"FOR COURTESIES SHOWN THE FLEET American Presents To Japanese and BIE BOWL FOR THE CHINESE Navy Officers Who Made The Voy- age Around The World Unite In The Purchase Of A Magnificent Loving Cup And A Punchbowl— Designs Are Handsome Specimens Of The Silversmith's Art. Philadelphia (Special) —Immedi- ately upon the return of the United States Atlantic fleet from its mem- orable voyage around the world sub- scriptions were made by the officers and enlisted men for the purpose of obtaining appropriate presentation pieces to be given the officers and crews of the imperial Japanese and Chinese navies in recognition of the courtesies shown by them to our of- ficers and men. A committee of offi- cers was appointed to make a suit. able selection from competitive de- signs submitted by the leading jew- elers of the country, with the result that contracts for both pieces were awarded to the Balley, Banks & Bid- He Co., of this city. The committee selected for presen- tation to the officers and men of the Japanese Navy a massive silver lov- ing cup, 34% inches in height, ex- clusive of the base. The body of the cup consists of a large, round bowl, supported by a globe, which is flank- ed on two sides by American eagles modeled in high relief The han- dles are ornamented with chrysan- themums, the national flower of Ja- pan. The cover is decorated with nautical motives and is surmounted hy two eagles and shields of the Uni- ted States supporting the imperial seal of Japan, which modeled in gold The following inscription appears on the obverse of the loving cup: is the “Presented to the Officers and Men of the Imperial Japanese Navy by the Officers and Men of the United States Atlantic Fleet, in gratéful recognition of the generous courtesies received dur- ing their visit to Japan in Oecto- ber, Nineteen Hundred and Eight.” the Japanese Navy, which entertain- of the cup, while those of the vessels of the United States Atlantic Fleet are similarly applied around the base U. 8. Atlantic Connecticut Kansas, Minnesota, Vermont, Georgia, Nebraska, New Jersey, Rhode Island, louisiana, Virginia, Missouri, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Kearsarge, Kentucky. Pmperial Japaneses Navy: Mikasa, Fuji, Asahi, Sagami, Azuma, Yakumo, Nisshin, Kasuga, Katori, Kashima, Tsukuba, lkoma, Soya, Otowa, Niitaka, Tsushima Flags Are In Colors, Flee ( Flagship), pears just above the globe, on which etched the map of Japan, while gracefully arranged below {s a group of anchors, trident, and of the United States and emameled in colors. On the reverse appears the same fnsoription in Japanese characters This was originally transcribed by His Excelleny, Baron Takahira, Jap- anése ambassador to the United States The engraving was repro- the original writing. Unden this tnscription is the seal of the Navy Department of the United States, and a second group of anchors, trident and the official naval ensigns of the United States and Japan, the two last enameled in colors. On this hemi- phere of the globe Is etched the taap of the United States. ver, the seal of the United States and of the Navy Department, efrcled by wreaths of laurel. BRYAN HAS SILVER WEDDING. Lineoln, Neb. (Special) Mr. and Mrs. W. J Bryan observed their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary at Fairview, the house being decorated with flags and flowery, Messages and presents from all parts of the world were received, Their three children and two grand- children were at home and the form. er alded in receiving the long line of neighbors who called. TWO HANGED IN NASHVILLE. Nashville, Tenn (Special). — At Sunrise William Mitchell, a white man, convicted of the murder of 8quire W. H. Hindman in Rutherforg County, and Cecil Palmer, colored. sentenced to death for criminally as- saulting a woman near Lebanon, Tenn., paid the penalty for their erimes on the gallows, Thee were the first executions under the new law which provides that all hangings In this State be held at the State Prison. BUSINESS 15 NOW ON THE BOOM in All Departments of Industries. Reports To The Federal Bureau Of Statistics Show A Continued Ime provement—Falling Off In August Of Packing-House Products — All Railroads Now Handling Greater Number Of Cars. Washington, D. C. (Special) .——A continued improvement in the indus- trial situation of the country is in- dicated by the reports of leading in- ternal commerce movements récelved during the past month by the Bureau Of Statistics of the Department of Commerce and Labon Unusually large movements of soft coal, coke, and iron ore, a corresponding heavy output of pig iron, and large shipments of lumber to consuming centers are a few indications of Increasing indus- trial activity, the railroads, as measured by the number of cars handled by the prin. cipal car-service associations and de- murrage bureaus in various parts of the country, for the first time shows a larger total than for the correspond. ing month in 1907. The grain re- ceipts at the leading interior mar- Activity in the two previous years, movements of live stock and visions, also of hard coal, continued lighter than in former years teceipts of live stock during Au- Bust at seven primary 3,039,455 head, while considerably in short of howeven, Angust the and 1907 figures of 3.232.441 3,130,225 head, all the packing centers except Omaha show ing smaller monthly totals Year ago Of the total received, 857. 622 head were cattle, 94,774 calves. 1,083,495 hogs, 962,257 sheep, and 31,307 horseg and mules. Loss In Packing-House Products. The largest loss, as compared with 1808 figures, is shown in t of hogs, while gains appear under head of cattle and sheep The | receipts for the eight months ending | August, 24,809,491 head. were like- | witse below corresponding totals jin the two Jreceding years, the | losses In the receipts of hogs alone { amounting to 14 per cent, as co | pared with the corresponding | figures also shown for cattle, horses mules, while the 1908 figures calves and sheep show small gains over the corresponding 1908 totals The August shipments of packing- house products from Chicago, 181.- {241.313 pounds, likewise fell below | the corresponding 1908 and 1907 shipments of 184,2319.278 and 266.960 pounds Losses are shown in the case of the principal products except pickled beef, cured meats, | stearin, and tallow. The shipments during the year to Augast 31. 1.27 384,882 pounds, were below the like shipments for the period since 1903, the largest occurring under the head of fresh beef und lard. these losses the decreased exports of cles as reported by the burean eastward trunk-line movement | provisions from Chicago during the weeks of Year, 607.. shows an nalogous | Crease compared with rorrespond- jing 1908 and 1907 of 704.- 068 and 764.042 ¢ and he receipts the ie 44 and 9072 . 202 losses corresponding more or these jess to arti The of thirty-four 396 the tons de. Os BY TELEGRAPH i plied for longevity pay informed that, instead { titled to this money, they are in debt i to the governmen: by reason be {ing overpaid during the Spanish- i American War H. M lewis, whose nection with the Company and ot} caused a government investigation, was held in $3,500 ball for the ac- tion of the grand jury in Washing- ton The principal commercial apple j orchards of the country are destined toe become infested with San Jose scale, according to a bulletin just published by the Department of A culture The government does not expect jany international complications over {the detaining of the Norwegian steamer Varig, at Nome, Alaska, by the revenue cutter Bear { The total national bank notes out- | standing secured by United States have been of acs National Hr in con- Trust rporations, eri Kia i807,459, a | year ago Gen years secretary of the {dian Commissioners, died against $675.,612.,327 in Wash- { ington. Government {imports last amounted to $117,081.689, while the exports for the same month were $109,610.237. The American Red Cross sent additional $2,000 to the flood suf- ferers in the vicinity of Monterey, Mexico, Secretary Dickinson finds nothing to eriticizge in the action of General Grant in taking part in a temperance and law enforcement parade In Chi- cago In his uniform. The court-martial In the cases of First Lieutenant Edward W. Terry recommended his dismiseal, Brigadier Genera! WwW, 8. Edgerly, commandant of the mounted sery- ice school at Fort Riley, Kan., was retired for physical disability, Distinguished scientists attended a dinner given by the staff of the Weather Bureau In honor of Dr. William Napier Shaw, director of the British meteorological service, The criticism of W, RB. Michaelis that Gen. Fred D, Grant woras his full dress atmy uniform in the Chi- cago prohibition parade is not likely to be made the subject of official correspondence between General Grant and the War Department, A GREAT WELCOME HOME TO PEARY Naval Parade Proves Ovation to “His Ship. WHISTLED ALL THE STEAM AWAY, Ocean Of Sound From Land And Sea Greets The Roosevelt, With Peary On The Bridge, In The Hud. son-Fulton Parade — Mps, Peary Stands By Her Husband Most Of Tae Way And Is Delighted At The Rousing Reception, New York (Special).—New York City and State gave Commander Rob. ert E. Peary a welcome such as few returning heroes can hope to receive, From the bridge of hig Arctic ship wife by his side, was the ‘most promi- nent icature of t 60 mile Hudson- Fulton naval parade from New York to Newburg. All the way land and water vied with each other hurling their cheers of tion through the air to 6 i Lae ing man smiled thelr greetings Meanwhile back his answer to Captain Bartlett was kept at work so inces antly with the whistle cord answering the sa- lutes of passing craft that Chief En- gineer Wardell called up from the engine room that vould not have | steam ui 10 move vesol 8LOp the tie Ce sfully smith Sound a ship th could ture picked of | he the i wai i buffeted the nd proved at no sea back, tae most tran- just below Vest Point, this alternoon, as the for an accident to her steering gear Unostentatiously and without warning sh parted port tiller rope and came to The mishs was quickly discovered by Cor tder Peary and anchor | while rope was a delay of e boat packs of herself so st floe Roo evelt quil part Het o out a i lee het out the goene her a #ton a stog Wis drop : ¥ the Was it! spliced nearly proceeded there an toward § before Newburgh “It has most tn been gratifying have taken part in the parade.” said Commander Peary “and 1 am deeply appreciative of the recep- given the Roosevelt magnificent” aiso was delighted welcome given by aft, who show- proud of he . creeting her and her husband ac in whether tonight, tion cers and myself Mra with the hundre ed t} ege of She that has been crew of It wag Peary fine 8 of marine cr | " the the mselves privi- smiled back her happiness response to © from a battleship or om a saucy launch Mrs apprehensive that the Cook con t By ¥ ight c! husband. but when the oF Peary hat Nant ry been deeply Yersy m line to pass the Roosevel ing and and crieg the water to and Mr Peary stood J Plerg Morgan steam yacht Cors of friends, gave and Roosevelt a graceful greet. ing Commodore Morgan espied the Roosevelt off Stony Point and. In a Jifly, the signal quartermaster began to lower the yacht ensign at the taff rail reeee hn of bridge where on his big party ont the Must Serve 18 Months In Federal Prison At Atlanta, Ga. Philadelphia Abraham iC. Eby, mayor of Burke. { ville, Va., who was convicted recent- { Special) formerly th the Pennsylvania Company, was feptenced months in the government Atlanta, Ga., and to pay a fine of | $1. Sentence was imposed by Judge McPherson, in the United States Dis. i trict Court Eby. in Railroad Company, threatened destruction of dynamite of folk and Western Rallroad unless he was naid $45.000 Eby was lured to Philadel=~%ja and arrested At from to is etter a8 a defense SCRATCH CAUSES DEATH. Rabid Dog Slightly Injures A Four. YearsOld Child, Waverly. N. Y inch scrateh from th dog was responsible {Spegial) A one. © paw of a rabid for the i child of a local merchant was playing near his house one after. { tacked by a strang: dog two were bitten and were Pasteur Institute for treatment as j8oon as It became known that dog wag mad. The Murrav {injury was so superficial, j that no alarm was felt. He develop i sent to the | and died in great agony i Business Man A Suicide, i Cleveland, O., (Special). —S8ylvan- | us Bourne, aged 62, president and ! treasurer of the Bourne & Knowles | Manufacturing Company, makers of | Iron specialties, committed suicide In | his office at the plant by shooting | himself in the bead. It Is thought | worry over the illness of a son | prompted the act, Resume Night Riding, Paris, Ky. (Special) There has | been a fresh outbreak of night rid- ing In the Bluegrass country, accord- ing to Judge J. J. Osborne, of Cyn- thiana. A tenant on the farm of T. J. MeDowell, who had steadfastly refused to join the pool of tobacco growers, was taken from his home, stripped to the walst and given thir. ty laghes, He was then ordered to be In Brooksville the next day and sign over his tobacco or suffer more severely. He complied with the re- quest. SPANIACDS MEET SEVERE REVERSE A General And Other Officers Killed By Moors They Fall Into An Ambush Set By The Moors And A Bloody Battle Follows — Spaniards, At Great Loss, Hold On Until The Arrival Of Reinforcements, Which Finally Beat Of The Moors—News Kept From Spanish People. Melilla (Special). — A Spanish force from Zeluan, reconnoitering in the direction of Sokel Jemis, countered the Moors and met with a serioug reverse Gen. Diez Vicario, three other officers and 14 men were killed and 182 men were wounded The Spanish force was under command of General Orozco officers who lost thelr lives a lleutenant and two captains Spaniards were ambushed by Moors The division under General Tovar. supported the left by General Vicario’'s brigade and on the right by two squadrons of cavalry had en- the The wore The the on re. made a into the on their return Zeluan that the the and it was of into in fell Were attac ing was Spaniards of Moorish ambush and furiously The fig} and held thei infores yinpanies of nt ked flerce Ie of two « battery n ald of which ing off taal fr toial In tho Me and YOU'S, dead wounded Madrid (Special) Spanish Diez Vicari known defeat Moros Yet to and the authorities ar pressing whi dicated : h resuming offensis known. however, th retired dels the from because of 4.004 expects husiasm that ment Guruga is e reports alreg the people will when they hear yesterday Guruga pearance {ack was 3 ¢ of Mount ti Tangier News has interior to tain tribes . of t} ryving to the ho are fighting Spain It is sald that the ing upon orders e Sultan of Morocco credited a8 FEES SU pPOT ATroOUNne from th not SISTER. KILLS BROTHER AND Then Brunn Commits Suicide By Shooting Himself, ith Woodstock, C Armin E. Bruno is brother, Co from bulle made the 1 enacted in of the Dox after shooting hig ®ister into another room, life with the same pistol Constantine Brung was a retired New York business man He leaves a wife and two esons— Armond and Ewart The sister, Miss Freida liv. ed in Broklyn and had been visiting here during the summer Sot Dr by bh died death tragedy dence Brunn, K filled going who was ntine F. Br wound, and rd one In the country tor Constantine the Doctor, and then, ended his the Le resi renida Freidsa BOTH WIVES SUICIDES, A Clergyman And His Matrimonial Misfortunes Sarnia, Ont. (Special) The Res Evan T. Evans, whose wife commit- ted suicide at Penwylit, Wales, came to Samia three years ago from Wales, as rector of Bt. John's Epis. copal Church A year ago returned to Wales After departure Evan: was married to Nellie Davis, 40 year: old, a clerk in the registry office and a member of the church choir. Evans had secured a divorce from his first wife A month after her marriage the second Mrs. Evans was brought back to Sarnia by her moth- er and committed suicide a few his wife her SUICIDE IN SIGHT OF BIG CROWD. Man Jumps From Viaduct Before Naval Parade Spectators, New York (Special).—In sight of thousand to view the parade, John H. Hudon-Fulton naval Bell killed himself 100 feet high Bell was 45 years old A short time ago nervous trouble caused him a Jocal dairy company. PLEADS GUILTY OF REBATING. Southern Pacific Railroad Fined £1,000 In Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Cal, Southern Pacific Railroad pleaded guilty Court to rebating and was $1.000 by Judge Wellborn Through Attorney C tional guilt. The maximum penalty woud have been §20.000 Suicide By Burning. Buffalo, N. Y. (Special). Mra. Lydia Snyder, an inmate of the Buffalo State Hospital for the In- While Miss Cooley, & nurse, was making out a report by the light of a shaded attéendant’s lamp, Mrs. Sny. der grabbed the lamp, poured the oll over her clothing and set fire to it. Miss Cooley and Miss Boott, an- other nurse, were badly burned in trying to smother the flames HURLED OUT OF A FLYING AUTOMOBILE is Killed and Ancthar Badly Hurt, One Man James Bates Herbert Lytle, The Well-known Racing Driver, Was Hurt While Traveling At Rate Of 65 Miles An Hour In Long Island Every Existing American For Speeding Broken, Lost His Life And Derby Hecord Riverhead, 1. 1 The (Bpecial) smashing of every existing American record for automobile racing and a spill whieh Mechanician James injuries to another, Lytle, a well-known racing marked the running of the Island Automobile Derby. The Was a stock car sweep was run over 22 miles of tried road at of Long Island, and Mattituck The casualties open road life of erious driver, even hitherto u extre: the eastern between Were caus Appers Lytle, the by in as It road, two neareg Lytle and M had compl of the first ond to Bur covered lobert : a1 1ttes 2145 AEROPLANES WI BALLOONS LOSE of Liberty. Both Curtiss and Wright Make Suoc. cessful Flights, The Latter Flying Three Times In The Of A Vast Throng—The DHrigibles Start Tore $10,000 Race To Albany, But The Aeronauts Comé Downe Presence Wilbur great of of New York while in two huge ngloriously N SEW Wright Liberty York { Special) ircled the Statue the entrance Harbor aeroplane, the upper of th dirigible balloong in their task Both Wright and Glenn H. Curtiss soared successfully from the Aero- drome of Governors Island in their motor-propeiied biplanes; both great! dirigibles, manned respectively by Capt, Thomas Baldwin and George L Tomlinson and entered in the New York World's $10.000 New York to Albany race, were forced to descend because of mechanical dJdifculties before they werd well under way. Wilbur Wright made three sonsa- tional flights and Curtiss made one brief though successful spin of 30 seconds Jduration Baldwin with dirigible landed in the Hudson River less than an hour after the start, while Tomlinson, after remain- ing in the air from 11.36 A M. unt 1.20 P. M., came to earth near White Plaine, N. Y 22 miles from h starting point Neither the dir igible pilots was injured, nor was either craft seriously damaged. Jart e City i falied test i 21s is Of Mrs. Depew In Auto Smash. Paris (Special). —Mrs. Chauncey M. Depew met with a painful dent while riding In an automobile | on the Champs Elysees A public | taxicab collided with her automobile | and Mrs Depew was cut on the fore- head by broken glass. It was a! first feared she might lose the sight | eye, but this danger is now past, and, with the Senator, she wil! sail for New York Saturday. i IN TEE WORLD OF FINANCE | —" BCCI- | Patten is again prices for wheat, predicting lower indicating he ia It is reported that United States Steel will spend $10.000.000 on its plant near Youngstown, QO The Rock Island syster’in August gained $1,273,820 in gross earnings It is estimated that $1,000,000. 00) worth of electrification work hag been outifhed for the coming year in the United States Union Pacific In August gained $078,143 in gross and $711.561 in net earnings. Southern Pacific gained $1,479,108 in gross and $1,067,009 in net “General business conditions throughout the St Paul's territory could hardly be myeh better,” saye Chairman Miller of that company. Philadelphia bank clearings in September were $600,177.000, or an increase of $112,723,000 over that month 19008 Big stock mare ket business helped to swell the bank clearings. but activity in general trade also helped decidedly. TWO MILLION SEE THE GREAT PARADE Hudson River's History Depicted in Big Pageant. Marvelous Floats, 54 In With Their Escorts Of Patriotic Bocieties, Move Along New York's Streets Walls Five And Onec.half Miles Fm foe The Buildings Are Ablaze With Bunting — Police Have Little Trouble With Crowd. Number, Between Human i Fault ing, O6 Ce which epoclti-making 111111 §a nturies, ay horses confual tl pu sf their instances the Point” “Canture CORRS Pr Washington Taki: TRAIL LOST ON OILED STREETS Bloodhounds Found Uscless In Tracing Fugitives { Special) TI! with bl the of th trails modern oiled EE the was demonstraed robhe Recently wholesale fuburd resulted dogs were oiled streets Fred Crouse, chogen as the fugitive for the afternoon's iry out, started across the prainie The dogs fol lowed his trial with rapidit they caught up circle back 3 such long the that before he could point On a second trail he crossed an and the scent 4 4 1am vO giar E ed etret was lost Shooting Accidental, He Says. Lexington, Ky (Special). —Han- nibal Hurst, who shot and probabl: fatally wounded his brother. Judgs C. J. C. Hurst, In Breathitt County, issued a statement, which he cansed to nailed to the front door of the Courthouse in Jackson. In this statement he says that the shooting was accidental! and that he was care. lessly handling a when it wa discharged The wounded. man also declared the shooting was accidents be isanl pisol Girl Found Dying In Wilds Fe, M. (Special) Miss Montgomery, here from Shreveport, La Eante N Gertrude who where she college for five years, died having been attacked the outskirts of convicts at work the vicinity in this city, and shot on town Three the highway in heen accused the on have Bank Robbed Of 810.000, Glenwood Springs, Colo ).~Two men entered the Citizens’ National Bank here and, after holld- ing up two clerks, robbed the safe and escaped on horseback with $10. 000. The men entered as though they were customers While one man covered the clerks the other looted the gafe and the cash drawer. { Spe~- 5 Gets 8300 Pear! With Oyster, Plainfield, N. J. (Special) While opening oysters at his oyster shop here Garret Van Name found a pearl, the size of a hazel nut. Local jow- e¢lers placed a valve of $500 on It and Van Name refused $300. Las: season he frequently found pearls in oysters. One he sald he sold for $200, May Use English In Church. Burlington. lowa (Special). Ae. tion which may load to the use of English In the church services in. stead of German wae taken by the general conferonce of the German Evangelical 8ynod of North America A resolution was passed permitting the language best understood ia the community to be used in the young people's societies, A The postmarks of Belglum adver {He the International Exposition of i810.