Tbihaae KIONAPERS REMOVED 10 PENNGILVANIA James H. Boyle and Companion Waive Extradition. CROWD HOOTED AND JEERED Will Use Blackmail Indictment If Parties Are Not Convicted for Sharon Offense. Cleveland. —With hoots and jeers ringing in their ears, James H. Boyle and his wife, arrested here as the kidnapers of little Wiiiie Whitln, of Sharcn, Pa., were escorted by pclice to an Erie train, just before it left for Mercer, Pa. This practically closes the case, so far as Cleveland is concerned, as fur- ther action will be taken by the Pennsylvania authorities. However, the Cleveland police have a club over the heads of the Boyles in a joint indictment returned, charging James H. Boyle and Helene Boyle, alias Faulkner, with blackmail This eharge is based on the payment of $10,000 ransom by J. P. Whitla for the recovery of his son. Willie. This indictment will be used by the local officials in the event that the case in Pennsylvania fails of conviction. Sheriff William Chass, of Mercer eounty, Pa., and Chief of Police Crane, of Sharon, arrived and Immediately began proceedi ings for the retur $1} of the orisoners. The Cuyahoga coun ty officials waived their rights to the Boyles and the latter informed Chief Kohler that they would not fight ex- tradition to the Keystone State. Instead of taking the prisoners to.[ Mercer, Pa., they were lodged in the Allegheny county jail until the Mer- cer county authorities shall want them. CLAIMS $15,000 REWARD Man Who Tipped Police Off to Kid- napers After Pennsylvania's offer. Cleveland.—Patrick O'Reilly, pro- prietor of the Ontaria street saloon in which James H. Boyle and his woman companion concealed them- s8el-es after detectives searched their apartments in The Granger hoping to escape at night, and who gave the po- lice information which led to their capture, ‘prepared affidavits claiming the $15,000 reward offered by the Btate of Pennsylvania. The affi- davits will be sent to Harrisburg. It was O'Reilly who ‘drew from Boyle and the woman arrested later with the plumber, the story of their desire to get out of Cleveland with- out being seen by police. O’Reilly. who had known Boyle for six years, was surprised to note Boyle's ready spending of money and drew him in- to telling much that roused O’Reilly’s suspicions. © The saloonkeeper Hn- formed Police Captain Shattuck, who with Detective Wood. made the ar- rests in O’Reilly’s saloon. ! The police have given O’Reilly eredit for the capture. He it was who made possible identification of the prisoner who was identified speed- | ily by Willie Whitla as “Jonesy” the | kidnaper. WHITLA GETS BACK RANSOM Money Paid for the Release of Little Son Now Safe in Sharon ; * Bank. Sharon, Pa.-——Guarded by seyeral private detectives in plain clothes. James P. Whitla, father of the an-| ducted lad for whose ransom $10,009 was paid, returned home Margh 25.8 5 bringing with him the money which | was recovered when James Boyle and | 2 his wife were arrested in Cleveland. | The package of bills, still marked as they were said to have ben when paid to the abductors by Mr. Whitla, i were taken to the safety deposit de- partment of the Sharon Savings and Trust Company which kept its doors open until Mr. Whitla reached here | about 9 o’clock at night. The money was carefully placed in a safety de- | posit hox to remain till if. may be needed as evidence. in the kidnaping trial. MAY BE CHICAGO WOMAN Would-Be : Relative Identifies Mrs. Boyle in Cleveland. Clevelond, O. — That the woman identified by Willie Whitla as ane of his kidnapers is Anna McDermott of | Chicago, was declared by a man whe | gays he is her uncle, a wealthy ves- | sel owner of this city. This man | saw the mysterious prisoner known as the wife of James H. Boyle of | Sharon, whom Willie declared carried him away from the Sharon school housé. He visited the police sta- tion and unknown to the woman watched her and heard her voice. “She is the daughter of my half sis’ ter,” he told the police. \i/znes Cut to 1905 Basis. I 21 Pa.— The companies | iron furnace in the Le- | have decided to reduce irpace men 10 per cent. This reduction will apply to 3,000 or 4,000 worke The date of the re- duction will prob ably vary with the different companies. The proposed reduction will.pnt wages back to the level of 1905. TWIN CITIES TO WED high vallzy wages of Minnesota Lower House Passes Bill | for Consolidation. St. Paul, Minn.