REVEALED BY A WILL. Alleged to Have Squandered Over 1200,000 Placed In Hia Handa For Inveatment. A ntory mi sot afloat In Buffalo, N. Y.. April 6th. that Arthur H. Pennell, who, with" lila wifo, was killed In an automobile illsnstcr on March 10, anil who was named In murdered Edwin L. Uurdkk's divorce suit as co-respondent' was a delaulter to the extent of from 1150.(100 to J.'oo.ooo. The story leaked out because of a legal dispute over two lITo insurance policies, and Is thnt Pen nell Indoeed friends In the East, who liad known hlti family nnd the family of 111:) wife, to plnee money In his hands lor Investment a:s lli;lr financial agent. He would Inform tliein of some good Invpstment which he lind come across which would pay un excellent rato of lntercBt, and they would send him money. The money, which was sent to hlni for Investment, It Is al leged, ho spent, and when Interest payments fell doe he made the pay ments out of his own pocket. Wallace Thayer. PennoH's attorney and inti mate friend. Is referred to as saying he had suspected Irregularities, hut that ho had no proof of any such wrong-doing, fennel made provision for the payment to Mrs. Edwin L. Bur dick, or $23,000 out of his lire Insur ance. Pennell carried over $20o,0oo life Insurance, to that alter his death tho Kastern estntes to which he Is al leged t0 imve heen a defaulter might he able to recoup the losses which they had sustained through him. In his will 1'ennell named as administrator of his estate his brother, J. Frederick Pen nell. H left to his administrator sealed Instructions that upon his death he Bhould make Rood In full out of his eRtat? all the losses which had been sustained thiough his defalcations. There were two Hie policies which had net keen handed over to the ad ministrator. One was for $l.ooo and tho other for Sio.ooo, an 1 had been as signed by Pennell to Thayer In trust. In one he referred to "Wallace Thayer trustee, " and In the other to "Wallace Thayer, as trustee." The Insurance companies took legal counsel and held up payment. J. Frederick Pound! In sisted on having more Information be fore he would consent to the payment of any Insurance money to Mr. Thayer as trustee. It was then that the story of Pennell's nlleged defalcations and his plans to commit suicide were made known. The $23.0(;0 Insurance money nssljned to Thayer by Pennell In trust Is supposed to be paid over to Mrs. Rurdlck In accordance with the bond ,for S30.0i.i0 which Pennell gave prior to his death. HE GET8 $750 A TRIP. Contract With Carrier to Take Mall to Alaska. The poatofllce department has ! awarded In ft T) Rnrlffira nf P.ilnt ! narrow, Alaska, the contract for car rying t:o mail from Point narrow via Point Hope to Kotzehuo, Alaska, about 50 miles, two round trips to be made each winter for the next three win ters at $750 per round trip. The mall 1b to be carried by reindeer. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. The volume on foreign relations of tho United States for 11)02, published by the State department, w ill be ready for distribution within a few clays. The amount of 3 nnd 4 per cent bonds received up to April 9 at the treasury department lor exchanjo into 2 per cent consols is $18,328,400. Major John H. Duval, of the regular army, has at hiB own request been relieved by the Secretary of War from duty at Grove City College, Mercer county. In a test of the submarine torpedo boat Grampus at San Francisco she j uiai-imteu miner waier a corpeuo ana struck squarely In tho center of a tar get 350 yards distant. The Secretary of War has directed the first class of cadets at the Military Academy to camp on tho battlefield ct Gettysburg, about April 20, for three days' Instruction In strategy and tac tics. Rev. Dennis J. Dougherty, profes sor of dogmatic theology at the Sem inary of St. Charles Horomoe, of Phil adelphia, has been appointed by Popo Loo XIII. one of the bishops In the Philippines. Major Elijah W. Halford, who has bee nservlng in tho Philippines as paymaster, U. S. A., has been relieved of duty In tho Islands. He will report to Adjutant General Coibln in Wash ington for duty. When Postmaster General Payne re turns from Porto'RIco tho "acts devel oped by tho Investigation of the post office department'wlll be made known to him. The investigation is in pro gress, and it is not certain when It will be ended. The case of Whltakor Wright, re cently arrested In New York under an order of extradition on the chargo of having committed fraud while engag ed as a director of an English cor poration will be argued In the United State supreme court on an appeal. Col. Allen, the engineer ofiicor In charge of the plans for the construc tion of the proposed highway bridge Across the Potomac river, has rejected All the bids and new proposals will have to be made. Among the bidders was the Pennsylvania Ilrldge Com pany, which agreed to do the work for $1,815,300.