I WORKMEN HURLED TO DEATH ITwtlva Man Killtd by Falling Cran at Wabash Brldga, Ntar Pittsburg. Pittsburg, Oct 20. By the breaking of the ropes carrying five beams to their position, letting the tons of iron fall upon the movable crane at the Pittsburg end of the new Wabash bridge being built by the American Bridge Company over the Monongahela river, almost a doren workmen were burled to death by a fall of more than 100 feet, striking the water and two barges beneath. Eight of the dead have been recovered. Five are seri ously injured. Several bodies are yet pinned undor the wrecked barge. The part of the bridge extending out over the river from the Water street side id a total wrrek. There wore ;u men at work on the superMrtii ture of the bridge, and in the baree l !ow. from whlrli the beams were bcini hoisted by the trane, 75 foot al.'ovn Uk? river level when the. booms i'llnpsed. if the men who vere In t!;o lv.n;o some escaped with their I i '.-' ly jumpim; Into tlio river th" !-.: t'vy heard the crash : . :.. of. the men on the super strm'teve v. re e:iL;:ii;ed in rivet ing i'.T ! ' !:::'.; t!:-' nr.-. t!:;'t were I'M' ! i: : :ii;m ;:!.o tot !f uiiia- j'lrei!. It v ... v ., r.-d th-tt t'ie a.-eident v :! ' : " ovienti'.etlt in the enn- : ' .'. r:!.;o in onbT to save 'ii ." 'I ' h:el it that this was i - t : t ever !mi;t without un- i : . i i!i;it the ) n i;i uy did t'ot i: ;. ,..,. r;ir.ning because it v.a- . t!. i lam h time lnii-iit bo saved. Jnl.u ; l.ppened to lie on the Moicitn ; i wti t't, watching the men it :',: . ! ' ii the nerideltt occurred. M. Tiu'.ie, in j. i i:is a description of tlie ;e, pt, said: "Tli" n preparins to ram in one (if t;.(. j ins on t'ae lirid'-e when tl'.e a' Mr!'.! took place. Hefoiv I knew what l::ol happened 1 saw the entire. top of the traveler' collapse and tlio next miP'ite ih. men were fulling through the air. It was a terrible sight. The men turned over and over us they fell, and their bodies looked like so many Hies. One of the men who fell from the top of the structure alighted on his head on the barge and rebounded several feet, falling into the water. His crushed body was tak en out. later." AN AIRSHIP THAT FLIES Cigar-Shaped Machine Hovered Over San Francisco For Two Hours. San Francisco. Oct. 19. Dr. August Greth, who for a year past has been working on an airship, surprised the residents of San Francisco by sail ing over their heads for two hours, di recting his machine almost at will, and demonstrating that in many es sentials ho has solved the problem of aerial navigation. Dr. Greth had pre viously tested his airship by making ascPBfions with the balloon held cap tive by a long rope, but this-was tho nr ' ! t,A I, 1 .1 j 4ici. muu oiui uau gout; fchjwuru free. The ascension was made from a lot almost In the heart of the city, and Dr. Greth r.ttnmpted to encircle a towering n vspap.r building about a mile e.istward, but found the high cur rents U'.i . rcng for his power, and then turned in an opposite direction. The winds an '. l him oceanward, and for a tin:-.- !: r.ovi red over tlie vicinity of tho G..', ! n Gate, making various successful triios of liis steering gear. The (urr r;; threatened to take him out ovi r t! i!i a:id he decided to make a landing en the parade ground of the I're-idio military reservation, but made tho mistake of letting out too much ens. and ho landed in the bay about .'"'i feet from shore. The crew of tlio life saving station rescued the. aeronaut and the flying machine, which was little damaged by the un fortunate termination of the voyage. The balloon of Greth is cigar-shaped, and has a capacity of 50,000 feet of gas, with a lifting capacity of 18,000 to 21,000 pounds. The car is similar in construction to the one used by Santos-Dumont, and weighs about S-10 nnunrts PAPAL SECRETARY OF STATE Pope Appoints Mgr. Merry Del Val Will Also Be Made Cardinal. Rome, Oct. 19. Pope Pius X has ap pointed Monsignor Merry del Val papal secretary of state. The announcement of this appointment was made in a let ter prosen'od by the pope to Mgr. Merry del Val. The nomination, how ever, will not be made officially until the next consistory, when the montig aor will also be made a cardinal. The pope has fixed November 9 as tho date for a secret consistory, and a public consistory will be held No Tember 12. IMJ mfflmi V TWO BIG FAILURES INJALTIMORE Receivers Appointed For Maryland ud Union Trust Companies. TOTAL CAPITAL WAS $3,125,000 Baltimore, Oct. 20. The suspension of the Maryland Trust Company creat ed intense excitement in financial and business circles, and many people hur ried to the vicinity to verify the news. The excitement was greatly Intensified two hours afterwards by the announce ment that tho Union Trust Company had also failed. Hankers and finan ciers generally, however, combined to allay what ever of panicky feeling was made manifest and by assurances that the troubles of the companies were enly temporary. llan Mi l.ano. third vice president of the Maryland Trust Company, was appointed receiver of the concern, giv ing a bond of ?2.(i00,000, and Miles White, Jr., vice pn sidi nt of the Union Tru.-t Company, was appointed receiv er of that i orpnrnt ion, his bond being placed at Jl.t .-... Hecciver Mcl.ane promptly i.-se.ed a general statement to tho effec t that the embarrassment of the Maiyland Company was due to the ln avv ;o;.-s in;. Jo to tlio Vila Cruz and Pacific Il-irimad Company, nvgre pnting ?ii. oeii.imii. The Maryland Trust Company was II.-; al agent of the rail road. It is officially announced that the company's !o: al investments had noth ing to do with its embarrassment. Tlie trust lor.ipany arranged a loan of t-,-(X'O.m'it in London on last week for tho purpose rif supplying the Vera Cruz and Pacific Railroad Company with needed cash in connection with con struction, but before the money was turned over to th' fiscal agent the ne gotiations were broken oft and this prncipitated the suspension. The suspension of the Union Trust Company was owing to a run made upon it by depositors in consequence of the announced failure of the Mary land company. So far as known, there is no finan cial or business connection between the two suspended companies. The last statement of tho Maryland Trust Company, issued on June SO, 1903, showed capital stock of $2,123, 000, surplus J2.4377.noo0, and undi Tlded profits of $ti77.!)38.8R. The com pany has demand and time deposits amounting to $3,773,817.15. The Union Trust Company at tho close of business on March 31, 1903, had capital stock of $1,000,000, surplus of $125,000 and undivided profits of $159,687.55. The Union Trust Com pany has deposits amounting to nearly two millions. The filing of the first applications for receivers for the em barrassed companies was followed by petitions for co-receivers for both com panics. ' The total liabilities of the two com panies exceed $10,000. The cause of tho Maryland Trust Conpany's failure was due, as Is sot fortn in the statement of Receiver Mc Lane, to the investment of the assets of the company in Mexican railwy se curities wiii( h could not bo marketed. The Union Trust Company failed be cause of a run on its banking depart ment, about $!.i)iHi having been with drawn by depositors, but the real trou bles of the company had their origin in the organization of the South and Western Hallway in Virginia, in which a capitalization of about $1 I.uoo.muQ was contemplated. The Union Com pany was the fiscal agent for the Vir ginia enterprise, just as the Maryland Company was the fiscal agent for the Mexican railway. Boy Accidentally Shot. Johnstown. Pa., Oct. 19. John Cushman, aged 11 years, was shot ami fatally injured by a foreigner named Martin Pukola. Pukola boarded with the Cuchman family. Saturday night be bought a revolver. While he was examining it the Cushman lad ap proached and stood watching hi u. In some manner the gun was discharged, the bullet tearing a large hole through the boy's forehead. He died two hours later. Pukola has been arretted. Stern Committed to Jail. Washington, OcL 17. Leopold J. Stern, the Baltimore contractor re cently indicted in connection with pos tal contract, appeared In police court Judge Scott denied the request of Stern's counsel for an immediate hearing. Bond was fixed at $5,000 anS Etern was committed to jaiL RESTORATION HOST HAVING TROUBLE Dowio Vigorously Denounces Newj papers in New York. WAS HISSED SEVERAL TIMES New York, Oct. 20. John Alexan der Ixiwie and his "Restoration Host" are having troubles of their own in "converting" this city. After giving Dnal instructions to the host for a liouseto-hoese canvass, Dowie vehe mently denounced the newspapers and several clergymen. Twelve companies ?f the Zlon Hosts, numbering 70 persons each, are en gaged in the house-to house canvass jf the city. Kaeh company was di vided into bands of 10, every band having a captain. Later Mr. Dowie, accompanied by Mis. Dowie, his son and Deacon W. I'. Kindle, railed on Mnvnr I-nw at th City Hail, aii ; told ti-e mayor Oat his people had respect for .New York and admired the mayor for what he had done. He thanked the mayor for po lice protection, and, receiving assur ance of the mayor's pleasure, departed with the Zion salute, "Peace be unU thee, brother," to which the mayor re sponded: "Thank you, sir." "Dr." Dowie's troubles with the pub lic of "New Gomorrah" were added to again, when during the meeting 2000 people calmly walked out after calmly listening to a tirade of the press. The "prophet's" anger knew no bounds, and he stamped up and down the plat form reviling his departing auditors in billingsgate that might not be printed. "This is all caused by the newspa pers the lying vipers of the press," said Dowie. "Hut never mind; I have a message straight from God which I will deliver to them. I'll burn them up, the hounds!" "I am going to spank Dr. Newell Dwtght 1 1 i lli s, that naughty boy," he. said. "He has been writin:; lies to the newspapers about me. 1 spar.ke I him in Chicago, and I spanked him so rood that it was hard for him to tit down. And I'll do it atain. "I want to say that tin re won't be any healing here at tki i:u etin .:. or at any mei-tin You have to I"' c!c:':"v 1 and saved first before you can be heal ed, you .stink pots, you beer puis, y-.ni whiskjiapoi When Mr. Howie op-ned his ;:; ;'.. meeting in Muui.-ou Si wire Hard n he. faced nil immense throng; when h 1 closed it his audience hail dwindled t only a few hundred persons besides the "host" he brought with him from the west. He fretted, fumed, threatened, cajoled end finally resorted to the use of epithets, his hearers meanwhile leaving the meeting, several hundred tog"ther, drowning the tound of his voice. Ho announced tht he would tell how it was revealed to him that he was "Elijah," and also that he would have something to say to the newspapers and their reporters. His talk, which was Interspersed with several hymns, at times when the tramp of those leav ing the hall was more than his voice could overcome, was devoted chletly to denunciation of tobacco smokers, 11 Qiior drinkers and newspaper men, all of whom be classed as "dirty dogs" and "dirty birds." Several tlmea the audience hissed Mr. Dowie. After one such demonstra tion he shouted: "We come here, and we get your Impudence, but I will get your hearts and then I will net your pocketbooks." "There is nothing ao Joyful as spend ing money for the Lord," he continued. "They say I came to New York for money. I do not deny the soft im peachment." He said the story that his wife lost a $1500 diamond pin was untrue, as she never owned a pin like that, nor had she lost anything. The tales printed about lis people keiag hungry were tli Iks, fc ts. i& fee "licked" the prccs of Chicago, ha shouted, and he would "lick" the press of New York. Ho would lick theso "vultures." Finally he came to the promised story of revelation. He quoted Scrip ture to show that Elijah was to com? a third time. A minister had told hirj that ho was Elijah, but he was Icath to believe It, but finally after going over tho situation carefully he made up his mind that be was truly Elijah. Thca at the opeo'n-'-r iiv '.' u years ago he hsd proclaiae hlmaelf iponil'eilltleg of the restoration tisi 5 vaet, Elja, U&d. The tiphone has robbed Alpine heights of some of their terrors. Two Swiss alpestrians lately lost their way on the great St. litrnard moun tain. Wandering for hours in a fierce snowstorm, they at last reached one of the newly-built shelters erected by the monks. There they found not only looa and a lamp, but also a tele phone connected with the hospice. They called up the monks, and soon one of the brothers appeared, accompanied by two St. Uernard dogs, and conducted the men to the hospice, where they received ' proper care. Many huts with telephones have been built in exposed places, and a niltnlui rf ll.