4 . MlD-OLEBURU .POST. TRAIN FALLS FROM 7 HIGH TRESTLE nine Killed and .Seven Injond in Disaster on Southern Railway. VICTIMS HORRIBLY MUTILATED Charlotte, N. C, Sept 2S. Whilo runnina; at a nigh rate of spaed, train No. 9". on lne Southern railway, the eolith-bound fast mall train, Jumped from a trestle 75 feet high, half a mile north of Panvllle, Va., and was almost demolished. Of the .crew of 16 num. inrliiilinK mail carriers, on the train, nine were killed and seven Injured. The dead are: Engineer J. A. Droady, Salipville, Va.; Fireman Clarence White. Conductor Tom Blair, Danville. Va ; J. L. Thompson. Washing. ;., p. C; Vv'. T. Chambers, Midland. Vn. : T. I'lory, Nokcsvillo. Va.; P. N. .r.I;itiv. -riplit. Mount Clinton. V:'..; KlaKninn A. 0. t'lnpp. Greensboro, N. C -i ti.I n boy named Thompson. The Injured are: Mail Clerk Louis W Spiers. Manassas. Va.; Frank H. UrinKs. Charlottesville. Va.: IVrcivnl n::'".Mr. W:i ihiniMott, D. C; Charles i;. Kennies, Culpojiprr, Va.; Jciiuiuxo ,. piiiilap. Washington. D. C: M. C. Maupin. 'haiiott-ivi!Ie, Va.; J. llirri smi Thompson. St. I.uk". Va. MI id' the injured men are seri ously hurt ntv.l have been taken to the h.npital in l'aiiville. The recovery of Mail Clerk Spiers is not e::pei led, and ,,l!i, r i In ks are thought to have re reived mortal Injuries. The t rest I'? where the accident oe rurre l is .".cii feet Ions and is located on a sharp curve. Engineer Hroady was a new man on that division of Hie Southern, and It is said he. came to the curve at a very high rate of speed. The cuisine had gone only about 50 (en on the trestle when it sprang from the track, carrying with it four mail cars and an express car. The trestle, a wooden structure, also gave way for a space of 50 feet. At the foot of the trestle la a shallow Stream, with a rocky bottom. Striking this, the engine and cars were reduced to a mass of twisted Iron and steel and pieces of toithtered wood. As the cars 'went down they touched the sides of the Riverside Cotton Mill, which Is very close to the trestle. All the dead men were killed In stantly, it Is thought, and all were preatly mutilated. The skin and hair on the engineer and fireman were torn off by the Impact of the steam engine. Several thousand people were soon at the scene of the wreck. No one on any of the cars had made an effort to jump, and the b. dies of all those killed were found in fte wreckage of the different cars to which they be longed. Ladies who drove out to the wreck from Danville fainted at' the sight of the bodies, some of which were cm - lied to a Kliastly degree. It seemed miraculous that any one should have escaped, for each car falling with tin1 engine hounded from It and completely collapsed after striking the rnrks at the foot of tlio trestle. All Til.' r;!css m:i 1 1 r,r in the oppress car was practically destroyed, except six crates full of canary birds. None of the birds was hurt, though the crates were in the thickest or the debris. All un c.licial opinions thr.t. have been ascer tained airree lti giving only one cause for the wreck the high speed of the train on the sharp curve. Train No. f'7 was n.nninL' about an hour behind time, it is thought that the engineer, being unfamiliar wiih the road, did lint take into consideration the dan ger ef coming on the curve with such great velocity. The n.ail hags in all the mail cars were broken open amj the letters and packages were scattered, but It is be lieved th;it none were lost. Fire, which appeared in tho wreckage shortly af ter it occurred, was quickly extin prt.iyi b tho Danville fire department. COUNCILMEN GO TO JAIL Summit Hill Law. Maker Get Ten Oaya For Contempt of Court. Mauch Chunk. Pa., Sept 29. The flvo councllmen of the borough of Sum mit Hill, this county, who refused to ' obey the order of the Carbon county court to perform their duties, were de- : clared in contempt of court and were sentenced to 10 days' Imprisonment in the county jail, pay the costs of the proceedings and stand committed un til the sentence is complied witfc. The councllmen are Philip Brogan, .Tamos Kennedy, John Gallagher, John Mc Hugb and Frank Gillespie. President Judge Horace Ileydt held a special ses- slon of court to hear the case. The men had refused to pcform 'he duty of councllmen, and an order was . Issued by the court directing them to comply with the rules to meet and transact the Ivisinei's of the branch. They refused, ami nn order was issued directing then t jg'iow cause why hn j littacliint r.t s-houle. '..,'! be issued ;;r,aln.-:t them. They a!o t ilhd to answer. :.n 1 the sheiiff w;::i ilV e:".l to bring then: into court The linner h i itir.c't .-'. w :' willing to lei them off on payment of ; t!. .' ', which amounted to it the co I - ,r i i 1 1 ; i c 11 ik'iiv.ril they roil' ! not pay this, nr. they have no em;,' y. vi't. ' The .-curt thetiy'i; eclTred th-n guil'y of . c( I t- e i,i ot colli'' ;,'d .scat. Meed lle'ln r. ' a ' f. statet',. J. H. TiLLMAN ON TRIAL Cre.it Array of Lawyers On Both Side.-, In Murder Cose. 1 l.eNin -ton, S. C, Sept. .laiiies I!. Til!ii!:i!i, former lieuti nant governor of South Carolina, was placed on iri:il here In the circuit court for l...in:-:::iii j county, under an indictment cli:u;i:i:; him with the murd. r of N. ;. (inn i ;. ciitor of t!:e Columbia State. Judge Frank U. (iaiy resided. The jury I selected without trouble and the fir-1 wit ne.-ses railed. Probably never in the history of this judicial circuit has there been so great an array of counsel engaged in the trial ; of a c.tc in the circuit, or perhaps In the entire state. The solicitor is as- j sisted hy (He attorneys, while the de fendant has 11 lawyers, V. 0. W. ! Croft, a representative In emigre. j from Aiken, as chief counsel, conduct- ! Ing the defense. ! A vigorously contested legal battle j is In prospect. It was manifested nt j the very outset of the trial that every Inch of ground Is to be contested. It Is estimated that there are about !00 witnesses to be heard. Labor Net Opposing Roosevelt. Washington. Sept. "'J. The attitude of the Central Labor Union towards President Roosevelt came up for dis cussion at tho meeting of that body in connection with tho case of W ,A. Miller, tho assistant foreman in the bindery of tho government printing "tare, In which the union has taken an active interest. After the meeting it was stated by one of the officers that the union felt its action in tho Miller rae had been misunderstood. It was said that tho labor people were not waging a political war against Presi dent Roosevelt, but they thought they had the rlgH to ask President Roose velt to rescind his action in the Mil ler cntse. Big Blaze at Bridgeton, N. J. T.ridgcton, N. J Sept. 28. Tho Plant of the Ferracute Machine Com pany, of this city, was destroyed by fire, entailing a loss estimated at $100,000, which Is partially covered insurance. The fire Is supposed to vo been started by nn explosion in tf e boiler room of the establishment. The company manufactured, nmong thcr things, fine dies for coins nt: ir.clah, of. Two hundred persons:!:-; 'irown out i I' .o.