rau. LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH Domestic As announced by the executors of Henry A. Butters. the millionaire traction magnate, who died at San Francisco last Tuesday, the bulk of his fortune, estimated at several million dollars, will go to the testa- tor's son, Henry A. Bulters, Jr, Two students of the Polytechnic High School, Los Angeles, have been suspended and three others are in danger of sharing the same fate be- cause they had branded the fore- heads ‘of two students of the High School with nitrate of silver. Dr. John F. Hayford, member ol the International Boundary Commis- sion of the United States and Mex- fco, and a well-known engineer, wiil be the dean of the new Northwestern University Engineering School now being built at Evansville, If. The steamer Dictator, which ar- riveq at New Orleans from Blue- fields, reports that the recent storm which swept the northern coast of Nicaragua practically destroyed the towns of Rio Grande and Prizapul- ka. The Texas and Oklahoma Horse- thief Association organized to pre- vent the stealing of live stock adopt- ed a resolution at Muskogéde, pledg- ing its 10,000 members to assist in the arrest and prosecution of night riders Cablegrams from Colon, Panama, say that the Norwegian steamer Thelma, which sailed from here over two weeks ago, was damaged in the recent Rurricane off the Nicaraguan Coast. The New York Central Railroad Company will begin an action to test the constitutionality of the law pass- ed at the past session of the Legis lature requiring railroads to pay their employes twice a month. The case of C. A. Rogers, accused of forgery, who says he is a nephew of Vice President Rogers, of the Standard Oil Company, wil go di- received at Mobile rect to the grand jury now in ses- gion at Reno, Nevada. Oscar Kondert, former! of the First National Bagk, of Baton | Rouge, La. charged with the em-! bezzlement of about $50,000 of the bank's funds, sentenced to five | years in prison. i Ten thousand farmers in the coun- | try adjacent to C hicago must report | to Chicago's health commissioner whenever infectious disease appear in the families of milk handlers William Montgomery, former cash- fer of the Allegheny Natlonal Bank. | of Pittsburg, was found gullty embezzling and abstracting $613, | 060 of ehe bank's funds, Death” by pols of {wo servanis in the home of Rev. Carter H. Jones of Oklahoma City, has aroused a sus- 1 drugged brandy was in- $ y nister rs for the "Sane | were asked for | president of the 1 ana citizens cashier | was mn other fatal draught of | posed to be Har- 8-Barre, Pa., shot | head at a ing back gictment | re turnec 1 aga! charging him | ew York cook. about spreading early a year and y IrTer a8uret was | of k, of Naw and | Paper Company. leader and 40 icinity of Samsbur n caplured ! Wor nan's Christian Temper- ance Unlon opposes the re-election of Speaker Cannon. The Catholic Diocese of Boston be- gan the celeb: on of fta centenary Rev. Fred ¢ J. Kinsman was consecrated Bishop of Delaware From the copper piping in the | old French machinery, bronze from discarded cars and tin discovered in | a disused warehouse are to be man- | ufactured the bronke medals which President Roosevelt will present tok] all two-year employes of the Isth- | mian Capal Commission i Dr” W. C. Gorgas, chief sanitary | officer on the 1al Zone, tre Night | g. bed ve Isthmian Can reports that caser of nialaria among employes is showing a material de- | Crease, F oreign John Durna, English labor leader | and president of the local govern- | ment board, aroused the ire of labor- | ites by declaring in the House of Commons that English workingmen drank more than American work- mei. The acting chairman of the Isth- mian Canal Commission in Panama has issued a circular making Tues day, November 3, the anniversary of the republics Independence a public holiday. Wreckage picked up in the North Sea confirms the fear that the steam- er Yaumouih foundered. It is be Heved that all of her erew perished. suffragettes arrcsted during the disorders about the House of Com« mons in London were each fined $25. Crown Prince George of Servia, arrived ia 8t. Petersburg for an au- dieace with the Car. A preliminary understanding has been arranged between Bulgaria and Turkey. Russia and Japan plan to withdraw troops from Chill Province, China, floon. Suffragettes caused another dis turbance in the Brissh House of Commons, In consequoance of which 15 were arrested and the Speaker ordered the strangers’ and the ladies’ gallerios closed until further notice, The Venciuelan govorament sent a reply to the Netherlands suggesting the sonding of a confidontial agent to settle all pending controversies. The British Aero Club has awarl« ed its gold :nedal to the Wright hrothers of Dayton, O., for thelr re. MRS: Wo 1STOR we PASSES. AWAY For Years’ ‘Ruler of of New York's Fashionable Life. HEART TROUBLE WAS THE CAUSE Received Guests Seated on Thronelike Dais and Dictated Who Was Who is Society Gave Famous Dances in Metropolis—Said Society Ceonsisted of Mare Than Four Hundred. New York "(Speci fal) - -Mrs. Wil liam Astor, for 30 years the ac knowledged leader of New York so clety, died just before 8 o'clock ia her home, 842 Fifth Avenue. At her deathbed were Colonel and Mrs. John Jacob Astor, Mr. and Mrs M. Orme Wilson, and their. sons, Messrs. Orme Wilson, Jr., and R. Thornton Wilson, and Thos. Hade, who had been Mrs. Astor's faithful attendant in her long illness and whe had been in her household gine 1876. Drs. Austin Flint, Jr., Billings, Nagle and Smith were also present. Dr. Flint had been in attendance on Mra, Astor for years. Mrs. Astor's end was most peace- ful and followed a state of coma, in- to which she lapsed some hours pre- viously. While death was somewhat unex-| pected, it was announced by Dr. | Flint that a month ago Mrs, Astor had a sudden return of an old affe tion and several attacks since then, Relatives were summoned a few davs | ago, and Mrs, Astor's daughter, Mrs G. Ogilvie Haig, of England, js on the ocean and is expected to arrive Sunday. Her grandson, Mr }. Laurens Van Alen and his wife lef: Newport today, having been sent for | by Colonel Astor. Mrs. Astor had been {ll since Au- gust of 1806. Soon after her return from Europe she passed several days | at her New York house and left for Newport, but on the way was fliness that made Necessary, D: summoned from As return she Boston hurriedly and remained with Mrs she was able to where she a Blop in was Nowport tor until her home here, beginning of her enforced Mra. Astor used to drive good weather but it is now 1S months since she had left house The only exercise she was gained from being wheeled about in an invalid chair.» While her IIlness was due primarily to advanc- ed vears, Astor's physical condl- tion was good until this attack Mrs Astor i Astor, who dled in Paris in was a son of William Astor and indson of tl Iohn Jacob tor, the f Astor fami ountry She At onfinement out in quite the last 1882, and Backhouse original ounder of the fortune in this formerly Caroline a daugl rn a wealthy he was Schermerhorn, She was born In this city and out life had been passed ancestors were of get Manhat mar aa yy in lors tan place 1 he had tor built and TI afterward gave Astoria Hotel, wumily home until the was built, some death. goles Fir out in mansion at fourth As & ir Sire Avent whic h present way to was the nt ma after Mr and it pres sion years Astor's For he ack Mra lead: and her } he the Astor was of Naw wns the exclusive and to mont country, # place of society of this with letters introduction Her entertaid- marked by tas and was her custom to give a ball each winter, invariably on tho first or second Monday in January, and this alwava followed a general afternoon reception, to which all on were invited, young of to ments were elegance, It and old. WRIGHT S MOTOR EXPLODES. Aeroplane Falls Without Damage Bleriot Has Another Mishap. (Special). — The motor Wilbur Wright's aeroplane exploded during a trial trip at Le Mans, but Wright managed to decend without serious damage to the flying machine to himself Bleriot made an ascent in Lis a field at Toury Owing to a defect in the motor the machine fell to the ground, but the height was not great, and Bleriot was not injured, though the frame. work of the aeroplane was smashed and one propeller was bent PAYS TO GO TO JAIL. Chicagoan Awarded $10,000 For Spending Two Days There, Chicago (8pecial)--Five thousand dollars a day was the remuneration allowed Harry Hughes by a jury in Judge Brentano's court for the time ho spent in the county jail on what the jury decided was a false charge of embezzlement, Paris of 8 aeroplane from state Shirt and Collar Company, and J. ©. Eaton, its president. Eaton swore ‘out a warrant for Hughes and ber 15, 1906. He remained in jail two days in default of bonds, and | ultimately was acquitted. He sued for 325,000, but the jury | decided that $10,000 was sufficient recomponse, an AAU SU AMOI 5AM Coat Tails Saves Man's Life, New York (Special). — His coat tails catching on a plece of fron work on the forward truck saved Frank Reid, 49% years old, from being ground to death in the subway when he jumped in front a train. The man was terribly bruised and cut before the motorman could stop the train, and will probably dle. The man sald he was very sorry that he did not kill himself and would try markablé achievements. " » | again, A SR 1 SRNR oe 5. BATTLESHIPS oivinten AT NOY CHINA EE Aided of ‘Squadron’ Under Admiral . Emory. BD Amoy (By Cable).—Eight battle- ships comprising the second squad- ron of the American Atlantic fleet, under command of Rear Admiral William H. Emory, arrived here Fri- day morning after an uneventful voyage from Yokohama. To the Chinese the visit “of the Americans is of far-reaching importance and ev- ery perparation has been made not only to extend to the representatives of the United States a flattering wel- come, but to Impress upon them China's desire for even more cordial relations with the republic than have prevailed hitherto. The selection of Amoy as a port of call is in accordance with the pro- gram decided upon at Washington when it was determined that the fleet ghould return to America via the Suez Canal. The 16 ships of the fleet left Yokohama together on Sun- day morning, but divided into two squadrons when two days out, the first, under command of Rear Ad- miral Sperry, on the flagship Con- gummy necticut, heading for Olongapo, Phil ippine Islands, and the second, under | Rear Admiral Emory, on the Louls- jana, bound for Amoy. The two squadrons will join forces again at Manila, the gecond division being! scheduled to leave this port on | November 4 nd to arrive at Manila | on November 7, China will welcome her American visitors with unbounded enthusiasm. | to this end are com- and Chinamen of exalted rank take part In the festivities, | fg struggling to preserve the plete will China the roachinents the pres- from ene of Russia and Japan, and ence of these American battleships | at Amoy welcomes to the Peking government because of the interpre- that China has chosen B is friendly act-—-that the United nelined support her in her contentions with her i TH, an Interpretation that is nized officially, but is own making, the desi; being father to the Manchuria is io ve to th States is to nef not of recog- China's Captured Two Hundred Whales, B. C The ot followed Victoria, {Bpecial) Lawrence the work for the wos! and has been took summ ited steam whaler the Orion the present ast of Vancouvy Isl loned wo 600 whales during Lawren to for ¥ ¥ por § whalers the for rid to $400 soi. $300 son, the for WASHINGTON | i Von Moltk memory of Von Con ran Church Barrios, a re of ingion good We iil Pablo Oc ampo de Leon, two resident con Philippine States, called Amt bassador h the ordia the minister :uatemain, on special aff a a imiissio Izgiands in at the White to talk with the President on tical and economic matters in nection with the islands News of the dai: Sastroas flight of A. M. Herring's heavierthan-air ma- chine, which was practically desiroy- od in an experimental flight on Long sland, was recgived with regret at the offices of thé Army Signal Corps. To man the the new Western field headquarters of the foresty service a party of 365 foresters, clerks, Stenographers and other employes will leave Washington December 1 The assignment of Brigadier Gen- eral Frederick A. Smith to command the Department of California, it is said at the War Department, may be only temporary. The Navy Department expecta to detach the hospital ship Relief from the Atlantic battleship fleet at Ma- nila and detach her to the Pacific fleet The model denatured alcohol still of the Department of Agriculture has been completed, and is in full operation In order to keep the organization free from the suspicion of evasion of legal requirements, George Otis Smith, director of the Geologic Survey, has issued an order prohibit. ing members of the survey from owning stock in any mining eam- | pany. Justice Stafford took under con- gideration a motion for a new trial in the land fraud case In which John | P. Dimond Joost H. Hyde were ners ihe ! Hous poli- con were acquitted, and convicted, Secretary of War Wright sald’ that hothing could be done in the | i matter of reinstating Mingo Sane | ders, formerly sergeant of the Twen- ty-fifth Infantry, who, with his bat- | talion, was dismissed from the Army without honor, Major General J. Franklin Hell, chief of the general staff of the Army, called on the President and presented a report made to him by Capt, John H. Parker on experiments for a machine gun service, Underground streams in SoutBern California depend upon rainfall with in thelr territory and do not come from distant sources, according to a government rt. Dark reddish brown glasses fur- nishes the most protection to beers, whose taste and odor are equally sensitive to direct sun rays and even to diffured daylight, is the Washing » & MAY HANG 1K OF THE NIGHT ROERS Tennessee fo Punish Captain Ran- kin's Murderers. NINETY MEN ARE IN PRISON, Officials Declare That the Most Im. portant of the Marauders’ Band Are Now Under Guard Mrs. Rassaker, Mother of Three Accured Boys, Is Dead of Heart Failure, . Tenn. (Special). night riders wii Union City, That at least six hang for the killing of Captain Ran- kin Reel Foot Lake is the at Samburg, Governor terson is In charge are hunting down the band. Corroboration bella] Pal- of the troops who the of at where members of the confession made by Tid" Burton at Tipton- ville, 18 said to have been from Frank Fertiner, another ed member of the band Rankin, and as a result Garrett and Tom Johnson, other prisoners are being solitary confinement, while prisoner made by the scouting par tieg of troops is being specially in before being herded “bull pen.” Governor Patterson is life of «a simple trooper in Samburg. He sleeps the officers and is to remain on the unt actor in the Rankin murder is down. “We are strong evidence,” confident we will the members band.” In addition to the Burton and Ferriner, the organization and activities of the unlght riders has been given 10 men examined by the grand jury There are now more than 80 pris id at Camp Nemo, The pris- oners. are complaining . little, being apparently too much frightened say anything. In one placed together It is practically certain that the most important night riders are now under guard, and while the soldiers not expect to go home for some it is generally supposed that greater portion of the work © accomplished A heavy guard is walching every movement of the suspects and are not allowad to talk to friends except when a guard is present to hezr their con versation A number of women ha visited them ging bzekets of his story in held the the living the camp and eats determined il the las! hunt- scene some mighty said “1 am ang pun- marauding ting he capiure of this Eel of fegaion evidenca con much ny 10 do ime, the 148 heen they their cakes and other eats of men, Haffa of tain Zopfi, squad of “Bob” get out iv them eved to be a prisones Editor James Bry Ne vs-Banner, who ‘ released Car mail of £4] $ _ the © & heen AN permi ( STOO iy riders know: ator $F 21 Of the m Whe in not given hi Alls Was socur Ti ptonvi le ys that Tid Bu rider, who dia he raiders, has been gion Clty under {Tenn } dispat 1. confessed night the secrets of taken to jail heavy guard lose d at DEATH IN OIL FUMES, Gases From Mexico o's Great Well Worse Than Fire. New Orleans, La al) Deadly fumes from great oil well fire, 60 miles from Tampico have killed more than a score of workmen during the past few davs, completely blackened the white paint on the glide of ships endangered com- méree and caused thousands of dol lars’ damage to ranches and other neighboring interests, according 0 Capt. Michael Henrichsen, of the steamship City of Mexico, which reached New Orleans last night Battling to save what they could from the wreckage American mine- owners, after spending hore than $1.000,000, finally succeeded in ex- tingulehing the blaze but even great. er terrors than before prevailed then, The flames had consumed the noxi- ous pases, but when the fire was stopped the gases burst forth, borers inhaling a bit of the stufy in their tracks dead, {Speci Mexico's eral companies of soldiers have been gent to the scene to of the laborers, to remain there, FIRES HERSELF IN STREET, ————————————— sane, Will Die. Chicago (Bpecial). — Mre. Mary | Lavine, aged 50 years, supposed to have become Insane, saturated her clothing with oil, ran out to the street and set herself ablaze. Neigh- bors and members of her family were aroused by the woman's screams but her clothing was burned off be. fore they could reach her. B8he will @, Sent To Prison F For Lite. Manila (By Cable). Private Mike Beecham, of the First Cavalry, who ran amuck at Camp Stotzenburg last May and killed four of his comrades, was sentenced to life imprisonment by a trial court before which he appeared. The court took the view that the erime was unpremediated and the resplt of a sudden ft of nger, Under the Spanish law, therefore, the court held that the circumstances In the case did not warrant infliction of the death penal- ty. Beecham will probably appeal from this sentence, BULGARIA WILL PAY FOR PEACE Accepts Principle of Compensation to Tu key. Sofia (By Cable) - government informed the tatives of the foreign powers of its acceptance of the principle of paying to Turkey which burden of per £istent representations | during the past fortnight on the part of all the great powers Thi decision was arrived at by the ecabi net after a long debate, in which | Emperor Ferdinand used all hiz in-| fluence in favor of peace with com pensation. Obdurate members of the who were opposed to the of compensation for fear of ing their party were won over reminder that there were other politicians who would be The Bulgarian represen hers compensation has been the diplomatic cabinet prin tult by to replace them and assume the sponsibility for the pa : Rumelian tribute The cabinet in influenced also by deputies Ag a further step peace, 60,000 LY Id a the mea in resery 5 the army of 60.000 day leaving normal strength government, with ill send a plenipotentis stantinople to negotiate Turkey. It ig believed steps Bulgaria has done it clear the and abroad in a situation RICH WOMAN JAILED. Refusing To Pay Fine, Mrs. Liston Work house, T Goes To Washington, Fol ¢ al i el i lowing a to obey and the Mrs ALBERS] Liston, a refused lo pay fault will serve four the workhot Despite and entreaty of fri stubbornly refused to a wag b with prisone to roy lared Vis via her, fi gf end undled a m workhous She dec to the nite nience arrival the entire Bik isd Twelve Men D Killed. Butt's Shortage 83540.8%4. the d Butt of hi retry term ing ma ning Count Paria (By ( of ( Boni modification of the defree of voree obtained by his wife, who was Mise Anna Gould, of New York. on ac- count of her subsequent marriage to *rince Helle de Sagan came up in the tribunal of the Seine, but at the request of the defense, the hearing was adjourned until next week. The Count makes this petition with the idea of giving his mother custody of hia children. Boni Again. "abie) The 4 ‘Oount o% % 2 i de Caste f dls Woman Falls In Love Washington, D. C. (Special) Mrs. Dorcas A. Gray, falling in love at the age of 7% with William H Mauley, aged 58, a carpenter whe At 79. indaw for a marriage license that she might marry him FINANCIAL The United States Treasury dei so far this flscal year ia $42. K0 Railroad carnings so far in Octo- ber show an aversge decrease of about 3 per cent, compared with a! it is understood in Philadelphia! financial circles that C. M. Schwab | is Tooking for some new capital to) be put into Bethlehem Steel, “Our business is improving right along, but not rapidly,” said a dires- tor of the Pennsylvania Steel Com- pany. Gross carnings of the International] Paper Company last fietal year were $20,716,304, compared with $21. 841.486 in 1907. Net profits were $2, $38,170, showing a decrease of $3,300. Standard Oil, according to Mr. Rockefeller, sells over half its pro duct abroad and brings $1.000,000 ot soM into the United States every week, It is a curious thing that United States Steel common never got as high In the big bull market of 1902 ag it had been in the early part of 1901, shortly after’ the trust hoi formed, nor did it get nearer than Points in 1006 of its high-water and go far in this bull move Feo yh bas got no nearer than 7 points of the highest recorded price ot bs, Which wae yuncheg in 1801, WHY THE FLEET WENT 0 JIPAN The Mikado Said To Have Asked Roosevelt. AN INTERESTING STORY IS DERIZD, Alleged Report of a Spe-ch by Senator Dixen, of Mon ana, Is Dec ared by the Senator to Be Un'rue in Every Particular— His Account of W hat He Really aid, RIOER GORFESSES ALL Tel $s 2 Remarkzb%e Stery. ni r UNF Burton The con and voluntarily, and ag unfol { Ww hile present put to « yagh 1 the band gitlorney at the hotel at A Tom rest, bond in com were the Burt when eat! i: infor: that the vid Wainy Burt Johnson wording to and Garrett and Willi BAR WIFELY DRUDGERY. Pennsylvania Clubwomen Vote Fund To Protect Their Pittsburg think you, will cleaning and scr ironing have upon the far toward the and spiritual development to advance? When Mrs, Anna C. Till! Titusville, Pa., made this re fore the State Federation Wag =a ‘all the women azscmbled, & that a fund of § created for a "domestic science schol jarship at tate College’ went through with out a dissenting vole, There had been much discussien as to the duties of the wile or dangh- ter in a howe, and many seomed agreed that it was all right to pate and mend, but that “drudgery” was the common mi istake of many wives Spark May Kin Three. Chicago (Special) Three men were fatally burned In an oxploston of gas In a tunnel on the Benth Side. The men were membors of ua gang working to connect two tunnels be. tween West Pullman snd Chicago. At the point where the tunnels juin. ed, a pocket of gas had formed. The three workmen did not notice it when they started to work therg. The only way n man can afford family doesn’t, Souls, {Special ) —- What effect, und of ubbing, wachizg and huwan soul? ideal in moral will such an cudless aghast, of mark bo Wom- cheer from nd a reso- 15.000 be of