Failure to Deliv r Message Said to Have Been the Cause. FIRE ADDED TO THE HORROR A Blinding Snow Storm Darkened the Rocky Gorget Where the Trains Met. Thirty-five lives were crushed out In a heudend collision of two passen ger trains near Adobe, Col., on the Denver & Rio Grande railroad, and nearly a score of the victims were In cinerated, several beyond ldcnt Men tion, by a fire that destroyed the wrecked coaches. Over 20 were in jured, but nil will probably recover. Many of the dead were honnseck ers bound for tlio northwest. The three crushed locomotives set tire to the splintered, coaches anil, It was hours before all the bodies were re covered, the flames being so hot that rescuers could not approach the deb ris until the fuel burned out. It was a wild, stormy night in the mountain canons when the two heiiw trains met. Minding snow darkened the rocky gorges and speed wiw high. Suddenly headlights Ihisitel out, and It was realized by the en gineers that something was wronj;. According to Fireman .1. H. Smith of the westbound train. Kngincer Walt er C'oslett applied the cmergeiicy brake, but the slippery rail' allowed the momentum of the heavy I rain to carry il on the falal crash. Flames Ran Through Debris. Hardly had tlie noise of the wreck ceased when a sheet of lire run through tho shattered car of both trains. In the forward coach of the wesl liound nain every seat was occuple.l by passengers, most u? whom were homeseekers. A number of t lie for eigners were among them nn.l in their terror they gave up life without mak ing any attempt to reach safety out side the burning ear. They sank to tho floor of the ear and were rousted nllve. The cooler ones in the; car, seeing their danger, rushed for the windows and doors, and with the aM of the piRsengera in the rear of the train ami those members of the train crew who were unhurt managed to reach tho open air. A list of dead made up from close Investigation bv responsible persons follows: William llollis, engijieer: Walter Oesslett. engineer; H. O. Slid-, duth, fireman; Kdward K. Tiaird. dep uty sheriff, Denver; Archibald Whit ney, prisoner in charge of Ilaird: Mrs. William Burnside, daughter and daughter's child, all of Kansas; A. N. Barklo,' Cttlida, Col.: Miss Grace Barglo, Salida, Col.; Knos Mc Far land, express messenger: Taylor He wilt, Lebo, Kan.; Mrs. Wililam He witt, Lebo, Kan.; Pearl Hewitt, Lebo. Kan.; Mrs. Catherine Hewitt and baby boy, Tebo, Kan.: Edward Cow ley, Ijebo, Kan.; Mrs. Kdward Cow ley, Lebo, Kan.; Frederick .Tones, Lebo, Kan.; Frederick Lemrooley, Denver; Mrs. Winona Hewitt. Lebo, Kan. The seriously injured were: Patrick Murphy, Florence, Col.; P. Peters, baggageman: James Proeonone. Ini "migrant; Miss Mabel Fields. K. A. Hewitt, Lebo, Kan.; O. C. Kissoll. New York : A. Goiher, New York; C. X. Wright, New York: ,T. N. Lotion, Bellflower, Mo. CADETS IN CONSPIRACY Bonaparto Says They Keep Class Records Level. Midshipmen at Annapolis have been conspiring to prevent a high standard of scholarship, according to the siate ment of Secretary Honapnrte before the house committee on naval affairs. Brilliancy has been discouraged and a sort rif trade union agreement to hold all midshipmen on a dead level, so far as the class records are concerned, has been in existence, so the secretary of the navy told the committee. The secretary entered objections to amendments to his anti-hazing bill, which would give the students a right to trial by court martial. He says it would be ruinous to discipline. Collision Was Accidental. Secretary Bonaparte has received the report of the court of inquiry ap pointed by Rear Admiral Evans to in vestigate the circumstances, attend ing the general mix-up of warships in the harbor of New York January ti last, when tho Kentucky and the Kearsnrge ran aground, and the Ala bama narrowly avoided the Kenrsarge and ran into the Kentucky, damaging her bo that she had to he taken to the navy yard for repairs. It is under stood the court found that the giound Ing and subsequent, collision were ac cidental. . Chilean Cabinet Resigns. Thk Chilean ministry has resigned. The i. Chilean cabinet was organized Augfist 1, 1905, all the ministers be ing personal adherents of President Riesao. Its membership was as fol