LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH 11)0 REPORTED DEAD IN GREAT FOREST EIRE Domestic Miss Fola Lafollette, daughter of Senator Lafollette, hag filed a motion In the federal court at Chicago to et aside the order of adjudication In the bankruptcy of the Will J. Block Amusement Company. She ask $;.: damage, alleging that he was engaged to play a role In "Honor Bright." that m never stag ed, and. as a result, failed to receive $50 a week salary agreed upon. Charles Humphries, chief clerk in the Bureau of Police of Philadelphia, and Harry B. Bromley, of a well known family of manufacturers, were run down and killed by a train while crossing the tracks, of the Reading Railroad at Nlcetown Station In the northern section of the city The auto crashed through the gates at the crossing directly In the path of a train. Kidnapped and held a captive for 24 hours In a lonely hut. where sho was horribly maltreated. Clara Kon ter, aged is. was mysteriously return ed In a dying condition to her homo at Shawsiown. near Pittsburg. Charles .1. Swsln. former president of the Quaker City Auto Club, and Dr. John H. Overpeck were seriously Injured by an auto turning turtle fnto a ditch. S.ieclal agents for the government In Chicago are collecting alleged evi dence to substantiate proceedings for the disruption of the Harriman sys tem of railroads. President Truesdale. of the Dela ware, Lackawanna and Western Rall-A-oad. refuses to treat with the Switch men's i'liion, and a strike is threat ened. The conference between the attor neys for the government that has been held at Lenox. Mass., has ended, after deciding to prosecute the Stand ard Oil case with all possible speed. August Kberhardr, of New York, the self-confessed murderer of his aunt, has been Indicted and held to trial In September at Hackensack, N. J. Officials who investigated the death of Edward Lauterbach, of New York, declare his death was due to Insatiate fondess for automobile speeding. A scientific analysis of the con tents of the stomachs of Mrs. Belle Guinness and children, of Laporte, Ind.. shows traces of strychnine. The millionaires of Great Neck and other towns of Long Island are arous ed over the number of evidently In cendiary fires in that section. The youngest son of Secretary Luke Wright sustained a broken leg In an encounter with an unknown man at Memphis. The mother of Barbara Relg threatened to kill Officer Shellard when the coroner's Jury brought in a verdict of suicide. It is now believed that George B. Cortelyou will not be a candidate for nomination as governor of New York James MrCafferty. chief of the New York detect l4(Pliireau, is to be tried for conduct II becoming an officer. Mrs. Robert Fink, of Philadelphia, has filed a suit for divorce, charging barbarous and cruel treatment. Percy Raisbeck will probe the mys terious drowning of his father and stepmother at Annandale, Minn. The New York policemen are busy killing all the unmuzzled and un leashed dogs In the city. Mrs. Elizabeth Gruber, of Philadel phia, and the baby she attempted to kill are dead. James H. Budd. former Governor of California, died at his home, at Stockton. Mrs. Estella M. ft. Merrill, known as "Jean Ktncald," of Boston, Is dead. The Sante Fe passenger train was wrecked and the engineer killed. Foreign President Davtla of Honduras nas cancelled the exequatur of the for eign consuls at CeitM for alleged friendliness to the revolutionary movement. Following the rioting at Vigneux, France, the labor leaders are to be arrested and the federation may bo suppressed. The Anticholera Commission met at St. Petersburg and considered means for preentlng the spread of the disease. Nine hundred and fifty common criminals have been released from the central prison at Constantinople. Major Sturdzn. of Viennn. declares the Roumanian Army is without dis cipline and has no drills. Count Bonl de Castellane, at Paris, has secured temporary pos session of his three children. Oil well In Austria continues to burn and four more men have been killed, making a total of 88. Terrific storms near Vienna. Aus tria, have caused the death of a large number of people. i'Mieinn Minister Paul, of Venezu ela, declares his country lias been in sulted by Holland. Thomas F. Gargun. of Boston, died at Berlin following an operation for etnmach trouble. The English Parliament f London has puss"'! the old-age pension bill ma I Ing it a law. The aged directress of a girls' boarding school at Paris was murder ed by two men. The Sultan of Turkey discharged Rami Pasha, minister of marine; Iz et Pasha, chamberlain to the Sul tan; Zekki Pasha. Inspector of mili tary schools, and Sellm Pasha, min ister of ml nS. Fifty thousand men of the build ing and allied trades went on a 24 hour strtue in Paris as a protest against the killing of strikers by troops In the labor