-r.fl t...A t J I . 1 .uiultt;, ut ihcb uavu uveii Baveu lu ine winter. The familiar phrase, applied to the telephone, "It lengthens life," is thus literally Justified. With a wheat crop of 670,000,000 bushels, with a cotton crop of at least 11,000,000 bales, and with a corn crop of at least 2,000,000,000 bushels the far- mer is going to thrive, and he will be able to make everybody else thrive, j He, says the Louisville Courier-Jour-Inal, Is the greatest of all wealth pro ducers; he has added billions to our actual wealth within the past five years, and he is still in:ent upon smashing past records. Who is able to compare with the hardy son of tho soil? An Kgyptian papyrus, which dates back to about 4')iji 11. C, has the fol lowing injunctions: "Calumnies should never be repeated." "Guard thy speech before all things, for man's ruin lies In his tongue." The wise men of the race early learned good sense. In Iowa there is a movement on foot to require school children to wear rubber-heeled bhofeg. Old-time schoolboys will emile. They used to wear a kind of heel which was just as noiseless and much cheaper. It is doubtful whether, in spite of all this war news, the average American will get his ideas of the little countries In eastern Europe unsnarled. sident Eliot on Education i 1C Comprehensive View of Latter-Dau Ideals Given Before National Educational Association. portance in the idea of cultivation. The conditions of the educated world have, however, changed so profoundly since the revival of learning in Italy that our inherited ideas concerning training in languages and literature have required large modifications. In the year 1400 it might have been aaid with truth that there was but one language of scholars, the Latin, and but two great literatures, the Hebrew and the Greek. Since that time, however, other great literatures have arisen, the Italian, Spanish. French, German and above all the English, which has become incom parably the most extensive and various and the noblest of literatures. I'nder these clrcuuTstanees it is impossible to maintain that a knowledge of any par ticular literature is indispensable to Mltn.n , The Store of Knowledge. In the eighteenth century a diligent student with a strong memory ami quick pow ers of apprehension need not have despaired of mastering a large fraction of this store ol knowledge. Long before the end of the nineti enih century such a task had become impossible. Culture, therefore, can no longer imply a knowl edge of everything not even a little knowledge of everything. It must be content with general knowledge of some things, and a real mastery of some small portion of the human store. Hero is a profound modification of the idea of cul tivation which the nineteenth century has brought about. Imagination. The only otherelentent in cultivation which time will permit to treat w the training of the constructive imagination. The educated world needs to recognize tho new variety of con ! structive Imagination. Zola in "La Hole Humalne" contrives that ten persons, all connected with tho railroad from ! Paris to Havre, shall be either murder 'ers, or murdered, or both, within 18 months, and he adds two railroad slaugh- ters criminally procured. Tho condi tions of time and place are Ingeniously imagined, and no detr.il is emitted which ; can heighten the effect of this homicidal fiction. Contrast thip kind of construc tive imagination with the kind which conceived the great, wells sunk in tho solid rock below Niagara that contain the turbines that drive the dynamos, ( that generates the electric force that t turns thousands of wheels and lights thousands of lamps over hundreds of square miles of adjoining territory; or j with the kind which conceives the send ing of human thought across three thousand miles of stormy sea instan I taneously, on nothing more substantial than ethereal waves. There is going to be room in the hearts of twentieth cen tury men for a high admiration for these kinds of imagination, as well as for that of the poet, artist or dramatist. JOHN D. ZIMMERMAN. i One