UNITED SliltS HAS POWER 10 N! CANAL TITLE VALID. TURN MINERS BACK. Operators Refute to Discharge Com petent Men to Reinstate For mer Workmen. Attorney General Gives Result of In vestigation of the Panama Co. Objections Answered. Attorney rirnoml Knox has derided Hint ir ilu United States should ac rept tin- offer if the now Panama Canal Company, submitted last s; :l.if. fir the sale if tho ranal for J t i ii, ii. i i.i, it would receive throimli t? ps . ;im in Interest a valid and un-Im-imlx r.vl title to tho property. Mo has formally submitted the opinion to PrtMiIeiu Ueoscvclf. Tho opinion taken up tho principal object inn;? whlrh have boon niado In this coun try l J tho title proposed to ho given to the United States as follows: 1 -That the ivw Panama Canal Com pany h;is net power to s, II tho ra ta! nnd railway pri.poriV. 2 -That tho liquidator of the oid Panama Canal Company has not power to consent to such nalo. .'. That tho French courts have not power to authorize the liquidator nnd the new company, or either of them, to inter into the sale. Tfce history and nature of French companion of the hind In question are explained nt length. His investigation shows that tho new Panama t'ninl Company Is quite sol Vint, nnd rhoro Is no law forbidding it to noil. Tho liquidator of the old company, when lie turned over tho assets to tho new company, stipulat ed for tid per cent of the profits of the canal when finished. It is held that tho new company has full power to dispose of the assets of the con cern nr.d consequently to consent to tho sale of tho tin per cent which Is a part of those assets. He holds that no French court or other au thority has nower to declare any French ftatute void. As to tho ob jection that Congress has authorized a purchase from tho new company only, the opinion says: "In view of the condldon of the title tho purchase will be from the new company, and the consent of the liquidator will bo at. mnst a waiver of rights as to prop erty transferred to the new company. What Congress wants is a (rood title from the owner of certain specified property, the owner being supposed to be. and being admittedly in part, the new company, nnd it is entirely Justifiable to buy from the owner, al though tho principal ownership should be found not to ho in tho com pany. Whether we believe it Is in tho new oompnny or tho old com pany, so long as it is not ono of both, srms to me altogether immaterial, since both Join In the proposed sale." TliA nnlnlnn rlra.-a fta .fnllnwa: "For the reasons I have given I am of opln- ion that tho United States would re ceive a good, valid and unencumber ed title." iWI'JSll VOTED OR PEACE ACCEPT ARBITRATION. DIED IN HIS 107TH YEAR. Did Not Retire From Business Until He Was 100 Years Old. Simon Raphael, for many years a dry goods merchant in New York city, is dead, in his 107th year. Ho was born in Russia in 1796 and came to this country when young. For 50 years he was a prominent business man snd resided in Manhattan. Ho retired from business on his looth birthday. He Is said lo have been tho oldest man in the state. A son six daughters, 45 grand-children and 28 great-grand children survive hlra. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. Renor Don Emlllo de Ojeda. the re cently appointed Minister of Spain to the United States, hns formally pre sented his credentials to President Roosevelt. The annual -report of Rear Admiral Kenney, paymaster general of the navy, devotes considerable space o showing that there is a shortage of officers for tho work. President Roosevelt has accepted an invitation to be present at the an Dual banquet of the Chambor of Com merce of New York December 11. Ho will make an address. Acceptances were received by tho President from all the members of the coal strike arbitration commis sion. Each one indicated his inten tion of being present at the session. The state department has no knowledge of the departure of any ex pedition from this country for the Torrltory of Acre, and it is said that If any such hns gone it has no official standing. Rear Admiral Merrill Miller, at present commandant of the Mare , Island navy yard, is to be relieved at the end of his tour of short duty some time this winter by Captain Bowman H. McCalla. Hiram B. Ware, father of Tension Commissioner Ware, died Tuesday of oia age. Tne commissioner and Mrs. Wore loft Washington, accompanying the body to Ft. Scott, Kan., whore the funeral will occur. Mrs. Ada Gilbert Dennis, the dresa maker who was brutally assaulted at her home December 9, is in a dying condition. From the effects of the blows on her head she had become paralyzed and ber mind Impaired. The Portuguese government has asked the privilege of sending a naval expert to this country to examine the mechanism of the submarine boats now in course of construction for the United States government. The request has been referred to the Judge advocate general. President Roosevelt has begun the preparation or nig second annual message to Congress. It Is said on good authority that he Is determined to force legislation upon the antl trust question at the next session of Congress. Postmaster General Payne and Sec rotary to the President George B. Cortelyou, attended the meeting at Canton. O., of the trustee of the William McKlnley Memorial Associa- . tlon. The meeting was held for the purpose of. selecting a site for the memorial to rresiaent wcruniey. Employes of the different collieries In the Shenandoah region whoso places were filled by non union men during the strike will not be rein stated. This fact was made plain to tho men when they repotted nt tho collieries fer work. Superintendent Adam Hoyd. of tho Philadelphia nnd Pending Coal and Iron Company, snid that his company would take care of nil men who helped them during the strike, nnd that nnyone who molested the workers would be discharged nt once. Vnder these eondlllotiH a par tial resumption of activity was mado Thursday. At nil Inn. two of tho col lieries steam wan raised for tho first time in six months. It will take at leait two weeks before nctlve mining can be commenced. It will be n month before 75 per cent of the p:is-r-lblo output is being mined. The most serious situation Is tho reten tion of the non-union men who work ed the pumps nnd assisted in saving heavy losses nt the mines by flood ing. It was for these men the engi neers, firemen nnd pumpmen that a fight wns made at the Wilkesbnrre convention. Those who have re ceived the edict of their employers, that their places nre taken, are dis gruntled. The local unions have been applied to, but they nre powerless, unless they repudiate the advIA- of their president. Superintendent Boyd In discussing tho matter said: "To nil men who applied to us for work we told them that In tho instances where the places had not been filled by competent men positions were waiting for them. Wo propose to tako care of all the pumpmen, engi neers and firemen who nliied us dur ing the strike regnrdles of circum stances. To employes whose places nre filled wo have not refused em ployment in the mines entirely, but hnve refused them the places that they formerly held. If they so do slro they enn go to work In other positions. When the l.ehlgh Coal and Navigation Company's miners re ported for duty in the Panther Creek valley at Tamnqua they were met by the officials and told their services were not needed nt present. At one of the collieries the men were stop ped by the guards, who refused to al low them to report at the colliery of Pee. The company posted the follow ing notice: "Any person working1 for this company guilty of Ill-treatment or molesting any man who hns worked during the lnte strike, or of abusing any member of his family, will bo Immediately discharged." All the individual operations In this sec tion resumed full handed Thursday. At Wilkosbarre the resumption was not as general as wns expected. Un looked for difficulties were encoun tered In the shape of water and ac cumulated gas, and dangerous roofs, Which threatened to fall nnd entomb the workers, were nlso discovered In many of the collieries. The mine su perintendents would tnke no chances. anil the mining of coal was put off until all parts of the underground workings can be made safe. Front reports received from the entire an thracite region the number of mine3 In operation is given as a little leas' than two-thirds of the totnl number, but the output of coal was less than half the normal. The Delaware. Lackawanna & Western Company iook ir,e jeait in production, us col lieries are in better shape than tho mines operated by the other largo companies. About one-half of tho mines of tho Delaware & Hudson I All Objections' Overcome and the Mine Workers' Convention Voted to Go to Work. LATECJ NEWS NOTE. Ill 10 KILLED GEN. CUSTER With a shout that fairly shook the convention building the representa tives of the 117,000 mine workers who have been on strike since last May officially declared off at neon nt V.'llkesbnrre tho greatest contest ever waged between capital and labor, nnd placed all the questions Involved In the struggle In the hands of the arbi tration commission appointed by the President of the United States. While tho large nnny of mine workers nnd their families, numbering approxi mately n half million persons, nie grateful that work in to bo resumed, tho striker have still to learn what their reward will be. President Roose velt has taken prompt action in call ing the nrbltrators together for their first meeting on Friday, the miners hope they will know by Thanksgiving day what practical gain they havo made. The vote to resume coal min ing was a unanimous one, nnd was reached only after a warm debate. The principal objection to accepting the arbitration proposition was that no provision was contained in the scheme to take caro of those men who would fall to got back their old positions or would be unable to get any work at nil. The engineers nnd pumpmen get hotter pay than other classes of mine workers, nnd they did not wish to run the risk of losing alto Bother their old places and bo com pelled to dig coal for a living. This question camo up nnd was argued right up to the time the vote wns taken. No one had a definite plan to offer to overcome the objection, nnd the report of the committee on reso lutions recommending that the strike bo declared off and that nil issues be placed in the hands of tho arbitra tion commission for decision was adopted without the question being set tled. A few moments before adjourn ment, however, a partial solution was reached when a delegate In the far thest corner of tho hall moved that the problem be placed in the hands of the three executive boards for solu tion, and his suggestion was adopted After Mr. Mitchell had notified Presi dent Roosevelt of the action of tho convention he sent out tho official announcement that the slrlko was off. It was ns follows: You are hereby officially .notified that It was unanimously decided Tuesday by the delegates attending the special convention that nil mine workers should report for work Thursday morning, October 23, and that the Issues which culminated In the strike should be refetreil for ad justment to the commission appointed by tho President of the United States. Wo nre aiihorbod by the executive of ficers of districts Nos. 1, 7 and 9 to caution nil these who resume work to exercise more thau usual care in or der thnt accidents to lire and limb may be avoided. Owing to the condi tion of the mines after an Idleness of five months there wll be great danger when work Is resumed. We aro prompted to offer this advice by the fact that at the close of the strike two years ago mnny more accidents and deaths occurred than take place when the mines nre operating regit lnrlv Ilendmi&rlers here will be kept I open nt Wllkesbarre until after tho award of the arbitration commission is announced. President Roosevelt soon as notified of the action of the convention Immediately issued a call un i I. mnnl EVI.Inv Company are working. Tho mines of " "m. the Susquehanna Coal Company at """ " Nantlcoke are in operation, but only Iha niinni. Im-nla .mild l.n m A n 1 I DOCTORS ACCU8ED. the lower levels contain considerable water. The l.ehlgh Valley Coal Com pany operated about one-hnlf of Its mines with a full force of men. The Lehigh ft Wilkesbnrre Coal Company mined coal in several big mines. Tho Kingston Coal Company started up two of Its four collieries. Only two of the 28 collieries In the llaleton district resumed operations. ThoBe operating are tho Hazle mines, break er of tho Lehigh Valley Coal Com pany, and the Upper l.ehlgh mine of the Upper Lehigh Coal Company. ENFORCE PROHIBITION LAW. Federal Court in Iowa Endeavors to Reach an Express Company. The Federal grand Jury at Keokuk, la., has Indicted tho Adams Express i burled in tho basement of one of Company for violation of the interna! the colleges; four bodies were found Grand Jury Brings Crime of Body Snatching Home to Physicians. The grand Jury at Indianapolis, lnd., returned 25 Indictments In the grave robbery cases. Five Indict ments havo been returned against physicians who are charged with com plicity In tho "body-snatching busi ness" for failure to keep record cf bodies received, among whom is Jos. C. Aloxander, demonstrator at tho College of Physicians and Surgeons. From evidence given by Rufus Can trill, the chief of the gang of ghouls, K0 bodies have been stolen from cemeteries during the last year. Tho ghouls say two of the physicians ac companied thrra on several of their night trips. Ten bodies were lounu revenue laws. Persons at Birming ham, la., received C. O. D. packages of whisky from consignors In Illinois and paid collections and charges to the express agent. The grand Jury and District Attorney Miles held that the C. O. D. method constitutes a salo of