Y r DIED IN BURNING CONVENT Ouo Nun, Nine Children and Four Old Women Perish. SISTERS PROVE THEIR HEROISM One Gives Up Hep Life and Two Others Likely to Perish In Rescue' Work. In the burning of the St. Ann Con vent at St. Genevieve, near Montreal, Qjebec, one 'nun, nine children and fi Air women lo3t their lives and two nuns were seriously Injured. The village had no lire brigade and an' effort was made to get Montreal by telephone. In order to secure as sistance but the effort failed and the UE bulldhig was soon a mass of smouldering ruins. Scenes of frightful suffering fol lowed, as1 tho night was very cold and a fierce wind was blowing. There were about 100 Inmates and as they were taken from the building In tl.clr night clothing the villagers threw open t'.U'lr homes and made a refugo lor thx o..ng and old. There vfro about 20 aged women, some of thtm nt arly 100 years old, at the convent, and It is feared that the shock In some cases will prove fatal. Heroism on the part of the sisters marked the occasion. The pupils who perished wero In a portion of the building where the Are had obtained too much headway before the alarm was given to enable those who responded to effect their rescue. The fire started about midnight In the old ladles' hospice, and the smoke -was so thick that the children on the floor above were unable to get down. As soon as tile fire was discovered the villagers hastened to the Bcene. Bucket brigades were hurriedly formed and every possible effort made to save the building, but the fire had gained such headway that It was Boon apparent that there was no chance to save it from destruction. The occupants, hurriedly aroused by the smoke, attempted to grope their way out of the building. Not withstanding all efforts, unfortunate ly ther was a deplorable loss of life. PARENTS WERE NOT AT HOME Returned In Time to 8ee Their Dwelling Destroyed But too Late to Save Children. The explosion of a bottle of gaso line in the homo of Jotn E. Kunkle, In Maple avenue, Greensburg, Pa., re sulted in three children of the family being burned to death and a fourth so fearfully injured that her recovery is a matter of doubt. Five other per sons also hurt. The dead: .Paul Kunkle, 7 years old; Alice Kunkle, 5 years old; Louise Kunkle, 3 years old. The Injured are: Catherine Kunkle, 2 years old; George M. Gester, right hand so seriously bunted that ampu tation may be necessary; William McCarthy, overcome by smoke; Jacob Weaver, overcome by smoke; Attorney A. M. Wyant and John S. Murphy severely burned and cut about the hands and arms by glass, while trying to rescue the children. Mr. and Mrs. Kunkle, accompan ied by. two of their seven children, In the early evening attended holy week Bervice in the First Reformed church, leaving their home In charge of Mrs. Kunkle's mother, Mrs. Cordelia Rugh, aged 75 years. The children went to : bed after the departure of their par ents arid were soon asleep. At 9 o'clock, Louise, the next to the young est child, awakened and calling her grandmother to her bedside afl;'ed for a drink of water. In bringing the water to the child the grandmother tripped over a rug and a portion of , the water was Bpllled on the counter pane. The lights were low In the room and in taking a towel from a mantel piece, the grandmother overturned a bottle of gasoline. The bottle crashed to the floor Just In front of a gas grate. In an instant' the fluid was aflame, being thrown to all p "s of the room by the explosion which folowed. , Mr. and Mrs. Kunkle were on their way home from church when the alarm sounded. They arrived Just as the fire was at its height. Before tha children had been taken from the ruins of the house the parents were both taken in a swooning condition to the home of a neighbor. Mr. Kunkle is a member of the Westmoreland bar, being a law part ner of ex-Congressman Edward E. Robblns. His home, one of the most pretentious in Greensburg, was gutted and Its furnishings either destroyed by fire or damaged by water. The loss will be at least $18,000. Storey Cotton Arrest. Postoffice Inspectors arrested Pat rick J. Kearns at Coney Island, on an Indictment charging him. and others with using the United States mall to defraud. " Tho Inspectors who made the arrest say Keams was Treasurer of the Storey Cotton Company of Philadelphia, which recently collapsed. The man under arrest denies all