of tli Mont Prominent neiuci rrnllc Lender of Ohio mid u Man nf Vnnt en I 111. John I). Zimmerman, who has an liounci d his candidacy for tho demo crat ie nomination for governor of Ohio, JOHN D. ZIMMERMAN. (Prominent Ohio Democrat Who Would Like to Ue Governor.) and who Is likely to be the nominee by Bcciaiuuwuu, in an umoan ny uirtn, 4s years of age, and one of the leading law yers of the state. He graduated at Wit tenberg collene, Springfield, O., in 1879, and began the practice of law in Spring field three years later. He has always been a democrat, and in 1 ?f'8 was de j fcated for congress in a (Mtfrlot nor mally 5,000 republican. He has t.reumu- lated a large fortune. Soft IVooil Mnilp llnril. A Liverpool chemist has discovered a process for hardening and toughening soft woods so that they can be used Ir. place of naturally hard woods. The treatment consists in saturating the timber with a solution of sugar at the boiling point. Kven hard woods are said to bo benefited by it. Klrplinn In n irir, j In Slam some of the women Intrust their children to tho care of elephant nurses, and It is said that the trust is never betrayed. The bab'es play about . tho huge feet of the elephants, who are ' very careful never to hurt their little charges. Vbat a Dtrennoaa I.lfe la. I A New York schoolboy asked his I father what was meant by "a strenuous man." The father promptly replied: "A strenuous man, my son, Is a man who does half a day's work and then spends the rest of the day talking about it." I i i THE horizon fif the human intellect has widened wonderfully since the beginning of the nineteenth century. The most convinced exponents and ad vocates of humanism now recognize that science is the "paramount force of the modern as distinguished from the antique and the medieval spirit" (John Addington Symonds Culture), and that "an Interpenetratlon of humanism with science and of science with hu manism is the condition of the highest, culture." We have become convinced that some Intimate, sympathetic acquaintance with the natural objects of the earth and CHAHLKS ELIOT. (President of Harvard mid Most Noted American Kuucutur.) sky adds greatly to the happiness of life, and that this acquaintance should be begun in childhood and be developed all through adolescence and maturity. A brook, a hedgerow, or a garden Is an in exhaustible teacher of wonder, rever ence and love. We proceed to examine four elements of culture: Character. The moral sense of the modern world makes character a more important element than It used to be In the ideal of a cultivated man. Now character is formed, as Goethe said. In the "stream of the world," not In still ness or isolation, but In the quick-moving tides of the busy world, the world of nature and the world of mankind. To the old Idea of culture some knowledge of history was Indispensable. The ris ing generation should think hard, and feel keenly, Just where the men and women who constitute the actual hu man world, are thinking and feeling most to-day. . . - Language. A cultivated man should exfress himself by tongue or pen with ; some accuracy and elegance; therefore linguistic training has had great im- THE RICHEST PRINCESS. Futnro ((iieen of Ilemimrk In Worth -..Olio, OOO lii nrrfiilly In. tl'NtOll I'llllllM. The crown princess of Denmark, who Is now in Paris with hi r husband, is cot celebrated for her good looks, but she has the more permanent distinc tion of being the richest royal princess in Europe. Her royal highness was left by her mother, the late queen of Sweden, a fortune of C0.000.000 marks about 13,000,000 of our democratic dollars and this legacy, through being wisely invested, is said to have in creased to an even more impressive sum. And not only is the future queen of Denmark distinguished for her wealth, but she is generally spoken of as the tallest of European royal women. She is over six feet, and it has been noticed during her recent stay In Paris where, by the way, both she and the crown prince are exceedingly popular that at no matter what aristocratic function ber royal highness is present, she towers above all the rest of the ompany in a fashion wonderful to behold. As mother of no less than eight chil dren, she would have the hearty ap proval of President Roosevelt, whose good opinion, by the way, is beginning to be valued, even by royalties. The crown princess has four sons and four daughters, the youngest of them all be- ' i 't .. 