a : THE NEWS Relatives of Benjamin self-expatriated Virginian, in Paris, leaving an estate 000,000, wiil contest the will. Winners Montreal were Dunc Campbell, John I1., Pocotaligo, Lesere, High Mon Ami and Collis Oamsby. Rev. Dr. Charles A. Dickey, a for. mer moderator of the General As. sembly of the Presbyterian Church died in Philadelphia. Dr. Frank T. Boullinger, a well- known veterinarian of New York, killed himself because of the death of his bride : Four boys at Paterson, sent to jail for six saulting Julia Rimer, a y A lone bandit held up a passenger train on the El Paso and Southwest- ern Railroad, in Texas. Hard, the] who died of $2. track Griffin Hat, on the N. J., were | for as girl Years ung A grandniece is to contest the will of Isaac C. Wyman, who bequeathed his millions to Princeton Three men were killed outright and six injured when Iron Mountain | fast mail for Texas, which carried no passengers, left the rails near St Louis and crashed through the brick | wall of a manufacturing plant The executive Seaboard Air Line Rallway mended payment on August 1 first coupon of the company's adjust- ment five cer cent. bonds, The jury in the case of the weighing frauds in New YO received the che of the jud summing up 1 been Northwestern Unive go, graduated the lt lass in history of the I 92 | gons receiv In the preser of Pythias of Ili fang and Or cated at Decs on U (1 0040 of the recom- of the comsy tee concluded Chica- the as a made at a spe board of trustees people were when a returning sreiraw ersiiay injured locom coach Hav The fellow fe: Ecuadorian drawn from Sir Charles ponted British viceroy succession to the Earl The Russian Douma pe giving that body auth Finnish Diet. The Preshyt bly of gction nation ver has broken out in the Arm the Hare General 3 cided to take no wntion in the coro- | the British soveraign denying belief in | oath of of that portio Catholic doctrines Sir George Newnes the Westminster the Strand of the bearing . the founder of | Gazette, Tit-Bits | Magazine and the International Chess his name, dled in and doner Trophy London Captain Moller, head of the Sean- | dinavian-American Steamship Line, died at Copenhagen Earl Grey sailed for England for | consultation with the home govern-| ment regarding his successor as gov- | ernor-general of Canada Herr von Lindegrist has been pointed to succeel Bernhard berg as German secretary state for the colonies . Russian police continue to search for Jews in the Province of Smolensk and drive them out from wherever found. A Cermian aeronaut lost control of his biplane at Budapest, which dash- ed into the grandstand, injuring six women, The King and Queen of Italy re- turned to Rome from the earthquake district in Avellino Fire destroyed 450 bulldings, in cluding three synagogues, in Boris. soy, Russia. At Dorchester House, the residence in London of Ambassador Reid, a ro- ception wag given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt to the members of the Pllgrim and American Socle- ties. The Roosevells sail for New York tomorrow. The Viscount Maidstone and Miss Margaretta Armstrong Drexel, daugh- ter of Anthony Drexel, were married at St. Margaret's Church, Westmins- ter, London. The Princess Agatha Von Ratibon and Prince Frederick Wilhelm of Prussia, second cousin of Emperor William, were married at the palace at Potsdam. The King and Queen of Italy vis fted the ruins of the sarthquake at Calitri. One section of the town wag hires under the wally of ap old cas. tie ap- | Dern- | of the | | 20,000 WEN T0 BE IN BIG. PARADE New York Plans a Great Re- ception for Col. Roosevelt. DELEGATIONS FROM _ DISTANT CITIES Remarkable Display Expected Next Saturday When The Former Pres. ident Gets Back Home-——Spanish War Veterans Will Have About 2,000 Out And The Roosevelt Neighbors® Association 600 — Gov. ernors And Two Members Of Cabi- net Will Also Be Present, - Setretary Reception between New York Cosby, of the Committee, estimates that 15,000 and 20,000 persons, compris- ing local and visiting organizations, will be in line along Fifth Avenue next Saturday afternoon at the time of the parade in honor of Theodore Roosevelt's return R. A. C. Smith display com- mittee, places the estimate of boats at something over 100 Many or the organizations will wear some nia (Special), Roosevelt ingle ingig bands, To ‘each organization ocom- prising more than 100 persons a block has been assigned on Fifth Ave- nue. Many will carry Roosevelt 4 and other flaga and the tional emblem. They will not ! society yut will stand in their pls the Rough Riders ther Spanis War Veterans go past The Han Club, under the leadership of John H. ten, will send 100 members, wi go down the bay on the Commodore and later have Fifth Avenue The 8 Men's Association rshaled by Col, A will sen deiphia, ( ities will add to The Army and Navy Uni place for between Chicago Bat- ton Of P gation ‘incinnati i the number & 10T iH oh Lae » stand at YErnors al Lr daw 1 ais0 EO down f the rutt J » 0 he cutters to g reet : Secreta Wi Meyer Ty ‘ 3 » uiture and Sed have stand been on and will also the go down the bay LIVING TO BE STILL HIGHER. Prediction tl. 8. By E. Steel H. Gary, Corporation. Elbert H pxocutive Steel! Cor Cheago (Special) Gary, chairn of board of the United poration, the States A Roe VAN Ce general WR oe iz of Vance prod i ome And it 1 proper, but will general all ig "an ter revasl resuit MADRIZ MUST BE GOOD, More American Marines Are Sent To Blaefields, D. C Consul Moffat, at Bluefields, has con- firmed the press report to the effect that General Rivas, commanding the Madriz forces at the bluff, has to prohibit American- owned vessels of Nicaragua register, but carrying the United States flag, from passing the bluff to and from Blueflelds, if the vessels at any time Washington, { 8pecial) Commander Hines, of the Dubu- any interference with the movements of American- owned vessels, and that if fired on he would consider it sufficient ground permit Lightning Strikes Park. Berlin (Special). — Six persons were killed, seventeen severely In jured and more than a bundred slightly burt by a single shaft of lightning that struck in Jungfern- haide park. All the victims were poor working people residing in North Berlin, who were seeking in the park relief from the intense heat. Telegraphers Get More. Washington, D.C. (Special) An increase in wages, amounting to more than $88,000 a year and a de- crease im the working hours have heen granted to the telegraphers of the Southern Railway by the arbi trators appointed under the Erdman act to mediate the differences be- tween the railway company and its 2,100 telegraphers, Swallowed Pins; Dead, South Norwalk, Conn. (Sp: elal). «In the opinion of the coroner, Mrs. Fredorick B. Malkin, the young wom- an who swallowed a handful of pins with suicidal intent and died after gix hours of agony, not only took the pins, but swallowed poison as well It is Coroner Huntington's opinion that the pins would not have caused death so’ quickly. Just what kind of poison Mrs. Malkin took he was unable to state In his finding, as an autopsy was not performed. JEWS ARE HUNTED LIKE WILD BEASTS Victims of Persecution Hide in the Woods. Reports Received Show Unmerciful Treatment Throughout The Czar's Dominions—Driven Out Of The Health Resorts—The Cruelties At Kief—A Report Made To The State Department By The Ameri. can Embassy, Berlin (Special). According to dispatches received here by the Jew- ish mercifully Ald Society, Jews are being un- from residences evicted their sum- throughout set forth mer country Russia The that Hebrews Jispatches are not even permitted to reside in the suburban town, while sick sting watering are examined by commissioners to determine the who are vi places government whether | makes thelr so-| In| their state of health journ in these places necessary instances, they are driven out “The in most One the ing mounted cordons ground Jdistricts daily Every Jew iEnt Jews are woods i dispatch police ] province of Smolensk are draw- whole fully establish a r country a M trade effects grain country ENGIE RUS ITO Four Persons Killed and One Fata ly Hart. A Grade Crosse N. Y.~—The Horses Fran Awful Castrophe At ing At Haverstraw, Driver Lashed His tically, But The Heavy Gates Held Them On The Track And The One The Hun The Coach Down. i lockers Saw Locomotive Besbe, will injured Ae Mrs legs Fatally Kessler, tured, both Perry crushed The accident usual, but to a degree was not only un- dramatic and horrifying it happened at the foot of Graveyard Hill, in full sight of the returning funeral procsssion of which ehe wrecked coach was the first, and of the terrified and help less watchman, The watchman was eating a bite of luncheon in his little cabin when the tinkle of an eleceric bell warned | him of an approaching train Me- | jchanically he pulled the lever that set the heavy, balanced gates in mo-! {tion. Then, glancing from the open door, he saw a sight that will not | be out of his dreams for many a ‘night | i Just what happened will probably (never be known, but some eye wit. inesses say that the arms of the cross. iing gates, late in descending, block- jed the coach after it had crossed the first two tracks and held it prisoner ion the rajls, while the terrified oe- ieupants sat paralyzed gazing at the tonrushing locomotive. The driver lashed his horses in a | futile attempt to force the vehicle {from the track until, with a sharp erack, the picture dissipated and it seemed ag if the coach literally blew | iup. Fragments of splintered wood | iand mutlinated shreds of humanity {were flung far and wide. The en- gine stopped There was absolute silence save for the hiss of escaping steam. A search for the dead followed. The bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Seifred were found side by side 60 yards down the track. The wife was just® returning from the burial of her father, by whose death she had come into a tidy fortune. Young Beebe, the driver, was the gon of a wealthy livery-owner. He lay 20 yards near- er, stone.dead. The Rev. Mr Romth was the clergyman who had offiei- ated at the funeral EE ay Gives 815,000 To Save The Birds, Now York (Special) Mrs. Rus- sell Sage gave $15,000 to the Na- tional Association of Audobon Societies for its work In the South. Earlier in the week she gave $500 to the association. The sum of $500 was given to start a special "robin protective fund,” which the associa tion is raising in an effort to protect the robin from extermination in this country Ss DEAD IN TRUNK HUSBAND 15 MISSING The Woman, Mary Scott Castle, a Former Actress. THE COUPLE ON THEIR HONEYMOON. Her Second Husband, Porter Charl. ton, Stepson Of Mrs. Paul Charl. stall, Of Baltimore—Mrs, Charl. ton Says The Young Man Married Against His Father's Wishes « Judge Charlton, Of Washington, The Father, Says He Believes His Boy Has Also Been Murdered, Probably By Jealous Rival. Rome Detectives busy trying (Special). to lake are solve a mysterious at Como Fishermen of Maltrasio, near Lake which, when towed found to con- tain the body of a woman 30 years old. The head and body of the were covered with blood- She was killed by on the head w ye instrument T : 3 in the trunk so tightly that the knee The tr en weighted by stot village Como, a trunk about stains evidently he be ested on i down " ! b l ssed body was fr the 5 tials . FF bearing i the trunk fry ter le written A Russian Arrested. police have arrested the name aed 14 a LIGHTNING'S MAD PRANKS. Wom Shoes From Feet. Corset From Bods And Tea rs ins Buck was h ing The the shade and ribs. knocked i men Mrs HCH 8 COs from her her feet injured. rem il late at nigh recover The nine persons knocked down were all more or burned and injured, Mrs. Buck most seriously jured A dog her feet was instantly killed her head and her shoes Buck was onsci seus vhs # WE. will log being at in DIAMOND RING IN A FISH Is Valued At 850, But Man Paid Only 45 Cents For Fish, { Special) T while Hoston Kedder, of West cleaning a codfish which he had bought from a fish dealer found in the fish a diamond ring which be es- timated to be worth $50 Kedder declares the ring must have been ine side the fish for two or three vears, because it had turned partly black The original color of pure 14-karatl gold. however, was restored when he usted polish The ring had engraved on the inside “"K D O 1504 Mr Kodder paid 45 cents for the codfish and considers he got a good bargain Stanley Brewster, Like Juices In Stomach. Kansas City. Mo. (Special).-—Glu. ten from unbleached flour was as a Drosera plant. gluten from bleach- Gustave Mann, a professor in Tu- lane University, in the “bleached flour” case. The Drosera plant, ex- plained the Professor, contains juices similar to those in the human stom- ach. Dr. Mann also said he experi- mented on animals with the two kinds of flour and found that the bleached product did not digest as easily or as thoroughly as the un bleached. Walks. With Neck Broken. Pittsburg, Pa, (Special). — With his neck broken and supporting his head with botk hands to keep It from falling limp onto his shoulders, El- mer Grove, 25 years oid, walked home with the assistance of two com- panions after he had fallen from