goods by tho express com pany to the consignee and requires retail liquor dealers license. Tho case grows out of efforts of people in Iowa communities to prevent tho sale of liquor, and the efforts of dealers to circumvent the Iowa prohibitory law. Tho latter Is badly crippled by a de cision of the United States supreme court that' interstate traffic In original packages cannot bo ' stopped by a state law. Jarred by a Meteor. The village of Baptist Hill, a few miles from Canadalgua, N.Y., was prae tlcally wrecked es the result of the exnlosion of what is believed to have been a meteor. While the sky was securities clear there was a sudden terrific ex plosion, followed by darkness and a strong smell of sulphur, Windows were broken, trees and telegraph poles demolished and holes burned in clothing of many of the residents. in BacliB on the street, wnere me hard-pressed ghouls had dropped them: one body was concealed for two days in a saloon and 30 were found In cold storage in an Ice-cream factory in Louisville. Wants to Prohibit the Bible. J. U. Billard has brought suit agnlnst the board of education at Topeka. Kan., to compel removal of Bible reading from the public schools. Utllard's son ' via expelled from school bocauso he refused to give at tention whon the Bible was being road. Bonds Held at Home. The report of Judson W. Lyons, register of the treasury, for the year ended June 30 shows that of $782.- 924.430 of United States bonds ouly $16,02!2,8.M) is hold by foreigners, of which fis.&is.uuu are on aeposit in this country as insurance company t.one rr.bber held up a Northcrtl Pa cific tr:n and killed the engineer. F.ltz.bdh Cady Stanton, the wom an's suffragist, is dead In New York. TIio King "of Slam Is soon to visit thl ; country as tho guest of the na tlrn. The Kentucky Home for Confeder ate Veterans was dedicated at Pewee Valley, Ky. . t Striking molders nt St. Catherines. Ont., have received concessions ami returned to work. Two negroes are lynched by mob nt Hempstead, La., niter being legally tried and convicted. The Nntlonnl Splrltualls-ts' associa tion, In session at Boston, decided to send out missionaries. Governor Nnsh, of Ohio, signed tho municipal code lnw passed by tho extra session of Legislature. Karl Whitney nnd Claude O'Brien have been Indicted nt Lexington, Ky., for the murder of A. U. Chlnn. The Iowa supremo court decided thnt tho lite of. a child under 5 years of age cannot exceed $5,000 In value. The crown princes of GirmanV and Great Britain are expected to visit America during St. Louis exposition. There has not been a enso of yel low fever in Havana for a year, some thing unprecedented in the history of that city. Government employes In Washing ton hnve started a movement to se- sure a 10 per cent increase in all salorles. Tho Czar of Russia has pardoned all students who were guilty of partici pation in revolutionary street dlu tin bnnces. The General Assembly toX the Knights of ljtbor meets In annual convention nt Niagara Falls, N. Y., on November 11. Harvey Lilly was shot and fatally wounded at David City, Neb., by burg lars, who had previously poisoned his bloodhounds. Jay Cooke, the aged financier, wns again stricken with congestion of th brain at his home on Gibraltar island, near Put-In-Bay, O Fire at Buffalo destroyed the freight shed of the Union Steamboat Company on the marine slip. Loss estimated at $75,000. The charred body of Captain Laure nce Gollne was found In the ruins of the Union Steamboat Companyj freight shed at Buffalo. Archbishop Elder, of Cincinnati, has ordered a recitation of a decade of the rosary after each mass for dl vine guidance of strike arbitrators J. M. McKnlght, former president of the German National bank of Louisville, has been convicted for the third time of embezzling the bank tunds. The Philippine commission is Invlt lug bids for street railway, electric lighting and other franchises in Ma nlla, the bids to be opened on March 5, 1903. The resignation of J. I. Tarte, mln Ister of public works, of Canada, has been received and accepted by Sir Wilfrid Laurler, the premier of the dominion. Mrs. Nettle Hall died suddenly at Lagrange, lnd., Just after being told that she was under arrest, charged with the murder of her father, Geo, Nicholas. A burglar entered Hardin college. Mexico, Mo., and robbed several girls of money nnd latin teacher's resistance forced him to flee. Santiago, Cuba, alarmed over the league said to be to this country to Buddhism. Russell Sage, the New York finan cier, makes two of his clerks trus. tees so that In case of his -death col lateral for loans may not bo tied up in estate settlement. The McKlnley Memorial Assocla tlon at a meeting In Canton, reported about $000,000 in subscriptions and located the projected monument in Westlawn cemetery. Chicago & Alton officials notified all shop employes of the system that the request for a general advance In wages had been granted, commencing November 1. President Lillian M. N. Stevens, of Portland, Mo., and the other officers of the National Women's Christian Temperance union, were re-elected by the National convention Ono hundred and fifty bicyclists from Switzerland are now In Canada and have applied to the United States governmont for permission to bring In their wheels free ol amy, Throughout the anthracite coal re gion the information that the Mine Workers convention at Wllkesbarre had declared off the strike at an end was received with rejoicing. State Labor Commissioner William Blackburn, of Washington, will rigid ly enforce the female labor law of that State, forbidding tne employ ment of women over 10 hours a day, Total exports of specie from the TOMAHAWK WAS USED ' Former Sioux Chief, Now a Minister, Tells the Story for the First Time. Rev. Philip Dnlorla, a former Sioux chief, now an F.plscopallnn rector of Flora, S. t)., who Is attending tho council of the Protestant Episcopal church nt Philadelphia, Pa., said: "It was only a year ago that I lenrned the rue story of tho death of General George A. Custer. I had been the means of converting n stoical old warrior named Appearing F.lk. Un like most Indian braves, ho wns not much given to boasting of his ex ploits, but ho was ono of tho mnst valiant of tho tribe, nnd I knew that ho had taken many scalps. Appear ing F.Ik became a fervent Christian, and one day, nfter he had been bap tized nnd taken Into the church I asked him to tell me of his exper iences in tho battlo of the Little Pig Horn. Every Sioux wants lo know who killed Custer, nnd of course, that wan ono of my first questions. I wan surprised when tho old man replied: I did. We had surrounded the last cluster of soldiers, when my pony was shot from tinder me. hen I got on my foot ngnln I discovered thnt I wns wounded. Suddenly n man In blue loomed up In front of me. I knew thnt he wns a chief, but I uui not know who ha was. He was sway ing like a drunken ninn front exhntis- tlon and loss of blood from ninny bullet nnd arrow wounds. I foiled him with my tomnhnwk. and then sat on his body to be sure that I shouldn't bo robbed of my rights. In order to make double sure 1 took the revolver from the holster of tho dead man nnd stuck it In my belt. I didn't scalp the man becauso his head was shaved and I wns ashamed to. 1 know posi tively," conflniiued Mr. Dnlorla, "that tho revolver taken by Appearing I-.lk was subsequently identified as Cus ter's, and, so far as I have been able to lenrn from my people and from what I have rend In your hooks, he was tho only man In the command who had his head shaved." Appear ing Elk died last spring. DOZEN LIVES LOST. Workmen In Chicago Refinery Caught In Disastrous Fire. Fire broke out shortly before mid night Tuesday In a Btignr refinery in Chlcngo, and before it was under control three big buildings, one n 14-story skvseraper, wns destroyed nnd 12 or more persons lost their lives. The plant of the refining com pany consisted of three buildings, the drying house, seven stories In height. the main refinery, 14 stories high, and another structure of four stories. The fire started in the drying house. The men employed In the three lower floors of the drying house ran for tho doors and windows as soon ns they had knowledge of the fire, and all of them succeeded in reaching the open air. Tho men on the seventh floor crawled along the window sills In an effort to reach a place of safety. but with the exception of two men all those who attempted to reach safety in this way made up their mind that it was certain death, ond went back into the burning building. These two Jumped and were killed. Four others jumped from the win- Jewelry before the dows on tho fourth flour and were horribly crushed, but living when taken to the hospital. A rigid Inves tigation for tho cause of the fire has been instituted . RESUMPTION INCREASES DAILY. 