lows Minister of the Interior, Juan Antortio Griego: minister of foreign affair, A. Edwards; minister of jus tice atpd public education, Antonio Hunetis; minister of war and navy, former! Admiral Luis Urine: minister of pubiiic works, Enrique Villegas. Kentucky Honors Lincoln. The Kentucky State Senate con curred iti a House. hill appropriating 1200 fora tablot at Hodgenville, Larue coiiuty, to the memory of Abra ham Unjoin HodgenvUle is the conntv seat ot the county In which Lincoln wis born. The Governor will approve tihe bill. George P. Brock, formerly cash ier of the Itoylestowu (Pa.) National Bank, which failed, has been placed on trial charred with the embezzle ment un misapplication oi iuuus. HAMILTON DEFENDS McCALL Pours Flood of Denunciation and In vective Upon Board of Trustees of Life Insurance! Company. Andrew Hamilton appeared before the Insntanee Investigation committee at Albany, N. Y. and poured forth a Hood of denunciation ami invective up on the members of the board of trus tees of the Xev York Life Insurance Company, ce-vrral of whom were pres ent, derignnling them "curs and trai tors," and paying special attention to one unnamed, whom he described as "the Pecksniff of three administra tions, the confidant of the Beers scandal and author of the liters pen sion, who rotates through one ad ministration and another, nml thinks that, he Is going to bo an indispensl ablo member of yet another." "And do you think." ho demanded, that the man who held the same pos ition to Mr. Beers that. I did to Mr. McCull could sit for the 1.1 years since and not kr:ow how the expendi tures were disbursed? Vet he, and tnch like lilm, sit, not Judging me as peers, but judging me as conquer ors, talking about "yellow dogs." , .ludgi Hamilton's attack upon the trustees of the New York Life was , made only the more dramatic by the fad that he Imiiicdlatelv followed .1. 71. Mcintosh, general solicitor of that company, vhn had been eulogizing the members of that bo.ird. anil challeng- ing any man to give unisons why they , should be removed from olliee as con ' lemplatnl by the pending legislation. ! The only name he mentioned was that of the late President MeCall. In the reference to whom and to whose : death he displayed marked emotion. He spoke of Mi. MeCall as n victim, as having been shouldered with the blame "the only one, the dead man, killed, thai they drove to his grave . and descried." anil declared thai tho memory ni' tlil-i man had appealed to him "to come down here and say something for him and just a word for him.-eif." He declared itnooulvocallv Ilia! every payment to himself by Die New , York Life was made with (he knowl- edge and approval of the trustees, os ' peclally of the finance and ntt.lilln ' commit li es. He pointed out thai if there hud been anything the mailer with his vouchers for these payments 1 it was their duty to bring him to. book i for it yet. he said, month after month, and year after year, for 10 ; years I hey pas.ied thetu "and then, when the cry at last conies out, they I say: "Well, we did not know anything; ! about It; this is tho fellow, this Is i the man who has done it all.' When I they say they did not know what, was j going on it excites my laughter and j derision." ; He declared again and again that j the payments were proper and legltl j mate, and that he had no apology !o I make for him.self or for President Mc ! Call. BIG COAL LAND DEAL ; Capitalists Secure 100,000 Acres. In Ohio and West Virginia. A syndicate of capitalists from Washington, Pittsburg, Wellsbmg j and Huntington. W. Va., have seenr ! ed control of about 100,000 acres of ; coal land in Lawrence and Gallic ; counties, Ohio, and Cabell and Mason : counties, West Virginia. I The price was $:'.,. VW.ilOO. the coal ; having been bought up at prices aver ; aging $:!." an acre. In addition to the coal (lie purchasing s ndicaie se ; cured the oil and pin rights. : The purchasers pre headed by W. i II. Taylor, of Wellsiniip.. and A. K. f.'o.v. of Huntington. With the excep tion of these two. the mime.-, of thi . purchasers are withheld for the pres ent. The ileal just closed is thought t be the largest for virgin territory in this part or the country for a quarter of a century. The eniire block is underlaid with the Pittsburgh vein. Tesl wells are now sunk to ascertain the depth qiia'ltv and thickness of ilv vein o coal. Tests for oil and en are to he made at once. ADMITS CHECK FORGING C. S. White. Arrested at Lima, O Says Hie Men Did a Big Business. C. S. While, i he l.isl of a gang of ', forgers, who have worked extensive ly in Chicago, Omaha and SI. Louis.: : was arrested in Lima, and confessed , '. in Dayton, O., later that he had led ; ! the check-workers. He stated that I ; checks were printed bv hiinscl? and; i his men. identical with those used by the Illinois Steel Comnunv. Thev : I were made out in sums of $50 and $rl. : i and on paydays at the plant the men . would dress as Hungarians, get in the j j crowd, and present their checks for j j payment at banks or saloons near tho I J rac.lory. White said he had cleared up about 1 $t;3.ono before leaving Chicago. FOUR BURNED TO DEATH Business Portion of Michigan Town Wiped Out by Flames. ' 1 The business portion of the village of Tustin, Osceola county, Mich., was destroyed by a fire, which started In the basement of tho Hotel Compton from a defective furnace. Ten guests escaped In their night clothes. While four were burned to death. The dead are William H. Mc Crane. the hotel proprietor; Mrs. Yv'il liam H. McCrane, Kdward Demorest, porter, and Charles Workman, a trav eling man, of Plerson. The financial loss was J22.00O. Twelve Years for Killing Americans. Olo 13. Finstad and L. C. Coughe ner were senteuced at Santa Rosalia, Mex., to 12 years each in the peni tentiary' for the murder of R. W. Rutherford, of . Philadelphia, and C. W. McMurray, of Los Angeles, at the Diaz ranch in Chlhuuhua recently. Author of School Histories Dead. John Jacob Anderson, author ot Anderson's School Histories, died of old age at his home In Brooklyn. Hi was in his SGtli year. H FREIGHT SHIP WRECKED Big Steamer Goes Down and 27 Sailors are Drowned, THE CAPTAIN LOSES HIS LIFE Crews of the Bostonian and Mann heim Risk Their Lives and Res cue 24 Men. Suffering, mental ami physical, and mum-ions ac(;i of heroism In saving life, rarely equaled In tho record of tragedies of the sen, attended the loss of tho Phoenix line steamer British Mug, which tin Sunday last In a rag ing Atlantic storm, foundered about l.ji) miles south of Sable Island, and carried to death 27 members of the crew. Thirteen men were rescued from the sinking vessel by the Ley laud line steamer, Bostonian, bound Irom Manchester to Boston, and 11 by the German tank steamer Mannheim, Rotterdam for New York. Five others who had been drawn down Into the vortex into which the British King was engulfed, were picked up by the llostonlan itoin a frail bit of wreckage which they had grasped after a des perate struggle for life In the whirl pool. The Kostonlan arrived In llos lon three days later and the details of the disaster became known. ('apt James O'llugan of the British King died on board the Bostonian Irom the effects of terrible Injuries sustained in trying to save his ship. The rescued brought here Include .lames Flanlgan, tho second ofllcer: .1. 1. Crawford, the chief engineer; Adolplius Heck, the fourth engineer, and William .1. Curry, the steward. The others wen- coal passers and sail ors mostly Belgians, and one stowa way, Henry P.irkotck, of New York. .The lil'elmuls from the Itostonlan were (rushed to fragments and the volunteer crews which manned them thrown into the high running seas while engaged In the work of rescue, but all were safely landed on 'hoard the steamer. When the first lifeboat was lowered from the Bostonian the small craft was swept against the stern of the big ship and destroyed, and several of the seamen were bruised and maimed. Yet, despite the boisterous condition of the sea, the volunteers were rescued by lines tin own out from the steamer. A second attempt to reach the sink ing ship was sucessful and 1:1 men, Including Captain O'Hagan, were tak en from the British King to tho Bos tonian. Then again a powerful bil low carried the lifeboat against the side of the ship and destroyed It, and the life savers were thrown Into the sea, to be rescued only after an hour's effort by their comrades. Volunteers from the Mannheim, af ter a heroic battle with the waves, had taken ofr 11 men from the Brit ish King, hut after this neither of the steamers, In consequence of the in creasing gale, could make an attempt to reach I lie foundering freighter. Moreover, darkness fell, and il was an utter Impossibility to do else but watt for the moonlight to guide them. In the darkness the British King, which was then water logged and helpless, plunged to the bottom. NO CAUSE FOR MASSACRE Missionaries Killed Because Chines: Magistrate Committed Suicide. Private advices received at Shang hai. March 12 from Kiauklng, province of lCuang Si, confirm tho previous re ports that tlte magistrate who died at Nanchung March 1 as the result of a stab wound, said to have been self inflicted or received at the hands of a Catholic missionary, committed sui cide. It' was tho wounding of the Nan chang magistrate which led to the rioting last month during which six Kronen Catholic missionaries were killed. Fire Losses. The house of Andrew Bunzo, a wealthy farmer of New Sewlckley township, Beaver county, Pa., was de stroyed by lire, the loss being esti mated at 1,000. Fire destroyed the squab farm or H. L. Baldwin & Co., near Washing ton, Pa. About 1,200 pigeons with many squabs, chickens and feed were cremated. A new oil well llg erected by Cul bertson & McKee. of Butler, on the Uenny farm at Coylesvllle, Pa., was destroyed by fire. Puddlers' Wages Advanced. The examination of the sales sheets at the office of the Republic Iron and Steel company at Youngstown, show ed that the wages of puddlers, will be advanced from 15.75 to $0 a ton. The wages of the finishers will be advanc ed 2 per cent. This Is the highest rate paid for puddling since October 1. 1902. Appropriation Bill Completed. The Senate Committee on Appro priations completed the Fortification hill, and it wan reported by Senator U. C. Perkins. It carries appropria tions aggregating 3,618,993, an in crease of $7SO,000 over the amount appropriated by the House bill. Peddled Stolen Goods. After a search covering more thin six mouths, during which time maty stores have been robbed In Dunbar, Pa., Officers Duncan, Harper and Pratt arrested Beven Polanders at Mt. Uraddock and recovered two wagon loads of goods. A foreign lad told Officer Duncan that the men bad a large amount of goodB at their home and were peddling it around the coun try. An Investigation proved that their house was filled with stolen goods. NOTED WOMAN DEAD Mist Sutan B, Anthony Pastes Away at a Good Old Age. Miss Susan B. Anthony, the cham pion of the women suffragists, died at Rochester, N. Y. of pnsumtmla. The end came peacefully, as Miss Anthony hud been unconscious for 21 hours. Miss Anthony was ta'lten ill while on her way homo from the national suffrage convention In Baltimore. She stopped In New York, where u ban quet was to be given February 20 In honor of her Klitll birthday, but had an attack of neuralgia on the 1 St h and hastened home. No resident of Rochester wan more beloved than Miss Anthony, who had made that city her home since 184!. She lived to see a decided change In sentiment from the time, in thn wint er of IStil, when she was tempted to give a lecture on ubolitlon. That lecture lour, which started in Buffalo, was a series of riots, but Miss Anthony never flinched. The insults heaped upon her culminated In Syra cuse, where shu was egged and burned in efllgy. Her life for the past few years had been in strong contrast to those stormy times. Her llrst act of distinction was at a teachers' convention In Rochester In INiVI, when she made a speech. No such thing had ever been heard of; a woman speaking in a meeting of that character, and the assembly, men and women alike, were ag:iast at her tem erity. But It was only a little while till Miss Anthony wan starting her lifelong campaign for the independence of her , sex - for equal properly rights, for - equal privileges, for whatever would . help her to that Independence. In 1S2 she aided In organizing the llrst. Slate Women's Temperance so ciety, for the temperance and nnll Hlnvery movements had occupied the earlier years of her public activity. She organized the Woman's National Loyal league for civil war aid work. TRUSTS MUST ANSWER Supreme Court Rules That Evidence Must be Given. II Is the judgment or the Supreme Court of the lulled Btntes that a cor poration can be compelled to produce evidence that will show it in be a vio lator of the Sherman antl-lrust law. Immunity does not nttach to It as It does to an Individual. Its officers must, upon pain of Imprisonment for contempt of court, give testimony, pro duce books and papers that will con vict the corporation and subject it to tho penalties of the anti-trust law. This judgment was rendered in a case entitled Hale versus Henkel. Ed win F. Hale was a witness In the In- i qnlry Into the operation. of the so- j called tobacco trust. j MINISTRY IS COMPLETE j New French Cabinet, With M. Sarrien ! as Premier. ! The new French cabinet ha.? been , dellnltely constituted. Following are! the ministers: Premier and minister' of Justice. l. Sarrien; minister of the Interior. Senator Clerneiiceau; min ister of foreign affairs, Mr. Hour-, geols; minister of war, Mr. Ktlenne; ! minister of marine, M. Thomson; minister of public instruction and worship, M. Ilrlnnd; minister of com merce, .. Dauinergue: minister of public works, M. Bnrthou: minister of linance, M. Polncare; minister of the ! colonies, il. Leygues; minister oi" agriculture, M. Ruau. 8 TONS OF DYNAMITE BLOW UP Shock Felt 45 Miles Only Seven! Men Are Hurt. in an explosion of eight tons of dy-' namlte at the works of the Great 1 Northern Power Company at Thorn- j son, Minn., seven men were injured, none fatally. A powder house, n j roundhouse and a steam shovel were j reduced to splinters and masses of ! twisted iron. ! At the time of the explosion there I were 200 men within n radius of 1. oou feet. Nearly all were thrown to the ground. For a radius of 45 miles from j Thomson the concussion could he felt. In Uuluth every house shook. KILLED BY SNOWBALL j Fatal Injuries Inflicted by Missile : Thrown in Play. I Anna, the 15-year-old daughter of j David Trump, of Connellsvllle, Pa.. ! died of cerebrospinal meningitis, re-; suiting from Injuries Inflicted at the base of her brain by a water-soaked I snowball. 1 While she was returning from ' school a boy playfully threw the i snowball. Later she complained of; pains In the head and a short time ! later became violently ill. Russian Lossea in War. The St. Petersburg Invalid, organ of the military, Is still printing dally lists of the losses sustained during the war which, without including Port Arthur, now total 151,000 killed, wounded and disappeared. The lists covering the lighting at Mukden are just beginning to appear. A remark-f.ble- feature is the percentage of men whose fate is unknown, having been abandoned on the Held of battle. Favor Appropriating $50,000. The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce decided to make a favorable report on the Town send joint resolution providing for an appropriation of $50,000 to enable the ' Interstate Commerce commission to Investigate railways and monopolies under the Tillman-Gillespie Joint resolution. ' The Townsend resolu tion also corrects other defects in the resolution pointed out by the President. THREE VILLAGES DESTROYED Volcano on One of the Samoan Islands Pours Out Lava. STREAMS OF MOLTEN ROCK Steamer Chartered by Government to Remove Women and Children From Danger Zone. Tho ollieers of the steamer Sierra, which arrived at Honolulu, from Syd ney, N. S. V via Samoa, report in at tlio eruption ot the volcano on the Is land of Savali, of tho Samoan group, continues on a large scale. Three villages have been completely destroy ed, including Maluecola, where was located tho finest cocoa plantation on tho Inland. The residences of A. King and G. Ilarleley have been reduced to ruins. Tho lava front the volcano Is flow ing Into the ocean In a stream three quarters of a mile wide and 20 feet deep at the rate of 20 feet an hour. At night, a solid wall of molten lava live miles long can be seen reaching far out into the sea. For some dis tance ahead the sea water Is boiling and tlie surf breaking over the fiery stream. ' ue government, recently chartered the steamer Maori to re move women it tut children Irom the utile of danger. TOO MANY CHILDREN Triplets Cause Father to Appeal to the Police. The arrival or hlplels In Hie home of William Cobb, u $lu-a-wcok labor er of I'llea, N. Y., litis proved not a blessing, but a shock upon which the home has gone to wreck. Wlih wife and live children, the eldest Jl, to feed and clothe on his scanty earnings, Cobb hud all he could do before the sixth, seventh and eighth additions arrived. Cobb, upon the dork's visit, notified the police. When Hie policeman ar rived they asked if they should ar lest the tilplet lor entering the house at night or If Cobb wanted his wife arrested for conspiracy. Cobb ex plained that he waute'd Hie police to remove his wife to lite hospital, where she would receive proper care. The mm her and three were removed to the General Hospital, and tho rest nf the family were bundled off to an orphan asylum. MORE TROUBLE IN ZION Wife of the Prophet Says She Has Been Deceived. John Alexander Howie, head of the Zlon Church, and his wife have part ed, according to a story printed. It Is declared the last message of Howie to his home was Ignored and that Mrs, Dowlo has (mown in her lot with the ordinary followers ol Zlon. It !s asserted thai Mrs. Dowlo has said to her friends that, she has been deceived as to the real conditions In the church and believed that millions of money were available, when there was no such condillou existing. Mrs. Dowlo called in brokers who made an inventory of the furnishings of the Dowle home In Zlon City, which Is decorated expensively. She said she desires to sell everything for the good of the church, and that when the furnishings have been sold the house Itself Is at the disposal of the society. Dowlo Is said to be dying In the West Indies. PANIC IN THE STEERAGE Ship's Officers Quiet Passengers With Revolver and Knife. A terrifying experience at sea was reported by the officers of the French line steamer Hudson, which arrived nt New York. During a storm which swept the Atlantic, the :i; steerage passengers became panic-stricken and were quieted only after the cap tain and first ofllcer had threatened them with revolver and knife. A terrific gnle rolled up great seas, When the storm wns nt Its worst the steerage passengers sought to go on deck. The stewards and minor offi cers lost control of them and appealed to the captain for assistance. Cap tain Juham said the storm was the most severe he ever saw in his 30 years' experience at sea. OPPRESSION OF JEWS. Proclamation Said to Have Been Issued in Russia. The anti-Jewish proclamation alleg ed to have been issued by the Russian bureaucracy consists oi 22 articles. Including a demand for the expulsion of the Jews from nil the cities of European Russia and Siberia into the pale, the prohibition of higher edu cation for Jews, the prohibition of the stoppage of work on Jewish holidays, the levying of t lump sum of money upon tho Jewish population in lieu of military service, the reassumption of Jewish names where they have been changed, the prohibition to the Jews or certain professions, like the stage, and that none but grandchildren of Jews, who have accepted Christianity shall enjoy full legal rights. Dr. Manuel Quintaiia. President of the Argentine republic is dead. Canal Commission Reduced. Reduction of the membership of th Isthmian canal commission from seven members to three, and pro vision that the ofllcers of the adminis tration shall be upon the isthmus, in stead of in Washington, will be pro vided' for In the canal act soon to be ptesented by the senate canal com mission. The first draft of tffat act has been prepared and It Is not prob able that It will be materially chang ed. DUN'S WEEKLY 8UMMARY Several Scales Signed Calling for Higher Wagei and General Pros perity Continues, R. G. Dun & Co. "a "Weekly Review of Trade" says: Wholesale conditions uro maintained in commercial chan nels, tho tenor of most reports being favorable, and comparatively little an xiety is felt regarding the labor situ ation. New projects are constantly nppcaring, calling for much capital and giving employment to many wage earners. Several scales have been signed Mint provldo for higher wages after this month, and the general prosperity of the winter is believed to assure a very largo retail trade In spring wearing apparel. Jobbing houses have been enabled to make shipments with unusual promptness, owing to the ample railway facilities. Some backward retail trade In overshoes and kindred lines wns made up by more seasonable weather In many sec tions of the country during the past week. Manufacturing returns from the leading Industries continue favorable, the week's feature being record breaking sales of leather, while the steel mills and Iron furnaces operate nt full capacity, the demand for lum ber exceeds the supply, and glass faclorle3 are preparing to advance quotations. Exports or farm Klnples In February exceeded last, year's by $2o,Ii"ll,000, or about 5 per cent., and the move ment of foreign commerce lit this port for the last weeds shows gains of :;,2."M::.S in exports and $1,152. 157 In Imports, as compared with the same date In I!i05. Railway earnings for the first week of March were S.O per cent, larger than last yetir'.i. Although there Is no evidence of decreased activity at the lexllle mills and faclorleH. the primary market.: fur "oitim goods be gin to okIiIIiIi ivns f ' weakness. New England loot wee ; iiiumifacl nrers re port only mod 'int" volume of new business. Failures numb' red 220 In the United Slates, against i; M Inst year, and "I In Canada, c .'iini.'red Willi 20 a year ago. Parker Appjals to Southerners. Judge Ailou It. Parker, ol "ew York, Democratic candidate for Presi dent In the last election, addressed the manufacturers' club of Charlotte, N. C. lie urged Southern Democrats to take the lead in the party for tho next four years. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. In a six-round contest at Philadel phia Untiling Nelson had the best of Terry ileGovern. Col. Mann of Town Topics'has been Indicted on the perjury charge made by Collier's. Gross earnings of Buffalo, Rochest er and Pittsburg for the first week in March increased Jtl.441. The Tonopah Midway Mining Com pany has declared a second dividend of 5 cents per share. The New York and New Haven system's announce a reduction of pas senger rates to the two-c. nt-u-milo basis. Thirty-one persons were drowned owing to equltinoctlal tides overflow ing or bursting dikes on the Scheldt river In Belgium. j A destructive earthquake has oc I curred in the Bnshnhr district of In i din, where eight, are known to have j been killed and 20 Injured. At Chile, Eastern Siberia, a court martial sentenced three revolutionists to death. Among them was the prin cipal of a school. The court of assizes at Bobruisk, Russia, has sentenced " soldiers to death for mutiny and 15 others to long terms of impiisonm?nt. Senator Chauncey il. Depew, of New York is a very sick man and is not likely to ever resume his duties In Washington. Judge W. C. Marshall of the ilis- I sonti supreme court, filled his resig nation with Gov. Folk to take effect April I. From the pockets of boys in one Chicago school, In the foreign quart er, eight revolvers were taken. A special trial has been ordered for Congressman Blackburn, Indicted on a charge of accepting a fee for ser vice performed before a Government, department. At Norfolk. Va., Louis Brown, awaiting trial for the murder of Flos sie Reese, at whom he threw a light ed lamp, committed suicide in his cell, cutting his throat. Boston Wool Market. The wool market shows a firm out look. For tine medium 6C to CSc ia being paid. There Is a moderately steady call In pulled wools for fine A's and A supers. Foreign grades are steady. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, M to 5'2c; X, ?' to S4c; No. J. "JS to 30c; No. 2. 'J to 40c; fine ! unwashed. 21! to 20ic; Vi-blood, tin ; washed. 32 to :',2c: -blood, Si to ! 34c; ',i-blood, 33 to 332c; unwashed j delaine. 2S to 29c; tine washed de ; laine. UGVi to 37c. MichiganFine ' unwashed. 21 to 25c; J -blood, un i washed, 32c: 7,,-blood, 33 to 33c; j ifc-blood. 32'i to 33c; unwashed de laine, 27 to 2Sc. Bomb Smashes Stone Front. Some one threw a bomb early in the morning at the front of the six story building of Clark, Chapin and Bushncll. wholesale grocers, in Duane street. New York, and the explos ion smashed several large plate glass windows and knocked over stacks of canned goods and cases- of. grocer ies Inside. . The damage was about 1200. Member of the firm say tt was the work of striking teamsters 0 k. KeOORAU. ATTOBKIT AT LAW. Notary PnbtU, rut lata steal, fsfaa icurd, eoilAotlona ma1a promptly, In Sjn iiaata bulldint, UarnaMaTtUa, fa, II. I. HOOVKK, RKTKOMIIVILLI, PA, lt...,m,i ilfNtiu. 1. iha nnnwr kaUttst a!u hirf-at. 0Mpri In operatlaa. J)R. L. La MEANS. BENTIS1 Offlos on rieoond floor of ITrrt aTs tlonsj bank building-, Main street. J)B. B. DEVEIiE KINO, DENTIST. Office en second floor BernoldsrflV Real Estate Buildino-. ifatn itnal BnynoldsrUls, Pa, il HTtrr JUSTICE OF THE PEA. CI Aud Real Estate Agentu ReypeldwttTay gMITH M. MoCR EIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rotary Pnblla and Hani Imata Afaata. 0a laottona will raonlra prompt atloniloa. 0BU4 In ilia ReynoldnTllle Hardware Oo. Balltta. Malaalraal, Keynoldtttllo, Pa. Commodore E. C. Benedict nt s dinner at Waterhury, Conn., said:-If this country was administered on business prlnelpl. s witheii; r. nr. id to politics we would sunn own or control everything in the world l!iM l.-t worth owning or control!. .is, a:.d that with out Bring anyih!:!i! but a cominvrcla! allot. The country sun'eif vastly more from the acts of Its luwuukers tiian t"ie acts of its lawhiviKi is in ine pedlng enmiifrcc. In dlncrlmiiiHlini in taxation, ami In uncivilized meth ods of nuance. Chew to Build Church. J. P. Wlthrow, a merchant of Hollls and Ellenboro, N. C, has a novel plan in behalf of the interdenominational church he proposes to build In Mollis. Tobacco tags, if this plan does not miscarry, are to serve as the flnan clal foundation of the new place of worship. Already the tags are pour Ing in upon tho devoted collector from many sources. Mr. Wlthrow hopes b fore long to have the building of the "tobacco tag church" under way. ASI'ARAiH'S VINAIGRETTE.' Tho asparagus may be served on the same plate with the creamed chicken. Mix shallots and parsley finely minced and blend them with French dressing, made with a large proportion of vinegar to the oil. Sea son with cayenne and dip over the ap paratus. PITTSBURG. Grain. Flour and Feed. Wheat No. irwl t 71 M Rya No.'.1 74 Corn No ti yellow, ear 4'l 50 No. il yellow, ubelled 4: 44 Mliwl ear 45 47 Oats No. U white :V. HC, No. 3 white S v, Flour W inter patent I r,i HQ Fanny etrslKht wlutere 4 00 4 19 Hay No. 1 Timothy J 7V lit OH Cloyer No. I !) m 91H Fed No. I while mid. toi t: ijo :ni Hrown mldillliiK if M' SKI 0) Bran, bulk M Oil 'J 50 Straw Wheat "Oil 7W oat 7i 7 50 Dairy Products. Butter ElKln creamery 5 3! 33 Ohio rreamery J.-t M Fancy rouniry roll p. 20 CheoBB Ohio, new tl IT, Hew York, new 13 U Poultry. Etc. Ilnna per Ih 5 II H Chlckenx 'Irewd M 11 Eggs Pa. and Ohio, tresh a) il Fruits and Vegetables. Applei bbl 8 iM Potatoes Fancy while per ln.... so CnhbftKe per ion 13 tw is uo Onlona per barrel '.. .. o) 'i '2& BALTIMORE. Flour-Winter Patent s m , tt Wheat No. -i red s) M Corn Mixed 47 F.KK pj jo butter Ohio creamery PHILADELPHIA. Plour Winter Patent t 5 0J t SB Wheat No. red g4 g5 Corn No. 'I mixed 4 47 Oata No. S while g,-, 1$ Butter Creamery r) a KgK Pennsylvania flrata j$ jo NEW YORK. Flour Patenta J OS) ili Wheat No. i red 86 8 Corn No. S 47 4H Oata No. S white . M a Butter -Creamery SO fcigga Slate and Pennsylvania.... 14 il LIVE 8TOCK. . Union Stock Yards. Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,4.t0 to 1,600 lb j 60 Mai Prima. l,tu tol.dW Iha ft 6 u Good, !,t00 to 1.300 I be 5 iq J Tidy. 1.090 to 1.160 Iha 417;, 4 go Fair, WW to 1,100 lbs 4 uo 4 Common, 700 to too Iba 3 7.-, 4 go Common to (ood fat oxen 4 74 43a Common to good tat bulla ao 4 m Common to good fai cows no a 75 llellera. TtOiol, lOOIhe -.'jo iti tresh cowa and rprlngera 10 0J SO 04 Hogs. I'rlme henry hoc ISA) I 6 SO 1 rime medium wetxhta so at Best Deary Yorkers g ( a u Oood lluhl Yorkers., t Xi li rigt, as to quality m ir, common to good roughs tl 811 J 70 8'" SoO 4 75. Sheep. Prime wethers f ) ) 4 00 Uoodniixel ; sw j -5 tair mixed ewes and wethera.... 4 7'. 61 luusanu common 2 50 4 00 Cutis to choice lamba 3j , Calves. Veal Calves MOO 8 50 neary and thin calvea A at 1 00 It Is no more a sin to hear these whispers of evil in our souls than to hear the wicked talk ot bad men as we walk along the street The sia comes only by our stopping and Jolsr uS iu who mem. n. a. anmn. '1 or their llies.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers