The Salton County News UcCoonellsburg, Pa. AMERICA AND IRRIGATION. Ours Is the foremost rountry In the world Id the reclamation of Its arid load. To the untravoled easterner tbe extent of the Irritation of west ern lands under direct government su OrervUIon Is unknown. The work of Qudlvldual and corporate concerns ralsea the actual reclamation of arid 4asd In the west to an enormous to 41 acreage. Mont of tills work has ibeen accomplished within the past iecade, wtillo each year the plans for Still further pufihlng tho conquests of artificial Irrigation are extended, says iht llttsburg Gazette-Times. That (ha prestige In this Important depart ment of borne building belongs to the Cut ted States Is further demonstrated (by a request recently submitted to the atate department by the Austra lian government. Australia has sev eral wide extended areas of arid food. The reclamation of much of IMs ban been undertaken, but the first jClfflculty that confronted the govern ment was a lack of expert knowledgo uf the actual work to bo done and of the means used to Bccure the largest and surest returns on the money In vested. In this dilemma Australia turned to the United States, where Ir rigation on the broadest lines has (been ably demonstrated under gov ernment control. Workmen In demolishing an ancient Sioum situated In the Hue de Stras bourg, opposite the old Mont de riete t Nantes, have made an interesting OiecoTery which Is likely to attract considerable attention, since the find wm at once dispersed by the men. It ccn si i ted of a number of gold and sil Hr coins of different epochs. The aost Interesting bore the efllgy of Al .jAonso VIII., king of Gallcla and Cas tll. who reigned from 1120 to 1158. They bear on the exergue an Inscrip tion In Arabia In these terms: "The Emir of the Catholics Is aided by jMlah, and Allah protects tbem." The drnfl Is Interesting In more ways than one, and It Is likely that economic -writers will not fall to make use of these coins to show the trade rela tions of Nantes about the period of 1th Hundred Years War. The defendant In a case before Una's Bacon, who objected to being described as a gentleman, may be commended on bis refusal, to be Babeled with a term which even Sir James Murray Is shy of defining, says the London Chronicle. There Is the cld legal definition, "all above the rraxtk of a yeoman," and there Is Sir TrilHam Dlackstone's description of a icentleman as "one who can live idly aofl without labor." There Is also the i-Wtorlc definition given by a witness tat the trial of Thurtell for the mur 4er of Mr. Weare as "one who drives tig." And the cabman probably ex ipresees the average opinion as to what constitutes a man, a gentleman -when be says: "You're a gentleman, tr." to the spendthrift who does not sk change for half a crown on a shilling fare. Two of the rare dollars of 1804 have been found. It is affirmed that only Jour of these coins are In existence, Mid numismatologlsts attach great 'value to them. The last coin sold brought $3,000. But of course if they continue to be found in this fashion the discoveries are likely to "bear" the market Radium has also come down among Abe other necessaries of life, a grain f it bavlng recently sold for $72,000. jStlll, at that rate, the time is not clearly In sight when families can af ford to lay In an entire winter's sup jly with reduced prices for cash. A veterinarian on Long Island re Sueed to take an anaesthetic for an iteration because he wished to watch t that be might get surgical points. Jk. man like this Is Just the kind not 3,'kely to Inflict needless pain on xtbera. Tbs meanest man has been found In New Jersey. In a quarrel with his rwlfe be took the false teeth from her Mouth and kept them, saying he had tpeJd for them. Naturally, In court tab mad a biting charge against him. Tfcsblon decrees that men must Vropos on their knees hereafter," ay an esteemed contemporary. Fash la m "dame," all right or Is she a idamselT Prof. Garner says his female chim .gMUttxee baa a vague moral sense. And fcbat Is tne sort that some folks In klgb aocletee bave. - it baa been a banner hunting sea awn In northern Michigan, the re tarns showing 6.000 deer and 20 hunt ers killed. There are 800 varieties of chrysan themums, but no ono seems to know thy there are so many. Pittsburg Is 152 years old. The fact teonstltutes another argument to tho ffect that smoking promotes long evity. Some of the dresses the women nre now woarlng resemble the wrapper of thin clear. They fit Just us tight, trvo. Maine hunters killed very few moose Ibis year, but doubtle-s the moose con ruder It a successful season. RISHES TO FIND MOREWORLU'S Carnegie Gives $10,000,030 More For Scientific-Work. Facetiously Objects To Being Intel" iuplcl mill Asks Scientist Out Ol n It i, Itul Hands Over Rig Dona- lion With Hie lll'e ,,llt u XV'" 'Interest" fuller Cntil Carnegie Has Time To See Him Ironmas ter Enjoys I n -blent. - Hits ;lven Nearly $00.0(MI.OOO. ' Audrew Carnegie on Decem ber 14 established a $10,000,000 fund to encourage world-wide peace. At that time It was estimated that tho Ironmaster's benefac tions aggregated $187,000,000. Among the most notable gifts had been tho following: t.'or negio Institution, of Washing ton, $15,000,000; Carnegie Foundation, $15,000,000; li braries In the United States, $41,500,000; libraries in for eign lands, $10,000,000; Car negie Institute, Pittsburg, $1. 000,000; Scotch universities, $10,000,000; hero funds, $5, 000,000; Carnegie Steel Com pany employes, $5,000,000. and Dunfermline endowment, $5, 000,000. Others were these: Polytech nic schools, Pittsburg, $5,500, 000; Peace Temple at Hague. $1,750,000; Allied Engineers' Societies, $1,500,000, and Bureau of American Republics, $750,000. New York (Special). The dona tion of an additional endowment of $10,000,000 to the Carnegie Institu tion of Washington by Andrew Car negie, the founder, was announced Friday. This brings Mr. Carnegie's gifts to the institution up to a total of $25,000,000. Coupled with the formal announce ment was a declaration by Mr. Car negie that the work of the Institu tion had cleared from blame the cap tain of a Hritish ship who ran his ves sel upon the rocks by proving that the Hritish Admiralty charts, by which the captain was guided, were 2 degrees or 3 degrees astray. !0.()()0 .New Worlds Discovered. The discovery of 60,000 nc worlds by Professor Hale at the ob servatory on Mount Wilson, Califor nia, also was announced. The ob servatory was established by the In stitution, and its operations and dis coveries afTord Mr. Carnegie more de light, perhaps, than any other work ings of the Institution. Mr. Carnegie also announced that a far more powerful telescope than man has ever made is now under con struction for the Mount Wilson Ob servatory. With it he hopes to make possible the discovery of still more celestial bodies. In confirming a report of the en dowment, Mr. Carnegie said: "The report is correct. They had a large endowment before and $10, 000,000 makeB the total of their en dowment $25,000,000, but the insti tution has already scored successes to justify even that sum. I believe that the Institution In research will pay tenfold in service to the world." WOKKKD IlKIt FARM AT it:j. Oldest Native Itesldent Of Pittsyl vania County, Va., Dead. Danville, Va. (Special). Mrs. Judith Coleman Anderson, the oldest native resident of Pittsylvania coun ty, who was born In May, 93 years ago, died at her home near Danville Friday. She was twice married, but both husbands preceded her to the grave many years ago. Mrs. Anderson lived on her farm. Mil s Jane Reld, an aged friend, being her only companion. She was con fined to her bed only two days, and up to her recent illness attended to her own household duties and man aged the farm. She leaves no direct descendants. VOI'TSKY DENIED PARDON'. Governor Wlllson Believes Him Guilty Of Murder Of G'ocbel. Frankfort, Ky. (Special). Gover nor Wllison has refused a pardon to Henry E. Youtsey, convicted of the murder of Governor William Goebol. The Governor says he believes Youtsey is guilty of a cruel murder and therefore refuses to grant the pardon. Bl'BOMC PLAGUE IN' PEKING. Disease Slowly Spreading In Mnn r.hurlA and Northern China. Peking (Special). The first death in Peking since the outbreak of the present epidemic of bubonic plague occurred in a missionary hospital Fri day. There have been earlier re ports that the disease had entered tho capital, but not until Friday had a fatality been directly due to the plague. In Manchuria and Northern China the plague Is slowly extending. Young Woman Kills Father. Gravctte, Ark. (Special.) Nellie Allen, the 21 -year-old (laughter ot John B. Uoyer, a wealthy planter, dliot and killed her father following an exchange oi half a dozen shots with the parent. Tho father, she al leges, was advancing with a knlfa on her hur.hr.ml of a f?w weeks, Jo!:u All'. Rushing into tin home, tho young woman secured n reuilvir, and just as the father whs in the act ot stabbing young Allen bho lircd. LOOSE WHS LONG FICHT Senator From Ma. sacliusetts For a Fourth Term. Huston (Special). Henry Cabot Lodge won the hardest light in his political career of nearly 30 years Thursday and returns to the United States Senate for a fourth term, with the support of 14G out of 279 mem bers of the Massachusetts Legislature, or six more than the number neces sary for a choke In the Joint conven tion. HENRY CABOT LODGE. 8. Snr fmm Miutichuketti. u. Two Democratic Senators, Martin II. F. Curley and Michael J. Murray, left their party to vote for him, but their support was not necessary. Representative James It. Mclnerney, i another Democrat, was In the chani-i ber but did not vote. He did not care to oppose Senator Lodge, be-1 cause of personal friendship. j (j.VTIIEKIVG OK THE LEADERS. Harmony llaniiiet Of (he Democrats. a Success. I Baltimore was the scene Tuesday of the greatest demonstration In the history of the Democratic party since its national convention of l'JOS in Denver. It was the Jackson Day National Mi Mi l - - - 11 - -" " - ' - Democratic celebration which began died of a cerebral hemorrhage In the; the House, subject to caucus ratlflca at 1 o'clock in the afternoon with a: Hotel Seymour here Thursday night ,'tlon. mass-meeting In the Lyric and whlcnj His wife and his cider brother, Joy,) A great ovation, was given Champ ended after midnight with the closet were at his side 15 minutes after he, Clark when Mr. Wilson, of Pennsyl- of the banquet in the Fifth Regiment Armory. The most s'riking development of the many during the day and night was the inauguration of a movement for holding :he Democratic National ; Conventlon in Baltimore next year. li marked the passing of Hon William Jennings Bryan as a Demo- cratic party leader and as a possible tare of himself grave results would fourth-time candidate for the presl- follow. dency, as far as the sentiment of the j0y A. Morton gave a full account speakers notably. Senator Bailey, of 0f his brother's ill health and sudden Texas could relegate him to the death. rear. Mr. Bryan himself was not "Paul and 1 took luncheon to present, nor would be indite a letter . R(.ther at noon," he said. "I had to be read at the gathering. i jUHt come on here from Chicago, and Still another striking develop-. ini , nn at thn station. Wn went ment was the expression of a decld- to tno Kquitable building together, 1 though they wero fopies for sub ed preference for Governor Jutlnou j k, here, at Paul s request, 1 attended scribers, a Federal grand Juiy Wcd Harmon, of Ohio, as the Democratic , a meeting of the board of directors at nesday indicted the Atlanta Journal candidate for president next year. j whch he presided. Then we had Company. James R. Gray, president At 1 o'clock the doors of the Lyric ;UIltheon together In the building. ' 0f the company, and John D. Sim swung open and the waiting crowd nnil gat together talking until pcr-jmoiis, C. H. Babb and V. P. Har;:er, rushed In. Tho first sight In the lob- Papg 2.30 o'clock. I employes. The Indictment In no way bles which greeted the throng were ..j na(, otller husineFs and so had involves tho daily or tho Sunday tho posters urging female suffrage. ho -See you at the house at 0 or a Journal. The amount Involved is The Lyric was beautifully deco- littl, t,eforo j ga!