1 Non-Union Miners Driven From Work-Mahanoy City Miners to Strike Against Blacklisting. An Increase In the working force nt the different collieries is notice able each dny slnco the strike was declared settled. The different mines are being gotten in sliapo for work ing. A camp for the con! and iron po licemen relieved of work has been eKnbllslii d at Eist Mahanoy Junc tion. A large force of nn-n were at work at mines In th" Wllkesharro pert Ion clearing up the mln-s for general resumption. It Is said tn-nrly all the collieries nre now In iibapn for work, and thnt there will lie a honvV output of coal. Flfieen hun dred employes of I.etitz & i':)., who operate the Pr.rk Place colliery near Mahanoy City, vol' d to po out on strike a-rnln until the hlneklislld hands nre reins luted. When the col liery resumed about r.-i employes, prominent mel.ers of the mine wre-v. ors" organization, were te!d that ther-f was no more work for ti.em un der the rnmpnny. By cen.-'-nt of I resident B.ier, of the Reading rail road, speaking for the ronl opera tors, and President Mitchell, of tho United Mine Workers, President Roosevelt has nppoltited the seventh member of the rfrike arbitration comn'lfi'ion. Mr. Wright will coti' 1 1n no to net ns recorder of the com mission. The board of seven cannot now be embarrassed by a tie vote on any proposition, as It. might be were there but six members. The Mill Creek Coal Company, near Mahanoy City, which emplovs about S.f.uti men, has withdrawn the objectlonrble pa per which It had prepared for Its em ployes to sign and in consequence tho i csmr.pt ion of mining will take place nt Its Buck .Mountain and Mtlinn col llerles. Hnlf a doen nott-tinloiilsts emrliii'ed nt the Oxford colliery of the Profiles Coal Company nt Scranton v!c beaten and chased half a mile through a gangway by a crowd of union employes of the Delaware I.nekrwnnna & Western Company's. pellevue colliery, which It adjoins, Tho mines open ono into the other In a number of places, and at ono place the employes of both make use of the same gangway, or main road. The union men waylaid the non-unionists at a cross-cut, and after beating them, chased them until the fugi tives renched tho mule barn in tho Oxford workings, where they sought refuge: 100 deputies on guard at col llerles In the shamokin region during the strike wero sent homo under or ders to be ready to return to d'lty on n minute's notice. Strikers are quiet, but object strenuously to working un tier non-union fire bosses and tngl p.eers. PITT8BURQ Grain. Flour and Feed. WhMt-JCo. re.l ..$ OS ll)aro. v ni Corn-No. follow, mr 7-1 No. t j.illoir, abelled M Mixed eiir '.) Onlt-No. (white 87 ho. white ie Hour Winter potent J on . rnnr-f etralslit winters llsy-No. Itlinoihr Ill W 'lover No. 1 IStM Foeil-No, 1 white 11,1(1 toa mw iiiowii iniiiiiiiniia is no residents are propaganda of a sending children be converted to I CABLE FLASHES. THE MAHKETS. TO ST 'i M ro IT Wl 9 00 llrnn. hulk Straw-Wle hi Out Dairy Products. Hiltrr-tltfln crenmerf h ., in 1 1 t.iiiiti v roll ( li'i-e Ohio, new iSCIT 1 1, ', w.Vf Poultry, Etc. Mm- 11 r It. 1114 I'hl'-ki-ns iln-H-i ! .... 14 Kh-ii-I ii. Ohio, fri-Jli tJ4 Fruits and Vegetables. 4 no M 00 is CO no 01) it 00 IT M 8 m mi IT iavi MX "a H n is u IS 04 l-fen I entii. -.er t'fli 1'oliit - K'Ui' ) wli, in .er linn I hl, ,Ki 1 it l.hli Unlolih- I'lT tl.tlrl . ..I I II) t 1 r,0 1 II) 90 BALTIMORE. I- lour- Winter I'ntent .. h- n--.Ni,. t 10,1 I II - III Klf.-H Huiti r -Uliln I.I.-IUII") 7. .3 T ) 5 SO ?l TIM . J.IK M K4 . ti PHILADELPHIA, I :our -Vi luii r I'nt ni t:i-t--Nii. if red lorn .No. -i imxeil On! 1 .No. 'i hiie ... liiim-r -1 lerinii-ry, extrit;. t-KK l'eniiH)lvauU brstN.. KM ... 7iH TO ... at ... w i!-4 4M T.I TO M 6 00 too 6 01) oOO 450 111 600 400 55 00 6000 CODE BILL ADOPTED. Extra Session of the Ohio Legists. lature Adjourned. The Legislature, which was con vnnoil In Avtrnnrrllfinrv eoaalnn in on. act a code of uniform laws for the I stantlnople. government of Ohio municipalities, practically completed Its work Tues day by accepting the report of the conference committee and voted to adjourn sine dlo at 10 o'clock Wed nesday morning. Tho final vote on the code was taken In both branches, the vote In the Senate being 21 to 12, and in the House, 65 to 35. The Ben- ate concurred in the House amend ments to the bill, repealing the Itoyer law, which limited the Jurisdiction of the supreme court. . Acquired a New Line. The Pennsylvania Company has ac quired that part of the Columbus, San dusky & Hocking railroad lying north of Columbus. The latter road bad been in the hands of a receiver tor some time And waa said undo fore closare proceedings. High Bids for Fancy Stock. From 25,000 to 30,000 people attend od the American royal live stock show at Dorothea, Mo. A Galloway belfer, owner by C. N. Moody, of At lanta. Mo., was sold to O. H. Swlgert, of Champaign, HI., for $1,115. The Berkshire. Poland, China and Duroc Jersey bogs sold for $160, $176 and $185. Aztec, a 2-year-old Angora goat, owned by D. C. Taylor, of Lake Valley, N. M., was sold .to A. Kem 1 , . a tt.....tl... 1 .. 'I . .AO - world ! recor- urica. TEXAS OIL PRODUCTION. Large Yield Likely to Be Followed by Speedy- Exhaustion. The United States geologic survey estimates the production of crude oil In the Spindle Top field of Beau mont, 'Tex., from the beginning of 1901 to May 31, 1002, at 11,088,000 barrels, and places tho value of wells and material at $7,IU0,0(H). The great porosity of the rock, .favors a largo storage 'and a rapid yield of on, but also an early exhaustion. The roclc contains about one-fourth of its vol time of oil. The petroleum stored In the Trenton limestone is about 10 n... . .Via -nnlr An.) Dm. II ,... port of New York to all countries for ,ong o the beBt Ponnsy,Vanla fields llltj Wt?lirk W?M- foif,on ouvui e.iiu have yielded square mllo. 900,000 barrels per $207,500 gold. Total Imports of specie were $13,717 silver and $235,tiU gold. Whon the case of Clarence Peake. convicted in a lower court of murder. ind now a raving maniac, was called In state supreme court at Knoxvllle, Tenn., the man supposea to have been murdered arose in court and declared he was still alive. General Snynian, formerly of the Boer army, who is Investigating the possibility of Boer settlements in Mexico, nas rece.vea mucn encour- Southern Pig Iron Prices, ao-oninnt from the government and neotile. A meeting In New York of repre The Rev. Dr. Sheldon Munson sentatlves of the Tennessee Coal and Grlawold, rector of Christ church, Iron Company, the Sloss Sheffield Hudson, N. Y., was elected mission- company, the Virginia Iron and Coke ary bishop of Sallna, the western dls- Company, the Allegheny Ore and Iron trlct of Kansas, by the bouse of company, and the Lowmcor furnace Pennsy Buys Farm. The Pennsylvania Railroad Com' pany has closed the doai for the Dr. John Fay 100-acre farm, one-fourth of a mile west of Williamsburg, pa. l tie company contemplates the erection of large repair shops, and will use Jun lata river water power to run the electric dynanmos. bishops at Philadelphia. Coke production in the Connells- vllle region last week was leas than the preceding week, agreed to maintain the prices of Southern pig iron during the latter half of 1903 at the samo rate as for I the latter hall of the present year. The treaty for the purchase by the United States of the Danish West Indies Is defeated by a tlo vote In the Inndsthing of Denmark. The police at Petersburg, Russia, hnve captured an accomplice In tho reported plot agnlnst Downier Em press Marie Dagmar, of Russia. Fire broke out In Guild Hill, Lon don, F.nglnnd. whore the luncheon of King I'MA'ard and his party was given Saturday, just as the last guest was leaving. The blaze was In the roof of the building. The Second Bombay grenadiers, stationed at Mhow, Central India, have been ordered to Somaliland. Twelve officers and 400 men of the Twenty-third Bombay Infantry will accompany the Second Grenadiers. In Old Bailey court, London, Eng land. l4iwrence Grelg, clerk of the Carnegie Steel Company, was found guilty of defrauding the company out of $125,000 by forgery, and was sen tenced to five years' imprisonment. According to a Copenhagen corre spondent tho czar of Russia, after vlslllng Italy, will proceed to Monte negro, Athens, and probably to Con- While In Italy the czar will have an interview with the pope. Prof. Osbaldeston, the American masseur from Pittsburg, who killed two men at Obersteln. Germany, is making a desperate fight to escape execution at the hands of the Ger man headsman. Osbaldeston Is un. dergolng examination as to his sanity by experts from Bonn university. The dispatch, reports that a Bul garian, disguised as a palace official, tried to kill Abdul Hamid, sultan of Turkey, but that tne guards were alert and overpowered the would-be assassin before he could harm the sultan. A man was detected at Paris, Franc, attempting to climb a wall of the Elysee palace. It Is believed that he intended to hide in the palace garden in tho hope of obtaining an opportunity to assassinate President Loubet. Premier Combes, of the French cabinet, had a conference with the national committee of the Miners' Federation at Paris and agreed to submit the demands of the miners to arbitration, which, the committee de clared, ought to include a minimum wage and regulation of the hours of work. King Oscar, of Sweden, has been summoned by the legatee of the late Helga de la Brache, daughter of the dethroned King Gustavus Adolphua IV., to bring Into court documents that belonged to her and were given by her father to King Oscar's father. Tho papers are valuable for their his torical character and for the court bo crets they contain. It has been decided to establish wireless telegraphy apparatus at all stations and on 'all passenger trains on Italian railroads. King Victor Emmanuel hats appointed William Marconi a chevalier of the Order of Industrial Merit. Colonial Secretary Chamberlain, of England, Is going to South Africa at the end of November, and will re main there till March. He will con sult with the heads of all the poli tical part'6 there and endeavor to decide the policy of the government toward the colonies conquered from the Boers. - NEW YORK. Hi nr- I'ntinle M 4 00 h..nt-:n a rut T?K ;t 1 orn-N'o. 2 D'jis To tint ,u, il Unite i'l .'6K Hotter Creamery iti ) l-KKMHttKiiaiuuuTlvnnln IN J LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. Cattle. 1 Hnie t.rnvj, l.'ioto lew I In 113 1'llii.e. K'OOlu UUO I os em .M. il'lllii. U'ou lo UUI) It 5 00 (eilielier-i 8UO lluti-her, lOU to 1000 IS 71 Common lo lair 8 oO oen, t'oiuinon to fat soo Common to gooil lat bulla and cows too M Hi h cow a, eai ti 0) t.itia milch i-owa, each 400) Hogs. I'rtnie henvr bona T 0 I'l line mi'tlium weights I TO beet bbuvy orkera and medium. T 10 iiood to choice Hi-kora TOO i.ood j,lss and Mfhtjrorkera ( TO i'lKR, common logooU M 6&r Common to tulr 8 TO IfiniKha SO0 Milla 6 00 Sheep. Extrn, me, Hum weinert $ 3 90 Unod lo choice 8 40 M.uliiin. tTJ Common to fair 1 50 Lambs. 1 amtia clipped S 33 l.nuilm, 1100U to choice, clipped. M 8 60 l.amha, common to fair, clipped... 30J lrlng Laiuba 4 0J Calves. Veal, extra 6 50 Jt-ai, gooii to choice 300 eal, common beavy SOI Veal, common to fair 80J TM T10 .T T05 auo TOO TU0 TOO 600 4 CO aso v It 50 5 90 6(1.1 490 BJ3 810 6.1O 600 600 REVIEW OF TRADE. Railroads Overtaxed Best Evidence of a Continuation of the Busi ness Boom. R. O. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: No better evidence of industrial and commercial activity is needed than present Inadequate transporting facilities. Every form of railway equipment has been in creased and perfected during the past lew years to an extent that appeared almost excessive, yet the Nation's business has more than kept pace. Unseasonably mild weather has re tarded retail trade at many points, yet the movement of goods is fully sustained by undiminished prepara tions for future sales. Distribution delayed by high temperature Is not lost, while the agricultural com-' munlty will profit materially by the tardiness of frost, increasing their ability to consume the products of factories and mills. Labor is more fully employed than at any recent date, only a few small controversies interrupting. Money market pressure has been removed, and, although se curities do not respond, legitlmato trade is not retarded by quiet specu lation. Earnings of the railways dur ing October thus far exceed last year's by 4.5 per cent, and those of ldOO by 12 per cent Coke Is still the vital factor In the iron and Bteel situ ation. Nof only has no Improve ment occurred, but the supply of fuel . Is falling further behind and the out- Irtnlr la alai-mlna- tl a Imn le l great demand, imports promising to continue large, and as the higher duty on steol will not be exacted, there is reason to anticipate a liberal move ment from Germany. The demand for rails is so great that large purchases abroad are being negotiated, while practically all railway supplies find an eager market. Structural shapes and other heavy lines of steel are in a strong position, but there is evidence of irregularity In wire rods, and actual weakness In a few lines that are now offered freely. Tin plate manufacturers are making a bard fight to secure the large foreign busi ness done here under the drawback arrangement, and a anew method of production is being perfected that promises to cheapen the cost Fail ures for the week number 232' In the United States, against 240 last year, and 22 In Canada, compared with 29 In mm Bradst reefs says: "Wheat, Includ ing flour, exports for the week ending October 23 aggregate 7,060,317 bush els, tho largest total for 14 months past, against 5,2IO.H88 bUBhela last week, 4,952,134 bushels In this week last year, and 4,r32,978 bushels In 1900. Wheat exports since July 1 ag gregate 85,431,317 bushels, against 100,056,051 bushels last season, and 60.235,143 bushels in 1900. Corn ex ports aggregate 84.564 bushels, against 180,674 bushels last week, 1, 18S.2K8 buBhels last year, and 3,36:, S51 bushels In 1900. For the fiscal rear exporst are 1,642,830 bushels, against 16,133,131 bushels last sea ion, and 53,460,342 bushels In 1900.