V'' Russian Government Showed It Was in Earnest. RED FLAGS SOON HAULED DOWN Fanatical Commander and About 1,500 of His Mutineers Surren der After Brief Fight. The official dispatches to St. Petersburg announcing the decisive crushing of the greut mutiny at Se bastopol, and the capture of all the mutineers, including the fanatical commander. Lieutenant Schmidt, has raisod a great loud from the hearts of Count Witte and his associates in the government. The dispatches show that the re sistance of the mutineers when they were convinced that the government meant business and could count on the active support of the troops in the forts was faint -hearted. As the Otchakoff fired only half a dozen shots before hauling down its flag the damage to the city of Sehastopol may be far loss than had been ex pected. The admiralty announces that It has received from General Kaulbars, governor general of Odessa, the fol lowing telegram addressed to him by Vice Admiral Choukhin at Sehastopol dated May 29: "We wished to terminate the affair on November 2S by surrounding the mutinous division with troops and is suing an ultimatum for unconditional surrender. The mutineers, however, commenced to attack on the night of November 27, seizing the torpedo boat Svirepot and three others which had drawn near the cruiser Otcha koff. "All these vessels hoisted red flags, after which the Otchakoff flew the signal that Lieutenant Schmidt was In command of the fleet. "At 3:30 o'clock on the afternoon of November 29, fire was opened by field artillery on the ships in the southern harbor flying .red flags. These flags were immediately lower ed and Lieutenant Schmidt signaled: 'I have many captured officers.' "The Otchakoff then opened Are, to which the north shore battery and the loyal ships, whose breech blocks , had been restored, replied. The Svirepoi advanced to the attack, but was met with a strong fire from two cruisers, and from the battleship Ros tlslav. The Svirepoi was immediate ly put out of action, as were also two other torpedo boats, one of which sank. The Otchakoff had fired bare ly six shots when she hoisted the , white flag and the squadron ceased to fire. A conflagration broke out on the Otchakoff, and boats were sent to rescue the survivors and to trans fer those who had been wounded. Lieutenant Schmidt, who was dress ed a a common sailor, escaped but was arrested later." General Katilbars telegraphed later that he had Just received a telegram from Captain Bergel, chief of Admir al Chouknln's staff, saying that dur ing the night about 1,500 mutineers had surrendered, with 19 quickfirlng guns, tt the Brest regiment and that the barracks were occupied by troops. General Katilbars also forwarded "an additional dispatch from Admiral Chouknin, saying that the barracks In which the mutineers had defended themselves, had been occupied by the troops. General Kaulbar's dispatch says that the mutineers who surrendered, together with those captured on the Elchakoff, number 2,000, the majority of them being reservists, who were sent to the barracks at the time of the mutiny. Reports of the number of dead vary from 5,000 to a much smaller number. Another Football Player Dies. James Foster, 23 years old, of Cuba, N. Y., a tackle on the All-College team, of Syracuse, died at a private hospital In Buffalo. N. Y., as the re sult of Injuries received in a football game at Sharon, Pa. CUBA ELECTS PRESIDENT Palma Returned to Office and Moder . ate Candidates Are Chosen. The political agitation which began six months ago with the national convention of the Liberal party and which has dwindled since the with drawal of Gen. Jose Miguel Gomez the presidential candidate named by that convention, ended in a quiet election. The vote was very light this being due to the lack of interest In the .wholly one-sided election. i The withdrawal of the Liberals from all nominations left a clear field for the Moderates, and every Moderate nominee was elected from President Palma to the provincial councilors. ' Fire Destroys Dormitory. The boys' dormitory at the Indiana (Pa.) State Normal school took fire and was entirely destroyed with most of the furniture. The building was erected 10 years ago and the loss is estimated at $40,000 with $8,000 In surance. Six members of the faculty: Profs. Walter Mitchell, R. E. Owens, Sherman Lowry, F. A. Hildebrand, L. L. M. Eaken, J. M. Hickman, with their families, lived in the building and lost their furniture and libraries. NEW CABINET FOR SPAIN Senor Mo ret Undertakes the Task of Forming One. King Alfonso has accepted the resig nation of the Cabinet and has request ed Benor Moret, formerly Minister of the Interior, to form a new Ministry. Senor Moret has drawn up a list containing: For Minister of the In terior, Senor Romanones; Minister of War, Senor Duque; Minister of Mar ine, Senor Concas, and Minister of Fi nance. Benor Salvador. . CZAR'S GUARD UNDER ARREST Disaffection In the Army Spreads to the Imperial Palace. General excitement has been 'Caus ed by an unconfirmed rumor that a Russian grand duke shot at the czar, wounding him in the right hand. The most alarming indication of the spread of disaffection In the Rus sian army, extending even to regi ments near the person of the em peror, was given In the arrest at Tsarkoe-Selo, of a number of soldiers belonging to the Yellow Cuirassiers of the guard, the Hussars guard and the Life Guard riflemen for present ing, a series of petitions, Including one against the use of troops for police purposes. The regiments In question are those which have been specially se lected by Gen. Trepolf to guard the Emperor and his family. They have been counted upon as being loyal to the last, ready even to be torn to pieces in defense of his majesty, like the Swiss guards of Louis XVI. Their arrest, however, although not for open sedition, shows how the leaven of discontent is working even within the precincts of the Imperial park at TsarsUo-Selo. FAMILY OF FOUR KILLED Gas Escaping Near House Ignites and Explosion Ensues. In a gas explosion at their home near Weston, W. Va., Charles F. Douglass, his wife and their two chil dren were instantly killed and their bodies were roasted almost beyond recognition. The Douglass family lived on a farm, and near their home ran a large main, containing a heavy pressure ot gas. A valve was blown out of the pipe and a tremendous volume of gas poured out, enveloping the house. It ignited from a gas jet on the op posite 'side of the house from the pipe-line, and aa explosion resulted. The house was blown to splinters and the ruins, under which were bur ied the four victims, were consumed by the flames. CONFESSES KILLING FAMILY Prisoner Admits He Murdered His Wife and Five Children. William S. McWilliams confessed to the murder last week of his wife and five children at his farm house, near Independence. McWllliams says he committed the net because he be lieved his children would be better off dead than alive, and because he could live no longer with his wife, whom he accused of driving him to desperation with demands for money. McWilliams suld he first struck his wife and each child down with a ham mer and then stabbed them with a butcher knife. BURTON GETS SIX. MONTHS. Senator Must Also Pay $2,500 Fine and Loses His Civil Rights. XTnited States Senator Joseph Ralph Burton of Kansas, was sen tenced in the United States circuit court to serve six months in the Iron county jail, Ironton, Mo., and to pay a fine of $2,500 as the penalty for conviction on the indictment, charg ing that he hud acted in the capacity of a paid attorney for the Rialto Grain Company. The sentence carries with it the further penalty of being forever bar red from holding any position of profit or trust under the state or national governments. Senator Fined for Contempt. Vnlted States Senator Thomas M. Patterson, was held by the Colorado supreme court to be in contempt for printing certain cartoons and editor ials in Ins two newspapers, and was fined $1,000, to be committed to Jail until paid. Subsequently the court ordered a stay of execlulion for six ty days. Senator Patterson declared he would go to jail rather than pay the fine. His attorneys also Informed the court , that Senator Patterson would exercise his constitutional right as a Vnlted Senator to claim exemption from arrest while Congress was in session. . DAMAGE BY LAKE STORM Eleven Lives Lost and Ten Vessels Wrecked In Gale. Eleven lives lost and It) shipwrecks constitute the net results of the storm which lasted two days on Lake Su perior. Of the wrerks those of the steamers Jlalaafa, Crescent City, Etlenborn and Lafayette seem to be total, l i addition the Elwood sank in Dululli harbor; the barge Manila, in tow of the Lafayette, was beached near Two harbors; the steamers Eng land and Brnnsford were stranded, while the barges Madeira nnd Con stitution are missing. A fireman of the Lafayette was drowned, and the second assistant englners of the Edenborn was lost, while nine members of the crew of the Mataafa were frozen to death or drowned. Unclaimed Fund of $738,000. Through the failure of many per sons to take up money orders made out to them there has accumrr'.ilated in the Postofflce department at Wash ington, $735,510 of such funds which, under the provisions of an act of Congress passed at the last session, was turned Into the Treasury. New York's Oldest Woman Dead. Mary Jane vHarris, believed to be the oldest woman In the State of j-jw York, died at New Rochelle In her 112th year. Her grandmother was a full-blooded Indian, and she claimed to be a descendent of Pocahontas. It was reported to the Brooklyn po lice that burglars had broken Into the Pratt Institute and carried off $50,000 worth of Jewelry and other articles of value which lies In their antiquity.. STORM IN LAKE REGION Terrific Gales Drive Vessels on Rocks Wrecking Several. LAKES WERE LASHED TO FURY Heavy Snowfall Stops Railways and 8treet Cars In Many Sections of Northwest. In one of