-i,. Th:f; is th.' t1;!:-! large Industr!:;! cm-cm !:i this i:y to be destroyed by fire within the list 'v, vei ,lSi c.,,i tiiis disaster will prove a f' :iaas Id:.:; t,) t:10 city. Frcm Trarca to England In Balloon. '.oudon. Sept. 2S. Count do la 'tw!x and Count d'Outremout descend In a balloon nenr Hull, Yorkshlro, saving journeyed from Tarls in 1791 hours. This is the first timo that a balloon haB successfully traveled from France to Kngland. . BEATRICE WAS WRECKED Stern of Fishing Steamer Found Bot tom Up On Virginia Coast. Norfolk Va., Sept. :'. The United States weather bureau received infor mation from Captain Drinkwater, of the Currituck life saving station, that the stern of a steamer bearing the name "Beatrice, New York," was pounding bottom up in the breakers two and one-half miles south of Caf fey's Inlet life saving station. Caffey's Inlet is half way between Currituck and Kittyhook. The wreckage Is sup posed to be from the fishing steamer fieatricp, which was caught In tho re pent hurricane while south of the Dela ware Ilreakwater, Wednesday. Septem ber lij. She carried a crew of 3.1 men, nnd was loaded with l'io,ouo fish. lb-r captain was J. W. !. land, of T.alti inore. II. S. liny was the engineer and Thomas K. Latham his assistant. I'.otli (.i tin s " men were from Norfolk. There were two other while nun in the T"W, and the remaining 2 were negroes. MAD DOG IN SCHOOL Seriously Eitcs Principal and Citizen of Dalton, Pa. Srrnnton, Pa., .Sept. Winmii Green, principal of the Factoryvillo high school, and K. Howell Fisk, n c it izen of Dalton, were taken to the Pa:i teur Institute. New York, to receive treatment, lioth men were badly bitten by a dog which was stiff 'ring from ra bies.'The dog ran into the Faetroyvii;.'; high school nnd began snapping at the scholars. Professor Green attempted to drive tiie brute from the room, when it turned upon him. The professor was terribly bitten about tho arms and l".s. but succeeded in driving the dog f-'oiu the room without any of the children having been bitten. rrofessor Grern secured a rille and killed the animal, but not before it had attacked and lacerated Mr. Fisk. Princeton Student Badly Hurt. Princeton, N. J., Sept. 29. Swift Tarbell, of New York, son of G. K. Tarbell, vice president of the Equit able Life, was badly hurt nt Mon mouth Junction by Arthur Mount, an Innkeeper, who struck him on the head with a wagon shaft. Young Tarbell and two companions, Princeton Btudents, were horseback riding. Mount picked a quarrel with tho boys, according to their version of tho affair, and when ho cursed them ono of the students knocked him down. Then he felled Tarbell, knocking lilm unconscious. Tarbell was hurried to Now York for treatment. It Is feared he may lose his eyesight. Mrs. Davis Rallying. ,!o, .". Y.. Sept. 2!).--Huth maik ; ceniir.ued improvement is by Mrs. JeTerson Davis, the of tho South- :i! -,;er.:; y, v, .: nail aniiosi :;t Castlo Inn, e" i-ion Davis i.uipllcations her health. Buf;': cd an i;ilov. ii Avldo-. r.-n ( lea ' i that . Ilnys pel in he pros:-!'" ,;er.:;y, V. '. ,leatf,' door srni.d.-a'ii. . ; lli-: line . woii' l rcco Thrr; Men Struck Ey Lightning. Trenton, N. .1., Sept. 28 Three i:rn who weto working at tho InUr Stato Fair grounds wero struck by light ning while taking refuge under a tent. William McLaughlin was burned about the arms and body and Is at SL Fran cis' hospital. The other two men were enly stunned. MAJOR DELMAR A WONDER Famous Geldir.g Trots a Mile In Two Minutes On Empire City Track. New York. Sept. 26. The big event at the Empire City track was the effort of the champion gelding. Major Del mar, to beat hit own record of 2.004 and to beat the world's record of 2.00, held by Lou Dillon. He trotted a most wonderful mile and In a game but dar ing finish shot under the wire in the record time. After a preliminary warming up the gelding champion came out for his great trial. He went round tho first turn, broke and came back. At tho second attempt he rent away as steady as clock and though a slow be ginner got to the quarter in SO'-j sec onds. I'p Ihe bail; stretch he shot with such lightning rapidity that he flashed by the half mile pole In C!) sec onds. Ttieti the grand stand rose and cheered ns the gallant son of I'elmar fi"v round the i. ;i turn id tie thr"'-1 quartir tole in with a world's; re ord bin if b" i iintaiucil his speed.' '. .'!. could not in.u'i- j The r. . !:. tain the pice, l, p ii-ti r i:i . !' I'll ol 2.' o r.;e ttotilng iMd:ni- ! V. !:,(! I K ... I.. I- n !;:. eiv : : i is er I would l.;. . was a splendid nuin-al which cr.iy i iii' nets at th" l.ihei i prii c ver paid for a iz.'lding. Maj t. trot:. to; ipiuled t .e set a r.e-.v n.l l-i:.i -;. an-1 ha I i: I. e the !a:t world's mark fur A -i l ' ii g ; !;! i uis lie- rec- rf-i We' :i by ihn k chanced -J iil.M'lO r D. dinar a Nik York animal bred and foaled, traini d and cwi'.ed in the empire state. Hifjh Jumping Record Broken. Philadelphia. ;-'ept. 2'!. -- I leatlr'f ldoom, the woild's champion hlg'i jumper, created a new Record at tint ltry Mawr horse show by dealing the bar at 7 feet K inches, breaking tie; record of 7 feet s Inches established by the same hoixe last year nt ftryn Mawr. The re. or l was made during an exhibition trial. Four attempts were made. At the first attempt tie; great jumper cleared 5 feet i! Inches; on the second attempt. II feet S inches was cleared; on tho third. 7 feet 1 inch, nnd the fourth trial the bar was topped at 7 feet U Inches. The owner of Heatherblonm, Howard Wiliets, of White Plains, N. Y., was present and received no end of congratulations. Uiehard Connelly was in tho saddle. SOFT COAL STRIKE IMMINENT 15,000 Men In Central Pennsylvania! May Come Out October 3. Altoona, Pa., Sept. 2S. President Patrick Gilday, of District No. 2. Unit ed Mine Workers, is authority for the statement that a strike of tho 15,000 miners em ployed by the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke company In the Central Pennsylvania field, is threatened. He has given the officials until October 3 to agree to carry out the provisions of the Altoona scale. Falling to do so, he will order a strike. The Pennsylvania company operates more than 40 mines t and practically dominates the Central Pennsylvania coal field. Men formerly prominent in the anthracite region control it. Thomas Watkins, who was a member of the anthracite arbitra tion commission, is a big stockholder, and Vice President W. A. Lathrop. for merly with the Lehigh Valley rail road, is the president. President Gil day asserts that the company has for some time refused to pny yardage at its A. M. Arasbry, Cambria county mines, where the unlcn i3 not 6trong. and seeks to establish a preccd.nt which will disrupt the wage agree ment. Realizing that a fight at this iso lated point would be a failure, Gil.lay says he has notified the company that unless it uiys yardage nt its Amsbry. he will close every property under til.' management of the company on ( e' i ber .'!. He sayR the union has td of money to carry on the fiiit n:i ! i In a pn::itin to lo:-e every mine u::t I sMiin.:. PRESIDENT IN WASHINGTON Crceted by Several Hundred Pecpl? Upon His Arrivrl. Wa-kim-tnu. S pt. '; r : :i ' -:cti. ' ,,f i;; -.;. -i .-::t -ii ' r.-.-t t . V- i i:,-,.,cv. It he i r i i.r, ; ., Wa- hineton. Th" pre ;,; u: coiiipac'' d by Mr--. Ki- -. cli, Alice Roosevelt and oti. r u,. .i, the lai'iiiy, and by lri ! . , l.o. li, 'l'lie ,: ,. Meat w-i-- -:-,. ;e,i 1 v Several llUMlltc-! pe(;e.., v'ln , when he entered hi-- ;: ; : il,. ;, was met by I'D i':V!-t .': . i'l v , . Colonel SynMnis, : p. to p'.iMii- li'iildia:.:'- :::ii - 't. i-: ( "i. Wi'Kie. oi' liie -.. ir ., ;..-.! Ct'lel public ,;:-. ;: ;. ': : p'e . ' -. i'.'.i-l family dro . .ii - t ; : ;i V, ; lb. ' The (ii;. ; . .., : v.- k.v: ... .- C.li . .'itiill. Arcl-.blr! cp Kain I-' .fa Aps-idicitis. 1' in..:-.'. Sc t. 2.V c .ii -: ii 1 1 ;i : i .,: oi thr ; -in ; liy-i. i ,n-. of ''.i- rii : l ei ! ;it t. ."tl".--' "iitar "la Mid i" we- ilei-iilcl that An. hi-!-...p Kli ill. of ,t. lmis. 'ns -lit att-ick n; a,i eiii!ii itih. ir. ('.:eiiis ci. Iliii. .vlin has att' tided t!i" an hid: liop since his arrival here last .May. sl:il -I that an operation, would pr i ah! lie peif.ui.i cd on hi grace at an early date. Tie archbishop had made arrangements to go to his home in St. Imis this we ic. but owing to the serious turn in hi condition he has, upon the adlce of Cardinal Gibbons and other ecclesi astical dignitaries, changed his plan.f. Treasury Clerk Short $800. Washington, D. C, Sept. 2S Through an order dismissing him from tho treasury department it became known that James H. Iioatty, for ." years assistant to tho disbursing clerk In tho olllce of the auditor for the war department, had been found short $S0O in his accounts. The shortage was made good by relatives living in Illi nois and Iieatty was not prosecuted. APASTOR'SWIFE CURED OF PELVIC C1T1RRH She Suffered for Years and Felt Her Case Was Hope lessCured Peruna. by MRS. ANNA B. FLF.HARTY, recent Superintendent of the W. C. T. V. headquarters, at Galeslmrp, 111., wiu for tenycarnonoof the leading women there. Her husband, when livlnc, was Jirt President of tho Nebraska Wosloyau University, at Lincoln, Neb. In a letter written from Y Sixty seventh Ctreet, W., Chie:'. -.., T Mr-. I'leharty says tho followinv; in . :;rd to Peruna: llavlnglived n very net: vn 1 if- a v.-ife f.nd working ji.irtiicrof a ! u- luiin-ter, my Is. :i':!i faiicd me a few ye.ir-i h-i.. I ln-t my lii:--!-:iti,l almut 11 i: d gradually I . : e.l t - ;:!! tiiu eil ! . va:. ' il i:u ' .rit. d:!i"-liler i a ' li-u.'i l'.lt iiiirni. ".ed ot iat..r. " of r. fe try i'rrui;.". ly y cnrcU i r!::-c in my il i. r.r.v c n .r.-?:,': v:s immediate-ev.-it eknt.'Q took .'.-'s as m c as in Our ipictiits im- 'proved very ;rc-:!y, lim digestion ftw.'J much hclpc-J, umt rtfttl sleep I "otin iu'proved u.:, so tluit n wf :;ccr.wd ,!.:' new H-f;:;:.':i. ! " would not he c lt!"-t Perun.i for '.-.''I times i.'i co...'. " I k ih-irty. ! What Hied to berulle, ! I'V t!l llle,iic;ll !