8EVEN MEN SHOT IN RIOT. EXPL03ION KILLS THREE. REVIEW OF TRADE. HANDLING OF FOOD. Negligence Shown on Part of Men Handling Curtain. CHARGED WITH ROBBING DEAD. Alleged to Have Taken Money From Iroquois Victims. Charged with rolcblng tho dead and dying at tho Iroquois theater Are three men liave been placed under arrant by tho Chicago police. The first of the alleged ghouls to be captured was liOiim Wit!!, keeper of the Illinois saloon, located at Denrhom and Hnn dolph streets, a few (Ioots from the main entrance of the theater. It 4s alleged that Wit robbed the body of a dying woman, Mrs. E. J. Trask, se curing $199 which, It Is alleged, was divided among three men, two of whom were arresied after Wltz. The other two arrested are Charles Con way, said to have received $20, and Thomas McCarthy, alleged to have been given $27. Bit. The third man, still at large. Is a stranger who was given $12. It is said that Wltz con tested that $2H) was taken from the bc!y of Mrs. Trask when she was car. rled dying Into the saloon. The first definite testimony showing negligence on the part of the men In charge of the Iroquois stage curtains developed Monday. John F. Dough erty, who stated that he was em ployed at the theater, was the witness Irom whom the evidence was obtain ed. 'Did you try to lower the asbestos curtain "on the day of the fire?" he was asked. "Yea. a n an came running over to m-3 from the south end of the stage and r.ald to lower tho asbestos cur tain lor there was a fire. I tried to lower It. but It was too heavy and seme one Jostled me, and my hand was caught. Someone elRc came and pulled down the rope and released me and shoved me out of the way." "Do you mean to say that you ran from tho bnck of the stage to the front, grabbed the ione to lower the asbestos curtain and tried to do so before the regular men in charge of the curtain could reach It? queried I Deputy Coroner Buckley. "I guess that Is so," admitted Dougherty. I Witness said ho knew tho men In charge of tire three cm tains, but did; not know where they were when the : fire broke out and the call came for -the curtain. Hp did not see them any-1 where In tho flies. r our additional churches wero closed to-day by City Building Com missioner Williams. A dozen halls were also added to the list of places under the bans for violation of the building oidJnanec. EVIDENCE AGAINST MOTHER. Shocking Story Told In Bechtel Murder Trial. The chain of circumstantial evi dence which the Commonwealth Is attempting to forga around Mrs. Caihc:rlnt Bechtel, charged with being an noec-ory after the fact In the mur der of her daughter Mabel, at Allen town, Pa, was strengthened by the witnesses calltd by the prosecution. Alois Eckstein's story of tho rela tions of himself and other men with Mabel Bechtel was shocking. He wont so far as to testify that the mother countenanced the misconduct of her daughter. He related his visit to tho Bechtel home on the day that Mabel's body Is alleged to have been hidden In the house, and said that the actions of the members of tho family appeared strange to him. Under cross-examination Eckstein said ho loved Mabel and ho thought she cared for him. Ha understood It was agreed that he should marry her. Mabel, however, always put him off when he mentioned the subject. He admitted having struck the girl. "I heard that Mabel had received attentions from a well-known mun In town," Eckstein said, "and that hor mother told hor to get all she could out of him. I upbraided Mabel about It and told her that if slro kept on acting like that I'd never have any thing to do with her. Then she ran Into the kitchen and got a knife. When she came back at mo, I struck her to defend myself." Witness told of other quarrels he had had with Mabel, and of Welsenberg's appear ance on the scene and of the manner In which Mabel transierred hor affec tions to him. Dr. John Lear, a biological expert of Muhlenberg college, testified that tho stains on the carpet and othor articles taken from the Bechtel house, were human blood stains. The wooden steps leading from tho kitchen to the cellar were shown to the witness, and without qualification he said that the spots on the boards were human blood stains. By this tho Commonwealth will endeavor to prove that the body of tho murdered girl had been curled down those steps and placed in tho alley, where It was later found. The court adjourned oarly to permit Judge Trexler to attend the funoral of his futher-ln-law. In the senate, Mr. Tellor (Dem Col.) contended the course of the president toward the Panama revolt was contrary to precedent and In con travention of international law. Swaney'e Body Found. The body of Homer H. Swaney, for merly of McKoesport, Pa., was picked up by the tug Bahada, two miles north of Dungenness Light, end was brought to Port Angeles, Wash. Both bis eyes were gone, but otherwise the body was In a good state of preserva tion. It was encased In a life preser ver. Mr. Swaney was president of the Pacific Steel Company, of Iron dale, and the Seattle Steel and Iron Company, or Seattle. He Iobi big life In steamer Cla'.lard wreck. . 