Infuriated Mob in Caracas Destroys Pictures and Statues of the Dictator. CAPITAL CITY IN A TURMOIL Property of President's Henchmen Wrecked and Deposition of Executive Looked For. The Venezuelan capital Tuesday ex perienced a significant popular demon stration against the absent President Castro. It took the form of an out break of disorder , following the war like activities of the Dutch warships along the coast. By nightfall it was necessary to de clare martial law to put an end to CASTKO. the rioting mm pn- l.'iging The people rounded up all the statues and pictures of President Cas tro from clubs and other semi-public buildings and burned them with rejoic ing on the Plaza Bolivar. Castro's rule in Venezuela seemed to be ended. In spite of Holland's warlike activity on the coast , there have been no demon strations against the Netherlands. All have been directed against President Castro and Acting President Gomez. Cipriano Castro has bpon dictator o Venezuela since 1S90 anil is regarded as the Plague of Europe. lie seized the capital of the South American republic in 1S09 and deposed President Andrade , who had fled to the island of Trinidad on a gunboat , the only effective fighting ship of the republic. President Castro has proved one of the most successful dic tators in South American history. He has been menaced by revolutions and plot ters since he assumed office , while for eign powers have been on his trail. Castro's origin is unknown. Spanish and Indian blood flows in his veins. He was a cattle herder in the ' 90s before he became Venezuela's dictator and the defier of the powers of Europe. "IK MAHVEL" IS DEAD. Donald G. Mitchell Passes Away at Home in New Haven. Donald Grant Mitchell ( Ik Marvel ) died at his home in Edgewood , New Haven , Conn. Mrs. Edward L. Ryer- son of Chicago , a daughter , who had been summoned , failed to reach her father's bedside before the end came. Mr. Mitchell in August last suffered an attack of acute indigestion. From this he rallied so that he was able lo walk about his home unattended until two weeks ago , when he began to fail slowly. Sunday his condition became rapidly worse and the end came shortly before 9 o'clock Tuesday night. At the bedside at the time of Mr. Mitchell's death were his sons , Harold of New London and Walter of Newark , and his daughters , Mrs. Walter Hart of Rye , N. Y. ; Mrs. Mason Hoppin and the Misses Elizabeth , Bessie and Har riet Mitchell , all of New Haven. Mr. Mitchell's death will bring sorrow row to lovers of literature everywhere. Essentially of New England and pos sessing to a high degree the best traits of the intellectual English stock that has made that part of the country fa mous , he wrote for the world and the world appreciated him. His "Dream Life" and "Reveries of a Bachelor" are known wherever the English lan guage is read. WILL FOUND NAILED IN TUB. Bachelor Grocer of Charlestown , 3as < i. , Conceals Instrument. Inclosed in an envelope and nailed to the bottom of a tub tlie will of the late Patrick Monahan of Charlestown , Mas * . , disposing to relative of property valued at $2oO,000 , was found in a cellar and offered for probate. Monahan was a grocer and unmarried. When lie died last Sep em cr no W'H could be found and John Monahan of Chicago , n brother , was made administrator. Of the estate Sf 0- 000 is left to die Chicagoan : $ GO,000 tea a sister-in-law , Margaret Mullen of Bos ton : 50.000 each to three sisters in Ire land , and smaller amounts to nephe- any nieces. DBOPS BOMB ON LOS ANGELES. Air.slii ; > lZ\'si hovrx How Hasy It WouJ t e to Destroy Cil > . RoTXnaienshue Thursday night at- temtjf.-il in Los Angeles. Cal. . to demon- sf-ce how an airship could sail over a oity unobserved under cover of darkness and destroy tin * city by the use of power ful e\plY > si\e.s. His flight failed in this re-poet , however , as his airship was easily discernible and the whir of the motor am ] propeller could be heard at a great dis ; f\ \ tance. Knabenshne dropped a harmless bomb on the city hull , where it was found \ l.itor. KiKibenshue was accompanied by George IJenslrr. his machinist. LIr T23H3 FOB MUBDEBZBS MM ri'iii * Conn Dooms Convicted Men to Iinprlsoiiiiicnt. Th'1 S'jpreini' Cosirt of Missouri af firmed the sentences of John Wooley and I-OIP- S -sman to life terms in the State , . : - ! " for murder. Wooley killed ] * , tcbuihter. Pearl Smith. : igPd ; > . and S-issmnn killed a traveling . ; ! } tnior . Cnrl Miller , taking his wagon . ' .1 ! , orsc < The l.Utcr crime was not dis- ri.eiod for several years- , when it was revealed by a woman accomplice. HOLD TWO JOBS ? NO. Pay Boll Patriot Gets Blow When Chytraus Decides Galpin Case. A smashing blow to the pay roll pa triot was administered by Judge Axel Chytraus of the Appellate Court in Chicago when he liamled down a deep- delving decision holding that no per son can draw two , salaries from the public treasury simultaneously. The decision came in the case of Her man B. Meyer against County Clerk Jo seph F. Haas , an affair of two years' standing Ln the court records of Cook County and involving the right of Homer K. Galpin , chief clerk of the Chicago cage Municipal Court , to sit in the State Senate , representing the Second District. Galpin's term as Senator is oflieially waning , and for all practical purposes has expired. Judge Clifford refused to issue a writ of mandamus to County Clerk Haas on the petition of Herman B. Meyer , who had sought Galpin's se.it in the Senate. County Clerk Haas in turn had refused to no tify Governor Deneen officially that a vacancy existed in the Senate from the Galpin district following Galpin's elec tion -U5 chief clerk of the Municipal Court. Judge Chytraus and the Ap pellate bench now hold that Judge Clif ford was in error and that Galpin had no right to a seat in the Senate dur ing the last two years. The point of interest to politicians generally , but most specifically unpleas ant to more than thirty members-elect of the incoming Illinois General Assem bly , is that the common hw is against two salaries going into the pockets of one. man at the same time from the public treasuries , and specifically tUit a State legislator under the constitu tion is forbidden to hold any other re munerative oflice tinder the United States or State government. It is known within legislative circles and among politicians that a large per centage of the personnel of the Cook County delegation in the Legislature has an intimate acquaintance with some public pay roll. There are examples of the same situation with regard to some of the down-State members of the General Assembly. Federal , State , city and Sanitary District employes , who are drawing pay now , will be noted on the official roll call of the Legislature. KNOX WILL HEAD THE CABINET. Senator Accepts Position of Secre tary of State Offered b yTaft. Senator Philander C. Knox of Penn sylvania has been offered and has ac cepted the position of Secretary of State in the Taft cabinet , according to a report in Washington that appears to be au thentic. Mr. Knox , it is said , has con sented to serve in the cabinet , at a sacrifice of his per sonal inclinations , w ' - J1S ho woukl profcr p. c. KXOX. to remain in the Senate. It is said that Mr. Kuox's resig nation from the Senate is ready to be submitted to Gov. Stuart. Senator Knox was appointed Attor ney General by President McKiuley and remained in that position under Roosevelt until 1004. when upon the death of Matt Quay he became Senator for Pennsylvania. HELD UP BY FOUR BOBBERS. Exprch-s Car Dynamited , but 3Iessen- Ker Says Higrlivraymeii Got Little. Oregon Railroad and Navigation train No. 1 , known as the Chicago-Portland special , was held up and the express car dynamited by four unmasked robbers shortly after 9 o'clock on a recent night , nine miles east of Portland , Ore. Ex press Messenger 0. II. Huff said the rob bers secured little of value. The robbers did not molest the passengers , but un coupled the express car and ordered the engineer to take it down the track to ward Portland. About a mile beyond the point where the train was held up the doors of the express car were shattered by nitroglycerine. The train did not carry a through safe , a small local safe and a strong box being the only recep tacles for valuables. The robbers com pelled Express Me cnger Huff to open the small safe. It contained but three or four small packages , believed to have been of small value. The strong bos was not touched. The robbers escaped. The Other John D. Join1 1) . Archbold started life as an oflicv lx > \ . But he evidently didn't have to look after the letter files. Augusta Chronicle. It 5 < ; difficult for Mr. Archbold to re- meirhor aiytlrngiihont referring to his letter fiV . which , as the world knows , are snlly incomplete. Washington Star. Mr.NnhlioM was unable to explain an item of S ± UM : > ,0 X ) paid to P. S. Trainer , be.\ond th" mere fact that it was for "ad- jn-tments. " Perhaps Mr. Trainer did -onip plumbing for the Standard Oil Com pany. Kansas City Star. ' We infer that the cost of the Archbold letters is not included in Mr. Hearst's outlay of S42.1XX ) for the Independence campaign. The letters have been listed as a jn.'nnuient investment , in all proba bility Houston Post. Though u nwn of letters. Mr. Archbold will waste no time writing an autobiog- i. ] > . ' . ] , . Atlanta Constitution. i \viss ISleet President. A. Deucher. minister of commerce , was " 1'X'Jed president of the Swiss republic fo'ino ) by the Federal Assembly. He \ \ illiicceed Dr. F. Brenner , whose term or ofii o expires Jan. 1. Ir'Mi JI3H to Itcnpeit : AVork for < OO. Th'1 Toledo plant of the Republic Iron a"d teel Company , employing GOO men , v.-ill resume operations Dec. 2S after thir teen mouths' idleness. TEfiS ORE IBM. FOB Attorney-General Says It Is Needed in Prosecution of Rich Defendants. CITES THE STANDARD FINE , That Case , He Thinks , Shows the Necessity of a Change in the Present Statutes. That the United States should have iho right of appeal to the Suprein0 Court of the United States as a matter of right , whenever a conviction is re versed on appeal by the defendant to a Circuit Court of Appeals , is the opinion expressed by Attorney Gen eral Bonaparte in his annual report for the fiscal vear enuing .nine . .u , c. .T. r.oxAPAKTE. lees , submitted to Congress. In this connection he cites the case of the reversal of the Standard Oil fine of more than $20,000,000 , in which an application for a writ of certiorari - tiorari has been made to the Supreme Court. lie holds that an amendment of the present laws would be appropriate in the case of all criminal proceedings , but suggests that it would be especially so in connection with prosecutions where the wealth of the defendant usually renders an appeal on his or its part from any adverse judgment a matter of course. The Attorney General's opinion is that in such cases there is no question of double jeopardy , as the appeal of the defendant from the original convic tion is recognized by the undoubted weight of well-considered judicial authority - t thority as a waiver of his rights in ' this respect and as in the absence of i some such provision of law as the Attorney - | torney General recommends ' guilty persons - sons may escape from just punishment under the law as finally determined by the court of last resort. j He declares that the consistent pol icy of the Department of Justice during the year in enforcing the statutes in tended to protect the interstate and for eign commerce of the country from evils arising through combinations in restraint of trade and attempts to cre ate monopoly , as well as discrimina tions and other illegal practices on the part of common carriers engaged in such commerce , has been to investigate carefully all complaints submitted to it , whether by public authorities or by re sponsible private citizens , and to au thorize proceedings , whether civil or criminal , only when such investigation has shown the complaints to be serious and well founded and that success might be reasonably expected. Mr. Bonaparte reports that this pol icy was attended during the year by a fair measure of success in the proceedings - ings authorized and that as a consequence quence of decisions already obtained or expected soon the statutes dealing with such cases will soon be interpreted so authoritatively that those seeking to comply with the law will be relieved from all uncertainty as to what the law really is. He says that serious obstacles - cles have been encountered in enforcing the statutes and that these may be with advantage readily removed by further legislation. 'The United States has had occasion of late years , and will probably have occasion in future , " he declared , "to prosecute criminally many corporations or other artificial persons. As such of fenders cannot be physically arrested , it is obviously desired that a simple and convenient form of process shall be prescribed by law to have the legal ef- ' ' feet of an actual arrest and removal to the trial district as in the case of a natural person. " COUPLE MUBDEBED IN SLEEP. Assassin Ilac'lcs Paces of 3Iaii and Wife Tvith Hatchet. Wicentz Florczik and his wife were i murdered by an assassin at their resi- j dence , 132 Bird street. Wilmington , Del. ! Their bodies were found by Alexander Florczik , brother of the murdered man , and a lodger at the house , who is detained - ed at police headquarters. Alexander told tlie police that when he went home about 11 o'clock at night he was unable to gain admittance , and spent the night' ' with an uncle. He went to the house j about 9 o'clock in the morning and found the bodies. He said the two children , a girl 2 years old and a 2-raonths-old baby , had not been molested. The baby lay in a crib between the beds occupied by the ! parents. Both of the victims had been hacked in the face with a hatchet which was found on the man's bed. The murder is thought to hare been committed for revenge. Florczik was 38. and his wife 24 years old. The prisoner is 18. . BRIBE PUTS OFFICIAL IN CELL. Former Member of City Board Sen tenced to Penitentiary. Fred Lied , formerly member of the Columbus board of control , was sentenced to four years in the Ohio penitentiary for accepting a bribe from Nelson Can non , representative of the Trinidad Pav ing Company of Cleveland , in connection with East Broad street paving. Fred Immel , another former member of the board of control , is serving a term in thf penitentiary. ANOTHER ROMANCE SHATTERED. MADAM I WILL HARRX x YOU * OPv HALF OK YOUR. ESTATE - BUT IT VJKIT//iQ / wuuutilllwiilUllulfiifc fW \/&m&&r \ , W ffe SCIENTISTS HAVE DISCOVERED THAT CLEOPATRA WAS NOT A BEAUTIFUL WO1VLAN SO MARC ANTON S MUST HAVE WOOED HER FOR HER MONEY. HOUSE SLAPS AT ROOSEVELT. Calls en Him to Tell on What He Bases Secret Service Charges. The House of Representatives Thurs day , by unanimous vote , adopted a resolution elution requesting the President to sup ply it with any evidence that may be in his possession that will justify the .statement in his last annual message in relation to the attitude of members of Congress toward appropriations for the secret service of the government. Mr. Perkins , chairman of the special committee charged to investigate the allegations made in the President's mes sage , and John Sharp Williams of Mis sissippi both stated on the floor that it was the desire of the special commit tee to be just toward the President in allowing him to submit any evidence he may have , and both declared that the committee would give it full and im partial consideration. Mr. Perkins said the committee would continue in ses sion , during the Christmas holidays so that it might receive such evidence from the President promptly and proceed to consider it. Both the resolution and all of the preamble , except that part of the latter interpreting the meaning of the Presi dent's ( message in relation to the secret service , were adopted unanimously by a viva voce vote. Mr. Bennett of New York demanded a division on the pre amble provision stating the commit ! tee's interpretation of the President's strictures upon Congress , but before the j division was entered upon endeav ored to withdraw his motion. Mr. Will- ! ir.ms insisted that this could not be dene , and , the vote being taken , 270 members voted aye and 14 no on this wart ' of the preamble. Milwaukee is after the next bowling congress ' and looks good to get it. Percy Iloughton has been elected foot ball ' coach at Harvard for f another two years. James R. Keene was the lamest winner on die American turf this .season. He won $282,0" . Cornell's track team will meet the Ma roons on an indoor track at the Bartlett symua.sinm this winter. Tommy Burns , the Canadian , is not oul.v champion heavyweight fighter , but lie is champion of all weights as a finan cier. The mot profitable race horse in the United States this season was Sir Martin. He captured stakes to the value of $7S.- "V.X ) . In the relay run from New York to Washington nearly 1.000 boys carried a silver tube containing a uie uge from Rudolph Foster to President Roost--et. ! Pat-y Donovan , who has been l"t go as manager of : he Brooklyn Na ioil : League team , will in all probab'lity lie appointed manager of the Boston cJub ue\t year. > Fred Br.itley ! of Boston was kvo-'relt j out in the fourth reid of a bu\ii : ho if v.iS { | Al Kubink of Grand Rapid : , 'jll-h. . J at the West End Athletic Club iu I'jili-j [ delphia. lie became unconscious and was 1 hurried to a hospital. { [ ! TWO DIE IN AUTO ACCIDENT. Machine ( iocs Into the River lit Mil waukee Through Open IJraw. An automobile containing three men dashed into the open draw of the Oneida srreet bridge in Milwaukee at 1 o'clock the other morning and wont to the bottom of the river , carrying two of the occu- i-ants to their death. A third was res- ( i.od with difficulty and is at the emer gency hospital. The dead : Oscar Z. Bartlett , member board of trade : Albert Kunx , chauffeur. A. F. Solliday of the Solliday Motor Company was rescued. The car approached the bridge from the caM. coining down the Oneida street hill at a high rate of speed. The driver ap parently did not notice that the bridge wx open until the car was within twen- tv feet of it. Kunz then made a frantic ertort to avoid the river , but only succeed ed in turning the car as far as the curb , where it bounded into the air , turning a complete somersault between the dock and the- center pier of the bridge , hurling Mr. Bartlett and Mr. Solliday thirty feet to the south of where the car hit the water. The crew of the steamer Iowa , which was passing through the draw , saw the tra gedy and immediately lowered boats. Kunz \\as pinned under the automobile at the bottom of the river. MANY WEEP AT BANK'S DOOBS. Xnpnlcoii , O. , Institution , Involved In Insurance Failure , Assigns. Men cried and women fainted in the streets of Napoleon , Ohio , when they found a notice of assignment posted on the doors of the Citizens' State Bank. I ) . D. Donovan was named as assignee. President Heller of the bank is now con fined in a hospital in a Minnesota town. The failure is said to be due to overloans made by Cashier Groll to Judge Michael Donnell\ % who is president of the Ohio German Fire Insurance Company , and the assignment is also said to be the direct result of the recent failure of that insur ance company. These loans to Donnelly , it is alleged , were made without the au thority of other officials. The bank is capitalized at $71.000 and has an undi vided surplus of $21,000. The deposits amount to $ S3o.OOO. The bank examiner objected to an extension of credit to Judge Donnelly and required the amount to be made up by the end of this month. The directors determined to make an assign ment in order to furnish equal and full pi election to all the creditors. Haiti's Revolution. Xord Alexis' speedy departure will ob viate the necessity of his making a finan cial report. Detroit News. With a little education those Haitians migh't be able to settle their differences through old-fashioned debating societies instead of revolutions. Toledo Blade. Old President Nerd Alexis has seen al most as many revolutions as a roulette sambier , and looks upon the freaks of fortune almost as cynically. Atlanta Journal. If Haiti keeps on having revolutions the first thing she knows the chivalrous but firm hand of the United States will be stretched out in her direction. Augusta Chronicle. BiST Furnace StarJi Up. The Emma blast furnace of the Amr-ri- j can Steel and Wire Company in Clevr- l.nd ha < started for the first time in -f- teen months. Two shifts of men. . . ) in all. were put to work , and the 'j.-naco will be kept going night and day. Sen's ICays Jsiurt r try. T''p van's rays focusing 'nro'igh a ? : = ' flo'.ic lilbil with water c asel n f. > hs the hoij of J. C. ITiit in SyanoI I Oa o. The timely dircovery of t ! . > Lia u , ulor.e hcvcd the ho no from destrnctioI I CLAIMS TO BE HAY'S WIDOW. Woman Says She Married Son of * Late Secretary of State. That Adelbert Hay , son of the Into- Secretary of State. John Hay , was T\ husband and father Jit the time of IMS- death from a fall from a second story bedroom window , was declared by tho- mother of Mrs. Mary Ryland I lay who claims to be young Hay's widow after her daughter had applied for ; v marriage license to marry Dr. Arthur Kraut , a wealthy manufacturing chem ist of Philadelphia. Adelbert Hay , she said , eloped from Washington in August , 1000 , to Atlan tic City with her daughter , and thex were there married by th Rev. Will iam Taylor Snyder of Washington. For seven years she said , both she and her daughter have tried unsuccessfully 40 compel the Hay family to admit the marriage , or at least recognize yonng Adelbert Hay Jr. as the grandson of" the former statesman. Obstacles were thrown in their way and they were handicapped by poverty. She accuses Dr. Snyder of withholding the facts. Her daughter has a recojnfl of the marriage , she says , but no cer tificate. Gov. Folk has decided that under the law the entire electoral vote of Missouri should be cast for William H. Taft. The Taft plurality in Missouri is 1,026. At St. Louis prominent Populists , who had been led into the Democratic ranks , and other radicals in that party , were caB- ed to a conference to plan united action through a radical political party , to es tablish the rule of the people. Congressman Theodore E. Burton of" Ohio has been tentatively offered the sco- ictarysliip of the treasury , in Taft's cab inet , but lias not decided whether he will accept. His friends in Ohio want hizn. to be a candidate for the Senate. J. J. Sullivan of Columbus , who was- appointed judge of the Nebraska Supreme Couit by Gov. Sheldon , has tiled his res- ii-nation. Gov. Sheldon accepted the res ignation. Judge Sullivan took the oatb of office and served one day. He declined to issue a statement explaining his resi iiafon. The statement of the expense accouc- of Robert M. La Follette's presidential campaign committee has been filed at Madison by Alfred T. Rogers , law jnrt- ner of Senator La Follette and member of the Republican na < ivnal committee According to the statement contribuiion > - aggregating $1T. * ' 2.10 ) were received to- carry on the campaign of La FoHette for nomination f v the presidency , and am equal amount was exp'ndcd. The -noounceme it that President- Roelt had insisted upon the immedi- ' . ; appointment r.f John D. Pringle , edi tor of the Labor World at Pittsburg , to- be appraiser of that port , with a $3 , . XX > - salary , ha * < a.stnrb d the regular Repub lic.- ! ! ! 'ead-us of that part of the State. j Jr. < ' : aritls I * . Neill. commissioner of" I.il-or. .11 a short time will be reappointetj to ! ; - present positio.i by President Roose-- \i-rt. Dr. Neill was made commissioner o1' b-or ! by President Roe e\elt in suc rf-sloi of Prof. Carroll D. Wright , who- : u' - . i.-ci \\\v \ position of president of Claris : j'ty at Worcester , Ma-