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HIGHLAND RDER VOL. XXV. MONTEREY, HIGHLAND COUNTY, VA., NOVEMBER 13,1903. NO. 44. STRIKE Of? (Ml MINER! Trouble lo Colorado Fu:l and Iroc Company. DOUBTFUL IF THE MINES CAN OPEN Men QuM Work at Ail M!aM and Flock tc Town With Tb:Ir Pay Checks-Hundred! of thi Strikers Join (be Inion, but the Italians Refuse t > Jala, as They Say Thej Have Been Sold Ou* b, the Union. Trinidad, Col. (Special).?It is now evident that the strike of thc coal min? ers in the first district ot the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company is no small affair, in fact, it is a strike out of ali proportions to that even hoped for by the officers of thc United Mineworkers of America, and ten times what was - looked for by thc coal operators. At a meeting of superintendents and pit bosses held in the Colorado Fuel and Iron offices, at Trinidad, reports were made thal in no camp would enough men go out to cause a shut? down. It is doubtful if enough men can bc found in the whole district to work the mines at Frimero. At Gray Creek every miner but one has quit, and the camp is surrounded by armed guards. At Bowen the men arc quit? ting rapidly. At Tercio the men quit carly. At Starkville alone of the camps reported as being wholly com? pany men nearly every man quit. At Peadmont. the new Rocky Mountain Fuel Company men took their tools home. All day the chiefs and miners have been swarming into Trinidad, nearly all of them having their pay checks, running from $187 down. Thc checks were for such amounts that business men could not cash them, and, hence, lost thousands of dollars in trade. All day long the miners have been joining thc United Mineworkers. Thc police, who were stationed near the office of that organization to prevent any pos? sibility of a clash between the union and nonunion men, estimated that at least 800 joined and came out show? ing their union cards. Commercial street for two blocks was at one time choked with the new union men. Thc Italians have quit almost to a man. They have not joined thc union to any extent, giving as their reason that they were sold out by the labor organisa? tion on two or three occasions and they prefer to go out on their own responsi? bility on this occasion. They will stay out, their officers say, until the last one - fcoes nac'tc vo work. Denver, Col. (Special).?A general strike in the Northern Colorado coalfield was declared. In all about 1,275 men in the Northern field are idle. The action of the miners in the North? ern field was a surprise to the operators. After the conferences held in this city. in which practically every demand except the eight-hour day was granted to thc men, they determined to strike. CHILD SHOOTS TWO OTHER CHILDREN. v. Thir'cen-Year-Old Boy Klis One Companion and Wounds Another. Monongahela. Fa. (Special). ?En? raged over a name applied to him. Earl Flory, a i.Vyear-old boy. shot and in? stantly killed James Murphy, aged 12 years, and severely wounded John John? son, .-.ged 11 years. The tragedy oe curred late in the" evening ;.t Seen ???>? Hill, where thc three boys reside. Flory i- in jail aud Johnson was 'roi-> ; h?re to the Memorial Hospital. lite three lx>ys for sometime have been boon companions and were out hunting. ? The only gun in thc party was owne 1 by Flory, who allowed the others to shire in the shooting from time to time. A 1 dispute arose as to whose tum it was to j usc the gun. and Flory settled thc quos- i .iou hy taking it himself, whereupon Murphy said: ''Your old gun is no good. It's like you, you dirty pup." Thc words v ere scarcely out of Mur- 1 phys mouth when Flory fired ?t him point-blank. The charge took effect iii Murphy's abdomen, almost disembowel- i ing him. Johnson was severely wounded about the lover part of the body by part | of the charge which went by Murphy. Flory iled. leaving the wounded John- j son to hobble to the nearest habitation for aid. When arrested Flory said to the ; officers: "Yes, he called me names and I shot bim." Later, be said Johnson told him thc gun was empty and he only j wanted to scare Murphy. CLARK WINS UREU -LIT. HooT.:;.". Senato. Awarded Timber Land Worth $2,O;W,009. Butte, Mont. (Special).?The great I timber suit brought by the United j States against Senator William A. j Clark, involving timber land in the Bitter Creek Valley, Western Mon- j tana, to (he value of $2,000,000. was settled by Judge Knowles, of the Unit ed States District Court, in favor of Senator Clark. Judge Knowles finds that Mr. Clark I was guiltless of irregular purchase of lands and innocent of illegal reg.stra tion of thc same if such irregular.ties j existed. Judge Knowles criticises the testimony of Witness Griswold for ihe Government, whose reputation, the de cision allege-, is none of tile best and \ who many other witnesses testified had approached rheni in behalf of the Gov eminent. The rase i> the most famous timber land action ever I ried in thc : 1 West. _ _ ' Ma-con 's Li'est Schem?. Rome (By Cable).?The government! Has ordered the beginning of the work I of construction of ihe extraordinarily powerful wireless telegraph station for 1 thc establishment of communication he- l tween Italy and Argentina. The station will he erected on the royal estate of San Ros?ore. on which King Victor Fmman- ' I uel ha- h's hunting 1-r'--. The site was ? chosen by Marconi as the best adapted for the Du?ooie TKE LATEST NEWS IN SHORT ORDER. Domestic. Judge Lacombc, of the United States District Court, in New York, dismissed the petition for habeas corpus brought in behalf of John Turner, the English anarchist, whose deportation had been ordered. Mrs. Edgar E. Clark, wife of the grand chief of the Order of Railway Conductor.", of America and member of thc Coal Strike Commission, died in Cedar Rapids, Ia., President Frank Buchanan, of the Bridge and Structural Ironworkers, or? dered a strike throughout the country on all contracts held by the Iron League of New York. Mark M. Dobson, confidential clerk for Austin M. Greer, a banker and broker of New York, was arrested on the charge of grand larceny, preferred by his employer. Despite thc opposition of thc widowp of Philo S. Bennett, Mr. William J. Bryan was permitted by the court in New. Haven, Ct., to qualify as execu? tor of the will. The Cuban government handed to United States Minister Squicrs a propo? sition for the turning over of the Guan? tanamo naval station to thc United States. Lieutenant Colonel John Dunlop Adair, who was a member of General Grant's staff during the Civil War, died at his home, in Chicago, of pneu? monia. Judge Landis, in Lancaster, Pa., re? fused either to grant or dismsis thc bill for a receiver for the Susquehanna Iron and Steel Company. Thc jury which tried State Senator Farris, of Missouri, for bribery in con? nection with the baking-powder legis? lation disagreed. Mrs. Christian Sorenson dropped dead from heart disease in New York on learning of her husband's arrest for theft. Miss Clara Josephine Coffin, thc daughter of Edward W. Coffin, of East Orange. N. J., who disappeared from her home on Tuesday night, has been ? ound in Omaha, Neb. Thc boiler of a harvesting engine ex? ploded at the Ohio State University, killing thc engineer and assistant engi? neer and injuring a number of "stu? dents. As the result ol' a general conference of window glass interests, 10,000 skill? ed workers who have been idle for six months will return to work very soon. At thc last day of thc Congress of the Protestant Episcopal Church in America thc proposition to change the name of the church was discussed. II. J. Hoover, until recently cashier of the Licking County Bank of New? ark, O., confessed that he was a default? er to thc amount of $36,000. Dr. S. W. Winchester, editor of thc Christian Outlook, of Buffalo, N. Y., "was elected president of Taylor Univcr -ily, at Upland, Ind. An explosion of gas in a pit at ihe repair shops of the Pennsylvania Rail? road in Pittsburg, Pa., killed two men alomst instantly. Magistrate Elijah Upton, of Bowling Green, Ky., shot and killed Tom Stew? art, who had threatened to shoot him on sight. Sam Parks, thc New York walking delegate, was sentenced to two years and three months in Sing Sing for the extortion. There was great excitement on the cotton exchanges in New York and New Orleans, and prices were again forced upward. Miss Bobb Clark Hoyt, of Bozman, Mont., eloped with and was married to the son of her father's Chinese cook. Tile National Convention of the American Humane Association was held in Cincinnati. Clinti n Rogers Woodruff, of Phil adelphia, has been appointed an ass >- : gi cialc of Charles J. Bonaparte in thc ! re nv 'st:??atio:i of the Indian Territory si arida!. A strike has been ordered of coal miners of Colorado. Utah. New Mex? ico and Southern Wyoming. The crew of thc schooner John W. Linnell, was, rescued at sea and was brought tu New York. The United Stales' cruiser Minne? apolis left LeagucTsland Navy Yard for Hampton Roads. Owing to the unsettled condition of the trade, the price of steel billets :as btcn reduced. I deign. The United States gunboat Newport tas been ordered from Savannah to San o Domingo. The Dominican government ias-declared the northern ports of the re? public closed to maritime commerce, but United States Minister Powell has de? bared the blockade noneffective. The -miser Baltimore arrived at Puerto Plata. The negotiations between Russia and fapan have so far advanced that a dis a'ch from Berlin states that an an? nouncement of a settlement is soon ex >ectcd. As thc result of a conflict over the iiicstiou of vivisection between the mem ?crs of thc Vienna Medical Chamber and r.embers of the Landtag, thc former :avc resigned. About 6.000 Bulgarian irregulars are ssemblcd along the frontier in readiness o enter Turkish territory and further rouble is expected. Thc German government docs not re a-'d thc reported massacre at Warm ad as serious and will send no reinforce. Rents to Africa. The report is confirmed that thc Gcr ian garrison at Warmbad, Dernaraland, .?as massacred by the Bondlzwar ribesmen.' Solicitor General Finlay concluded his rgument in behalf of Great Britain be- j J)V :>re the Venezuelan arbitration tribunal. Un The new Hungarian premier, Count crf tephen Tisza, secured a hearing in the Cx* .ower House after a stormy beginning, thr Senor Gil Robl. a Carlist, mafic a bit-. I mc ?r speech against thc United States j 1nc iivcrnmcnt in the Spanish Senate. j tioi I inenciat. Two banking-house failures iu Colo- , ido threw a chill over Western scnti- *' o\ in Cl Al la? se an in fm th dr ch ho nn fr< ow iii I dc Ol tin ! si!; of liol sa i P. vol lent. There is an end now lo Lalee Supe or common's decline. There is no low ? place for it to fail. London sold a great lot of United tites Steel preferred on the reports ?nm America of a cut in the price of J sell illets. ?ufl President Thomas, of Lehigh Valley, in ivs that thc qflestioal of a dividend li 3? : hac rt vet been jfrought before thc Board I ai<J( Dirftrtors 1 i B V KILLED IN AJiOLD MINI runnel Timbers Take Fire and Fall c Imprisoned Workmen. FUTILE ATTEMPT AT RESCUE MAD! superintendent Turner, a Well-Known M:n:t Man, Arnon; tbe Dead ?Ile (lave His Li to Save tbe Miners. Leading a Reset Party of 170 Men to Aid in Ibe Escaps e tbe Entombed Men. Butte, Mont. (Special).?A Virgini lity special to the Miner says fire i he Kearsarge minc, six miles froi .'irginia City, killed nine men. T. iarnagc to the surface buildings i light. Among the dead is Supcrintcr ent R. B. Turner, of Butte, one r lac best known mining men in th Northwest. Four bodies have been rc overcd. All the dead miners are from Butt nd were single men. The Kearsarg > one of the principal gold mines c he State, and is considered very val able. It is operated by the Aide lining Company. At about 5 o'clock fire was discov red issuing from the tunnel house o: unncl No. i. At the time thc flame ?ere discovered the timbers in the tun cl were ablaze. How the fire orig lated is not known, but at the firs larm all the miners, carpenters an< iborers, about 170 in all. hastener cross thc gulch to aid in subduing th ames. Superintendent R. B. Turner, whoa ?mporary quarters arc high on thc hil cross the right fork of Alder guicl nd a short distance from thc buriiiu; mncl house, at once went to th< ?ene and assumed thc direction 0 ffairs, entered thc tunnel through tin re and smoke to give warning to tin ntombed miners and to aid in theil scape. Near thc mouth of the tunnel the) umbled over the body of John Tobin ho evidently had made an effort tc 'cape, but was driven back by th< ames and smoke. They carried tin >dy io thc surface and once more en red the workings to rescue their com ides if possible. According to thc story of a miner [urley by name, he. with Turner an; lOther man, entered the minc bellini in, but descended through the ail taft. Hurley was the last of the three 1 descend. After going down some stance through the air shaft, Hurley jard a cry and then thuds as oi ?idies striking thc timbers, followed t a smothered splash in ihe water. Hurley tried to go farther down the aft, but was compelled to retrace his cps. Mr. Turner bad been connected with e company for several years as su rintendent of thc Kennel mine. CHOLERA VICTIMS IN PHILIPPINES. rtntyOae Dealhs Reposed From thc Cap? ita! Ilocos. Manlia (By Cable).?Twenty cases Asiatic cholera occurred in Vigan, c capital of Ilocos Sur, Luzon, last :ek. Twenty-one deaths are report A party of ladroncs captured the licnte (municipal officer) of Buena sta, near Malabon, Cavite. They cut c tendons of his legs and left him on e roadway. This outrage was an act vengeance, because the tcnientc had ven information to thc authorities garding the movements of thc la ones. The Philippine commission has con med thc antislavery law passed by B Legislature Council of the Moro ovinces, October 5, prohibiting slave nting in al! the Moro territory and oviding for thc confiscation of all sscls engaged in the slave traffic. Ihe volcano Malaspina, in Negros. is a state of violent eruption. Malar? ia is thc loftiest summit of thc cal? li mountain chain of thc island of -gros. being 8102 feet high. It has vcr been entirely quiescent. EXCITEMENT KILLED O.M. Millionaire Wbos: Mill at D.-rby Was Dam? aged by Fire. Derby, Conn. (Special).?Excitement ir a $.