knowledge of the affairs of the Stor ey concern, and declares that he has never been In Philadelphia. Predicts Disaster. Dr. J. MacDonald, an astronomer of Binghamton, N. Y., in his s almanac Just published, says the solar con figuration and sun spots radicate se f vere earthquakes in many sections, especially from Florida to Nova Scotia. New York city will suffer most He predicts a number of h.,Htlna will ha aholian rfnarn mr,A lha -"Moss of Ufa will be terrible. Japan, he iri, will be nearly wiped off the -earth by earthquakes, and a great tidal wave. ACTIVITY EXPANDS Cc .ndltlon of Traffic Arrangements Threatens Accumulation Steel Making May Be Injured by Ore Shortage. III. G. Dun & Co.'s "Weekly Review of jTrade" says: Erratic weather has tended to make trade reports some- wliAit Irregular, but on the whole the wel'k's results were satisfactory. Early delays were followed by Increas ed activity particularly iu want misfit be I termed Easter lines. It Is note worthy that much business for fall delivery has appeared, and more sup plementary spring and summer con traits are being placed than Jobbers anticipated. Mercantile payments are also) Increasingly prompt. Industrial activity expands. Iron furnaces and steal mills maintaining their good rec ord, textile plants securing larger or der: i, and footwear manufacturers are ablt to hold full prices without cur tail! ng operations. Labor cc-.itroversles are few and caus'e little , Inconvenience, while im migration 'or the last week was more thanfdouii'J that of tho corresponding week In ' Ji4. transporting Interests are able i handle the Increased busi ness! wit i little congestion, railway earnings Ahus fnr reported for April exceiHHnf last year's by 10.2 per cent. Foreign Commerce at the port of New Yorkfo- the last week showed a gain of $3,00:,8fil In value of merchandise exported and Imports were $3,415,922 largri' than In tho same week of 190 Hlgjher wage scales becoming effec tive ojn May 1 assure freedom from la bor troubles at blast furnaces, and there 1 Is little friction at the steel mills,; but .the Industry will be Inter rupted unless Iron ore Is freely mined. Otherwise the Iron and steel industry Is In splendid condition, contracts covering deliveries well Into next year in many departments, and there is no division that can be styled dull. Coke output! continues to eclipse all records, and, ay traffic conditions are favorable, rree movement threatens accumu latlcM.lso that this fuel is a little weaken. Both anthracite and bitumin ous coail are active. Leather Is steady, despltejrepr-'ts of sales at concessions emanating rom transactions in In ferior i;ooii i while belting butts ad vanced Isha ply. Packer hides are strong and ctlve. Foreign dry hides are unchanged. Failures this week numbered 200 in the Vnfted States, against 241 last year, nnd 21 In Canada, compared with 12 a yeir ago. ZEMSTVOISTS BARRED Congress Called for Next Month Pro hibited by Government. A private circular has been ad dressed to the Governors of the sever' al Russian provinces Informing them that the congress of Zemstvolsts called for May 7 has been prohibited and instructing them to prevent the departure of delegates to that con gress. The congress of Journalists will recommend wide reaching meas ures toward the liberation of the press, as well as u political programme along the -lines o! the programmes adopted by tho recent congresses of barristers and doctors. The Juridical Society at Tomsk, Western Siberia, adopted a strong preamble which reads like the Declar talon of Independence, proclaiming that all citizens of Russia, without re card to nationality or religion, are equal before the law and entitled to equal protection from the state, and advocating the abolition of all clas3 privileges. TOOK M'KINLEY STATUE Sculptor Declares He Has Not Yet Been Paid For It. In broad daylight C. D, Blllman, a sculptor removed from its pedstal in City park at Logans'.iort, Ind., an heroic statue to William McKlnley, wh!ch had been erected by citlztr.s as a memorial to the martyred Presidant. Blllman alleges that he has not yet been paid for the statue. Taking ad vantage of the absence of all city officers at a municipal league meeting this afternoon, Blllman backed a wagon against the base of the monu ment and, with block and tackle, trans ferred the monument to the back yard of his home. OLD WOMAN WEDS A DOY Afteehe Ceremony Declares She Feels Thirty Years Younger. Mrs. N. O. Griffin, a gray-haired wo man of 60, widow of a Philadelphia carpet merchant, who left an estate valued at $1,000,000, leaning on the arm of her sturdy coachman, John Wood, appeared at the Episcopal rec tory In Whitehall, N. Y., and told Rev. Mr. Elliott that they wanted to get married. The 42 years' difference In their ages was so apparent that the clergyman used every effort to dis suade them from their matrimonial venture. It -s all to no avail, how ever, and the ou"? answer the woman would make was: "I don't care If Johnnie is only 18. I am CO and I guess I am old enough to know whether I love Mm or not." The mir Ister performed the cere mony. Tho bride, beaming all over with contentment, as she boarded the train, said she felt 30 years younger, and she looked it. too. The main building of the Vnnder bllt university at Nashville, Tenn., was gutted by fire. Loss $200,000. Turpentine Combine Formed. . Fifty leading turpentine operators of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisana Florida, and Texas have formed a combine with a capital stock of $3, 500,000. The combination will be known as the Naval Stores Product Export company. It ia understood that the combine will control 490, 000 casks of turpentine out of a total production in the country of 650,000 casks. Headquarters will be in Savannah.' Postoffice Order Against Some Large Concerns. MONEY POURED IN FREELY Former Ccngressman From Indiana and Former Preacher Among Promoters. William T. Owen, former member of Congress from Indiana, former secre tary of state of Indiana and former minister of the gospel, organizer and promoter of the Ubero Plantation Company of Boston, and the Conslll dated Ubero Plantation Company, also of Boston, has gone to Europe, and thousands of investors in the stocks nnd bonds of the companies are hold ing the sack. The sack is empty. A fraud order was Issued to-day against the two Boston concerns. It Is also said that Arthur W. Stedman and Frederick G. Hood, two prominent men In Boston business and social circles, president and vice president, respectively of the Consoli dated Ubero Company, are likewise absent In Europe. Judge U. Z. Wiley, of Indiana, nt present Judge of the Indiana appelate court. Is named as treasurer of this company. The Investigation conducted by the department through Inspector Shaw disclosed one of the most gigantic and baldest frauds that has been perpetu ated In recent years. Owen embarked In his Mexican plantation scheme shortly after retir ing from the office of the secretary of state in Indiana In 189S. He and Boi'ges organized the coffee companies which were to develop large tracts of coffee lands In Mexico. Stock was put on the market. Extensive adver tising was done and It was represented that the companies .were making suf iflcent money while' developing the property to pay dividends of 10 per cent, annually. Such dividends were paid, but the Investigation disclosed that they were paid from funds of Investors; ' that there had been practically no develop men of the property, and hence no re turns warranting dividends. As large amounts of money are still pouring Into the companies from Investors making good their monthly Installments, Postmaster General Cortelyoti decided that the fraud ord ers should Issue. It is said that Owen and Borges have operated In other cities and floated similar plantation companies. Cleveland and Toledo are said to be two cities where they have operated. BANKERS PLEADED GUILTY Cashier, Teller and Bookkeeper 8en ' fenced to Penitentiary. E. F. Knneen, former cashier of the closed Citizens Savings bank of Lo rain, pleaded guilty to embezzling the funds of the bank and was sentenced to serve seven years In the penitent iary. H. B. Walker and Dana Walker, teller and bookkeeper, respectively, of t.ie bank, also pleaded guilty and were each sentenced to two years and six months In the pentltentlary. Of the four Indictments against Kanecn, two were nolled. The indict ments against the Walkers were also nolled. In pleading guilty Kaneen ad mitted that he was entirely to blame for the Walkers' downfall. The pris oners were taken to the penitentiary immediately, after sentence was pass ed. HONORS FOR PAUL JONES American Squadron Will Be Detailed to Bring Body Home. I The Btate