er one m——— IN BUTE Tess STABS NINE MEN Pigsticker Kills Five and Wounds Four Fellow-workmen, HE SLASHES RIGHT AND LEFT. John Murphy, Shricking Like A Crazed Man, Suddenly Turns From Hog-Killing To Man-Killing In Packing Company's Slaughter. House Somerville, Mass. — Pursues Fleeing Crowd And Strikes Down Man After Man Government Inspector Disembow- eled. : At Somerville, Mass. (Special), ~— With a maniacal shriek John Mur- phy turned from pig-sticking to man- killing in the North Packing and Provision Company's slaughterhouse here, Driving his fellow workmen be- fore him he slew five and wounded four others. Two of the wounded, one of them a Government inspector, were reported later as dying. The dead: Hubert Smith, colored, Cambridge. James Catre, colored, Cambridge. Thomas Crowe, Cambridge. Michael Janicus, Somerville. Unidentified white man. The wounded: Dr. Daniel C. Hayes, Government inspector, of Waltham. John Cheevus, Cambridge. John Lews, Cambridge John Patterson, Somerville. slashed. According to some men Murphy had | liarly for some days, ed h dinner His of the return- appar- but he from at normal. ortly after 1 ly uttered 100 noon, 2 he sud- a scream and sprang Dr. Hayes, waving his 15-inch razor-edged knife, which he had been using in slaughtering } hand. He cut Dr the neck, stab! practically terrified o'clock hogs, in his a deep gash him over the 34 i d wisl isemboweled rushed wu Fe al Every nt down Inne plunged them mes men ran Pp el a groan. downstairs, with and at every body. On the the workmen, heavy bar of phy, but he was quickly again and wounded On the another heavy blow his knife was wrer hand. Two policems assist the workmen, was given a fearful beat was finally overpowered to the police station Murphy is 5 200 pounds and one of the strongest plant. He had been pig killing for some North company. He lives in Somerville, He came Iowa 9 years ago, and worked for the North company 5 years The wounded were taken to the Cambridge Relief Sta- tion, where it was reported that there was little hope Dr. Hayes or Cheevus surviving their wounds. 8¢ an iron another floor he was street years old, weighs was as the at the en rmployed years by married and from in is ET hagtily men hastily of AFTER RAVING. Maniac Hog Butcher Allows No One To Approach Him. Cambridge, Mass. (Special). death of Dr. Daniel C. Haves, was stabbed John Murphy, hog butcher, who slew five men and seriously wounded others at Somerville is expected hourly. John Cheevas and Joseph Chicosk. who also were stabbed, are in a eriti- cal condition and their recovery is considered doubtful In a padded cell at the Somer- ville police station Murphy allowed Ro one to approach him, and, after hours of raving, he began to pray. PRAYS he who the by three PREACHER'S SON KILLS BOY. Blows His Head Off For Talking About Him. { Special) .~~Ed- gar Serber old, was called from home in West Nashville and killed in the street McPherson, 15 ves id er used a fired twice, his victim's head. McPherson, who is the son of Eld- er Joseph McPherson, a preacher of the Church of Christ, was a ted He admitted that he went Ser. ber’'s home to kill him, Ser- ber had talked about Some weeks ago the in a fight, in which to have used buggy Pherson. Nashville, Tenn , 16 years nis yy Jeaae The siay- shotgun and off the top of blowi: res to saying him Seroer said Me- is a rhip on Dynamites His Own ‘House. Oregon City, Ore. (Special).—In a fit of insanity at Marquam, near here, Bert Garrett placed a charge of dynamite under the kitchen his house. The house was destroy- ed and Garrett, his wife and daugh- ter, aged years, wera killed, Kills Children And Herself. Corsicanna, = Texas (Special), Mrs. J. M. Green, residing at Rich- or " - ed three children, aged 12, 7 and years, and herself with a razor. mestic trouble is said to prompted the tragedy. Sa — Bandit Is Identified, Spokane, Wash. (Special) — Ww, D. Woods, now in jail in Omaha, charged with holding up the Over- land Limited, was identified by Po- lieeman Chester Edwards by means of portraits as Dan Downer, a man frequently arrested in Bpokane. Ed- wards says he assisted In arresting Downer and Fred Torgenson at Everett last October. He found in their grips a safe-blowing outfit. Torgenson is now with Woods in the Omaha jail. FOR HIS WIFE Louis Cohen Leaps Into Niagara's Torrent, Desperate Struggle To Save The Woman From Intended Suicide While Excited Crowd Looks On. Cohen Grasps A Stump And Is Kept From Being Swept Over, But Help Is So Long Coming That His Wife Dies, Niagara Falls, N, Y. (Special).