The Fulton County News McConnellsburg, Pa. COUCH OF LUXURY. The most perfect resting place ever .Devised for a humnn being Is Just be neath the roof, and then you must be Oil to see the shingle nails stinking through. If a gentle rain be falling, o murh the teller. Five minutes pent In that sweet retrent are enough Ho banlflh the memory of every trouble. Debt and death lone their terrors, and lite peace tbnt passes underntuntling comes upon you, says the Washington Iost. You heroine a boy ngaln and enter once more into the world that tisnd to be. Soon the dark comers of oe room are pi (j led with the Itnnges of childhood. Over where the old clothes Hre bunging you can see tho outlines of a il!s;imritld ship, wliilo down the t-nri'lv nlmre come Robinson Crusoe and Man Friday. A swarthy fare peeps from l.-hlnd the big irnnk. ft Is Fiirlrighca, the Htr.ir.gliT, creep Ing stealihily njon his v'ctlin. Fast er and faster they come, somo pleas Ing, sone fi-roc-'ous. You welcome theui all and are not a bit afraid, and the ruin drips, di'ps, with a steady, monotonous cuiii.d. Then conies a blank. Next niornlnif tho spell Is broken, but ti c memory remains. You see the old flot I.'-h and the trunk, and find that the only gobelin tapestry In the room Is a ' ter of cobwebs over the little dorn.er window. But you had slept fl:c sYcp of the Just, and found It most rctrc&hlng. The passenger tralllc between the l'nltcd states and Europe continues to itTer must alHirli g inducements. Many of the liig ctiniianles are adding the Tie-west, largi'st and swiftest vessels to their fleets Oi e of the latest launch ing Is that of a ship that Is being built by a French line, to run to New Tork. This Is one of the greatest craft yet completed, an I when put In com mission w'!l be able to carry 2,020 pas sengers. The total cost will be about $."),0!)l.WiO. Th:it Is what foreign con cerns are doing to get American trade. And Americans permit them to mo. uopolizo a business that should be In American control and which should be a most Important auxiliary In ex tending American commerce. English owners of homing pigeons have lost so many of them this season that they believe there Is an especial cause. This cause, many of them are inclined to suspect. Is wireless telcgra phy. Many will dismiss the Indict ment as fanciful, on account of the comparative weakness of the current which wireless telegraphy brings Into play. The answer to this Is that the current does not kill tho birds, but only confuses them, causing them to miss their way If the Marconi cur rent affects plg"ons, why not gulls! Indeed, It would seem not Impossible that wlrelesB telegraph stations may be the means of greater disaster to gulls than lighthouses. From London comes the announce ment of the death of the woman who claimed to be the original of "Little Dorrlt," that famous character of Dirkens. The lady was entitled to th benefit of the doubt, but It Is a fact that similar claims have been made by others. It Is also asserted that brother of the woman who has Just died was the original "Tiny Tim," and that be served In part as the model for "laul Doinhey." If all those asser tions can he proved It would seem that the family formed a sort of trust for Dickens characters. Perhaps If the truth were known a considerable proportion of the so called automobile "accidents" would be found to havo resulted from be fuddled heads and unstesdy nerves. The menace of a man under the In fluence of liquor find In an automobile ta easily appreciated, and when It Is demonstrated that crashes on the road are due to drunkenness the pun ishment should be severe. Those who Insist upon running amuck on the highways should be made to pay heavy penalty, whotber they be sober or drunk. The usual fata of get-rlch-qulck schemes Is collapse at the end. And the "lambs" are fleeced as a prelim inary. A speculative scheme of this ktnd In Connecticut has brought up to the bankruptcy court, with unse cured claims of foOO.OOO to be set tled. And the further sequel no doubt will be the charging of the sum to the profit and loss account of those foolish enough to "Invest." A German musician says that our craze for ragtime is the great obstacle to creative work In American muslo. Ragtime? Sounds like faint echo from our past. Our friend must have cot his Idea from old newspaper files. Among airmen excessive avoirdupois Is at a discount, most of the success ful atmosphere navigators being phys ical lightweights. In this as In some other matters good goods often com In small packages. There Is a man In California who went to sleep on a railroad track, was struck by a fast train and escaped with a headache. To complete the Jujple beauty of this tale, we are pleased to add that the locomotive la also doing well. One by one the comic supplement Jokes com true. In Detroit a ben pecked llontamer has real! taken refuge from his wife by sleeping In lbs cage TWENTY-FOUR DEAD IN FIRE Scores of Girls Lpnp Oat of Vt indows of Factory. IHE STAIRWAYS WERE IN FLAMES. fn a Four-Story, Oil-Soaked Struc ture a fJasolIno Can K up I odes Score Of Working Girls, Finding Elovutor and Htnlrwayg Aflame, Plunge Headlong From Flre-Es-capes, Many To Death Ou the Pavements. IVrlsli Within 10 Minutes. Twenty-live working girls are known to have perished, 6 others are missing and 6C are injured as a result of the burning of a factory building at Orange and High streets, Newark, New Jer sey. The fire started on the third floor by an explosion of gaso line. Within 10 minutes the whole four-story structure was a blaz ing furnace. Hundreds of working girls were trapped on the upper floors by the rapid spread of the Are, their only escape being by way of two Insufficient fire-escapes. These were quickly overcrowd ed. A wild panic ensued, and dozens leaped from the windows and fire-escapes. One girl was burned to death sitting at her sewing machine. The financial loss Is said to be $165,000. Newark, N. . (Special). Twenty five girls were burned alive or crush ed to death on the pavement In leap ing from windows and fire-escapes within 10 minutes Saturday morning. The tragedy occurred at a fire in the factory building at Orange and High streets. The latest count shows that 20 of the 25 bodies recovered have been Identified and that six girls are still missing. They may be among the unidenti fied dead or they may be in the ruins. Fifty persons were taken to hos pitals, of whom two may die. Among the injured Is Joseph E. Sloane, dep uty fire chief, who was overtaken by the falling wall and burled in bricks and rubbish. He Is badly hurt, but may recover. The rush of the flames was so In credibly swift and threw such unrea soning terror into the huddled work ing girls on the top floor that the body of one was found still seated on a charred stool beside the machine at which she bad been busy when the first cry of "fire" petrified her with fright. Trapped In a Tinder Ilox. Horrible as must have boen the tragedy In the smoke of that crowded upper room, what befell outside In the bright sunlight was more hor rible still. The building was furlouBly Inflam mable, and the first rush of flames had cut off all possibility of escape by the stairways. The elevators made one trip, but took down no passen gers and never came back. The only exit was by two narrow fire-escapes, the lower platforms of which were IS feet from the street. On these overcrowded and steep xtts, made hot by the flames from the lower windows, pressed forward a mob of women, blind with panic, driven by the fire, and the others be hind them. Out Of Windows To Death. A net had been spread beneath the windows, and the girls began to Jump. "Like rats out of a burning bin" was the way a fireman described that pellmell descent. They bolted out of the windows,' rolled up on the heads of those below them and cascaded off the fire-escape to the pavement 80 feet below. Borne of them stood in the windows outlined against the flames and Jumped clear; others from the land ings; still others from the steps where they stood. The air was full of them and they fell everywhere Into the net, 06 the necks of firemen, and 15 of them on the hard stone slabs. When the Jumping ceased there were eight dead in the street and the gutters ran red with blood. Eleven more were so badly crushed that they died in hospitals. Clouds of smoke and showers of burning embers spread over the city and rained down on neighboring roofs. As the news flew and It lost nothing In the telling panic spread to other factories, where many of the girls In peril had friends and rel atives, and several firms had to shut down for the day. Prayer In the Street. Italian silk workers fell in the Two Roys Mnrdered fn Woods. Colombia, 8. C. (Special). Guy Rogers and Prentiss Moore, aged 15 and 11, respectively, went hunting Thanksgiving Day In tbe swamps of the Reedy river, near Bennettsville, and their bodies were found Saturday In a ditch near their buggy. They bad been murdered. Circuit Court was adjourned and practically the en tire population of Bennettsville is en gaged In searching for the assassins f the lads. Rogers was a son of the County Treasurer. Oklahoma Has l,A.17,inS. Washington, D. C. (Special). Tbe population of the State of Oklahoma Is 1,657,155, according to the sta tistics of the thirteenth census, Just made public t by Director Duraud. This la an Increase of 142.178, or 17.3 per cent., over 1,414,177 lu 107. The counties containing tbe principal cities are: Oklahoma. 85, 111. 00m pared wllh 24,916 In 1900, and Logan, 31,740, compared with 28.581 ia 1100. streets and prayed and lamented pitiably. Priests and clergymen worked their way through the press to give the last consolations to those; of their different faiths. Ambulance!) and automobiles, commandeered for emergency service, were hurrying in oposlte streams to the hospitals and back again. Floor Honked With Oils. The building was a four-story brick structure occupied on the two lower floors by the Newark Paper Box Com pany and the A. A. Drake Paper Box Company; on the third floor, where the flro started, by the Anchor Lamp Company and the Ktna Electric Com pany, and on the top floor, where the death list ran heaviest, by the Wolf Manufacturing Company, makers of underwear. The wooden floors were soaked with oil drippings from the machin ery and the flames ate through them like pasteboard. When they warped and weakened, the weight of the machinery torij them from tho walls and they fell Into the basement in a horrible tan gle of hot iron and mangled human ity. Sadie Benson, an employe of the .rtotna Electric Company, was clean ing an electric light fixture in a gnso lino bath. Gasoline Can Explode. The gasoline took fire she doe not know how and trickled In a lit tle rivulet of flame on the floor, where stood a full can of gasoline The ran exploded and the burning liquid flew far and wide. Lewis Cox, an employe of the bo factory on the second floor, waf standing in the hallway at the time of .the explosion. The shock wai strong enough, he says, to hurl hire against the wall, but the- girls up stairs at their whirring sewing ma chine! heard nothing. Fireman Brown, who turned in the alarm, was at work directly opposite the building, cleaning the windows oi the engine house where he is sta tioned. He saw a girl rush out ol tbe factory Into the street, scream ing and wringing her hands. "There's fire In there," she cried, pointing- back to the hallway she had left. Brown did not wait to ask any questions. He turned in an alarm and then dashed up the fire-escape Already he found 40 girls at the fourth-story windows, some of them so dazed with terror that they hadn't the wit to pull down the sashes and climb out. Brown smashed In the window and began pulling girls out upon the fire-escape. He counted 40 that filed past htm. Face Scorched By Heat. The floor was far from cleared, but the heat had then grown so intense that the skin was beginning tc scorch on his face. He pulled him self up to the window for a last look In, but at that moment a gush of red streaked smoke blinded and almost smothered him, and he was forced tc drop Into the lee of the wall. "It was the most horrible thing I've ever seen," he said afterward "Tbe girls were dropping from every window. I never saw a fire spread so fast once It got started. Before we could get the girls through the windows on the fire-escapes the flames were licking the wooden sashes. " Fire Chief Astley laid the responsi bility for loss of life on delay In turn ing In an alarm. He says that five minutes were loBt In trying to fight the blazing gasoline with sand In a barrel. "If those precious minutes bad not been wasted," he almost sobbed, "we would not have lost on single life." Owners In Tears. David Levy, president of the Woll Manufacturing Company, and Alfred M. Wolf, secretary and treasurer, broke Into tears when they were ask ed for an estimate of the loss. "What Is loss In the face of this disaster?" said Mr. Wolf. "What It any Investment against the life of one of those poor girls? When we. can talk coherently we'll give out a statement." Frederick Welmer, chief Inspectoi of the public prosecutor's office. Is making an Investigation to determine tbe responsibility of tbe tenants and owners. NAVY WINS GREAT GAME. Dnlton's Placement Kick the Only Heore Desperate Battle. Philadelphia (Special) . Standing on the Army's 30-yard line In the last period of Saturday's big football match Dalton, the Navy's tall half back, kicked a goal from placement which was the only score of the con test, and disposed of the West Point ers unexpectedly by 3 to 0. Dalton had previously attempted six goal trials without success, so that when he shot the oval squarely between the posts and over the crossbars the blue and gold enthusiasts Indulged In one of the wildest demonstrations of Joy ever seen at a struggle between Uncle Sam's young soldiers and sailors. Five Hundred Flyers. Paris (Special). Prof. Soreau, lecturing before the civil engineers, said the danger of aviation should not be exaggerated. Tbe Aero Club of France has Issued over 270 licenses and the total number of viators In the world la about BOO. The deaths have been about 6 per cent. Tbe total distance flown may be estimated At 125,000 miles, or one death for 4,186 2-3 miles. Daylight Lynching 1st Florid. Mayo, Fla. (Special). Richard Love, a, negro, was lynched several miles ontsld the city for entering tbe bedroom of the daughter of R. M. Cobb, In the heart of Mayo, Satur day sight. Alcoholic liquor for th use oi native ar not permitted to be Im ported Into Botnallland. Titer ar,ll periodic oomet of whkife the return ha been observed. GENERAL REYES LOYAL TO DIAZ Dis Statement a Blow to the Revolutionary Leaders. WIRED TO ALL PARTS OF MZXICO For Standing By the President In the Crisis Diss Will Likely Ilcstore Bejcs To His Former Position As Minister Of War In tho New Ad ministration Itumon Corral May Resign the Vice-Presidency and Be (Succeeded By Enrique Creel. Mexico City (Special). The state ment which General Bernardo Reyes issued from Paris, France, In regard to the revolutionary situation In this country, and in which he reaffirms his loyalty to the administration of President Diaz and belittles the pres ent uprisings, was widely published in Mexico. It was wired by the gov ernment to all parts of the republic and orders given to the authorities of the different districts that the people be made acquainted with the state ment. xIt came as a telling blow to the ardor and hopes of the revolutionary leaders, who have been diligently cir culating the report that Reyes was back of the present movement and was even on his way to Mexico to as sume command of the revolutionary forces. General Reyes statement In sures that the army will remain loyal to the present administration, no matter what the turn of events mayJ be. It Is the express belief in high offi cial circles that tbe stand which Gen eral Reyes has taken will cause a quick dissolution of the armed bands that are still roving some parts of the country. The report is current that Diaz will restore Reyes to his former position as minister of war when be enters upon his new administration Decem ber 1. Ramon Corral, vice-president, is in 111 health and has been at a hospital near this city for sometime. His physical condition gives rise to the report that he will resign his position as vice-president soon after bis coming Inauguration for a second term and that he will be succeeded by Enrique Creel, the present minis ter of foreign affairs. Eduardo Chalx, consul of France In Puebla, has presented a claim against the government for $3,000 damages done Julio Slbilot, a mer chant of that city, during the recent revolutionary disturbances there. Other claims for damages to the prop erty of foreign residents will be pre sented. It Is stated. MINISTER AND WIFE KILLED Half-breed Negro Charged With the (rime. TO CIRCLE WORLD ON STILTS. German Acrobats Are After Wager Of $5,00O. New York (Special). For a wager of $5,000, two German acrobats will attempt to circle the world on stilts. They obtained a promise of police protection from Commissioner Crop- sey on the first leg of tbelr Journey through the crowded streets from the City Hall to the Jersey City ferry and from there they will make their way to Philadelphia. Tbe bour of the start has not yet been decided. Tbe young men are Albert Marder and Hans Hoeledamp, until recently employed as stewards cm a trans atlantic liner, and the purse they hope to win was raised by the Steam ship Stewards Vereln, of- Hamburg. "We are expert stilt walkers," they said. "We expect to walk eleven hours a day, and we can travel five and a half miles an bour. We are not allowed to take any money with us, and count on making a living by selling picture post cards. We will work our passage on the ocean laps of the Journey." Walsh's Friends Htlll Have Hope. Washington, D. C. (Special). Offi cials of the Department of Justice state that the application for pardon of John R. Walsh, the Chicago bank er who was sentenced to five years at Fort Leavenworth prison, Kansas, has not been received. This dis proves the current reports that the Attorney-General has dented the ap plication. President Taft, it Is said, has given no Intimation of his In tention to refuse a pardon, and friends of tbe banker ar hopeful. The application contains 5,000 names. Two Children Suffocated. Kalamazoo, Mich. (Special). Edgar, 6 years old, and bis 3-year-old sister, Mabel, children of Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Riley, of this city, were suffocated In an overheated room. The boy and girl bad been left In the room by the mother, who. It Is said, had failed to shut off the coal stove. Bolh children were un conscious when found and soon died. Th mother went temporarily Insane and I now In hospital. Gaynor Appoints Woman. New York (Special). Mayor Gay nor has appointed Miss Martha L. Draper, of 18 West Eighth street, a member of the Board of Education to fill one of the vacancies resulting recently from the' expiration of the terms of several commissioners. Miss Draper 1 chairman of the local school board of th Ninth district, and has been Interested for soma year In educational work. She is the first woman to -receive an ap pointment to th school board from Mayor Gaynor. n Shot To Death By Mob. Columbia. 8. C. (Special). After confessing that be bad attempted an assault on Nannie May Shealey and then bad cut her throat, a negro, whose name has not yet been learn ed, was shot to death by a mob about three-quarters of mile from Little Mountain at 10.40 Friday night. Five hundred men with hounds scoured Lexington county for the negro. Miss Shealey is the daughter of a prominent farmer. Her throat was cut from ear to ear. Trenton, N. J. (Special). The murder of Rev. Anzl L. Armstrong and hi wife, Annie Armstrong, at their homo at Dutch Neck Wednes day night baa resulted In charges being preferred by County Detective James Kirkham, against John Sears, who - was arraigned before Justice of tho Peace Mills, and held with out ball,- to answer two separate charges of homicide. Rudolph Norhaus, who was brought to Trenton by the county authorities along with Sears, was al lowed to go to his home In New Brunswick. .. Prosecutor Crossley stated that he was entirely satisfied that Northaus was in no way con nected with the murder of the aged couple. Norhaus was not at any time un der arrest, as the prosecutor (ox pressed the opinion from the begin ning that the man knew nothing of tho crime and that his presence In Dutch Neck was the result of a pre arrangement between himself and Sears to go on a gunning trip. After having submitted Sears to a severe examination, Prosecutor Crossley and County Detective Kirk ham went to Dutch Neck and, as the prosecutor expressed It himself. Sears' mother, the housekeeper In the Armstrong household, was Im pounded In the custody of consta bles at a bouse In Dutch Neck. The Investigation, it was stated, established the fact that the Rev. Armstrong and his wife were killed by shots from a double-barreled gun, which was found standing in a cor ner of the kitchen of the Armstrong home. This gun was borrowed by Sears two weeks ago from a neigh bor for gunning purposes. Sears is a halfbreed and his mother is a negress. Mrs. Sears has been housekeeper in the Armstrong fam ily for more than 30 years, having been employed by the murdered man before the birth of her son, who is suspected of the murder and who Is 83 years of age. MUST BEGIN LIFE ANEW. Surgical Operation Leaves Editor With Mentality Of a Child. Fort Wayne, Ind. (Special). Fol lowing a successful surgical opera tion at Chicago for the removal of a tumor from the brains, Jesse V. Tay lor has been brought to his home In this city in the mental condition of a 5-year-old child. Taylor was editor of an agricultur al publication in Chicago when a strange development resulted In an almost complete loss of ' memory. Physicians say that Taylor must now begin to learn as a little child would, and that It will be necessary to start anew In teaching him. Physically he is as well as ever, but there Is small hope of bis complete mental recovery. HELD FOR WIFE'S DEATH. Leo Appleby, Aged 23, Is Accused Of Murder. Wellsboro, Pa. (Special). Leo Appleby, aged 23 years, was arrested here, charged with the murder of his wife, Mazle, aged 22 years, whose body was discovered Friday. Tbe side of tbe woman's head bad been blown off with a shotgun. Appleby notified his neighbors that be bad discovered his wife lying dead In tbe kitchen when he returned home. When neighbors entered the house they found the woman's body lying on the floor, while her Infant was playing nearby soaked In her blood. The coroner was notified, and, after making an Investigation, deter mined to hold Appleby to answer for bis wife's death. Elklns May Resume Work. Washington, D. C. (Special). Statements made by member of the family and the physicians of Sena tor Stephen B. Elkins, of West Vlr glnia, indicate that the Senator may be able to resume bis seat In Con gress within 30 days. His physl clans are insisting that he 'fully recuperate from his Illness before at tempting work of any kind. New York 0,11.1,270. Washington, D. C. (Special). New York will gain from four to five Congressmen on the basis of the offi cial figures for 1910,, given out at the Census Bureau for that State. Th total population of New York State is now given as 9,113,279, a net gain of 1,844,385 over 10 years ago. Dropped Dead Eating Dinner. Rockford, 111. (Special). George Kaut, a hardware merchant of Bur lington, la., dropped dead while eat ing a Thanksgiving Day dinner. HOUSES WENT UP LIKE MAGIC How Red Cross Aided Forest Fire Victims. SHELTER PROVIDED fOR THE HOMELESS The Race With Oncoming Winter Was a Thrilling One and Building nor" In Minnesota Broke All Records Method Employed Was Unique, Hut It Produced th lie suit Aimed At. Firemen Burned To Death, Chicago (Special). John Juday, of the fire company of Swift ft Co., packers, was burned to death, fifty city firemen were overcome by smoke and $75,000 damage was dona to the lard refinery and grease storehouse of tbe packing firm by a Or which raged for three hour Thursday. In sufficient water supply for th extra Or engine called out and crowds which hindered th fir fighter was responsible for th extent of th damage. Nothing To Be Thankful For. New York (8pec!al). Feeling that be had nothing to be thankful for, while all about him were people en joying tbe Thanksgiving Day, Michael McGe,-28 year old, com mitted suicide In Central Park by shooting In the bead. "1 haven't anything to be thankful for on this day of Thanksgiving," passershy beard Mm mutter. With that he whipped out a revolver, and pressing the muzile to bl head, fired. He died Instantly, - -l N Washington, D. C. (Special). One of tho strangest facts observed In tbe forest fires which occasionally sweep over tbe woods of Northern Michigan and Minnesota is the burning of tbe ground. Falling leaves, bark and twigs and dying plant life gradually accumulate In the forests. The rains and dense shade keep the mass damp. Mosses grow on the surface of the de caying vegetation. The half-rotted stuff settles down and hardens. Trees spring up and their roots take bold in the peaty substance. . Then comes a season of drought, and tbe dampness slowly evaporates. A hunter or woodman or farmer builds a fire, or a railway engine drops a spark. Tbe dry surface of the ground is Ignited and a slow can cer of fire eats deep among the root of the trees, smouldering for weeks or months. Then one day a strong wind springs up. Trees, undermin ed by the fire, topple over, their roots throwing out showers of sparks and burning masses of Under-like material. Flames burst out In every direction, and like a flash, a forest fire is in full sweep. Trail Of the Fire Fiend. The forest fire which occurred in Northern Minnesota a few weeks ago broke out in many places at once, because many of theso smouldering fires were Blmpiy awaiting the gale which sprang up on October 7. In this fire about 1,600 square miles of country were burned. The thriving villages of Beaudctte, with a popula tion of 1,200, and Spooner, with 850, were swept out of existence in an hour. 'Hundreds of "homesteaders," carving their farms out of the for ests, lost their homes and saved their lives by lowering themselves into wells, or plunging into streams or ponds. Thirty lives were lost, and 3,000 persons were left homeless, with food, live stock, farm crops and machinery all gone. When tbe agents of the American Red Cross reached the burned dis trict they realized that winter was at band In this north country and that their greatest task was tbe swift con struction of a large number of shelt ers. It was a big Job, and it had to be quickly done. Here Is the man ner In which the Red Cross met the emergency: Two simple designs for bouses were prepared, of one and two rooms, respectively. These required only a few standard sizes of lumber, and tar paper took the place of shingles and plaster. Lumber was rushed in from Canada, the Secretary of the Treas ury at Washington having waived the customs duty on supplies required by the Red Cross. A half dozen car penters were hurried to the scene. Then "building bees" were organ ized, with one carpenter In command of each. A half dozen neighbors, with saw and hammer, would help Ole Olson build his house. Then all. Including Olson, would move along and build Hans Hanson's house, and so on. Building "Bees" Hammed. Tbe speed with which these houses were erected, where several "bees" were "humming" at the same time, wa startling. While this was going on the Red Cross was hurry ing Into tbe fire district from Duluth and St. Paul and Minneapolis big or der of door, window, stoves, bed ding, chairs, kitchen utensils and provisions. A rapidly a the little houses were ready they were fur nished and stocked up with food and the famine moved In. It wa a desperate race with win ter, and the Red Cross won. While the race was at Its swiftest there was not a busier spot between the oceans than this black and desolate stretch of country along tbe northernmost rim of Minnesota. Much remain to be done, but nobody is going to freeze or starve. DREXEL FLIES UP 9,970 FEET If -1 V IT' 11. . . iiitthes a new nor; a s uecord In' Bleriot Monoplane. Philadelphia (Special). J. Arm. strong Drexel .broke all aeroplane altitude record her Wednesday when be climbed above this city un til his Bleriot monoplane was unahl to make further progress In th rare fled atmosphere. The Ink In the nee. die of his barograph ran out at 9,970 feet, which was accepted as a new world' record by Clifford B. Harmon, chairman of the National Council. Associated Anrn filiih. America, and James King Duffy, the secretary oi mat Doay. Tbe Instrument Is the same one which Johnstone carried when h made the former record of 9,714 feet at Belmont Park on October 31. u was broueht to this cltv under ai by Mr. Duffy In order that the rec ord made would be official. Mr. Drexel left the aviation ftoM at Point Breeze in the extreme south ern part of this city at 3.23. rr landed at Oreland, about 20 miles north of the spot where he had start ed, at 4.46. MUTINY IX BRAZIL'S NAVY, Posing As Martyrs. London (Special). All of the suf fragettes who were charged with as sault and tbe wilful damage of prop erty, as a result of tbelr recent riot ing were found guilty In tbe Bow Street Police Court, and sentenced to pay fines of from $10 to $25 or to spend two weeks or a month In Jail, according to the seriousness of their offense. All of tbe prisoners elected to go to Jail. Revolter In Possession Of Mine Gcracs and Sao Paulo. Rio Janeiro (Special). The gov ernment took prompt step to placate the leaders of tbe sailors' revolt en the warships In this harbor. The mutinous sailors, after seizing the battleships Sao Paulo and Mi new Geraes and the cruiser Florlano ana Bohla, killed several of the officers and then fired shells Into the city. Not much damage was done. The mutineers offered to surrender If granted more pay and the aboli tion of corporal punishment. The Senate unanimously approved a proposition for amnesty. The mutiny started on board th two battleships, the largest vessels in the Brazilian navy. They turned their guns upon the loyal ships and also threw a few shells Into the city. During the out break several officers were killed. The fighting ceased at night, but tbe revolters remained In possession of the two vessels. It Is officially stated that the trou ble is not of a political character and Bhould be described as a mutiny among the sailors to enforce certain concessions from their officers, rather than a revolt against the administra tion of President Fonesca. DR. CRIPPEN HANGED. Pays the Penalty On the Gallows For the Murder Of HI Wife, Belle Elmore. London (Special). Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen was hanged early Wednesday morning for the murder of his wife, known r.s Belle Elmore. All preparations had been made within tbe gloomy walls of Penton vllle Prison, which stands In one of the most dismal sections of London. Public Executioner Ellis, of Roch dale, who hanged a wife murderer at Liverpool Tuesday, arrived In Lon don on the eveniug train. A few tenements overlook tbe prison yard, and to bar tbe tenant from a gllmpss of the tragedy a big canvas screen had been put up before tbe gallows. Only a small group of official wit nesses attended, and every effort was made to prevent morbid crowds from gathering In the neighborhood. Father Carey, who has visited Crippen frequently, entered tb prison at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening to spend the night with tbe condemn ed man and walk with Crippen to tbe scaffold. Miss Le Neve, at the request of tb prisoner, paid a farewell visit te Crippen In the afternoon. Sbs reached the place In a closed cab and was accompanied by an elderly man, who remained outside. WAR ON THE. HATPIN. Airship Turn Over. Mobil, Ala. (Speolal). While de scending from a 500-foot flight Avia tor J. A. D. McCurdy dipped too near the earth, one of the wing shields striking th ground when going at a high rat of speed, and turning the machine over. Tb crowds rushed to th end of tbe field in whidh tb accident happened, but foond Mo Curdy walking about, smiling and uninjured. Tb aeroplane wa bad ly damaged, although It fell but tn or fifteen feet. Gen. Magrnder Dead. Philadelphia (Special). Brigadier General David Lynn Magruder. Unit ed State Army, retired, a Civil War veteran, died at bis bom In Bryn klawr, near her. He wa SB years old. General Magruder was bom 1 Frederick, Md., and entered th Army in 1860 as an assistant surgeon. In 1886. b wa retired by operation of th ag retirement law, but in 1894 he was advanced to th rank of brigadier general, retired. t The Berlin; Police Warn Wome Against Wearing Them. Berlin (Special). The pollcs president of Berlin has declared war on the) dangerously protruding hat pin. In a proclamation Just Issued he calls the attention of the women of th city to the many recent reports of injuries inflicted by hatpins that projected beyond the rims of wom en's hats. The accidents have' been especially frequent In street cars, and usually men are the victims. Tbe president call upon th wom en to either cease using long pins or turn the point so that they will not be a constant menace to tb traveling public. He adds that while he ex pects that tbe women will comply with his reasonable request b If prepared In the event that tbey do not, to adopt compulsory measures. Lose Her Life For Dog. Mayfleld, Mass. (Special). I trying to save the lit of a dog Ml Helen Herbert lost ber own. 8b was walking with a dog; when a motor car rounded tb bend of a rot and came toward her. Tb dof Jumped In front of tb on-coming car and Miss Herbert at one sprang after the animal to save It from It 11 pending fat. Her kindly effort w made at' tb coat of her life, for tb car struck her, fracturing her skull, and she died shortly afterward th bom of a friend. DYING FROM FOOTBALL. Lad Has Concussion Of Brain AIM , - Scrimmage. Wheeling. W. Va.' (Special).- George House, a 11-year-old ko7ij will dl as th result of injuries celved while playing football, tb scrimmage th boy wa throw heavily to tb ground and knocks unconscious. H received a blow ij tb bead wbtoh esnsed oncMloa th brain.