department has advised I Ambassador Porter that an Americai squadron will be (.at to bring the : body of Paul Jones to the United States probably In June. It Is expect j ed thBt the French government will i participate In an imposing funeral i pageant when the body leaves Paris. ! Detailed plans have not yet been j made but It probably will occur short I ly before the French national holiday, ! June 14. Large forces of French soldiers and sudors will form the es cort TRY TO CUT RAILWAY Russian Have Fight With Natives on Harbin and Vladivostok Line. There was a determined attempt on the night of April 17 to cut the rail road between Harbin and Vladivostok, a formidable body of Chinese bandits making an attack near the station of Imyanpo. 100 miles east of Harblu. After a desperate fight which lasted several hours, the bandits were driven off and ' dispersed. Many smaller companies of Chinese bandits are roving In the rear of the Russian army, but disappear when pursued. It is thought probable they are Manchurians, who scatter to their villages when they find themselves in danger. There are various reports of wide turning movements at Tsitslhar or eastward of that point, but as yet these rumors are apparently unfound ed. The vigor of the skirmishes tak ing place on tho left flank of the Rus sian army, however, seems to Indi cate the Japanese are planning to thrust northeastward and Interpose a force between Harbin and Vladivostok. An official report from Manchuria headquarters says: ' To Harass Japan's Shippings. A dispatch from the far east states that Admiral Rojestvensky has de tached three of his fast auxiliaries, which formerly belonged to the Hamburg-American line to harass Japanese shipping and to raid undefended parts of the Japanese coast, hoping to com pel Admiral Togo to weaken his fleet oy senaing cruisers to chase them. Wlscoiath woman whn uima b the original Mrs. Hoctt has made her appea-anSca. TEN HOUR LAW INVALID U. 8. 8upreme Court Says Law Is Unconstitutional. In an opinion by Justice Peckham the Supreme court of the United States held to be unconstitutional the New York State law making 10 hours a day's work and sixty hours a week's work in bakeries In that State. Justices Hurlan, White, Day and Holmes dissented and Justice Harlan declared that no more import ant decision had been rendered in the last century. The opinion was handed down in the case of Lockner vs. the State of New York and was based on the ground that the law Interferes with the free exercise of the rights of con tract between individuals. The Court of Appeals of the State upheld the law nnd affirmed the Judgment of the trial court holding Lockner guilty. Judge Parker wrote the opinion of the New York Court of Appeals supporting the law, and the court divided four to three on the question of validity. $600,000 FIRE LOSS Valuable Tannery and Immense Stock Destroyed. A fire, which destroyed Beoboe & Sons' tannery at Tltusvllle, Pa., caused a loss estimated at $600,000. fully in sured. The plant was one of the fin est and largest In the country, and nothing was saved, an Immense and valuable stock being destroyed. The fire broke out In the drying room of the tannery and rapidly work ed Its way toward a large benzine factory. The Oil City fire department was asked for assistance nnd, arriv ing about two hours later, with their aid the local firemen succeeded In confining the flames to the Beebee plant. A. P. Johnston, a grocer, became confused In the smoke as a spectator and fell Into a hot water vat. He was rescued by Chief of Police Laley and two firemen. His Injuries are not ser ious. In the run to the fire Fireman James Wlthrop was thrown from a hose cart and had his skull fractured. He was removed to the City hospital. WAGES ARE INCREASED Blast Furnace Workers Will Demand They Be Given Eight-Hour Day. Notices have been posted In the various blast furnaces at Youngstown, O., that beginning May 1, the wages of laborers will be Increased 5 per cent, and turn men 10 per cent. President James McMahon of the Blast Furnace Workers and Smelters' Union of America, said the advance was but a return of the former wages, received by the men before the In dependents reduced them a year ago. The United States Steel Corporation Is not Included. The men will still make demand for an eight-hour day. JAPANESE SEIZE COLLIERS Rojestvensky With Portion