STATE CAPITH L DEDICATED Magnificent Building at Harris burg Pennsylvania. PRESIDENT DELIVERS ADDRESS Brief Speeches Were Made by Gov ernor Pennypacker and W. A. Stone Military Parade : Follows. Pennsylvania's magnificent state capitol was dedicated October 4th with Imposing ceremonies, despite a steady downpour of rain, which began to fall at an parly hour. The rain was the only discordant feature of the day's proceeding. President Roosevelt and party ar rived on their special train shortly after 11 o'clock and were met at the station by the dedication commission. The President's salute was fired from the arsenal across the river and the party proceeded promptly to the capitol through the drenching rain. Accompanying the President were Surgeon General P. M. Rixey nd United States Senators P. C. Knox and Holes Penrose. The President was escorted to the capitol by the dedication commission, Mayor Edward Z. Gross, of Harrisburg, and the Governor's Troop. The President was received at the capitol by Gov. Pennypacker and staff members of the Supreme Court and other honored guests. Meanwhile a throng of people solid ly covering the streets for three blocks was waiting in the rain for the appearance of the nation's chief exe cutive, and the most of them were un provided with umbrellas, taking the downpour in great good nature. The grandstand was erected at State and Third streets. It had no i provision of rain and the elements made things unpleasant for the President and guests. The President was undisturbed, apparently, by either the immense throng of people which crowded about him or by the rain which descended In torrents. The exercises began shortly before 12 o'clock, with Gov. Pennypacker presiding. The band played "Hall to the Chief" as the President entered the grand stand. Everyone rose and remained standing during the rendit ion of "America," which followed. A Scripture reading by John H. Dilling ham, of the Society of Friends, was followed by a silence which was pro found and impressive. W. A. Stone was then Introduced and formally pre sented the capitol to the common wealth as the president of the building commission. The address accepting the build ing was delivered by Gov. Pennypack er and it was pronounced one of the governor's most noteworthy efforts. He was greeted with prolonged ap plause. Following the governor. President Roosevelt made an address, reading from manuscript. It was a najterly effort and he was given the ..Wisest attention throughout its delivery. Congressman Marlin E. Olmsted of Harrisburg, was chief marshal and Col. W. F. Richardson chief of staff. The state constabulary, a large de tachment of which was present led the parade, followed by a provisional brigade of the National Guard, State College Canets, Soldiers' Orphan School Cadets, Carlisle Indian School Cadets and other organizations. There wore many bands to enliven the par ado. The new Cap tol is one of the mosl ; beautllul and imposing buildings in ; the United States, not only in its ' architecture, but also in Its interior decorations and furnishings. Thus lar the building and its furnishings rep resent an expenditure of about $13, 000.000. The building is Roman Corinthian in its general design and is faced with Barre granite. It covers a trifle more than two acres of ground. The Capitol consists of a main build ing and two wings, the total length being 525 feet and the breadth 254 feet. The whole is surmounted with a dome rising 292 feet above the first floor. The most striking feature of the exterior ornamentation is the em ployment of 32 great granite mono liths, each weighing 35 tons. The interior of the dome is decorated in gold, cream and blue, and at the top there is a patch of sky, Btidded with glitteikng stars. Two great corridors load off from ihe rotunda to various suites of offices. From the rotunda gallery on the second floor elaborated doorways, with heavy maho;any hangings, lead Into the Senate and House chambers on either side. The building contains 4S1 rooms, ; and is occupied by all of the depart- I ments of the State Government, in-1 rlnI;Tn tha Snir3niii nnrl Gtnnnplr.i. I courts. It contains more floor space i than that of the Capitol at Washing- i ton and mure than that of the Capitol 1 at Albanv Bank Robbed at Noon. Two robbers entered the Kimmon Ginko, a Japanese bank, also known as the Golden Gate bank, at 1588 O'Farrell street, San Francisco, at noon and after fatally beating S. Ura kata, the munaser pnd seriously in juring A. Sassaki, a clerk, with a piece of gag pipe, escaped with $5,000 in gold. Manager Urakata died two hours later, from his injuries. Ura kata was acting as teller of the bank. Insurance Rebates Condemned. The National Association of insur ance Commissioners adopted a strong resolution against the practice of granting rebates as a great injustice to the public. An -address by Charles B. Hardy of Chicago foreshadowed increased rates of fraternal Insurance. The Octopus, the new submarine addition for the United States navy, was successfully launched at the yards of the Fore River Shipbuilding Com pany, Qulucy, Mass., la the presence of many distinguished naval officers. DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY No Unfavorable Development Have Appeared Except Storm In the South, R. G. Dun's Weekly Review of Trade says: No unfavorable developments have appeared except the damage by storm at the South, which was almost en tirely local in effect. Autumn trade Is now In full swing, especial activity being reported in drygoods, millinery and footwear. Manufacturing plauts are engaged far in advance In all the leading indus tries, the metal departments making the most striking exhibits, and the activity of transporters Is shown by railway earnings in September 9.2 per cent larger than last year's figures. Crop returns are up to expectations aside from some loss in cotton, which caused a violent rise in prices. Scarcity of most forms of steel and pressure for quick delivery tend to harden quotations, while the rise In pig Iron has continued until the In flated position of a few years ago seems about to be attained. Practically all the pig Iron furnaces are now in blast and work will soon be started on many new plants of the open variety. Any decrease In de mand for structural steel for buildings on account of the approach of winter Is more than offset by the urgent needs of car works, which are falling further behind with deliveries. High prices continue to prevail for minor metals. The most important development this week in the textile Industries was the limitation of irregularity in pri mary markets for cotton goods be cause of the sharp advance in the price of raw material. Purchasers who had hesitated to place orders be yond Immediate needs In the hope that better terms would soon he avail able changed their attitude abruptly and endeavored to arrange distant de liveries. Curtailment of production by scar city of labor has prevented accumula tion in first hands. No support conies from the export division, a small sale to India being the o:ily business re ported this week. New England manufacturers of footwear liberal orders for spring de livery, not only from Western jobbers who have been operating freely for some time, but interest is shown by Eastern jobbers and large retailers from all sections. Commercial failures in the Vnited States are 1S3, against 188 la.tt week, and 200 the preceding week, and 193 the corresponding week last year. Liabilities of commercial failures reported for September are $0,253,905, compared with $8,039,947 a year ajo. FIVE KILLED, MANY HURT Special Train Bearing Troops to Cuba Crashes Into Regular Passenger. Five passengers were killed out right and a score were injured in a rear-end collision between a regular passenger train and a military spec ial on the Boston & Maine railroad directly in front of the Lanslngburgh depot north of Troy, N. Y. The dead are: F. L. Block, Peoria, 111.; Mrs. Wallace E. Shaw, Bath, Me.; Mrs. Stevens, Boston; Mrs. J. W. Dacey, Arlington, Mass., and Mrs. H. S. Poole, Concord, N. H. Among those most seriously injured is W. H. Seymour, Kenton, O., scalp wounds. The collision took place on a heavy grade and sharp curve. The passen ger train consisted of five cars, and mnt, olinnt nno hrtui tnte when It. reach- 6(, Lansingburgh station, waiting lher(! fol. a cnance to get Into the Trov d t vvilhout apparently any .'. ,hB Rnprini rnmft thunderinc along with IS cars and crashed Into the passenger train, smashing the last two cars, which were Pullmans, like eggshells. Both these cars were swept from the track and rolled down the embankment. The engine of the special kept on for a dozen yards and then turned turtle. The special was drawing four troops of the Fourteenth United States cav alry from Fort Allen to Newport News, where they are to embark for Cuba. The soldiers quickly got to work to rescue the injured. In a com paratively short time most of those pinned down by the wreckage were on their way to a hospital. One man's grief was pitiable. His name was J. W. Dacey and he ran up and down the track crying for his wife. In a few mi.iutes her lifeless form was identified. They had been married the previous night at Arling ton and were on their honeymoon, having planned an extended trip, which included a visit to her sister in Pittsburgh. Disbar Two Prominent Lawyers. The supreme court of Illinois issued orcJer3 barring George S Baker an(1 Herbert B. Wickersham, formerly Prominent Chicago lawyers. Baker is charged with collecting money for a client end iamng lo mrn it over. He was indicted and arrested, gave bond and then fled. Wickersham, who Is dm reed with a slmfiar ofTense, was Pi'lMed end has been missing ever sine:'. 300 Horses Burned Alive. A stubborn blaze in the livery and sales stables of B. Gray on West Third street. New York, destroyed nearly ,300 horsed said to be valued at $100,000 and many carriages. SIXTY-ONE DROWNED Emigrant Steamer Founders and Only 28 Escape. The emigrant steamer Charter house, voyaging between Hoihow and Hongkong foundered off Hainan head. Capt. Clifton aud 60 passengers were lost. The North German Lloyd steamer Kohslchang has picked up a raft be longing to the Charterhouse, on which were thief Engineer Dowse, 23 of the crew and two women, after they had been drifting for 43 hours. FATAL EXPLOSION IN HE Sixteen Known to be Dead and Many More Entombed. CAUSE OF DISASTER UNKNOWN Wives and Sweethearts Crowd Around Entrance to Shaft, Pleading for Loved Ones. Twenty-nine bodies have been re covered from the West Fork of the Pocahontas Collieries Company mine at Pocahontas, Va., and a conserva tive estimnte places the total number of dead at 70. The rescuing party reached the scene of the explosion but the Im mense amount of debris and wreck age has hampered the search for bod ies. There Is no evidence thus far of fire. The explosion, the cause of which has not yet been learned, occurred In the St. Paul entry of the celebrated west mine of the Pocahontas Collier ies Company. A few men escaped from the Tug River side of the mine, these are mostly drivers and engineers, who were working in the entries. The force of the explosion was scarcely noticeable at the mouth of the mine, as the force was directed toward the north side and two and one-half miles under the mountain. The work of rescue proceeded slow ly, all the miners in the south mine being taken out in a semi-suffocated condition. There was no record to show the exact number of miners working In this section of the mine, as it was about the hour the shifts were chang ing. The scene about the entry was ap palling. Mothers, wives and sweet hearts rushing about in wild confus ion, weeping and wringing their hands and pleading with the officials to be allowed to enter the smoking tomb. Officers were being stationed about the entrance to quell the ex citement. The catastrophe Is the worst since the disaster In the nineties, when 20 miners' lives were snuffed out in a similar explosion. President James E. Jones was on the scene shortly after the explosion and is directing the work of rescue. Fire broke out in the mine and ser iously hampered the work of rescue. PROBING FRAUD CHARGES Claim That Defective Tubes Were Put Into Naval Vessels. Secret Service agents of the United States Government, working under or ders from the Department of Justice, are investigating charges filed with Secretary of Navy Bonaparte that the United States Government has been made the victim of a gigantic fraud. It is charged that several of the largest and most costly battleships In the United States Navy are equipped with thousands of boiler flues which were never subjected to the Govern ment tests and that many of them were delivered to the Government and placed in the vessels after they had been rejected as defective by the Gov ernment inspectors. The warships directly involved In the charges are: New Battleship Maine, Battleship Georgia, Armoured Cruiser Colorado, Armored Cruiser Pennsylvania. The charges are against tho boiler flues placed in these vessels at the time they were built, but also affect nearly every vessel in the American navy which has had flues installed since 1S9S. The author of the charges, which were submitted to Secretary Bona parte through United States Senator J. B. Foraker of Ohio, is Frank L. Emmett of Sharpsville, Pa., who was In charge of the shipping department of the Shelby Steel Tube Company's mill at Greenville, Pa., when this com pany made the tubes for four war ships. He confesses his part In the alleged fraud against the Government and swears to a statement containing all the charges. STOLEN MONEY FOUND Slayer of Pearce Family Admits Rob bery Led to Murder. That Elmer Dempster, the negro slayer of the family of Samuel Pearce in Cecil township last July, committed his crime In perpetration of robbery, was disclosed at Wash ington, Pa., when the negro, who is In jail under sentence of death, told the olflcers where the money he stole could be found. Officers discovered, wrapped up In a piece of cloth, $12.50 hidden in an oil derrick near the Pearce home, as he said they would. The money was taken from a pocketbook belonging to Mrs. Pearce. Dempster said that he killed Mrs. Pearce when the latter dis covered him rilling the purse, and that he slew the rest of the family to prevent their telling of the first crime. Fifteen men are supposed to have lost their lives in an explosion in the Dutchman Coal mine at Blossburg, N. M., a small camp five milea from Ra ton. Three boiijles have been, re covered. Mrs. John Severson of Mondovl, Wis., has given birth to four boys. The babies are strong and healthy and physicians say they will live. Russia Anxious for Peace Meeting. The convocation of the second peace conference at The Hague is being urged by Great Britain and also by Russia, the latter wishing to show that the International situation in that country Is again becoming normal and in any case It does not affect her foreign policy. Anti-admlniBtratlon Republicans of Alabama, in convention at Birming ham, nominated for Governor Judge A. Stratton of Montgomery. The plat form calls upon President Roosevelt to stand for a third term. BALLOON RACE Lieutenant Lahm, of Sixth U. S. Cavalry, Victor in Contest. The Aero club officially announced that Lieutenant Frank P. Lahm, of the Sixth United States cavalry, one of the American contestants, was the victor In the Hist competition for tli James Gordon Bennett cup for Inter national aeronouis. The race started Sunday afternoon, when 15 balloons, representing seven countries, sailed away from the Tul lerles Gardens In Paris, France. C. S. Rolls, one of the English contest ants, has not been heard from. Up to the present time, however, tho performances of Lahm and Hor sey, In the balloon United States, in reaching 15 miles north of Scarbor ough, England, Is the best record at tained by anyone of the 15 starters. Santos-Dumont had an accident which compelled him to descend. His arm caught in tho niechaniclsni of his motor, paralyzing it. His injury was not serious anil he returned to Paris. PALMA GOES OUT PENNILESS Minister from Cuba Confers With Secretary Root. Gonzales tie Quesada, minister from Cuba to the United States, conferred with Secretary Root regarding the situation in Cuba. Mr. Quesada ex pressed full confidence in the friendly attitude of this government toward Cuba. Quesada Bald President Paliua after spending 40 of the 73 years of his life in fighting for Cuban liberty, leaves the palace in Havana without a dollar. His private fortune, as well as the best energies of his life have been patriotically poured out In 1he cause of his country. Quesada add ed. "I have cabled to President Palma an invitation to make my house his home if he decides to come to the United States. Although President Palma Is practically penniless he has hosts of friends who will remain steadfast, even though adversity has become his portion." KILLED PRISO..-A3 The Dominican President Wins Vic tory and Then Slaughters Cap tured Rebels. Advlce3 from Monte Crlsti, Santo Domingo, which was besieged for some time by Dominican revolution ists, ani.-.mnce that President Caceres, with 1,200 men, recently attacked the revolutionists, raised the selge and pursued the besiegers, dispersing them and captured a number ot prisoners. Twenty-four of the prisoners were executed, and the property ot the recalcitrant revolutionists was de stroyed. Later the revolutionists ral lied and according to the last advices were preparing to make another at tack on Monte Crist i. CUBAN FUNDS ALL RIGHT President Palma Departs from Ha- vana for His Home. Former President Palma, who de parted from the capital to his home with no money remaining of his once large fortune, left the Cuban treasury In a satisfactory condition with $13. 000,000 In it. The obligations out standing will soon necessitate paying out one-half of this, but tho income of the government amounts to nearly $2,000,000 a month and loans are not considered necessary, ns nearly all the congressional appropriations have been canceled. CABINET WILL CHANGE Attorney-General Moody and Secretary Shaw Will Retire. Two retirements from the presi dent's cabinet are slated for the com ing winter. They are those of Attorney-General Moody, whose resig nation will become effective about December 1. and Secre'Tv of the Treasury Shaw, who will retire in February. For one of the vacancies the Presi dent will nominate George . L. Meyer, American ambassador to Rus sia. For the other he is not yet ready to make an announcement. Cooked Alive. Literully cooked alive in a boiler into which steam was turned on by mistake, Gustave F. Friend of Vin cennes. Ind., lived five hours 'with his flesh dropping from hlin In chunks. He remained conscious and arranged all his worldly affairs, bade his friends goodbye and then prayed with his pastor till death came. President's Son Must Answer. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., and several of his fellow students at Harvard, to gether with two police officers have been summoned before the Suffolk county grand jury In connection with an investigation by that body ot an assault upon one of the officers on Boston common. Held for Smuggling. Twenty thousand dollars' worth ot emeralds were found by United States customs officials at New York on Manuel Suarez when he arrived on the Oceanic of the White Star line. The jewels were seized and Suarez who says he is a Colombian, was ar rested on the charge of smuggling. United States Commissioner Shields later admitted him to $300 cash ball. Gen. Guerra and his Insurgent forces in Cuba offered no trouble to Americans and peaceably gave up their arms without any sign of dis order. Mint Statement, The statement of the director of the mint shows that tho coinage exe cuted at the mints of the United States during September, 1908, amounted to $10,893.7:14, as follows: Gold, $9,4(10,1(12: silver, $1,308,000; minor coins, $125,571. In addition there were coined 400,000 five peso gold pieces for the Mexican govern ment. The theater at Odessa where the Jewish Company played has been en tirely destroyed by fire. A professor and two students perished. Forty Either Swept Into the Sea or Damaged Beyond Repair. RED CROSS WILL RECEIVE AID Those Who Wish to Contribute Can Send Money to the National Organization. Forty-four lighthouses either swept into the sea and lost or the struc tures so badly damaged that no lights can be shown, and four lighthouse keepers drowned during lust week's hurricane Is the summary of the re port made by Inspector Sears of New Orleans. These lights were located on the coast and adjacent islands be tween the mouth of the Mississippi river and Mobile. Fort McRea, out from Pensacola, Fia., has oeen swept almost oft the earth with its new and modern bat teries and disappearing guns, and it was here five men were drowned and five others underwent such a harrow ing experience they are now chained In the army hospital, raving niainacs. Fort Pickens has been greatly dam aged, but not to the extent of Fort McRea. The estimated loss at. Fort McRea is $40,000, at Barrancas $5, 000 and at Pickens 12.000. There has been no definite news from Fort Mor gan. Mobile, since the storm. The American National Red Cross decided to receive contributions for the relief of the storm sufferers In the iflilf states, and sent Instructions to the presidents of all the state branches of th organization asking them to make announcement that they will receive money for the purpose in dicated. Persons living in states which have no Red Cross branches may send their contributions to the national treasurer. Charles Hallam Keep, assistant secretary of the Unit ed States treasury. The commanding officer at Ft. Barrancas, Pensacola, confirms tho report of the drowning of Quarter master Sergeant Maurice O. Oberlund and Private Rex. A. Jordan, both of the Twenty-sneond ompany' of Coast Artillery. The bodies wore not re covered. DEATH LIST INCREASING Later Report Swell the Number of Casualties on Coast. The number of casualties in the great storm U slowly increasing ,as messages are received from place.-) which have heretofore been lnaccess able. Tha total of the known dead was brought up to n certainty of 79, and a possibility of 102 by the report j that have reached Mobile. Four bodies not before counted huve been found at Coden, and It Is estimated that 23 lives have been lost from the oyster fleet around Cedar Point. This last estimate is probably somewhat exaggerated, for the reason that it includes among the dead tvery man aboard a fishing boat who has not been heard ot since the tstorm. DROWNED HIS LITTLE SON Drunken Man Throws Child Into River and Jumps After. Drink-crazed Patrick Coyne of Pittsburg, while crossing tho Twenty-second street bridge with his' 3-year-old son, suddenly seized the lad and hurled him far out over the rail ing. The boy sank to death In the Mouongahela river, but scarcely had the body disappeared before the father also leaped from the bridge, falling almost in the spot which marked the son's watery grave. The father was taken out unconscious, the bodv of his son has not yet been recovered. MORMON UNDER ARREST ! president Smith Held on Charge of Livlna With Five Wives The president of the Mormon church, Joseph F. Smith, was arrested and bound ovei to the district court on the charge of living unlawfully with five wives. The complaint was sworn to by a Mormon deputy sher iff, the warrant was served by order of a Mormon sheriff, and the com mitting magistrate is also a Mormon. President Smith was arraigned im mediately after his arrest and waived preliminary hearing. After being bound over he was released on his own recognizance. TWO KILLED IN COLLISION Refusal of Air Brakes to Work Said to Be the Cause. Two persons were killed and 29 in jured in a rear-end collision on the New York division of the Pennsyl vania railroad near Eddlngton, Pa 19 miles north of Philadelphia. The dead: Mrs. W. H. Council, wire of an employe of the railroad; Mrs. Mary O'Malley of Philadelphia. U. S. Marshal Removed. Tho President has determined to remove from office Vivian J. Fagin, United States marshal for the South- em district of Ohio, upon the report of the civil service commission that he has been guilty of making politi - cal assessments, and Marshal O'Nell, of the Western district of I,oulslana, on tho allegation of general unfitness, as disclosed by tha report of a com missioner of tho department of Just ice. Cruiser Reaches Santiago. The arrival of the American cruiser Des Moines, nt Santiago, Cuba, Oct. 1, relieved a serious situation. Fully 4.000 armed revolutionists were en circling the city within three miles, threatening a raid. The government forces were not sufficient to drive the besiegers away. Eleven persons were hurt In a col lision betweeu two passenger trains on tho St. Louis & Cairo line of the Illinois Central railroad at Murpheys boro. III. MAGOON WILL BE GOVERNOR President Roosevelt Makes Him Pro v visional Executive Over the Af fairs of the Island. It was announced at the White House that, upon further considera tion of the subject, the President had decided to adhere to his plan end send Chares E. Magoon to Cuba to relieve Secretary Taft as provisional governor, allowing Governor Wlnthrop to remain In Porto Rico, where hi) services are needed. Government Statement. The monthly statement of the Gov-' eminent receipts and expenditures shows that for the month of Sep tember, 1900, the total receipts amounted to $31,497,190 and the expenditures $40,270,154. leaving a surplus for the month of $11,227,036. The receipts from the several sources of revenue were: Customs. $27,280, 010; internal revenue, $21,491,481; miscellaneous, $2,725,099. The re ceipts last month were $1,240,000 in excess of those for September, 1905, and the expenditures $1,040,000 less than for September, 1905. For the three months of the present fiscal year there is shown a surplus of $5, 871,000. Seven Entombed in Mexico, By what Is reported to have been an intentional firing of the timbers of the Buena Tlerra mine, near Chihuahua, Mex., seven men lost their lives sev eral days ago. A report of the catas rophe has just been given out and the authorities have Instituted an lnvesti- ' gallon. Particulars are not available and no cause has been assigned which could have prompted the act. The Buena Tlerra mine is located in the Santa Eulalla mining district. Find $50,000 in Spinster's House. That gold, sliver and bills aggregat ing $30,000 were found In the Robin son homestead, Hudson, N. Y., where Miss Frances Carolyn Robinson, a recluse, was found dead four weeks ago, is announced. The treasure wa9 stuffed in pots, cups and vases which were hidden in nooks und corners. Mis Robinson left a will dividing her estate among four, charitable socle ties. CURRENT NEWS ITEMS Gen. Bell will take charge of American troops In Cuba. District Attorney Jerome will ask that the case of Harry K. Thaw be transferred to supreme court. Fire destroyed the Avery hotel at Mount Clemens, Mich, causing a loss of $30,000, with $23,000 Insurance, M. t'no-'. Hip Swedish vice consul at Baku, was shot anil killed by an unknown assassin while out driving. Mrs. W. J. White of Cleveland, was arjntod a divorce from her husband, President of thp Chewing Gum Trust. Mrs. Ellen Nngle. a prominent society woman of Canton. 111., was robbed of $2,000 in cash and diamonds at the Saratoga Hotel, Chicago. The Republicans of the TTflrfet'nJ- Congressional district of Freeport. fll., nominated Frank O. Lowden to fill the unexpired term of Robert R. Hitt. In spite of the appeal for mercy of the widow of General Kozlow, who was murdered July 14 last In mistake for General Trepol'f, the assassin was executed. The Swedish Government has ban ished a number of Finnish students as vagrants and persons dangerous to society. Their return to Sweden is absolutely prohibited. Gen. O. H. Burton, Inspector gen eral of the army, retires at his own request, alter 40 years' service. He is to be succeeded by Col. E. A. Gar lington, inspector general. Thirty thonsnnd pounds of decom posed poultry was seized t cold storage warehouses in Chicago. An analysis of the chickens by the' city chemist showed that they were putrid. President Roosevelt appointed Eugene 55. Lewis to be the Marshal for the Southern District of Ohio. Sena- : tor Foraker recommended the ap- 1 polntnient or L,ewis less man mree hours after Marshal Fagin was dis missed. Acting Postmaster General Hitch cock has ordered the exemption of over 1,700 assistant postmasters In first and second class postoffices from the requirement of recording the time of their arrival at and departure from their offices. The proceeds, amounting to $1,195. of an excursion from Ithaca to Niag ara Falls was stolen from the cash drawer of the Lehigh Valley railroad station at Ithaca. N. Y., early in the morning. B. T. Bryant, the telegraph operator was asleep. Arma Tashjian, an Armenian who was arrested in New Y'ork charged with the murder of his brother, Markar Markarian, confessed to the police, he killed his brother. He said he threw his brother's head Into the Hudson river. The Boston Wool Market. The w-ool market held firm, active in some directions and dull In others. N'n- Inree blocks of Territory wool nave heen BOu( but Territories are I moving freely. Pulled wools are j steady. j The price ranged from 41c to 44c. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, 34 to : 34.c: X. 31 to 32c; No. 1, 40 to 41c: No. 2. 38 to 30c; fine unwash 23 to 2Cc; half-blood, unwashed, to 34e; three-eighths blood, unw ed. 34 to 35c; one-quarter blood. washed. 32 to 33c; delaine, washe 30 to 37c; Packers Guilty of Shortwelghlng Lar The Omaha Packing Company, A mour & Co., and Llbby, McNeil . Llbby, were adjudged guilty of sellin short weight lard and a fine of tZ was Imposed upon each firm by Jus ice Sheldon, of Chicago. Yellow Fever at Havana. The marine hospital service has hn nut I fled bv cable from Havana of the aupearance of two new cases of yellow fever there, making seven cases reported during the past week. 1 IS I ia 1