troubles at Vig neux. David B. BUI, of New York, has arrived in Wiesbaden, where he will take the waters. Police fired on the mob during a demonstration made by strikers In Vigneux. France. The Sultan of Turkey proclaimed amnesty to all political refugees, of whom. It is estimated, there are 200, 000 in the United States. The Netherlands government has oraered the big battleship Jacob van Heemskerk to he made ready to sail for the Caribbean Sea. The bill demanding the arrest und Impearbment of the Franco cabinet passed Its second reading In the Por tuguese cabinet. The Universal Peace Conference, In session in London, received a de putation of blsbops of the Lambeth Con re re a re Spaniards In Manila are complain ing Of intemperate speeches made by Simon Villa, a FUlpluo candidate fur ifflce. Canadian Towns Destroyed and Countryside Swept FLAMES EXTEND OVER 100 MILES. Entire Country on the Crows Ntst Lin of the Canadian Pacific Is a Seeth. Ing Mass of Flames-Half Dozen Towns Are Ksported Wiped Ont. and Others Are Threatened. Winnipeg, Man. (Special). As a result of bush fires that s'.arteu Sat urday and still rage for many miles, Fatal, B. Ci Is wliied off the map. Michel. 14 miles distant, Is in flames, ind the fate of Hosmer, Olsen and I Sparwood, Intervening towns, is In ' loabt, as they are cut off from com- I municatlon. More than 100 lives are reported lost, 7 4 of them In Ferule. A tcrri tory 100 square miles in extent is I seething mass of flames. Through It are scattered hundreds of lumber- ! men and prospectors, so that the ac- I tual loss of life will not be known for 1 lay.. Much property of the Canadian Pacific and the Great Northern Rail ways Is destroyed. Including bridges and rolling stock burned, so that it I is Impossible to enter or leave the j burning area. The inhabitants of the I affected towns have fled to open coun try to seek safety. The railway companies have placed all available trains at the disposal of refugees and unless there Is a change of wind within the next 2 4 hours the whole of the Crows Nest j Pass country will be abandoned to I the flames. I There Is no possibility of estimat ing the loss of life and property which will result, for the flames are I driven by a half gale, making it lm , possible to put up a fight against I their advance. The conflagration Is j the greatest which has ever viBited Canada. For the past month forest fires' have been raging in the mountains j of the Elk River Valley country, but they have not beeji considered seri j ously. Saturday morning a heavy I wind sprang up from the west and ! early in the afternoon the flames ; appeared over the crest of the moun I tains to the west of Fernle. They ran down the mountain side and be- l fore :t fire guard could be organized i had entered the town. Within an hour the town was ! doomed and the Inhabitants sought safety In flight, leaving everything behind them. All night and Sunday morning the exodus continued, the destination being a small prairie in the valley three miles south of the town. At present 3,000 people are camp ed there in the open, their only pro tection being shelter built of brush or blankets, while a constant shower of sparks from the burning area keeps falling through the pall of smoke by which they are surrounded. For a time communication with towns to the east was kept open, but with the burning of the bridges across the Elk River this way was j closed. Scattered through the val ley are many small prairies and all of these have their groups of refugees. The hills in all directions arc a seething mass of flames, cutting on every avenue of escape. The lire spread with unprecedented rapidity, and it is feared that several parlies who tried to get through the pass have been cut off Families have been separated and there is at pres ent no means of checking up the fatalities. At Fernle the only buildings re maining are six smau shacks on the banks of the Elk River, the offices of the Crows Nest Coal Company and the Fikes wood warehouse. The of , flees of the Canadian Pacific Railroad ; and Great Northern are gone togeth er with all of the rolling stock in ! the yards, the sleeping car Osceola ! being the only car left. One hundred j cars of coke, the property of the I Great Northern, nre gone, and the ! stock piles of coal and coke, holding . about half a million tons, are In ' flames. It is now feared that the fire may 1 get in the mines themselves, several of which are open In the neighbor hood. This will meun incalculable damage as the whole of the valley ' is underlaid wilh coal. I At preient the fire Is following the : crest of the mountain chain above Sparwood. cnting down into the valleys on either side It 1b travell ing al a tremendous rate of speed md unless there Is a change of wind will cross the boundary Into Mon tana within the next 12 hours. There are thousands of mines and r prospector's claims in the track of i the fire, ail of which are In peril. Nut Cutting Dividends. New York (Special). The Union j Pacific Railroad Company declared a : quarterly dividend of 2 Vi per cent. I on its common stock and a semian nual dividend of Z per cent, on Us I preferred stock. The Southern Paci fic Railroad Compdny declared a quarterly dividend of 1 per cent. I on Its common stock. All these divl : dends are unchanged from the last previous quarter. THOMAS L HISGEN IS NAMED FOR PRESIDENT Massachusetts Man Candidate of Independence Party. Chicago (Special). For President THOMAS HISGEN, of Massachu setts. For Vice President JOHN TEM PLE GRAVES, of Georgia. This is the ticket nominated by he national convention of the Inde pendence party. Hlsgen was nomi nated on the third ballot and Graves on the first. The first ballot for President re sulted: Hlsgen. 396; Howard. 200; Graves, 213; Lyon, 71; Hearst, 49. The second ballot was: Hlsgen, 590; Graves. 189; Howard. 109; Hearst, 49. On the third ballot the vote set steadily toward Hlsgen, and It was soon evident that his nomination was certain. Virginia broke from Graves and placed him within a few votes of success. Then came Washington with 10 votes for Hlsgen and he was nominated. There was a scramble for the band wagon. Missouri was the first to discern In what direction It was headed and swung its vote for Hlsgen. Georgia changed from Graves to Hlsgen and then they enrno too rapidly to count, all changing from Howard and Graves. Alabama withdrew the name of Howard after Hlsgen had been ac tually nominated and cast Its vote for Graves. Mnile It Unanimous. The third ballot resulted: Hlsgen, S31; Howard, 88 i Graves, 7; Hearst, 2 A roar of applause followed the announcement of the ballot and a motion making unanimous the nonil naion was adopted with a yell. The usual parade of standards around the ball then commenced while the band played patriotic airs. The uproar continued eight minutes and then a committee was Bent to escort Mr. Hlsgen to the hall. Chairman Walsh appointed as members of the escorting committee Messrs. Howard, Graves, and Lyon, who had Just been competitors of the Massachusetts man. While the committee was seeking the nominee the roll-call for the nomination of a Vice Presidential candidate was begun. Clarence J. Sbearn, of New York, presented the name of John Temple Graves and asked that It be given the unanimous vote of the conven tion. Indiana's candidate, Charles F. S. N'eal, was nominaed by E. G. Bal lard, of Gary. Graves was nominated on the first ballot. The name of William Jennings Bryan almost caused a riot In the convention when a Kansas delegate attempted to put In nomination the nominee of the Democratic party. What Plat form Provides. The important planks of the plat form are as follows: 1. Initiative and referendum. 2. The right of recall of office holders. 3. Government ownership of rail roads as soon as the Government run show Its ability to operate, and Government ownership of telegraph companies. 4. All money to be Issued by the Government . 5. Postal savings banks the de posits to be loaned In the people on good and sufficient security. 6. Good roads. 7. No Injunctions to be Issued without notice and hearing, and all contempt court cases to be tried by a jury. 8. Elght-hotir-day labor law. 9. Opposition to child labor. 10. To suppress bucket-shops and prevent flctltuous dealings in farm products. 11. Physical valuation of the rail roads. 12. Against the immigration of Asiatics. Woman Tortured. Hot Springs. Ark. (Special). Mrs. N. Pettit was attacked by a man who, after beating her almost in sensible, thrust a rag saturated with arsenic Into her mouth, bound her to her bed with wire and then tied a number of matches to her mouth so that they would become Ignited if she moved her head. Two hours after Mrs. Pettit had been bound and gagged her husband returned from work and released her. IN II PISTOL DOEL WITH BURGLARS Three Robbers Dash Off in Auto Into Darkness. BATTLE ON LAWN OF HOME. Watchman of 12,0(j0-acre Estate Ex changes Shot for Shot With Men E. C. Convene, a Wealthy Ntw Yorker, Joins In Fnslllsdo Ons of the Burglars Wounded. Greenwich, Ct. (Special) Conyers Manor, the 1,200 acre estate of E. O. Converse.- a wealthy New Yorker and a director of the United States Steel Corporation, was the scene of a thrilling pistol duel between three burglars and the night watchman on the estate. The men were driven off after a number of shots had been fired and Just as Mr. Converse, him self heavily armed, rushed from the house and went to the watchman's assistance. The watchman declares that one of the would-be robbers was struck by a bullet, but he prob ably was not dangerously hurt, as he picked himself up and made his escape with his companions. It Is believed (he .three men had an auto mobile in waiting outside the giounds, as a moment after the shooting a car carrying three men was seen racing away toward Bed ford, N. Y. The presence of the burglars in the grounds was made known by Mr. Converse's pet collie, who dash ed out of the house, barking loudly, and ran to a hedge near the watch man's cottage. The watchman went down to make an Investigation. As he approached the hedge three men sprang upon him, pinioned his arms, and then one of the trio pointed a revolver at his head and directed him to make no outcry. In the meantime the collie's barking had aroused the household, and when lights began to flash In the windows the robbers became frightened nnd, releasing their prisoner, ran down beside the hedge toward the street. The moment he was released the watchman opened fire with two re volvers which he carried, and the fleeing desperadoes, turning as they ran, sent back she for shot. Just as the three men were about to turn through an opening in the hedge leading to the road, the watchman says one of them threw up his arms, sprang Into the air and fell to the ground in a heap. A moment later, however, he was on his feet and running after his companions. All three succeeded in getting away Just as Mr. Converse, with a revolver In wither hand, rushed across the lawn to take a hand' in the battle. The Converse estate is one of the finest of many beautiful summer places maintained by wealthy New Yorkers In this vicinity. It is situ ated about eight miles from the cen ter of the village proper. DIES Of ELEPHANTIASIS. JUDGE WILLIAM H. TAFT NOIIFIED OE HIS NOMINATION Republicans Must Carry On Policies of President, He Asserts. Woman Weighed BIO Pounds And Buffered For 19 Years. Pittsburg (Special). After suffer ing for 19 years from elephantiasis, Mrs. Anna E. Lynch died at her home on the State road, near Mc Keesport. At her death she weighed 510 pounds. When afflicted years ago Mrs. Lynch weighed ICTj pounds. The disease started similarly to ery Blpelas and the lower limbs began swelling. Her left limb measured 8fi Inches around the calf und the right leg 6f inches. Finally the whole body became affected, and the physicians claimed the disease killed her when Is reached the heart. Mrs. Lynch was 00 years old and formerly an ardent worker of the First Reformed Church of McKees port. During the past Beveral years she listened to sermons by the aid of telephone. Many physicians of the I'nlted States and Europe visited Mrs. Lynch for the purpose of studying the disease. SALIENT POINTS IN TAFT S SPEECH ACCEPTING RE PUBLICAN NOMINATION The chief function of the next Administration Is to complete and perfect the machinery by which these (Roosevelt's) standards may be maintained. The practical constructive work of those, who follow Mr. Roosevelt Is to devise the ways and means by which the high level of business Integrity and obedience to law . . may be maintained and departure from It restrained without undue Inter ference with legitimate business. Mr. Roosevelt has favored I regulation of the business in I which evils have grown up I hb to stamp out the evils am ' ier mlt the business to continue The tendency of Mr. Bryan's pro isals has generally been destruct e of ' the business with respect to . Iiich I he Is demanding reform. Unlawful trusts should be re strained with all the efficiency of injunctive process, and the per-, sons engaged In maintaining hem should be punished with all the severity of criminal prosecution, In order that the methods pur sued In the operation of their business shall be brosght within the law. To destroy them and to eliminate the wealth they repre sent from the producing capital of the country would entail enor mous loss and would throw out of employment myriads of work ing men, and working women. A revision of the tariff under taken upon this principle . . . (making It approximately equal to the difference between cost of production at home and abroad) began promptly on the incoming of the new Administra tion, and considered at a special session with the preliminary In vestigations already begun by the appropriate committees of the House and Senate, will make the disturbance of business Incident to such a change as llttlo as pos sible. This provision . . . (for Jury trial In prosecutions for con tempt of Federal Injunctions) . . In the (Democratic) plat form of 1896 was regarded then as a most dangerous attack upon the power of the courts to en force their orders and decrees, and It was one of the chief rea sons for the defeat of the Demo cratic party in that contest, as It ought to have been. The extend ed operation of such a provision to weaken the power of the court in the enforcement of Its lawful orders can hardly be overstated. The Republican platform adopt ed at Chicago explicitly demands Justice for all men without regard , to race or color, and Just aB ex plicitly aeciares ior me enforce ment, and without reservation, letter and Spirit of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth ind Fiiteentb amend ments to the Constitution. It is needless to state that I stand with my party squarely on that plank of the platform. We must be prudent, and not be lulled into a sense of security which would possibly expose us to national humiliation. SET TRAP FOR Shoot Captive Balloon. Magdeburg (By Cable) The army made experiments In shooting at a captive balloon at a distance of two and a half miles Although it was struck 30 times the balloon did not collapse. Cholera In Russia Virulent. St. Petersburg (By Cable). -The cholera appearing In Russia this year is almost virulent Out of 12 cases in Tsarltsyn there have been 11 deaths. According to investiga tions made by Deputy von Anrep, a distinguished medical authority, the sanitary conditions In the Volga towns are horrible. The absence of a sewerage system and water works puts the Inhabitants at the mercy of tho epidemic. Suicide On The Steel Pier. Atlantic City, N. J. (Special). Convinced that he had only a few more mouths to live because bis health was falling, Ellsworth Nutt, :i wutchman on the steel pier, took i.nusual means to end his life Climbing the rsillng at the ocean end of the pier, he knotted the bal ynrds of a flagpole, and tying a noose about bis neck. Jumped wide ol the jiler. His neck was broken. Nutt was 50 years old and married He bad frequently told friends of bis luleullon to kill himself. I WASHINGTON i Army medical experts in the Philippines say the dengue fever, which waB prevalent at Fort William MrKlnley, Philippines, Is not con tagious. England will Bend a large delega tion to attend the international con gress on tuberculosis, to be held in Washington in September. One hundred observation telescopes are to be purchased by the Ordnance Department of the United States Army. The government is to try different colored underclothing on the soldiers in the Philippines. Dr. Hamilton Wright, one of the members of the commission, Investi gating the opium traffic, finds the use ot the drug has largely Increased in I he past Ave years. Chile and Ecuador have concurred in the parcels post convention. D. A. Tompkins, of Charlotte, N. C. was elected president of the Ap palachian National Forest Associa tion. The United States and the Mexican governments ate stirred up over tuv lawless doings on the Mexican bor der. Former Senator Harris, of Kansas, is urging the War Department to lake steps to harness the Kaw River. Col. Perry Carson, an unique fig ure in the political life of Washing ton, has passed out of the spotlight. Acting Becretary of the Navy New berry announced that .11 me bids tor building colllen the Navy wers rejected, none uning satisfac tory. Orders have been issue relieving Admiral Hemphill and placing Cap tain Harber In command of the Asiatic squadron. Col Thomas W. Symons. Corps of Engineers, was placed on the retired Htl of the Army. Recruiting officers hsve been or dered not to enlist former national guardsmen unless they can show that they have been honorably discharged Switchmen May Strike. Scranton. Pa. (Special). Grand Master Hawley, of the switchmen's union, announced that 80 per cent, of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad's men have voted for a strike, and that the grievance committee Is now awaiting a reply from President Truesdale to a letter sent requesting a conference with a view of affecting a sett lenient before the committee takes up the question of ordering the men out. Stricken After Son's Funeral. York, Pa. (8pecial). On return ing from his son's funeral, Peter Kessler was stricken with a vertigo and his condition, physicians say. Is serious. The son was killed several days ago by lightning and five other members of his family were injured. All being incapacitated for work, neighbors worked the Kessler farm. 17 Pasteur Cases At Once. New Orleans (Special). Bitten by an alleged mad dog, whose head they brought with them, a party of 17 men, women and children of Tecum seh, Okla.. appeared at (he Pasteur ward of the New Orleans Charity Hospital and applied for treatment. In the party were 2 white women. 11 wblte children, 1 while man and a negro woman and her two children. Parachute .luinpei Killed. Jackson, Mich. (Special). Wil liam Oliver, a young aeronaut of Mason. Mich., was killed while mak ing a parachute drop at Hague Park, on Vandercook Lake, near here. Just as the parachute filled the strings on one side snapped and (he aeronaut dropped 2,000 feet to his death, the parachute trailing, a useless rag, af ter him. Oliver landed near a crowd ed merry-go-round, and lived live minutes after being carried to the nearest house. Policy On Tuft's Life. New York (Special). A Wall Street house took out a policy for $100,000 with the Lloyds, of London, on the life of Judge William H, Teft to Insure them against loss In case of Mr. Taft'a degih wltbin a year. The rate was five per cent. Village Destroyed By LamHIIdc. Innsbruck. Austria (By Cable). The village of Mer-Leg-Bains has been destroyed by a landslide. Six teen persons are reported to have bean hilled. Cincinnati, Ohio (Special) Stand ing on a flag-draped platform in front of the old colonial portico of his brother's home, Judge William H. Taft at noon Tuesday accepted the nomination of the Republican party ot be its candidate for the Presidency. The quaint old residence of Charles P. Taft once In the outly ing residence section of the city, but now almost swallowed up by the big business buildings that have sur rounded It was the centre of a dem onstration unequaled In Cincinnati's history. Political leaders from far and near, gathered to give the affair its political significance, while from the city and surrounding suburbs (he friends, neighbors and admirers of Judge Taft among his own towns people turned out in large numbers and without regard to party affilia tion. The notification of the candidate was made the occasion of a holiday. From early morning the downtown streets were filled with gay throngs, waving flags, shouting and moving In a seemingly endless stream to ward the Taft residence. Senator William Warner, of Mis souri, past commander In chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, headed the notification committee, which consisted of a member from every State, Territory and Island pos session of tho nation. The repre sentatives on the committee were chosen from the delegates attending the nominating Convention at Chi cago. There were also present many members of the Republican Nation al Committee, including its chairman, Frank H. Hitchcock, who made a flying visit to Cincinnati on his way from. Chicago to Washington and New York. After formally accepting the nomi nation tendered by the chairman of the notification committee, Judge Tift at once launched, without any attempt at oratory, into the very essence of his declaration of prin ciples, the first portion of bis re marks being a declaration that Re publican strength lies In a mainte nance of the "Roosevelt policies." Sewing Machines For 23 Cents. St. Petersburg (By Cable). A special dispatch from Tabriz, Persia, says that the horsemen under Rachld Khan, who Is operating on the side of the Shah, have pillaged the Kusso Perslan High School at Tabriz, de stroying the laboratories and library. Later they sacked the warehouse of an American sewing machine com pany, next door to the school. Find ing the machines loo heavy to carry away on horseback, the pillagers sold them from 25 to 30 cents a piece. Pitchfork In Skull Lorain. Ohio (Special). While loading oats, J. Craven, a farmer, thrust Ms pitchfork Into what seem ed an unusually heavy sbeaf. Glanc ing up as he raised the fork, he found bis K-year-old son Charles dangling from It. The boy was hur ried to a hospital, but died in a few hours He had been playing around a shock, and as the father attempted to lift a sheaf the bo stumbled and he fork penetrated his skull. The Universal Peace Congresv -fii' ct London, discussed the air ship iu warfare. Tarred and Feathered, Beaten and Thrown Out WOMAN A PMtTtO THE PLOT, Mrs. Chan. Marthlnaon, Handsome VV'lf of Wealthy Lumberman of Washing ton, D. C, Says F. E. Bliss. Jr., An noyed Her by His Attentions Inform ed Husband and Set Trap for Men. Washington. D. C. ( Special ).- An amazing story of hypnotism of aa attractive young woman by an ardenl suitor, with the result that the lattci was soundly thrashed and then tar red and reathered by the lady's hus band and two muscular friends, lies behind the arrest here of Charles Marthlnson, a wealthy lumberman, living In Mount Pleasant, a fashion able suburb of Washington; Jnmee L. White, a stockbroker, and Henry C. Cole, the manager of a tabu atlng machine company, charged by c E. Bliss, Jr., with assault and battery technical terniB by which are covered the responsibility for the blows i.:id the tar and the feathers from v 'Ich Mr. Bliss has not yet fully recovered. From the statements of the various principals or their attorneys, it rc ,ig that Mr. Bliss has known Mr. I th Inson and his very attractlv wife for sometime. His attentions o the young matron have been v. . y pro nounced; so pronounced, indeed, as to arouse the displeasure of Mr. Marthlnson and the alarm of hla wife. On last Wednesday Mrs. Marthln son told her husband that Mr. BUsb appeared to possess extraordinary hypnotic power, and that Bhe desired an immediate end of their acquaint ance. Mr. Marthlnson entirely shar ed his wife's views. He consulted with hla friends. Messrs. Cole and