the most terrific gales In the history of Yt'isconsln or the great lakes, even surpassing in fury the ter rible storm of last September, in which so many men lost their lives in the vicinity of the Apostle islands, three big lake steamers were driven ashore within sight of the lighthouse at the Duluth entrance to the local harbor, and several members of the crew of one of the boats, the Mataafa, are believed to have perished. The wrecks are the Crescent City and the Mataafa, ot the Pittsburgh Steamship Company, and the R. W. England, owned by the England Transportation Company of Cleve land. In the Lake Superior District, the worst slorm since 1872 created wide havoc. Belated news from lake ports told of vessels being smashed on the rocks, or cast ashore to be pounded to splinters by the fury of the storm. In Superior, Wis., and many other cities in that district, six feet of snow was reported, with the people practi cally snowbound In their homes, bnt tling with the rapidly incoming drifts. Street oar traffic in many northwest ern cities was entirely abandoned, while the steam roads were paralyzed or the trains running without sched ule. At Milwaukee the lighthouse was wrecked, the stranded steamer Appomattox torn to pieces by the gale, and farther up the lake the big Steel Corporation steamer Crescent City, built entirely of steel and sup posed to be stormproof, was battered Into junk after the crew had escaped to the shore on a plank. FOOTBALL PROHIBITED Columbia University Will Not Permit the Game as Played Now. Columbia university has abolished the game of football, as nt present played, ns one of the sports In which students of the university will be permitted to engage. This action was taken at a meeting of the Columbia Vniverslty committee on student organizations held at the university, at which were present the members of the committee, Prof. Lord, chairman; Prof. Mitchell and Prof. Odell, and also President Nicho las Mm ray Butler and Dean Ktrch- wey and Prof. Bogert, the two latter former chairmen of the committee. Prof. Lord said, after the meeting of the- committee. "The reasons for this action need no explanation. They must be pat ent to the mind of everyone acquaint ed with the game as now played. Only by such radical action can the university and college life be rid of an obsession which, It Is believed, has become as burdensome to the great mass of students as it has prov ed Itself harmful to academic stand ing and dangerous to human life." FOOTBALL VICTIMS Present Season Holds the Record for Dead and Injured. Nineteen dead and 137 seriously in jured is the record of the football sea son of 1905. This year's record of deaths is more than double that of the yearly average for the last five years, the total for that period being 45. The increase in the heavy armor worn by players and the close mass plays are responsible for much of the slaughter. A significant fact is that the teams playing an open game have ecaped with less than their usual quota of accidents. Of those killed 11 were High School players and 10 were boys of 17 and tinder. Three hardened, seasoned and presumably physically fit college men were slain. PRESIDENT IN COUNTRY Roosevelt Family Eats Thanksgiving Dinner at New Virginia Home. Universal observance of President Rooscvelts Thanksgiving proclama tion was held In Washington. The departure of the President nnd his family for a day at his country place at Plain Dealing, about 10 miles from Bid Hill, Va., had not been announc ed in advance, although plans for the day on the part of the members of the Cabinet and their families did not contemplate any White House func tion. Two cooks from the White House accompanied the party to pre pare the Thanksgiving dinner. Officers to Cook and Bake. Under a new policy decided by the War department officers of the com missary department are to be taught to bake bread and will be given prac tical instructions la cooking. It Is the belief that with the acquirement of practical and technical knowledge by officers in the baking of bread and cooking of food a great Improvement can be brotight about in the prepara tion of food for the arm. h Bank Closed at Boston. The American National bank of Boston, closed Its doors, the direc tors being dissatisfied with the ex ecutive management of the bank. It is said depositors will be paid in full and stockholders will receive divi dends. The bank was established in 1901 and owed depositors $207,520. A board of regents of the Univer sity of California has just concluded the purchase of the Bancroft library for $20.000. GOMPERS RE-ELECTED American Federation of Labor Chooses Officers. The silver anniversary convention of the American Federation adjourn ed November 25th to moot next year In Minneapolis, Minn. Samuel Gompers, of Washington, D. C, was re-elected president by practically unanimous votes, only two votes hav ing been cast against him. The re tirement of Thomas I. Kldd. as fifth vice president, advances the can didates behind that office, and all who were candidates for re-election were successful except Eighth Vice President W. J. Spencer, of Dayton, O., who was defeated for the seventh vice presidency by W. D. Huber, of Indianapolis, Iud. Joseph F. Valen tine, of Cincinnati, O., was the only new officer elected, defeating William D. Mahon, of Detroit, Mich. Frank K. Foster, of Boston, and James IT. Wilson; of New York, were chosen to represent the federation at the British trades and labor congress, and Thomas A. Rickert, of New York, was elected to attend the Canadian labor congress. SHELL PIERCES ARMOR An Eight-Inch Ball Goes Through Plate and Dock at Proving Ground. What an eight-Inch nrriior piercing shell fired at a distance of 1,500 yards will do to the side of an armored cruiser, protected by a five-Inch ar mor plate on a protective deck, nearly three Inches thick, was demonstrated by an important test at the naval proving grounds at Indianhead. The shell pierced the five-Inch plate, went through the Inclined protective deck and buried itself In the coal bunk ers. The test was in the presence of the board of construction of the navy department nnd officers of the bureau of ordlnnnce, steam engineering, equipment and construction and re pair. The results of the test will be considered at an early meeting of the bonrd of construction in connection with armor to be supplied to the new ships. CRUSHED BY ICE Amundsen's Expedition In Search of Magnetic Pole Loses Ship. George Cleveland of Massachusetts returned to Dundee, Scotland, from a whaling expedition In Davis strait. bringing news from Eskimo sources that Captain Amundsen's Arctic ex pedition ship Gjoa had been crushed in the ice at Boothia Felix, the north ernmost part of the mainland of North America, and that the explor ers escaped and had been living with the natives. The Dundee whalers who were appointed to meet Captain Amundsen with stores, have not been able to trace him. Captain Ronald Amundsen conceiv ed the Idea of searching for the mag netic pole. The expedition left Chris tlanla, Norway, June 17, 1903. , TO FIGHT RATE BILL Various Railway Organizations Move to Oppose the Roosevelt Idea. An organized movement on the part of railroad employes In every branch of the service has been put on foot to secure concerted action against the Roosevelt Idea of rate legislation. Preliminary steps have already been taken by committees from the differ ent brotherhoods of railroad men for a general mass meeting. Rate regu lation, in the opinion of the employ es, means a subsequent reduction In wages for them, and they propose a strong organization to oppose any move to give the government direc tion of traffic rates. Sentenced to Prison. Judge Thomas of Meadvllle, Pa., filed an opinion refusing D. W. Ty ron a new trial in two cases of em bezzlement. Tyron was interested in the Spartansburg bank, which failed a short time ago, and which held state funds. Tyron Is orderd to pny a fine of $7GG,72, costs of prosecution nnd undergo imprisonment In the Western penitentiary for two years. The defendant has appealed to the supreme court. KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE Steering Gear Breaks and Machine Plunges Down Hill. Mrs. Francis Burton Harrison, wife of former Congressman Francis Bur ton Harrison of New York, was kill ed by the overturning of nn auto mobile In which she was riding with a party of friends from San Francis co. The car was running down a steep hill near Long Island City when a break in the steering gear caused the accident. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence T. Scott of San Francisco and Charles T. Crock er, also of San Francisco, a Yale student, and a brother of Mrs. Har rison, were Injured. Mr. Scott suffered a fractured rib and Is in a serious condition, his wife was rend ered unconscious, but later was re vived. Mr. Crocker was bruised, and the chauffeur slightly hurt. Mrs. Harrison's neck was broken. Oil Field Workers on Strike. ' The ttrlke of Texas oil field work men against a reduction in wages of 60 cents a day, went into effect at Bat son, Humble, Saratoga, Sour Lake and Spindle Top, the Guffey Company and Pass and Eastham being affected. About S50 men are out. Quay's New York Estate. The appraisal of the estate of Sena tor Matthew S. Quay, just filed in the Surrogate's office, at New York, shows that he left a personal estate in this State of $105,582, consisting of C25 shares of the Mer'genthnler Lino type Company stock. Secretary Root declared the Ameri cans on the Isle of Pines to be amenable to the laws of Cuba, and without authority to form a United States territorial government. ' ' NINE BLOWN TO ATOMS Explosion at Powder Mill Causes Great Loss of Life. HORRIBLE SCENE PRESENTED Portions of Bodies of Men Found Scattered Among the Ruins of 8pllntered Buildings. The Keystone Powder Company's plant at Emporium. Pa., was com pletely wrecked and nine men killed by an explosion. The dead are John Bossle, Jumes Joyce, James Campbell, John Hamil ton, John Butler, William Murphy, Thomas Welsh, Frank Harrington and William Sprung. Joseph Ganey was perhaps fatally Injured, while a dozen others were more or less Injured. Two explos ions occurred simultaneously In the mixing room and a packing room. The cause Is not. known. The body of William Sprung Is the only one recovered, that being Identi fied by the clothing. The top of his head and one leg were blown off. Searching parties are still looking for bodies, which are being picked up in small pieces. The explosion took , place at 10 o'c'ock. Schools, stores nnd indus tries in town were closed and a stream of excited humanity, among thorn the families of the men em ployed at the powder plant, started along the road to the scene of the accident. A great hole where the main buildings stood, with a Howlng of splintered timbers and warped iron, gave ocular evidence of the destruc tive force, while here and there, ly ing among the wreck, the ghastly portions of men's bodies added horror to the scene. There is no chance of Identification of more than two or three of the vic tims. Indeed, for the most part, there is nothing to be found of the bodies of the men, they having been blown to atoms. Ganey, the man who escaped with awful burns, may not have been in the buildings at the time of the explosion, for he was found 50 yards away from where the buildings stood. It Is presumed that the explosive which ignited was dynamite, for the plant has been engaged on a large order of this for several weeks past. Maryland Railroad Sold. The Western Maryland railroad has acquired the Georges Creek nnd Cumberland railroad after negotia tions extending over several weeks. The price was in the neighborhood of $2,000,000. The Georges Creek and Cumberland runs from Cumberland to Loaaconlng, a distance of about 47 miles, and the principal owners were the American and the Maryland Coal companies. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. The trial of the first issues in the Indictments found against the beef packers for operating in restraint of trade has been set for December 12. The United States supreme court decided that It was without jurisdic tion in the case of Mrs. Mabel Rog ers under sentence of death in Ver mont for the murder of her hus band. The responsibility is witli the state authorities. Former Congressman H. Klrke Port er of Pittsburg, has made a donation of $25,000 to the endowment fund Of $500,000 being raised for higher edu cational work In foreign lands by the Baptist Missionary union. The last Thursday of April has been selected by the national committee as the day for inaugurating the President of the United States. The emperor of Germnny opened the relchstag in a Bpeech from the throne, declaring that. Germany's de fense must be strengthened. James B. Oliver, President, of the Oliver lion & Steel Company, nnd prominently identified with a number of Industrial concerns, died at his home at Shields, near Sewickjey, Pa., after a brief illness of pneumonia. Captain Howard P. Sherman of the United States Light house Service dropped dead just as he was . about to greet a friend who was coming down the gangplank of the steamer Ponce, from San Juan, Puerto Rico. While Marquis Ito was in a train with Minister Hayashi and members of their suites a window of his car was smashed. Four natives were ar rested. It is believed the act was committed by members of the so-called Patriot Students' Society to resent the new treaty with Japan. WILL TELL ALL SHE KNOWS Mrs. Chadwick Writes Note to Fed eral Bankruptcy Referee. -Mrs. Cossie L. Chadwick expressed the desire to go on the witness stand again in connection with the bank ruptcy proceedings against her, and wrote a letterto Referee Harold Remington, of the Federal Bank ruptcy court, requesting him to set a date for reopening her case. Mrs. Chadwick declares that if an oppor tunity Is again given her to go on the stand she will tell without reservation all the facts concerning her financial dealings. AMERICAN ATTACKED Second Secretary of American Em bassy Almost Killed. Robert Wood Bliss, second secre tary of the American Embassy, who has jtiBt returned to St. Petersburg from a vacation In Paris, was the vic tim of an outrage by rowdies In one of the most fashionable streets of the capital, and only escaped being beaten to death through the timely arrival of the police. DUN'8 WEEKLY SUMMARY Feeling of Confidence in Future of Business in All Lines Manufac- turing Plants Busy. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Business conditions cer tainly warranted a day of gratitude this year more than ever before, but In many industries it was difficult to take time for a holiday without falling still further behind orders and Increas ing the complajnts of Importunate purchasers. An' idea of the volume of trade in November is shown by a dally average of bank exchanges that exceeded last year's figures by four per cent., which in turn 'surpassed all previous monthly records. Yet un seasonably mild weather In Novem ber has postponed retail business in winter goods. Christmas trade opens with a vol ume that promises to eclipse all earl ier records, and the feeling of confi dence in the future Is strengthened by the encouraging statement that the strike of structural iron workers may not become general. Crops supply the foundation of this country's commercial prosperity and the value of all farm products, accord ing to the annual report of the Depart ment of Agriculture, was even great er than estimated. Manufacturing plants make most satisfactory re turns, despite the high level of prices for raw materials nnd Inadequate transporting facilities. Railway earn ings thus far available for November were C.5 per cent, larger than a year ago and foreign comerce at New York for the last week shows gains of $4,280,535 In exports and $2,874,907 In imports as compared with last year's figures. Progress Is fully maintained In the Iron and steel Industry. Quotations of all forms, from ore to finished steel, nre firmly maintained, several small advances being noted and all available statistics testify to unprecedented ac tivity. In the primary market for cotton goods It is rather a matter of delivery than of price, the toward tendency of quotations having little effect on the attitude of purchasers. Conditions are unchanged in woolens nnd worsteds, the raw material being strengthened by the London auction pales. Quiet conditions in the packer hide market have become so pro nounced that the tone is less firm al though no definite change In quota tions can be recorded. McCURDAY REGIME ENDED President, Son and Son-in-Law Quit Life Insurance Company. Richard A. McCurdy, president of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, has resigned. The date of his resig nation depends only on the time re quired by the trustees to find his suc cessor. The Investigating committee did not accept Mr. McCurdy's offer to cut his salary in half, because such acceptance would have pledged them to a continuance of the McCurdy re gime. Quickly following the retirement of President McCurdy, his son, Robert H. McCurdy, general manager of the Mutual, and hi son-in-law, Louis A. Thebaud, the favored general agent for New York, have resigned. Each of these three men has been drawing approximately $150,000 a year in sal aries and commissions from the com pany, besides their indirect profits In financial transactions with Mutual money. SULTAN YIELDS Said to Have Agreed to Fulfill De mands of the Powers. Eight warships of the combined fleet arrived at Mytilene. Admiral Hitter von Jedlna, accompanied by the Austrian consul, proceeded to government house and banded an untimatum to the governor. At 1 o'clock In the nfternoon 500 sailors landed and seized the customs and telegraph offices. The Vienna "Neue Frele Presse" published a dispatch from Constanti nople saying that the sultan through Tewfik Pasha, the foreign minister, has announced to Baron von Callca the ambassador of Attstro-Hungary, that Turkey acceded to the demands of the powers regarding the finan cial control of Macedonia. GRANDMOTHER AT 31. A Virginian Claims Palm Over Ohio Woman. In a letter to the Columbus "Dis patch" in which she takes exceptions to the claim of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Mt. Vernon, O., to be called the youngest grandmother In the Vnlted States, Mrs. Katherlne Halrston, of Bassltts. Henry county, Virginia, says: "I was a grandmother at the age of 31. I was married at the age of 14 and my daughter at the age of 13 and am entitled to take preced ence. I am now the grandmother of two children and am still under 33. If any other woman can beat this I would be pleased to hear from her." Tragedy in Michigan. Enraged by gossip that his wife cared more for his friend, Frank Dtibrowtki, than for himself, Carl KokosinskI, a tinner, of Grand Hav en, Mich., shot his wife and Dubrow- ski, shot and killed his little son, Eddie, mortally wounded his 5-year- old son Max, shot a neighbor, Joseph Smith, who tried to stop the whole sale shooting, and then sent a bullet through his own brain. Korea Will Make Protest. The Korean minister, Mln Yeung Tchan, will sail for New York for the purpose of presenting a protest nt Washington against Japan assuming authority over Korea. The minister says the protest emanated from the emperor of Korea, who cables Instruc tions to present a protest to France and the United States. The minis ter's advices say that Japan's as sumption of power was accompanied by a display of armed force and that the emperor was treated violently.'' KEYSTONE STATE CULLING5 TEN 8TATION3 ABOLI3HED Pennsylvania Railroad Company 8trikes Names from List of 8tops on the Pittsburg Division. Tea stations on the Pittsburg di vision of the Pennsylvania railroad have been abolished. Increased traf fic on the local division is given as the . reason for cutting out the stations. G. W. Creighton, general superintend ent at Altoona, issued a circular an nouncing the abolishing of the fol lowing stations on the local division. Including the Southwest branch. Ruth, Davidson, Wheeler, Ferguson, Stam baugh, Evans, Lacolle, Conemauga Furnace, Sang Hollow and Allegrlp pus. The majority of the stations which were abolished were only small points and none but the local trains stopped there. The freight tratlc oa the Pittsburg division has reached such proportions that It became necessary to do away with some of the less Important stations. . Postmaster Michael Beaver, of Bradley Junction, Cambria county, was driving home at night, when three men stepped out of the bushes, and while one man covered him with a revolver the other two dragged him out of the buggy and rifled his pock ets, securing $300. Beaver was too frightened to object. After, the highwaymen got all they were after they put him back in the buggy and hit the horse with the whip, taking to the woods. Fire destroyed the house of Richard Matthews, near Greensboro, and his 4-months-old baby was burned to death. Matthews is an employe ot the Bessemer Coke company and was at work. His wife had gone to a neighbors for milk, leaving three small children in the house. The fire Is supposed to have been caused by the baby carriage being pushed too near the open grate. John T. Dalley, a boss employed at the stables of the Dunbar Furnace Co., was brutally beaten and robbed. While going from his home to the company's stable he was accosted by two negroes, who ransacked his pock ets, obtaining only a few cents. Af terward he was given a severe beat ing for not having In his possession ' more money. Mad with jealously, Steven Czlntel shot and killed his wife and then himself at their home in Dorothy, a little mining village a mile west of Lalrobe. The couple was married three months ago. Czlntel was aged ' 23 and his wife aged 26. The husband was Insanely jealous of an Allegheny butcher, and had stated he would kill either him or himself. Amelia Fryer, of Derry, a nurse who graduated from the Memorial Hospital Training School five years ago, was burned to death at Johns town. Miss Fryer had been nursing Mrs. Conrad Schwlg. A lamp explod ed and a flood of oil was thrown, over her clothing. She was removed to the hospital, where she died. While smoking a pipe, which be had purchased the evening before, Frank Porter, the six-year-old grand son of Joseph Sickafuse, of the Wil mington road, near New Castle, Is al leged to have set fire to the latter'g barn, which was destroyed. Mr. Sickafuse was severely burned while getting his horses out of the build- ing. The loss is about $3,500. Mrs. Minnie Salow, of. Erie, con victed of manslaughter and perform ing a criminal operation, was sent enced by Judge Walling to nine years' solitary confinement In the Western Penitentiary. She was charged with leaving a new-born infant in a cold wash-bowl until it perished. Senator Boies Penrose has engag ed a suite of rooms at the Common wealth annex for the coming extra session of the Legislature. The Sen ator will come to Harrisburg in Jan uary to co-operate with Gov. Samuel W. Pennypacker for the enactment of the proposed reform legislation. The Mahler glass plant at Du Bols, which was started up for the season's run about one month ago has shut down and it will not be operated again this season. The reason given by T. P. Welch, the lessee, is the demoralized condition of the glass market. Ten mills of the Shenango tin plant, , which have been Idle for the past six months, will start up, giving employ ment to 1,000 men. The other ' 20 mills of the Shenango have been working steadily. ... The Donora council has granted' a franchise to the West Shore Street Railway company which proposes building a line connecting Donora with Monessen, Charleroi and other river towns. Elizabeth Henderson, of Beaver Falls, died in the hospital at Sharon, from the effects of a fall while visit ing at the home of her brother fa Wheatland. She was 64 years old. Mrs. Daniel Welfley, 43 years old, was thrown out of a buggy near Donegal, Westmoreland county, and killed. A husband and three chil dren survive her. The Lawrence glass works at New Castle, which started up a week ago with four blowing machines, will op erate in full with four more machines. The plant employs 400 men now. John H. Weiss, president judge of Dauphin county, was stricken with paralysis November 16 and never ral lied. Mary Shaylor, 30 years old, and Henry Whitmlller; a babe of 8 months, were burned to death In a fire which iestroyod the house of William Ack !ey in Towanda township. Two men were seriously burned c several others sustained severe lnj..,les. The Fire was started through the accident al upsetting of an oil lamp. John Hinn, a steel worker, while hunting near Canonsburg, was acci lentally shot and killed by Ttios. Lewis Sr., a companion of Hinn. Hinn was tbout 45 years old and leaves a wife. He 'had resided la- Canonsburg foi leveral years. L