}0,coo fire in his big woolen ll caused thc death of Millionaire aries B. Ailing, of this city. Mr. iug was driving on thc hills when looked clown and saw thc Baugaus Mi!ls, which he had built up from attic-room industry to the largest town, burst into flames. He drove iously into town and ran through extensive mill yard only to find thc house section, with its costly ma nery and stock, destroyed, fears filled his eyes and he was taken ne with a nervous chill. In the ming bc was found dead in bed in cerebral hemorrhage, dr. Ailing, who was 70 years old, ned one-half of thc business blocks Derby. Engine Blown Up at University. Columbus, O. (Special).?While stu its of the Agricultural College at the io State University were witnessing harvesting of a field of corn for cn ge purposes, by a machine operated an old traction engine, thc boiler blew and pieces of iron torc through the wd of students. Thc force of the losion was terrific and was felt v.igh all the university buildings. The ?t intense excitement was caused and students came running in all direc is from classrooms and dormitories. Gunner Kids Himself. brtsmouth, N. H. (Special).?In one the cabins of the training ship Mo gahel.i. which is al I he navy yard. ors found the body of Gunner George Brady lying on the floor, with a rc cr by his side. Brady had shot bun? in the head. He had heen a great erer fron*. neuralgia. Brady had been he Navy about eighteen years and an excellent record His widow re s at Newport, R I., to wdiichiplacc -iv's bodv will be taken. NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS. Senate Financiers Meet The Senate Finance Committee held 1 session at which the general work of th: session was discussed. The discus jion showed, what has appeared prob? able for some time, that no legislation looking to an increase of the volume 'c of money will be seriously undertaken during the special or first regular ses? sion of this Congress. If anything is to bc attempted in the way of financial legislation it will be in behalf of the Aldrich bill relative to | deposits or customs revenues in the na? tional banks. It was suggested that Ce Aldrich bill might be amended so ,.s ro eliminate some of the features ?i:o>J objected to and in thc amended lora bc passed, but there was manifest? ed a general indisposition to go farther dian this into thc question of financial legislation. In the opinion of members of the committee there was nothing to be done by them with reference to Cuban reciprocity legislation until after thc House had acted on the subject, and thc suggestion was made that the sub? ject properly belonged to the Com? mittee on Relations with Cuba, of which Senator O. H. Platt, of Connect? icut, is chairman. The discussion indi? cated that there would be no disposi? tion to contend with the House over 1 j thc question of the proper initiative of revenue legislation, and that if in the opinion of thc House the matter should bc treated in a bill, rather than by joint resolution, the Senate would ac? cept this decision. Cost of Carryng the Mail. W. S. Shallcnbergcr, Second Assist? ant Postmaster General, in his annual j report, states that thc yearly rate of i j expenditure for all classes of mail ' ; transportation service in this country '? j Is $63,504,542, and that the rate ol cost j per mile traveled is $12.80. It is estimated that the railway pos ' i tal clerks handled during thc year 15, ' ' 909,80.2,630 pieces of mail matter, ex i elusive of registered matter, and 1,387, 604 errors were reported in their distri? bution, a ratio of 1 error to n.530 cor? rect distributions. During the year there were 373 cas? ualties to mail cars, in which 18 clerks and 4 other employes were killed and 78 clerks seriously and 308 slightly in? jured. Statistics of the parcels-post business with Germany showed that this country was not profiting under thc old ar? rangement, and thc maximum-weight limit therefore was reduced to 4 pounds 6 ounces. This government received j postage on 77,174 pounds sent to Ger | many, while the latter received postage I on 400,289 pounds sent herc and trans J ported long distances. Thc feature of delivering mail into boxes along the lines of the star I routes will bc extended to the entire [ system of star service on more than 20.000 routes, aggregating over 249,000 miles in length. Report on Education. The report of thc Commissioner of Education for thc last fiscal year places thc total number of pupils enrolled in the common schools during the year at 15,925,887, or over 20 per cent, of the entire population. The average daily attendance for 1902 was 10.099,273, being 69 per cent, of the total number enrolled. The average monthly wages of teach? ers for 1902 was $49 for males and about $40 for females. Less than 28 i per cent, of the teachers were males. or 122.392 out of a total of 439,596. The private schools