White. That afternoon, whilst Mr. Marth lnson was at home, Mr. Bliss, it Ib stated, called up Mrs. Marthlnson on the telephone to make an appoint ment to call on her that evening. By her husband's advice she arrang ed that ber admirer should call that evening. How Trap Was Net. "When I called in the evening, " said Mr. Bliss, "she asked me to enter the house, by the basement door. It seemed an unusual request, but I obeyed It nevertheless. When I stepped Into the house three men grabbed me, tied my hands and one of them pointed a revolver at my head and then they smeared tar and feathers over me." It Is added tnat they then thrashed Mr. Bliss and threw him out of the house. Mr. Marthlnson and his friends de clined to make a statement, but their counsel, Mr. E. F." Colladay, spoke for them. "The statement made by Mr. Bliss," he said, "grossly misrepresents the facts. He had a very unpleasant ex perience because he attempted to break up the home of Marthlnson." Mr. Colladay stated that the Marthinsons have been married six teen years and have always lived hap pily until Mr. BUsb came on the scene. He told of Mr. Bliss' atten tion to Mrs. Marthlnson. Mr. Bliss Is a student of hypnotism. Mr. Col laday went on to state how the plan was made hy which Bliss was lured Into the basement of the Marthlnson home. He said: "Bliss called as was arranged, and was Been by Mr. Marthlnson and his friends to attempt to' embrace Mrs. Marthlnson. He was then confronted by the augry hutiband and bis friends. His explanations were by no means convincing. His admissions infuriated his hearers, and they then gave him a sound thrashing and tar red and feathered him and then kick ed him ont of the house." Shoots Whipping Husband. Cnnonsburg, Pa. (Special) WhlU whipping his wife during a domestic quarrel, Frank Talmer was shot through the abdomen by Mrs. Tal mer. He was taken to a hospital probably fatally Injured, while llu woman is at her home is an uncon scious condition from her Injuries. FINANCIAL A seat on the New York Stock Exchange has been sold for $79,000, as against $78,000 for the last previ ous sale. The Giles cotton estimate places condition on July 25 at 86.6 per cent, against 80 per cent on July 10 and at 85.3 per cent, on June 25. Application has been made to the New York Stock Exchange to list $11,555,100 new capital stock of (he American Steel Foundries Company. A despatch from Pittsburg states that "the business of the Crucible Steel Company for July Is showing a considerable Increase over June, and orders are being received from agri cultural implement makers, which are not usually placed until Septem ber or October." The conference of traffic officers of the Southern Railway, in progress for several days In Washington, has adjourned It was their consensus of opinion that the large crops in the South this year will go tar towards reviving business in that section. This belief Is confirmed by W. A. Garrett, formerly of Philadelphia, now president of the Seaboard Air Line, who states (hat a considerable Improvement in business is evident there already. The syndicate In which is vested control of the Wisconsin Central Kailroad l.aB extended its agreement, which was to expire cn August 21, for a term of one year This syn dicate Is distinct from that compris ing Brown Bros & Co., Mattland, Coppell & Co., Edward Sweet & Co. and George A. Fernald & Co., which underwrote the Wisconsin Central's last issue of bonds, amounting to $7,000,000. The Bank of Montreal has shipped an additional $250,000 gold coin to Canada from New York. Concerning the quarterly state ment ot the United States Steel Cor poration, P. A. B. Wldener, a direct or, In commenting upon the showing, said: "If the company can make guch a good showing In the worst three months In years, thero Is every reason to believe that- each succeed ing quarter will show a correspond ing Increase. Especially will thla be true when the railroads begin to place their big rail orders, which have been 'hanging fire for some time." The British Houee of Lords pase ed the Old Age Pension Bill PINIONED UNDER JMRMNG AUTO Mr. W. K. Vanderhilt's Stepson the jnctirrt Paris (By Cable). In one of the most terrible sutomnblle accidents In many years in Frsnce, O. Wlnthrop Sands, a stepson of W. K. Vander bllt, was killed Just outside the grounds of Mr. Vanderbllt's beautiful country seat, the Chateau St. Louis de Poisey, 20 miles from Paris. Mr. Sands was driving bis 50 horsepower car along at a terrific clip In a desire to reach the chateau, where Mrs. Sands and her Infant daughter were staying. He had al ways been known as a reckless dri ver, and, as he had been delayed at railroad crossings, he opened the throttle wide as ho approached the chateau grounds Almost immediately a tire burst nnd the machine crashed Into a tree turning turtle and burying Mr. Sandi under the forward pnrl and pinning the Chaffeur Ptcklns to the ground An explosion followed and In a mo ment the car ens In flames. Peasants working in the adjolnllif fields were the only witnesses to tin accident. They rushed to the rescue but fearing a further explosion o: the gasoline tank and deterred by thi sweep of flames they stood Idly by not knowing how to give asslrlnne to tho injured men. Finally thej managed to raise the rear of thi car and released the chauffeur, botl of whose feet had been held tight and a little later after hnatlnft dowi the Are, they dragged out the torn bleeding and burned body of F.nndn Help soon arrived from the cha lean, which Is In the center of Mr Vnnderhllt's great breeding farm The Injured men were carried to thi house, whene It was found that Fandi was beyond the hope of recovery but (hat the chauffeur was not serl ously Injured. MIL TAFTS NARROW ESCAPE. Woman Standing Near Candidate Ii Shot. Cincinnati, O. (Special). Th steamer Island Queen was fired or during Its trip up the Ohio Rlvei with Judge Wm. H. Taft and lh notification committee and guesti aboard. Mrs. C. B. Russell, or thil city, standing on the hurricane deck directly under the seat occupied b3 the presidential candidate, was struck in the face and breast by a numhej of small shot. She was not seiiouslj Injured. Very few of those on the steafriei knew of the occurrence and Judge Taft was not told. A shotgun was used being fired by a man from shanty boat moored to the Ohio side of the river. The Identity of the shooter is unknown The Island Queen had steamed Blowly around the bend at Dayton Ky., and va! near the middle of the river when persons leaning on the larboard rail saw n man emerge from the cabin of a shanty boat moored on the Ohio hank and fire a shotgun He was in bis shirt sleeves and wore a straw hat. Mrs. Russell gave a scream and declared she had been shot. She was hurried Into the enhln, where It was found she wns not seriously In jured. One of the shots had pene trated the skin over her left eye nnd another had struck her on the chin Onre Iiich; Died In Poverty. York, Pa. (Special). After living for years In great poverty, without even a bed to sleep on, John Mc Dowell, an aged Dallastown resident, who, it Is said, was at one time pos sessed of great wealth. Is dead About a week ago McDowell, who was helplesg from what Is said to have been neglect, was taken charge of hy the Humane Society of thi city. Killed Uysi'nlted States Marshal. Doniphan. Mo. (Special). V. F. V.'hltwell, who kept n country slore In Ripley County, was shot nnd killed while resisting arrest hy V. G Smith, a deputy United States mar shal from Chicago. Aceording to re ports, Whltwell .was wanted olf chargeB of deserting the United States Army two or three years ago Hard Pressed For ljiho. Winnipeg, Manitoba (Special). The Manitoban Government announc es that 30,000 men are needed to harvest the wheat crop in Western Canada. It recommends to the gov ernors of Jails that all men In prison for vagrancy and other minor of fenses be released early next month on condition that they work In the harvest fields Three Mull Clerks Injured. Atlunta. Ga. (Special). Train No 38 on the Southern railway, known as the New Orleans-New York limit ed, northbound, which left here at noon, met with an accident 30 mile from Charlotte, N. C. The tender nail car and club ear left the raJtt and three mall clerks were Injured No passenger was hurt and no one nut killed TTe trnle eruceuded al ter a delay of five hours Explosion In Peking. Peking (By Cubic;. Fire In the German guard section ut the legation quarter of the city at 10.30 o'clock P M., burned the s tables nnd mss room and exploded a quantity ol Hmmuuiiion Two German and ont French Boldler were killed and eight German and five French soldier were severely wounded and lour sol Hers and civilians slightly wounded Southern Cotton Mill To Curtail. Columbia, S C. (Special). It it announced that beginning next week Olympla, Granny. Richland and Capi tal City cotton mills of this city will run only four days u week. It ; not stated, hawever, how long t hie curtailment will continue. These mills aggregate 200,000 spindles Other cotton mills In the 8tate arc following a similar policy, some ol which are closing down complete!) for a period of 10 days or two weeks. Rohert Slevler, who was accused of attempting to blackmail J. B. Joel, the millionaire nephew ot the lets Barney Barnato, the diamond king, was acquitted in London. The University of Straosbure con ferred the degree of doctor on Prlnct August, fourth sou of Emperor Wil liam. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion will at once begin an Investigs lion of the freight rate situation. Captain Baldwin will recolve$0, 700 from the government If his tests at Fort Myer are aitsfucinry.