LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH Domestic Irving Spalding, Ihe yo'.ing son of A. F. Spalding, of 8prlngfield, III., wai rescued from death on the face of a precipice on Catallno Island, C'al. Young Spalding had climbed to the face of a cliff 750 feet high until he got near the top. when his further progress WM Impossible either up or down. After a search of hours a party, headed by his father, found the boy. .Miss Lena Brown suffered concus sion of the brain and two other wom en and three men were badly hurt when a speeding automobile turned turtle on Willow Grove Avenue, Philadelphia. The others Injured were William Atkinson, owner of the car, and his wife; Miss Flor ence Payne, William Oakley and Frank Williams, the chauffeur. Beaten almost Insensible by white, cappers, his body perforated with small holes caused by a nail-pronged board, covered with tar nnd exhaust ed by his constant crlea for help, John Trlbbey, a wealthy farmer, was found bound to a tree near Huah vllle. Ind. Eliza Stewart, known the world over the "Mother Stewart," and one of the best-known workers In tho cause of temperance, died at Spring field, O., aged 94 years. She had been advocating the temperance ques tion for 65 years. Tho Chicago owners of a Boston terrier are deeply affected by the death of the animal, and have in serted a notice in the city papers ex Dressinu tho intensity of their grief. The employer of the Italian at Chicago who advertised for $500 aB the ouly means of preventing him from killing himself has arranged matters with the man satisfactorily. The body of the woman found charred and burned on a man res; at New York Is now believed to be that of a Detroit girl who came to New York seeking employment. The Shipmasters' Association of the Great Lakes will file a protest with Secretary of War Wright regard ing the sanitary condition of tho Chicago River. Mrs. .Josephine Araore has been held on a murder charge at New York, though she admits killing tho victim, claiming the shooting was in self-defense. In a regatta sailed at. Lake Gene va seven yachts were capsized, and George Uusse. brother of the mayor of Chicago, was nearly drowned. George C. Kyan was examined at New York before the referee in bank ruptcy concerning the T. A. Mcln tyre Company's failure. International Brotherhood of Teamsters electeil Officer! at Detroit, choosing Daniel J. Tobln, of Cam bridge, as president. Forty-seven thousand and live hun dred barrels of Kentucky whisky burned at Lexington, entailing a loss of $500,000. Peter Garrahan, of New York, was sentenced to three months in prison for failing to flic a certificate of In corporation. Captain Hewett, of the Salvation Army, Brooklyn, will wed Marian Woolman, a wealthy girl, of Bur lington, N. .1. John Temple Graves, Independent party candidate for Vice President, underwent a slight operation at New York. Criticism of his action in the State Legislature has caused the physical breakdown of Owen Cassldy, of Ith aca. Two men were killed and one fatally Injured by an explosion at the Auto Gas Company plant, Albany. Norman C. Bassett, driven insane by the beqt, wandered on the streets of Milwaukee, carrying $50,000. The National Association of Jewel ers, meeting at Cincinnati, chose Omaha as the next convention city. For the first time In 71 years n couple at Chicago were parted, the husband dying. The Missouri Pacific Railroad has ordered open all of Its locomotive shops. A wooden building at Boston col lapsed and two men were Injured Robert Turnbull killed himself at New York, because of tho heat. Foreign Agents of the British Department of Agriculture have evidence, they declared, that the American meat trust la trying to corner Smil afield market, the largest establishment of its kind in the world, and to smash ffiy)ltfl competition on Ha own ground. The thousands of people released from Turkish jails and prisons under amnesty proclamation of the Sultan are spreading mixed joy and terror throughout the country. King Frederick and Queen Louise of Denmark took luncheon witli 400 Danish-Americans at Copenhagen, and the King expressed good wishes for President Roosevelt and the l ulled States. The Marquis dl Rudlnl. former premier of Italy and for many years prominent in the government of Italy, died In home. Count Okuma has been attacking the new Japanese cabinet, on the ground that the continuance In office of certain ministers Is evidence that Here will be no retrenchment of military and naval expenditures. In the If days of fighting In the streets of Tabriz, Persia, there huve been S00 casualties and many of the llnest residences In the city have I ( ta looted. In order to have dock arcommnd:' '.ions for the biggest two ships afloat which It Intends to build, the White Slur Steamship Company is negotlat ing with the London and Southwest ern Railway Company for the con struction of a