- Louis Cohen, of Buffalo, saw his roung wife leap into the swirling riv- er between second and third Sisters Islands at o'clock P. M., only 150 feet above the brink of the cataract Without a moment's hesitation he followed her, caught her hand and struggled desperately to save her Mrs. Cohen probably died in her husband's arms Before it was pos- sible to bring efficient help an hour had passed, during all of which Cohen was making frantic attempts to reach the shore But the { gle against the current-—at this point lit is about 20 ‘miles an hour—was beyond merely human muscde. For- tune aided him With his wife tightly clasped him he felt himself bump into 0 to a got a grip with his one free hand He lustily shonted for help, and word | Was carried to the reservation police, i but it was nearly an hour after Mrs { Cohen jumped into the river that | Officer James Martin arrived with ropes, and Representative James S | Simons and three other men Three they threw the it within Cohen's he catch it about his The two from shore, and | owing times fell did it rope BTasp was own or were tween f was ¢ i before { When weak to t wife's he fe waist feet away tremely difficult, 18 nature I a good carion the ' MaKe cast body stream his wife's off down Cohen when rescuers that could not speak for 10 minutes. first words were: “She is out dead far gone on shore WAS BO got him there and get She died in my Go She is Meanwhile a crowd had gathered erintendent Perry and Chief Shoe- ge skirted the Goat Island body, but could Collen joined them ¥s insisting that the must stopped short of and might be reached 1 enough. Wi Barnet and Brown, who hud joined the searchers, finally spied the body just before 7 o'clock. It was held fast a rock, about 100 feet above the brink. Without ropes Brown and Barnet waded into the stream and moving carefully over the slippery rocks reached the body. Just as Brown touched the body the current caught it again and it whirl- ed around in an eddy. It was with the greatest difficulty that the two men brought the body to land. Life was quite extinct. body cataract en daring Hugh qr a Dy out Airship Destroyer Now, Victoria, B., C. secret trials of airships planes in Northern Japan demonstrated that guns and heavy loads carried was the story brought here by the steamer Mont- cagle It was sald that the Jap- anese have invented an alrship de- stroyer fitted with shells which ex- plode on contact with another air chi it gaip. That and { Special) can be si Buried Under Their Engine, Mich Engi- neer John Smith and Fireman Rey- nolds were killed when a Pere Mar- 1 Railway engine ran into a and tipped over, burving them uanderneath The accident happened two miles west of Free- Saginaw, (Special) .- Quetie washout nnd i2naQ, IN THE WORLD OF FINANCE Leading independents deny that they are to join the United States Steel Corporation. Uncle Sam is not making much silver money. Last month only $1,- 100.000 was coined Insiders In North Butte have been working very hard to get the public interested in that stock From a. space about square one Cobalt mine { $1,000,000 worth of silver. . United States Steel is operating 80 per cent. of its full capacity, A year ago only 48 per cent. was in i | Operation. 30 feet extracted {income Is now as large as it was in 11906, but not up to the banner fig. ures of 1807. About 5,000 tons of ore are being | handled at the Steptoe concentrator Of this the Nevada Consolidated Supe ' plies 2,500 tons and the Cumberland Ely 1,600 tons, An influential man in Tonopah is responsible for the statement that the company Is earning 180 per cent, on its stock. Commercial fafluges in the United States during the month of May, aoc- cording to Dun, were 1,028, with to- tal Habilities of $14,383,750, The output of lead in this country by the American Smelting Company is 18,000 tons a month, and the price has risen from 4 cents to 4.85 cents a pound. New York Stat $301,600 from transfers. ¢ collected in May the tax on stock Ear —— EL Te Years, ———————— JUDGE CALLS HIM MURDERER. William Darragh, Who Ran Down And Killed Young Ingvaard Trim. ble And Then Fled From New York, Gets Severe Arraignment From Judge—Next Man Arrested On Same Charge May Go To Elec tric Chair, Court Declares, York (Special) William Darragh, the chauffeur who killed boy ‘and ran was sentenced to Sing Sing prison for not less than seven years, and not more than twenty. Judge Mulqueen's remarks were calculated to make an impres- slon wherever they are read: and ft 18 safe to say that every chauffeur and automobile-driver read ev- ery word of them Judge Mulqueen proof murder | whelming, and that {have been giad to escape § New i a away, will sald had Darragh with He that the been of CO - add a viction of manslaughter ed t if another chauff { be on a similar « undoubtedly be hat, eu tried would hair it i harge, ne to the : Bent was i 13-year-old { Morningside i dred - i ran down Darragh wh Trimble, at Ingvaard Avenue and One Hun- and Sixteenth 8 on March and, after dragging the boy dist t Juries from {away and a4 pursull to i yf murd ) I'r i i for some ance wiiicl Lhe if ie ! peed Warning Tud To lave: on it =t i rine it is murder committed danger vineing a depraved ess of human life a premediated desi death of any individ “That law was enacted when the automobile and when the conditions could been foreseen. And applies to the reckless machines that | ; could be improved upon by the expert legislative draughtsma i “It was urged by your learned counsel that you did not intend to ill your victim But it is an i mentary legal rule that a man's in- tent may be inferred from his acts When you took your seat in that car {You were free to drive carefully or | recklessly You choose to go at a most reckless speed. And you knew that you bore a message of death for the uafortunates in your pat} You knew that all the people had ing, unless fiable, is when snp db § or BLiy ig i £ | i nf Was present not possi yet it 84 doubt if ole. for ife the and roads. You cared Your own pleasure than for the or any other person You had power to choose, and you to do that which destroved an inno- tcent life and brought the deepest sorrow to a happy home Brands It As Murder, "Experienced counsel their skill and persuasive eloquence in your behalf Evers admitted the slightest dice exciuded from the jury, d finally chosen were repeatedly ed in my charge to tention solely to the oy d ad in case Fhey it was not their 4 pubHe affairs, but truth or falsity of charge ainat you if swayed jury othe than a of duty it was not a desire venge, but rather a spirit of Indeed, 1 am convinced that had been a rich man or a dissolute man the verdict would have been murder, “The legal proo? of overwhelming. But not even most sympathetic could acquit of manslaughter, fining that crime were clearly appli- cable, and no question of intent is involved in them. The law does not seek revenge, and punishment of one criminal is intended to serve as a warning to others.” more evoked all who was those warn- er at- nce fajesman onfine tl} i 1d¢ pro- { told regi. on thin Wore {that late +3 ae uly to ag the or sense res mercy if vou for the Cost 8100 For Friend's Drink. | Montrose, Col. (Spécial). —It cost tJ. H. Ciark $100 to treat a friend ito a drink of whiskey here Ex {tracting a flask from his pistol pock- ‘et, he presented it to the friend on | a street corner, and was immediately 'arrested and fined $100. Vivisection Defended, Philadelphia (Special), — Vivigec- tion was discussed at the session of the American Surgical Association, in annual meeting here, Dr. Wil- liam 8. Halstead, of the Johns Hop- kins Medical School, said only one of the animals experimented upon at Baltimore died, and he justified its death by saying that as a result of the experiment facts were learn ed, including the transplanting of glands, which bave saved scores of human lives. PTR TR TS OL TS A SER L ROOSEVELT 1S NOW AT KIJABE Cowcatcher For Over 20 Miles. | Mr. Roosevelt Delighted With The Beauty Of The Scenery In The Rift Valley — American Missiona- ries Welcome The Party And Mr, Roosevelt Will Lunch With Them =A Night Under Canvas. Kijabe, Africa (Special). ~The | Roosevelt special arrived here. Mr, i Roosevelt was delighted with the beauty of the scenery, especially the Valley, on the way up He and Major Mearng rode on the cowcatcher of the locomotive for 22 miles On the way a which got on the rails, was rua down il the porters of expedition, } had preceded "nt were Rift Nairobi the Mr Ravelt tha & atinn {at form ho uj ed i Cosevel WW n puile Ti Aries gree Kijabe« iin a northwe country for mos and high The greatest elevation of the Kikuyu escarpment is 7,830 ¢ { From this point there i8 a magnifi- cent view Ti traveler down some 2.000 fee: into the Gr Rift Valley a rift \ be traced e Palestine from and cheer. the ican station to f Nairobi roy On teriy direction Nairobi and part thickly Kijabe wooded belween iB the eet 100ks 1€ eat though ©] the On t | £7 his expedition oRevelt exper the first €i: my Jun read rie, as some section of the i $9 4 5% » are very little known to white mar an WAGES RAISED IN PITTSBURG. By Republic; Other Companies To Follow. Ten Per Cent. Given Pittsburg thousand and Steel of 10 101 employe Company per W : the Renabl received cent, in at once It ir said all the other con- wages the first an iy wages, effective that practically cerns which cout April will restore the former scale before the first of July Orders were issued Frick Company of 3. additional this district This will make 000 ovens fired in the last three weeks and will put in operation a total of 15.000 out of the company's total of 20,000 ovens of the the H C firing ovens in by for coke (Coke 5 2006 - INTERIOR DEPARTMENT MAKES BIG CUT, Appropriation Estimates For 1011 Reduced by 88,500,000, Washington, D. C. (Special).— The estimates of appropriations for cal year 1911, as approved by Secre- tary Ballinger, show a net decrease $8 1810 The the of 00 000, appropriations reduction is made up largels in General Land Office for tions the department for approximately $184,000,000, while the estimates for 1911 are ap- proximately $1756.000.000 he to- tal increases recommended amount to 3469.000, and the total decreases $4 .000.000 The reduction in the estimates is In pursuance of Presi. dent Taft's desire for economy in are not believed the Interior Department will be in anywise impaired, Last Licutenant General, Washington, D. C. (Special) Arthur MacAr- thur, U. 8. A, will be placed on the retired list of the Army Wednes- day. With his retirement the grade of lieutenant general on the active list will become extinct. Major Gen- eral Leonard Wood will become the list as senior major general. in March, 1807, Congress passed a law providing that the grade of lleuten- ant general should cease to exist on the retirement ‘of General MacAr- thur. action was that the rank had ceased to have any particular status, a A BA Blinded By Flash Of Lightning. Vincennes, Ind. (Special).— While sitting with her back to a window awaiting her turn to enter the gold medal oratorical contest at Vincennes University, Miss Ola Wilson Yates, a member of the graduating clase, was blinded by a flash of Hghtaing, Physicians hastily summoned found she had been blinded, and in’ this condition she remained for an hour. On regaining her sight she insisted on going into the contest. She spoke for about five minutes and be- came blinded again, SEATILE FAR 15 OPENED ———— President Taft Presses Gold Electric Key in Washington. FLAGS UNFURL AND GUNS BOOM. Fireworks, Bands, Fountains, Ma- | chinery And Salutes All Begin At Same Time — President Presses Key Studded With Gold From Klondike—~Dual Ceremony At The National Capital And At Seattlee Addresses By President Taft And James J. Hill, BEE Seattle, Wash. (Special) Presi. { dent Taft in the House at 3 {o'clock P. M. pressed a telegraph key of Alaskan gold {acrogs the Contine the kon-Pacific Exposit f its fountain ban- started its band play re- leased tht fireworks: called guns | American an Jap fleets all the ! the White s a vl a spark Ho wv wheels tie Alaskan-Yu- * Wa | tion LEers « ILE ners LE rea Of 34 locomot bellowing forth universa which about Seattle, to br od ing i Wore people understas means exact and ing 1 . nstead game iig is t respec nd governi tem itself ar { be undermined of hy gloom are these made Ye are most imperfections in w= and prize most highls must guide our course past the shoals we hear as by expanse the sea Just because and the streng:} { fences we shonid any defect that might grow into Ais. aster And those who most exult in the present and most confide ig ithe future of this countrs mos ! bound to labor that greatness, |i it may be, become without flaw.” gaf confidence he only a NE sys gradually “In Ef pessimistic tions to any best no spirit ercriticism or EUERUS- gopsitive t we love Vo bo oy where roaring larger Tis the the safe wi Can breakers well as infinitely and sun- believe in 1 of de examine for of trust our them are her eh nt shall NORTH GIVES UP BUREAL. Director Makes A Farewell Speech To His Clerks. DC relinquished of {cnsus Washington, N. D. North tion as | bade farewell to whe for under him Chief Clerk will be in charge of the bureau un- {til E. Dana Durand, Mr. North's suc cessor, is confirmed by the Senate Mr. North was the recipient of | masses of flowers from the clerks | He sald that he has as yet fixed no {plans for the future. Mr. North ad- dressed the clerks, bidding them good-bye, and LeGrand Powers, chief statistician of agriculture, re- plied on behalf of the employes, { Special) his Director the the Years Census clerks gorved many goven have Rossiter Flour leachers' Petition Refused, Waghington, D. C. (Special).— That the interest of the Alsop Pro- cess Company, of 8t. Louis, in the ruling of Secretary Wilson, of the Department of Agriculture, placing the ban upon the use of nitrogen peroxide in bieaching flour, is too remote to entitle them to institute mandamus proceedings, is held by the affirmative opinion delivered by | Justice Robb, of the District Court | ul Appeals. North Texas Wheat 21.85. Fort Worth, Texas (Special). — Reports received here from the wheat growing belt of North Texas show that the first of this season's crop in the United States is being contracted for at $1.35 and upward. In some Instances farmers are aad curing contracts that will give then any advance which may oceur in the market at the time the wheat is thrashed, Millers are eagerly buying the crop at the present quo tations. “ i ow HR, BASES ASHINGTON BY TELEGRAPH A blow to the proposed lakes to gulf deep waterway project, I* was intimated, would be re- port of the Board of Army Engi- neers, The contract for drydocks at Pear] wig awarded to tt ne Bridge gevore the the construct] h Harbor, Hawail, Ban. Francisco $1.5606.000 LaFol- Pres- rela- ne Company for he Benate adopted Mr * 8 resolution calling on the ident respondenc report for the cor 10 the German on Taft of the District rney g ting WHaHECE Pregident Harr istant appointed Willis Rn of Col an att United States Commissioner Smith conferreg es dm in progress of 8 tes Cone tions A cut RO00.0 OR'ir Inte: The cotton A Direct : The Treossy of May wi: Se Senate schedul farewell or of the nat« r income Bolt Kills Pittsburg (Spe damaging tri y second his oft mused pne ber of Mexico's Mexico Cit a the 1.400 shops in the federal listrict, 760 have been closed by the Pulque Trust recently formed ; 2 the rich Haciendados of tials section With the diminishing of the shops by hall, the price of the beverage Lad It now ranges from: four to six cents a glass, whereas, until the formation of the trust it was {roi (wo to four cents Trust, 01 Palque {Spec aeng Has Clairvoyant Perth Amboy, N. J A clairvoyant known bere as ‘Madame Fay,” was arrested on a warrant from Wilkesbarre, Pa. She is charged with swindling Chester Van Scoy, of that city out of 21.000. A reested. (Bpecial ) w= ing under the promise that it would increase tenfold by the use of a ass SA James S. Manning A Judge. Raleigh, N. C. (Special). --Jsies 8, Manning, of Durham, was appoint *d by Governor Kitchin ag an as soclate Justice of the State Supreme Court of North Carolina, to suscoed Indge Henry Groves Coanor, pointed United States judge for the Eastern district of this State. Mr. Manning is about 50 years old and was the manager for Governor Kite chin in his campaign. A SI A ARNG. i Atchison's new bond issue amounts to 426,000,000, 9 wi —- ou “
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers