. The amounts donated range from $10,000 to $50,000 and aggregate $135,000. Dr. Pearsons announced that he had rejected requests of over 400 institutions in various parts of the country. “This will be all for six months,” was the characteristic declaration of Dr. Pearsons when he told of the gifts. The donations as as follows: boro, N. C., announced are Guilford College, Greens- $25,000; Piedmont Col- lege, Demorest, Ga., $25,000; Wash- ington College, Washington, Tenn. 25,000; Grant University, Chatta- nooga, Tenn. Seminary, 000. Dr. Pearsons, who is a retired busi- ness man, has made donations here- tofore aggregating over $2,500,800 to colleges and charity. Referring to the gifts made, Pearsons said: “The which I give these presents must raise $3 for themselves for every dollar I give them, and this must be ' done within a year.” $50,000; West Virginia Morgantown, W. Va. $10,- Mr. colleges to TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. President Roosevelt and party killed four more bears. | It is reported that the Russia sec- ond Pacific squadron, together with the Russian third Pacific squadron, | are near the island of Hainan. A statistician has figured that the toto losses in the May deal amount | to fully $10,000,000. He puts the Gates | pool down for only one-quarter of this, $2,500,000. E. S. Benson, auditor of the Seuth- {ern Pacific, with headquarters at | Houston, Tew., has been appointed general ‘auditor ‘of the Panama canal | and railway. John T. Dickey, a Democratic poli- i tician, is under arrest at Wilmington, | Del, on a charge of causing lottery [iekets to be removed from Califoraia | to Delaware. | Twelve labor leaders, prominently | identified with the Chicago teamster’s | strike, were indicted by a Grand Jury. | Each indictment contains six counts | and charges the men with conspiracy. Sir Henry Irving has opened an en- | gagement Drury .ane theater, sted by Maud Fealy, the London, a 5. Sir Henry showed no signs of his recent serious illness. of the chimneys of the execu- ces of the White House in 1 took fire and caused much but no dama ‘ buckets of water to extinguish the 1 being blaze. Promises an Assembly. Czar Iy will regarding the convocation | o frepresentatives of the people is | unswerving, and the minister of the effort for its yeror Nicho- at Tsar- marshal of no- government of the abeve to the no- that om munion by a ruse petitioned in vain | was done, | | Burnham, WEATHER RETARDS CROPS Too Much Rain in Texas and Drouth in Other States. The weekly summary of crop con- ditions, issued by the weather bu- reau, is as follows: In nearly all dis- tricts east of the Rocky mountains the week decidedly for germination and growth. interrupted work in Texas, Northern Mississippi, Oklahoma, Colorado and Northern Indiana, whilz drouth is becoming serious in Central and Eastern Missouri and rain is cool and was unfavorable Rains needed ins Montana, the Dakotas and | slow progress | New England. Rather with corn planting was made during the week, except in Missouri and Kansas, where this work advanced! satisfactorily. Preparations for planting have been actively carried on | in Nebraska, Jowa and Illinois. Further east none has been planted northward of the Ohio river. The cool weather has proved injurious to corn in the Southwest much having been killed in the South Atlantic and | East Gulf States by. the frost of the 17th. While the growth of winter wheat has not been rapid, the condi- tion of the crop continues promising | in all districts. Spring wheat seed- ing is now well advanced in the northern portion of the spring wheat region, and is practically finished in the central and southern portions. Germination and growth of the early sown have been very slow, and some injury has resulted from freezing in South Dakota and Nebraska. also need warm weather to promote growth), ' which. kas been generally slow, but on the whole for this crop is favorable. is well advanced in the more north- erly sections, except in the northern portion of the Middle Atlantic States and New Epgland, where slow pro- gress has been made. Fruit prospects | have been further lessened the past week valley, East Gulf States and on the Atlantic coast south of New peaches suffering most. In the States of the Upper Missouri Valley and in the lake region and New: England the fruit outlook i$ more promising. during PENNSYLVANIA REPUBLICANS | State Convention Nominates Candi-| dates and Adopts Platform. The Republican state convention met in Harrisburg for the purpose of nominating three candidates for the Superior Court and one candidate for state treasurer. The renomination of the Superior Court Judges, Charles E. Rice, of Luzerne; George B. Orlady, of Huntingdon, and James A. Beaver of Center, and the nomination of J. Lee Plummer, of Blair, for state] treasurer, were generally conceded weeks ago, and they had no opposi- tion when the convention met. It was the largest state convention the Re- publicans have ever held. The platform applauds the adminis- tration of President Roosevelt; com- mends the action of the fifty-eighth | congress in making liberal appropria- | tion for the navy, ane expresses ap-| preciation of part taken in congress by | the Senators and Representatives from the Commonwealth. Senator Penrose is thanked for his ability and | skill as an organizer in the conduct! of the state Governor Pennypacker is esty, independence and wisdom, the legislature is commended for many wise and discreet enactments during the session. The platform further says: We congratulate the people upon the successful management of the state campaign. finances under Republican adminis- | tration. The most of our revenue is derived from the taxation of cor- porations. The Republican party re- pealed the state tax on real estate and on. horses and cattle. The only property now taxed for state purposes | in money at interest. No other state has such a record. The banking house of J. I. and A. Kelley of Cambridze Springs, Pa., failed to open its doors Friday morn- ing, causing much surprise, as the in- | stitution was supported w w b bz b | institution was supposed to be in goed shape. ORDERS 250 LOCOMOTIVES B. & O. Awards Contracts Involving More Than $4,000,000. Official announcement was by the Baltimore company of contracts being closed for 250 locomotives that will cost more than $4,000,600. The American Lo- comotive Company has received the contract to build 210 consolidation type freight locomotives, and 35 Paci- fic type passenger locomotives. Williams & Company | (Baldwin Locomotive works) re-| ceived the contract for five switching locomotives. The contracts call for the be- ginning of delivery in August and all are to be delivered by December 1. made Thirteen Entombed. Thirteen miners were entombed and ! probably killed by an explosion in the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Coal Com- pany’s mine near Wilburton, Okla. Their bodies may not be recovered for several days. A tornado swept over Carlisle, Ill. causing $200,000 property damage, but no lives were lost. —————————— | CHADWICK SALE CRUSH | Bargain Counter Crowd Gathers and: Police Are Called. | auction-mood crowd | gathered at the Knickerbocker Art Galleri s, New York, where the sale | of the e ts belenging to Cassie L. Chadwick is in progress. Police were the crush. It was goods A frenzied to avate day at a big dry summoned Arkansas, | Oats | the - outlook | Seeding | throughout the Ohio | England, praised for his hon- | and | the | & Ohio Railroad | | WOUNDS OFFICER: | Lieutenant | in the | rivals | Schwab's | sian adodralty | startle MINERS DROPPED TO DEATH Cage of Delaware and Hudson Co. Shaft Falls 400 Feet. ending April 24 averaged | THE CATCHER FAILED TO WORK | The Bodies Were Horribly Mangled Mass | and Entangled in a of Debris. Ten miners fell to their death in Coal Co., near Wilkes- ugh the breaking of and Hudson barre, Pa., thro a hoisting rope. The shaft is nearly 1,000. feet, and | the men were being lowered to thelr work when the accident occurred. All mass of flesh and bone. territory and others hurried to Crowds of excited persons the | scene. gathered around the mouth of shaft and the usual | scenes were enacted by | children. The mine cage was the third to be | lowered. Engineer William Cunning- | ham was at the throttle, and ten men, | miners and their laborers, boarded the cages The engineer ery was working perfectly, and that he had his engines under control and | i | | | women and slowed down to stop at the Hillman { vein landing, 350 feet from the sur- { face. Without warning the rope | snapped and the carriage with its hu- man load -d, 400 feet to the Baltimore vein. A rescue party lowered on the | other side of the shaft fownd the bod- ies mangled in a horrible manner. There were several hundred men in the mine at the time of the acci- dent but they escaped from the shaft | | | through other openings. Supt. Foote says he is at a loss to i account for the accident. An. ex- { amination of the rope was made bef | the first cageful of workmen was | lowered into. the. mine, and it was | found to be all right. The carr | had all the safety appliances and its speed should have been checked be- | fore it reached the bottom, but as far as can be learned the “catcher” did not work. two others English-speaking miners. Charles Hochel and Frank Barmey are the names of the English-speaking miners who were killed This is the .third accident of a similar nature that has occurred in the Wyoming region within six | months. In each case the rope at- | tached to the carriage broke and the | men cn the vehicle were dashed to | the bottom of the shaft and instantly killed. | TRAIN THROWN INTO RIVER | One Killed and Seven Injured in West | Virginia—Ten Hurt in Ohio. A passenger train struck a tree at! Cass, W. Va,, and the entire tr. thrown into the river, | Engineer C. H. Dean was killed and Fireman Culp badly injured. Five passengers were slightly hurt and one | probably fatally, Uriah Byard of ! Marlington. A westbound passenger train was wrecked, near Marion, O., by through a “derail,” 20 miles an hour. were slightly hurt. in was while going about Six passengers Fussian Lcsses at Mukden An exact statement of the losses iin all categories in the _hattle or Mukden from February 19 to Mare 14, shows that the Russian amounted to two generals taken prisoner, 1,985 staf officers and 87,667 greatest part, about 55,000, we wounded. Gen. Karkevitch, the chief of staff, calculates that other losses aside from wounded were as follows | 15,uvu killed, 7,000 to 8,000 known to have heen captured and 10,000 to 12.- 000 missing, of whom and were drivers, who and other men, of whom the a several thous- sanitary and com- non-combatants. The Iron Trade. The Iron Trade Review says: is heard now of dange in the pace of the iron trade, and the lull of re. cent weeks has contributed to a healthy situation. Nothing definite | has yet developed as to purchases of pig irea by the Steel Corporation for May delivery, though merchant furn- i aces expect an inquiry for some amount with the next few days. The fact that the Carnegie St eel Company | s blast furnace | has 100 per cent. of it capacity active this wool and that to do this an old furnace of relatively i small capacity was blown in, indie ates steel works | how the keeps up. pressure from KILLS SELF | Shoots Lieutenant Intoxicated. Captain W. A Raibourn, Twenty- gainth Infantry, United States committed suicide at Fort after making a murderous assauyl William H. Point, Army Cantain While Army, { on als f { the Twenty-ninth Infantry. Point thy shot twice by his superi er, one bullet penetrating the left 1 and { another inflicting a deep fl¢ wound right leg. Schwab Gets Russian Contract. American again tr plete success wh superiority over the h has crowned the of Charles M. Schwab, of Pitts. burg, to St. Petersburg. Mr negotiations with the foreign hs in ump nr mp com- visit Rus- have arrangement m of | a number of fori » of bhattle- | ships of a type \ will iage | Eight of the dead were Poles and | 30 feet below. | running: | + si | | | 1 | thither after | five | 30, and mY, ARABS ON THE WARPATH Tire of Turkish Yoke and Are In Rebellion. The situation in Turkish Arabia has become critical. It develops that only a thousand of the Turkish troops sent to the relief of Riza Pasha reached Sanaas and these fled sustaining a defeat at the hands of the insurgents. Riza Pasha’s troops, 6,000 strong, encountered the Arabs in great force miles south of Sanaa on March after a sharp encounter most | of the troops consisting of Syrian re- the Conyngham shaft of the Delaware | were dashed to the bottom, a mangled ave Mine officials from the surrounding the | heartrending | ‘who down their arms or de- serted, the remnant of the Turks managing to reach Sanaa the same evening with only 50 camel loads of supplies. The chief-of-staff, Izzat Pasha, was killed and seven guns were abandoned and taken posses sion of by the Arabs, also captured 200 camels laden provisions and large quantities and amuaition. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. The sultan’s third brother, Ahmed kemal, is dead. A long and heavy earthquake shock was experienced at Guayaquil, Ecua- serves, laid with of rifles | dor. { at Hackensack, N. J., says the machin- | | Milwaukee, s convicted of first degree killing of Joseph Mrs. Antoinette Tolla wa murder for the Sonta. The defalcation of former President Bigelow of the First National bank, is now said to be more than $3,000,000. Miss Alice Pearburn, of New York, 25 years of age, fell from an upper window of the Hotel De Ville at Flor- ence, dying immediately. In the running down of a street car by a and Northwestern rail read engine near Onalaska, Wis., 10 persons were seriously in- jured. At Jackson, Mich. fire destroyed the Withington ‘& Cooley trip ham- | mer shop within the State prison | fight to recover an Less | | | Doug! as | | so@ Terr Joe u: ste. Territory—Idaho fine, 20@ 21c; Disnvy fine, 17@18¢c: fine medi- um, 20@21c; medium, ; low medium, 24@2 ne, 18 @1%c; heavy fine resulted in an | May: 3 | tween the two ware | | Secretary .{ Mr. Hay walls, causing a loss of about $75, 000. In a battle with burglars. at Lan: caster, Ont, Herman von Metzke, teller of the Merchants bank, shot ang killed one of the outlaws. Minister Bowen will be recalled from Caracas to produce whatever proof he | has of the grave charges made by him against Assistant Secretary of the state department. An alleged shortage eof $39,000 ex- ists in the office of the tax collector of Los Angeles and Edward PF. Smith, the collector, has been sus peaded from office. The Pressed Steel Car Company has declared its regular quarterly divi- dend of 13% per cent. on preferred stock, payable May 24, to stockholders of record May 3. Books will closa and reopen May .24. Robbers blew open the safe in ths postoffice at Northeast, Pa. and secur- ed $300 in cash and $200 in stamps. | They made their escape. Harry Williams, eight years olg, | was killed by a Baltimore and Ohio railroad train Briallee, wyp w f £ fired train at Bellaire, O. The body of William Wood was found in a meadow near Meadville; Pa. A bullet hole in the head and a revolver lying at his side told the stery of self destruction. Wood was about 35 years old., James Flemiag, of Wheeling, W. Va., was found dead in the rear of a saloon at Torento, O. His remains are being held awaiting a claimant. Charles Bernhardt, a German miner, was crushed to death by a fall of slate in a Barnhill mine near Dennison, O. Germany gave notice to the United States that the tariff agreement Dbe- t nations would end March 1, 1906. This was done to ex- clude America from adv antages under treaties with other nations. Eagineer James McClain and Brake- n W. N. Duncan were killed in a wreck on the Big Four railroad near Indianapelis, Ind. At a meeting Loomis : of the directors of the Wabash Company. held in New York, Frederick A. Delano was elect- ed vice president in charge of all missariat corps employes and cther ! the Wabash-Pittsburg Terminal com- panies. To carry on more effectively their estate in the an- thracite coal fields of’ Pennsylvania, alleged to be worth $33,000,000, the Dye heirs of Indiana and Ohio will form a stock company. Many families are interested. They are heirs of Andrew Dye, who died in 1835, own- ag large tracts of Pennsylvania land. Boston Wool Market A period of active contracting pre- vails in the wool market. Leading quotations follow: Qhio and Peansyt i- vania XX and above, 33@34c; X, 30@ slc; No. 1, 36@37¢c: No. 2, 37@38¢c; fine unwashed, 24@25¢c; quarter blood, unwashed, 30c: thr ree-eights blood, 30@31c; half blood, 20@39c; unwashed del laine, 27@28¢c; unmer- hana. 28@29¢: fine washed de- { laine, 36% @37c. Michigan fine un- washed, 22@23¢; quarter blood un- W shed, 29@30c; three-eighths Siege 50c; half blood; 28@29c; unwashed ia 25@26ec. ; Kentucky, Indiana, ete, three-cighths and quarter blood, medium, 19@2 Secretary Hay Doing Well. The Associated pre a private dispatch from heim saying that the 8 has received Bad Nau- condition of is very good. second thermal after 1. 3 aiter lunch of State took his drove out Hay bath and A flareback on the hati] burned #hree gunners, b ly « ~ ut 1 nearly cau di aster 6t P Membe Fash ventior manuf their d fashion time if should season, be ret: ing th ward, ¢ the ide materia real fic Ages, t the nat decked flowers and me tificial and the industri FITS ner nessalte NerveRe Dr.R.H. Hamb servants Mra. Wi teething, tion,alla The er by a bri Piso’s ( #284 COug Avenue, | The N body of The FT gasoline cific dem: users. 1 free from from $50 catalogue: dress De; Hartford, The yi largest was 924 double t last ten