TUFT'S TRIP THRO WEST AND SOUTH PRESIDENT WILL TRAVEL ROYAL GORGE OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. VISITS ALASKA-YUKON EXPO. Will Greet President of Mexico on in ternational Bridge Over Rio Grande at El Paso—Sail Down Mississippi. Washington, P. C.—Before his depart ure here the president made public a ten tative outline of his trip through the west and south this fail. Starting from the rugged shores of the north coast of Massachusetts, the presi dent goes direct west from Beverly. He will motor into Boston the morning of September 15 —his tifty-aecond birthday— and there board the car which practical ly will be a roving White House for two months. The president's first stop will be at Chicago, where he arrives shortly before noon on the morning of September 16 and spends the afternoon and evening, leaving at 3 a. m„ September 17, for Mad ison, Wis., where he will spend the en tire forenoon of that day, leaving Mad ison at midday for Winona, Minn., with u brief stop at Portage, Wis., en route. After spending Friday night at Winona, the president will reach Minneapolis early tile morning of September IS. The presi dent will spend all of Saturday and Sun day in Minneapolis, leaving Sunday night at 8 p. m.in order to reach lies Moines, la., tiie morning of September 20. Denver. Oil., will be readied the after noon of September 21 and tin? president will go almost direct from his train to the state capitol for a reception to bo tendered by state officials by the cham ber of commerce, civic organizations, etc. At 9 p. m. tiie president will make an uddivss In the Denver auditorium where Mr. Bryan last year was nominat ed for the presidency. The president and liis party will breakfast with Thomas F. Walsh at Wolhurst, near Denver, the morning of September 22, and then re turn to th' city for the chamber of com merce bfanqut t at noon. The morning of September 23 will And the president at Olenwood Springs for a brief visit and that afternoon lie will visit Montrose -to have a look at tha great Gunnison tunnel of tlio western < 'olorado irrigation" project. Returning to Grand Junction to resume the Journey w'estward, the president will arrive al Salt I.akc City, IJtalx, Friday afternoon, tho 21th, when the party leaves over the Oregon Short line for Pocatello, Ida, arnP Butte. Mont., tiie latter city being reach ed September 27 at 6:40 a. in. After spending half a day In Butte, there will be a brief excursion into Helena. Spo kane, Wash., will be reached early Thurs day morning, the 2Sth, and the entiro day will be spent In the city. The fore noon of the 29th will be spent at North Yakina and the party wlli arrive at Se attle at 8:15 that evening. President Taft will spend two days, September 30 and October 1, "doing" the Alaska-Yukon exposition, leaving Seattle late in the evening of the second day and arriving at Portland, Ore., October 2 at 7 a. m. Two days will h«- spent in Portland, the party leaving there at 6 p. m. October 3 for a trip down the fa mous Shasta route, through the Siskiyou mountains and in view of Mount Shasta, to San Francisco. The president will stop the evening of October 4 at Sacremento, reaching Oakland, Cal., early on the morning of October 5. He will spend four or five hours in and around Oakland and Berkeley before taking the furry at 12:30 o'clock for San 'Francisco. The president will leave early the morning of the 6th for tiie Yosemite Val ley. He will spend the 7th, Bth and 9th in the valley and. coming out the morn ing of Sunday, October 10, will proceed to I.os Angeles, stopping for three hours at Fresno, Sunday afternoon. The pres ident will spend October 11 and 12 in I.os Angeles, visiting his sister. Ho will ar rive at the Grand Canyon the morning of October 14 and will leave again that night for Albuquerque, X. M., where lie will spend the evening of the tilth, reach ing El Paso early the following morning for the meeting with President Diaz of Mexico. The president reaches San Antonio Sunday night, October 17, and will spend the forenoon of the following day in an Inspection of Fort Sam Houston, with the upbuilding of which he had much to do while secretary of war. Arriving at Corpus Christl the evening of October 18 the president goes to his brother's ranch. Visiting Houston the forenoon of Sat urday, October 23, the president pro ceeds to Dallas that afternoon to s;pend Saturday evening and all of Sunday. From Dallas the president proceeds di rect to St. Louis to begin his four-days trip down that historic waterway. The tlrst long stop on the river will be at Cairo. 111., at S:3O a. m., October 26. The second stop will be at Hickman, Ky. at 2:50 p. m., the president making brief addresses at both places. Arriving oil Memphis, Tenn. at 8 a. m. October 27, the president will make an address at 9 a. m.and that afternoon at 5 o'clock will speak at Helena, Ark. On October 28 at 2:30 p. m.the president will make a speech at Vicksburg. New Orleans will be reached about 4 o'clock Friday after noon. The river Journey also will in clude short stops at Cape Girardeau, Mo. and Natchez, Miss. From New Orleans the president goes to Jackson, Miss., spending practically the entire day of November 1 there. He will spend three hours of the following day at Columbus, Miss., and will arrive at Birmingham, ifla., that evening at 7:45 o'clock. The president will remain in Birmingham until the afternoon of Wednesday, November 3. when he pro ceeds to Macon, Ga., arriving there early the morning of the 4th. After spending the forenoon of the 4th at Macon, the president proceeds to Savannah. Charleston, S. C. Is next on the list for a stop the evening of November sth. From Charleston the president proceeds Saturday morning, November 6, to Au gusta. where lie will spend Saturday af ternoon and Sunday. Columbia, S. C.. will be visited the afternoon of November 8 and Wilming, ton, N. win claim the president for the entire day of the 9th. The president will spend 12 hours in Richmond, Va., from 5 a. m.to 5 p. m„ and will return to Washington at 8:35 o'clock the night of November 10. Cremated in Saw Mill Fire. Mancetona, Mich. -Charles Weaver, 61 years, was burned to death. Mer ritt McCain was seriously burned and several other nten received minor burns and injuries in a lire which de stroyed the saw mill of the Antrim iron works. Cars Collide; Five Injured. Pittsburg, Pa. —Five persons were injured, one fatally, when three cars on the Pittsburg railway's El liot & Sheraden branch collided neat Elliot borough. FOUR PEOPLE DROWNED GASOLINE LAUNCH HITS PILING AND IS WRECKED. Occupants Were Thrown Into the Water—Rescue Parties Succeed in Saving 16 Persons. Baltimore, Md. —Two drowned bodies are lying at the Canton police station and two others at the bottom of the Patapsco river, while 16 persons who were their com panions are alive and thankful that they were not also drowned when a gasoline launch in which they all were was wrecked. The drowned were: Mrs. Katherine E. Brown, 60; Marie Hawes, live; Willard Leach, 12; Frank Pryor, 19. Pryor was acting as engineer of the launch. The others were attending the annual picnic of the Huntington Avenue Baptist church Sunday school, which was being held at a shore re sort a few miles east of this city on the Patapsco. Twenty persons had entered the launch for a short trip on the river. The craft had reached a point about 100 yards from shore when it struck some piling, the top of which was under water. The launch was badly damaged and its occupants were thrown into the water, which at that point is only about four feet deep. Rescue parties at once put out from shore and saved 16 of those who had been in the launch and at once be gan dragging for the bodies of the others. Those of Mrs. Brown and the little girl were brought ashore. ROBBER AND CHIEF KILLED Man Holds Up Bank Cashier and Runs Away with Money—Citizens Pursue Thief and Pitched Battle Ensues. White Bear, Minn. —In a desperate pitched battle with rifles and revolv ers following a bold robbery of the First State bank of White Bear, Rob ert Pohl, said to have been an ex-con vict, and Edward Larkin, chief at the Five Forks, a Bald Eagle lake cottage, were killed and several others wound ded. William Butler, a White Bear fisherman, perhaps fatally. Pohl, who had been working at White Bear for about a week, and who is believed to have been a professional cracksman, took a check for $7 to the bank in the morning, and while the cashier, Alfred Auger, was exam ining it, he produced an automatic rifle and demanded all the cash in the bank. Auger complied. As the robber dashed out of the bank with $565 in cash, Auger raised the alarm, and citizens prusued Ihe man to the Inter state lumber yards, where he hid. Lar kin entered the yards and was shot through the heart. The robber then ran to a pile of lumber a short dis tance beyond the yard, and hid under it. A desperate battle with the self constituted posse during which at least 500 shots wore exchanged, followed. John Brachvogel, one of the posse, finally winged the robber in the arm. The man dropped his weapon, but picked it up again, and as he turned to fire, Brachvogel shot him dead. MUCK PROPERTY DESTROYED Pittsburg Is Visited by a Severe Elec trical and Wind Storm—Con servatories Demolished. Pittsburg, Pa. —The Saints Peter and Paul German Catholic church struck by lightning and damaged to the extent of $55,000 by a subsequent Are, several of the finest conserva tories in the city almost completely demolished by hail, lawns destroyed, streets covered with water and mud to a depth of several feet, delayed street car traffic, electric light service suspended for several hours and many bridges over streams washed away. These are the result of one of the worst electrical and wind storms that has visited this city in recent years. The storm struck the East End dis trict of this city early in the morning, lasting about an hour and was ac companied by terrific lightning. The storm resembled a cloudburst, so heavy was the fall of water. Large hailstones at times covered the ground. The storm traveled in a south easterly direction, the downtown sec tion of this city receiving only a shower, the path of the wind and rain being through the residential sections. NEW DIES WILL BE PREPARED Secretary of the Treasury Has Or dered the Minting of the New Lincoln Pennies Stopped. Washington, D. C. —Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh announces that he has decided to have the mint ing of the new Lincoln pennies stop ped for the present and that new dies will be prepared as soon as possible, eliminating the initials of the design er, which now appear so prominently, and substituting the single initial B in an obscure part of the design as recognition of Mr. Brenner's work. Thirty-Five People Injured. Chicago, 111.—An electric car filled with laborers and with women and children who had spent the day in the country was struck by a Penn sylvania, train here and 35 persons were injured, five perhaps fatally. Strike in Honolulu Over. Honolulu, S. I. —The strike of more than 6,000 plantation Japanese la borers which has been in progress for two months and has caused much loss to the planters, has been declared off by the Japanese of the islands. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY AUGUST 12, 1909. IS^Abinet THE CHILDREN'S BREAD-LI NE fOD help the poor!" but why should we Leave all to God? We are his agents; dally tread the path His feet have trod. Read what He says in Gospel clear— "Go, feed my sheep!" "The children's bread-line" Is It thus His Law we keep? "The bread-lino or the children!" This is one of the pictures to be seen any day in Chicago; a row of hungry, ill-clad children of all ages, sexes and colors, with baskets on their arms, standing in line at the door of one of the large, whole sale bakeries. When the door opens, they file in with a pitiful order — pitiful because it shows automatic obedience and sullen fear. They re ceive the stale bread and left-over cake and cookies and file out again— where? The imagination follows them —where? Now to some onlookers this picture speaks volumes for the charity and kindness in the world; how much bet ter than wasting that bread; how thoughtful to provide those starved children with such a good meal a day. At least one meal of wholesome (stale) bread a day! But the cynic might laugh; the thoughtful will grieve; the pessimist might see in this the worst arraign ment of our social order; a pictorial presentment of economic blundering displayed by our most effective ac tors, the children. Indian Kedgerie. This recipe was obtained in India by Mrs. Clinton Locks and she found it popular with lier friends the world over. Take equal parts of halibut and rice, with red pepper to taste (the '.aste, of course, depending on the country). Add cream sauce. The fish and the rice are separately cooked and stirred with the sauce into the pepper. A Cool Beginning. A nice beginning for a dinner is a mixture of fruit (any kind), well chilled and drained, and served in small glasses or coyipotes with a dash of sherry and pulverized ice. A pleas ing combination is made of berries, pineapple and oranges. Grape-fruit may be added, and grapes, too. But the grapes should be seeded, and the trouble is scarcely worth while. DOLLY'S FRECKLES. V ■» < HEY say how pretty Doll Q woukl be H If only she weren't Gut do we think the less S,/JP\ of Heaven IHH-0 I When with light clouds (