are tabulated at i 1.103,301 for thc elementary schools and 168,636 for academics and other secondary schools. The total enroll? ment for thc year, including public and private, elementary, secondary and higher education, was 17,460,000 pupils, and to this there should be an addition made for ' evening schools, business I 1 schools, private kindergartens, Indian 1 j schools. State schools for defectives, | t orphans, etc., 620.840, making a grand ; ,1 total of 18,080,840 in general and special j schools. Cition dinned. A bulletin issued by the Census Bu? reau on thc cotton ginned from thc growth of thc present year up to October 18 places thc amount at 3,839,627 com? mercial bales, as against 5,925.872 bales ginned up to the same date last year. Complete returns on production for 1902 showed that 53.5 per cent, of thc total crop had been ginned prior to Octo- j ber 18 of that year, but thc percentage of the girnagc prior to October 18 of this ^ year cannot bc known until the final rc- | 1; port for the year is made. Meantime n two other reports will be submitted?on , , November 18 and December 13. The statistics for thc present year were || collected by 631 local agents, who found that 27,723 ginneries had been operated prior to October 18, while to the corre? sponding date last year 29.314 ginneries had been operated. R Rigid Exclusion of Chinese As a result of thc annual conference j IJ of Immigration Commissioners, just con- I ;\ duded, Commissioner-General Sargent ii predicts a much more rigid enforcement fi of the Chinese Exclusion law than here? tofore. Secretary Cortclyou defined his ll policy to the commissioners to thc strict ti enforcement of the laws, based on fair p dealing. Thc number of Chinese inspec- tl tors along thc Mexican border is to be 'l increased. ? n ?:- r< Missionaries in the Congo State. Representative Livingston, of Gcor gia; Hon. H. St. George Tucker, of j y Virginia, and Rev. Dr. Morrison, com- I y< prising a committee from thc Presby- b terian Church, represented to thc Pres- I bl ident that the treaty rights of mission- j fl aries in the Congo Free State were bc- 1 ci ing violated. Thc President will take lc< lin: matter up with the State Depart- ci men. _ __ I ti Says Sheriff Was at Pauli. In response to the request of thc In? terior Department for a report regard- 1 mg the recent Indian troubles in Wy- | u niling. General Kobbe, commanding (he Department of Dakota, forwarded 1 dispatch from Major B. H. Cheever, Sixth Cavalry, at Pine Ridge. Major Cheever says thc trouble was mostly the Sherill's fault and that the Indian prisoners at Newcastle shornM j of 5c released. He says it is believed that j ai roe Sheriff's party fired the first shot. ca The War Department states that the cr situation does not require'the service I h< Of HOODS. ' ; <<-, REPUBLIC IS RECOGNIZE Special Action Taken at Important Ca inet Meeting;. HERRAN MAY LEAVE WASHINGTO. President Roosevelt and His Cabinet Dec! to Recognize tbi De Facto Government tbe New Republic?Secretary May Clear Defines Validity of Action Taken ?Cruis Dixie Reaches Colon. Washington, D. C. {Special). ?Ti United States government has recc nized the de facto government of Pai ama. It was announced at the State D partment after the return of Seer tary Hay from the cabinet meeting th instructions had been sent to Unite States Minister Beaupre, at Bogo (assuming that he has not left thc ca; ital yet), and to Mr. Ehrman, the Uni ed States vice-consul at Panam, ai now acting consul there, to infor the governments of Colombia and Pai ama, respectively, that thc de fact government is recognized. Dr. Thomas Herran, the Colombia charge here, is prepared to leave Wa si ington on short notice, with his fan ily, for Colombia. It may bc state that instructions withdrawing him wi cause no surprise at the Colombian b ration, where it is believed that tl State Department's recognition of th Republic of Panama will cause inten feeling in Colombia. So far Dr. Herran has had no ai vices from his government. Thc decision to recognize the d facto government of Panama was ai rived at after a protracted session C the cabinet, at winch, every member wa present except Secretaries Root an Wilson. No other subject was considered. 1 li President emphasized the importance c the recognition of thc dc facto govert! ment. With the withdrawal of thc Colombia officials, the isthmus was left cntirel without a government unless that cstah ished by the secessionists should be rec gnized, and this step seemed necessar, ior thc transaction of thc routine busi less of thc United Slates on thc isthmus When thc decision was reached th following telegram was sent by thc Stat Department to Mr. Ehrman, the actin; ?onsul general of thc United States a 'anama : "The people of Panama have, by ai ipparently unanimous movement, dis lolved their political connection with th epublic of Colombia and resumed thci ndependence. When you arc satisfie hat a de facto government, republican n form and without substantial opposi ion from its own people, has been es ablished in thc State of Panama, yoi viii enter into relation^ with it as th csponsiblc government of the territory nd look to it for all due action to pro cct the persons and property of citizen d' thc United States, and to keep opel he isthmian transit in accordance will he obligations of existing treaties gov ming thc relations of the United State: o that territory." Immediately afterward an instructioi tas sent by telegram to Mr. Beaupre he United States minister at Bogota, ii lie following terms: "Thc people of Panama, having by ai pparently unanimous movement, dis dived their political connection with thc tepublic of Colombia and resumed theil ?dependence, and having adopted a gov rnmciit of their own. republican in form ith which the government of thc United tates of America has entered into re itions, the President of the United tates, in accordance with thc tics of rieudship which have so long and sc appity existed between thc respective ations, most earnestly commends to thc overnments of Colombia and Panama ic peaceful and equitable settlement ol ll questions at issue between them. He olds that he is bound not merely In eafy obligations, but by thc interests oj vilization to sec that thc peaceful traf ;? of the world across the Isthmus ot anama shall not longer be disturbed by constant succession of unnecessary and asteful civil wars." BATTLESHIP SENT TO COLON. rcng Naval Force to Cither at the Isthmus of Panama. Washington, I). C. (Special).?The avy Department is concentrating a rge naval force at the isthmus, to be ?epared for any emergency as well a^ r squadron practice movements. The ittleship Maine has been ordered to Dion. She mailed from Martha's Vine ird for Hamjiton Roads, where she ill coal and proceed to her destination. he cruiser Atlanta has arrived at nlon. Thc auxiliary cruiser Dixie id the gunboat Nashville are lhere, ear Admiral Class, commander of the tcitic Squadron, is proceeding willi the arblehead, the Concord, the Wyom g and the collier Nero at full speed om Acapulco, Mexico, to Panama. It was stated at thc Navy Department at thc sudden dispatch of thc Maine Colon is not because there is any irticular necessity for the presence ere of thc big battleship. Thc Navy, is stated, is deficient in squadron ovements. and the Navigation Bu au desires to remedy this deficiency lcrcvcr practicable. Thc Maine, it further said, has been at the navy rds during a good part of the past ar, and the cruise to thc isthmus will beneficial to discipline. Il" thc trou c at the isthmus is over before the aine arrives there she may be divert to Culebra. where Admiral Bar? r's North Atlantic Squadron will be gaged in practice about Christmas ne. An Operation on Wiiliair. Berlin (By Cable).- -Emperor William iderwent an operation for the removal a polpus from hi- larynx. The opcr 011 was performed by Prof. Moritz lunidt, aud was entirely successful. ic only inconvenience suffered hy thc r.pcror is that he has been enjoined not speak until the wound caused by thc eration has been healed. The bulletins nouncing thc result of the operation used much, astonishment, even among urt officials, who had no suspicion that was suffering from any affection of ?. tliroat SHELL HOUSES ALSO DESTROYED. Six Men Were Kited and Ten Otberr Injured. Iona Island, N. Y. (Special).?Sis men were killed and io slightly injured by an explosion at the United State.' Naval Arsenal, one of thc largest mag azines in the United States, which is located here. The explosion occurred while men were drawing thc explosive charges from a consignment of ole shells recently sent here from the bat tleship Massachusetts. Three massive shcllhouses were com pletely destroyed, and a rain of frag merits of projectiles of al) sizes wa* scattered in every direction. Thc force of the explosion, or scriei of explosions, broke windows at reeks kill, three miles below, on the opposite side of the HuVlson, and thc detonatior was heard for many miles. Adjacent buildings, including two storehouse! for fixed ammunition, were riddled will the fragments, and the quarters of tin tl marines composing the garrison were completely demolished. The dead, all of whom were workinct employed by thc Naval Ordnance Dc partment, are Fred Ward. Stonej Point, George Moorehead. Tompkim Cove; Fred O. Locke, Pcckskill; Pat? rick Curran. West Haverstraw; Free Brown, Haverstraw; James Connolly Pcckskill. The bodies were frightful!) mangled, fragments being hurled foi hundreds of feet. The island, which has been used a: an arsenal for a year, is in the Hudson river, 40 miles from New York, anc shells and ammunition 01 all kinds wen stored there. The detonation of part of thc charge of a shell being unloaded in Shellhouse No. 1 exploded all the other shells in the house, and the frag? ments of shells driven into the adjoin ing houses exploded their contents. There were two main explosions with an interval of several minutes be? tween, and a succession of minor onei as individual shells went off. Fire fol lowed, and for several hours thc ma? rines fought thc flames in imminent danger from constantly exploding shells. Physicians and nurses from West Point, Pcckskill and Haverstraw hurried to the island nnd attended to tiie injured, one of whom was seriouslj burt. No statements of thc amount of ex? plosives on the island could be obtain? ed from Gunner Fries. U. S. N., in command, but it is said that a large consignment of shells from the Ala? bama, Kcarsargc, Massachusetts and Illinois were in thc buildings destroy? ed. About 480 13-inch shells were on hand, it is said. A large amount of fix? ed ammunition, stored in two build? ings from which the roofs were blown, did not explode, and the two main powder magazines were at the other end of the island out of danger. MARINES LANDED ON ISTHMUS. Nashville's Bluejackets Were Later Returned to Their Vessel. Colon, Colombia (By Cable).?The ives of the American residents here ivere threatened. American and for ?ign families Hocked for shelter to thc ?ailroad buildings. There was great commotion and thc United States gunboat Nashville land :d fifty bluejackets and a quantity of immunition. During the excitement the bluejack? ets from thc Nashville quickly placed 'jalcs of cotton on the tops of freight :ars, forming excellent barricades. Many of thc citizens were armed with ri ties and revolvers. Several Americans and other foreign? ers took refuge on board thc German (teamer Markomannia. Quiet was restored later and at 7.3c /clock thc bluejackets returned to the Nashville. Thc flag of the new republic has al *cady made its appearance in Colon. General Cuadros, the prefect of j Jolon, and the senior officer com- j nanding the troops which arrived on he gunboat Cartagena from Savanilla, 1 ire maintaining their position of rcfus ng to acknowledge thc authority of j he provisional government of Pana- j na. The presence of thc United States ! runboat Nashville at Colon is believ? ed to have resulted in the avoidance of I lerious trouble. It is believed that peaceful results viii follow a guarantee given by Col- ' mel Torres that if the American ma- j .?ines would return to the Nashville he ' vould maintain order. Thc British consul has suggested that | f requested a contingent ol troops will De sent to Colon from thc Bril ish :ruiser Amphion, now at Panama. Both Burned to Death. Wheeling, W. Va. (Special). - At Mount Pleasant, 0.. Edward Moore, a :oal miner, and wife, were burned to death by thc explosion of a powder can which the husband was filling. A spark from thc grate ignited the explosive, and both were so badly burned that they died KXMl afterward. Kite Pulled Four-Toa Boa*. London (By Cable).?After several failures S. F. Cody succeeded in cross? ing thc English Channel in his boat drawn by a kite. He left Calais at 11 Vclock P. M. and reached Dover 13 .'lours later. He encountered much ship ping and had some narrow escapes. SPARKS FROM THi: WIRES. Ihe eighth celebration of the found? ing of Carnegie Institute was observ? ed at Pittsburg. It is probable that three more men lost their lives in Inc Iona Island ex? plosion. . District Attorney Jerome, of New York, says thc Tamuianyitcs arc mis? taken if they believe they are going to have a wide-open town. He says he proposes to go after the gamblers and divekeepers. Two men were killed in a freight train collision at Reed's Run. O. ( THE OLD DOMINION. Latest News Gleaned From All Over tbe State. Virginia pensions:?John Maher $12; Henry Groh, $12; Jesse M. Pow? ers, $10; Lucv Tribley. $8; Samuel Hol? land, $8; William H. Holden, $8; Adolph Grossman, $17; John T. Stew? art, $10; Thomas G. Sesler, $10; Cae? sar Smith, $10; James Bailey. $10; Eze kiel Johnson, $8; Caleb Turlington $12; Charles Fisher, $8; Joseph II Mann, $6; Augustus Stone, $12; Geo W. Brown, $8; John Harmon, $10 Henry Powell, $8; Agatha Evans, $12. George Savage, $8; Frank E. Kelly $10; John Coates, $8. "No developments; deny empliaticali) all rumors; my son is yet missing am there is no clue to his whereabouts, wa* what Dr. J. S. Wentz said at Bristol He is thc father of Edward L. Went/, who disappeared from the mountain.' near Big Stone Gap four weeks ago las Wednesday. The rumors jftnmk thaV the kidnappers were holdflig the younj? man until a ransom ?l $2co.ooo was pau them are most-emphatically denied, not oidy by thc father, but hy others closeK allied with the Virginia Coal and I roi* Company and the Stone (Ga.) Coke and Coal Company, in which the missing mat has a large interest. The Bristol Iron Furnace 1-as been closed for extensive repairs, which wd! cost $50,000. The machinists of Bristol have organ? ized and are now a part of the Machin? ists' Union of the United States. Thc firm of Coleman & Johnson, ai Warsaw, has made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors. The cause ol the failure is attributed to the loss of most of the canned tomatoes put up DJ the firm this season. Thc tomatoes were not sufficiently ripened. Full official returns from the election in Stafford county show a majority ol only four for H. G. Chcsley. Republican at present Treasurer of Stafford county against W. B. Reamer, the Democratic nominee. It is said that a contest will be made. Thc reunion of thc survivors of Ma hone's Brigade, who made thc famou charge at the battle of thc Crater on Jttlj 30, 1864, when the fiercest hand-to-hand fight of the Civil War took place, \Va held on thc Crater battlefield, which il just outside of Petersburg.{ The parade of the veterans and military and fire de? partment through thc principal street! was witnessed by several thousand peo? ple, and the stores and private dwellings were beautifully decorated with flags and bunting. The banks and schools were closed and business was practically sus? pended. A suit for $15,000 has been instituted against the Lynchburg Telephone Com? pany by Frank Booker. It is claimed that a defective wire of thc compain caused Booker to be so badly bunted that he had to have part of one hand amputated. An enthusiastic meeting was held ill Hampton in behalf of thc Jamestown Exposition. Addresses were made by Gen. Fitzhugh Lee. Congressman Harry L. Maynard and others. Charges were filed with Mayor Moss, of Newport News, against Chief of the Fire Department W. K. Stow, who i charged with gross neglect of duly and misconduct. It is alleged that Slow made an unprovoked attack upon Pal? mer Dillard, a well-known yo?h% mam** at a fire recently. Samuel E. Smith, an old resident of Port Norfolk, fell from bis wagon neal bis home, and when assistance arrived was dead, his neck being broken. He was 69 years old, and had suffered from asthma for many years. But the au topsy showed that the fall from thc wag? on was due to apaplexy. Owing to compulsory vaccination or? ders being issued by thc Board of Health and thc sending out ot Dr. Moorman ant Dr. Webb, accompanied-toy^T p"o1h ficer, a great commotion has been stine' up in Belmont, where thc physicians art now vaccinating the children in thc pub lie schools. Many patrons of the insit tution visited the schools and took their children home. Several children arc saW to have fainted while undergoing thc or? deal, and many had lo bc held in order that their anns might be bared for vac? cination. Patrons of the school arc in 1 rebellious mood. During the year 1840 John Trent, the? il young man, left his home in Amcl county, Virginia, ard went to<Iickmar county, Kentucky, to make his home Friday he arrived in Petersburg on a visii io his brother, George W. Trent, whom he had not seen before in more thar 52 years. Thc- two aged brothers em braced each other and the meeting bc wecn them was affecting. John Trent is about 76 years of age. The Commissioners of Elections of Dinwiddic county met at the Com,tr Courthouse and canvassed the returns ol ast Tuesday's election. The return! ?ive T. E. Clark (Dem.), for the Hoiim )f Delegates, 12 majority over hi; op xment, J. E. Young. Clark is an ex nember of thc Legislature. Further evidences have developed tc diow that Lillian Shaw, the young mu atto woman whose body was found i ? he mountains of Johnson county, wan murdered. It appears that she was stain bree miles from thc spot where hei -barred body was found under a pafrurifj ' tamed log heap. Two men. tied the rorpse on a rail and carried it through he mountains to thc secluded spot when it was found. The rail having broker n twain, the men cut a pole and attached thc body to it, carrying it tims lo thc ire that was to consume it. James Dailey, a resident of tits Dis rict of Columbia, while at work on tlr ?ornice of tho new postoffice addition it Alexandria, fell from (ho caves to the rround and was fatally nurt. William P. Ward, a well-known rail oad contractor, was struck by an etti fine on the Chesapeake and Ohio Rall "* ?oad at Lynchburg and received injune-* hat resulted in his death. Mr. War wat scamming a piece of track which he had ust constructed, and ii, the thick toa )f the morning failed to see the atv ?roaching train. He was a son of thc ate Judge R. H. Ward, of Campbell ?oimty. ? Mr. Henry S. Campbell, of Fredericka, lurg, nas been made superintendent of ie J. S. Kemp Manufacturing Company it Nev-ark \ alley. N V. _