a street car. When taken to a hospital later the physicia sald the man might live, although the spinal col- umn was broken near the base of the skull. An operation will be per. formed to remove pleces of broken bone. & GOSPEL OF HEALTH 000 Sermons. ing Dread Discase—Foreign Couns tries Observed The Day Also, Over 40,0¢( { New York (Special) 000 churchgoers, nearly mons and 1,260,000 some of the totals given in a liminary report issued by the Nat al Association for the Study and of Tuberculosis, of the r¢ the first T National Tul Sunday ever he or ger. preachers, and more in pieces of literature, are On- Pro vention of culosis 24 The eighth municants chu United States heard the goss health on Tuberculosis Sunday, that the number of people reached by notice and papers in the news Hardly 5.000.000 failed annout sults id, report states that full of the 33 of the churches 0 600 the the occas St PY ' country to on WASHINGTO BY TELEGRAPH of State Ki the governn the Internationa al The Hague r General Will . hief of engine States Army, retired from acts fice Railroads en am filed a notice interstate Commerce poning the i vanced freight new ralircad law bas gone The Interstate Commis that the agreement hetwee {dent and the railroad offici ed only freight and not passenger rates The House passed the ings Bank Bill and the Ser ed the conference report erg and Harbors Bill Secretary of the Navy commended James Denver for bravery in - from drowning Senator Dixon has {: bill for the incorporation eran Reserve Corps as of defense The United States his first official Ope the ad rates fler th until a into effec rescuing Zia, Secre- Youssou! made call to nation of Maurice D. O'Connell, so- President Taft refused to receive had come as spokesman for a dele gation Medical Director Richard C Dean, 8. N.. retired, died at his resi dence. The President refused the removal of the Twenty-fifth Reg- iment, colored, from Seattle because of an assault charged to have been made on a white woman by a soldier The Sundry Civil Appropriation Bill and the conference report on the Rivers and Harbors Bill occupied the attention of the Benate Nearly a million acres of arable land In New Mexico wiil be thrown open to settlement by the President's proclamation. Major General] Wm. H. Carter as. sumed the duties of acting chief of staff of the Army. A memorial sent by the Iiinols Voters’ League making formal charges of bribery against Senator Lorimer was laid before the Sephte AD. INDIARS Details of the Massacre im & Mexican Town. 1R00PS HUNTING DOWN THE REDS. One Man Cut Down Before His Wife And His Body Hacked To Pirres— The Mayor, Chief Of Police, Town Treasurer And The Chief Of The Telegraph Office Among The Vie. tims——Sacked Building In Which They Had Taken Refuge. Mexico all With nd operators for their n is lacking at Valla- of a bloody renis sever. recefr- timate the « are sald e attack iid at them fidirgs volan- fied ind 4 are CON Jalledolid, the reb- commander ne whose ‘raz de puintana ACEO raged dians ied smia POET BARRED oU7 Don't Will Pay Immigration Officials Poetry New write pros liable mear ruling was Ch Be Peterson celebr to New York Scandinavian or his writings, in country 12 £ cul natur- ity prned {ier a brief ark with only 334 in i pom as exciad- eporied and a baeh- craracter. uld only is support, he was ordered Peterson is 50 years o of established good the nay over he aroused rest usiasm among the imnigrants livering an addres Amer ica, and how to succeed there ™ einy On ent! by de 8 Of Eleven Aviators To Race indianapolis Ind i Bpeciald Eleven aviators siresdy have entered replane race meet to the national ars fix of the the Wright wanned by The other machine fp- {0 be belong will aeroplanes brothers and aa Dolt Hits Bayonets; Kills. St. Petersburg (Special). —Light- that was mancuvering at Krasmoye- Selo, killing one soldier and fatally injuring another Aviator Gets A Tumble. New York (Special) —Olittord B. Harmon, an amateur, was jolted from the seni of his Seroplane and hurled to the ground as he was about to alight after a fight at Mineola, 1. 1. He escaped with a bad dp and a few bruises, but the ma chine was wretked. One of the pre peller blades wis driven ints the ground, halting the machine and pre- venting more torious consequence. Glenn H. Curtiss was one of the wit, vesses of the accident wo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers