LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH Domestic A desperado who killed Pollremanl Bmlth and seriously wounded Officer' Deverss., who were attempting to, arrest hltn (or a holdup near Omaha,) Neb., and was probably fatally; wounded, was Identified as Jack' Curtain, said to be a desperate crtm-; Inal, against whom charges ranging; from stage robbery In Wyoming and. bank cracking in Missouri to murder' In St. Paul are said to stand. j T. S. Anderson, former president, of the defunct Davles County Hank, and Trust Company, of Owensboro, Ky., was found guilty of swearing falsely to a statement of the bank's, condition and was sentenced to three years In the penitentiary. A butcher's bill for $2,000 led to' the examination In supplementary' proceedings of Mrs. Llda Rawlcg' Reader, whoso financial deals In. Spanish-American countries havo at tracted attention. Joseph Wharton, the Philadelphia; Ironmaster, practically left an estate of $25.uuu,u00 to his widow, three, daughters and his grandchildren. - Swarthmore College gets $100, U00. Enrique De Lara, the S:ui Do-: mlngo boy who, cn September 14. shot and killed Father Artuoro Asen-' clo. In Central Park, pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree be fore Justice Dowllng, In New York.' M. H. Carmichnel, of Wollsburg, W. Va., declares that his brother,; Rev. John H. Carmlchael, was drlveni Insane over hypnotism when the cler-' gyman murdered Gideon Browning and then committed suicide. The mother of General Manager Samuel Hlgglns was killed and three members of the railroad official's family were hurt when his residence, at New Haven, Ct., was destroyed by fire. Otto Kel.se, New York state sup erintendent of Insurance, whom Gov-' ernor Hughes twice attempted to re move from office, has resigned. , Prof. Abbott Lawrence I.Kwell hns been named to Biiccecd Charles W. Eliot as president of Harvard Unl-, verslty. I Six masked men forced Solomon Lauehner. of near Pittsburg, to give up 11,500. ' The General Assembly of Ohio ha returned Theodore E. Burton to Congress. ! Massachusetts is to spend $684, 000 resurfacing public highways. Charles S. Cameron, president of the Tube City Railroad, of Pittsburg, was found guilty of giving a bribe of $70,000 to former Councilman VV A. Martin to UBe among members of councils to secure the passage of an' ordinance for the benefit of the com pany. Martin, who Is now serving a three-year sentence for accepting the bribe, was the principal witness against Cameron. Magistrate Moss, In the Tombs Court, found Bradford Merrill, S. S. Carvaho and Edward S. Clark, of the New York American, guilty of criminally libeling John D. Rockefel ler, Jr., and technically committed them to the Tombs. John V. Duffy, confidential clerk to Martin J. Condon, president of the American Snuff Company, was arrested In New York, charged with, forging his employer's name to 12 checks, aggregating $3,800. The will of the Dowager Duchess of Marlborough, Lily Warren Beres ford, bequeaths her millions to her son, William DeLapoor llercsford, who Is an Infant, under 4 years of age. John F. Mclntyre, In summing up for the defense in the trial of Thorn ton Jenkins Ilalns, drew an Imagi nary word picture of the electrocu tion and dissection of Hr.ln3- . r oreign Shad Khan, a Persian prince in the Russian service, committed sui cide because he had been relieved of the command of the Fifteenth! Dragoons. The American and British min isters In Peking, China, formally pro tested against the dismissal of Yuan Shi Kal. A mlsunderstandlrg between Chlla and Peru resulted in tt;e recall of the Chilian minister to Peru. The death is announced in Berlin of Ernst Von Wllderbrucu, the Ger man poet and dramatist. Fifty-six men were killed by Are damp In the Auka coal mine, near Veszpiln, Hungary. Earthquake shocks are reported to have occurred .in various parts of South Africa. New cases of cholera are reported daily In Russia. Commercial re'atlons between France and Venezuela were ordered renewed us a restiit of the negotia tions of Josu de Jesus Paul, the Venezuelan representative to Paris. A slight earthquake was experienc ed throughout Lombard)', Venetla and Tuscany. No damage was done, but the people were much alarmed. The Chilian government officials at Avlia, Chili, entertained the American delegates to the Pan American Scientific Congress. The new Cuban Congress held its first meeting, which whh devoted to the passing upon Ihe cnxlent'uls of the members. All political prisoners In Peru were set free In conscience of the decision of the Supreme Court. An aeronautical professr.rsh'p has been established at the Cnlverslty of Llettlngen. The French government favor a bill providing that all executions bo In private. The adjustment of the Austrr Turklsh controversy Is not pleasing to Russia. Seventeen nations have accepted the invitations extended by the Neth erlands to attend an International conference on the subject of bills of exchange. Mrs. George Guy Chctwynd, daugh ter of the late Charles Secor, of New York City, secured decree In lAtn don for restitution of her conjugal rights. Seven Chinese were drowned when the French liner Polynesian rsn down and sank the Dutch steamer DJandi at the wharf in Singapore. X lieutenant of Infantry and two firemen rescued from the ruins in ' Kegglo a three-year-old glr' who was not only alive, but well. Pierre Bletry, of the French Cham ber of Deputies, was sent to prison for breaking the seals on bis news paper olllce. Sven Hedln, the Swedish explorer, who Is returning borne from Tibet f la Rul, was received by the Ctar. Tram ears of the Amarloaa-Oaoa-dim Company were burned In Rio Janeiro by a mob. A aurgloaJ operation was perform 4 o Sir Arthur Conaa Doyle la lxn4on. - PLAN HOUSES FOR THE EARTHQUftKE VICTIMS Will Build Houses With Congress Appropriation. MAY SEND THE CARPENTERS. Five Hundred Thousand Dollars In Cash Will Be Put Into Lumber, Out of Which 2,500 to 3,000 Sma 1 Buildings Will Be Erected in the District De. astated in Sicily and Calabria. Washington, D. C. (Special). An Innovation In international re lief measures, so far as Europe Is concerned, Is to be undertaken by the American Government In expend ing the $j00.000 in money appro priated by Congress for tho Italian earthquake sufferers. Realizing that a great need among the sufferers will bo shelter from the elements, President Roose velt has decided to send to Italy ma terial for the construction of 2,500 or 3,000 substantial but necessarily very modest frame houses, supple menting this by supplying civilian carpenters, to supervise construction !f this can bo arranged. Ever since the appropriation was made serious consideration has been given by the President and the State Department ns to tho beBt uses that cculd be made of It in the way of relief. Correspondence has been go ing on almost dally with Ambassador Grlscom at Rome with a view to as certaining the views of himself, his follow-members of the American re lief committee and of the Italian Government as to the most sensible course to adopt with a view to the best results. A final decision was reached Sat urday. Vorbal instructions were giv en by President Roosevelt to Secre tary Newberry whereby the machin ery of the Navy Department was en listed in the prosecution of the plan. Mr. Newberry at once got into tele phone communication with the naval officials at New York, and, by quick work, has been able to make partial arrangements for carrying out the President's orders. The following statement was made public at the Secretary's (pfTlce: "The Navy Department has ar ranged for the expenditure of ap proximately $500,000 In the purchase of building materials, including all articles necessary for the construc tion of substantial frame houses for tho Itullau sufferers, and the ship ments will begin by the sailing of two steamers probably on Monday. This lumber is being delivered In New York, and the sailing of the vessels will proceed as fast as they can be loaded. Each ship will carry all the materials for the construction of about 500 houses, and It will require not less than six steamers for tho entire amount purchased. If pos sible, the department intends to send with each vessel several civilian house carponters with plans to assist in thQ erection of these houses." el . TO DRY VP SOUTH CAROLINA. Three Rills Introduced In The Legislature. Columbia, S. C. (Special). The fight of the Prohibitionists has start ed ill the General Assembly. There were introduced three bills in each house aa follows: To provide State-wide prohibition. To provide for the closing up and the disposition of the stock of the county dispensaries In force now under the Local Option law. To license liquor drummers at $5,000. Another bill to provide for the- en forcement of the law will be intro duced. That the question is about evenly divided is the general opinion. On this issue much Interest centers in South Carolina. BLACK HORSES I.N TAFT PARADE. Troop A, Of Cleveland, Will Turn Out 70 Mounts, Cleveland (Special). Troop A, of this city, which is to act as the per sonal guard and escort to President Taft in the Inaugural parade on March 4. will have 76 men at Wash ington, each of whom will be mount ed on a Jet black horse. The troop acted in the same capacity for Presi dents Hayts, Garfield nd McKinley. 21 liliuk Horses Matched. Lexington. Ky. ( Special). Jacob B. Perkins, a Cleveland millionaire, completed the purchase of 24 match, ed black horses, which will be ship ped to Cleveland to be used by tho famous Trcop A, or "Black Horse Troop," in the Taft Inaugural parade March 4. Clothing For Xuvul PriHoncrs. Washington. 1). C. (Special). The Naval Committee has) reported favor ably the bill Introduced by Mr. Hale, which provides for suitable civilian clothing and a cash gratuity to naval prisoners on discharge. Enlisted men have been released frcra naval prisons without money or suitable civilian clothing. Not Infrequently they become public charges. Shock Iteg Mered At Manila. Manila (Special). The instru ments of the Government Observatory here recorded a severe earthquake shock at a distance from this city. It la estimated that tho seismic dis turbance must have occurred at least 3,000 kilometers from Manila. Bullets After Handsliuke. Nashviillo, Tenn. (Special). Eu gene A. Laurent, of this city, was killed at Artesia, Miss., by Charles Smith, a wealthy planter of that sec tion. Laurent traveled for a St. Louis hardware house. It Is said that Smith was one of Laurent's cus tomers and that Lauront was In the act of shaking hands with him when he pulled a plstcl and fired two shots, each taking effect. Laurent was a son of Edward Laurent, a prominent architect of this city. Quits Cigarette, Dies. Hatleton, Ind. (Special). Edward Lane, 20 years old, died here as the result of keeping a New Year's reso lution, In wblcb be gave up the use of cigarettes. He was addicted to ex cessive smoking and was urged to stop them with the new year. So accustomed had the young man be come to tbelr use the denial of them affeotej bis nervous system serious ly. Uuf bo determined to do with out smoking, thinking the keen de sire for them would pass away. OIL SUIT COST MILLIONS Evidence Already Fills Twenty-Two Volumes. Case Yet to Be Heard By the Circuit Court of St. Louis. New York (Special). With the examination of W. W. Pilklngton, In charge of the records of the Stand ard Oil Company's pipe line, on matters relating to the shipping of Lime, Ind., and Oklahoma oil, the government's suit for disso lution ot the Standard Oil Company came to a close here. There are still two or three witnesses to be heard In rebuttal, but these will be examined in Chicago, an adjournment till then having been taken for the purpose at the conclusion of today's hearing. The case, which practically ended here, so far as the submission of evi dence Is concerned, will undoubtedly go down In legal history as the great est civil action ever brought before 'the tribunals of the country. The rec ord already comprist 22 printed volumes and represents n coBt to the litigants of nearly $10,000,000. The filing of briefs by counsel will add another million or so words to the already monumental mass of testi mony and court records. Arguments of both sides next April before the full bench of the United States Cir cuit Court sitting In St. Loulflt will further enlarge the record, and as the caso is to be taken to the Su preme Court of the United States, no matter whnt the doclslon of the Circuit Court Is, the final bulk of the record in tho case promises to be appalling. The suit to dissolve the Standard Oil Company cf New Jersey was com menced on December 6, 1906, with the filing of a complaint in the fed eral court of St. Louis. Besides tho Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, 69 subsidiary companies and seven Individuals were named as defend ants. The latter were John D. Rocke feller, John D. Archbold. William Rockefeller, H. H. Rogers, H. M. Flagler, O. H. Payne and Charles M. Pratt. In all, 192 witnesses were called by the government and 140 by the defense. The record of the testi mony proper totals up 4,500,000 words. The exhibits, consisting of over 73.500 groups of words and fig ures, adds another 10,000,000 words. The printing office at Washington has been kept busy night and day for months completing the record, which, when bound will make 22 printed volumes. The maps showing tbe company's pipe lines and oil fields, are printed In four colors, a pro cedure heretofore unknown in legal record making. From the printers' view-point it Is the greatest case in legal hUtory. TAKE PRINCE AS FORGER. Russian Xohlemnn Said To Have Gotten 9250,000. St. Petersburg (Special). Prince Bobutof, a well-known figure In so ciety, has been arrested at a fashion able gathering on a charge of hav ing forged checks for a total amount of $250,000. It Is alleged that the Prince organized a gang consisting of certain club members and govern ment employes who took part in what is said to have been a most Ingenious scheme of fraud. Two well-known ladles are alleged to be lmpllcatod. The Governor of the Russian part of the Island of Sakhalin, M. Jalupoff, is accused of swindlng and extortion. House Spanking Takes. Washington, D. C. (Special). The demand for copies of the Con gressional Record containing tha proceedings of the House, when the Secret Service portion of the Presi dent's message was laid on the table, has been so great that members can not comply with it. To meet the further demand, Representative Langley, of Kentucky, has introduc ed a resolution calling for an edition of 2,000,000 copies of the Record. If the resolution is adopted, as it probably will bo, this will be the largest edition of. a single Record ever Issued. No Crop In Graveyard. Norfolk, Va. (Special). Agree ing to give the ground "two good coats of fertilizer"' for use of a por tion of Forest Lawn Cemetery for the planting of a big radish crop for spring shipment to the North and West, John L. Lambert received a reply from the board of control tell ing him that the "compensation of fered the city was inadequate." Millionaire Philanthropist Dead. Monterey, Cal. (Special). David Jackson, millionaire landowner and philanthropist, of this city, died here. He was born In Scotland 88 years ago and came to tbe United States In 1841. He leaves a widow and seven children. TWENTY DEAD IK JEJD-ON CRUSH Locomotives Stood on Ends and Coaches Telescoped. ENGINEER MISREAD HIS WATCH. A Passenger Train Flying Down Grade on the Denver and Rio Grande Runs Into Freight Train Laboring Up Incline Engines Jammed Into One Piece of Machinery. Glenwood Springs, Col. (Special). Twenty persons were killed, and 30 m Injured, many of them seriously, In a heud-on collision between west bound rasBenger train No. 6 and an eastbound freight train, on tho Den ver and Rio Grande Railroad, be tween Dotsemo and Spruce Creek, 22 miles from Glenwood Springs, at 9.36 o'clock P. M. All unidentified are women or chil dren and bodies are badly mangled. While nothing official has been giv en out as to the cause of the wreck it is said to have been due to a misunderstanding of orders ou the part of tha engineer, Gustaf Olsen, of the passenger train. Olsen, how ever, claims he understood his in structions perfectly, but that he mis read his watch, thus encroaching on the time of tho freight train, which was being drawn by two locomotives, the first of which was in charge of his brother, Slg. Olson. When news of the catastropho reached Glenwood Springs every available physician and nurse in the city was pressed Into service and a relief train was soon on the scene. The work of rescue was Immediately begun. A pathetic feature of the accident was the killing of a father, leaving two small children, the elder four years old, the younger two. The eld er boy told a nurse at the sanitarium that his father called him Bennle, and this Is all he will say. From a fellow-passenger it was learned that the family was going to Grand Junc tion to visit relatives. It is supposed that Mr. and Mrs. Kettle, whose names appear among the dead, were the parents of these two little ones who were badly injured. Another sad case was that of tho destruction of an entire family with the exception of an Infant of three months. This helpless child was tak en care of by a family at Shoshone, who intends to adopt the sole sur vivor of a once happy family. One of the remarkable incidents of the wreck was tho almost mirac ulous escape from the ill-fated chair car of a Mr. Stall, a Pueblo (Col.) salesman. Mr. Stall escaped without a scratch, but Is on the verge of col lapse as a result of the nervous shock. Another heartbreaking scene was enacted In the wreck zone when kind hands gently lifted 4-year-old Alice Williams from the death clasp of her mother's arms. Near by lay the body of the father, decapitated, and on every side were lifeless bodies, victims of the disaster. KAISER SHOWS HIS TEETH. Wants Share If Persia Is To Be Taken Over Ry Powers. London (Special). Emperor Wil liam has at last voiced his opposition to the Anglo-Russian program for monopolizing the control of Persia's affairs, according to ' information from official sources. Germany has covertly hinted to Russia that the Kaiser will demand a hand in Persia's government in case other powers attempt to divest the Shah ot his authority. The Emperor admits that he is un informed as to the plan that the Rus sian and English foreign offices are supposed to be working out for the reform of Persia's Internal affairs, but ho intimates that any attempt to act in the dark will meet with failure. This move by the Kaiser is be lieved to be the first sign of the long expected clash over the contemplat ed control of Pers'a. Reports from Teheran say that Gen. Firman Flrma has not yet en gaged the revolutionary forces at Is pahan in battle, and that the rebel lion Is spreading throughout the en tire southern half of the empire. DEADLY FIREDAMP AGAIN. IN THE WORLD OF FINANCE Chesapeake & Ohio has arranged for the sale of a large issue of new bonds. Chesapeake & Ohio's new bond is sue will be $30,000,000 ot 6 per cents. Four per cent. Interest will here, after be paid cn deposits by the First Penny Savings ot Philadelphia. John Wanamaker Is the president. Standard Oil's net profits in 1908 approximated $80,000,000. Divi dends paid out amounted to $40,000,- 000. It is figured out that in 1908 the value of electrical equipment turned out In the United Slates was $228, 000,000, a decrease of 27 per cent, compared with 1907. Wall Street had a rumor that Secretary of the Treasury Cortelyou will become president of tbe Consoli dated Gas Company ot New York on March 4. Mr. Cortelyoa, when seen In Washlngon, refused to confirm or deny the report. W, C. Brown was elected president of the Lake Shore ft Michigan South ern to succeed W. H. Newman. He was also elected president of the Luke Erie ft Wei tern. A few days ago he became president of tbe New York Central, which is tbe "daddy" of the Vsnderbllt lines. Tbe "Iron Trade Review" says; "The principal developemeut of lb week was tbe appearance of the New York Central lines In the market with an inquiry fur 80,000 tons of steel rails. The Internatlouul ft Great Northern Railroad I inquiring for 88.000 tons, and the Great North ern for 8,000 tons. 210 Men Eentonibed In A Coal Mine In Hungary. Veszprlm, Hungary (Special). In an explosion of fire damp in the Auka coal mine here, which was fol lowed later by a duBt explosion and fire, 240 men were entombed. Sixteen living miners and the bod ies of 4 5 dead persons thus far have been brought out of the pit. Tho fire has been held to one lo cality and It is hoped that the re mainder of the entombed miners will be rescued alive. Tho town of Veszprlm lies 60 miles southwest of Budapest, and has a population of some 15,000, com posed mostly of Magyars. $200,000 To Howdoln College. Boston (Special). Bowdoin Col lege is benefited by the will of the late Joseph E. Merrill,. who died at Nowton about one week apo, to the extent of $200,000. liy the condi tions of the will tho ent re estate Is lelt In' trust to Bowdoin, subject to an annuity of $1,000 each to Mr. Merrill's two Bisters, both of whom live at Portland. Maine. V. 8. Consulate .Moved. .'Washington, D. C. (Special). Orders have been Issued by the State Department to Vice Consul Stewart K. Lupton to re-establish the Mes tins consulate at Catania. Tbe name is all that remains of tbe former consulate la the ruined city, and even this would disappear If tbe State Department were authorized by law to establish the post at Catania. The present change, therefore, Is only one of domicile, it being Im possible to reopen tbe consulate In tbe ruined city. After Express Companies, Washington, D. C. (Special). Holding that there may be some question of unjust discrimination in volved in the matter of express com panies dealing in exchange, money orders, etc., tbe Interstate Commerce Commission refused to dismiss tbe complaint of tbe American Bankers' Association against tbe express com pany. At tbe same tlmo tbe com mission declined to issue a subpoena as requested by the complainants, de claring that tbe Information about tbe express company's business sought to be obtained did not seem to be necessary at tht present time. THE EARTHQU'KE ZONE EXTENDS Quake is Felt in Northern Italy to Austria. Vienna (Special). Slight earth quake shocks were felt in Southern Austria and the Tyrol. The disturb ances extended from Sarajeve, in Southeastern Bosnia, td Meran, in the Tyrol. -Among other places where the shocks were felt were Trieste, Pola and Trlent. No damage has been reported. Professor Belar, of the Lalbach Observatory, describes the earth quake as very strong. He says the center was In Upper Italy, but the shock was felt through a wide radius, even at Lalhnch. Rome (Special). All of Tuscany and many of the principal cities In tbe northern part of Italy were shak en by an earthquake. The Inhab itants were thrown Into a panic. Hundreds rushed from their homes fearing a calamity like that suffered by Southern Italy and Sicily, and It was several hours before many of them could be Induced to re-enter their dwellings. Present indications are that Italy was more or less shaken as far north as the foothills of the Alps. A strong shock of an undulatory char acter, lasting for four seconds, was felt at Genoa at 1.45 o'clock in the morning. Two shocks, probably the same seismic wave, were felt at Venice befvoen 1.45 and 1.47 A. M. An undulatory shock, moving from the north to the south, was reported at Bologna at 1.50 A. M., and a slight shock was felt at Milan at the same time. Many other towns were affected, among them being Florence and Padua. According to the records of the observatories, and especially the es tablishment maintained at Florence by the Jesuit Fathers, the center of the disturbance was near Lcimbach, Saxony. The quake was strongest in Italy at Trevlso, 16 miles north of Venice. A strong and violent shock was felt at the town of Imola, In Central Italy, at 1.43 o'clock A. M. The in habitants, fearing a repetition of the catastrophe in the South, rushed from their houses, terrified and in a Btate of panic. The streets were crowded with people rushing to and fro, praying and weeping. Kills Them One By One. Mankato, Minn. (Special). James York, a quarryman, murdered his four children at his home and then hanged himself. The crimes were committed apparently with delibera tion. The children descended from their sleeping quarters at different times. As each came down the stairs the father killed him or her. It Is supposed York was mentally unbalanced. - Woman Blown To Atoms. Leadvllle, Col. (Special). Mrs. Richard Lauterbach, wife of a pros pector, was killed, and Miss Esther SchuBter, a guest of the former, at her home, near Mitchell, 15 miles west of here, was badly Injured when a mysterious fire In the Lauterbach, cabin set off several sticks of dyna mite. The explosion blew Mrs. Lauterbach to atoms, wrecked the log cabin and severely hurt her wom an companion. WASHINGTON BY TELEGRAPH Desiring further Information with regard to the schedule of duties on files, tho House Ways and Means Committee subpenaed Samuel M. Nicholson, of Providence, R, I., to appear before it. No change in tbe form of govern ment of the Isthmian Canal Zone is to be recommended to Congress at this session by the House Commit tee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. The Revenue Cutter Service an nounces a competitive examination, commencng April 6 next, for the ap pointment or 15 cadets ot tbe line and 4 cadet engineers. Strong opposition la expected to to the enactment of a bill granting an American register for the Paclflo coastwise trade to the barkentlne Andromeda. Representative Charles S. Landls, of Indiana, declined to discuss the published report that he bad been offered the position ot publlo printer. The President sent to the Senate the nomnatlon of William R. Comp ten to be United States marshal for the Western district of New York. The Senate Committee on Agricul ture authorized a favorable report on the McCumber bill providing for the inspection and grading of grains. Admiral Dewey, who has been con fined to bis home for the greater part of two months with an attack ot sciatica, has considerably improv ed. , To make the rate of postage cn third and fourth-class matter on rural free delivery routes equal to two cents a pound Is the object of a bill Introduced by Representative Foster, of Vermont. No definite line can be drawn be tween old and new automobiles ct different value by railroads in their classification of freight rates ac cording to the Interstate Commerce Commission. Scores ot men whose life work has been devoted to a minute study of the problems of forestry, attended the twenty-eighth annual meeting of the American Forestry Association. Despite the frequent calls of com mittee meetings, grave doubt Is ex pressed as to whether there will be gny copyright legislation at this ses sion of Congress. An apppropriation ot $161,018,000 for pensions was agreed on by the Committee on Appropriations In the drafting ot the annual pension ap propriation bill. The House Committee on tbe Ju diciary agreed to a favorable report on tbe Parsons Bill for an additional Judge for tbe Southern district of New York. ' Arbitration treaties with Bolivia, Ecuador, Uruguay and Haiti were reported favorably to the Senate from the Committee on Foreign Re lations. Tbe Senate passed a bill permitting tbe use ot tbe pension of fice for tbe Inaugural ball In connec tion with tho Inauguration of Mr. Taft. Secretary Root signed arbitration treaties with Costs, Rica and Chile, through Honors Cairo and Cms. T. JENKINS HIS FREED MID CHEERS After Twenty-Three Hours of Delibera tion Verdict Is Reached. GETS BENEFIT OF THE DOUBT. Jnry Evidently Based Its Verdict of Acquittal on Belief That the Charro That Thornton Hslns Assisted In Murder of Annls Was Not Proven Captain Bains Trial. Flushing, L. I. (Special). Thorn ton J. Ilalns was acquitted shortly before 3 o'clock P. M., of complicity In the murder of William A. Annis, who was shot by his brother, Capt. Peter C. Halns, Jr., on the Bayslde Ya?ht Club float on August 15 last. The verdict followed an all-n'ght session of the court, during which Judje, lawyers and newpaper men, with a few hardy spectators, kept a vigil with the arbiters ot the pris oner's fate. Judge Crane was In conference with District Attorney Dnrrln on the question of keeping the Jury locked up all night and until a verdict was reached, when they sent word that they had agreed. All night Flushing waited for a verdict which would toll the story ot the five weeks' fight of the Btate against Thornton J. Mains. It was a night of speculation and false rumors, of well-nigh Intolerable strain for some, ot relaxation for otherB who had gone through more than a month of nerve-wrecking toll and now saw the finish of their work. The stenographers, for instance, packed up their belongings and went home smiling. They had taken more than a million words of testimony, and now, their task completed, they were bound for a well-earned rest. But for others there was no rest not for Mr. Darrln, the prosecutor, whose most Important case had reached its crucial point; not for Justice Crane, who remained up all night waiting for a verdict: not for Mr. Mclntyre, chief counsel for the defence, who was on the point of collapse, and went about the court house looking like a ghost, asking at frequent Intervals If there were any news from the Jury, and not for the man most concerned the pale. haggard defendant, who tossed and pitched on his bed all through the night. Nor was there even a catnap in the locked chamber, where the 12 men of the Jury one of them so nattered and bruised that he could hardly hold up his head wrestled and argued over thp ev'dence with out coming to any decision. COAST PANIC STRICKEN Earthquake Shock Felt Along Mi'es of Mountain Range. ML Baker Belchrs r Ire Cable Com. ninnicatlons Cut Off. Seattle (Special). Efforts to re establish communication with Nomo, Dawson and Valdez, Alaska, are be ing made to ascertain the amount of damage caused by the seven see onds' seismic disturbance which shook the Sierra Madra Mountains from Tacoma, Wash., to far north ern points. The Alaska cable has gone down and no reports have been received. With the shock in Washington State came the reports from outlying districts that 800 miles of moun tain range felt three distinct auakes Mount Baker, the tourists' landmark, uelched Are and smoke. The moun tain gives forth acrid fumes and the crater of the century-extinct volcano is lull of redbot lava. Bellliiitham Panic-stricken. At Belllngham, Wash., the citizens were panic-stricken and rushed into the streets when the first shock oc curred. Hundreds rushed into the 3treets. Walls cracked, plaster fell. chimneys toppled and tall towers swayed. At Blaine buildings and stone were rocked and In some cases badly cracked. At Fort Townsend windows were shattered by the score, roofs fell in and a panic ensued among tho citi zens. The siege guns mounted In the fortifications settled on their swivels. In Tacoma two distinct shocks were felt. At Everett reports state .the shock lasted 11 seconds. Port Angeles. Everett, the Tatoosh Island Lighthouse, and the weather station in the Fuca also report dls- turr- nces. The earthquake started with a light tremor and rumbling culmlnat Ing with a severe upward shock. Oc cupants of the Ewell Block of Port Angeles fled into the street. Along the water fronts at Belllngham and Everett it was believed that the large steamers had bumped Into the docks. Officers at Fort Worden state the Investigation so far made shows no damage to the fortifications, al though both Fort Worsen and Fort Flagler were badly shaken. The parting ot the Alaska cables occurred several hours earlier than the shock here. Investigation will be mado to ascertain if there was any connection between the circumstances. DIEO IN English Jail For Carrie Nation. Newcastle - Upon - Tyne, England (Special), Carrie Nation, tbe Amer ican anti-saloon crusader, was arrest ed here while engaged in a raid on 4 saloon. Five Perish In Flames. Ashland. Wis. (Special). Mrs. Nathan Sherrard, and four children, aged, one, two, four and six years, were burned to death at Echlln's Lumber Camp, 20 miles 'south of Ashland'. Sherrard, the camp, cook, arose at 4 o'clock , and "began to prepare breakfast for the 100 men In the camp, leaving bis wile and children asleep. Sherrard rushed into tbe burning structure In an ef fort to save his wire and family, and was dragged out frightfully burned. Senator Heyburn Ro-Elected. Boise, Idaho (Special). By a strict party vote, Waldon D. Hey burn was re-elected United States Senator. Tbe Democrats united on James L. McClear. The vote of the Joint assembly was: Heyburn, 67: McClear, 19. .' r Convicts Fire Penitentiary. Little Rock, Ark. ( Special LIn an attempt to escape from Jail pris oners, at Hilar, met flro to the struc ture. Oeorge Laosy and Lassie Col lins were Incinerated. f- EACH OTHER'S ARMS; Lover Shoots. Married Woman and' Himsslf. Washington, D. C. (Special). Be. cause she bad returned to her hus bany, from whom she had separated, Mrs. Llzzlo Harbin, aged 41, and mnther of seven children, was shot and killed at her home in this city Frederick Kreamer, a painter, 22 years old, employed In the Navy Yard, who then turned the -weapon on himself and inflicted wounds which proved fatal. The police say that the circumstances of the trag edy indicate that probably there was an agreement between the man and woman to dio together. Recently Mrs. Harbin became es tranged from her husband, Daniel Harbin, as the result of Kraemer's attention, lit is sntd, but for the sake of the children they agreed to live together again. A few hours j alter the reconciliation Kraemer went I to the Harbin home. There were no 1 witnesses to their meeting and what transpired there prior to the shoot ing is unknown. The couple were discovered locked In each other's arms after the trage dy. There were no evidences of a s'ruggle. The woman was Hhot twice ! thro.igh the heart, while Kreamer shot himself through the head. Sev. I eral of the woman's children were In the house at the time of the shoot. ing. Kronmer had been madly Infatu ated with the woman for several months and was the cause of her separation with her husband. Har bin and Kreamer entered the coal and wood business about a year ago, nnd through this business relation Kreamer first saw Mrs. Harbin. She was a woman of 43, but unusually attractive, and Kreamer was 23. His attentions became so pressing that he seemed to win her from her hus band. After a stormy scene Harbin left his wife, several months ago, vowing never to return. He stated to friends that If it were not for the disgrace It would bring on his two married daughters and his other children he would execute summarv vengeance on the handsome young German. After Habrln left hie home and took quarters in another section of the city Kreamer continued his at tentions, and the affection he mani fested for the woman seemed to be returned. They talked of getting a divorce for Mrs. Harbin and marry ing. Recently, friends of the couple in terceded and a reconciliation was ef fected, and the couple, after an af fecting scene decided to let by. gones be bygones, and take up life where they left it off several months ago. The children were rejoicing all dav at the return of "Papa" and neighbors say that Mrs. Harbin acted in a manner which showed that she was happy and anticipated the re turn of her husband as a renewal of the happy relations which existed between them previous to the entry of Krenmer. Strangely, the pistol which did such deadly work was the property of the dnad woman's nineteen-year-old son, Wllmer. Kreamer borrowed it several weeks ago. Mrs. Harbin, before marriage, was Miss Elizabeth Hamill. She had been married 20 years. . Xo General Rivers And Harbor Bill, Washington, D. C. (Special). The House Committee on Rivers and Harbors voted against a general ap propr'atlon bill for river and harbor Improvements. Tho committee will report a bill providing for carrying on Important work already begun fnr surveys of urgent projects pro- . posed and for any emergencies which may arise. This h'll nrobably will not carry to exceed $10,000,000. Jap Mulct Rill Advanced. Sacramento, Cal. (Special). One' of the most dratjtic steps In the anti- Japanese movement was taken by the California legislature, when the Assembly Judiciary committee re ported favornh'v tha hill nn.nil.. Japanese owning realty In California. neai estate men claim tnat numerous titles would ho clouded by the bill if it became a law. ; Drastic Pistol Law Valid. Montgomery, Ala. (Special). Tho Alabama Supreme Court held tho pistol law to be valid. The law pro vides that no one shall own or carry a pistol cr gun less than 24 inches in length: also that pistol supplies for guns of less size cannot be sold. : Jail For Ihikc'B CoiikIii. Parkersburg. W. Va. (Special). Sam Ferrozzl, who claims to bo a cousin of the Duke of tho Abruzzl. was sentenced to two months in Jail and fined $100 In the Federal Court here upon pleading guilty to a chares of peddling liquor Illegally. Puts Marines Ruck. Washington, n P (Gnu,i.i The House Committee on Naval Af fairs reported the Naval Appropria tion bill with a proviso directing the President tr riutnvA tha ma l , - . . . - - . ...... v, v.,v . u 111,: IVS duty on the vessels of the navy. Abandon Buildings Bill. Washington n C I9tiwI.ii No new federal buildings will be au thorized by Congress at this session. This was decided at a meeting of tbe House Committee on Publlo Buuaing8 ana urouuas. 00,000 Died At Meosiua. Messina (Special). An official estimate ot the dead in Messina due to tbe catastrophe of December 28, made by Stuart K. Lupton, the Amer ican Vice-Consul, on behalf of the American embassy at Rome. Dlacea the number at 90,000. Mr. Lupton estimates also that there are still 10, 000 people in tbe city. The work of getting information concerning in dividuals who were in Messina at tbe time of the earthquake is ex tremely ainicuit, as there are un doubtedly still tens of thousands un der tbe ruins. Officials of the American Sugar an nounced at the annual,' meeting yes terday that while tbe comnanv'a sur plus was large enough to . pay a larger aivldend they thought it ad visable to keep on hand a plentiful supply of ready funds. The total number of stockholders of common and preferred stock Is 18,720. and their average holdings are 488 shares each. Directors were re-elected. ''"Not going to leave the New Haven A Hartford,'1 declared Vice-President Stevens, In answer to a report that ho was to become president of tho Colorado ft Beuthera.