8trlklno Miners Ambush Officers Ex cited Mob Had Gathered at Trial of Women. Deputy sheriffs, gum ding the prop erty of the Merchants Coal Company, and striking miners engaged In pitch ed battla at Boswoll, Pa. A fusillade of bullets was exchanged before the strikers, the majority of whom were foreigners, withdrew. Tim wounded are: Deputy Sheriff Geotge W. Bay lor, bullet from 38 caliber revolver lodged above heart, reported In a dy ing condition; Deputy Sheriff William I-X'gley, three wounds, two In face and one In left wrist, none serious: Weigh master John W. Long, pistol shot in calf of right leg; three Hungarians, shot In breast, thought to bo fatal; un known Polander, shot In body, not ror tons. Tho clash occurred In front of the office of Justice of the Peaco J. C. Ickcs, where three Italian wome l were being tried for trespassing on the coal company's property and lucking a riot Sunday afternoon. Tho women aro alleged to have stoned a passen ger train on tho Poswell branch of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, .In the belief that men were being brought on the train to Boswell li take the plnce of the strikers. An excited mob gatheroi about the Justice's office, few of wto:n wore able to iindet stand the pro?od.ng. w'.ilch were conducted In EnglUi. After a sufficient case had beja mado out agalnfl tho defendant's to warrant holding them for court they were com mitted to Jail, the commitments being handed to Deputy 8heriff Pegley. Peg ley stepped out of the office and at tempted to drive tho crowd away In order to make a path for his fellow officers and their ptlsoner3. As he passed over the threshold an Itnllan dealt Coal and Iron Policeman J. S. Bant Ivy a vicious blow on tho head, felling him to the floor. At the same instant another Italian fired at Deputy George W. Snylor, who was standing not more than 10 feet away. Soylor promptly returned the fire and the Italian dropped to his knees. Meanwhile a shower of bullets was fired at Ileglcy and the officers out side. Pegley says he saw a man raise a shotgun and Vet drive nt h.lm, but as a button on his overcoat was clipped off nt tho same time he did not at tempt to go after the man. Ixing was wounded by tho first volley. A majority of the assaulting party are reported to have been secreted in buildings adjoining Icke's office and could fire without exposing them selves. When the bullets began to fly close to tho heads of Begley's posse of 10 men he ordered several of them to run to the hotel and get their Win chester rifles. Bel'ote they returned th fotelgn element had withdrawn. TWENTY HURT IN WRECK. Street Car Jumps Track and Plunges Down Embankment. i An east-bound car on the Rankin ; and Swlssvnle branch of tha Pittsburg! Hallways company jumped the track at Third rtreet and Kenmawr avenue, Hankin. It plunged over n 25-foot em-; bnnkment. and in tho lesulting wreck j 2.1 of the 23 passengers were Injured. ; An official statement Issued by the' company puts the number of passcn-' gets at not more than-19 and the number of injured nt 13. Medical at tention was rendered, however, to the larger number. j Three of the Injmed may die. All I of these were employes of the com pany, Samuel Callahan, a motorman; P. C. Starkey. a conductor, and John Frazler, a conductor. The enr left the track at a sharp curve. The rails were slippery from the rain, and although a safety stop Is always made just before cars reach the curve tho brakes refused to work last night. The result was that car 1057 hit the curve at a much higher rate of speed than It had been run ning a moment before,' When the car left the track It leaped to the curbstone, a distance of about 10 feet, tore down a fenet surmount ing the stone wall along Kenmawr ave nue, plunged over the wall and down the 25-foot embankment. WHITAKER WRIGHT ON TRIAL. Saya He Took Money Intended for Family to Help Company. Whltaker Wright, the company pro moter, on trial on tho charge of fraud testified to-day. He told of tho foun dation of the London"-and Globe Cor poration, which, he declared, was prosperous until the end of 1899, after tho South Afilcan war had ktarted, when matters became disastrous. The witness added that he assisted tho company out of his private pocket, lending It between $2.0i'0,ooo aud $2,- 500,0011. Previous to this he had pre pared a settlement of $1,500,000 on his family, giving $500,000 to each of his children, but one day In 1899 the com pany's accountant Informed him that he must have $1.5"0,onO or the com pany would be obliged to suspend. The witness said he supplied the money and, consequently, the settlement ou his family was never carried out. Cannot Bar Negroes. The United States supreme court again reaffirmed the ruling made in the case of Cartor vs. the State of Texas to the effect that the exclusion of negroes from grand Juries In cases involving criminal charges nualnst members of their race In violation of the constitution and therefcro not per missible. Gold Found In Ohio. The samples of gold recently dis covered Jn Allen township, Union coun ty, have been roturned from the Unit ed States assay office and pronounced to be the genuine article. The Six Eagle Mining Company of Ada. which has charge of the leases In that sec tion. Is preparing to sink a shaft for the purpose of mining. Excitement runs hityh In that neighborhood and land h taken a wonderful jump in prlne. Russian Statesman Looks for It If Trouble Begins. IRRITATED AT UNITED 8TATE3. Blame England, Also, for Counten ancing Toklo Governmtnt'a At titude In the Crisis. A mcssags from St. Petersburg siys: In diplomatic circles, where Indications arc eagerly sought as to hjw political straws are pointing, much Interest Is aroused at a bad quarter of an hour which the British Ambassador recently had when calling upon Count Lamsdorf, the latter's re ception of Fir Charles Scott being of the most frigid order. This fully con firms the intense Irritation In the high est qunrters against England. Ttve same angry sentiment Is to-day being extended freely to America. It Is being declared her that Russia has not got to do with Japan so much as with England and that the Anglo Japanese alliance is at the bottom of all of the present trouble. Tho echo Is now loudly heard of tho utterances of those far-seeing politic-Inns who nt the moment of the alliance announced and proclaimed that this political "coup" meant war against Russia as destroying the balanrs of power In the Far East. It !s urged by many that the tlmo has come for Russia to re taliate for tho "pln-prlck policy of England" by a demonstration toward the Indian frontier, and alBo by ag gressive political tartlcs In Persia. Count Lamsdorf was yesterday handed a duplicate note of Japan's reply by Japanese Minister Kmlnn, whose sincerity as a friend of peace warmly appeals to the Minister of For eign Affairs. Count Lamsdorf, who, It Is Interesting to know, will surely do everything possible to avert war, which ho, a lifelong friend of Witte, looks upon with the utmost repugnance. Tho Count Is firmly of the opinion shared by every seasoned politician and diplomat here, and whlc with characteristic frankness he communi cated to the Emperor, that if war breaks out between Japan and Russia nothing can prevent a general Inter national conflict. There Is a large war element, which seems liable at any moment to force the hands of tho peaco lovers. Plehoo, who Is now the most power ful man In the Cabinet, has been cred ited with being a friend of war. If so, ho conceals It well, for a few days ago. In a long conversation, he ex pressed himself strongly for peace, saying: "Russia can only accept war If forced on her." Wltte has not tho ear of the Emper or, so he Is powerless to urge effec tively his peace propaganda. What Is dangerous at this critical period Is the larre military element. JAPAN WILL NOT YIELD. Rusela Will Defy United States at Manchurlan Ports. The Pekln correspondent of the London Times declares thnt Japan's lit.'ot note is stronger In tone than the preceding one and that she will neither yield her moderate stand point nor accept tho mediation of a third power. The Port Arthur correspondent of tli 3 Mall cables that he has had an Interview with Admiral Alexeff, who declared that the action of the United States in making a commercial treaty with China without Russia's consent was unfriendly. Russia, he snld, would not open or allow consuls at Mukden and Antung under the pres ent regime. Pure Food Bill Passed. The House passed the Hepburn pure food 1:111 on a rising vote of 201 to (58. its opponents being unable to secure a roll call. The amendment, inserting tho wcrd "willful" with reference to persons who sell adulterated or mis branded goods and which would have compelled the government to prove intent to violate the law 'by the vend ors, was stricken out. Several at tempts were made to amend the bill, but no material changes were made. Old Couple Tortured. Breaking into the home of Benja min Yealy in Cook township, West moreland counf.y, two masked rob bers subjected tho aged couple, the only occupants of tho house, to tor ture In an attempt to loam the hiding place of a hoard of money said to have been Beereted. The robbers were un successful In locating the treasure, only securing $8. The Yealeys live In a lonely road near the foot of Chest, nut Tidge. Shutdown for Six Months. The Alliance plant of the American Steel Foundries Company shut down for an .Indefinite peilod. Supt. Wal lace Bald lack of orders was the cause of the shutdown. Up to December the plant employed about 800 men, but at the present time the force only numbers about 300 men. Officials say the plant will not resume work for six mouths. A number of the foremen and melters will be sent to other plants under the same contiol. An antl-profanlty club has been or ganized among the students of Co lumbia university, with a sliding scale of fines for the members who violate the rules. 6helby Steel Works Burned. The United States Steel Corpora tlun sustained an Indefinite loss by fire at the plant of the Shelby Steel Tube Company. The fire started in one of the smaller stock rooms from a defective electric wire and spread to the larger stock looms, completely de stroying all of them. The product of the entire plant for the fast six months was destroyed within an hour, consisting of 800,010 tons, making In all 25.000,000 feet of finished product and valued at $3,000,000, Steam Pipe Bursts, Wrecking Mill and Burying Men. Thr-e men ate dea and eight are Injured as a tesult of the breaking of a governor belt, allowing an immense fly-wheel to run nway and burst In the Cambila f-'teel Company's No. 2 rail mill at Johnstown, Pa. Three are dead and tight aro more or less In jured. Most or those kill 3d and hurt are foreigners who were employed In tho mill. Tho explosion btought down the whole sedlon of roof running from the puddling mill to the finishing shed of the mill. The woodwork at once took fire frcm the furnaces and it burned fiercely. The accident was tho result of the engine In th mill running off, as the result of the governor belt breaking. Th wheel was about 30 feet In diam eter, and exploded with terrific force, smashing into the large steam main thnt ran along the roof of the bulb'Jng and causing It to burst. In a moment the entire No. 2 mill was a scene of confusion and devastation. Great pieces of Iron and steel machines were torn BBunder and twisted In all con ceivable shapes. Gas and water mains running through the mill were shatter ed, and the flames burst simultaneous ly from all sides. In the explosion the mnsonry walls were wrecked and came tumbling down upon tho workmen, many of whom lay alrendy stunned and bleeding upon tho ground, battling with the flood of water and breathing superheated steam. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. The net earnings of Southern Rail way for November decreased $4,318. Germany will rush troops to tho scene of th? revolt in German South AfrU a. Tho gross earnings of Wabash for the necond week In January Increased $43,100. Additional United States warships and marines will be sent to Chemulpo, Korea. Tho Japanese reply to Russia's last note Is not believed to Improve the prospects for peace. Edward K. Landls. a noted chemist of Philadelphia, shot and killed him self and his wife. . In St. Petersburg It Is expected that other nntlons will bo drawn In If Rus- sln and Japan fight. The Constitutional Convention of Panama held Its first session and took over supremo power fiom tho junta. Colonel John H. Bacon, Mayor of Colorado Springs, Col., In 1800 com mitted suicide because of 111 health. Flro In the Chicago Milling and Malting Company plant caused $75, 000 damages. A crippled little girl was trampled to death in a panic during a fire which destroyed a Dayton (Ohio) public school house. Mr. Spooner, (Rep., Wis.), advanced the argument thnt there might be such a thing as a right of Intel national eminent domain. A law pi midlng compulsory com pensation for Russian factory em ployes and miners In case of accident became effective. Genernl John C. Black, Commander- in-Chief of tho Grand Army of the Re public, has been Bworn In as civil serv ice commissioner. In tho boodle trials at Grand Rapids, Mich., former City Attorney I.nnt K. Snlsbtiry said he hnd assumed tho bur den for tho crimes of himself and others. Hon. William J. Bryan, In a speecn at Lincoln, Nob., declared for the Kansas City platform, with tho addi tion of new Issues which have arisen since. The Socialist party will hold its na tional convention in Chicago May 1. The July option In cotton on the New York pit sold for 14.28 cents, n new high record. The French government sent an ul timatum to the Vatican threatening to dismiss the Papal Nuncio at Paris unless tho Pope approves the appoint ment of five bishops. By a promise to dlssolvo the so- called candy trust and after entering pleas of guilty officers of that concern wero released In New York under sus pension of sentence. The Cramp Company of Philadel phia, being the lowest bidder, prob ably will secure the contract to build both of the new 13.000-ton battleships Idaho and Mississippi. The senate foreign relations commit tee adopted an amendment to the Pan ama canal treaty, giving the United StateB partial Jurisdiction over Colon and Panama harbors. Vienna reports say that Empsror Francis Joseph will, If his health per-l-ilts. pay a visit to King Edward dur ing tho coming summer. The Westlnghouse Brake Company, Limited (of London) declared a divi dend of 10 per cent for the six months ended December 31 last, and a bonus of E per cent for the year. In the trial of A. W. Machen, the Groff brothers and Doctor and Mrs. Loienz, the court ruled tho govern ment must prove the existence of a conspiracy to defraud the government. A six-foot channel in the Mississippi river at low water from St. Paul aud Minneapolis to Cairo, a distance, of 1,000 miles, to be completed by the time the Panama canal Is put Into op eration. Is tho project advocated be fore the House Committee on Rivers aud Harbors, A passenger train on the Seaboard air Una was held up by robbers near Sanderson, Fla. The door of the bag gage car was blown open by dynamite, but the train crew fired several shots, and drove the robbers away before they secured any booty. The United States supreme court rendered an opinion to the effect that the share holders and not the direc tors of a bank shall decide whether an assessment on stook shall be mado when the comptroller of the currency gives notice that the capital stock Is impaired. Moundsvilla, Alabama, Suddenly Removed from the Map. PATH HALF A MILE WIDE SWEPT. Many Homes, Hotels and Warehouses Demolished by tho Wind's Velocity. A disastrous tornado swept over Moundvllle, a town of 30? Inhabitants, 15 miles south of Tuscaloosa. Ala., and as a result 37 persons were killed, and mote than loo Injuied. Every busi ness house, with the exception of a small drugstore, was completr'y de stroyed. The tornado struck the town from t.e southwest, and mowed a path a qi arter of a mile wide through the tewn. All but five of those killed were ne groes. Surgeons were rushed to Moundvlllo from Greensboro and Tuscaloosa, and a,l possible was done to allevlnte the sufferings of the Injured. By the force of tho storm persons were blown hundreds of feet from their beds in the blackness of tho night. Through terror, a father, mother and thiee children fled from their home to seek lefuge, and In their excite ment left a B-yenr-old boy In bed. He was pulled from beneath some timber and thug far It Is Impossible to find any other member of tho family. Bedding, carpets and wearing ap parel wero scattered for a distance of 10 miles through what was a fotest, but which Is now ns clear as though cut by the woodman's axo. Freight cms were torn to splinters, the trucks fiom them being hurled hundreds of reet from tho track. The depot, tho hotel, warehouses, p.ns, 30 homes and many stores, to fitther with their stocks, were com pletely destroyed. It is Impossible to find even tho pillars upon which these structures rested. Bales of cotton stored In warehouses wore torn to at oms, the fragments of lint lodging In trees, mnklng It appear as though that section had been visited by a snow storm. A young clerk employed by W. P. Phifur, hearing the teniblo roaring of the storm, let himself Into a well In the center of the store. He no Booncr found his plnce of safety when the stoie was completely demolished. He was drawn out uninjured. WAR AND BLOODSHED. Anarchy Reigns Supreme In Ssrto Domingo. Santo Domingo Is at present In a state of nnnrchy. War and bloodshed ride over the country. Tho torch of desoUtlou 1ms been kindled. Homo steads are being wrecked, plantations ruined, and nilseiy, starvation and death sweep over the republic. Three distinct revolutions are In full swing. Gen. Jlmlncz nnd his fol lowers opposed to Gen. Morales nnd his, while- the followers of former President Alejandro Wos y Gil are seeking to gain a firm footing. All threa parties lark the necessary funds to push their respective? interests and designs with vigor, hence Gen. Mora les holds his own in the city of SnntJ Domingo, Jlmlncz Is supreme In Can tiago do los Cabnlleros, while tho fol lowers of Wos y Gil are seeking to gain ground In Puerto Plata under the guise of being nllles of Jlmlncz. There is no money in the country. The native cunency Is nickel, the dol lar having a value of only 20 cents American money in tho republic, and is valueless outside the ccuntry. Lo cal loans can no longer be raised, for eign loans cannot be negotiated, as there U no foreign concern that would loan tho Republic five cents In its present' condition. BANK WRECKED. Defalcation of More Than the Capital and Surplus. The Produce Exchange Banking Company, Broadway and Central ave nue, Cleveland, closed Its doors. The Insolvency court has appointed the Cleveland Trust Company receiver. The assets and liabilities of the bank are placed each at $1,500,000. Attorney Andrew Squire, on behalf of the bauk, made the following state ment this afternoon. "There Is a defalcation of $170,000, which Is more thnn the paid-in capital and surplus combined. The original capital was $200,000. but only $5o per Bluue Was paid in. The depositors will be protected fully. The stockholders will have to pay in $100,000 more on their capital stock and $200,000 In stockholders' liability. Mrs. Arthur Oswald, driven Insane. It was thought, by loneliness, killed and beheaded her 6-year-old son at Oakland, near Peterson, N. J. Sixty Persona Were Drowned. It is now estimated that 60 pertons weie drowned ns a result of tho burst ing of a reservoir at Bloemfunteln, Orange River colony, which also de stroyed 17C houses and three hotels. There was a public funeral and inter ment of 23 of the bodies already re covered. The ceremonies weie at tended by all the local officials, and 2,000 of the inhabitants. The shops wero closed and the town is In mourn ing. Sharon Has Forty Fever Cases. Tha rapid development of typhoid fever In Sharon, Pa., has stirred -up tho health board to action and a strong ef fort is being made to discover the ex tent of the disease. Health Officer Yahress made a partial canvass of tho physicians and finds that there are now 40 cases in the city, besides sev eral in South Sharon. One death has occurred In Sharon and 0110 in South Sharon. The beard has asked tho Sharon W'uter Works Company to make an ?a!yi.li of the city water. New Business Keeps Mills Running. Hope That Easy Money Mar ket Will Help Trade. R. G. Dun & Co.'s "Weekly Review of Trade" soys: Weather conditions have furnlfdied the chief Influences In the general trade Bltnatlon. To some extent traffic has bcn hindered, especially nt tho East, but tho latest returns of railway earnings for Jan uary show an Incseaso of 3.9 per cent over 19o3. Consumption of fuel was Inci.'as.id and retell trado In coal sieatly expanded, but no gains at first hand Is reported, owing to the large supplies held by dealers. Retail dis tribution of footwear and heavy wear ing apparel felt tha stimulus and an nual cleat once sales removed accumu lations of dry goods, millinery, etc. Iron and steel plants that resumed at tho turn of the year have obtained sufficient business to continue operat ing and thus far the adjustment of wages has not produced the threat ened strikes, workmen generally ac cepting the changed conditions. As to quotations, there Is nominally no alteration. In so far as this new busi ness keeps mills active, tho situation has Improved. Scrap Iron and steal continue firm and old rails aro the strongest feature. The Industry Is naturally Jn a most unsettled condi tion, owing to the numerous and un equal reductions In quotations, but there Is a feeling that with the easier money mntket will come a better de mand and more settled conditions. Or scarcely less Interest than the abnor mal price of raw cotton Is tha situa