(Ji ail( , pnrtcc!. ' paid to be $700 postage charges, rated. American flags were in evl- , I1PV(r 8aw hIm alive aKal." uence. uen. hurray vanuiver, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, called the meet- ing to order and Introduced Gov. Austin L. Crothers, who presided. The speakers were: GOV. JLDSON HARMON, of Ohio. SENATOR JOSEPH W. BAILEY, of Texas. HON. CHAMP CLARK, of Mis souri, prospective Speaker of the House of Representatives. The tenor of all the speeches was (hat as a result of tho November elec tion the Democratic party had been placed on probation; that the people would watch its course with great care, and that it must live up to its promises to win continued support. RESCUE CHILDREN'. Firemen Drag Little Ones Out Of lleds and Down Ladders. ninghamton, N. Y. (Special). Fire In the basement of the main building of the Susquehanna Valley Home imperiled the Uvea ot 156 children and the 18 attendant and officers of the institution, and but for the bravery of the teachers, the fire men and, in instances, the children themselves, grave loss of life must have resulted. Train Hits Cow ; JIO Hurt. Fort Smith, Ark. (Special). Thir ty persons were injured, four prob ably fatally, between Hartford, Ark., and Monroe, Okla., when a Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific passenger train struck a cow. FEWER AND BETTER LAWS. Gov. Colquitt, Of Texas, Wants a Conservative Government. Austin, Texas (Special). The In auguration of Governor Colquitt and .Lieutenant-Governor Davidson Tues j day w as witnessed by one of the larg !cst gatherings on record In this I State. Governor Colquitt made his inaugural speech along lines of con ' servativo government, fewer and be'.- ter laws, and safer and saner legisla tion. Carnegie Hero Medals. Pittsburg (Special). Twenty-six awards In recognition of acts of hero ism have Just been made by tho Cnr neglo Hero Fund Commission, 16 bronze and 10 silver medals, besides cash awards being authorized. Nine teen of the award- were made in rescues or attempted rescues from drowning, threo from fire, two from HUtVoratiou in wells, ind one each from train wrecks and shooting. In nine Instances the heroes lost their livs ami the nwp.nl is mtnlo to fl member of the fanily. PAUL MORTON DIES SUDDENLY Stricken Willi Hemorrhage in New York Hotel. WAS UNCONSCIOJS 10 THE END. President Of the KquKaliU' l.ll'c .n Niiranep Society Had lleen Sutler ing Willi a Km n I Illness, IliK He Did Xot Know Ills Mfe Was In Danger Was Secretary Of Hie Xavy Tinier Roosevelt Wife Keuelies Side After Dentil Whs An Authority n Itnilrojuls. . Life Sketched In Itiicf. Horn In Detroit, Mich, May 22, 1857. Taken to Nebraska City when tlx months old. Got a position with the Iiur lington Kailroad in 1872 at $1C a month. Became assistant general freight agent on the Ilurllngton at 21. Promoted to general passen ger and general freight agent. Kngaged In the coal and Iron business In 1110. Vice-president of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company and president of the Whitehread Fuel Company, 1830 to 18'J. liecamo third vice-president of the Sante Fe In 1 8 ! ti . Was made second vice-president of the Sante Fe In 18US. Appointed Secretary of the Navy In 1!I04. Resigned to become president of the Metropolitan Street Rail way in 1005. Fleeted president of the Equitable Life Assurance Com pany In 1905. New York (Special). Paul Mor ton, president of the Equitable Life Assurance Society and Sei retary ot the Navy under Theodore Roosevelt, was stricken, but he never regained j i consciousness and at 6.4 5 o'clock, an : would gladly vote for Clark for presl hour after he was stricken, he died. 'dent. There will be no autopsy. ) About 210 Democrats were present. Mr. Morton himself had no Idea Mr. Hay, of Virginia, presided, and that his life was In danger, but his family, his physicians and a few close friends knew that his condition was precarious and that if he did not take Mr. Morton was to have started on jK vacation trip to Kurope February oo Coroner's Physician O'llanlon said that from the antecedent history and Schwab and Corey. the symptoms there was no doubt In I Npw York (Special.) Although his mind that death was due to' , , . , . , , , , i , , . ,i Charles M. Schwab and William F. arterial sclerosis, a hardening of the, walls of the arteries, terminating in a l'orp'- 09 P"'"0" t-lio United cerebral lesion. I States Steel Corporation, received The death was reported to the cor- $100,000 a year, James A. Farrell, oner's office in the usual stereotyped ' 11,0 new Prt'sldont. will receive only form. j $50,000. Few, If any, of the directors of the! The "l"onco Committee of the Equitable h'ad news of the death until corporation is empowered to fix they were informed by the newspa-' salarle8' 8,1(1 Mr- Terrell's salary has pers. E. W. Bloomlngdale. Robert ,,een Place'1 t JU8t one-half of what De Forest and Frank S. Witherbee, llis predecessors received, the last named also of the executive; committee, were all deeply shocked. Money Put In Right Place. Washington, D. C. (Special). Denounces the Press. ' President Taft received a telegram In- Columbia. S. C. (Special). Weak Tomiing him that San Francisco had from illness, Coleman Livingston ralao(l "5.000 for the American Red Bleasc, of Newberry, was Inaugurated Cross. He has replied to William W. Governor Tuesday. Lleutenant-Gov- Morrow, chairman of the endowment crnor Charles A. Smith, of Tlmmons-1 fund- BS f"ow: "I congratulate vllle, was also sworn in. Governor "ou on the contribution to Red Cross" Blease devoted nearly halt of his inaugural address to a denunciation of the press. Kaiser Kick Against Tax. Berlin (Special). The Reichstag debated the second reading of the government's unearned increment tax bill Friday and adopted an amend ment subjecting the German sov ereign houses to the tax. The gov ernment Is strongly opposed to this Innovation In German constitutional ism. Need More Funds. Washington, D. C. (Special). Re questing that Congress provide addi tional funds for continuing the work of raising the battleship Maine In Havana Harbor, Secretary of War ! Dickinson has written a letter to Sen ator Hale, chairman of the Senate ' Appropriations Committee, calling at tention to tne tact tnat the appro priation of $300,000 made at the last session of Congress will bo exhausted in about six weeks. Irish Re-EIect ltediuond. Dublin (Special). At a private meeting Tuesday tho Irish Parlia mentary party re-elected John E. Redmond chairman. The other offi cers were also re-elected and the resolutions j,ovenilng the party were reaffirmed. Cook Will Get His Notebook. Copenhagen ( Special 1. The ftnl verslty committee decided to accede to the request of Dr. Frederick A. f'ook. made through Walter Lons- iGLARK IS SPEAKER Also (Jets Ovation as Presiden tial Candidate. Washington, D. C. ( Special. ) Representative Champ Clark, of Mis souri, the Democratic leader of the House and receptive candidate for the Democratic nomination for tho presi dency, was nominatod by acclamation Thursday night for Speaker of the House in tho Sixty-second Congress. This, with tho selection of a commit tee on ways and means to make an early preparation of tariff legislation for submission to Congress Imme diately upon the beginning of the next session In December, when the House becomes Democratic, was one of the features of a caucus of the Democrats the old and new mem bersof the next Congress held in the hall of the House at tho capltol. CHAMP CLARK Congressman From Ninth District of Missouri. Representative Oscar W. I'nder wood, of Alabama, was unanimously nominated for chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. His name was proposed by Representative Champ Clark. Tho caucus- adopted the Foster resolution clothing the Ways and Means Committee with the power of naming the standing committees of vanla, in a speech declared that he Mr. Ashbrook, of Ohio, was scere- tary ATLANTA JOIRNAL IXDICTKP Said To Have Violated Postal Laws In' Mailing Sample Copies. Atlanta, Oa. (Special). On the charge that sample copies of the 'semi-weekly Atlanta Journal were ' mnllnil nn BPVnral rlnva In 1 QA8 oa stkkl in' a i) tiirrs $.-.0,000. Sl,I'"J- f I'm'cll Only Half That Of from San Francisco of $75,000. It is v4Viuc money in the right place." $-,000,000 For Naval Base. Washington, D. C. (Special). A $2,000,000 appropriation for the new naval home at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, including not exceeding $300,000 for a naval hospital, of which $75,000 is Immediately appro priated, was agreed upon for inclu sion in the naval appropriation bill by the House Committee on Naval Affairs. WALSH ASKS FOR PAROLE. Banker Xot Eligible I'nder Law Vntu September 10, 1011. Leavenworth, Kan. (Special). John R. Walsh, the former Chicago banker, serving a sentence in the Federal prison here, has applied for a parole. I'nder the terms of tho parole act, approved June 25, 1910, prisoners must have served one-third of their sentences to enjoy tho benefits of the law. Tinned Over To Prohibitionists. Canton, N. C. (Special). Mayor Custls, of Canton, has turned tho con trol of tho town over to the prohi bitionists, asking them to demon strate how tho North Carolina prohi bition laws can be enforced. He has cited two ministers and n number of laymen to appear be for" l!m and bu sworn In as special policemen. John Riinyan Is In jnll In New York charged with speeding his automobile. mm 4 mm ' CHILDREN KILLED Mexican Troops Fire Into Houses at (i;Lleanea. SOME HARD FIGHTING DONE THERE. l'lie Revolutionists Attempting to Tnke All Towns Along El Paso Honil The Federal Troops In a Serious Condition At Guerrero uml Ojinngit As At Galeana General Xavano Cut Off From Chtliuiiliim For Sometime Gen. Lugoe Re ported SuiToiimlctl. El Paso, Texas (Special). Fight ing continues at Galeana, south of Casas Grandes, and runners brought tho news to Casas Gruudes Sunday that among the dead were many wom en and children, killed in their homes as the Federals fired on the. Insurgents ,n the houses. I'uless theso couriers arc greatly excited it promises to be the bloodiest battle of the present in iiirrectlon when all losses are totaled. Reiorts say that tho dead and wounded will total 300. Casas Grandes Is still In the hands of the Federals but the inhabitants are not certain how long It will bo held. It Is claimed now that tho rebels are attempting to take all towns along the El Pato Northwestern road south of hero and hold the line In order to use It to take supplies to their troops fro n El Paso. Juarez, opposite EI Paso, acording to these statements, Is to bo taken. As in dicating that the Mexican govern ment places credence in these reports it sent another hundred cavalrymen to Juarez front Chihuahua Sunday. Fiscal guards in Juarez reported Hun (I ay that 200 revolutionists '.Tossed the Rio Grande at Guadalupe east of EI Paso Saturday going jonth. This report was made to their commander. Reports from Guerrero and OJlnaga show the Federals in as seri ous condition there as at Galeana. Navarro is completely cut off from Chihuahua and the rebels boast that their retreat from Guerrero was to draw him further away from his base vf supplies and then annihilate his command. He has been cut off for t week and tho rebels are attacking his commands In all the smaller towns, around Guerrero and Temo lachic, asisted in their attacks by the rarhuamara Indians. At OJlnaga General Luque has had :o send out all the troops he can pare to reinforce the small garrisons he placed in the smaller towns and .8 now said to be surrounded himself by, rebels at OJlnaga. The loss nmoiig tho Federals around OJlnaga Is known to have been heavy of late. BOTH DEAD IN BED. Two Members Of Coast Artillery Corps Asphyxiated. Providence, it. I. (Special). loseph Scott and Chester Pouns, members of the Ninety-sixth Com pany, Coast Artillery Corps, station ed at Fort Adams, Newport, were ac cidentally asphyxiated at a local ho tel. The men we're on leave of ibscnco and registered late last light. A chambermaid found both dead n bed with the gas cock wide open. The supposition is that one of the men bumped into the gas cock in the dark and turned it on. Scott en listed in 1909, giving his home as "aution, Ky. Pouns, who had been In the service since 1908, came from l'owu Creek, N. C. Stabbed Anil Killed. Pittsfield, Mass. (Special). Dur- I Ing a quarrel over a trivial matter Sunday, James MrKeever, a youth of 14 years, is alleged to have stabbed ind Instantly killed Francis Donovan, t playmate of the same age, while :hey wero on their way home from ihurrh. McKeever, It Is charged, ac cused Donovan of some slight remark ind drew a small pocket knife and (tabbed him In the neck. Young Girl a Suicide. Hattiesburg, Miss. (Special). Miss Maud Hlxon, a pretty 18-year-old girl, despondent because of ill health and the thought of being separated from her sweetheart, telephoned good-by to tho latter, George Bony, Saturday night and immediately drank an ounce of carbolic acid. She died Sunday at noon. Her father had come here to take the girl to their homo at Red Level, Ala. Nursery In Church. Fort Wayne, Ind. (Special). To enable the parents of babies to at tend church services Rev. H. B. Mas ter, of the First Presbyterian Church, Sunday announced that a nursery, In charge of three kindergarten teach ers, would be conducted In one of the church social rooms during the hour ot service. Three Boys Browned. Lowell, Mass. (Special). Three Bkaters who ventured on thin tee wero drowned near here Sunday. William Hancock, aged 12, lost his life In a pond at Methuen, and Nicholas G. McNulty, aged 10, and Patrick H. McCue, 11 years old, wero drowned in the Concord River. Mc Nulty and McCue, who were playing hockey, broke through the Ico to gether. In a vain effort to rescue thent William H. Carey, aged 18 years, and a man who declined to give his name. Train Kills Woman. New York (Special). A subway train running south on the north bound tracks because of a block struck Miss Violet D'Arry, a stenog rapher, as she was loaning over the edge of tho Twcntty-third Street Sta tion Sunday In an effort to see If a northbound train was coming. 1 lor head was crushed in and she was In stantly killed. Her body wns hurled Into tho crowd on tho platform, bowl ing over several people like tenpins. THE HEWS 0?" Rutler. The Pittsburg ami Sha, inut Railway lino will bo Imilt roj Nickelson's Run on the Allr;-il(tj River to North Iluller, when j; connect with the llesseiner and l,a(, Erie Kailroad. The line v. iii n,rt up 50,000 acres of coal, nnd a r.iin. ber of towns will be built. T!. important collieries have lin n ,4 eil. The line will give the n,., aj nutlet to Lake Erie, and tli s;,j,. inut will gain an entrance liiin yUy burg over tho Bessemer line. Altoona. Following out li e !vic. sylvanla Railroad's plan of t in ri;i i;. Ing Its employees to study ti,e i j( Df their respective dcpai t ;ie ; , :;. Mountain City Trnflle Club has!,,.., organized here by young nun i., th traffic department, with I a Matlas us president, A, M. l:,,. secretary and Howard Nogcie u urer. The dub will meet o:n-,. , mouth to discuss tiafllc prolil : a,;j al.-io to listen to talks by e i: lwlstown. Chief Burr- s.i V,'. Hum Ryau died Tnursday 10:11 monla after an Illness of six , 1, He was 63 years old, and I. ml rv. ed as Sheriff, County Trca.vir'r ar.4 school director. His adniinis'r.i'irn was known as the golden rule ,ii,y as ho made It a rule to scmI va'i::j of Intoxication and other petiy 0;. feuses to their homes rather tliati a the borough prison. Pittsburg. Charles Dasiian hi been released from tho KewiikVr Jail because the print of the tiiU(;,j did not agree with that found mi :t dresser In the residence of liev a. C. Howell, whoso house was uilUi recently. BaBtlan was sukhiio; the crime, which Involved 1 , a ti.rr:i!i to the amount or $2500. Scranton. Mattco Gerv;z.i ;n die rrom wounds received, it all.-t.-i!, at the hands or Alfonso Terui.:,;, who Is now In the county jail. A3 operation showed that the bullet fired Into Gervazzi's body ja?M through the general vertebra of t:t spine. The men quarreled our 1 load of coal. Media. Ray Showers, of Xi'rarf, a student at Williamson School, a( struck by a train on the P. I). & W. R. R. near Elwyn, and probably fa tally Injured. Ills skull was fiaetur pd. He and a half dozen companm:;! stepped from the castbound traik to the westbound to .escape a train, w hen the westbound train bore don and all Jumped except Showers. Pottsvllle. Andrew Grundy, ol Grandy, of Drier City, a tan.lida'e for the Legislature last Fall. at ?rushed to death at Pine Mill colliery Thursday, several tons of roa! falling on him. Companions ru!4 jtandy's bruised body to the I'o's lille Hospital, but he lived onl a !c hou.'s. Altoona. Failing to hear tc ap proach of a train at ilolliib-tu , jertram Cessna, aged :1T, .ea i! Professor John Cessna, a noted nl jator, was run down ami pr.'iiiilr Tatally Injured. His skull ;i tor tured for tho second time in l.i lne. The first time was when as a bey he was kicked by a horse. South Bethlehem. Andrew (Ivi da, a three-year-old boy, aitracciif bon tire wnlch boys hail biiili 10 keep warm while playing, was U&'i burned. Ills clothing took tire, f when a stiff breeze suddenly s.at'M ed the embers, blowing them acaitift his clothing. Wllllamsport. Fire totally troyed the plant of the Wilhaiai port Packing Company entallitie t loss of $15,000, John Smith, it years old, watchman, was bad!' burned by an explosion of a a sa' monla tank, and is in a sei ioi.s con dition. Pino Grove. Jonathan Freeman a retired farmer, died at his home Is Wayne Township of dropsy. afJ 75 years. He was a Civil War vet eran, having served in tlw 1' Pennsylvania Regiment. Shenandoah. M. J. Warms!. Alexander Lechenk, Enoch Jo"'1 and Andrew Houscheck, miners, rl seriously Injured by falls of coal ' Packer No. 5, William Penn and El' langowan collieries. Warrtish mil die. Chester. Tho Chester Police De partment has commenced a campus1 to clean out alleged gambling h(iu!f' which are said to bo In operation here. Chief McCarey had J"11" Dayard, 24 years old. arrested nnt charge of keeping a gambling lious At a hearing In City Hall a lsr mimtipr of witnesses testlllcli ti1' they had shot "crap" and IndulH other games of chance in Bayard house. The defendant was held ft court under $400 ball. Chester. Two years ago. Taylor, a young man of this clU. went to the office of tho rroRf( League, and asked that his child v allowed to remain for a short time he was going to look after boihc . : 1 mi) ness. rayior never reiuni -nothing was learned of him "nU Thursday when a police o"1. josted him and took him before W istrate Elliott, who ordered Taj' to pay the sum of $t.E0 per wee1' the child's board while at the- in-' tutlon, and also directed that he P $1 a week for tho two years Vil Carlisle. Miss Nora Smith, of W lisle, while eating oysters at a l0' restaurant bit into a large I'J which upon Investigation I,rpV0 " be worth $150. I Editor Mistaken For a W' London, (Special). Dr. fia1 lain, of Kansas City, Mo., pro? of tho Agricultural Journal. mistaken for a spy at C!uerns".v ( day, and arrested. Ho w.is soon terward released.