-. d'e--: : nvil" i . i-i IM- . f i 'Ii-- a .uuf la ' lvi" catarrh. It li.i j ;ieri"tiee tliiit catarrh. I I'elvie organs are the ea. ' .'f female disea.-e. ' Dr. Hartniaii was nmetig tie I America's great physicians t n li-seovery. P"r forty years he treating diseases peculiar to w long ago ho reached the conch: a woman entirely free, from c ! ii nfleetioti of thi'Ho organs won'.- . subject to female disease. lie: began using Peruna for these c 1 found it so admirably adapted . ir permanent cure that Peruna . w become tho most famous v:. . r female diseases ever known. -y where tho women are using it :i lug it. l'eruna is not a paKia. im ply: It cures by removing the o of female disease. Dr. Hartman has probably cur. ' lore Women of female nilnients to.i. any other living physlelan. Ilemaki-s tliese cures simply by using and roeuinnn iid Uig l'eruua. WAXTKD.-Meii to sell our Xovel-tie-i, fast sellers, first-class ternw, write to .National Novki.tv Co., 121 Valley Stkkkt, It d Iei.-town, Pa. j Me. !.. ; .. : t j - : ' v . -, .. '' !. ' ' : -ati.-n. I wa- ' I w ; . ,. J ' w. mi. I i ' i: ; : . , , ' than v. Ie--i ! .-. ,i ' ! J tie- a, '. -. ; h-:t.'i',y 1, . . t, W il I. Ml ' I -. ' ' .IM... h- jan.i'i.. r v. . I . . i,,v,.,l j I"'-1-' ' i r. r :i ; .1 ,,., 1: ... . ,'. :,,)W ed In iV J:ai -v - "A !l. Mr '' M- y" - : -.ot.i,,, w rili -: e ' I "hi - ' IVI-I-ll r I .. ...... 1 1 ; ... as ....--, 1 ,e. ..iir inn,. ,! I'erutia I t.'i'k f"Ur !..itt!es llliil lis .: , : - J i! Illeil- a ! ITl' ie ,. . - lie i !. 1 Ili'U-i;. . I w :i- ii. t a ! i work f.-r m;. If and I i; -you and d.-ci '.. mv e. : as i...--;' ',e. You r inn,. I t'H.k f"ur !..ittles and wa cured. I think Peruna a w : ieine." Mrs. ISthcr M. Mil;,. . Collar, s-iua'i Tfiad. M. ., . .,n, 0f ChamU Tiburg, Pa., writ, s: "I take pleasure In commcndln 'your Peruna as a s ihstantial tonic and a good catarrh r. :nedy."T. M. Mahnn. If you do ii .: lerive prompt and satis factory result- i in tho us.. r,f Peruna, write at otn e I 'r. Hartman, clving full stat. -nn n: .' your case and ht will Ih- pleaded to ; ,. yon j is valual lo ad vice pratis. Address Ir. ilartman, Prepident of The Hartmuu .Sutiitarium, Columbus, Ohio. When vou come to Court next week, come in to see us. HcreW where your family newspaper is printeil. Our of lice is located between the County jail iiud the Imiik liuii.ling. Purciiase a! Schreyer's LADIES TAILORED GARMENTS Tl." vu!;- i 'Ii a-e, i!ie IVii'i- Suit I a'ci v I'm $10.00 WALKING SUIT of GHEJY Mixed Suiting, jacket irimined Fanci; will - t WALKING S ITS, Loiiff fflsi Blouse Mil. Heaview WAISTS For Winter, $5.00. STYLISH SHOES FOR ALL. Never Rip shoes for Children. A lew nf our Ui-jTular I'riec l, r ynir OuMilerulioii. Anit'iicim ( iratiulittcil Sncjar ?.".()() jwr llunilrcd lbs. !? Looker 'Jo I lis. ,"io ceiil t,v MIU. California J lams 10 cts II). Regular Hams lOccnts :i II,. Linn ami AH Ides V.hYi' 10 rents ,( packai.'. .Slimlili'd WLcat 10 cts. package. H;itnl Snap 'J -Avs I'm rents. Lenox Soap 7 cakes lor '."i , ni. I'lirc Cliiimlitc IH (..'fills a cake. (Jrape Nuts 12 cents a package. Hi ( arl Soda lo.e, rcnt a pniinil. Kan Syrnp t) rents a ran. Mixr I Tea J." ciriits a pniinil. H Stcre will Close at .1 p. m. on Thursday of M:li:n Fair LADIES and MISSES GLOVES IN GREAT VARIETY Ladies Knit Shawls, Silks and Velvets. Sell Store Q Fror,b Street:. reyer Co Vni I ( DC3C 3G DC OQ 3 s Eln; Street g