.... The News Domestic A general search for the robber who shot Maurice Tannenholz, the New York Jewelor, after getting vwav with a Dalr of diamond ear rings and a diamond ring, did not ! revenl any clue. Tannenholz 13 Itlll In a critical condition at the Presby terian Hospital. Six months' Imprisonment, dishon orable discharge and loss of pay for eating green apples contrary to or ders was the sentence pronounced upon Bernard Lolser, a private In Battery D, Third Field Artillery, Three masked burglars entered the home of Hanker H. B. March, of Morrlstown, N. J., covered seven women with revolvers, ransacked i the house, cut the telephone Witt I and escaped with 13,000 in loot. I Dr. J. L. Sawyers, of Centrevi'.le, la., the family physician Of T. P. Shonts, will go abroad to attend the Duchess of Chaulness As a cure for criminality In Chi- I cago. Alderman William K DT1 urged that the municipal government 1 net aside each year money to bo used In condemning houses unfit to live In, razing the structures and making breathing spots for children to play in. I Through the heroism of Lleuts. Hobert Clark and Tredway and Post- , master Foss 100 natives were res- , cued from a submerged fishing vll- i,i, .... in cone with the situ lage in the Oagayan Valley. In the ; . u lg doclart-! that the entire Philippines, during the typhoon, but mllitcry f0rco of the State will be nearly 000 persons perished. concentrated if necessary- A report that Commander Peary s i..,.i,. n. - Arctic steamship Rooterelt had OOl- K , , the lided with an Iceberg before sho In the Reel toot Lake reached Etah was made by Henry lake itself Is the source of contention Johnson, a sailor on the Koosevelt, which brought forth the activity ol was denied by Robert Harnett, tne the nignt nam ui kbuiw- contended by tnose living uwi lake that It was tlieir rigiu 10 v SOLDIERS AFTER THE NIGHT RIDERS Tennessee Trying to Crush the Organization. TROOPS WILL PROTECT THE COURT. Special Session of the Circuit Court for Union County Will Open at UnUn City. With State Militia Standing Guard -The Entire Reel Foot Region Under Domination of Military Rule. Memphis. Tenn (Special). What mav happen this week as a result of the Investigation of night rider depredations In the northwestern part of Tennessee Is a matter of con jecture. With the convening of the Circuit Court for Ohio County In special session at Union City to In vestigate the death of Qulnten Ran kin, who was killed by a night rider band In the vicinity of Reel root Lake last Monday night that reglou will be under the complete donuna Hon of military rule. Five companies of the State na tional guard will be at the dlsposa of Colonel Tatom to enforce martial law and It Is purposed to gather n every member of the band. To aid v. n,niiin the ndioiniiiK counties h beta drawn on for armed bands of nicked men. Should this force Rooseveh's carpenter. Three amended bills of complaint were filed in the Federal Court at St. Paul by the Union Pacific. North ern Pacific and the Great Northern Railroad Companies, alleging uncon stitutionality of the interstate com merce act. Two men who registered as Mi fhael Pllzar and John Pllzar, of Harrlsburg, Pa., and believed to be brothers, were found dead In their tectlon as nshermen In Its waters without molestation, while the own er of the land on the shores of the lake took an opposite view. In the courts the latter, the Western Ten nessee Land Company, of which Cap tain rUnkin and Col. R. Z. Taylor, of Trenton, were the organizers, was upheld. then followeu nigm nut-r u... room at a small hotel opposite the ingg, threatening death to those who Pennsylvania Railroad Station at opposed the wishes of the members Philadelphia. i of the band. It was on the first With passenrers on board, the vigi, lr4 many months to the lake stenmer Frank Jones, of the New regi0n that Captain Rankin was kill- York and Albany transportation t,,i Men c.uinecieu wuu vi Company, rnn ashore in the west aide of the Hudson River, rive miles above the PoughUeepsIe bridge. Announcement of the placing of orders for $2,000,000 worth of new equipment by the Morgan lines of the Louisiana and Texas Railway and Navigation Company was made at New Orleans by Thornwell Fay. President Russ. of the Rovert N. Basset t. Manufacturing Company, Shelton, Ct employing between 600 and 700 ha. ids, announced that In the future the company will pay all the doctor bills of Its employes. Theodore C. Tiedebohl, former sec retary of the Selpp Brewing Com pany and president of the Chicago Distilled Water Ice Company, was brought back to Chicago to answer to the charge of embezzling $17, 250. The case ngalnst Miss Edith Wirt, the Kansas City I Kan. ) school teacher charged with cruelty, because she stuck a pupil's lips together with court plaster, was dismissed by Pro secuting Attorney Taggart. Col. H. H. Taylor, the aged Trenton (Tenn. I lawyer, who was taken from a hotel at Walnut Log, at the Bame time Capt. Qulnten Rankin wag lynched, has turned up near Tip tonville, Tenn., having escaped from the Night Riders an hour after Cap tain Rankin v:;s hanged, by swim ming a lake, followed by a fusllade of bullets. Former Governor W. A. Stone, of Pittsburg, Pa., attorney for Harry K Thaw, slayer of Stanford White, took an appeal to the I'nlted States Circuit 'Court of Appeals from the decision of Judge Young at Pitts burg, in which the court dismissed the writ of habeas corpus to bring Thaw to Pittsburg to testlf" in bank ruptcy proceedings. I oreign The Parslval dirgible balloon at Berlin met with an accident at a height of 6,000 feet, as a result of which It became unmanageable and dropped rapidly, but Major Pur.sival and his assistant made a safe laud In g- Emperor William of Germany has given Ambassador Hill evidence of the most cordial feeling. There were 027 executions In Russia during the v-ar 1007. accord ing to statistics made public at St. Petersburg. Tank Shao Yl, special envoy of the Chinese government, who Is making a tour of the world to study financial, Industrial and political Sonditlons, was received In audience by the Emperor at Toklo. The 15,000 Chinese residents of Melbourne and Sydney have sent $340,000 to the government at Pe king to assist In the upbuilding of the Chinese navy. The collier Manshan arrived at Amony with coal for the American battleships and will await the arrival of the fleet. a. Reports Indicate that the Duke of Abruzzl is fitting out his Arctic ex ploration ship, the Polar Star, for his honeymoon trip, and that two Italian crulseja will escort the honey moon ship from New York to Italy. The Duchess Alexandra Victoria of Schleswlg-Holstein was married to Prince August William of Prussia, fourth son of Emperor William, In the imperial Chapel of Berlin. The Austro-Hungarlan foreign minister denies that negotiations be tween Austria-Hungary and Turkey relative to the Provinces of BoBnla and Herzegovina have been broken off. Whltelaw Reid. United States am bassador, unveiled a tablet at Bath, Eng., In memory of Edmund Burke, statesman and orator. H. Phlpps and Matt Tummon, well known Erigllshmn. have disappeared In Northern British Columbia. There is a hitch in the negotiations between the Turkish government and Bulgaria. Thomas Crozler and Milton Cro tier, father and son, were sent to the penitentiary In Milton, Ont. Both confess guilt as counterfeiters. . Alfred Picnrd, who accepted the ministry of marine, resigned by Gas ton Thomson, was French commis sioner to the St. Louis Exposition Suffragette quizzed two members of the Cabinet whom they hud brought in 'be London police court as witnesses. . porting the land-owners have been forced to leave their homes, nud oth ers, who refused to obey the warn ings, were punished corporally. Notwithstanding the efforts of the local ofllcers, the depredations con tinued for n year, the situation be came more und mere stIoub, until, with the killing Of Captain Rankin, it proved necessary for State officers to act. From Nashville two com panies of State troops were hurried forward the day following the lynch ing, and Governor Patterson, aban doning his campaign for re-election, went to the scene to direct the work of ferreting out the members of the mob. Will tinned Court. Two other military companies went from Memphis. Of a number of men arrested 10 are held, and it Is promised that when the grand urv is convened tomorrow sufficient svldence will be furnished to bring ibout the indictment of every nifin oer of the night rider organization. The court will be under tr.e military protection of a company of militia -.hat will be sent from Nashville to morrow especially (or this service. Governors or several States of the South have approved a suggestion 5f Governor Patterson that a confer ence of the executives of the differ ent States be held and plans devised whereby they can act in concert In in effort to dc3troy night rider or ganizations, Governor Noel, of Mis sissippi: Governor Pindall, of Arkan sas, and Governor Wlllson, of Ken tucky, have already expressed them selves In approval of the proposed inference. Nearly all Sou. hern States have suffered from the opera tions of the mysterious organizations. CHEWING Gl M AS DIET. Japanese Stowaways Live On It For Two Months. Port Townsend, Wash. (Special I Living for fifty-tlw days on chew Ing Sum and drinking mineral wa ter three Japanese stowaways were found in the lazarette of the bark Leader Just previous to the depar ture of the ship for the United Kingdom with a cargo of wheat. The Leader left Liverpool for Puget Sound via Japan, leaving at i Kobe, Japan, a large cargo or gen- oral merchandise. It was while the : ship was discharging cargo that the men slipped oh bonrd and secreted several cases of chewing gum and mineral water, and stowed them ' solves In the hold, where they ex I lsted nearly two months chewing the sweetened gum The captain says that had he no: found the men the chanceB are they I would have been taken back to ,1a ! pan and thence to Liverpool. They had eaten nearly three eases of I chewing gum. The men will be tak- en back to Japan. Killed By Hlgbwaynf. Pittsburg, Pa. ( Special) . -Hugh i McGulre, a well-known resident of i Camp Hill, a suburb, was killed ' by highway robbers between that : place and Carnegie. He was render I ed unconscious by a Mow on the , head and then thrown into the creek. where he drqwned. McGuire Just drew his pay and Is thought to have had about $30 In his pocket. BROOM SHOT Of REJECTED LOVER Young Bride Attacked, But Her Life Saved. New Orleans (Special). On her bridal trip, which had begun scarcely an hour before, and seated In a rail road coach almost between her hus band and a former suitor for her hand, Mrs. Fred Van Ingen saw the flash of the suitor s revolver, felt the grip of het husband's hand as the bullet killed him and then fought for her life. When the girl appeared about to become the victim of the second bullet from the revolver, her uncle, a man with gray hair, but strong and cool under the excite ment, rushed In and thrust his thumb beneath the hammer of the revolver, rendering the weapon harmless. This was the story the other pas sengers on the Texas and Pacific "Caiinonaa'.l" told when they reach ed this city, but the principal actors In the tragedy, most of whom nre connected with Louisiana's leading fnmllles, have so far refused to dis cuss the matter. The former suitor is P. 8. Beau vre, of Plaquemine, La., at which place he was taken from the train and placed under arre3t. The unfor tunate husband was Prof. Fred Van Ingen, a prominent teacher of Alex andria, La., and a relative of former Governor Blnnchnrd. The bride Is the daughter of .Inmes M. Rhorer, one of the lending officials of Iber ville Parish, residing at Baton Rouge. Beauvre Is 24 years old and Van Ingen was 23. The wedding took place at Alex andria. Beauvre was In town, hav ing arrived there on the same day as Miss Rhorer. When the bridal couple left for New Orleans, he boarded the train and after a time sat In a seat where he was facing Mr. and Mrs. Van Ingen, with the brldo between him and her husband. Other passengers say Beauvre talked with the bridal couple Just before the shooting and say that his manner appeared cordial. Beauvre is alleged to have leaned across and said: Congratulations to you both." The bride thnnked hlni and added, "We are very happy." at the same time turning to her husband to caress bin. "This Is too much," Beauvre Is tilleged to have exclaimed and, drawing a revolver from hlB pocket, he fired at Van Ingen. tiie first shot killing the bridegroom almost In stantly. As the husband sank Into his wife's arms, Beauvre, with arm still outstretched, started to pull Hie trigger again, hut a white-haired man leaped forward and thrust, his thumb between the hammer and cartridge so that the cartridge did not ex plode. Other passengers then caught Beauvre and disarmed him. ONE MORE IN FORTUNATE. Beautiful Girl Wearing Diamonds Goes To Her Death. New York (Special). Apparently disappointed In love, Dora Abrams, a strikingly beautiful young woman, 2 4 years old, was found dead in her apartments, 83 Gerry Street, Wil liamsburg, one of the most dramatic cases of suicide the police have had to deal with in years, Every crack and crevice In the doors and windows of her apart ment had been carefully sealed With paper and cloth. This task, the po lice say, must have required three hours of time. Not a trace was found or any letters, nor Is there any other means of ascertaining who her rela tives are and where she came from. The girl's body was found lying In her kitchen. She had dressed her self In her finest cjothes, wearing all her jewelry. One end of a rubber hose was tied to her mouth with a silk handkerchief and the other end was fastened to a small gas stove. On the girl's fingers were three diamond rings, in her ears were diamonds, and she had carefully ar ranged her hair before lying down to die. Wife Talked Him To Death. Auburn, Me. (Special). Provoked because his wife woke him up at 3 A. M. and Insisted on talking to him, Kdward H. Goddard, a carpenter, dressed himself and, running through the deserted Btreets to the Andros coggin River, Jumped in. His wife sped after him in her night robe, entreating him to '.ie back, but he eluded her. Goddard's body Tas discovered several hours later In the river. , JAPAN IS EAGER FOR THE POWERS TO MEET Wishes to Avert Clash on the Pacific Ocean. ARE FOR AN AMERICAN ENTENTE. May Take InltlatlTe If United Statu Does Not Bring About Understand Ing rieet Postpones Departure From Yokohama Relic of Oommo dore Perry's Visit. Toklo (By Cable). Leading diplo mats and scholars of Japan are man ifesting such enthusiasm for the Idea of a conference of powers Interested In the Pacific that It Is almost cer tain Japan will Issue the call for such a conference If the Initiative Is not taken by either England or America. A few of those who expressed themselves today as unreservedly in favor of the proposal are Baron Kntn, minister of communications; M. Haseba, parliamentary leaders; M. Olshl and M. Matsuda, former cab inet ministers, and Professor To mlcw, an authority on International law. Almost Unanimous For Conference. This list of names could be multi plied Indefinitely, for the Japanese opinion Is almost unanimous that the time has come for a clearly defined statement regarding the future ac tivities on the world's greatest ocean. The argument Is heard on every hand that the zones of interest and Influence of Japan, England and America In the Orient are rapidly expanding and must soon clash un less n permanent understanding Is reached at a conference called as speedily as possible. Americans Privately Favor Plan. None of the officers of the Amer ican fleet will allow himself to be quoted on the proposition, but in private talks many of them have heartily Indorsed the Idea. The reason for much of Japan's enthusiasm In the conference matter is the attempt to stir up a feeling In America for an alliance between Americn and Japan. Japan holdB that she is the natural ally for either England or Amerlcn, or both, In the control of the Pacific. DAMAGED BY TYPHOON. Oriental Storm Kills Two Thousand seven Hundred People. Amoy (By Cable). The damage done in Thursday's typhoon was much greater than at first reported In Chang Chow 3,000 houses, in cluding the prefect's yaruen, were destroyed and 1,100 persons killed. In Lam Chang. 15 miles west of Chang Chow, 600 houses were de stroyed and 1,200 persons killed. Five years ago Lam Chang was flooded and 3,000 persons were drowned. Fifteen miles north of Chang Chow throe villages were en tirely destroyed in Thursday's storm, 400 persons being killed. Admirals Sperry and Emery, of the American battleship fleet now In Japan, have sent messages of con dolence to Commlssoner Mark. CABRERA'S son asks AH). Guillotined By Girder. New Yorlt (Special). His head severed from his body, Patrick Sul livan, 45 years old, of Mariners Har bor, S. I., was Instantly killed by a lalllug girder while at work on the new building at Seventeenth Street and Fourth Avenue. Sullivan was working on the cement sidewalk when the girder fell from the sixth story. He tried to get out of the way, but slipped, and one of the beams struck him on the back ot the neck. Wants United States To Save Life Of Guatemalan Dictator. Sun Francisco (By Cable). The immigration officials of this port for warded to Washington a report from the son of President Cabrera, of Guatemala, saying his frfther's life is In danger nnd asking this gov ernment to aid him. Cabrera's son was a student at Lc-land Stanford University and became a naturalized citizen of this country. i His father'! properly here and In Guatemala was placed In his name, so that, It Is thought, this country might be required to defend the title In case Cabrera were killed or de posed. Sweep Through Five Counties. Toledo, O. (Special). --Forest and brush fires are sweeping through sec tions of five counties of Northwest ern Ohio, doing an immense amount of damage. A thick haze covers the entire section. Fremont, the coun ty seat, ban been threatened several times. MORE CARNEGIE HERO PROS ARE MADE Maryiander is One of Those On the Honor List Plttaburg, Pa. (Special). Tho Carnegie Hero Fund Commission at Its quarterly mating here recogniz ed 48 persons as having performed acts of herols: i deserving recogni tion under the rules governing the fund provided by Mr. Carnegie. Each of these persons was awarded a medal, bronze, silver or golden and a number of them were also awarded cash for educational 1 or other purposes. The cash awards made amount to about $40,000. A Marylnnder Is among those hon ored: Daniel P. Greoly. of Sparrows Point, who lost his life June 11. 1908, in savin that of a drowning companion. To Oreeley i I awarded a silver medal, $50 a onth to his widow and $5 a n: ..lb for each minor child. One of tho most Interesting awards is that of Joseph C. Casler, of Cassville, N. J., who was given a bronze medal and $250 in cash for saving the life of William E. Carey at Cassville on ugust 20, 1906. The official report of the hero commission sl.ows that Carey on that date was working in the well of John W. AiBdale, which contain ed about 10 feet of water and which was lined with a rough Btone wall. The pump was being repaired by Carev. who was on a swing 25 feet down, Bitting on a board suspended by a rope. He braced one of his feet against the stone wall at a weak place and it gave away, letting his foot through, where It caught. The wall above shattered, too, and fell down on him partly. Word was carried to Casler, a farmer, who was working several miles away, and he came, finding a great crowd around the well, but all were afraid to enter beef use of fenr of gas. Casler had himself low ered Into tho well, to find that It would be necessary to remove most of the wall In order to rescue the Imprisoned man. He worked for five hours, then was relieved by an ex perienced well digger, whom he again relieved in three hours. All the rock nnd debris had to be sent up In buckets. It required 13 hours to dig Carey out and he was more dead than alive when rescued. One thing that made the act of Casler of great Importance in the eyes of the commission was the fact that the soil around the well was very sandy and liable to slip in on the well at any moment. The Hero Fund Commission, up to October 1, has had presented for Its consideration 2,84 7 cases. Of these 1,783 have been rejected as not coming within the scope of the com mission; 172 have been favorably acted upon, a medal being awarded In each case, and money In a num ber of cases; 892 cases await Inves tigation by the agents of the com mission, four of whom are constant ly at work. At this meeting 120 cases were considered, 72 of which were reject ed. Albert W. Simpson, of Stockdale. Pa., who last May was awarded a bronze medal for rescuing a miner from n cavein In a Fayette County coal mine, was voted an additional reward of $2,000 to pay his ex penses through the Carnegie Techni cal Schools, where he is now regis tered as a student. Frank M. Wilmot, secretary of the commission, Is now In Scotland, aiding In the organization of a simi lar fund and commission in that country. FOREISN MINE EXPERTS' VIEWS Recommendations For Minimizing Disasters. WASTE OF COAL IN MINING. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT TO FILL CHAIR OF EDITOR To Become Associate of Dr. Abbott On Outlook. New York (Special). President Roosevelt has made a contract with the Outlook Company by which he will become an associate editor ot the Outlook after his retirement from the Presidency. Mr. Roosevelt will be associated wrth Dr. Lyman Ab bott, and will write on political and economic topics. e While Mr. Roosevelt was at Oys ter Bay lost summer he was visited by representatives of many publish ing houses. It was announced final ly that he had made a contract with Charles Scrlbncr's Sons for the story of his big game hunt. Details of this contract have never been published, although It has been admitted officially that It is in ex istence. By It Mr. Roosevelt Is to receive large royalties. It was snld on behalf of the Srrlb ner firm that Its contract with Mr. Roosevelt had neither been modified nor abrogated. It was added that the contract Is for exclusive work on the subjects It covered, and that Garfield, of the I " Impossible that the President Mil i u I ( i.iive Hi : i" 1 1 1 1 1 ii i i.niiiini.1 which would in any manner ronfl ct with It. The contract with the Outlook The Commission Appointed to Inves tigate Conditions In American Col lieries Submits Its Report Some of the Suggestions Made Use of Elec tricty Important. Washington, D. C, (Special). Im portant suggestions for minimizing loss of life in the coal mines of the United Stntes are contained In a re port Just submitted to President Roosevelt through Secretary Gar field by the three foreign mining experts who have Investigated con ditions In American mines. These experts. Captain Arthur Desborough. or England; Vict r Watteyne, of Bel glum, and Carl Melssner, of Ger many, came to this country six weeks ago nt the InvltatVn of the Unite States government to assist in the movement lookli: . toward a reduc tion of disasters lu American mines. In transmitti. ,; ti e report to the President. Seen" Interior Deuartt) . stated that "the recommendation if the experts will be of the high Importance In ald- i r , , ,;-..,. ,i .'t i gernn In ' providing legislation j ".!. for an entirely different line of which will Insure more efficient and j i 1 1 i ' I 1 1 1 uui-uiiii'ii yi ... .. through the adoption of methods that will materially aid In preventing the terrible losses of life that have oc curred through mining explosions In recent years. ' The recommendations of the ex perts, which will be printed as a bulletin by the Geological Survey and distributed among coal mine opera tors and miners, refer to conditions rtttflh MAM tlmti "Win (10(1 mtneru nre i subjected to each day.' The examlna- ! Col. R. Z. Taylor, aced Co years, tlon of explosives by the government ; and Cnpt. Quinteu Rankin, both with n view to eliminating the mote pruiiilnent attorneys of Trenton, dangerous kinds and to Improving Ten wcnj tnkjn from Wa,u.g ana Btnnoarnziiig mo Bum nmww Unfal ot Wnlnnf t.nn Tenn lu N'GHT RIDERS LYNCH LAWYERS Colonel Taylor and Captain Ranki.i Strung Up at Night. Union City, Tenn. (Special). for mining purposes Is recommended. mlleB from here by masked Night -n, . . ... , . Illlll O IIUIII iH.IL u.woi. inar opera.orn b.iou.u sc.ect nun, - ; ,d u lmiI.Ql!ri.d. Captain ltan- ploslves wh c.h can be used to the . kn. b()()y ound riddled with ui uuvan.uBe ... .... i-. . . i bullets and hanging irom a troe one Hons; that all explosives should be ..... . , " , .... ... SLZm. ... i mlle Don the ho. el. Efforts to lo cate the body of Colonel Taylor have made into cartridges and placed In closed receptacles before being tak- I'll miu llie mine, luu. su.im.iiis n . ,n l,l,l,wl i. i i u k. .,,, i,i ho v. aa also killed mi me ii. ii n.iv.uu nui , . . . .i--L. , been futile, but It Is believed that Sheriff Eastwood and a pose of armed men left I iilon City for the scene of the muittejr. If t.iey meet any of the Nlghl hiders It is expected that a pitched buttle will be loughl. Sheriff lluyues, of Lake Coumy, is more effective are n w2' ftf ' a ii,Efl.: . if. u i ijh.i.i . inc. The trouble which resulted In the death of Captain Hankln and prob and that the use of a larger charge than is required should be avoided are the contentions of the experts. That greater care should be ex ercised where gas or dust Is known to occur In the mine, and that wa terlng should be also suggested In the report. Recommendations regarding new construction, shaft lining, super ing operations and for Bhot firing rom anut Log. Night Rider dis- ar ,,f Si A-? thc uvcs ryZ i i. u nntntnB . ,ho Tnprt lnen Colonel Taylor and Captain thu s'fe vn'emdencv Inconf n- I "n8,tan' ES g would be greatly aided through . ." '" K'rs, to wnlcb the establishment and maintenance tht?Irpa' '''" , i w" iiH , i .nr,!na ni cnintii I Ut. WKti, tM manager of the schools for training res 'mie Hotel at Walnut Log tele- FINANCIAL Kern Called Home. Syracuse, N. Y. (Special). John W. Kern, the Democratic vice pres idential nominee, abandoned his cam paign In this vicinity and left for home at 5 P. M. on the Southwestern Limited In response to a message from his wife telling of the serious Illness of their eight-year-old son. Wounded By Torpedoes. Lexington. Ky. (Special) Charles and Millard Hale, aged six and nine years, respectively, were horribly wounded by the explosion ot n railroad torpedo at their home In Erlnifteld. In Boyle County. The children were playing along the rail road tracks, found the torpedo and took it home to use as a target to throw at. The first missle thrown hit the torpedo squarely, causing It to explode. The children are not expected to live. Kills His Brother. Harrlsburg, Pa. (Special). Al bert Bell, a 12-year-old school boy, was shot and instantly killed by hi" 16-year-old brother, Raymond, whlk hunting In Wlldwond Park. With the brothers on n hunllng expedition were three other boys, one of whom, without saying unylhlug to anyone, slipped a cartridge Into the rifle, which was tho only weapon they Daughters of Prince Nicholas head- j had. I-ator on Raymond playfull ed a street demonstration of Mon tenegrin women In opposition to the Austrian annexations pointed the rifle nt his brother ai.i pulled the trigger. The youth sank to the ground with a bullet In hh brain. l-ive Men Itlowu To Atoms. New Orleans La (Special). Blown to atoms and with their bodies scattered over a radius of half a mile, five men lost their lives a Culebra Cut, Canal .Zone, when a steam shovel exploded a hidden dyn amite charge. Tho news reached here from Panama. The dynamite Is believed to have been left from previous work. W. J. Davis, en gineer, of the shovel; George Good ley, a c:aneman; an unknown fore man a 1 wo negroes were among the vl .! 3. Says l.ibcruU (.'it Money. Havana (Special). A political sensation wub sprung here by lead ing Conservatives, who charge that Miguel de la Torre, the defaulting treasurer of Havana, loaned the stolen money, $195,000. to the Liber al campaign managers. De la Torre was Indicted. He has not yet been sdmltled to bond nor has a successor K-eu appointed. There Is a marked drift In the political sentiment to ward General Menocal, the Conserva tive candidate. Illinois Central'.: proposed electri fication plans call for an expenditure Of $25,000,000. The Bethlehem Steel Corporation has secured orders for structural steel aggregating 16,000 tons. The Balkan situation Is ttnii.ovlng, but fore gn Government bonds were gtnerally weak. Twenty railroads in tho second wek of October return a decrea.-e of 3 per cent. In groas earning.-!. Warwick Iron & Steel directors declared a half-yearly dlvlicnd of i per cent. The La Rose Company, of Cobalt, after paying 1U '' per cent, quar terly dividend this week had $43li, 000 rash n Its treasury. According to Price the amount of cotton ginned so far this year is 38 per cent, greater than the amount during the corresponding period of 1907. At Its present rate of output the Hand Is producing afiout $140,000, 000 of gold a year. Rhodesia's Sep tember output was worth $1,000, 000. Baldwin's have received an order" from the St. Paul Railroad for 12 locomotives and the same company placed orders for 3s more with the American Company. John P. Reynolds, Jr., has been appointed receiver for the failed banking firm of E. H. Gay & Co., of Boston. The firm has a Philadelphia branch under the management cf ,; Warren Coulston, Jr. Canada Is taking a little gold fr-:i New York. The Boston & Montana Smelt, will go Into full operation tho fit I of next month. Full operation mean that the Amalgamated Ooppni properties will bo turning out tl. normal tonnage of copper. Reports from th') Counellsvllle c.il' district show that the number i Idle furnateB Increused last w u There were on Suturday 17,621 ' blast and 20.011 out of blast. Vi to this time last year the output v that region was 16,000,000 tot i Ihls ywv It is about 7.000.000 to:;.. "HIPPER" SOUGHT BY POSSES. .Mun Cuts West Vlaglnia (irl Krom Chin To Stomach. Wheeling, W. Vu. (Special). Police of this city and all neighbor ing communities ure Bcouring the country In an effort to arrest an unknown "Jack the Ripper," 'who brutally attacked Anna Strobel, a 16-year-old Benwood girl. The man attacked the girl twice. He first caught her early In the night, and attempted to choke her. She broke away from him and ran home. He followed her and caught her In the yard. With a long-bladed knife he inflicted a wound that extended from the chin to the stomach. Tho wound Is not fatal. Battleship Named Utah. Washington (Special). Tuesday was apparently christening day at the Navy Department, for a long list of names of torpedo-boat destroyers, colliers and other boats was made public. It was announced that bat tleship No. 31 has been named U'Ofl and that the old monitor Wyoming lias been rechrlstened Cheyenne, lu order that one of the new battleships may be named Wyoming. foremen, superintendents and Inspec tors. The foreign experts deplore what they term the large and permnnent loss of coal In mining operations In many portions or the United States, which they argue might be prevented through the Introduction or more ef ficient methods. WASHINGTON i , phoned Sid Waddcl! in the West Tennessee Land Com pany, stating that about 25 masked Night Riders came to his hotel at midnight. According to thiB report, the Night Riders lined up outside the hotel, pulled out their revolvers and Balled Colonel Taylor and Cap tain Runkin. the two men did not suspect trouble and cunie down im mediately. As the attorneys passed Into the front yard of the Jiotel the riders covered them wah tnelr revolvers. Beloro Captain Rankin and Colonel It bus been arranged that Miss ( laylor hod opportunity to retire Elkins shall have two mattons of ; they were surrounded and seized, honor and lour bridesmaids to at- I They were put on horses behind tend her when Bhe becomes the bride , NUfht Riders and carefully guarded, of the Duke of the Abruzzl. The Night Riders then quietly Commissioner of Patents Moore 'ook up their march from the hotel, denies the statement that there is turning down the road toward Reel any purpose to deotroy the models ' Vboi Lake. Guests ut the hotel In in the Patent Office. I n 'ew minutes lost the sound of Walter HensBuelcr Berry, or Wash- j crunching hooibeats and nothing IiiEton. has been appointed by the "'ore wire learned or the rate of Cap- MShedlVfl of Egypt judge or the Inter- '' Rankin and Colonel Taylor uu- uutioual Com. of l i.st Instance at ' muming. rroceooing to tne Cairo, to fill ihe vacancy made by ' e"'ge of Reel Koo; Lake, the Night tho promotion or Summcrville P. Hiders pulled out a rope with which Tuck to the Court oi Apt.eals. 1 'hey had provided themselves and A memorial service to Baron Speck Pj?W the no03e abo"t Captain Run von Ste: nburg. the former German ' '-''j'8 ueck. ambassador to the I'nlted States, who ! Examination of the scene of the d.ed at Heidclburg, Germany, Au- i niurder tailed to reveal evidence of curt 23 last, will be held at Concordia I "' struggle. Captain Rankin was Church Washington. ! "rung up irom a limb on the bam. At the Mexican Embassy it was i of lh lnk for ,ne Baaing privilege., s'ated that Ambassador Creel, now , l" "au coinuuueu wun iv Smoke Blinds Engine Drivers. Roanoke, Va. (Special). Forest f.res are raging on the mountains around Roanoke and through Bouth-wer-t Virginia,' ruining vast tracts of timber. Railroad engineers can at I luit a thort dlBtance ahead of their trains. QraaddaUghtav of Governor Cui-roll. ParlB (By Cable). Miss La grange, daughter of Baron and Baroness Lagrange, and grand daughter of former Gov. John Lee Carroll, of Maryland, was married today to Count BolBf-)re Thlennes of Belgium. Entire Island Afire. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. (Special). Hundreds of residents In this dis trict who have been fighting for est Hrei are depending upon show ers predicted to give much needed relief. A forty-mile gale spread the fires In all directions. It is report ed that Sugar Linnd, which has a population of 1,000 people, Is ablaze almost from end to end. Near De tour, sixteen square miles have beon been burned over. Wright Will Go Hume. Washington, D. C. i Siiec-ial ) . 'tv ilo Wright, tho aeroplanlst who irntvlv e.-eaped death In the ac cident to bis aeroplano duiihg a Qlgbt at Eort Myer, Va., five weeks i go. will soon be able to leave for borne, ut Dayton, O. His most serious Injury was a broken thigh, ml the n.ilint wa removed from s leday. It was found upon maas ring the led leg, the one Injured hat It Is but a quarter of an Inch lierler than the other An X-ray evai.iinatlon of the fracture showed 'hat the knitting of the broken bones bones has baen perfect. at bis Chihuu.iau home, Is not ex pected to return to this country pend ing the appointment of his successor. The commission oi lortign miiie cxperu appointed to make recom mendations, with a view of mini mizing loss of Hie in Americas mines, has submitted lis report. The Association of Railway Bridge a'ld Building Superintendents decid ed to held the next convention lu Jacksonville, Fla. The argument in the so-called Colorado timber land fraud cases was begun lu the United Staes Supreme Court. Two weeks is the time which the Navy Department estimates the bat tleship flest, commanded by Admiral Sperry, will remain in the Unl'ted States after its arrival at Hamptcn Roads, as now contemplated. A virulent disease, which has baf fled physicians, highly contagious und fatal In every case, has broken out ut Rabat, Morocco, and the Moorish authorities have been asked to tuke quarantine precautions. The National Fire Proofing Com pany's main building at Terra Cotta, D. ('., was totally destroyed by fire, causing a loss of $50,000, partially covered by Insurance. The abstract of the reports of the condition of the 6,853 national banks on September 23, 1908, furnished evidence of vastly improved business conditions. , In accordance with a scheme ot reorganization of the Coust Artillery Corps, which has been decided upon by the War Department, changes In assignments of officers woro announc ed. A total of $1,297,203,-120 in new money was printed and circulated by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing during the last fiscal year, according to the annual report of Director Ralph. From tho little hill town of Bolen hofen, near Neuremberg, Germany, practically the world's supply of iltbographlc stones has been obtain ed for more than a century. n 1 J a n ...I. U- . i-ieaiueiit iiuuwvru nan loierreu ; to Secretary of the Treasury Cortel you for investigation serious charges which have been made against Rob ert W. Dowe. collector of customs .a' Eagle Pass. Texas. Night Riders. The masked men then 3 epped back and opened fire on the swinging body, riddling it with bul lets. Colonel Taylor was evidently alive at this time and witnessed the mur der of his law partner. Leaving the corpse of Captain Rankin hanging on the bank of Reel Foot Lake, the riders took Colonel Taylor to another spot. Search near Captain Rankin's todj has railed to reveal a trace of Mr. Taylor. No sign of a hat or a piece of clothing can bo discovered. Fires Kill Trout. Malone, N. Y. (Special). Sports men have Just discovered that the forest fires In the Adiroudocks have worked havoc among the trout with which many streams throughout th burned section are well stocked. Thousands of dead trout hnve been round In the bottoms, and along the edges of the streams and It is be lieved they have been killed by im purities in the water caused either by ashes or smoke. Dies To Have Dog. Sandusky, Ohio (Special). --('apt John Robinson, of the 'onrge Cutter, was killod at Kelley island. The boat was docking when a pet dog fell overboard. Cnplnlu Robinson Jumped into the water to save the dag and was caught b'-tvvecn the ves sel and dock. Ho was crushed co badly he died on thc way to the hospital here. Captain Robinson wai a veteran nat.'getor well known on the lakes. Puppy Nearly Asphyxiates Family. Chester, Pa. (Special). A puppy, left In Oliver Carpenter's kitchen to keep warm, turned on a cock lu a gas stovo after thc family had gone to sleep. By (ho narrowest ohunaj one of them was aroused and snvsn himself and all tho others from asphyxiation. Turks Spent IK 1.000.000 For ,' ExplosJvra. Paris (Special). Artllley JjS plosive for Turkoy, valuod M ncar-i ly $1, 00,000 at j being embarked 'l Marseilles tor Sitlouica.