BIG BLAZE IN NEW ORLEANS Loss of $1,500,0 000 in the Business District THE FIREMEN WERE AT A PICNIC. Flames Gained Great Headway Before the Fire Fighters Arrived, as Most of Them Were at Their Annual Out. ing In a Nearby Suburb-—0ld Build, ings Burn Like Tinder. New Orleans (Special). — Fire, which broke out in the center of the district here, three commercial portiong of a large number of wholesale manutacturing plants and small stores. Originating at Bienville and Chartres Streets, the flames worked their way north as far as Conti Street and west toward Royal, bring ing about a property $1.000000 and $2,000,000 they were finally subdued At the time the alarmed was turn ed in, shortly before o'clock, the New Orleans firemen were in the midsi of their annual picnic a su burban park, and the engines and patrols responded with a mere hand ful of men. When the finally reached the scene it blocks, destroying houses, before o ~ i“ Was even fight against the flames, owing inadequate supply of waiter, The fire was one of the most spec tacular that has occured in New Or- leans during recent vears. The tion devastated of old buildings, century in use. much tinder to ned by a high rapid progress. Two warehouses, and liquors, were ings destoved by burned the barrels of whisky brandy exploded with roars which could be heard for blocks, and which shook the walls of adjoining build- ings, and dangered the lives of fire-| men engaged in fighting the flames The fire was gotten under control after several hours hard work. Among the establishments burned were: Central Glasg Company. George I. Scott, lighting and elec-! trical instruments, Heidenbrock, Wy manufacturers Hoehn & linery. Kost Commissio Paul Gelpi & uor dealers New Orleans Isidor shoes. Thomas uor over a half They were like the flames, and fan- wind, the fire some among the build- the fire. As & Welss, Dyeth, wholesale mn Sor Company. 18, wholesale Junk Com & C pany. Keifer 0 boots L. Harris, wholesale lig dealer, i PERSIA 15 SWEPT Hundreds of People Killed Wounded. { By th i Teh news ran est courier conf revolution western All th have raised der the | tionalists and ate convocation of erwise they independence The government into the hands of the everywhere and a large soldiers have been killed ernor of Sultanieh has fled with a small remnant of loyal troops, the remainder of the troops having join- | ed the insurgents. Governor's residence was pillaged and burned The uprising in the provinces of Laristan and Kerman. reports which were received here a few davs ago, Is rapidly gaining ground. The City of Kerman is entirely in the | hands of the revolutionists, the gov- ernment officials having either fled or submitted. The vice Governor has been killed. . The seizure of she city ceded by a bloody batt hundreds being killed or wounded The insur gent leaders, who Include Kazim Khan, have organized a temporar: government and declared their in tention to ignore the central govern ment until the parliament shall be | reconvoked. The Shah lacks the! necessary troops for the suppression | of the revolt in the different prov- | inces. The seriousness of the situ ation is mitigated only by the ab- sence of a strong pretender to the | throne around whom the constitu-| tionalists could gather. eadersh dem OLh- | for a parliament threaten to declare falling insurgents number of | The Gov- offices are roy i 0 of was pre- ie, FIN ED $3, 000,000, Venezuela Cotirts Assess French Cas | ble Company Same As American Asphalt Concern. Caracas (By Cable). The French Cable Company has been found guilty of complicity in the Matos revolution «by the Civil Court of First “instance and sentenced to pa} a fine of nearly $5,000,000, The decision is practically the same as that made in the Bermudez Asphalt Company's case, the amount being similar. e cable company will likely ap- peal from the decision. RAILROAD BARS « CIGARETTES, Rock Island win Discharge Any Fm. ploye Who Uses Them, Memphis (Special). — A bulletin kas been posted at the Union Sta tion, signed by F. J. Easley, division superintendent of the Rock Island lines, notifying employes that the smoking of tobacco in the form of cigarettes is forbidden, It is understood that any employe found using them hereafter will be DEATH CLAIMS COLONEL WILLIAM F. VILAS Former United States Senator Dies at Madison, Ws. Wis. Vilas died following five weeks of {ll- When Dr. Philip Fox called upon the Colonel he found him un- usually cheerful and bright, and be- lieved he showed signs of remark- able improvement Shortly after 10 o'clock, while the nurses were administering a bath to the patient, he weakened quickly. An attempt was reach the doctor. but Colonel died before the physician reached the house Dr. Charles H. Vilas, of New York, who has been staving at the home, was not present at the death It is believed thatt the cause of of Madison, Wm. F. A. M., ness. Col o'clock { Special) at 10.45 very the a paralysis William F suffere hemorrhage earl on of July 20 at his home, His condition was so seri P. Vilas, his brother, was summoned to the for two days the ble to offer On the third condition was sligh and there were two first had | stroke Col Vilas i cerebral morning 5 Madison that E { wankee, { beds de, and sicians we re i of recovery Colonel Vilas’ ly improved, | hopeful signs { no spreading of the f se ond, he manifested i of intelligence. Altho ods of consciousness they gave the family the distinguished pat Since ed ae ous Of una day been and, Signs there paralysis, marked ugh the were alight, and friends of lent much hope then his condition has remain- practically unchanged, although had moments rallies, and on occasions would answer ques- tions by “ves” and “no.’ of seeming GAGGED, TIED AND ROBBED, Small In Chicago. icago (Special) skin, bovs the gagged and were beaten ‘Onuscio small re all larger 1 boy Forest but unt ¥8 in the Glen ir assailants ing Park sted more than torturers ivy ov police of in the the boy SKins act Younger who were MASS lu are & are of @a them 1081 finger, hard Keen! hard Keenls are riaur : imgren, » NAN 8 and Ri sallants r Vears years bail Forest sSuburd woods old old was released lonely hicago, whe When th some thoroughly of are thick boys were missing for shborhood was and a iunteer posse was While the pos search- rries ard stifled Keen A fering fre cries ' le a oy a BODIES RECOVERED, Flood At Augusta Leaves Ruin In Its Wake. { Special) The receding leaves the Joss i sia, (sa flo ee rapidly, gireets it Is apparent hag been underestin in addition t ready reported i lamage to on which Aug » he walter at and as usta is “A water 0 asters al- rede Mills, logs of . Sustained Held cotton finest in the South. damaged. but it will re- to determine the loss; block where the assembled was The Nelson Morriz has collapsed and Augueta Grocery was aged the National $1¢ ing the plant on ” floated f £100.000: Ad away the cot a logs o chouse, th greatly 8 survey triangular wholesale |} damaged warehouse ng razed; the Company's building the extent of $6 Biscuit Company wrecked The Central Grammar School the Davidson Gramma: School were also damaged severely in addition the fires already reported. 10 smaller houses were burned in different sections of the | city As the water goes down fur- | is feared that further damage | will revealed, Twenty-two bodies covered and corpses every hour or so © WAR ire qui Ouses are badly & Co bei da O00 oul waz and to te had been re- | are being found ¥ i WASHINGTON || i Capt. Charles J. Badger. superin-| tendent of the Naval Academy, has made appli cation for the command of the 20.000-ton battleship North Da- kota, the first American Dread nought. The War Department has refused leave of absence to Col. William F. Stewart, “exiled” in an Arizona des ert, and who wisheg to visit Balti more to mee his wife, American clerical emploves are to be given preference over alien em- ployes on the Isthmus of Panama, The Rev. Joseph Himmel has been appointed president of the George- town University. A sweeping reduction of from one- half cent to five cents per hundred pounds on range cattle shipments was ordered by the Interstate Com- merce Commission, It was learned that the War De- partment Is caring for two lepers who contracted the disease while serving In the Army. The monthly statement of the In. teraal Revenue Bureau shows that K,646 retail liquor dealers have gone summarily discharged. out of business during July. ’ ALL UNITE TO HELP THE VICTIMS The Charities of Bugusta Severely Strained. CONVICTS PUT TO WORK ON STREETS Work of Relieving the Sufferings of Flood Victims Goes On With a Will—~Food and Clothing Badly Need. { ed-The Task ¢f Cleaning Up Will Eegin Monday. The AlLgus!- Augusta, Ga. (Special) sun shione out brightly 8 tings raining helping Prominent n unday else, the i ans, pu aside everything began st every 10 the energy work of sufferers en who made up committee, the A ion Armj working h and relie the Charities the Salvat and Daught ! The however LE ers are work is very thorough i8 neeq of other necessities gave 311 Saturday night loaves ved Sunday and Cha 20 000 loaves at s BGO rleston and up and « bie unty It ng board of health situatic well in with mergency abso asked Senators tation 1 i Ue, deputie ar in is trol There is no loiterin The i ! United on rowdyism (seorgin’'s 10 urge send an gineer here t flood alor K tion y consideration the protect fares ne futur NEW CURRENCY BILL May in One Respect Render It Useless. Washington § nh Feaala rich-Vreelan law at which i Hoosevel!: worked last which year and cracking assage b of the party ids fair to be practi un the law an qual Yoicoe der urren of its snd. th in the law zardiess sent withdraw from an joined f New York wrote to Recret having once tional banks o timnory point Was there was would not elvou referred ¢ Solicitor of received an offici: wis no auntharity retary of the to walve or amend the which were declared {fonable Mr Cortelyou next called upon Attorney General Bonaparte for a decision on that feature of the lawn which akes it impossible for a bank t from an tion No was asked relative voting power of the constituent banka of an association, as Mr. Cortelyou held it was self-evident that each bank must have the same volee in an association But realized tha uniess the banks could withdraw, the law would probably remain dead far as it provided for the currenc: associations The Department ing out these objections mated that uniess iv the associations formed Secretar: questions Treasury, and al opinion that there either in the Treasury or von it inti reme he a yt Cort 0 to t1 the Soc. elsewhere provisions object a Oo secede associa 3 5 opinic mn On the he 80 Justice has its opinion It holds with! the Solicitor of the Treasury that a bank having once joined an associa cannot withdraw, but It sug- that withdrawal may be pos. | on the unanimous consent of | all the other banks which remain in the association As the only cir-| cumstances under which a bank, when once in an association, would | want to withdraw are conditions! when every other bank would insist | on each bank assuming (te full share | of the association's responsibilities it is evident that Mr. Bonaparte's. opinion is practically the same as that of the law officer of the Treas ury, namely, that a bank cannot withdraw. Mr. Cortelyou has accepted the in. vitation of the New York bankers to meet them in that city next week to discuss with them the currency law in its application to the banks. of FIND TWENTY. BIGHT BODIES, One Still In Mine Where Oklahoma Horror Occurred, McAlester, Okla. (Special). With the bodies of 28 of the 295 miners who met death in the coal mine at Halleyville recovered, a search is be ing made for the body of the re. maining victim, All the men were suffocated when fire broke out at the mine entrance and owl off the air supply. JOHN W. KERN FORMALLY NOTIFIED Indianapolis and Surrounding Country Out in Force. Indianapolis Ind. John Worth Kern, didate for Vice President, mally notified of his nomination The meeting was held in the rately decorated Coliseum at th Falr grounds, and many thousands of people regardles party attracted by the distin. guished speakers on the programme The weather was ideal. clear and { cool with a pleasant breeze that over the grounds lennings Br members {tte { Special) Democratic can- was for- elabo- e State Wag attended by Of BW epi William ikers an ar of the | Bp¢ notifica appointed at the Del) Convent members | tional Committee headed Mack and others of the ty arrived carly trains The IOUrs were conferences by aL while a band « Hotel assieted tion comm ion, of by On morning 1 aneert in amis thro poured recep and Mr igh On yan Kern parlors The cluded programme luncheon and member notifi the for at the hotel Mi officia Mr Bel automobile Kern and Chairman fication « i The ride rounds busi nt through the fair Was through “95 ireets and The doors of he were nr Kern Coll y n residence i OW (1 hefor the public hours § 11 CROTrCIBes Ean homas CIman ted to call immediate Nat troduced Tao rn ve - FAKEAT national Pyro Ain ns irom Indiana, had the to order gavel who eon. mit alec He tO en mestiing k anded he Mack ional Chair Theod Bryan bis nomi HRoosevel! ugh deal fending Even Taft esidencs ped in Rooseveltian a lurking sus held him, like don of the heel prove wholly porate assaults | election Mr. Kern, his speech ance, devoted some time to tion, "Shall the people rule?” deprecated what he charged is ex ive power in the hands the Speaker of the House of Representa- tives, and denied that the people have ruled, because he ssid their will had not been given effect He cited the demand for a reduction in the tariff on white paper and wood pulp and the failure of the Babcock tariff bill in 1902. Mr. Kern charg ed that there is a power within the party determined that the people shall not rule, which pow. er has manifested itself whellever effort has been made to check the destructive work of unlawful ecom- bination, reduce the tariff or equalize burdens by legislation. The Demo- | eratic party. he gaid, would draw | a sharp line between lawful business lawfully conducted and unlawful | to be the who believed that nominated for thoroughly dip waters no have that son ehod "Achilles, if the BO that he invulne rable n the € thos wae he fore x Pr was icion in ia of accep! the ques He COR of i FINANCIAL So far in 1908 gix New York Stock Exchange firms have failed. General /Electric has declared usual quarterly dividend of $2 The Bank of England's discount rate remains 2% per cent. Europe is taking but an unusuy- ally ‘small interest in American glock just at present. The reported cuts in certain class. es of steel materials didn't seem to discourage the bulls in the stock market, The two score raflroads which have reported for the second week of August return an average de- crease In earnings of about 12 per cent, Fire insurance premiums to the amount of $2,886,700 were collect: ed in Philadelphia during the first #lx months of this year, according Philadelphia Of this sum its SKULLS CRUSHED BY A MADMAN Three Men Hit With Heavy Hammer By Maniac. VICTIMS ARE EXPECTED T0 DIE Cornelius Baker, an Aged Farmer; Nathaniel Baker and John Bott, Baptized— Madman Overpowered. York, Pa t Cornelius {Specia tha Baker a farmer, and Joh; Patrol, $713,304 went to local Sompanies. old, a plumber, Wosserman lost hi ACID TO DESTROY IDENTITY. Man Evidently Barned His Face Be. fore Jumping Into River, near % adly t id and id to be impossible the man's hat and shore was the bottle contained the acid | been partls gceratched enough of it remained to had been purchased in Massachusetts It is supposed that the man ren his features unrecognizable the acid and then jumped into irned ant hoe dered with fh river PLEA POR UNWRITTEN LAW Texas Grand Jury Wants It Placed On Statute Hooks, Tex. (Special) re to give greater * daughters by curta the grand jury that the While pro i“ Eastland, urging mothe; tewtion to thei: ing their liberties openly recommended written law’ should be placed on statute books as a means of protect ing the home in a rem denda to its report “If the law cannot am ed as to visit punishment upon despoilers, then let the avenger free,” reads the report “let here un- the arkable ad end- the be the be so decelivers no Captain Shoots His Wife, Port Huron, Migh. (Special) Campbell, a lake captain, and killed his shot wife on the After killing his their home and and { committed suicide wife he ran into drank a dose of carbolic acid fired three bullets into his body, Sage Estate $64,158,800 New York (Special). — Russell Sage's estate is valued at $64.153.- | £00. This fact became known for | the first time through the signing of the order for transfer tax payable to the State. 20 Children - 20 Years. Pittsburg (8pecial) Twenty chil dren in 26 years is the remarkable record of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Me Intyre, of MeKees Rocks, and all of them are “singles” and all living. Married in 1882, the babies have been coming at intervals ‘of 15% months. The latest arrival was born Satu evening and is a boy and A IE In the family there are 12 sons and eight daugh- ters. ATTACKED BY ROBBERS. A Blank Cartridge Young Man's Exploded In A Mouth. Chicago i {special ) robbers, after having relieved Monroe, LIK Hazel ables, thr 11’ § g = Williams iB. A th 3 TY 0 # HE Young man blank fnndyg A Cart 114 YEARS TER AWFILL Explosion Blinds Oflicer Rats Killed In Lond n Wound Kills Preacher Anarchy In Persia, Methodist Russcll ywildings Burn ial} pu ildings Se Shoots To Defend Wife. Ga. (Special) J. Ha worker was wy Atlanta, 28 vears old shot and ki the latter's home heen Hving The gsed was a single barrel shotgun it jeged that Harris, who is a of Earnest's wife, tad been abusing the latter and Earnest being notified he ran ito his house Earnest saves that he shot Harris in defense of } wife. an won lied by J. R where Earnest in Harris has weapon 8 al brother 18 Wolf Attacks Marshal, Lawton, Okla. (Special) United States Marshal John Abernathy, of Oklahoma, was severely bitten by » wolf, which he had cap and bound with wire about the head. The wire snapped. two of Aber lacerated The wolf was fight that followed and bis knee injured. recaptured. ARO 3 ODDS AND ENDS Ss ——— New York City has 133 depart ment stores that employ 11,000 per sone. Twenty million feathers are sent from Germany Jo England every year for millinery purposes. Argontina’'s area under cultivation is now 36,000,000 acres, comparing with 12,000,000 in 1905, ’ There is a little more than 26% miles of rallroad in the United States for every 10,000 Inhabitants,