- but there is only ISoli, 000 available. Another chaplor In the Investiga tion of affairs at tho postofflce de partment was furnished when charges were filed with Acting Postmaster Gen eral Wynne against M. W. Lewis, chief of the dlvtaiou of supplies. The -charges allege that the hand stamp .and ink pads now being supplied to postofflcos under the present contract are Inferior In quality and not up to ton contract standard. RED CROSS UP IN ARMS. President' Sister and Ex-8ecretary Foster Among Those Thrown Out by Miss Barton's Faction. Factional troubles In the Red Cross Si, lety which led to the temporary expulsion by the executive committee of those members who oppose the ad ministration of Miss Clara Ilarton will likely result In the organization of an other rociety that will demand recog nition us the olllclul P.ed Cross Society. Among the expelled members are John W. Foster, former secretary of state; Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Cowles, President Roosevelt's sister; Thomas Wnbh, the Colorado mine owner; Hilary ikrbert. former secretary of the navy, and William II. Michael, chief clerk of the stats department. The executive committee notified the expelled members that an opportunity would, be given them to show cause why their suspension should not bo madu permanent. Those Interviewed declared emphatically that the action of the executive committee will be ig nored for the ronson that the commit tee Is nn Illegal body. Granting, how ever, that It Is legal they said the com mittee has no power to expel any member for the causes recited. The position of the expelled members was stated by Mr. Michael: "All that we demand." said he, "Is that the Red Cross Society he conducted upon a mismesB basis. The president and members of tho cabinet w-hn vlr. tue of their Vosltlons, are members, have practically withdrawn their sup port of the Red Cross and demanded font It he reorganized. The executive committee was not regularly created, and It has no power, therefore, to ad minister the society's affairs. None of tho members who have received notice that they have been expelled will pay tho slightest attention to the committee's action." MONEY IN BEET SUGAR. Production Proved Profitable In Spite of European Ejunty. At tho meeting of the stockholders of the American Beet Sngnr Corn vary at Jersey City. President Henry V. Oxnard snld the eompnuy had passed through a ctuclal year. Arti ficial stimulation of the industry In Kurope ly export bounties had re sulted In the uci umulatlon of an ab normal surplus nnd a Tall In price be low the cost of production. Unw sugar hnd sold In Hamburg, which makes tho prices of the world, for 5 shllllnas. ll'i pence, 23 per cent below the rec ord price. Mr. Oxnard Bald tho com pany had Indicated a capacity to earn money under conditions unlikely to occur again. The great sugar-producing countries of Kurope had united to abolish export bounties and the effect had been to advance tho price of bu gar. Raw sugar was now selling at Hamburg at 8 shillings, 2 pence, an advance of 3.1 per cent. Tho price In California was 4.90e and on the Missouri river 4.73e. The quantity of sugar produced by the company was 113.R8O.3O0 pounds, which was beyond expectation. STEAMERS COLLIDE. Passengers Became Panic Stricken, but All are Rescued. The Atlas line Bteamer Allegheny, from Port Union, Costa Rica, was bad ly damaged In the harbor of New York bb tho result of a collision with tho Britten Fteamer Joseph Merryweather, bound out. The Allegheny was struck on the starboard side and a huge hole torn In her. She took water rapidly and soon her bow was under water. The passengers, many of them In a panic, were rescued by a passing tug and brought to the city. The crew re mained on board. Th.; collision oc curred during a thick fog. The Alle gheny's water-tight compartments, six In number, kept, her from Binklng en tirely. Tho Allegheny had 34 passen gers on board. WORK FOR 30,000 MEN. Will Employ That Number In Con struction of Panama Canal. Admiral Walker's estimate of tho number of men to be employed on tho Panama canal when the United Slates takes hold is 30.000. It Is probable that laborers will be drawn by the thousands from the Southern States and the West Indies. As tho labor supply Is controlled largely by com panies organized for the purpose, It Is likely that many Chinese and Japan ese laborers will be Imported. A 8IGN OF THE TIMES. Old Iron Mill, Idle for Several Years to Start. President Lange, of the Springfield, 111.. Business Men's Association, re ceived a letter from President A. W. Thompson, of the Republic Iron and Steel Company, stating that the roll ing mills In Springfield, which have been idle for several years, will start about May 15, If not sooner. Tho mills will give employment to about 800 men. Pay $40,000,000 Debt. The announcement was made by of ficials of the Pennsylvania Rallroa'd Company that they will pay oft the loans maturing In July next, and which aggregate about $40,000,000, with tho proceeds of tho June install ment on the new stock, and not exer cise tho option of renewing these louns. Suit Against Northern Pacific. George A. Haekett and Charles A. Chase, of Philadelphia, and Wolf Bros., stock brokers of New York, began suit In the United States Circuit Court In New York to nullify the retirement of the preferred stock of the North ern Paclnc railroad. Swift Leaves $12,200,000. The will ot Oustavus F. Swift, late president of the packing flrin of Swift & Co.. was filed iu the probate court t Chicago. SMIL BURST MIDWAY III IK Gl ACCIDENT ON BATTLESHIP. Huge Piece of Steel Falls Upon Men at Mess Killing Three. Others Injured. A disastrous explosion occurred on the battleship Iowa at Pensacola, Fla., while the vessel was at target prac tice in the gulf. The forward port 12-Inch gun burst from the premature explosion of a shell, 12 feet of the piece outside the turret being demol ished. Three men were killed and live Injured, two seriously. The kill ed nro First Class Seaman Klele. Or dinary Sianinn Percell and Gunner's Mate Horry. The Injured are: First Class Seaman Gnught, Ordinary Sea men Ihiirsdnle. Drown. Mansdnle anil Purucker. The men killed nnd Injur ed were on the deck nt mess. Three pieces of the exploded gun, each weighing over a ton, passed down ward through the spar deck, falling upon the men at mess. Instantly kill ing the threo named. All or the men were horribly mutilated. The heavy missiles, after passing through the gun deck, continued down to tho third deck, where they came In con tact with the armored deck, tho heavy Bteel bringing them to a stop, thus saving the engineers and firemen who wero at work below. Although the upper decks were covered with men, no one there was seriously Injured. Firing wns to have ceased after the shot for tho dinner hour. The range had been set nnd the Iowa was steaming along nt a speed of 12 knots an hour, when I. lent. Reed. In charge of the forward 12-lneh turret, gave orders to load and fire. The time fuso was cut for tho range, the piece charged, breech closed and tho word plven to fire. Following the report of the gun thera was a smothered no'se ns the shell exploded midway In the gun and pieces of the hursted gun nnd shell were scattered broadcast. Three great holes were torn through the deck. Those who were below be gan coming on deck, some bloody and mutilated, while lying on the floor, crushed almost beyond recognition, wero three men. The Massachusetts, six miles cllKtnnc, was signaled for old, nnd one of the cutters put off with the surgeon and assistants. Tho wounded men were taken to the hos pital and their Injuries dressed. Tho (lend were takrn to Pensacola. Some claim thq explosion was caused by a defective shell, nnd others think thnt tho frequent firing of the pleco at Cu lebra during the winter, added with tho work done during the past 10 dayB no strained the rloeeHhat the force of the charge bursted tho gun. HAD PISTOLS AND CLUBS. Small Riot at Baltimore When Iron workers Start. A small riot occurred In Calvert sta tion at llnltimore. Pistols and clubs were brandished, but fortunately only flBts were used. The trouble was caused by the presence of some mem bers of the local union of structural Iron workers at the station when a number of men engaged by the Amer ican Bridge Company were about to board a train for Pittsburg. The union men endeavored to persuade the men not to go, and this falling, they re sorted to rough house tactics. The station was soon the Bcene of a fight ing mob which required tho efforts of the entire central police station re serves to scatter. Seven men were locked up to await a hearing. LAUNCHING ON APRIL 18. Officials to See the West Virginia Strike the Water. The 14,000-ton armored cruiser West Virginia will ho launched nt the yard of the Newport News Shipbuilding Company Saturday, April 18th, and the occasion will he made notable by the attendance of many leading officials from Washington city and WeBt Vir ginia. The vessel will be christened by Mlsa White, daughter of the gov ernor of tho State, in' whose honor she Is named. HAMPER THE ORE FLEET. Striking Firemen Turn Back the Non Union Hands. Union marine firemen, on strike for higher wages at West Superior. Wis., have pickets stationed who are turn ing back all non-union men who at tempt to board any of the 40 or more vessels In tho harbor. The boats are mostly ore carriers, belonging to the Steamship company of the United States Stoel corporation. Kansas Against Saloons. Returns from all towns In Kansas which held elections disclose that the vote lu favor of enforcing the prohibi tion law Is the most overwhelming In the history of the State. Only six towns In the State voted In favor of a liberal policy toward tho saloons. Stratton Will Case Settled, County Judge Orr nt Colorado Springs, Col., lias agreed to approve a compromise reached In the Stratton will case. Young Stratton Is to re ceive $;150,000 in cash. This Includes his legacy or $30,oou. Stratton be queathed the bulk or his fortune, esti mated at $15,000,000, for the establish ment of a home for the poor In Colo rado Springs. Tunnel Hearing Is Closed. Commissioners appointed by the Su preme Court to pass upon the plans of the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany for Its tunnel under New York City concluded their public hearings, after listening to briefs from the ob jecting property owners whose inter ests would be affected. Italians Object to Water. The congregation of the First Ital ian Baptist Church of Stamford, Conn., has deolded to change front the Bap tist faith to Congregationalism LATEST NEWS NOTES. Mayor Harrison of Chicago was re elected by greatly decreased plurality, The Duke and Duchess of Manches ter sailed from New York for Eng land. The wife of United States Ambassa dor Horace Porter died suddenly at Fans, France. Rev. Heber Newton has resigned as pastor of the Stanford Memorial Church at 8tanrord, Cal. Editor Henry Watterson In a speech at a banquet In Chicago said that ne gro suffrage Is a failure. Mrs. Carrie Moser was suffocated to death by bur Iu Jers.-y City and her two children are dying. Excursion trains arriving at Atlan tic City are carrying thousands of vis itors ror tho Easter season. The Indlnna Supreme Court ruled thnt tho State law for a compulsory weekly pay day Is not constitutional. Republicans win In Ohio municipal elections, except at Cleveland and To ledo, where Johnson and Jones are re elected. John Campbell, mayor of Pes Molnos. Ia.. 12 years ago, died nt his home in Des Moines as the result of paralysis. Percy M. Clark, civil engineer of tho Chicago and Northwestern railway, was killed In a windstorm near Apple ton. Wis. The Legislature of the Sao Paulo, Rio Janeiro, has passed a bill Impos ing a maximum tax of 2 per cent on exported coffee. Steamship Southwark arrived at New York eight days overdue; pas sengers complain bitterly of lnsilffl cient food supply. Attorney General Webb, of Califor nia, rendered nn opinion that the use of the Illble In the public schools is unconstitutional. Tho Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany placed nn order with the Amer ican Car and Foundry Company lor 2,200 freight cars. The navy department awarded tho contract for the Philippine limiting dry dock to the Maryland Steel Com pany for $1,120,000. John Mejouu and John Sours, run away hoys from Ashland, O.. are In the county Jail nt Helena, Mont., ac cused of having stolen property. The bodies of Captain Henry Hart well nnd his son Alva, t Hols Plane Island, were found on Hound Island, Mich., npr.nrently having perished In a gale. Miss Frelda Pink, an IS year old senior at Indianapolis high school, was fatally Injured, being kicked in tho side In a basketball game at Craw fordsvllle. The intention of tho Dutch govern ment at Amsterdam, Holland, to enact rigorous anti-strike laws has paralyzed traffic by land and water throughout tho kingdom. The grand Jury nt Coshocton, O., returned two indictments against Charles Piatt, defaulting township treasurer, for embezzling funds aggre gating $3,000. The grand Jury at Columbia, S. C, returned a true bill ngainst James H. Tillman, charging him with tho mur der or N. O. Gouzulcs in that city lust January. Tlio WcBtlnghouse Electric nnd Manufacturing Company has secured orders for equipment from Japan, Greece. Mexico. England nnd South American countries. Reports from the Eastern shore counties and Western Maryland are thnt vegetation was frozen during the cold snap .and Uiat there will bo no peach or strawberry crop. Jesse E. Doyer. aged 22, a dis charged Bailor from the United Stntes steamer Wabash, was Instantly killed near the village or West Salamanca, N. Y., by William Rodawald. Samuel Trace killed Logan Elam, and Sidney Elam, tho dead man's son, avenged his father's death by killing Trace pn the Whlto fork of Johnsou river, near West Liberty, Ky. Michael Goetzo, a Russian student, was expelled from Italy after being arrested at Naples on a chnrge of con nection with a plot to kill the Czar during his proposed visit to Rome. The Indlnna monuments on Shlloh, Tenn., battlefield were dedicated. Sev eral hundred Indlanlans, Including Governor Durbln and his staff, General Lew Wallace and other prominent cit izens were present. The Hnrd mill, six dwelling houses, Queen Soap Compnny's factory, a Michigan Central railroad oilhouse and 20 pleasure yachts were destroy ed by fire at Marshall, Mich., the loss es aggregating $100,000. Tho examination of George E. Mills, the lawyer accused of having attempt ed to bribe Assistant District Attorney Garvan in New York by trying to buy the indictments against Dr. R. C. Flow er, was adjourned until April 13. Application hus been rnade to the English government for Immigration permits for 30,000 Finns to settle In South Africa. Mine agents are in Fin land endeavoring to recruit laborers for the Rand. The numerous small strikes In the anthracite region resulting from the disagreement between operators nnd miners, regarding the strike commis sion's ruling, brought forth a letter from President Mitchell calling upon the men to return to work. King Alexander took tho reins of government of Servia completely Into his own hands. He Issued two proc lamations, the first decreeing suspen sion of the Constitution adopted April 19, 1901, repealing objectionable laws passed. thereunder retiring the Sena tors and the Councilors or States, dis solving the SkupBhtlna. and re-enacting the laws as they existed previous to the Constitution of 1901. The second proclamation restores this Con stitution to is former validly. A dispatch received from Manila states that Gov. Tart, who has been lying IU there for several weeks, has gone to Benguet, a mountain, resort two days distant from Manila, but In telegraph communication: , f NI VISITS W OLD HIE MEET "GREAT FATHER." Is An Honored Quest at the Place Where Ht Was 8heriff 8lxteen Years Ago. President nooscvclt traveled through familiar country Monday, April 6, and received hearty greetings wherever his train stopped. At many places he rec ognized old friends, and from his con versation It was evident thnt this has heen one of the most enjoyable days of his trip. At Fargo. Jamestown and UlBinarck. N. I)., Ifo made stops of from half an hour to an hour, and dis cussed the conditions In tho Philip pines, the tariff, and the general pros perity of the country. Stops were also made at Casselton Tower, Valley City, the home of Governor White; Dawson, Dlckln and Medora. In the private of fice of Oovernor White at Bismarck President Roosevelt received the as surance of the friendship and support of the great Sioux Indian tribe and similar assurances from the chiefs of the Mandans and Orosventres. John Grass, the orator and chief Justice of the Sioux, made the presentation of the tribes' good will, In a translation of the address, which had been agreed upon In council of the chiefs. At the same time Grass presented the Pres ident a peace pipe of beautifully carv ed plpestone. Among the' chiefs pres ent were Red Tomahawk, the Indian who killed Sitting Bull at the time of the uprising In the early nineties; Red Fish, one of the hereditary leaders of the Slottx; Black Bull. Standing Boar, Crow Ghost, Cross Bear and other Sioux chiefs. The most Interesting ceremony of the day occurred at Me dina, where the President at one time owned a ranch, and which was his postodlcc address lfl years ago when he was sheriff of Billings coun ty. Medora Is a small place, but the ranchmen from the surrounding coun try had come Into town, nnd they gave the President a truly Western recep tion. Joe Ferris, the President's old foreman, and his brother, S. M. Ferris, met tho President nt Bismarck and rodo with him to Medora. At Fargo tho principal nddress of the day was made by President Roosevelt. The President began with a reference to promises to the Filipinos made by President M Klnley and declured they were now In the realm of positive per formance. He said this government could not abandon the islanders and added: "When, by last July, the last vestige of organized Insurrection had disappeared, peace and amnesty were proclaimed. As rapidly as the mili tary rule was extended over the Is lands by the defeat of the Insurgents, Just so rapidly was It replaced by the civil government. At the present time the civil government is supreme and the army in the Philippines has been reduced until it Is sufficient merely to provide against the recurrence of trouble." HIGH RECORD OF IMMIGRATION. Over Eight Thousand Landed at New York in One Day. "Tho Immigration to the United States during March was the largest ever known In the history of this country." Bald Commissioner General of Immigration Sargent, "and the same rate is keeping up during April. Th? arrivals In New York April 8 were 4.000 aliens. The outlook now is that the number of immigrants this fiscal year will exceed the number of any year In tho history of the country by many thousands. Chinese contin ue to reach San Francisco from the Orient. During March 43 Chinamen seeking- entrance at that port were de tained. Thirteen of these were de nied admission. Even the Mexicans are taking more kindly to this coun try than heretofore. During March 2.233 of them were examined at El Paso. Tex., of which number 482 wero refused admission Into the United Stntes." April 9. Seven steamers brought 8,378 immigrants from Euro pean ports. CUP DEFENDER IN DANGER. Attempts Made to Burn Reliance In the Herreshoff Yards. Indications that twice during tho la;U week attempts have been made at Bristol, R. I., to burn the Herres hoff boat shops and the now cup de fender Reliance have come to light. Two years ago an attempt was made to burn the boat shops and the yacht Constitution, which was being built, ii nd the would-be Incendiary was cap tured and subsequently declared to be insane. It Is thought tho present at temps have been due to a similar cause. Herr Most Released and at Home. After serving a year's Imprisonment, less about two months for good be havior, on niackwell's Island, N. Y., John Most, tho anurchlst, has been re leased. He was convicced for pub lishing In his paper, "Frelheit," on tho day President McKlnloy was sliot. an article with the caption; "Murder and Murder." Biscuit Company Chartered. The United Stntes Biscuit Company, with an authorized capital stock of $4,500,000, was incorporated In New Jersey. The stock is divided into $1. 500,000 preferred, drawing 7 per cent, cumulative dividend, and- $2,000,000 common. The object of the company is to sell and manufacture bisculU, crackers and other food products. England Wants Privileges. .Negotiations are proceeding be tween the United States and Great Britain with the object of obainlng certain privileges for British com merce In connection with the Panama canal when built. The concessions Include opportunities for repairing and coaling ships and privities help ful to the British squardons In North Atlantic and West Indian waters, lu return for facilities to be granted to the United tSates navy. REVIEW OP TRADE. Strike- Only Cloud en the ButlneM Horlson Cut In Southern Pig Iron, II. O. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: Aside from the preva lence of strikes and possibility of fur ther Interruption to Industrial actlr Ity next month on this account, the business outlook ia most gratifying. Late fronts caused some damage early In the week, but low temperatures did not continue and most sections agri cultural productions had not advanced sufficiently to suffer materially, while the prospects are bright for large crops and heavy sates of fertilizers testify to extensive operations. De spite some unfavorable weather. East ern retail trade has been heavy, and Jobbing activity In summer fabrics In dicates expectations of a vigorous con sumption as the season advances. There Is less couipluliit regarding de liveries due to bett r trail!:, facilities. Railway earnings In March Increased 13.8 per cent, compared with (ant year, and 24.1 per rent comparad with 1901. Undue significance has been attached to the recent reduction lu prices of Southern pig Iron, and throughout the country a tendency to delay placing contracts Is noticed. No other cut In quotations has followed and in the trade it Is believed thnt after the tem porary uneasiness there will be a re sumption of buying on the former lib eral scale. Finished steel Is eagerly sought and there 1b increased activity In outdoor work. Makers of merchant pipe tools, agricultural Implements and all kinds of machinery have more business than can be handled prompt l.v. The pig Iron output has bounded upward with tho better movement of fuel and In a short time production will bo at the rate of 20.ooo.ooo tons annually. These figures are the better appreciated when It Is remember id that they are more than double t ie maximum yar'B output prior to 1S99. In the textile Industries there are still adverse factors, notably the labor con troversies at cotton mills. Beyond a moderate revival of export purchases for China, there Is no Increase In the pales of cotton poods, both sellers and buyers awaiting gome more d. finite information as to the future. Another rise In the raw material threatens a shutdown nt several mills which have light supplies and few contrac trs. Man ufacturers of men's heavy weight woolens and worsteds receive few or ders except for filling out sample lines, and the situation Is practically unchanged. Thus far fall business la below normal and clothiers are not seeking large supplies of material. Wool has been fairly steady since the month opened, but none of the March Is recovered. New business Is small nt Eastern factories, but this Is sea sonable and no apprehension Is felt. Moreover, current shipments are much heavier than a year ago, and activity is assured for at least two months after work begins on fall con tracts. Quotations are firmly held and local Jobbing trade is brisk. Leather Is In better demand, the strike at Chi cago tanneries stimulating purchases. Domestic hides have lost part of the recent recovery and Imported skins are also somewhat cheaper. Staple products develop Irregularity as the season advances and speculation has again become a prominent factor, failures this week numbered 197 in the United States, against 198 last year, and 15 In Canada, compared with 19 a year ago. WESTERN UNION AGAIN SUES. Seeks to Restrain P. R. R. Interests From Interfering With Poles. The Western Union Telegraph Com pany has entered suit In United States Circuit court at Philadelphia, against tho Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington and the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central railroads, both controied by the Pennsylvania rail road, In which It seeks to have the railroad companies restrained from Interfering with its poles and wires, and asks the court to assess the amount or rental that should be paid to the railroads ror the continued use of their right of way. CABLE FLASHES. Emperor Francis Joseph, at Vieuna Austria. assisted by 11 archdukes. In tho Hofburg. performed tho ancient Holy Thursday ceremony of washing the feet of 12 aged men. Major General Davis. In command of the division of the Philippines, has issued an order directing that no troops be allowed to land at Manila until they have been vaccinated. President Roosevelt's speech has raised a storm all over Germany and Is very Bharply criticised bytthe un official press, while the government newspapers have made no comment. The governments of Austria and Hungary have Introduced specie pay ment bills in their respective parlia ments. The Auiitro-Hmigarlan bank I will! redeem it uotes in coin on do- r.uind. ' Tho steamer Allegheny, from Cen itral America, reports that on March the viliage ol Tin Jo. Colombia, was destroyed by an eruption of the Tierra del Firma volcano, and from 80 to 100 persons were killed or injured. The British royal yacht, Victoria ar.d Albert, with King Edward rn bu.ird, accompanied by the British cruisers Minerva and Venus, left Lis bon, Portugal, ror Gibraltar. The de parture wus siguuied by a cannonade and salutes from the wsseia in the harbor. Advices from Honduras state that General Davlia. one of the generals lot Senor Bor.lDa. President-elect of Honduras In the iatter's druggie against the retiring PreslJua:, Sierra, capture J the town of ftuliitrfca, tig Dilles south of the cani'.i:. Tegucig alpa, after a nine hours' battle and is now besieging Niapme. Five thousand inurgr..v made a desperate attack, on tti :'jrtnsi of ! Frajaua Morocco. , A Natal naturalist naserts, from ob servation, that other Inserts are at tracted to hear the cicada sing, Just at humans gather abont a concert per former. Floyd 3. Metzger makes a prelimin ary nnnnuneemetit on a new method of separating thorium from' cerium, lanthanum and dldymltttn. He find thnt from a forty per cent, alcoholic solution, thorium is precipitated quan titatively cm the addition of fttmaric acid, while no change Is produced by Hint reagent In cold solutions of cer ium, lanthanum or dldymlutn. When thorium is precipitated In this way in (he presence of the above-mentioned elements, traces of these are carried down with the thorium, but may be re moved by a single precipitation. A number of other weak organic acids ire being investigated in the same way, and several of these show interesting results. Sir William MneGregor In nn ncires delivered to students of medicine of Glasgow University dealt especially with the prophylaxis of malaria. As the outcome of his great experience he recommended, the preventive use of quinine In closes amounting to nt least fifteen grains a week. lie stated thnt In Lagos the radical method of Rom for the extermination of mosquitoes Is being pursued by filling In the swamps with Y-indy soil. The large pools which cannot be drained nt present have crude petroleum put on the surface pe riodically. Empty tins and similar rub bish are removed, and receptacles for drinking wnter nre kept carefully cov ered. Native boys nre now being em ployed ns mosquito catchers. Senor Pnvndl, Oovernor of Comya gun. Honduras, Is authority for a re cently published statement thnt In the PIJo Mountains there grows a vine In the wild state, varying lu diameter from four inches to two feet, nnd to 100 feet In length. Upon cutting thin growth produces a sap from which nn excellent rubber can be made. In Hon duras no one appears to know the bo t.inlenl family to which this plant be lomrs. H thrives nt great altitude fit well ns In the lower valley levels. Such luxuriance of growth has this plant at tained thnt It Is quite capable of being rut In commercial quantities. It may be quickly propagated In the rich soil of Honduras by means of seedlings, the growth being so much faster than tho rubbpr tree. The Academy of Natural Sciences lias purchased At a great bargain a col lection ot the skins of birds and Ani mals living near Mr. Hearst's Univer sity, at Berkley, California. The col lection contains a great number of the beautiful and gnyly-plumed birds of the raclfie Slope, ns well as a great many examples of little rabbits, squir rels nnd curious field and wood mice thnt nro peculiar to that region. This recent addition, coupled with the great Hoopes collection, gives the academy one of the finest series of American birds outside of the museums In Wash ington nnd New York. These bird and mammal skins nre not for exhibition, but nre kept flat. In tin cans, away from the light, nnd are only available to investigations connected with the academy. Man's Ttneonntons Reasoning. Two men stood waiting for a Harlem train nt Park place. "I want to show you a peculiar result of man's uncon scious reasoning," said one. "Stand here and wntcu the people buy thelc tickets. 1 There are two ticket sellers ono on the right band and the other on tho left. Now see which one sells more tickets." Three persons straggled op the steps nnd all went to the right-band win dow. Then came fonr In a group. Three of them went to the right-hand win dow, and the fourth would have done the same, only seeing that he would have to wait, he turned and bought his ticket of the man on the left. the wei left." "Did yon do It purposely?" "Not nt all. I am left-hnnded. It Is simply a case of unconscious reason ing that amounts to Instinct. Being right-handed, you hold the coin In your right hand. If you go to the right hand window you can put In your coin nnd scarcely stop walking. Th.tt will save time. If. however, you go to the left-hand window yon must stop and turn half way about in order trt put down the coin nnd take up the ticker. "Now there goes n left-handed man to the left-hand window. How do I know he's left-handed? Because bf took his money from his left-hand pocket, went to tho left-hand window nnd shifted bis paper to bis right hand i'ress. Lodger Crowded Them. The packing of human beings Into a single room in a tenement house re minds a correspondent of the experi ence which a woman bad In the slums it Dublin. She came upon a room in a tenement house in which there were five families "In residence" one In each corner and one In the middle of the floor. The visitor expressed hn-' astonishment to an old woman iu 1 of the corner locations, and wonJel bow In the world they were aU.nl to fiud room. "Wlsha, nia'anit'Tv.sv tho reply, "we were all right till tbe Casey there In the middle of the dure' tuk la lodgers.' In a few momenta the score stood eleven to two. I V. .... ..I , .i A.-- . . . 1 .uaj ue joa umii i nonce ir, saios man, "but when you came In you I it to the right and I went to the V