THE NEWS Domestic Tho Interstate Commerce commis sion lias refused to mspoi.d tin; operation of tin- new freight classi fication, which Involves over G.uuu Items. Koynl K. Cabell, eomti'.lsa;i;n"r of Internni Revenue, ordered a de'ail Of eight additional special nger.ts to hunt down moonshiners. The naval hoard of Inquest de cided that the two midshipmen who were drowned in the Severn died In tho line of duty. The President has signed several proclamations eliminating nearly half a million aires of lands from the natlonul forests Railroads operating out of Ihiffalo have heen permi'ted to advance rates on flour. Judge O'Snllivan. In l: -r-liar Jinr the Rockefeller spertal grand Jury, which lound that there Is tin or;i.n-, ration engaged in while .-hiveiy i'J New York, declared the metro;. to he the gieati..' and ci" inest ci'j In the ji lil. Hishop William Mi.liekcr, of thft Protestiin' Kplsi opal dlorese of Rhode Inland, died at his summer home at Beverly, Mass. : The Cumberland Tele;Ciune Cotn panv, of Mississippi, found guilty of Violating the State anti-trust law,; was fined $17",, mil). Tbaddtus K. York, said to he want ed for forgeries in nearly all the large cities, .van capture 1 In Chicago. I'nited States Senator Samuel Douglas MelOnery died suddenly at his home in Now Orleans. Attorney John S'linehlield revulved a fee nf $suO,nno for tho acquittal Of K. Augustus llelne. Dr. Henry. II. A Heach. for many years a l.-ad'tng sur-von, died in Hus ton. I'e'er K 1 i 1 1 1 y , of Hammond, III., was drowned hy an auto plunging Into a ciek The Chicago jury tryititr Legislator Lee O'Ncil Browne, charged with bribery in connection with the elec tion of William l.orimer to tin! United States Senate, disagreed aft er deliberating 11 " hours and wore discharged. A a'er spaniel paved nine mem bers of tin' tarilly of Mrs. Caroline Rolph, of New York, from death hy fire. V K. Powell, of Scotland Neck,1 N. C, was sentenced to 30 years In prison for the murder of Chief of Police Dunn. Colonel Roosevelt and Senator LaJ Follette, of Wisconsin, conferred foij over two hours afer which Senatoi LaFollette said thev had talked poli tics, and then added: "Colonel Roosevelt is the greatest living American and in fighting trim." Louis Levlne, head of the so-call-. ed Arsenic Club, which exacted black mail by poisoning horses, was sen tences in ll'.-ooklyn to not more than 15 years and not less than seven years in the state nrls in. : Reports that an opeiation Is to he performed on the throat of Theo dore Roosevelt are denied by the secretary of Dr. Walter K. Chappell, who was said to have made an en gagement to attend the Colonel. The senior class of the College of the City of New York presetted to Slayer (,nnir an "Kphehle." oath, swearing neer to bring disgrace up on the city. Due of President Tal't's autos, driven by h! son, Robert A. Ta!t, Htrck nn Italii'ii strict laborer, frac turing hi.- "kill!, in the streets of. Beverly. Mas-: One of tt.e I.yuri ( MusO handits was arraigiie I and he!d for the grand Jury. The -econd one is still in the' hostiital. with lit 1.. hope of recovery. The Inti rs'ate Commerce Commis-i slnn announced that, the federal law re.'tula'Ing the hours of service of train crevs was declared constitu tional by .Mdge Morris, of Iowa, In a test cme brought by t he Illinois Central Railroad. The appropriations made by the session Congress just closed' amounted to $ 1 ,i2 7. 1 ::::,! 1 1',, accord ing to an official announcement made by the House Appropriations Com mliuo. The Stat- Department wants the manufacturer In 'he I'nited States to participate In 'he great Interna tional Industrial cxp'.dtion to be held at Turin, Italy. A BIG RAILROAD STRIKE IS FEARED The Siluiition on the Southern IJoiids Serious Foreign Kmj.eror William hai accepted the resignation of llaon von Kheinbabcn. the Prussian minister of s'ate anil finance, and Wilnelm von Schoen, secretary for foreign affairs, liaiou von Noehte was appointed secretary of st-ite for foreign affairs, von Hehoen being appointed amhas.-ador to France Trial of the suit Institute,) ,y Rudo'phe Fraucke Hgainst Comtnan der Peary, ( onc-rning the disposition of Arctic 'rophies was begun in a Ilerlln court. I'rancke was ass eiat ed with Dr. Cook la polar e.,, Ora tions. Prime Mlnls'er Anq'il'h Introduced In the House of Commons tiie bill a' terlng the form of the religious dw laration required of the kin-.? epiu his coninatl'in The bill passed Its. first reading hy a vote of lis.! to i. Twenty persons were injured by a bomb explosion in a thea'er in liuenos Ay rex The bomb was hurled from the gallery Into the pit and many persons were blown out of their eats. Ibrahim Nar.'lani. the a srisiln of Haittros Pas'ia (ihall, the Kzyptlnn premier and minister of foreign af fairs was hanged at Cairo. Iilcting occured at llllbao. Spain, as a result of the strained relations letwien" tho government and the Vatlrtn. MEOiATQRS ARE WORKING OVERTIME. An AIl-Dny Conlerem c Of The I'lesl. I dents Of lit Companies With ! Kniipp And Veill III lugs No lie mi It t lb.' OMIdals linn And The Employe Determined To Have Higher Wages The Situation i Very Acute; j Washington, I). C. (Special). ; Within a lew days It will probably be known whether the entire South ! eastern section of the country east of t!ie Mississippi will be Involved In a serious railroad strike. The presidents of 111 railroad lines were hastily called into consultation with chairman Knapp, of the Interstate Commerce Commission and Commis sioner of Labor Nelll, and stayed in session all day. The situation is : admitted on nil sides to be acute. , The situation (trows out of a con troversy between tho Southern Rail way, the Seaboard Air Line and the : Atlantic Coast Line and their aflillat ! ed lines, including the Queen And I Crescent Road, and their conductors I and brakemen. The latter have de , manded a material advance in wages j approximating 20 per cent. They have already taken a vote to strike 1 unless their demands are complied i wlih. ' i About two weeks ago the general ; manager of tho roads and tho repre sentatives of the conductors and ! brakemen agreed to submit their dif ferences to Chairman Krinpp and Commissioner of Labor Nelll, the I mediators under the Krdmnn Act, the terms of which act provided for I the settlement of disputes between ; common carriers ami their employes. ; Hearings have been given to the rep resentative of the men, some L'OO in number, and the 10 general mana gers. Harvey Marker, general mana ger of the Queen and Crescent, being the chairman of tho managers' com mittee. Practically no headway was made, the railroad managers asserting that their earnings would not nllow of the Increase demanded. The men , were obdurate, and it appeared that a break would occur, and the rep ' resentatlves of the conductors and ! brakemen would send telegrams or ; dering the men to walk out. At this Juncture It was decided to call In the presidents of the roads. and this was done. President Fin ley of the Southern Railway: Presi dent Emerson, of the Atlantic Coast Line, and President Meldrum, of the Seaboard Air Line the chief lines 1 and the presidents of the other lines I were In conference with the Medla i Hon Board all day, and it appears I that little progress was made, and 1 that unless one Bide or the other makes concessions the entire south i eastern section of the country will be I Involved In a serious Btrlke. j The men have urged that, lnas I much as the conductors and other trainmen on Northern and Kastern . linos have received Increases, it Is i only right they should receive the same treatment, in view of the In- creased cost of llvng. While neither side will discus-? the situation, it Is known that, though the mediators admit that It Is serious, they have not yet given up hope of bringing the two sides together and avoiding a strike. A mi max iioori:i. . I niveislty Of Michigan filves Hon orary Degree To Ir. Itabcock. Ann Arbor, Mich. (Special). Dr. Robert Hall Rabcock, of Chicago, who, though blind frdrn bis twelfth ! year, has risen to a position of emi nence as a heart and lung speclalitt, ! wa i given the honorary degree of ' doctor o' laws at tin annual com i menci nient exercises of the I'nlverst 1 ty of Michigan. Dr. Pabcock was ig-rduited from the University of , Mlchli an In the class of 1ST". ; Others receiving the honorary de ' gree of doctor of laws were Justice j Aaron V. McAlvay, of the Michigan Supremo Court: Circuit. Judge George Hosmer, of Detroit, and Brigadier General James Harvey Kldd, of Ponla. Mich . a Civil War veteran and Journalist, i I T.UT fJOKS TO IlKVKItLY. DEFIES MILITIA UNTIL . HIS MEJS RIDDLED Desperado Kills Three , and Wounds Three of Posse. W. II. Host wick, Wanted For The Murder Of His Itrotlier, Single, blinded Drives Off Posse, Killing Chief Of I'ollce And Two Sheriffs, Of Invln County, tin. Troops Are failed Out Kept Six Children In House To Stay Itullets Militia Fires Volley After Volley Into Home Head With Hoots On. LIST OF CASUALTIES. TIIE DEAD: J. P. Mclnnes, sheriff, Irwin County, C.a. Steve Davis, chief of police, of Ocllla. Ga. Deputy Sheriff Sheffield, Irwin County, Ga. I W. II. Bostwiek, victim of I shots fired Into his home. THE INJURED: James Gill, seriously wounded. Deputy Sheriff T, C. Pass, arm broken and shot In abdomen. Deputy Sheriff Wyatt Tucker, Injuries slight. Irwin vllle, Ga. (Special). Fanatl cally defiant, even while tho shad ows of death closed around him and volley after volley from the new Springfield riles of two State militia companies made a sieve of the walls of his humble home, W. H. Bostwiek, the white desperado who observed his last Sabbath day by the murder of two officers of the law and the serious wounding of three others, paid the penalty of death shortly after a o'clock A. M. He succumbed to many wounds re ceived from the volleys fired Into the building early In the night by a mob of Infuriated citizens or from those of the military which began an at tack after 4.30 o'clock A. M. Almost at the same moment Sheriff J. P. Mclnnes, of Irwin County, who was wounded while making a desperate attempt to remove a wounded fellow ofllcer from the range of Bostwick's deadly fire, expired. James Gill, an other officer, was added to the list of wounded during the early morn ing fusillade, but it Is believed he will recover. Surrounded by his six little chil dren, whom he held prisoners almost to the end of the siege, Bostwiek, whp had declared Intention or dy ing rather than submit to arrest on the charge of attempting to. murder his brother-in-law, fought the bat tle to the last ditch. Knowing that death was near, the desperate man finally allowed the children to Jeave the house, but they would not reveal one Incident of the fight to the mili ary officers. SKTS HIMSK.LF OX FIHK. President In Fine Trim, Heady To Knjoy IIIh Vacation. Washington. D. C. (Special). Pres ident Taft left Washington over the ; Pennsylvania Railroad for Beverly, Masn., where ho will spend his sum- 1 tner vacation. In his private car were his secretary, Charles D Nor- ; ton. and his military aid, Captain Arr'.i.b-ihl W. Butt. In another car i were the corps of under-secretarles j a mi stenographers. Ho will not he back in the White House for at least ! three mon'lis .The President's last dav In Wash ington was a busy one. Callers pour ed In clear up to the time of leav ing HowlliiK Green, Ky Goes Wet. Howling Green. Ky. (Special) In a hotly contested election the city of Bowiing Green gave a majority of fi7 in favor of a return to license pale of Honors. Three years ago the It y went "dry" by 21!8 votes. Frank Walters Coiiiinils Suicide In Horrible Way At Fastou, I'a, Kaston, Pu. (Special). Frank Walters, 45 years old, ono of the best-known hotel proprietors In this section, ignited ills clothing while many persona watched him and walked to the mlddlo of the street enveloped In flames. As the fire reached the ton of tho man'B bead ho fell, and before any thing could be done to help him be was burned so severely that death followed. The fierceness of tho flames In dicated that before Betting fire to his garments he had saturated them with oil. Waiters bad been showing signs of derangement. Damage Hy Cloudburst. Huntington. W. Va. (Special). Great damage has been wrought throughout the Cqa! River and the .Mud River Valleys by heavy rains, followed by a cloudburst. The riv ers are at the highest stages ever Known. i ne damage to crops ana property will probably be $300,000. Railroad traffic hna hnon Sllanonrlnrl owing to many washouts and land- snues. "Killed His Girl." New York (Special). Because Jennie Mlnkoff, not quite 18, re jected his attentions, Morris Nathan son, a young grocer's clerk, lay In wait in the hallway of her homo and shot her through the heart. She fell dead at his feet. NathanBon then walked to a police station and re marked that he had "killed his girl." He was locked up. Old Indian Fl-'tiler Dead. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special). Dan iel Webster Field, who founded Glen coe. Minn., and who has lived In Los Angeles since It was a village, died aged 7 7 years. Before tho Civil War Mr. Field was an Indian fighter In Minntiesnta. During the Civil War he served with a Connecticut regK nient. Three Dead In Hotel Fire. Seneca Falls, N. Y. (Special). Three persons lost their lives and another had a narrow escape from serious Injury in a fire that destroy- ea xne new reuuen jiuuhq nere. A building adjoining the hotel was also burned and the loss Is estimated at $40,000. UNITED STATES SENATOR JOHN W. DANIEL DEAD A THRILLING VOYAGE IN ZEPPELIN'S FLYER . Pennsylvania Haron Fternburg was arrested In St. Petersburg on the charge of de livering secret documents to c for eign state. Emperor Wi!liam Inspected the tcamshlp Malm, which will carry to ErltJtlergrn Inlands Count Zcppe In'a preliminary North Polar expedi tion. Conflicting reports of the result of the recent fighting In Nicaragua eome from the American consuls at Blueflelrfi and Manague. T.le Rusrflin Council of the Em pire has ad' the Finnish bill. A ppfiilon has been prtentd to ('neral Estrada, R ider of the o ltlofi to the Madrli far Ion In Mrnrnsra, proving fir the Interven tion of the I'nited State. Aleh Chr'at, an operatic conduct or, ilot and killed Anna Sutter, a court singer, In Berlin and killed Mrrteif T Chlrco nvernrent re 'used ti p-Me to the demand of the dele gats to the provincial M:nb!lei for the itnir r-litita convention of a na tion! parliament. Tbe Due d'Alencon, grandson of King Lou Philippe, died In London. Opium Smuggler Confesses, Savannah, Ga. (Special). W. H. Rowe, special agent of the United States Treasury Department, In charge of the Savannah district, re turned from Atlanta, where he as tliited In placing under arrest Charlea C. Chisholrn. for smuggling opium Into the I'nited States from Mexico. "I have a confession from ChUholm." aid, Mr. Roue, "which Is sufficient to convict firms or Individuals In New Orleans, New York and Philadelphia." Honoring Young ltounevelia. rianta Barbara, Cal. (SpeclalL Santa Barbara and M,onteclto society paid homage to Mr. and Mra. Theo dore Roosevelt, Jr., when tbe visitors were made the guesta of honor at a (Inner dance given by Mrs Frank Duff Fraticr at tho I'otter Country Club. This la tho first series of to (I'M events planned for the itoose v"a durlnr their month's stay here. Otherwise the bridal pair are spend ing a quiet honeymoon, ea bathing, boning, and riding being tbelr prin cipal recreations. 13,000,000 Leuther Merger. Montreal, Que. (Special). An other merger, this time In leather, will be the Canada Leather Com pany, Limited, with an authorized capital of $15,000,000 of stock and $a, 000, 000 bonds. Companies prob ably are to be Included In the mer ger representing 75 per cent, of tbe total output of leather used In the Canadian boot and shoe, trunk and bag trades. Abraham Lincoln's fortune was $75,000. Duel With Knives. Tampa. Fla. (Special). Armed with knives and keeping their word to meet at sunrise in tbe woods near Macfarland Park. In West Tampa, Mario Adalo and another Cuban, whose Identity has not yet been es tablished, fought until both fell from lota of blood. Adalo died within a tew minutes. The unknown es caped. Adalo came from Cuba. H wa a labor organizer. Wagon wheel spokes may be made to fit tight by splitting the tennon with a chisel and driving wedge into tbe split. Third Stroke of Paralysis Proves Fatal. FAVORITE SON OF COMMONWEALTH. His Wife, Son And Daughter With Him When The Fnd Came He Had neen III Pracllcnlly All Win ter, And Wna In The Keniite Only To Or Three Days During: The Last Session One Of The Most Conspicuous Men In The Old Do minion And Known All Through The South. I FACTS IN HIS CAREER. I Born at Lynchburg, Va., Sep I tefnber !, 1842. I Served In the Confederate I Army of Northern Virginia I throughout the Civil War, and I was wounded four times. I Became adjutant-general on I General Karly's staff. I Studied law at the University of Virginia In 1865-K6, and was ad- I raitted to tho bar In the latter I year. Served In the Virginia House I of Delegates In 1869-72. Member of the State Senate In 1875-81. Presidential elector In 1876. Defeated for Governor of Vir ginia in 1881. Member of Congress, 1885-87. I'nited States Senator since i 1887. Lynchburg. Va. (Special). United States Senator John Warwick Daniel died at 10.35 P. M. at a sanitarium in Lynchburg, where he had been rdiire his return from Dayton. With him when the end came were his wife and his son, Edward M. Daniel, and his daughter, Mrs. Frederick Harper, whose husband, also here, was Senator Daniel's law partner. Senator Daniel had been 111 prac tlclly all winter, and had been In the Senate only two or three days dur ing the past session, that being short ly after Congress convened. Death was due to paralysis, the last stroke being the third, the first being last fall while he was In Phila delphia, and the second at Dayton, Fla., during the winter. BALD EAGLF. ATTACKS CHILD. Tries To Ciiify Off Two-Y'eur-Old Hoy, Hut Is Foiled. Chester, Pa. (Special). A bald eagle of enormous size attempted to carry off Paul, the 2-year-old son of William L. Zebly. of Bethel. Paul was playing In the rear of his home, when Mrs. Zebley heard her child ecream, and was horrified to see the eagle tugging at the lltle fellow's dress. The boy, however, was too heavy for the bird, which only suc ceeded In lifting him about two feet from the earth. Securing a stout club, Mrs. Zehley attempted to strike the bird. The eagle dodged tho blows, and after making several lunges at the woman It Hew away. Mr. Zehley. who had arrived with his shotgun, fired at tha bird, but the shot went wild. DIt. HYDF. IlKXIKII XF.W TRIAL. Physician May Appeal To The Su preme Court. Kansas City, Mo. (Special). Dr. B. C. Hyde, convicted on May 16 last of poisoning Col. Thomas II. Swope, the millionaire philanthro pist, was denied a new trial by Judge Ralph S. Latshaw in tho Criminal Court here. The prisoner' attorney Immedi ately filed a motion for arrest of Judgment and the Judge set Tues day as the time for arguments. When this motion is disposed of next week the matter of appeal to the Supreme Court, and a motion to release Dr. Hyde on bond will be taken up. The South Made Big Gains. Washington, D. C. (Special). That the census of 1910 will show the Southern States, Including Mis souri and Oklahoma, to have made a gain In population of 21 per cent, since 1900 Is the estimate of the Southern Commercial Congress. The congress estimates the population to be 32,415,297. The gain of other states of the Union during the same period Is estimated by tho congress to have been 1 8 4j per cent. The five states of the South which have made the greatest gain In population, according to the estimate, are Okla homa, Texas, Missouri, Georgia and Alabama. A Flouting Federal Court. Valdec, Alaska. (Special). The revenue cutter RubIi, with United State District Judge Edward E. Cushman's traveling court, arrived from Juneau. Besldea United States Marshal P. H. Sullivan and United States District Attorney C. D. Mur nane, the members of the grand and petit Juries will board the cutter here. The traveling court will be gone until August 17, and will touch at Isolated station to tlm westward as far as Dutch Harbor. Twelve cases are to be tried along the route. The Liability Of Employers. Washington. D. C. (Special). The commission created by Congress to investigate the whole question of em ployers' liability and workmen' com pensation will hold It first meeting either here or In Chicago during August or September. A prelimi nary conference of arveral of tho member waa held, and It wa an nounced that Senator Warner, ths chairman, would call a meeting later. Taft has yet to name two member from civil life. . F.nrt liureuu Of Equipment. Washington, D. C. (Special) The President signed an order abolish ing the Bureau of Equipment In the Navy Department and distributing It function among the other bureau of tbe department. In accordance with the recommendation of the Swift board. Machinists (let Increased I'uy, St. Paul. Minn. (Special) The 1. 400 machinist eninloyed on the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railways succeeded In securing an lncreaae In pay of two cent an hour. WASHINGTON BY TELEGRAPH I The United State Circuit Court of Appeals of New York denied the peti tion of the Wright Company asking a modification of the .decision dis solving the temporary Injunctions obtained by the Wright Company against Louis Paulhan, the French aviator, and the Herring-Curtis Company, of Hammondsport, N. Y. The first commencement at Har vard University under the direction of President A. Lawrence Lowell came to an end with the annual meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Fra ternity, which had Governor Charle E. Hughes, of New York, as Its orator. One police lieutenant, 6 sergeants, a detective and 15 patrolmen were charged with pilfering from tbe Po lice Relief Association Fund by the board of police commissioners of St. Iouls. An explosion at the DuPont Pow der Plant, at DuPont, Wash., killed Thomas Blake, foreman, of Wau kesha, Wis.; George Strouse, of St. Paul, and Edward Smith, of New Orleans. The Congressional Bonding Com mission In aprelitnlnary report Just completed, will favor the bonding of all government employes by the gov ernment Itself. Ex-Senator Curtis Guild, of Mas sachusetts, was appointed special am bassador to represent the United States at the Mexican centennial cele bration. President Taft Is expected to name ex-President RooBevelt as chairman of the Peace Commission. Cadet C. V. Boykln, of the third class at West Point, was dismissed for lying. The Swing government has Issued a decree postponing the prohibition on the Importation of California sulphur-dried fruit until July 1, 1911. according to official Information re ceived at the State Department. Out 2S0 candidates who took the mental examination for admission to the Naval Academy only 104 passed, according to reports received at the Navy Department from the examin ing board. Edwin S. Holmes, Jr., former as sociate statistician of the Depart ment of Agriculture, pleaded guilty to connection with the cotton leak scandal and was fined $5,000 In Criminal Court No. 1. The sailors of the battleship Louisiana raised $1,559.25 for the widows and orphans of the men who were lost by the foundering of the Naval tug Mina. The State Department wants China to ratify the $30,000,000 Hankow railroad loan and has sent Instruc tions to Minister Calhoun. William T. Thompson, of Nebras ka, has been appointed solicitor of the Treasury to succeed Maurice D. O'Connell, resigned. A House bill amending the Imml gation laws to permit certain persons to complete their naturalization without being subjected to the delay generally Incident to the naturaliza tion process was passed by the Sen ate. Senator Smith secured the ac ceptance of an amendment to the Appalachian Forest Reserve Bill car rying an appropriation for an inves tigation into the feasibility of drain ing tho swamp lands In Maryland. Tho Senate adopted the Joint reso lution, which originated In the House, authorizing the appointment of a peace commission. Draughts Do Not Cause Colds. London (Special). Dr. Sir Fred erick Treves astonished the public this week by declaring that "The Idea that colds are caused by draughts is absurd; no cold ever had such an origin. Colds are the result, not of draughts, but of stuffy rooms." Other famous Lon don physicians back up Sir Fred erick In holding that no cold was ever caused by a draught. ODDS AND ENDS. The placing of fuses on the out side of street cars lessens the danger of fire and panic when they blow out. With a production of 14.493.936 gross tons, tbe output of open hearth steel Ingots and direct castings In the United States broke all records last year. A.German dictionary for tbe blind, printed at Vienna even though con densed as much as possible, makes five big volumes. Four hundred thousand flasks of tuberculin were distributed free last year by the federal Bureau of Ani mal Industry for cattleman to use In tests for tuberculosis. Slum, outside of Bangkok, Is most ly Jungle and Its teak and timber trade is the most important industry, so that It affords a splendid market for such machinery. Banana oil. applied with a soft brush to any metal surface after pol ishing, Is a good preventive of rust. Mrs. Pankhurst's society of Eng lish suffragists has Just cleared $S, 500 at a suffrage bazaar held In Glas gow, The members made about half as much by their recent self-denial week. The output of molasses In Mexico during the past year was 85,185 tons or 2,000 pounds each. The State of Morelos led with 21.000 tons, Vera Cruz furnished 14,340, Mlohoacan 11,160 and Pueblo 10,750 ton. The general use of the automobile In a South African town has caused the abandonment of a short railroad and one of its station has been turn ed Into a gar&ge. The pine reaches a maximum age of 700 years; the silver fir, 425; tbe larch, 275; the red beech, 245; tha aspen, 210; the birch, 200; the ash, 170; the elder, 145 and the elm, 180. More than one-third of Turkey' total trading Is done through Con stantlnople. Havre maintain it position a one of the great port of the world, and tbe second In France, despite recent labor trouble and certain temporary Irregulartle of movement In the foreign market for various Important staple of which Havre la tbe European clearing house There Is In England relief map of Uganda whlfh contain 2,000 qure feet, and the claim I made that It 1 the largest In the world. In 12 marriage out of every 100 one of the two ha been married before. AIrslii) Deutscliland Now Lying on Top of a Forest. WAS CAUGHT IN TERRIFIC WIND STORM.. Thirty-Three? Persons, Mostly New puiK-r Men, Who Sailed In Her Fnm Dusselriorf After A Wildly KxcitiiiR Experence Escape ny Sliding Down Rope Ladder From The Wreck To Get Out Of A Whirlwind The I'ilot Shoots Up The Airship 4,000 Feet. Dusseldorf, Germany (Special). Count Zeppelin's passenger airship Deutschland, the highest developed of all the famous aeronaut's models, lies on the top of the Teutoburglan forest pierced with pine-tree stem, a mass of deflated silk and twisted aluminum. The 33 persons aboard, after a wild contest with a storm, escaped uninjured, climbing down a rope ladder from the wreck on the pine tops. Herr Colestnann, general manager of the new airship com pany; Chief Engineer Duerr, of the Zeppelin Company, and Captain Kannenberg, who personally had charge of the crew of 10, and 20 newspaper men sailed from Dussel dorf at 8.30 A. M. for a three-hour excursion. The objective point wa Dort mund, about 35 miles from Dussel dorf, but a high head of wind pre-' vailed and an effort was made to reach Munster, a garrison town, so' that a landing might be made on the parade ground by the aid of the soldiers, and It was realized that It would require a large number of them to hold the vast contrivance of silk and metal against the wind. A Motor Fails. It wa dangerous to attempt a landing In an open field because of the storm, as the metal was likely to pound to pieces. In the high wind one . of the motors refused to work and the other two were not powerful enough to make any prog ress in the gale. The airship drifted, swaying in the violent gusts and sometimes leaning to an angle of 40 degree, and all the while the englnemen were at work repairing the disabled motor. When this was done all four screws were driven at their full power, un der which in normal conditions the airship was capable of attaining a speed of 4 0 miles an hour. But the helmsman was unable to keep his course, and the great craft waa swung about at tho mercy of the winds. Colesman did not dare to turn,' the ship around for fear of over turning, and he decided to drift in the gale, which was blowing at the rate of 50 miles an hour, toward Osnabruck, which la also a garrison station. If he missed that he would continue on to Senne. X'p 4.000 Feet. Suddenly he perceived a whirl wind coming and ascended to a height of nearly 4,000 feet to avoid the worst of It. With the whirlwind came an avalanche of rain, After half an hour the Deutschland came down to permit of observations and It was seen that the Teutoburglan forest lay below. The forward motor again stopped and Colesmann sent five of the corre spondents to the aft gondola to bal last the vessel. The Deutschland sank rapidly, having lost much gas in the high altitudes, and dragged along the top of the dense forest. A heavy branch of a tree broke through the floor of the cabin amidships, throwlne two of the guesta to the floor. Other branches ripped through the gas compartments and the whole great structure settled down 30 or 40 feet from the ground. "It Isn't the fault of the Zeppelin system," exclaimed Herr Colesmann; "that 1 all right. It is our own fault, and our benzine ran out." The airship, for which Herr Coles mann's comnany had Just paid $137, 500, looked a total wreck. The frame were broken, but the motors were not damaged. The silk was ripped and had fallen In a torn mass on the tops of the trees. MAN AND CHILD ELECTROCUTED. Wife And Mother, Severely Shocked, In Critical Condition. Duluth, Minn. (Special). E. M. Nelson and his 6-year-old daughter were electrocuted here In the front yard of their home at Lake Side, a suburb. In the presence of tho wlfo and mother;. The cause was a llvo wire which had been allowed to dangle from an adjacent telephone polo to tho lawn. "Oh, see the grass Is burning up!" shouted the child to her mother, and then grabbed the wire. In an Instant she fell over dead. The father saw the child fall, and In an effort to extricate her met a similar fate. Mrs. Nelson, while trying to drag the bodies away, was severely shocked and 1 in a critical condition. , Still ExpelHnR The Jews. Kiev, Russia (Special). Ninety five Jews wero expelled from Kiev; fifty-two from Solomenka and fifty one from Demleffka. A Triple Tragedy. Bangor, Mo. (Special). Enraged because hi wlfo had determined tc leave him on account of hi violent temper, David Downe ' shot and killed her and her mother, Mr. Ivy Woodard, and then killed himself with the same rifle. . The tragedy oc curred In a little farming community near the rllltgo of Springfield, about 70 mile northeast of Banitfr. Downe wa 83 year old and hi wife 28. Ex-Mlnister Terrell Shoot Himself. Ean Antonio, Tex rE. H. Terrell, a wealthy business man of San An tonio and former United State Min ister to Belgium. Is dying at his home here from the effects of a telf-tnfllot-ed bullet wound. Mr. Terrell ha been 111 (or several monf.is. 1 , Election - In Panama. Panama (Special). Municipal election were held throughout the republic without disturbance of any kind. The government won by a large majority, particularly In Pana ma Cdty and In Colon. "i I Teachers Answer Complaint. Reading. The difficulty between the school authorities and the nar enta Who are anxious that their soat and daughters, who graduated on Tuesday. June 14, should be given their diplomas, has not yet been set tled. The officers of the class ot 1910. which Is making high school history, have come forth with a cer tiflcation that all money due the class ha been turned over, settling all rumons and placing the girls In a po Bltlon to secure their diplomas, in. vestlgatlon In the case of the bnys where It Is alleged that a cllqui broke into the school building and secured examination papers, is still being carried on. The mntter hat narrowed down to about eight or nine of the boys, who are supposed to b the guilty ones and these niav not be granted a diploma at all. Princi pal R. 8. Birch, of the Boys' High School, arid Principal Miss Mary H. Mayer, of the Girls' High School have made answer to the comtnunl cation from a committee of tho par ents requesting them to answer rer. tain questions. The answer was brief, acknowledging the receipt of the communication and stating that It was impossible to reply to all ot the questions or to comply with the request for the diplomas until a re-' port had been made to Superintend ent of Schools Charles S. Foos. Can Rattlers Climb Trees. Part of Columbia County says a rattlesnake can climb a tree. An other part of the same division of this sovereign Commonwealth says the rattler can do nothing of the kind. State Economic Zoologist Sur face, usually the court of last resort in such questions, Is playing safe and not taking sides. He inclines to the opinion, however, that the rattler can't get into a tree unless the trunk Is at an angle of less than forty-live degrees. Plenty of scientific dalu lj at hand to show that the blacksnuke and the greensnake can and do climb vertical trees and that the water snake can get Into bushes that nrs not too high. Surface says, too, that there la not tho slightest doubt that the "horntallcd snake" can clinih a tree. The blacksnake and other tree clintliing serpents are able to do so because of their long and slender bodies and constrictor characteristics. The rattler Is short and thick. Samuel A. Crozer Dead. Chester. Samuel A. Crozer, prom inent In Baptist Church circles and a wealthy manufacturer and land own er, died at his home In Upland, near here, aged 85. He was president of the board of trustees of the Crozer Theological Seminary, which his fam ily founded and contributed liberally to other Baptist enterprises. He owned extensive coal lands In Vir ginia, and was the owner of several large textile mills in Chester and Upland, Three Years For Murder. PottBville. Because court tnougftt the slaying of George Godhart, by his brother-in-law, John Yost, was to some extent Justified on the ground of self-defense, Yost was sentenced to only threo years for the murder. The court was told th.it Godhart broke in the door and threatened Yost, who picked up a poker and hit the in truder twico on the head. The quar rel of the men arose over, a wheel barrow, which each claimed as his property. Two Injured Hy Lightning. Yellow House. Lightning aurmg a severe thunderstorm, struck the home of Isaac Marks, shattering the chimney and the bolt followed tho stove pipe to the kitchen, where it tore the oilcloth on the kitchen floor to pieces. Mrs. Marks was stunned and the daughter who stood on the oil cloth had her feet badly burned. The house was saved from destruc tion by fire by the heroic efforts of the family. Wills Gold Watch As Prize. Lebanon. 'George W. Hayes, for merly a city engineer of Lebanon, who died last week, left a will which was probated. In which It Is stipulat ed that "my gold watch shall be giv en to the graduate In chemistry and pharmacy of the Philadelphia Col lege of Pharmacy who is truly wor thy and who graduates with the high est honors from the said Institution at the next commencement after my departure to heaven." Man Killed In Trolley Crasn. Stonersville. Orlando A. Le, a well known retired farmer, while driving over tbe tracks of the Ohiy Valley Traction Co., at JacksonwaM, was Btruck by a trolley car. His team was burled a dlstunce of fifty feet. Lee was so badly injured that bis death followed three hours after. Tbe horse had to be killed. . I'eteian Editor Injured.'1 Chester. Henry Fryslnger, tne veteran editor of the "lelaware County Dmpcrat," wag locking a win dow when he fell against tbe edge Of a table sustaining two broken ribs. He Is nearly 80 years of age, and Is said to be the oldest edtlor of active service In the State. Crane Crushes Out Man's Life. Berwick. William Callk. aged 46, was Instantly killed In the steel "hint of the Berwick A. C. & F. Company plant, when ateel channels, weighing 12,000 pounds slipped from the trav eling crane upon which they were being carried and crushed Callk be yond recognition. , Drowned In Schuylkill Cannl. Reading. While bathing In tbe Schuylkill Canal, a short distance from the Lebanon Valley Railroad bridge, William Dlefenderfer, wvi 13 years, got beyond his depth and wa drowned. Falling Rock Kills Man. Huntingdon. Four employe ot Mount Union Silica Brick Company were caught by a fall of overhanging rock on Jack's Mountain. John l'at tereon waa killed, William Kalnoy badly Injured and two other ;Work men cut In the face. i , ' Plant To Move To Kaston. Lebanon. Tbe M. H. Treadwelt Manufacturing Company, operating large car building and heavy mnufac turlug work here, and a large foun dry at Myerstown, thl county, at meeting decided to move their plant to Easton when tbelr leese expire here In December, 1911. The build ing and ground axe owned br the Lebanon Manufacturing Company and the prooerty will probably be old to another corporation. ' Lack of apace for development la given a the reason for tbe removal of tbe company, which en ploys 400 men here and 100 at Myerstown. ... '. '