6 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. HOVER TOGIVE BAIL Pcttibone Cannot. Butte Miners' Union Will De posit $25,000 Draft. WAY NEVER BE TRIED Two Jurors lUlurutc Belief That lie Is CJuil j. .Ai.ii' i.i Tln-y Signed Verdict lVttilx.no Triul Set Dowu Fur Tuesduy, October First Hay. wood's Acquittal I'uiiltcij- IiIscu.xm i Boise, July 31. -Chnrles H. Moy er, president of tho Western Federa tion of Miners and co-defeudant with William 1. Haywood, acquitted of the murder of former Governor ateuneubcr;;, was ordered released on 125,000 ball by Judge Wood, who presided at the Haywood trial. No application for ball was mad to the case of Gearge A. Pettlbone, the third of the alleged conspirators, bat a motion was made for a speedy trial, and his case was ordered But town for Tuesday, October 1. Coun sel Intimated to-day that they mlht apply for bond for Pettlbone lator, bat It Is not bollovod that the State's attorneys will consont. It has been awnerally asserted that tho State has sore incriminating evidence against Pettlbone than any of the others, while it has been generally conceded that the case against Moyer Is the weakest of the three. The defense the Haywood cane admitted that there were things for Pettlbone to explain as to his association with Harry Orchard and tho sending of xmey to him, but they said U would be time enough to deal with (hem when Pettlbone himself was placed on trial. The Jurors continue publicly to flaeuss the part they played In ar riving at a verdict. Samuel D. Gil nan, the lust man to vote for acquit tal, said: "There has been publish ed one statement that I want to cor rect. One of the Jurors Is quoted is saying that the Jury had to spend i long, disagreeable and tiresome light. In order to convince two Jurors t the defendant was not guilty. E want to say that they never did convince us. I believed that he was guilty, and 1 still think he Is guilty Mkd I want the world to know It. I limply acquiesced In the verdict of icqultal because I fell that I could aot do otherwise, after I found th.i mtlre eleven other Jurors voting to icqult, but I was convinced that It res right. Kindly make the cor-j-ecUon for me." A. P. Burns, Juror No. 11, said: "I was firmly convinced when we "eft the courtroom that the first bal lot would show a vote for conviction. I still retain the belief that Hay rood was guilty, and only changed 3iy vote because It struck me that if 'Jie evidence presented left eight men jneonvincd of the guilt of the de fendant It would be' Impossible to jet twelve men in another trial, and that It would be better to settle the question of acquiescing In their de cision." l , HAYWOOD ACQUITTED. Jurors Say, Under Court's Instruct ' ' Ions No Other Verdict Possible. Boise, July SO. Braced for he knew not what terrible shock, Wil liam D. Haywood heard the clerk of the court read the Jury's verdict that made him a free man and acquitted him of the murder of ei-Gov. Frank Saranenberg. ' The surprise was stunning even to Haywood. - Of all the people In the court room when the Jury came In It is stvbabl that non one of them ex fretted an acquittal. It la certain neither Haywood nor hla law looked for It. ''"Most of the Jurors say they could not eonrict under the Court's la tractions. a. RUHHO-J APA X KSK THEATY. 9m East Situation Covered The -ategrlty of China to Ho Respected. ' 'fit. Petersburg, July 31. Follow Tag the signature of the Russo-Japanese treaty of commerce and navl gac ion and the fishery agreement be tween the two countries a general R -o-Japaneso treaty will be signed at' once. - The main points of this treaty provide for the preservation I the status quo in the Far East. ''Each country guarantees the Inte ntly of the existing possessions and concessions of the other. Japan ag rees that Russia shall keep her rail roads in China and Russia agrees to Japan's suzeranlty In Corea. Both covenant to respect the Integrity of ie. 8 UTES LOST OV CAYUGA LA KG. VTmatrn and Children the Victim " When Steamer Took Fire. Auburn, N. T., July 80. Eight parsons lost thetr lives and many ware injured when the steamboat rrwntenao, carrying fifty passengers an? a crew of twelve, was burned to the)1 water's edge on Lake Cayuga. even bodies were recovered. All the victims were children of wasun, and nearly all were drown drafter Jumping In' the lake In a fr4uted attempt to escape. tree child certainly was burned to -aath. sues imzeiw ron $30,000. Iloy Tied to Tonibstono Mny Be a Cripple for Life. Blooralngdale, 111., Aug. 1. As a result of the hazing of Charles Ston er, of Starke County, by six compan ions his father has filed suit for 130,000 dumges against his alleged assailants. Young Stouer Is In a serious condition and may be a crip ple for life. Ho was a student In tho Bradford Hli;h School, inul was a leader In hN class. His fctnJIoiis disposition and quiet, reserved manner Irritated the other young men and thoy planned to haze liini. Ho was seized, bound and gaped and carried to tho ceme tory, where he was tied to a tomb stone. He struggled to escape when one of his tormentors pulled a re volver and threatened to (Uncharge It In his face. The tombstone was lnpecuro and It fell over on tho boy, crushing him severely. Ho also caught cold from the exposure, be ing left to lie upon the ground with heavy weight upon his body for Bomo hours. His assailants finally notified Ston er's relatives of his predicament, and he was released and taken to first to his home and thence to a hospital. ma FTHE AT COXEY ISLAND. Ewfs Over 35 Acres of Wooden Structures; Checked at Stauch's New York Aug. 1. There was a $1,500,000 fire and flame show at Coney Island Sunday morning be tween 4 and 7 o'clock. Beginning In the Cave of the Winds In Steeple chase Park, It swept some thirty-five acres clean of their gayly pointed buildings. It erased all but a corner of Steeplechase Park from Coney Is land's map of Joyful territory. It swept along two blocks of Surf Av enuo, skirted along two blocks of the Bowery, ate up everything from the Bowery back to tho ocean front for a couple of blocks, injured a doz en people, cost In addition to the Immediate damage an estimate of $1,500,000 loss of business this sea son, threw Coney Island's 20,000 of resident population Into panic, ruin ed dozens of men, insurance at Coney Island being prohibitive In rates, and sent hundreds out to camp on the beach. 117 IX THE SHADE IX TEXAS. Thcrniomeret Suid to Have lltx-orded 170 Decrees in tho Sun. Dallas, Tex., Aug. 1. The hot wave that has prevailed over Texas for more thau a week began moderat ing to-day. The mercury at Dallas registered 102 in the shnde. Sunday It stood at 104 at Gainesville. A report from McGregor, 100 miles southwest of Dallas, says that for more than an hour the mercury registered 17!) In the sun and 117 In the shade. The roport said that more than twenty persons were over come and that nearly a hundred head of live stock died from the heat. TWENTY KILLED IX BLAZE. Scores Burned in Early Morning Fire In Chrystlc Street. New York, Aug. 1. Fire Just bo fore midnight Monday killed twenty persons, omstly children, In the six Btory tenement at 222 Chrystle Street between Houston and Stanton one of the most congested districts on the east side. Most of the resi dents of the district are Italians. Fifteen persons were seriously In jured and were taekn to Bellevue and Oouverneur Hospitals. A score of others were treated by ambulanco uregous on the ground. Army Worms on Long Island. Southampton, L. I., Aug; 1. Tho appearance of great numbers of army worms In this section has product, consternation among the farmers, who are vigorously combating the march of the pests. Despite the efforts made to reduce the worms, they already have destroyed many acres of oats, and further damage to crops Is feared. Robbed of f 100,000. Geneva, July 80. An American of the name of Day, described as a wealthy Chicago financier, has been robbed of a pocket-book containing $100,000, chiefly In notes, while trav eling on an express train from Mun ich to Lausanne. Six Americans and Britons were robbed at various times on the same train last week. i Life Imprisonment for Troop. Bucharest, Roumanla,' Aug. 1 . Fifty-eight Roumanian soldiers were condemned by a court-martial ti hard labor for life for refusing to fire on peasants during the uprising last March. Three soldiers were sentenced to twenty years for kill ing an officer and other men wont given shorter terms for refusing to' obey orders. ' ' ' ' ' . Stone Breaks Prince's Javr, Paris, July 80. While Prince Or loff was motoring between Fontaine-' bleaa and Paris a motorphobe threw a large stone at him, which fractured the Prince's Jaw, I The Prince's asallant escaped. Milton Point Shipyard Ruraed. Rye. N. Y., Aug. 1. The plaut of the Milton Point shipyard on the1 Found at this place was destroyed by f r. i Covering Minor Happen ings from all Over the Qlobe. HOME AND FOREIQN Complied and Condensed for tho Busy Header A Complete Rooortl of European I)rptitehcs and Im portant Events from Everywhere Dolled Down for HiMty Perusal. Secretary Taft was given the in dorsement of the Ohio Republican Committee for President In 1908. The revolt In Santiago Province was regarded by Cubans as a Joke. Before the Interstate Commerce Commission tho Chicago, Burlington and Qulncy Roalroad alleged a "creamery trust" In the" Middle West. Suit against tho Powder Trust for violation of the Sherman act was brought by the government In Wil mington, Del. Judge Wood, In Bolso, Idaho, re fused to accept ball for George A. Pcttibone, accused of the murder of Governor Frank Steunenberg. Mexico has boen asked by the United States to help In preventing the smuggling of Japanese laborers across hor borders. Washington despatches told of an accident on the cruiser Colorado, in which the muzzle of an eight inch gun was blown off. The new dry dock In the League Island Navy Yard will be tested by the docking of the big battle ship Kearsarge. "Tom" Madlne, coachman, nam ed as corespondent In the Hartjo divorce case was arrested In Pitts burg, Pa., on Augustus Hartje's com plaint of larceny. Father Levont Martogesslan, ar rested In New York on a charge of being leader of a blackmail band was held la $25,000, tho contention being made that he may have to face a more serious charge, for which thers la no ball. Involving a loss of $2,000,000 the Long Branch Hotel, Long Branch L. I., was destroyed by fire. Many persons being injured escuplng from the flames. According to the Navy Depart ment, the explosion on the battle ship Georgia was not caused by In ferior powder, as was charged jy Robert S. Waddell. Earle Irven, of Indianapolis, was drowned at Colon after having res cued several other Americans caught by the undertow while bathing. Bands of bandits in Santiago Pro vince are regarded by Cuban news papers as proof of the exlstance of a conspiracy to bring about an up rising. Senator Otto G. Foelker, of Brook lyn, obtained a court order temporar ily restraining Secretary of State Whalen from Issuing notices for an election of State Senators next fait. Senator Foraker replied to Sena tor Tillman's criticisms on the pass ing of the Fourtenth and Fifteenth amendments. The scout cruiser Salem waa laun ched at Qulncy, Mass. The United States Steel Corpora tion refused to treat with the Dock Workers' Union in Duluth, and the latter voted to continue the strike. Twenty-live news laws In the In terest of labor were passed by tho last Legislature, says the quarterly report of the State Labor Commiss ioner. Three members of the Explorers' Club reached the summit of Mount Olympus, in the State of Washington, for the first time. ' Trying to rescue a servant who had been killed by prusslc acid, Rob ert T. Oerstle, his wife and son and three servants were overcome by the fumes of the acid which had been put Into their Arverne, L. I. home to expel ants. The N. Y. State Assembly defied Governor Hughes' message asking direct nominations law by defeating the bill, fit to 41. Armed conflict between the State and federal authorities over the rate law situation at Ashevllle, N. C. teemed nearer than ever, as both sides of the controversy continued aggreslve. In a referee's report, confirmed In the Supreme Court, it is shown that William C. Whitney left an estate valued at almost $25,000,000. Frank Snyder, a "trusty," escaped from the Tombs, New York City by means of a rope thrown to him from outside the prison wall. Representatives of the Eastern railroads met In the office of the Erie In New York city and discussed passenger traffi rates. "v ' t)r. ' John Ward, medical director of the New Jersey State Hospital for the . Insane, told an 'Investigat ing eommKte - a. patient had been beaten scV severely that he died add that the Board of Managers had suppressed the case and allowed tb guilty attendants to escape. 1 -The foundation stone of the Patacv , of Pence, presented by Mr. Andrew CarneRlo, was laid at Zorgvlelt, near The Hague, according to a despatch. Henry Huntington, who murder ously attacked his brothers and sis ters at the bedside of his dying fath er, Major Henry Alonzo Huntington, In Versailles, France, will be exam ined ns to his sanity, according to a despatch. By extondlng to October 31 tin time of collecting minimum rates on Puerto Rlcan coffee, France has aid ed tariff negotlnns. According to a despatch Professor Chantenu'sse has discovered a valu able test for the diagnosis of typhoid cases. According to a despatch, tho French lottery laws are dally evaded, Americans In the capital being among the most persistent buyers of tickets. Tho project of building a palace In the British metropolis devoted to the exposition of French life and to bo known as "Paris In London," Is to be carried out, says a despatch. According to a despatch tho Bell erophon, larger than Its prototype, the British battle ship Dreadnought, was launched at Portsmouth by Prince Henry of Battenberg. The victory of General Horace Por ter in securing a unanimous vote on the subject of dettes contractuelles, has been regarded as alone Justifying the calling of the Peace Conference, says a Hague despatch. Mr. Orvllle Wright, one of the Ohio aeroplane Inventors, Is In Paris, where be has met his brother and may sell his Invention, according to a despatch. According to a despatch from Ber lin the coming meeting between tho Czar and Kaiser will establish more friendly relations and may settle the Far Eastern policy. A despatch says that the extra ordinary rainfall In Germany has done great damage to the cropB, the yield being far below the average. Major Lemalr, a Belgian, In com mand of native troops In the Congo, Ib publishing a sensational exposure of conditions prevailing. A despatch from The Hague says that a British proposal regarding con traband was quickly burled by the speech of Dr. Krleger, a German de legate. , According to a Berlin despatch a Mr. Rockefeller, an American, was robbed on a train between Munich and Switzerland of a letter of credit for $100,000. The new proposals of Japan were presented to the Corean Cabinet, causing a panic In the Seoul court. SPOKTlXq NEWS. Sailors of the fourth division, bat tleship division, United States navy, won the Old Guard trophy in the Stnte rifle meet at Creed moor. James R. Keene's Colin, still un beaten, won the Brighton Junior Stake from a field including Chapul tepec, Bar None and others, In fast time. .... The Vnnderbllt automobile cup race Is off. Beals C. Wright, an American lawn tennis player returned homo from England, where he played for the Davis International Cup against Australian experts. Bryn Mawr won the Junior polo championship of tho United States by defeating Onwentsla In the final game with a score of 10 to 5 goals. Insurgents Kill 80, Then Die. Athens, Aug. 1. A pitched battle occurred between Turkish troops, supported by Bashl-Bazouks and a band of Greek Insurgents who had entrenched themselves in a house In the outskirts of Seres, European Turkey, fifty miles northeast of Sal onski. The band was completely wiped out and thirty soldiers wera killed. Convicted Mayor Fills Offices. Ban Francisco, Ang .1. Eugene E. Bchmlts, the convicted Mayor, mad, appointments to fill the vacancies created by the forced resignations of fourteen members of the Board of Supervisors. Schmlts claiming the right Of appointment on the ground that he Is the rightful Mayor of San Francisco. No Clrc-aes for Texas. Austin, Tex., Aug. 1. The Rail road Commission has Issued a ril ing that under the anti-pass law,' full rates must be charged for the trans-' portatlon of advance cars of circuses' and their representatives. This pro pesed Increase In thetr expenses has caused circuses to wipe Texas off of their routing map. Threatens Sir Harry MocLrnn. Tangier, Aug. 1. Gerard A. Low ther, the British Minister here, has received a letter from Cald Sir Harry MacLean stating that Ralsufi, who holds him prisoner threatens to put htm 'to death unless ' the Sultan's troops are withdrawn from the Elk mes territory. Father and Hon Drown. Lnther Iowa, Aug. 1. Father and son, George Tipler and his fourteen-year-old bof, were drowned In a wU at Luther Iowa. The boy waa sent down on a rope, which slipped, and he Tell rata na"wsterrht'ardreW' sixty feet Hla father died trying tt:sav him. -'d RATE WAR EXDED. North Carolina Wins Fight for Che:i" II. It. Fare. Raleigh, N. C, Aug. 1. The war between the State and the United States Courts over the refusal of tho Southern Railway to obey the new State rate law Is ended, the railroad company making a surrender. Ofllcers of the Southern agreed ti put the new passenger rate of 2V cents a mile Into effect on Ane. 8. Thin rate will ho effective until th. United States Supreme Court deter mines the question of the constitu tionality of the railroad law. The ngremnnt was the result of a conference between officers of the Southern road, Gov. Glenn and his advisers. Tho conference began t 8 P. M. and was of long duration. Gov. Glenn gave this message to the people of tho State: .."It is n great victory for States' rights ngnlnst Federal Intetfi no. It will teach Hiitlllty corporations thnt while the StnU- will treat them fairly It will not tolemto their trying to control the State." Further, the Governor said: "I never defied the Federal powor. as has been stated, but simply tried to carry out the law as I bhw It under the constitution." A LIZARD 814 FEET LOXG. Wyoming University Unearths tho World's Biggest Fossil. Baggs, Wyo., July 81. The most Important discovery ever made In the great fossil beds of Wyoming Is the skeleton of an animal of the He ard type, Just found, which shows length of 814 feet. It 1b by far the largest prehlstorlo animal yet discovered. The skele ton, which was found by an expedi tion from the Wymolng State Univer sity, is In a perfect state of preser vation, every bone seeming to have been In place when petrification set In. The skeleton is In the side of a hill of shale and has not been torn entirely from the Btono in which it Is Imbedded, but the whole length can be seen. One vertebra, which has been re moved, weighs more than 1.000 pounds. The skeleton will be placed in tho Wyoming S 'diversity, which has the greatest collection of fossils In the world. BREAK IX ERIE CAXAL. Damage to Bouts and Ivii1!!fni In Syracuse Amounts to $10,000. Syracuse, N. Y., Ang. 1. A sorl ous break In the Erie Canal In tills city where the canal passes ov;r Onondaga Creek resulted In a loss of more than $100,000. Stone archos that held tho canal bed gave v.-iy, letting the water of the canal Into the creek with a rush. Five canal boats fell through and were smashed up. Tho force of the water undermined the building of the Standard Milling Company and the rear wall fell Into the water on top of the canal boats. No persons were hurt. It was announced that tho canal would be closed two months for re pairs. Child Shoots At Burglars. Bloomsburg, Pa., July 30. Alone In the house with her flre-year-old brother and baby sister at midnight, when her father and mother were away from home, Martha, the eight-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Reich, of Mausdale, routed two burglars who were trying to get In the front door. Getting her father's revolver, she fired twice through the door, and while she did not hit either, she frightened them so that they lost no time in getting away. Uprisings la Cuba. Havana, July 30. An uprising by an armed band ef twenty men Is re ported from Santiago Province. It Is at Socaudero, not far from Santia go City. The men were discovered by Rural Ouards In a 'coffee plantation. Shots were exchanged, but, as far as is known, nobody was hurt. The band Is led by Salgero, a Porto Rlcan. Another band, under a man named Maceto, la also out. Three members of the band have been captured. Two Earthquake Shocks. Kingston, Jamaela, July 31. A short, sharp shock of earthquake was felt here Monday. No damage waa done. . ' Victoria, B. C, July 81. At 1:20 A. M. Sunday an earthquake shock waa felt, awakening many persons from their beds. It was not strong enough to do any damage. Faid 91,000 Fines for Rebates. Minneapolis, Aug. 1. Before Judge Lochren, in the United States District Court, representatives of the Amer-Brooks Company, McCall-Dlns-more Company and Duluth-Superlor Milling Company paid $1,000 fines for soliciting and accepting rebates from'' tha1 Great "Northern Railway1 Company on shipments of grain. Itreaaaed of Dears; Dislocated Xeck. ' Camden. N, J. Aug. 1. While dreaming that bears were after hor ten-year-old Olga Bennet of Hi South Second Street turned suddenly in' bed aid dislocated her neck. She Is' at the Homeopathic Hospital, where th physicians, with the helji of X-rays and A harness arc trying to replace' th vertebra. ' ' 1 JACKET I Oil ItAXGK BOIL; ;. Helps Improve the Apvenran e t,f tho Kitchen. You can buy a ready-mad Jaelat. for your kitchen boiler If yon v..nt, to dress It. nicely. This In one of new conveniences which tho bu:y V ASBESTOS JACKET FOR noit.U. brains of the Inventor are conslanily thinking out to make conditions luoic comfortable for us. This Jacket will keep the water hotter In winter, un l In summer It will have n material aldin keeping the temperature of ths kitchen at a more tolerable point, and at the same time the water will be kept quite hot when tho fire s low, as It Is often maintained during the summer months. The covering Is cut and shaped ready for applica tion. It Is made In two sections unj the edges are supplied with honl.s bo that it can he laced In place. T!h Jacket consists of asbestos, Insulat ing felt and a canvas exterior. It ! Impossible for any hent to eseaim through this. After It Is fixed in place In mny he painted with g-l 1 or aluminum paint, or given any other color to harmonize with the surroundings. FASHIOVS' MANDATE. Silver In braids or fancy trlmniin;.) Is much used on the pah gray fab rics now so much In vogue. Trimmings of tiny points falling 'n pendant fashion from leaves sewi.-J to the frock material are a lii;,!i prlced French novelty. Mnny oRtrlch feathers aro f;."? dyed In shaded colorings from t.'i deepest, darkest tones down to iho palest and most delicate tints. Picture hats grow larger anil a correspondent In Paris writes thai !i Is a mnrvel how the French women ever keep them on, so overbalanced are they at thefront. With the brim rolled up In front nnd of exaggerat ed width In the rear they have a li dded backward tilt. Pny Their Gamhllng Debts. Pawnbrokers In New York are do ing bis business Just now with n lot of fashionable women who have bee i devoting too much time and monev to bridge whist. These devotees of the card table generally have plenty of money, but It Is not always avail able, and It Is not rare for them 'o be hard pressed for ready cush. .So after ono or two bad evenings at the table where the debts must, of cours, be paid promptly, the loser hie them to one of the several quiet pawnshops catering to the "carrlau trade" and raise the needful on their Jewelry. It Is said that a parure of diamonds belonging to one of the richest New York belles has bena pawned half a dozen times In many months. i To Look Slim. If you 'wish to look slim do not dress In white or light-colored clo thes. Stripes are more becoming than spots or. checks, but narrow chocks could be worn. Short skirts are still very becom ing; flowing draperies, on the other hand, give grace. A long central line of trimmings from throat to hem adds a certain height; bo does a single flounce at tho bottom of the skirt. Many frills should be avoided. A tight-fitting gown Is never be coming to a stout figure. Wear something which has a softening effect. It will be far more becom ing. Don't Forget. That few succeed until they try. That work la only a means; char acter la the end. That sincerity la the foundation of something worth while. That everyone la destined to io all honest work. That It la easier to do good wor than poor work, If you once learn how. That the only way to keep your credit good Is by paying your debt. ' That no one can hold you down if you are determined to succeed. That a sensible employer is more anxious to push you ahead than tJ hold you down. CASTOR I A For Infants and Chlldrsn. Bears th V lil ilii Mi t hi ' "