of Fleet Passes Hongkong. The Japanese are reported to have captured a large number of colliers off the coast of Cochln-Chhia. Since leaving Europe Admiral Rojestvensky has lost only eight men by disease out of 18,000 with him. A dispatch from St. Petersburg says that Vice Admiral Rojestvensky, with a portion of his squadron, has been sighted off Hongkong, sailing for the east. A dispatch from Hongkong says that a portion of the Russian squadron was seen Sunday at Turan bay, about 350 miles north of Kamranh bay. INDIANS DYING Consumption May Exterminate En tire Winnebago Tribe. The once mighty Winnebago tribe of Indians is facing a miserable end, though the National Government holds $900,000 to the tribe's credit. Scores of the Indians are dying of consump tion and this entails a heavy expense on . several towns. Resident Indian Inspector A. P. Jones Is authority for the statement that consumption, unless stopped, will soon klli the whole tribe. WILL NOT ADMIT DEFEAT Russian Bureaucracy Forms Plans for Manchuria and Kwantung. The committee of the far east, under Admiral Alcxleff, oblivious of what happened last year. Is proceeding dally with the work of elaborating tne administration of Manchuria and the Kwantung peninsula. ' A school system for Port Arthur has Just been completed, Its execution being placed in the hands of the minister of education with power to "temporarily suspend" tho system, and today the appointment of two Justices of the- peace for Port Arthur was officially gazetted. To Aid Poor Colleges. Gifts amounting in all to $250,000 will be made this year to small col leges in the rural districts of Tennes see, Kentucky, North Carolina and West Virglna. This announcement was made by Dr. D. K. Pearsons, re tired capitalist and benefactor of many small colleges In tho United States. Agents of the Equitable passed reso lutions calling on Vice President Hyde to resign. . District Attorneys Named. I. C. Herndon, of Welch, W. Va., and H. Albert Rummel, of Charleston, W. Va., have been appointed assistant district attorneys of the United States. The appointment of Messrs. Herndon and Rummel was made at the request of Elliott Northcott who took the oath of office as United States district attorney of the Southern district of West Virginia. The Japanese government Is about to raise another domestic loan of 150.000.000. DEFIANCE TD STEEL TRUST Five Furnaces In Valley With draw from General Trade. WILL NOT BEG FOR MARKET Youngstown Iron, Shot & Tube Com pany Will Use Production In Bessemer Plant. An Important move in the Iron and steel business of the Mahoning val ley has Just been made in connection with the building of the Bessemer plant of the Youngstown Iron, Sheet & Tube Company. Five of the largest independent furnaces of thd valley have gcae into a deal and withdrawn from the general market. The furn aces include those of the Brier Hill Iron & Coal Company, the Youngs town Steel Company, the Ohio Iron & Steol Company at Lowellsvllle, the Stewart furnaces at South Sharon and the Plckands, Mather & Company furnaces at Sharpsvllle. These furn aces have a capacity of 15,000 tons a month and in the past this has gone to the general trade, at times the independents begging for market and at other times the United States Cor poration begging for pig Iron. When the Youngstown Iron Sheet & Tube Company organized it was In tended to build an open hearth steel plant, The ore properties purchased were not suitable for the Bessemer plant and It was necessary to get raw material somewhere. This, when the Bessemer steel plant proposition was proposed, was a critical point. The necessity of securing raw ma terial caused the holding bnck of the steel plant proposition. When the Independents of this and the Shenan go valley indicated their willingness to enter into this deal it was a vic tory for the Youngstown Iron, Sheet & Tube Company. With five furnaces at their command the trust could be defied. Besides, the short hauls in the valleys, which amount to nothing more than transfer charges, not more than 15 cents a ton, give the Independents and the Sheet & Tube Company a decided advantage. The shipping of pig Iron at $2 a ton is quite different from the transfer at 15 cents a ton and this - makes the position of the company still stronger. FOUND GOLD IN CABIN Farmer Accidentally Discovers $1,600 In Coin on His Premises. Philip Sesler who lives In Georges township, Fayette County, Pa., ripped a board from the end of a log In a cabin on his farm and found secreted behind it $1,600 in gold. It Is sup posed that the money was hid there many years ago by his grandfather, James Downer. Encouraged by his find Sesler is carefully examining the cabin In' the hope of finding more treasure. Sesler Is of a retiring disposition and said nothing about his find until a missionary society gathering at his home, when he displayed the gold to his astonished hearers. Most of the money is In $10 and $20 pieces, all of them being dated prior to the six property. Sesler, who was a favorite, ties. James Downer, who died a number of years ago, Is well remembered by a number of Uniontown people. He was of a peculiar disposition and it is said that he never deposited money In banks. At the time of his death he left a will, disposing of his various was the chief heir, and the cabin where the gold was found Is located on a farm which Downer left him. - Russians Cut Cable. Russian agents have cut the cable between Foochow and Formosa. Six teen Japanese cruisers and many tor pedo craft have been sighted scouting off Sampaloco point. Three strange warships have been sighted at Bantan gas In Philippine waters. Minister Grlscom has cabled the state depart ment that Japan has Included the Pas cadoea and Tsugaru straits in zones of defense. CAUGHT BETWEEN BASES Russians Retreat in Great Disorder Over Pellng Pass. The following official announcement was made in Tokyo: "The force advancing north from Slngking, driving the enemy before them, occupied Ylngecheng, 38 miles north of Slngking, at 1 o'clock on the afternoon of April 14. A detachment of the same forec, co-operating with cavalry, occupied Pachiatzu at 6 o'clock In the evening of the same day. "The enemy's force near Pachiatzu consisted of seven sontnlas of cavalry and one battery of artillery. They first retreated toward Ylngecheng, then came back to Pachiatzu. Find ing It occupied, they were thrown Into confusion, and they retreated In great disorder over Pellng pass, two miles north of Pachiatzu. Japs Get 200 Russian Guns. ,The London Dally Telegraph's cor respondent at Toklo reports that the Japanese recovered 200 of the 600 guns which the Russians abandoned In the retreat from Mukden. Japanese Land Reinforcements. Captured Japanese spies place the number of Japanese army at 400,000, and say the losses at the battle of Mukden are already being replaced by drafts from home battalions. Lieuten ant Komayashl, one of the spies, cal culates that the Japanese losses at Mukden exceeded 100,000. 'The muzzle of an eight-Inch gun on the battleship Iowa, oif Pensacola, Fla., blew off during target practice, but none of the men was Injured. CORTELYOU CHANGES RULING Postmaster Will Not Be Allowed to Act as County Chairman. An official circular will be Issued goon by Postmaster General Corteyou that will circumtcrlbe the political activities of postmasters. This docu ment will set forth that for tho good of the service a postmaster should not act as chairman of a county committee. This ruling will be made in re sponse to a letter from the Pennsyl vania Republican state committee. It appears that former Postmaster Gen eral Payne advised the Pennsylvania Republican state committee that there was no objections to postmasters be ing selected as delegates to the na tional convention and the purpose of the present Inquiry is to ascertain whether a coiraty chairman will be treated In .the same manner by the postoffice department. It Is under stood that while Postmaster General Cortelyou will sustain his precefles sor'8 ruling as far as being delegate Is concerned that he will rule it is not advisable for them to act as the head of the county organization. This action will not be based upon the grounds of offensive partisanship, but that the duties of a chairman have become so extensive It Is feared they will Interfere with the official duties of a postmaster. SULTAN'S AIDE DEFEATED Gen. Rlza Pasha Loses All His Guns and Stores In Recent Fight. News received from Hodeida Is to the effect that the situation at Sanaa is precarious, necessitating a new re lief expedition, owing to Gen. Rlza Pasha, nid-de-camp to the Sultan, hav ing lost all his guns and stores in re cently fighting his way into Sanaa. Rlza Pasha, with a strong force of men, reached Sanaa, capital of the province of Yemen, Arabln, on April 29. On March 3 It was reported that Sanaa had fallen into the hands of the insurgents, and on March 18 a dispatch stated that Sanaa had capitu lated, but subsequently this was de nied by the military authorities at Constantinople. Boston Wool Market. Heavy sales o( foreign wool and the reports from the West as to the urgency In the making of contracts have been the features of the wool market. Quotations on domestic wools are about as follows Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, 3334c; X. 3031c; No. 1, 3C37c; No. 2. 37 38c; fine unwashed, 2425c; quarter blood unwashed, 30c; blood, 30 31c; half blood, 2930c; unwashed delaine, 2728c; unmerchantable, 2S 29c; fine washed delaine, 3637c. Michigan fine unwashed, 2223c; quarter blood unwashed, 29 30c; blood, 30c; half blood, 28 29c; un washed delaine, 252fic. Charged With Embezzlement. Cashier D. W. Tyro.i of the Spartansburg, (Pa.) bank which fail ed In March, has been arrested, charged with embezzlement, on com plaint of W. E. Rice of Chicago. Rice alleges he Is a manufacturer of chairs and that he contracted with Tyron for the erection of a chair fac tory at Spartansburg. He claims ho paid Tyron $1,500 to be used in con ducting the business. He states that Tyron diverted the money to his own use, never building the factory or buying the mnchlnery. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. All the membcM of the pension board of rsview have resigned. The Jury selected to try Nan Patter son is almost entirely made up of murried men. A fight cc.-ured between strikers and mill guards at Wheel'ng, in which a number were seriously hurt . The enmmanrior of the president's yacht Sylph reputed to ths navy de partment that hU ca'l for help was Ignored by the captiin of the steamer Otorl. Agent3 of the Equitable society, in conference assembled, sustained Pres ident Alexander and appealed to leg islature to use its powers In tnibling policy holders to s!t In the directorate of the society. At Chicago, Johann Hoch, the big amist and alleged wife murderer, was arralngcd under the new indictment recently returned against him. H"e pleaded not guilty. Rev. John Dodge, pastor of the Holiness church at Lebanon, Ind., has been arrested on a charge of stabbing Oscar Johnston, a member of his con gregation, during a quarrel. Increases averaging 9.76 per cent, are shown by the gross earnings re ports of 37 railroads for the first week of April. Net earnings of 99 rail roads for February show an average decrease of 14.07 per cent., but the same roads for eight months show an average Increase of 6.87 per cent Taft Will Visit Tokio. On further consideration of the matter as laid before him by Secre tary Hiokl, of the Japanese legation Secretary W. H. Taft has concluded to visit Tokio while hl3 ship, the MiMchurla, on which he will make his Philippine trip. Is coaling at Yoko hama. The secretary has made such a visit on the occasion of other like detentions at Yokohamo and feels that he could scarcely fall to make an official call on this occasion. Battle at a Monastery. A band of Bulgarians, April 15 at tacked the monastery of Athamas, near KUssura, which was occupied by a Greek band. Fifteen Bulgarians were killed and the remainder fled to Zagovltchant, to which place the Greeks pursued them, killing; many and burning; a number of houses. In an engagement between Turks and Albanians near Frtxren tha Albanians wars def stated with the loss of 30 men killed. I KEYSTONES LEXOW IN GREEN Taxpayers' League Appealsfrom tors' Reports of Accounts cf mlssloners, Poor Directors d 8herlff. The Greene County Tax-Payers' large Bums of money alleged to have been Improperly or Illegally expended by various county officers. Appeals are taken from the county auditors reports, auditing the accounts of coun ty commissioners T. J. Hogo, w, Fry and W. L. Inghram; Poor rectors Spencer Cowel and John and Sheriff John J. Koebort. Thi amounts excepted to aggregate many thousands of dollars and It Is charged that illegal and excessive sums were paid for bridge building, road making, salaries for employes, care of the poor, etc. Lew 1 KlngV Two departments of the National Tube works at McKeesport win be removed to Versailles borough, two miles above McKeesport. Work of razing the buildings was commenced yesterday, and