drydock that can car.' for verse's 1,000 feet long. The British steamer Kirkwall was Bunk in a collision with an unknown bulk In the North S a. Pari.) was plunged in darkness for two hours last night because of an attempt of electricians to carry out a general strike similar to that of Ma:ch, 1907. The International Miners' Federa tion, with a total membership of K0.600 men, has decided to afflllat. with the General Federation of Labor In France. Formal i at incut Ions of the new I raie-r.iark and copyright treaty be tween the JaMNMM gnvruuieul unJ the I'nited s:.it ; wtiv exchanged at Tokio. '1'ii j at raattaaal congress or I i 1st :ii leal Sciences opened in Benin Belted State Ambassudor lllll de livering the opening address. Myllus Erichstn, the Danish ex plcrcT. perlsiod in a snowttorni la rtrem'.uBd. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT FOR FIRM REFORMS Would Improve Conditions of Country Life. A COMMISSION IS APPOINTED. Prof. I . r. Bailey, of New York. Heads Body of Men Who Will Give Chief Executive Advice to Be Em bodied in a Message to Congress Next December. Oyster Bay. N. Y. (Special). With a view to bringing about better octal, sanitary and economic con ditions on American farms President Roosevelt has requested four experts on country life to make an Investi gation Into the whole matter nnd to reivort to him with recommendations for Improvements. The report and recommendations, with any addition al recommendations which the Presi dent himself may desire to make, will be Incorporated in e message which the President will send to Congress probablv early next year. The men President Roosevelt has asked to act as an Investigating com mittee are: Prof. L. H. Bailey, of the New York College of Agriculture. Henry Wallace, of Wallace's Farm or, Des Moines, la. President Kenyon L. Butterfleld, of the I'nited States Forest Reserve. Wulter 11. Page, editor of tbfl World's Work, New York. Gtfford Pinchot, Unite! States Forest Service. In a letter to Professor Bailey ask ing him to accept the chairmanship of MM commission the President out lines his desires In the direction of Improvements on the farms. The let ter follows: My Dear Professor Bailey: No nation has ever achieved per manent greatness unless thl3 great ness was based on the wellhelng of the great farmer class, the men who live on the soil; for it is upon their weliare, material and moral, lhat Ihe welfare ol the rest of the nation ul timately rest.. In the I'nited States, disregarding certain sections and tak ing the nation as a whole, I believe It to be'true that the farmers in gen eral are better off today than they ever were before. We Americans are making great progress In the devel opment of our agricultural resources. But it is equally true that the so cial and economic Institutions of the open country are not keeping pace with the development of the nation as a whole. Conditions In South. The farmer is, a3 a rule, better off than his forebears; but his In crease in wellbeing has not kept pace with that of the country as a whole. While tho condition of the farmer In some of our best farming regions leaves little to be desired, we are far from having reached as high a level as that in all parts of the country. In portions of the South, for example, where the Department of Agriculture, through the Farmers' Co-operative Demonstrating work of Dr. Knapp, Is directly instructing more than 30, 000 farmers in better methods of farming, there is nevertheless much unnecessary suffering and needless loss of efficiency on the farm. A physician, who is also a careful stu dent of farm life In the South, writing to mo recently about the enormous percentage of preventable deaths of children due to the unsanitary con ditlons of certain Southern farms, said: Choose (Dtt.m Mill. "Personally, from the health point of view, I would prefer to see my daughter, nine years old, at work in a cotton mill than have her live as tenant on the averuge Southern ten ant one-horse furm." This apparently extreme statement Is based upon actual life among both classes of people. I doubt If any other nation can bear comparison with our own In the amount of attention given by the government, both federal and state, to agricultural matters. But pruc tically the whole of this effort has hitherto been directed toward In creasing the production or crops Our attention has been concentrated almost exclusively on getting better rarmlng. In the beginning this was unquestionably the right thing 'o do. The farmer must first of all grow good crops in order to support himself and his family. But when this has been secured the effort for better farming should and that Is the tiller of the soil the farmer. If there Is one lesson taught by history It Is that the per manent greatness of any state must ultimately depend more upon the character of Its country population than upon nnthlng else. No growth of cities, no growth of wealth can make up for a loss In either the iiumbeT or the character of the farm ing population." CLUNG to PRBCIPtCS. Boy OOO Feet High I'nnblo To Get Up Of Down. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special). A wireless message from Avalon, Cata llna Islands, reports the rescue of Irving Spalding, aged 15. son of A. F. Spnldlng, of Springfield, III., from n precipice 000 feet above the sea where he had spent the day In peril or his life. The youth disappeared from the hotel early In the morning. He went to explore the Island and Cllmbad the sheer face of the cliff, 7"o feet high, as far as he could go, and got within 100 feet of the top. Spalding found It Impossible to get down nnd shouted ror help, but railed to make anyone hear. He could not sit down, and the Bllghtest misstep would have sent him to In stant death on tho rocks below. His rather, as night was approaching, or ganized a searching party. After an hour's search, they located the boy, weak with fear. The problem of how to rescue him was solved at last by the discovery of a path leading 50 feet down from the top. A rope was lowered to the youth and he was dragged in safety to the top of the cliff. Aside from the nervous shock, weakness, hunger and terror, the boy Is all right. FIRE AREA THIRTY MILKS. HARRY K. THAW j BOY MURDERED AND IS A BANKRUPT HiS BODY MUTILATED Creditors' Bills For Nearly Half a Million. HIS TRIAL HAS COST HIM $600,000. Slayer of Stanford White Admits Owing Nearly Two Hundred Thous andThe Alienists Present Claims for From One to Twelve Thousand Dollars Each. Alleg- Tuffa Shis' ein is Victim of An Atrocious Crime. Chicago (Special). Following the Identification of the mutilated body of a boy found in Mud Lake and ad jacent ponds and waterways as that of TafTa Shlshcin, a Syrian, the po lice arrested Joseph Hasson on sus picion or his being the murderer or the boy. Hasson was arrested at 102 Mather Street. In his room the po- Plttsburg. Pa. (Special) Ing that his creditors are pressing lice found a blood-stained garment unfair claims against him so that he Is unable to pay, Harry Kendall Thaw, slayer of Stanford While, through his attorney, Charles Mor schauser, of Poughkeepsle. N. Y., and ex-Governor Stone, of Pennsylvania, filed a petition in bankruptcy in tho United States Court here. Detective Roger O'Mara, of Pittsburg, was named as receiver for Thaw's estate and gave bond In $200,000. In his bankruptcy papers, which were Blgned by Thaw while outside ppvn-nl blood stained saws and an ax. The body gave every Indication of having been dismembered with such Instruments. With the Identification or the vic tim or the Mud Lake mystery as Tuffa Shlsholn, a Syrian, the police began work on a new theory thai the lad met his awful death at the hands of a degenerate, probably one who had assistance in disposing or tho body. Developments have come rapidly In the case. On Tuesday the detcc- the Poughkeepsle Jail, he shows some i tives were called to Mud Lake, startling figures. He places nis as sets at $128,012, his liabilities at 9453,140. Thaw, through his at torney, sets forth plnlnly that he doea not believe that he owes the $453, 140. He names 13 creditors and gives the amount which they claim he owes. Of this number only two pond formed In the old bed of a branch of the Chicago River, when the waters of tho river were diverted to the drainage canal. Here boys bad discovered the lower limbs of a human being, severed at the hips and at the knees, and with one of Ihe feet miaslnE. The EreWBOIllO claims are undisputed. He admits to I ro)jL.8 when found were wrapped In Loss To The City Of Pernio Not Less Than ijfJ.ooo.ooo. Toronto, Ont. (Special). J. O. S. Llndsey. president of the Crows Nest Coal Company, summarizes the Northwest Arc situations thus in a dispatch received here: "The fire area Is about 30 miles long and from 2 to 10 miles wide, and is still burning In many places at the outskirts, but Michel is safe except In the case of high wind, and may be even then. Hosmer is quite safe and Coal Creek may be said to be almost certainly sate. "The loss of the Crows Nest Pass Company, owning mines at Coal Creek and Fernie. and Michel will bo $200,000; the Canadian Pacific Hail way will lose $200,000; the Great Northern Railway will lose about $2&0,000, and the lumber companies not less than a million. The loss of timber to the Crows Nest Pass Coal Company will not bo lesB than a million. "The loss to the city of Fernie will be not lo3s than two millions." i WASHINGTON ENGINEER DRIVEN INSANE, Fatal Accident Responsible For A Man's Los Of Mind. Wilkes - Barre, Pa. (Special). Brooding over an nccident In which his fireman was killed and holding himself to blame ror the fatality, John Bonavitch, of Kingston, one of the best-known engineers on the Del ware, Lackawanna and Western Kailroad, was committed to the In sane asylum at Danville. Bonavitch had charge of a switch engine in the yards at Washington, N. J. About a month ago his engine collided with nnother In the yard nnd James Hutt, of Newton, N. J., who was Bonavltch's fireman, was so badly Injured that he died the next day. The accident, and especially the death of his firemnn, so preyed upon the mind of the engineer thnt he fled from Washington and nothing was heard of htm until a week ago, when he appeared here at his home a rav ing maniac. Assistant Secretary of State Robert Bacon bus gone to Sun Juan, Porto Itlco, where he will look Into thi question ol transferring the I'nited States' holdings. Comtnlsnlonar Dennett, of the Gen eral Laud Office, has return ; Irom a tour ol inspection, having found the new land onlce system most el fective. ihe probable election or loriuoi Assistant Post master General Bris tow as senator from Kansas has stir red the political circles Thu niiii.li.-r of VMnU nf ri 1 1 t fv cease to stand alone nnd should l.e j cavated at the Isthmian Canal con accompanied by the effort for better business and better living on the farm. It Is at least as Important that the farmer should get the largest pos sible return in money, comfort and social advantages from the crops he grows, as that he should get the largest possible return in crops from the land he farni3 Agriculture Is not the whole or country life. The great rural Interests are human In terests, and good crops are of little value to the farmer unless they open the door to a good kind or lire on the farm. This problem of country life Is In the truest Bense a national problem. In an address delivered at 'he semi centennial of the founding of agri cultural colleges In the I'nited States a year ago last May I said: FaiMsa'i Weifnre. "There Is but one person whose welfare Is as vital to the welfare of the whole country aB Is that of the wage-worker who does manual labor, Furls Strike A Fizzle. Paris (By Cable). Tho 24-hour strike of 100,000 Purls workmen, as a protest against the government's severity In dealing with labor denun ciations, called for Monday, turned out a fizzle. Not more than half this number 1 1 1 c work, and except for the ncnuppearunce of several morning papers, due to a lack of compositors, and the police putrjh in Ihe I'luce Republl(iie. no one would have known a labor contest was In prog ress. Small Hoy Kills Mister. York. Pa. (Special) A younger brother of Sarah, the 7-year-old daughter of John Lloyd. of Muddy Creek Forks, while bundling an old gun discharged the mat on acciden tally and the loud tore the little girl'-., head off The parents have Leen separated for some time, and Ike mother had gone out 10 work, leav ing the children In tho custody of May, ou older daughter. The girl, instead of looking after the young sterr. came to York to attend the luldsiimiier carnival, and the acci dent happened In her absence. sldersUil exceeds the work done In June. Statistics show that Porto Rlcan trade has Increased .it ml $200,783 during the pust year. Commander C. A. Gove, or the Navy, has been ordered to duty at the Naval Academy as commandant or midshipmen, relieving Commands W. S. Benson, who has been ordered to duly with the Pacific fleet, wtilch is to sail from San Francisco on Oc tober 5. The Bureau of Yards and Docks has recommended to the Secretary of the Navy the acceptance of the bid oT the Penn Bridge Company, Reaver Falls, Pa., and Washington, D. C, of $1 54,426 for the construction of a coaling plant and shed, a pier and l ev wall at Key West. Fla. C. J. Erlcksen, of Seattle. Wash has been notified by the Navy De partment of the acceptance of his hid or $1,025,000 for the construction of the Pugef Sound dry dock. The Comptroller of the Currency announced the closing ol the First National Bunk at Kile Plains, Minn The Navy Department has approv ed the rale of the old warships St Mary's and Shearwater. Tho southwestern territory rail roads claim that tho shippers o Georgia have no cause or complaint as the injunction by Judge Spec has prevented the proposed Increase In rates. Soriano, provincial governor o llocos Mortek, Luzon, hus sent an exiireseion of sympathy upon the deuth of former President Cleveland Banor Queson. ono of the leaders ol tho Philippine Assembly, dis cussed the Islands situation with Secretary or War Wright. The suspended Went Point cadet are still wuitlng to heur their rate no decision having been as yet reach cd Robert II Todd has been selected for the o'll o oi resident commission cr for Porto Rico at Washington. A seaman was sentenced to a 10 year term at Wmherslli U prison fo repeated desertion An effort has been made at Chi cago to prove the imunitrution act unconstitutional. owing Mrs. Mary O. Thaw, his moth er, $191,500, and he also upproves the claim of Roger O'Mara tor $400 rees as a detective. There then fol- ows in his paper a list or creditors nnd their amounts. It Is understood that Thaw disputes every one ol hem. and will Insist that O Mara, as his receiver, sift the claims to tho bottom. The list of claimants Is as follows: James O. Graham, Poughkeepsle, Y., $2,954. Dr. Graham Hammond, Now York, $1,000. Dr. Charles li. wagner, new iurs, $4,000. Dr. Smith E. Jelline, New xora, $5,200. Dr. Brltton Evans, New xora, o,- 000. Martin W. Littleton, $3,000. Hartrldge & Peabody, $60,000. John B. Gleason, New York, $80,- 000. Allen McLean Hamilton, New York, $12,000. Dr. Dana, New York, $1,000. Dr. John P. Wilson, New York, $600. Total, $153,140. Attorney Morschauser slipped into Pittsburg and had a long confer ence with Governor oione, isswi new Pittsburg counsel. There was confusion when It was found that Judge Young, to whom Thaw's peti tion was addressed, was in Europe. The referee in bankruptcy of Al legheny County was also missing, and it was necessary to send to New Castle, Lawrence County, for a ref eree before the papers could be prop erly filed, and It was 8 o'clock be fore this was done. In his bill of assets Thaw seta forth that he has $40,000 worth of real estate, $59,000 In stocks and bonds, about $10,000 worth of books, etc. He calls attention to the fact lhat ho has an income of $33,300 per year from the various trusts created for him. but this, It is aver red, cannot be touched by any cred itors. From one close to Harry Thaw here It is learned that he has al ready spent $600,000 In his two trials, which, he thinks, Is enough, and that every bill paid from this time out mUBl be bona-flde. The most interesting information given regarding the proceedings Is to be found in the petition asking for the appointment of a receiver, in which It Is alleged that the ac tion is taken for the purpose of preventing his property being dis sipated iu litigation over claims, many of which are unjust. Ihe ng ures in the bankruptcy petition show that thiB refers to the lawyers and doctors. l'haw states that he Is confined in Jail at Duchess County, N. Y., and is likely to be there ror sometime. He Bays some of his creditors have commenced suitd again t him and others are contemplating similar no tion. He Is unable, he says, to give the litigation his attention owing to the confinement. Previous to filing the paper At torney Morschauser held a long con ference With Stone & Stone, Thaw's local counsel, and the greatest se crecy was maintained regarding tno action tonight. an old shirt and a newspaper of July 29. Every Greek detective In the city was put to work on the case i In tho belief that a Greek lad, a victim of. the Padrone system, had ! been summarily dealt with by some ' countrymen against whom the boy had testified In the recent caBes I brought by the government to wipe out the "Greek slave" trade. Boys swimming In Pelletts Pond, half a mile from the canal and hav I Ing no connection with It, discovered I the head, which was removed to tho morgue and placed with other por i tlons of the body. With tho body j thus restored, It was possible to : formulate a close description of the I boy. At the Lawndale Station It was ! found that the description tallied i somewhat with that of Tuffa Shls j heln, whose disappearance from his homo, at 7 Johnson Street, last Sun- day night had been reported by the lad's father, Samuel Shisheln. First the shirt which the boy had worn 1 and then the corpse were identified by members of the Shisheln family, the mother fainting when she gazed for the first time on the mutilated remains of what had been a straight limbed, buoyant youth. INDIANS KILL THIRTEEN. That Is Report Received At EI Paso Concerning Yaquls. El Paso, Tex. (Special). That Yaqui Indians on July 24 killed 13 persons, members of three families, near Lampasas Mine, was the news received by W. M. Gillette, of San Carlos, Indian Reservation, Arizona, In a letter written to him here by A. D. McPhee, superintendent of the Promontorlo Mine, 20 miles from Montezuma, Sonora. The letter says ranchers of the surrounding country have congregated at the Promontorlo Mine prepared to resist the Indians. "Three Killed By Explosion. Hazelton, Pa. (Special). Two Americans and an Italian, all of this city, were Instantly killed by the pre mature explosion of a blast at the Btonecrushing plant of Charles Ke hoe, on the outskirts of Hazleton. Thomas Kehoe, a son of the con tractor, was Injured about the head. The bodies were blown Borne distance from the scene of the epxlosion. President To The Sultan. Washington (Special) . Ambassa dor Lelshman, at Constantinople, has been directed by the State Depart ment by cable to communicate to the Turkish government the President's congratulations and gratification over the action of the Sultan In proclaim ing a constitution. MILLION DOLLAR FIRE. Cigurctto Causes A Disastrous illh.e In Chicago. Chicago (Special). Fire, which was so hot that the firemen could not get nearer than a block of It, and which made It necessary to pluy streams of water on buildings three nnd four squares away, destroyed the Burlington elevators "E" and "F," the dock transfer warehouse of that road and either burned or rendered useless 100 box cars. The loss on the grain In the two elevators is placed by Armour & Co., who own it, at $700,000. The lotal loss 1b placed at $1,000,000. . The fire started in the Burlington warehouse supposedly from a ciga rette dropped near several barrel; containing chemicals. Stupid lturglur. Hendricks, W. Va (Special). Burglars entered the store of J. E Poling & Co., general merchandise dealers, at Hendricks, and blew open the large Bate, securing about $25 in cash, but falling to take away $20 worth of postage stamps. They had carefully piled up a large lot of clothing around the safe to deaden the sound, and almost all this cloth ing was ruined. The safe contained only the books of the firm and the amount above stated, and was unlocked. FINANCIAL Found 150,000; Reivnrcl l2. Chicago (Special) Wlllllam Beck er, a poatofllce wagon driver, founJ i $50,000 check In the driveway he lical h the Federal Building, and re nortcd It to Superintendent Day. The i heck was payable through the Merchants' Loan and Trust Company. Ihe trust company was notified. Ueckcr Is said to have been the re ipleut of many thanks and a $2 Mil. COUNT ZEPPELIN'S GREAT AIRSHIP 18 DESTROYED Aeronaut's Flight Comes To a Disas trous End. BY STORM AND EXPLOSION. Bad Nearly Achieved His Greatest Triumph in Navigating the Air Thousands of People Waiting at Fricdrirhi hafen to Hall the Comple tlan of the Great Flight. Girl l-'atully Wounded. Greensboro, N. C. (Special). Miss Mary Ball was fatally shot by Free land Tharpe In Wickes County. She was a teacher in a rural school and Tharpe hud been paying her atten tions. She ru.'uBcd to go with him to church, but went with bis brother, while Freelund Thaipe escorted an other young woman. Jusl as MIbs Mall was entering the house on the return from church, Freeland Tharpe flrod threo shots at her. One of the bullets ontered her left breast, aboul an Inch above the heart, Inflicting i mortal wound. Copper metal advanced another V4 :ent. Jones & Laughliu mills, in rit.ts burg. report business 25 per cent, better In July than in June. Philadelphia & Reading declared the regular semi-annual dividend of 2 per cent, on first preferred, pay able October 10, to stock of record, August 24. Shipments of coal and coke over Hie Pennsylvania lines, east of Pitts bun; and Erie for the week ending August 1, amounted to 889,134 tons. Since January I the shipments aggregate 25,770,942 tons as com pared with 34, 004, 222 tons during the same period last year. Conferences between a committee or the coal operators of the Pitts burg district and officials of the Uni ted Mlue Workers foreshadow a prob able adjustment of difference In the wage agreement. Note brokers say that the Western banks are purchasing commercial pa per as freely aB Eastern Institutions and that they are taking paper ma turing after the first of next year. This, they say, Is unusual at any time and especially so at this time of the year. Offerings of commercial paper are light and as a consequence rates continue to be very low. Bankers aud brokers said that to their best knowledge Philadelphia Interests were not affected one way or the other by the flnanclal affalis or some or the underwriters in the Lloyd Syndicate. Dun's Review for July shows a healthier condltlou In tho commer cial community. According to that authority failures In July were the smallest for any month In the year with the exception of May. Failures numbered 2232. with liabilities utuountlag to $14,222,126. In July, 1907, there were 777 failures, In volving $12,834,710. AN AERIAL WONDER. The airship was 443 feet long; diameter, 45 feet; weight, 6,000 pounds; motor developed 140 horsepower; carrying capacity, 16 persons. Count Zeppelin made a num ber of successful trips In the last two months. June 29 he made a seven-hour fight at a speed of 39 miles an hour. July 1 a 14-hour flight at aver ago speed of 34 mllcsnn hour. July 3, In an ascent over Lake Constance, the Count was accom panied by the King and Queen of Wurtemburg, this being the first, time a reigning king and queen had enjoyed such an experience. August 4 Zeppelin started on hla 24-hour flight over a 400 mile triangular course from Fried rlchehafen. August 5, after traveling all night at reduced speed, because of one of two motors failing to work, the Count descended at Echterdlngen to make repairs. During a thunderstorm the air ship was torn from its nnchorage, a motor exploded and flames en veloped and destroyed the airship. Echterdlngen (By Cable). A dra matic end came to Count Zeppcflln'e long-waited endurance flight In his monster dirigible balloon, and the proud airship lies In an open field near here, a mass of twisted, use less metal. A chapter of accidents occasioned by bad moods of nature and the failure of mechanical appli ances combined was responsible for the untimely end of the balloon, the flights of which have held the at tention of the world, and for blast ing the ambitions of Its Inventor, Count Zeppelin. The ount, almost heart-broken and unable to longer ondure the sight of his shattered craft, has left by train for Friedrlch shafen. The airship had lert Nackenhelm, the scene or Its first mishap, and over night had vlsted Mayeuce and begun on the homeward journey when mis fortune overtook it. Soon after the start it was found that the front motor was working badly, owing to the fusing of metal In the groove In which the piston rod ran. This was caused by friction. Consequent ly Count Zeppelin was compelled to rely on one motor on the rear platform throughout the night, which conslde-ably reduced his speed. During the night, too, he made an ascent of nearly 0,000 feet, losing a considerable quantity of gas. This deprived the balloon of some of lta buoancy. Over Echterding Count Zeppelin decided to land. Although this was the first time that Buch a maneuver had been attempted with a rigid balloon, the landing was effected eas ily and smoothly, only one of the steel wire stays being broken. The engineers Immediately set about making repairs to the balloon, which rode at anchor In the center of a large force of military, which had been called out to keep the crowds away. Count Zeppelin telegraphed to Frlcdrlchshafen for more gas cyl inders, and then went to a neighbor lug inn for luncheon. He was away : bout two hours, and was destined to see only tho wreck of his airship when he returned. The local railway companies ran special cars to convey the curious slght-seers to the spot, while pedes trians, automoblllsts aud wagons loaded with peasants also flocked to the vicinity. It Is estimated that tbe crowd numbered nearly 40,000. At 2.30 o'clock a wind suddenly sprang up and Bonie of the wealhor wise bystanders called the attention of the officers to the fact that a storm was brewing and advised them to Becure the balloon. Their warn ings were unheeded. The balloon swayed to and fro, sometimes rising a few feet from the ground. Then a strong gust of wind struck the airship broadside. At first the craft heeled over and then her bows rose in the air, carrying with them a number of soldiers holding the ropes. After poising for u moment at a height of 50 feet the airship returned to the earth, even more suddenly than It rose, and came crushing to the ground. With a thunderouB report the forward motor exploded. From the bows of the balloon shot forth a livid flame, while from tbe rear escaped thick clouds of black smoke which caused the entire struc ture to disappear from the view of Ihe thousands of spectators When the air cle; red the balloon was seen lying In an open fleld 5n a high plateau with only the ragged, tangled strips of the aluminum envelope still remaining. The metal stays and bands and portions of the motors were strewn about in pieces like old iron apd blackened with smoke and scorched. Amend Bunking Luivs. Washington (Special). Acting Comptroller of the Curreucy Kane transmitted to the Secretary of the Treasury for submission to the Na tional Monetary Commission, author ized at the last session of Congress, his recommendation lor such amend ments to the national banking laws as experience In the administration of the laws by the comptroller's of fice and observation as to their prac tical operations has shown to be necessary. The recommendatloni cover 40 printed pages. DNITED STATES SENATOR ALLISON PASSES AWAY Was Twice a Candidate For the Presidency. Dubuque, Iowa (Special). United States Senator W. B. Allison died at his home In this city Tuosday after noon. The Immediate causo of hla death was henrt rallure. The end came as n result of a serious sink ing spell due to a prostatic enlarge ment complicated with kidney dis ease and during a period of uncon sciousness which had lasted since Saturday afternoon. Two weeks ago the Senator left his home In the city to escape the heat. He went to tho home of Mrs. Fannie Stout, n friend of the family, living on the Asbury road, a few miles from town For a few days hla condition seemed to Improve, but he later began to grow worse. Medical advisers urged that an operation be performed to relieve the prostatic enlargement, which was bringing his condition to a crisis. Saturday morn ing the Senator wan brought back home. Soon afterwards he relapsed Into a condition of semlunconscloue ness. Except tor brief periods of par tial recovery, he remained in (hit condition until death. News of the serious Illness of the ! aged Senator was kepi from tho public as much as possible, and his death ! came as a surprise to his thousands of friends residing In this city. I During the Inst week nurses were employed to cam for the Senator for i the first time since his illness, and this was the first Intimation anyone ' hnd ef a change for the worse In his ! condition. Atter the Senator lost I consciousness on Saturday he did not I fully recover his mental faculties up I to the time of his death. He had I been under constant surveillance of I physlcans for the last few days. , His condition grew rapidly worse, his menial vigor was wholly spent, and his condition was one of absolute dependence. Two nurseB were In constant attendance on htm and ef forts to maintain secrecy as to his condition were redoubled, while every means was adopted to insure rest. $50,000 IN WANDERER'S RAG. Hent And Work Unbalanced Mind Of Wealthy Man. Milwaukee. Wis. (Special). His mind unbalanced by work and heat, Norman C. Bassett, 50, years old, mnnager of a department at the Allls-Chalmers plant, wandered for several hours about town Tuesday , night until a patrolman took him to a police station. I He carried a satchel, which was I feund to contain $50,000 In money, ; bonds and other paperB. Bassett talked incoherently and I was unable to tell about himself, even his name, nnd imagined he was . In a foreign city pursued by thieves FIGHTING THE PAPER TRUST. Five Carloads Of News Print Paper Sold At Auction. New York (Special). Five car loads of news print paper were sold it auction In this city under the di rection of John Norrls, chairman of the committee on paper of the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers' Associa tion, for $1.90 per 100 pounds f. o. b. at Natural Dam, N. Y., tor the entire lot. Two car loads were taken by C. D. Relmers, of the Fort Worth Tele gram, of Fort Worth, and three car loads were taken by M. E. Foster, of the Houston Chronicle, of Hous ton, Texas. The paper was guaran teed to be equal In quality to lhat used by the New York World. Japs sign Copyright Treat'. Toklo (By Cable). Formal rati fications of tho new trade mark and copyright treaty betweon the Japan ese Government and the United States were exchanged. Viscount. Terauchfc acting Minister of Foreign Affairs, signed the document on be half of the Jaapnese Government, and P. A. Jay, American Charge d'affaires, nfllxed his name In behalf of the United States. Rewurd For Night Riders. Frankfort. Ky. (Special). Gov. Wiljson offered a reward of $500 "for the apprehension and conviction of the leader r.nd chief officer next In authority to him. of the Night Riders In the Hopkln-ivllle raid, the Prince ton raid, and the Ruaseliville raid." The Oovernor said that bo is deter mined to forret out and convict the leaders that hung tho four negroes at ItuBBellvtllo, and the Instigators of the lawless rclgu in western Kentucky. Fulls 900, Feet And Lives. Abbottsford, Wis. (Special). Dropping 900 leet through tho air Mrs. Eva Jones, balloonist Tor a car nival company which is conducting a Btreet ralr here, will probably re ;over. The rope of her parachute snapped, but she was caught in a tree .30 feet from the ground. When taken down she was uncouscious, jeveral of her ribs were broken and ihe was otherwise internally Injured. Chicago Quite A IF.g Town. Chicago (Special). Chicugo has a population of 2,425,000, according .o the 1908 city directory, which will be Issued this week. This is n gain iver last year ol 58,000. The total aumber of names In the alphabetical list Is 758,100, an lncrense of 20, 700 in a year. In estimating the po pulation the multiple of 3.2 Is used, a smaller figure than is used in soms it her cities. 100,000 Fewer Dead Letters. Washington (Special). One hun dred thousand leas nleceB of mail were received In the Dead-Letter Of fice during July, 1908, than during the some month of 1907. Of the 932,983 pieces of mail received, 381, O.'O were returned to the senders. Isom E. McCury wsb appointed post master at Sylva, Mitchell County, N C. He succeeds R. J. Burleson. Lightning Kills Family. Charlotte, N. C. (Spcclul). A spe cial to the Observer from Sparta, Al leghany County, brings news of the death of an entire family at Ed monds. 10 miles across the moun tains from Sparta, by lightning. Frank Murphy, a farmer; hit wlf .and young son were in tbe field stacking rye when the storm carne up. The trio ran for shelter, but were struck down before they reach ed the house. The uodies wero found by neighbors. t Shot Mother And Bubo. New York (Special).--Mrs. Berths Hood,. 32 years old, was shot nod in stantly killed at her home In Brook lyn, by Ernest SuKz, 24 years old, ol (nhattun. Bettr. also shot and ser iously wounded tho veai-and-a-hal' old daughter of Mrs. II ;od and then turned tbe revolver on himself, la lllctlng a probably lata! wound. The battloshlp Virginia bus estab lished a coaling record. She took on board 1,6(17 tous In four hours at aa average rate of 416.75 tons a" hour.