—Representatives Kneeland, as joint authors, presented a bill in the house of representatives | to consolidate St. Paul and Minneap- | ®lis. The bill provi | les for appoint- | ment of a joint co ee to draw up | — a bill to be prese: to the 1911 leg- fslatu The bil s passed un- | der a suspension of the rules. | wolsky i ter Smith, a tin w BATTLE WITH INDIANS Three Bite the Dust and Die, While Two Survivors of the Posse Are Saved by Fiight. Oklahoma City, Okla.—In a pitched battle at Hickory Ground between a posse of five officers and twenty Creek, Indians of the Snake clan, Of- ficers Edward Baum of Checotah, Jerman Odam of Checotah and Frank Swift of Muskogee, were killed. Frank Jones and William Carr, other mem- bers of the posse, escaped with in- jury and fled to the settlement, where the news of the battle was telephoned to Sheriff Odom. Governor Haskell has the State troops. The men had been sent to serve a warrant on the Indian chief, charg- ing him with inciting the Indians and negroes to insurrection. This was done in the hope that the arrest would prevent any hostile action on the part of the Indians. When the men approached the chief’s cabin about 6 o'clock, twenty guns were leveled at them and two officers fell dead when the first vol- ley was fired. The others retreated. Swift was wounded in the second vol- ley. Deputy Sheriffs Carr and Frank Jones escaped but went to Pierce, a station a mile from Hickory Ground, and telephoned Checkota. Deputy Sheriffs Ransome and Patty of Me- Intesh county, recruited a posse and with twenty-one deputies started to- ward Hickory Ground. Fifty men have joined the posse at Muskogee. Men are coming from all parts of the surrounding counties. Further fight- ing occurred later and it is reported that three other deputies were killed. Their names have not been learned. It is said that Crief Crazy Snake has called on his men to arm them- selves and fight. There are more than two hundred Indians besides negroes in the Hickory Ground set- tlement. The place is one. of the wildest in Qklahomad. Five companies of State militia, under command of Colonel Roy Hoff- man, marched against the redskins. Crazy Snake is personally leading ‘the band, which is entrenched in the Hickory hills, seven miles from Hen- ryetta. called out COAL OPERATORS DISAGREE Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania Owners Battle Over Ship- ping Rates. Cleveland.—Coal operators of Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania fail- ed to agree on a schedule for the equalization of shipping rates to lake ports for the three States in a meet- ing here. Ohio and Pennsylvania operators held out for an advance in the differ- ential. West Virginia operators op- posed the plan. Accusations that many West Virginia mines were oper- ated by railroads and that indepen- dent mine owners had secret shipping agreements were made. But one more attempt will be made by the operators to.agree on the rates. A meeting will be held in New York. If an agreement is not reached then, the matter will be put into the hands of the interstate com- merce ;eommission for..adjustment. WAR CLOUDS DISPELLED Seérvian Press Says Action Will Be Everlasting Disgrace to Nation. Vienna.-—A complete agreement has been reached by the powers with re- gard to the steps to be taken at Bel- grade on the basis of the proposals made by Sir Edwarl Grey, the British foreign secretary, to Baron von Aeh- rnehal, the Austro-Hungarian minis- ter of foreign affairs, for the settle- ment. of the giSisuiy betwetn Aus- trian and Seryja.: Belgrade. —The Starving newspapers acknowledge that Servia has failed in the contemtion8 against the action of Austria-Hungary, and gccuse M. Is- , the Russian "foreign minister, of treachery. They declare that the action of Russia in acknowledging | the annexation of Bosnia and Herzeg- ! ovina by Austria is only a misfortune for Servia, but an eystiassing disgrace for mighty Russia. Vatican Gallery Sash. Rome. — The pope inaugurated a new vaticap picture gallery’ on the ground floot. of the palace, near the Belvidere - court yard. = The gallery comprises six balls, * in’ which ‘are aathered the vatican’s collection from hirteenth century, inereased ‘by 3 ions from the Late¥an™palace. The cost of carrying out the work was mere than $60,000. His holiness was in good spirits and looked well Summary Punishment. Pueblo, Mex.—According to advices received here from the town of Jeh- uitzingo, this State, the recent muni- cipal riots there resulted in nine per- | scns being killed and 30 wounded. Immediately following the authorities caused the arrest of 11 of the chief participants and executed them with- out trial. Many other citizens were banished. from the town, Marines Restored. Washington.—The last remaining vestige of the Roosevelt order taking maries off the battleships and cruisers of the United States navy was swept away when President Taft directed that an order be issued restoring the marines to exactly the same duties that they performed prior to their be- ing order ashore. Salvation Army for Russia. St. Petersburg.—General William Booth commander-in-chief of the Sal- vation Army, is at present in St. Pe- tersburg and is negotiating with the government for permission to estab- lish a branch of the Salvation Army in Russia. He is being strongly op- posed by the holy synod. Shot Without Provocation. Without the slightest warning, Wal- , was perhaps igner at Follans- fatally shot by a fore bee, W. V. ABDUCTORS IDENTIFIED BY WILLIE WHITLA Recognizes His Captors at: Once and Greets Them. TAKEN BEFORE THE GRAND JURY Charge of Blackmail- Based Upon Receiving $10,000 for the Ran- som of Stolen Boy. Cleveland, 0.—Willie Whitla identi- fied the man and woman held on sus- picion- by the Cleveland police as the persons who kidnaped him from the schocl at Sharon, Pa. and ‘held him for the $10,000 ransom, which was paid by his father, Attorney J. P. Whitla. Willie said the man, who gave the name of James H. Boyle, was the one who took him from school and carried him through a tbrtuous route to Cleveland, then to Ashtabula, then back to this city and placed him in ‘the house in the East End, where he was held until the money was paid. Willie also declared that the woman was the one who cared for him at the house where he was retained, and who acted the part of a nurse. oyle said the. woman was his wife. he de- clared, soon after her arrest, that her identification would cause a sensation in Sharon. When the identification was completed, Mr. Whitla would say nothing regarding the woman. He said he knew Boyle slightly. Grand Jury Hears Story. Immediately after Willie Whitla had seen the man and woman at the Central police station, they were tak- en to the county court house and there appeared before the grand jury. They were cxamined for the purpose of aid- ing the jury in its attempt to find an indictment against the two prisoners. The charge, under the laws of Ohio, against the man ana woman, if an indictment is found will be blackmail. This is based upon the payment of the $19,000 ransom by Mr. Whitla. As Boyle and hig wife are held by the police on suspicion only, an. in- dictment will afford a mreang of plac- ing them under arrest formally. Then they can be held indefinitely. Immediately after leaving = the grand jury room, Mr. and Mrs. Whit- la, Willie and the janitor of the Shar- on school which Willie.attended, left for Sharon. As the prisoners had not waived extradition they were held here for | two or three days until the necessary papers for their removal. to Sharon can be arranged between the gover- nors of Ohio and Pennsylvania., ARCHITECT TO BE TRIED Judge Severs Huston’s Case from That of Sanderson et Al. Harrisburg, Pa.—The case: of Con- tractor Jchn H. Sanderson, ex-Auditor General W. P. Snyder and ex-Super- intendent of Public Grounds and Buildings Shumaker were severed by Judge Kunkle from that of Architect Joseph M. Huston in the Capitol con- tract conspiracy case and continued indefinitely. Huston is to stand trial alone, but ‘because of the severance and conse- quent necessity for rearrangement of his defense the Court granted a post- ponement of his trial from April 5 to April 13. The severance was granted to San- derson because it was showfi that he cannot stand the strain of a trial with- out fatal result, and to the others because of the condition of Shumak- er’s health and the disadvantage to which they would be put by Sander- son being cut off from them. FOUR KILLED, FIVE HURT Workmen Meet Death in Ruins of Chicago Butterine Plant. Chicago:—Four men were killed, five were seriously -injuredsand‘a dozen others narrowly escaped injury here when a part of a 35-foot brick wall, left, standing after a fire a month ago, which destroyed the butterine plant of Swift & Co.;- crashed down upon them without warning.’ The men were working in the ruins of the Darling & Co. fertilizing plant, which was partly destroyed by fire January 6. They were laying foun- dations for a new building from: the wall of the buttgrine plant when the wall fell, burying. the vic- tims in tons of brick. It ig thought that the wind blew: the wall over. Admiral Beresford Retires. London. — Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, commander of the channel fleet, hauled down his flag at Ports- mouth March 24, thus bringing to an end 50 -years of active service. He was given a rousing sendoff by some 10,000 enthusiastic friends and admir- ers, who. had gathered arcund the dock yard:gates. The admiral is now a free lance, and it is expected that he will take an active part in the agitation for a big navy. : es Wabash Orders Cars. : The Wabash-Pittshurg Terminal Railway placed an order with the Standard Steel Car Company..for 500 steel freight two-hopper cars, the ap- proximate cost of which Will be about $500,000. ‘The contract calls for early delivery. Bondits Raid Pullman. Denver, Col.—Two highwaymen en- tered a sleeping car in the Denver & Rio Grande yards at West Denver, held up six of the seven passengers, the conductor and porter, and got | away with about four hundred dollars | in cash. The only woman passenger, | Mrs, N. R. Hussey of Booth Bay Har- bor, Me., was not molested. The robbers then marched the passengers, conductor and porter Into a compart- ment at one end of the car, closed the door and escaped. few feet HAVOC WROUGHT BY STORM Havy Damage Is Done in Denver. Twelve Persons Killed and Many Hurt. Denver, Col—Eight inches of wet clinging snow, following several hours of steady rain, did damage in Denver estimated at from $200,000 to $300,000, and cut off wire communi- cation with the outsice world for many hours. Every wire of the Western Union and the Postal Tele- graph Companies and every toll line of the telephone company was carried down by the heavy snow, along with hundreds of poles. The city’s fire alarm system was almost destroyed, 6,000 telephone wires in Denver were rendered useless and hundreds of trees in the parks and along the bou- levards were damaged. Dallas, Tex.—Twelve persons were killed and a score injured by a tor- nado that swept over the northwesern part of Wise county. Several small towns were visited by the storm, but none was destroyed, although each suffered serious damage. Starting at Crafton, in the north- eastern part of the county, the storm passed to the north of Decatur, the county seat, and struck several small settlements, of which Slidell is the center. MINERS APPEAL TO TAFT Executive Board Instructed to Conduct Negotiations Looking to Peace. Scranton, Pa.—A resolution to ask President Taft to appoint a commis- sion to arbitrate differences was adopted by the miners’ convention and referred to the executive boards to put it into effect at their discretion. Reaffirming the demands already presented to the operators, the min- ers voted to remain at work after April 1 until the district executive boards of the hard coal fields of Pennsylvania continue their efforts to gtt an agreement satisfactory to the men. The miners were instructed by the convention to continue at work until such time as they are otherwise notified by the official representatives of the three anthracite districts, and the executive boards were instructed to negotiate an agreement upon such basis as the boards in their judgment believe the conditions warrant. DEATH SENTENCE FOR 22 Russian Military Tribunal Passes on Political Prisoners. St. Petersburg.—Twenty-two death ‘gentences passed upon political pris- ‘oners were confirmed by the supreme military court. Fifteen of these were convicted of an attempt to escape from the Irkutsk prison when a pris- on guard was killed. At the first trial the court martial acquitted eight of 16, but the su- preme court set aside the verdict. One of the number, a woman, escaped. The other prisoners, whose sentences were confirmed were convicted of be- ing implicated in a shooting affray at Irbit, in which a policeman was killed. COKE SITUATION BETTER Several Hundred Addition Ovens Are Placed in Operation, Connellsville, Pa.—There was a slight improvement in conditions in the Connellsville and lower Connells- ville coke regions last week, several hundred additional ovens being placed in operation. The total production for both regions, however, fell off 1,500 toms, while aggregate shipments increased 20 cars. Less stock was piled up at the independent market ovens than for several weeks. and hence there was no increase in the visible supply of coke at such plants. About 1,000 cars of unconsigned coke are still on tracks. CANADA WILL HELP Will Build British Dreadnought, but Control Warship. Ottawa, Ont.—The Canadian Gov- ernment will offer naval assistance to Great Brttain. The sentiment among the Canadian Ministers is that the Dominion should build a dread- nought, or possibly two of them, and control their movement, probably us- ing them in the training of a naval militia. Should war break out these vessels would be placed at the disposal of ike British naval authorities. To Open Coal Road. : New York.—It was announced here that the official opening of the Vir ginia railway, H. H. Rogers’ new coal road, will take place on April 3, when the first trainload of coal to .be brought from Deepwater, W. Va., will arrive at the terminal at Sewalls Point, near Norfolk. Mr. Rogers will take a party of friends to Nor- folk to witness the opening. The road is 443 miles in length and has cost” approximately $40,000,000. Kidnaping Pictures Under Ban. Detroit, Mich.—All moving picture shows in this city and the theaters which show motion pictures were no- tified by the police that they would not be permitted to show any scenes hereafter of the kidnaping of chil- dren. The order is an outgrowth of the stealing of Willie Whitla and the publicity which it has been given. Brownsville Court Is Named. Washington, D. C.—Secretary of War Dickinson announced the retired army officers’ court of inquiry to in- vestigate the discharge of the battal- ion of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, col- ored, at Brownsville, in 1906, as pro- vided by the Foraker resolution. The officers follow. Lieutenant General S. B. M. Young, Major General J. P. Saeger, Brigadier General Theodore Schwam, Brigadier General Butler D. Price and Brigadier neral John M. Wilson. Tm 5 ES et re rece SUSPECTED KIDNAPERS CAUGHT IN CLEVELAND Officers Arrest Mau and Woman With Money in Their Possession. $9,790 FOUND ON WOMAN Shots by Officer Bring Man to Man to Standstill When He Started to Run. Cleveland, O.—In the arrest here of a man and woman haying $9,790 in their possession, the police believe they have captured the kidnapers of Willie Whitla.- In fact, the woman in the case, who is somewhat befud- dled, admitted that she had been re- sponsible for the kidnaping. ‘When placed in custody at the Central po- lice station she said to Captain Nor- man Shattuck: “I am the one who planned the whole thing. There will be trouble for me and h—— in Sharon.’ Beneath the woman's skirt was found $9,790. All of it but $40 was bound in packages with the original slips, placed on the money when Whitla took it from the bank, still around it. Captain Shattuck and Detective Frank Wood made the arrest in the East End of the city. When near the police station the man broke away from Detective Wood and ran toward an alley. The policeman fired two shots from his revolver into the air and the man stopped. The woman made no attempt to escape. The woman appears to be well ed- ucated and is refined in manner. She says she spent 15 years of her life in a convent in Pennsylvania, but de- nies that she has ever been in trou- ble before. Both the man and woman deny that they know the name of the other. They admit they are not man and wife. According to the po- lice, they were intoxicated when placed in custody. Due to their con- dition, they were not questioned close- ly by the police and were locked in separate cells. Both will be ar- raigned in police court on the charge of abduction, according to Detective Wood. THREATENS TAFT'S LIFE “polish Voter” Says He'll Kill Can- non and Whitlock Also. Toledo.—A writer signing himself “Polish Voter” has written a letter to Speaker Cannon threatening the lives of President Taft, Speaker Can- non and Mayor Brand Whitlock of’ Toledo. The letter was sent to Mayor Whit- lock by Speaker Cannon. The writ er complains about the hard times, declares that his relatives in Rus- sia have killed three bad men, and announces that he will kill Taft, Cannon and Whitlock. He makes Cannon an unusually generous prop- osition in giving him a year in which to reform before death. TWENTY-YEAR SENTENCE Negro Given Maximum Penalty for Shooting Wife. Pittsburg.— Twenty years in the penitentiary, the maximum sentence, was imposed on Robert Smith of ElN- zabeth, by Judge Francis J. O’Con- ner when a jury found the prisoner guilty of murder in the second degree. This was Smith’s second trial. He was convicted of murder in the first degree, but secured a new trial. He shot his wife on the streets of Eliza- beth July 5. PROTEST AGAINST FREE ORE Iron Men Meet and Resolve to Mem- orialize Congress on the Subject. Youngstown, O.—Independent pig iron manufacturers who met in Cleveland adopted a formal protest against the free admission of iron ore and reduction of iron and steel scrap duty from $4 to 50 cents. A memorial to this effect is now being prepared to send to congress. Practically all independent blast furnacemen west of the Allegheny mountains are behind the movement. Reward for Kidnapers. Harrisburg, Pa.—Governor Stuart issued a proclamation offering a re- ward of $15,000 for the arrest and conviction of the Whitla kidnapers. The proclamation says: “By virtue of the authority contain- ed in a concurrent resolution of the Senate and House of Representatives, approved the 22d day of March, A. D. 1909, and in pursuance thereof, I, Ed- win S. Stuart, Governor of the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania, do here- by offer a reward of $15,000 for the apprehension and conviction of the party or parties who abducted William Whitla of the county of Mercer, State of Pennsylvania.” Will Fight Reduction. Chicago.—At a meeting of lumber- ‘men it was decided to send a com- mittee of 10 to Washington to fight the Payne bill, which contemplates a revision of the lumber duties. Dele- gates from other States will join the Chicagoans in Washington. The lumbermen declare that the Payne bill discriminates against the West, ‘North and South, in favor of the East. Three Indiana Counties Dry. Indianapolis.—Montigomery, Green and Benton counties voted dry in county option elections. This makes 57 of the 22 counties of Indiana dry, 35 by county option elections and 22 by remonitrances. $500,000 for Summer Home. Washington.—A bill was introduced by Representative Taylor, of Colo- rado, appropriating $300,000 for the construction of a summer home for the President at Glenwood Springs, in that State. OKLAHOMA FIGHTS TRUSTS Co-Operative Association Will Bulld Packing Houses and Han- dle Grains. Oklahoma City, Okla. — Asserting that the time has come for the people of Oklahoma to fight to rid themselves of the so-called trusts, which they as- sert control the output of grain and cattle of Oklahoma and make practic- ally their own price, an experimental co-operative company, known as the Grain and Stock Growers’ Associa- tion, has been organized by a branch of the Farmers’ union in Oklahoma. The headquarters for the new asso- ciation will be at Enid and J. Y. Cal- lahan, formerly Oklahoma’s territorial delegate to congress, has been elected to head the organization. The new enterprise will have the direct Back- ing of the Farmers’ union. association will, it is stated, erect. a packing plant. To finance the plant the association will accummulate a fund of about $500,000. Shares in it will be sold at $1 each and no person may own more than one share. In the handling of Oklahoma grain the association proposes to build a co-operative elevator at every grain shipping station in the state and to sell its grain for export. MORE GRAFT INDICTMENTS Six Men Held on Testimony Produced Before Grand Jury. Pittsburg.—Four indictments against six persons, one of them a prominent banker, and two of them councilmen whose names - have not been heretofore been mentioned in the published graft testimony, were re-¢ turned by the grand jury which has been conducting the investigation. The men indicted are: Frank A. Griffin, vice president and director of the Columbia National bank, charged with perjury. Dr. William H. Weber, select coun- cilman. Dallas C. Gyers, manufacturer. John F. Klein, common councilman. The three last named are charged jointly with conspiracy to bribe coun- cilmen to vacate South Seventh street. Charles Stewart, select councilman, charged with having solicited a bribe of $2,500 from the German National bank Henry L. Bolger, saloon keeper, charged with aiding and abetting the solicitation of a bribe. GETS ALMOST TO POLE Lieutenant Shackleford and Party Re- turn After Near-Successful Trip. London.—Lieutenant BE. H. Shackle- ton, of the British navy, commander of the Antartic expedition which re- turned on the barkentine Nimrod to Invercargill, New Zealand, although he did not achieve his object, suc- ceeded in getting within 111 miles of the pole. The Nimrod expedition left Eng- land in July, 19G7, and after reach- ing the ice fields and making the most elaborate preparations, the main expedition started on the sledge jour- ney, which occupied 126 days and traveled 1,708 miles southward. The explorers reached latitude 88.23 and longtitude 162 East, which was esti- mated at 111 miles from the pole. ROOSEVELT STARTS JOURNEY Great Throng Bids a Noisy Farewell to Former President and His Son. New York.—Waving farewell with his black slouch hat, his smiling face beaming in the morning sun as he stood on the captain’s bridge of the steamship Hamburg, ex-President Theodore Roosevelt, now America’s most distinguished private citizen, sailed away on the 23d for his long- planned African “safari.” He left his native shores amid the cheers of thousands of persons that swarmed the Hamburg-American line pier, the whistles of countless river craft and the thunderous reveberations of the ex-president’s salue of 13 guns from Forts Hamilton and Wadsworth. Wool Market. Boston.—In the absence of heavy domestic stocks, local wool transac- tions are confined to the foreign prod- uct, while in both lines the demand exceeds the supply. Dealers are eagerly awaiting the arrival of the new clip and advices from the West show an advance to 23 cents for Mon- tana and Dakota wool on the sheep’s back. Very little of the old stock is available and transactions are con- fined to small lots. There is a steady demand for pulled wool at firmer prices for all grades. The leading domestic quotations range as follows: Domestic wools: Ohio and Pennsylvania. fleeces: XX, 34@35c; X, 32@33c, No. 1 washed, 38@39c; No. 2, washed, 38@39¢ Pig Iron by Electricity. Ottawa, Ont.—The first electric fur nace in the world for the production of pig iron on 2 commercial scale has been installed at ILudvika, Nor- way. Dr. Haanel, director of ‘mines, was informed of this. The installa- tion. will include {wo high pressure furances, 2,500-horsepower each, and two steel furnaces, 600- ‘horsepower each, and all the furnaces will be: sup- plied with two phase current. Kerosene was first used for light. ing purposes in 1826. Shortest Bill Presented. Washington.—Representative Coud- rey, of Missouri, has just introduced what is probably the shortest bill so far presented during the present ses- sion of congress, yet if enacted into law, it would probably attract more attention than the Sherman anti-trust law. After the enactment clause the entire bill is as follows: “That from and after the passage of this act all corporations shall pay a license tax of 1-10 of one per cent om their cap- ital.” In opposition to the packers, the amgh Hall, of it cannc address forthe drug. ne of . Was! hol whe velop ir stitutior ternslly ful It a suifaces dred dol for circu CHENEY Sold b ‘Fake | “Som Whe: a fine ¢ in the court “of ev there the cle science Mrs. Wi teething tion, all: The whole of whi use in rope. Itch Banitar Ther world cheste Fe om Bargain: vour R. World's |