tion as to the size of stocks of manu factured goods. Much depends on tho revival of pun basing, thus far, a very limited amount of new business being offored. Increased activity and strength ate reported In the domestic hld- market. Failures this week num bered 358 In the United States, against 2i'.5 last year, and 33 In Cnnnda, com peted with 27 a year ago. NEW MEDICINAL CLAY. Dlocoverer Saya by Its Aid He Ex pects to Live 3C0 Yeara. H. H. Bourne, of Pueblo, Col., the discoverer of a new medicinal clay, sayB he expects to live to bo 300 years old. An analysis of the material has been made and It Bhows a small per cent of silicate of aluminum. This, Mr. Bourne says, Is what gives its curative properties. It Is claimed that no min eral known to scientists Is purer thnu this. It Is nine times finer than the finest stnrch. It Is said to be the purest mineral -to bp found with tho exception of diamonds. J. Iierpont Morgan has a piece of the silicate of aluminum about the size of the end of a small finger, which Is worth more than $20,01.10. according to statements made by chemists. Mr. Bourne, states that he can drink four gallons of wnter now without any ills comfort alter using the nem mntetial as a medicine, and that his weight has increased as well ns his strength, nnd though he Is till yenrs old he feels bet ter thnn when he wns 40. He claims that he enn euro with this clay any case of typhoid fever or dlBase of thnt kind within an hour. GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN DIES. Excer.tric Man Who Took Part In Great Enterprises. George Francis Train died from heart disease at Mills Hotel, No. 1, Now York, wheto he has lived for some years. George Francis Tralu was born In Boston, March 24, 1829. He organized th? firm of Train & Co., shipping a.;ents, with offices here and in Aus tralia, and started the first clipper Ehlps to California In 1849. He mude an Independent lace for president In 1S72. Ho promoted the building of the At lantic and Great Western, and tho Un ion Pacific railroads, and Introduced the first street railways In Europe, Asia and Australia. He made four trips around tho world, one of them in 00 days, holding the record. In 1870 he organized the French commune at Marseilles, and two years later was tried for Insanity, to avoid trial for obscenity. Says He Accepted a Bribe. Ex-Alderman James O. McCool, of Grand Raplda, Mich., pleaded guilty to the charge of accepting a bribe from Lant K. Salsbury for aiding the water deal. Ex-City Clerk Isaac F. LeMoreaux also changed his plea of not guilty to guilty. Ho was charged with conspiracy In tho water deal, olso having acknowledged the receipt of money from Salsbury. Stole Safe and All. Train robbers stolo the Iron safe from the express enr of the Sunset limited northbound on the Southern Pacific railway near San Luis Obispo, and It is understood the robbers so- j cured a large amount of treasure from the stolen strong box, the sum being placed as high as $80,000. This, how evor. is denied at the office of Wells, Fargo & Co. Three Brakemen Killed. C. W. Ayres and Wade Manford, Baltimore and Ohio 'brakemen, each about 27 years of age, were crushed to death within a few moments of each other in the big Brunswick yard. A short time before Brakemun Claude SprlggB, aged 19, of Plane No. 4, was killed by a train. Wrajsk Hurts Three Men. There was a bad wreck on the Ty rone division of the Pennsylvania mil road in which three men were hurt and 25 cars piled up. The Injured are: Conductor E. P. Moore, Engineer A. Moelian, A. U. Woumor. The accident occurred oue mile south of Osceola and was caused by a freight train of (10 empty cars running Into the work tralu. Traffic was blocked nearly all day. All three men were hurt In Jumping from their train. None of the work Jraln crew was in lured. Car Should Be Taken In Putting Gro ceries Away Properly. It matters Iltllo how much care la exercised In tho selection of food of the sum expendefl In It) purchase If It Is not properly cared for after It reaches the houne. Through careless ness nnd Ignorance tho loss Is often great, proving tirnt there Is more tuaa u grain of truth In the old adngo, "A' woman can throw out on a teaspoon whet a man brlnja In on a shovel." Salads ani vegetables Liat arrive In good condition aro dumped In a hot kitchen to wilt and wither until the cook gets "good and ready" to put thorn away. Meat Is left In Its paper to absorb tho taste and get glued fast to It. Fruit Is bruised In emptying It out, butter left uncovered to grow rancid, nnd milk standing to sour. When green vegetables come they should be put at once In the cellar or Into the icebox. Salads may bo wrapped in a damp cloth, then In newspaper, and put in the air. Cereals should bo emptied In their proper receptacles of tin or glass and closely covered to prevent Insects get ting In. Coffee should go Immediately Into an airtight canister In order to keep its aroma. Olive oil should be put Into a cool, dark place, and salt, soap and cheese Into dry places. Dried fruit shottld be kept In air tight glass cans: nuts in a cool, dry place to prevent their growing ran cid, and cdocolate, cocoa and cocoa shells In cold storage. Molasses and syrups sjcod to be whero it Is cool. Eggs should be handled carefully, so as not to break the membrane sep arating tho yolk nnd white, and kept in a dry, cool place. Flour belongs In a bin or barrel raised a few Inches from the floor. AVhllo wheat flour may be obtained In quantity, cornmeal or graham flour should only be purchased in small quantities and kept In tin or glass. Onions should not be left cut, as they aro great absorbers. Neltlier onions, bananas nor muskmelon should be put In an Icebox with other food. Winter vegetables should be fully matured when gathered, dried thor oughly and then stored In a cool, dry placo. Carrots, beets and celery keep better if packed In oanJ. Small and soft fruits should be scat tered on platters, not left In baskets as purchased, ns their own weight crushes them and r.ioy decay. Poaches and fine pears should be removed to a shelf and not be allowed to touch one another. Tomatoes may be rlponed by exposure to the sun. Milk and cream should b9 kept sep arata from tho other foods, as tlioy ab sorb odors. Butter, If purchased In quantity, should haro a cloth spread over the top and on top of that a thick layer of salt. When necessary to take out butter. lift the cloth from the Bide, cut out a square, even plf ce, and re-cover with cloth nnd salt. If only a few pounds aro purchased at a time, koep In a tin or agate pall, cover with a cloth wrung out of salt water and the lid. Lnrd should bo kept in tin and In a ccol place. Fresh flnh should never be permitted to sonk In water. Put in a cool place directly on artificial Ice. Moat should not bo laid on the Ice, as that draws out the Juices. If fresh killed, allow It to get chilled before putting In cold storage, otherwise, the animal heat Is driven inside and causes fermentntlon, which Is poison ous. Do not let chops nnd steaks rest against 011a another, much less ham nnd steak. All meats and poultry require a cool. dry atmosphere. If necossary to hang thorn, suspend with the choicest and tender parts down. Hang lamb and mutton by the shank, and poultry by the feet. Boston Journal. An Omlette Every Day. Mr. O. W. Zook essayed to sell off all his poultry stock, and thought he had done so, but afterward one pullet that had escaped the poultryman's axe turned up. Somothlng over two weeks ago Mr. Zook found two eggs, one white and one brown. In the soli tary nest In the tmrn, and every day thereafter for ten days he did the same. He had seen but one chicken about the place, and it suddenly dawned upon blm that bis pullet was doing double duty In showing the su periority of the Missouri hen. So he set about watching hor. For three weeks he noted her visits to the nest and found one white and one brown egg. He knew there were no eggB In the nest before the hen's visit, and thorefore concluded to a certainty that N for two weeks the hon bad laid two eggs a day. Maltiand (Mo.) Herald. Dyed His Hair W.'th Ink. Becauso she discovered that her oc togenarian husband had dyed bis hair with Ink and so altered his appearance when courting her as to deceive hor as to bis age, Martha Dlckhoph sued for, divorce and $10u0 alimony at Nevada, la A few months ago Martha was a care-Troe girl In Germany. A letter came to her sister trom a relative Inl America, advising her that Peter Dick-f hoph, a rich farmer, 44 years old, de- sired a wife, and suggested that she would fill the bill. But the sister was already betrothed, and she turned the bargain ovor to Martha, Martha thought well of It, came here and was Introduced to Petor. Al though she wasn't much Impressed with his appearance, she consented to marry him, and she became bis bride The government of Alsace-Lorraine has decided to grant small pensions tor lite to those French soldiers who, fought In 1870-71 againm Germany, but have since boonno German subject.