within a week the company expects to have the machin ery In operation at the new location. The departments to be moved Include the Job and pole shops, where about 150 men are employed. The ground vacated at McKeesport will be used as a site for departments of the new tube mills. , It has been announced that the Fort Wayne, Van Wert and Lima Traction company in Ohio has award ed to the Cambria Steel company of Johnstown, the contract for all the , steel rails to be used In tho construe- '' tlon of the unfinished section of tha line from Van Wert to Fort Wayne. The orders are to rush the shipments. The section of road to be completed Is about 33 miles long, and the rails are much heavier than those used on the ordinary electric railway. Edward Grear night telegraph opera tor of the Nickel Plate railroad at Thornton Junction, had a desperate battle with two burglars. Two men broke Into his office and he protected himself with the only weapon he had. his pocket knife. He stabbed one of the men, but the other struck him over the head with a heavy poker and dragged away his companion. Grear , did not recover consciousness for some time. Cerebro spinal meningitis, or spot ted fever, Is spreading about Con nellsvllle. The first deaths reported are those of Elizabeth Wllmer, aged 19 years, at Wheeler, a suburb, and I Grant Real, of Mt. -Pleasant township, X Westmoreland county. There are two cases at Dunbar and several at Lels enrlng No. 2, a mining settlement. The State Board of Health has been appealed to for help. Butler borough will hasten to avail itself of the provisions of the act Just signed by the governor amending the third class city act. The amendment was drafted by Attorney H. H. Gouch er, and provides that on petition of 100 citizens council shall, submit the question of third class city charter to the voters. There is a population of 18,000 in the borough limits. Julian Kennedy, of Pittsburg, is pre paring the plans for a new universal plate mill to be erected Immediately by the Cambria Steel Company. The mill will have a capacity of 200 tons a day, and will cost about $600,000. One hundred and fifty men will be employed. It Is expected the mill will be ready for operation before January 1. A riot was precipitated when Ualtlmore and Ohio railroad workmen attempted to lay tracks near the prop erty of W. D. Smith on Moravia street. New Castle. The latter fired four pistol shots and chased the force away. The railroad company has been ne gotiating with Smith for his proper ty but no agreement has been reach ed. ' One thousand acres of land under- laid with limestone has been purchased at Lowellville, by the George W. Johnson Limestone company, of New Castle. One hundred thousand dollars will be expended In installing machin ery and laying tracks to facilitate the work of quarrying. The Butler county commissioners have filed notice of f- ..ir Intention to , build eight new bridges during the year. Two will be in Clinton town ship and one each In Butler, Jeffer son, Allegheny, Penn and Washing ton townships and in Harrlsville bor ough. The Point bottle works plant, at Rochester, was sold at receiver's sale to Henry M. Camp, of Rochester, trustee, representing a syndicate which la making an effort to place the works In full operation at an early date. The price paid was $15,800. The Cambria Steel Company at Johnstown has made a readjustment of wages. It Is not officially announc- ed, but It is understood that the raise will make wages the same as before the cut made more than a year ago. The Slavish woman who committed suicide at Altoona, by throwing her self under a freight train, has been identified as Mary Zuka. 25 years old. Homesickness is accredited as the cause for her act. Cerebro-splnal meningitis, or spot ted fever, has invaded Greensbuvg. There have been about six cases with in the past few weeks and all have been fatal. JacoH Presock, fire boss at Oliver was arrested for violating the mine laws. It Is alleged that he lit lamps In the mines and thus imperiled the lives of from 900 to 1,000 men em ployed there. John Gllmore, J. Q. Van Swearln sen and other Uniontown, capitalists nave bought a SO-acre tract of coal land near McClellandtown for $75, 000. William McLaln and two children of Boottdale, were thrown from a bac gT, which cilllded with a street oar, aad were painfully hurt. Cow I V; - V v.. i L