7 CROWN PRINCESS OF DENMARK. (Said to lie tho Richest Royal Woman In Earope.) lng little Princess Dagmar, who was born In 1890. Most of his mother's for tune will pass to the princess' eldest son, Princo Christian, who married, in 1S98, Princess Alexandria, sister of the reign ing grand duke of Mecklenburg Schwerln. The crown princess' second on, Prince Henry, also is a benedict, having espoused, in 1896, Princess Maud of Wales, the - youngest daughter of King Edward VII. - and Anti-Pain tv Cured Grip Did f' Day's Worh, Anti-Pain Pills, the J Meadache Reraety "I with ta uy I have uixd too. i Till and Nervine Icr LmGripr ,.rv itout and krtt urtnv full tWc- rlso utrd Dr. Miles' Ann-rim'rl times duruij; the pan year f,, 1 and always with most cratifvn,. consider them the bes.t of hc-iVl edies. I have also uied ylH;r vV J Cure in my family with ei"J suite Alitol 1 u " " !".: wim i:.f.J your remedies have proved o I t-, I i cheerfullv rrromnn-n.l il.. A Mkrrit M. Davton, Husinr . y. l'ublishiniCo., Publishers ii ,,'a"i; Weekly IVws, Con, ell la; v ,; Alumni News, aw N. Tioja - In itself I ntinppc is very i! in its after e!:cc's it is one of t . SLOurc.cs thi.t :n."i!its ni.mi,.: the iicivou. S' :(:: v.--. ;:'.c . ' action, and las the ioutntat.i : : . cifie. The a.'i'ui!i;i.uivi:,,; . ..' tl.e vitality an. I muleis X. tihleto pneumonia, l.rcn, 'I lie best treatment ccin.,i.-' , '..' Nervine winch cu'ets the :.-! brain, restores .-.enth , ' entiic f'Mitn; Dr. Miles' .Vv .'j', I'iils. nerve tunic act;!',; , .," nerves tf the die.-tivc origin- . to act in nnaturalun 1 heaithvna r--. M.les' Anil l'.n:i i'lils wlntli .- t! e torture of l.ea.i.itlie, bael.i. res. t:.e most common simpt. -,,?'. All dre-ic'sU sell and i;.ir !: -.. tie I lr. Miles' Kerne. lies. .Sen I i on Nervous ami Heart 1 1:, Dr. Miles Medical Co., Llklum, hi mmw i On Silver PInte enn nnfv dctcriniia-il alter lunc v:.:t of nctunl service iniltt-s roj Iiurchase wnre tenriii a imwii trntle-tnark. 1 rntfr half n century 5poons, l:orks, etc., stnnie(l WW Have been In use unci fhn perfect satisfactinn. Th-j ore solil Im- lendini; ilralm everywhere For entuinm No. 'c:i,uf nrwdesiKlla ituols the makers INTERNATIONAL SILVER CO., Merldcn, Conn. Every farmer knows t some plants grow better!' others. Soil may be thed and seed may seem the d but some plants are weia others strong. And that's the way v children. They are like jr. plants. Same food, same b ame care but some grow .md strong while others jinall and weak. Scott's Emulsion ofe .'asy way out of the cliffic Jhild weakness often it itarvation, not because of 'f food, but because the: loos not feed. Scott's Emulsion really uid gives the child grcn .trensrth. Whatever the cause ofi iiess and failure to ff Scott's Emulsion seems to! 't and set the matter right -iaitt Si. Eowne, Chemists, 4) P,aTl 81 -n yx:. aud $1,00 ; all drucE1 A C. RUTTER, M. H Physician and Surget Port Trevorton, Pa Offers his Professional Sen the Public. All Calls Prompt? tended. WANTED : SEVERAL IMDI STRIOI' nnatn ,.nh Mttftfj. tolri...l for llOII ! cloven yeum itnd with a large eP'J ujion inerennniB anu rkhii'" " iirolltable line. Permanent cuirm."'""1" ly enh mlnry ol I1H and nil InnfHnl " nnil hotel billH advaiK-ed In en-h ' KxPerienee not esxentinl. Mcntlnl r" Itixl eneloo Hell adtlrrHM tutr: NATIONAL, 334 iDearbornSt. Chical W VT-lHI.-VI?lAr. VRIIStlNS " rxtrr unci Rood repiitnllon In eeh 't1 mill eiMimy rriiiirru iff riii -"- Mealil eHtHblinhed wealthy l""r?Jl x.ll.l llnm.nli.l .tuiwlliio KnllirV I-1' J with eipeniM-i ndditinnal, all l'"' di reel, every Werinenday Inn" ""r m - i ..! when ri'ifw Mini vni i inn. ixiiimn... , , Kefnrrnwa. Knelo.e II al'lre'd " Colonial. 'Mi llearborn Ht., (''I,lc,.tti . MANAGER WANTEDj Truiilworthy lady tr fentlcmMi liiiniiiraii In thla i ounty unci aujo;" for well ami favorably known ',0J flnanclal a'.andtno-. IJ0.00 irtra'Rbl and eipenma, paid each Monday . reel from headquarter. Kpen Jj vaneed ; poaition permanent, M'rJ u ..ii... a i n n... nirfir.. Cbl'". am. mm ilfiTPM