\pe— FOREIGN POWERS MAY INTERVENE Outbreak in Chang-Sha, China, Is Rather Serious. U.S. CRUISER CLEVELAND ON SCENE. Several British Warships Will Land Men To Protect Property—The destruction Of The American And English Missions — Narrow Es- cape Of Some Of The Missionaries —Indemnity Will Be Demanded For The Property Burned — Chi- Peking (Special). — Intervention the time of the 1800 is believed be imminent by government officials as a the anti-foreign outbreak sha. Advices from there say that the arrival of a British gunboat and the news that three British ships, and the American cruiser Cleveland, are on their way to the scene of trouble have had a tem- porary quieting effect on the natives, The uprising is so wide-spread, how- ever, that the government fears oth- er outrages will committed that will lead to the occupation of the city. Several Boxer ve 10 uprising in resuit in other he foreign have been de- word being maintained was burned valued $100,000 missions stroyed, and the latest that the Yale Mission, by the Yale University, The mission had property considerably more than These mi were maintained England America. These tions will full Inde The settlement of this likely to prove a delicate diplomacy, though China position to termined mand. The Cleveland The warships al pad, ang. that 1 the not sions and demand is resist de a gunboats are under nets Slangkl ders 8p to has nese ted that foreign essary naval Hankow, is filled with from the rioting fled with ut f effects The fires that bulldings to have W. H J. A. Alexander, C ling, W. O. and Mrs wife, E Lawrent Hail about ntirsese comn powers it migh steps of force, northeast of missionary Most of their city. of tl YW have been | destroyed the Those who are reg t Hankow Wat a Oakes Miss 1 Keller can appreci: Several J had narrow escapes and only got away through the friendly natives, who in their homes until! mitted an escape Serious charges against the Chang- Bha officials of conniving with the rioters has heen made to the govern- ment. The punishment of the offi- cials will undoubtedly be demanded by the powers that seek an indem- nity. All of the missionaries of a few them DOT I intervention shielded darkness at its to conceal the fact that the outbreak is inspired wholly by anti-foreign hatred have now | been abandoned i PARDONED 152 MURDERERS, Record Of Governor Of Tennessee Young Cooper Files Bond. Nashville, Tenn. Rob- in J. Cooper filed a new bond in the Criminal Court to appear when want- ed to answer to the charge of mur dering former United States Senator Edward W., Carmack Many believe that because of the difficulty in gets ting a jury young Cooper will nev-| er be called to court pardon of Col. D. B. Cooper! continues to be an absorbing topie | in Tennessee. Political opponents of | Governor Patterson issued a synopsis | of the pardons issued by him. They number 956, and 152 of them were! given to men convicted of murder. (Special) The A Young Wife Shot, Gladin, Mich (Special). Mrs. ! Clay Armore, the 16-year-old wife of a farmer in Tobacco Township, was! found near her home with al bullet wound in her breast. Her! husband. to whom she was married | two years ago, {8 a pensioner about | 70 years old. The couple have two children. An investigation is being made in an effort to determine! whether the woman's death was a suicide or murder. dead Wood Alcohol Kills 8 More, Westerly, R. | (Special) .--To the already long list of deaths caused! by the dvinking of whisky made with | wood alechol and sold in drug stores in no-licenge towns thers were added three more. They are Daniel T. Sul. ivan, of Westerly; Rosario Patti, of Stonington, and John MeAvoy, of Westerly. This makes 12 deaths that ean be traced directly to the gale of whisky mada of wood aleo- hed COLONEL D. COOPER GETS A PARDON Freed by Governor as Court Was Upholding Sentence. Governor Patterson Gives Liberty To Former Political Ally While Su. preme Court Is In The Act Of Upholding The Lower Court That Sentenced Colonel Cooper To 20 Years In Prison For The Murder Of Former United States Senator, Robin Cooper Gets New Trial, Nashville, Tenn the Supreme Court (Special) of sonfirming 3B the conviction of Cooper for the slaying, on 9, 1008, In a of former United St E. W. Carmack, Governor Pat- m wrote full pardon for the efendant, declaring in his be- lief, Colonel Cooper not gullty ates ben- ator ters d a the case of Robin Cooper, victed of the same crime father, The as situation is tense, because of by friends of Carmack that politics entered into case, It is probable that Robin Cooper will never be retried, it said Coopers had been sentenced to imprisonment. Court was divided, sentence of C remant Was reading a te Of Colonel the is ob The the nel in It and his son Beard opinion in t that Gov. Maleol £2. doned the efendant, swelaring in the document: “In my opinion, guilty, and convicted ov Cooper while tice 1igser § Cooper On par- neit ar had t were and h » Governor a fa i evidence." Patterson's and Tennessee as nothi before Wil ine to asnsas BURNED LIKE CAGED EATS. Firemen Meet Death In Fire In New Haven Jail, Six SO Toe K nto the 1 a wd ’ HAINES AAG Ine most ever ff *ha ¥: Le has the | at the with isoners find three ix destroyed propert more than $200000, great chair factory « the jail, in which the pr employment; burned th nearby and caused serious firemen who are now various hospitals. To Carve Face On Mountain, Denver, Col. (Special) Plans the face and figure of wiping out @ lives, y valued leveled ne int cted houges injury to in the] i othar to the king,” carved in heroic slze face of an immense bluff overlooks the famous Camp| Bird Mine at Ouray were broached | by admirers of Mr. Walsh yesterday and may result in what would prob-| ably be the most unique monument | on record. The Camp Bird Mine laid the foundation of the Walsh fortune and it is pointed out that no mbre | be selected | “silver the Ofl-burning Torpedo Boat Launched, | Bath, Me, (Special ) .—Distin. | guished as the first of the torpedo! boat destroyer fleet to be equipped with burners for burning oil exclu the Bath Iron Works, No coal will be carried except for galley purposes, The destroyer wag christened by Miss Emma Paulding daughter of the late Rear Admiral Paulding, for whom the craft was named. Btatue or Greene At Guilford, Washington (Special).—A bill providing for a statue of General Nathaniel Greene, of Revolutionary fame, on the Guilford battlefield in North Carolina was passed in the Senate, Gets 20 Years For Murder, New York (Special).-—August Ot. to, alias Patersen, who beat his wife to death on February 2 with a lamp lighter and buried the body under the floor of their basement apart. ment, in a house of which he was janitor, was convicted of murder In the second degree and sentenced to 20 years’ Imprisonment. Otto was arrested in Mobile, whither he fled after concealing his body. He eon. feaned that he killed his wife In a EARTHQUAKE SHOCK FELT IN COSTA RICA Property Losses Are Estimated At $1,000,000. MANY PEOPLE WERE PANIC-STRICKEN. Government Of San Jose Orders A Complete Suspension Of Business ~Thirty Shocks In 24 Hours— Communication Hetween The Va. rious Interrupted — The People Their To The Towns Hu:h From Hillsides, Homes San Jogse, A series of intensity. } Costa Rica (Special) varying in Rica, extent earthquakes, 1a8 swept over Costa of doing vast damage, the uy which can only now be es at more tl | there hag been i life, but the people | panic-strickan their homes In all there 30 shocks {tween 12 P an $1,000,000 no report of | in the cities are abandoning for the hillsides have been more these { and 3 A. ty in Sar to the val hundred rand dollar has been destroyed, but it ig feared that ft will total vibratious than 10 of M. Jose th Bid CCCUITinE be x Of | ceased The DYNAMITE UNDER BEDS. Miner Blows Wife, Himself To And Daughter Pieces, MES. ROOSEVELT WEARY. Tired Of All The Public Functions Of The Great Tour, Berlin (Special) r have ved fect tha probable Deen eco] that Mrs Ethel Hers effect Roosevelt and daughter will accompany the Colonel to lin. These that Mrs. Roosevelt strong, and ig tired of functions in whic participate in | She is anxious oid the fatigue which would inevitably be connected with her husband's rov. al and popular fon at The Hague, Brussels, } Copen.- hagen and Berlin. Mrs. Roorevelt also ia unwilling to expose Ethel the risk of being spoiled, as was Alice (Mrs. Longworth) by being too much in the limelight. . tho advices are to not very all the public she has had to and Italy therefore, to av Chri ia to Silvey Service For Warship. Charleston, 8 CC. (Special) In the presence of a large and brilliant Governor M. F. Ansel, of South Carolina, presented to the bat tleship South Carolina the silver gervice which the general assembly voted to the ship. The response to Governor's brief address was made by Captain A. F, Fechteler, commanding the South Carolina, Fol- lowing the presentation of the silver Mrs, Bratton, in the name of the Daughters of the American Revolu-| tion, presented a silk state flag, which | was received by Commander Leon ard, executive officer of the South Carolina. Elected Life Trustee Of Princeton, Princeton, N. J. (Bpecial).—The board of trustees of Princeton Uni versity, at their quarterly meeting, elected Parker DD. Hanby, of New York, a member of the class of 1879, a life trustee. Mr, Hanby is chair man of the graduate council and suc. ceeds the late C. C. Cuyler, of New York. sos i ARN OfMicer Kills Prisoner. Salisbury, N. C, (Special) .—<In a desperate struggle Special Officer A. C. Attaway shot and killed Jack Johnson, a negro of Asheville, N, C., after Johnson had stabbed the offi. cer. Attaway had the negro under arrest, when the prisoner drow a knife and plunged it into the offi. cor's side, Several wounds were in. flicted by the negro before Attawny shot him. Attaway is seriously jealous rage. wounded. MR. TAFT IS HISSED BY THE SUFFRAGISTS Dares Speak His Mind Before Convention of Women THE UPROAR LASTED FOR A MINUTE Executive Had Declared He Could Not Fully Subsribe To The Doc. trines Of The Suffragists, When A Chorus Of Hisses Like A Broken Steam Valve Of An Engine Filled The Hall—The President Asks Women To Show The Restraint Needed To Govern, Washington, The DP. LC. of (Special) United executive President first the States, chief of the ns: ever to greet a convention braved the of women rh Lilie want connie COUrag His ni and was that opini S80 great was » throng admis were WASHINGTON BY TELEGRAPH ir il Compan members of the sub-comt? House are divided on Bill Lyon Monrovia, not § of the » Posial Savings Bank United Minister his arrival at declared that he did the conditions serious Senator Burton sub ority report on the Ri bors Bill, indicating lead a fight against it Agricultural Department statis. tics show a phenomenal growth in the value yf farm products the past 20 years, Stales re and consider ported mitted a min vers and Har- that he will Custer me- morial at Monroe, Mich The Sugar Trust was subject conference at the White House President Taft, Collector Attorney Stinson, Secretary and Attorney General the of a hetweoen Loeb, MacVeagh Wickersham The action of Quebec in deciding to prohibit the exportation of pulp wood into the United States was re. ceived with surprise and regret the State Department. Secretary of tne Navy Meyer re- ported to the House that the explo- sion on the cruiser Charleston cently was due to a premature dis charge of a three-inch gun, The personal estate of the late Thomas F. Walsh, the mining king, is valued at $3,600,000, to a petition filed by his executor in court. The Senate adopted an amendment to the raliroad bill permitting the inclusion of complaints In suits be- fore the proposed Court of Com- merce, William 8, Kenyon, of lowa, as sumed office ag assistant to the At- torney General, succeeding Wade H. Ellis. The Supreme Court of the United States reassigned for reargument the cases of the United States against the American Tobacco Com- pany and the Standard 0Oi1 Come pany. The Senate Judiclary Committee voted to recommend favorable ac tion upon the nomination of Rob- ert T. Devlin for distriet attorney for the northern district of Califor. nia. The Rivers and Harbors Appro- priation Bill was reported to the Senate from the Committee on Com- merce. THE CONQUEST OF MT. MKINLEY How America’s Highest Peak Was Reached. Notes Of The Journey In The Hands Of The Order Of Pioneers Of Alas ka~The Summits Utterly Unlike Those Shown In Dr. Cook's Book An Unnamed Peak Discovered— Found The Cook floute To Be Im- passable, Fairbanks, The Alaska Fairbanks Mount pedition that started ial). ex - of route (Spec McKinley the to follow reached summit the peak Dr the Cook but ob was Vie iiged ) BDANGoOn it as it impasse f Yow ¥ covered a 1€.0G0 th Murderers Of Officer Confess, Vashington bh ie Agent oried the charged ng { Special) Surber, to three at rej Com- bell that men the assassination Deputy Ww A. Anderson had confessed Ander- wae killed In a moonshine raid in Walker County, Ala, several days ARO. were ted with Arrow of Collector Four Killed In Explosion. Dover, N J The in- Lackawanna demand. (Special) satiable cut-off ed gion more victims o'clock killed injured four none is expects after 1 four men outright and others so badly that ed to recover Nine men in ploy Contractors Walsh & Reese were working together shortly of it exploded prematurely Three Killed By Explosion. Huntington, W. Va. (Special). A boiler explosion in the sawmill of Thornton & McDermitt, on Coal in Boone County, cost three gongs. The boiler was a new one, being fired up yesterday for the first time. Fireman Broke Neck At Fire. Nashville, Tenn. (Special). One injured in a fire here, which dam- aged the plant of the Bradford wholesale furniture manufacturing plant to the extent of about $40. 00. Lieut. John Ambrose’'s neck wag broken. Dismissed From The » Army. Washington, D. C. (Special). —- First Lieutenant Carlos J Stolbrand, of the United States Engineer Corps, was dismissed from the Army as a result of the court-martial held in this city, which convicted him on charges of disobedience of orders, conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, dereliction In money matters and neglect of duty. Lieu tenant Stolbrand was born in the District of Columbia and appointed from New York to the Military Acad. emy, graduating in 1905. m—— T0 GRANT PENSIONS For All Employes Injured or Killed In Service. 10 COST. MANY MILLIONS A YEAR. Married Men Injured Will Get no Per Cent. Of Wages, Five Ver Cent. Additional For Each Of His Children And Two Per Cent, of ay ¥ Of Saewvice Plan Td ww Each Year Five Old Above Yearg——Also Pension Employes, New York (Bpecial) Following announcement of an increase in United its sub- OQ map ade the for employes of the npl and $0.0600.1 Bteel Corporation ated at H. Cary commitiee, for a plan re- injured at we £40,000 Ag Heart Balm, Y or} NT a Lg PT 180° nning nuing Chicago At) Pennsy Orders Eighty Engines Philadelphia ({ Spe An iad nouncement made thn the road Company has the comotives once construc The tio of order corporation for n 80 freight | is to be filled at Splinter Caused His Death. Keyser, W. Va. (Special) Sate uel Hanlin, 77 years old, died at hie home at Mount Storm, this county. of blood 1 1 He ran a small splinter } foot from the kitch- en floor it was hardly discernible, but it caused his death 17 days later. in Plant For Charlestown. Charlestown, W. Va. (Special). The plant of the Baldwin Forging and Tool Company, of Columbus, Ohio, will be moved to this city. New $10,000 bonus The plant employs between 500 and 1.000 persons Poisoned By Three Wives, Fez, Morocco (Special). —-It i2 re that CGrand Vizier Madani Glaui has been poisoned by three of his wives and is in a critical cond} ODDS AND ENDS. In German cities food prices are now about as high as in the United States, Lavender and credited with microbe killers Traveling cranes are now rose perfumes are the virtue of being equip. be weighed in transis, The lead pencil manufacturers of Nuremberg use about 700.000 tons of American cedar annually, states Consul 1 The removal of a coat of paint on a canvas in a church of Winkel, Germany, brought to light a valuae ble painting by Jane Van BEyck's pupil, Petrus Christus. Experiments are being made in Cuba in manufacturiag paper from sugar cane fiber. The paper is high grade and cheaper than it could be made from wood pulp. A bit of primeval yew forest about half a mile square is carefully pre. served in the Bavarinn highlands of Germany, the tree, once widely distributed, having become almost px. tinet in Eurove. :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers