COLUMN BLOWN TO PIECES \ Detachment of 700 Japanese in the history of ithe Annihilated by Mines. HILLSIDES STREWN WITH DEAD. Victims So Badly Their Number Couid Not Be Ascertained. A Japanese column, numbering ap- proximateiy ¢CJ men, while marl ching along at night on a road in the val- ley petween Long Hiil and Division Hill, met a ir:ghuul disaster throuzh the explosion oi an electric land mine, September 1. "he mine was carefully laid by the Russians and covered nearly a mile of availabie marching space. The explosive was placed -at the bottom. Rocks were placed next, and on lop of these clay was packed sO carefully that the ground gave the impression of no. having been’ disturbed. The indications of Japanese activity in this vicinity put the Russians ou uard. Near midnight the outposts rushed in and reported that the Jap- Mutilated That | anese were approaching. The Rus- gians withheld their fire for some time. Suddenly they threw a search- light up the valley. The Japanese opened with a rifle fire. The Rus- sians waited until apparently the whole Japanese column was in the | danger zone. Then the mine was exploded. The force of the explosion knocked a number of Russians down, and the sight of Japanese rifles, watier-bot- tles, legs and arms hurling through | the lighted space made by the search- light, was an awful spectacle. Some rocks landed inside the Russian lines. There was one appalling moment, during which the garrison itself was stunned, then a deathlike silence. The’ searchlight coldly lighted up the | road and. hiilsides strewn with dead. The foliowing day the Russians bur- ied the dead, but owning to their dis- membered and mutilated condition they were unable to accurately esti- mate the number of killed. A few Japanese escaped, however. MEAT STRIKE ENDED. Men Will Apply for heir Positions in Packing Houses. The strike of the butcher workmen, which has demoralized the meat pack- ing industry for two months, was of- ficially ge clared off by President Michael J. Donnelly of the Amalgam- ated : Cutters & Butcher Work- men Donnelly this morning tele- | graphed the members of the National Executive Committee asking their consent, and having received favora- ble answers from all, the strike eo end. The strike of affiliated the stock yards in sympathy with the butchers will officially be called off by the conference board of the allied trades. This was decided up- on by the central body. When the packers were notified that it had been decided to end the | they | would give places as far as possible | strike they announced that to the skilled men, but it was stated at the same time that many of the men would be unable to secure their | old places, as in many cases the work | was being performed in a satistactory manner by men who had gbeen se- | the commencement of cured since the strike. HOTEL CLERK MURDERED. in Cash and Many Valuables Secured. $250 After pounding the night clerk, H. | 3S. Butler, to death and leaving him | lying on the floor of the office, a thief rified the safe of the Greek Hotel on Forty-second s‘reet, nearly op- posite the Grand Central station, New York, securing $250 in cash and a quantity of valuables been left with the clerk for safe keep- ing. Soon after the clerk’s was found the police sent out a gen- | eral alarm for Percy Howard, 23 years old, a bell boy, who had been em- ployed at the hotel only about a week, and disappeared before But- ler’'s body was found. SCLD TO THE WABASH. Gould Interests Get Large Property in! Pittsburg District. The Pittsburg Terminal Railroad and Coal Company, the West Side Belt Railroad Company and all its branches, and all the subsidiary com- panies of the coal company, been sold to the Wabash interests. The price paid for the was about $12,000,000, the promotors realizing a profit of about $800,000. The purchase includes 15,000 acres of coal land in fee simple, 1,000 acres of surface land, seven mines and 36 miles of railroad, wi.h valuable ter- minals in Fittsburg and Clairtcn. The property was as ssembled in 13¢2 by Messrs. Donnelly and Nicola. It is completely ¢ eloped and fitted with modern machinery. The present output is at the rate of 3,000,000 tons of coal annually. The pu especial he railroad, the Wabash an immediate which, it is said, will be sufficient to pay the interest on the entire issue of the Pittsburg Terminal bonds. have properties for secures Voting Trust Dissolved. With the payment of the recently- declared semi-annual dividend of 2 per cent on the first preferred stock of the Reading Company trust of the corporation was dissolv- ed. The affairs of the company will in future be in the hands of the share- | holders. Sir Thomas Lipton leaves England IT the end. of September for St. Louis, | be the eu President of of David the Expo- wh are R. Francis, sition. A TCTAL WRECK. Freight Train Plunges Over Embank- | ment at Horse Shoe Bend. One of the most frightful! accidents Pennsylvania Railroad occurred at the famous Horse ‘shoe curve; five miles west of Altoona, shortly after 11 o'clock at] | night when a freight engine and 35 | | loaded cars leit the track and plunged | hundreds orf feet down the steep em. | bankment. The engineer and one brakeman were killed, the fireman and a tramp were so seriously hurt that they may die, and three qthers of the train cre: w are missing and are thought to be dead under the wreckage. The dead are: William Boardman, engi- neer, lived at Pitcairn. Went over | the embankment with his engine. | Charles Lohr, head brakeman, kived at Pitcairn. Went over the embank- ment with the train The train was composed of 35 load-| | ed cars and was going east. As jt} left the Gallitzin tunnel, it got be- yond the control of the trainmen and S ed down the mountain at terrific sod. All efforts to lessen the speed were useless. As it reached the steep! curve just west of the Horse shoe | curve, the engine left the track, going | over the embankment, carrying a | number of cars with it and piling up | 1S cn the tracks. The engineer and | firemen were carried with it. The | engineer is buried under the wreck- | age. DAYLIGHT ROEBERY. Thieves Lock Treasurer in Vault and | Carry Off $14,000. Two masked men entered the office | of County Treasurer T. J. Chase, at| Pomeroy, O., and, after binding and | gagging that official at the points of | revolvers, abstraeted $14,000 in bills. | Chase was found two hours after-| ward by his daughter, locked in the | he declared that | 3 unions at | which had | body | hase of the properties, and tonnage ! the voting | vault, helpless because of his bonds | and unable to summon aid. {| The county auditor was the only | other occupant of the court house, | everybody being in attendance at the fair. He stares that he heard no | noise and knew nothing of: the rob- | bery unti] Chase's daughter inquired | as to the whereabouts of her father. | On going into the treasurer’s office | | he heard noises in the vault and | summoned a local banker to work on | the combination. After © half» an hour’s work the big doors were swung | opert and Treasurer Chase carried | out almost dead from suffocation. NEXT CONCLAVE AT SARATOGA. G. W. Moulton, of lilinois, Is Elected | Grand Master. Saratoga Springs, N. Y., was chosen | as the meeting place of the next con- | clave of the Knights Templar in July, | 1907. The following officers were elected’ Grand master, George M. Moulton, Illinois; deputy grand mas- ter, Henry W. Rugg, of Rhode Island; grand generalissimo, . Willlax B. { Melish, of Ohio; grand captain eral, Frank H. Thomas, of Washing-! ton; grand senior warden, Arthur Mec- Arthur, New York; grand junior war- den, W. Frank A. Gerow, Michigan re-elected); grand treasurer, H. Wales Lines, Connecticut (re-elected). The following officers were appointed: Warden, Edward W. Welling- ton, Kentucky; grand Prelate, Rev. John McWorrell, Kentucky; grand standardbearer, Wiliiam H. Norris, Iowa; grand swordbearer, Joseph K. Orr, Georgia; grand chaplain of the | Grand i guard, G. W. Chamberlain, Minne- | sota. 60,000 SLAIN IN BATTLE. Japanese Estimate Divides Losses Evenly With Russians. It is learned from a high official source that the Japanese compute their casualties for the ten days’ fight- | ing around Liao-Yang at 30,000. It is estimated that the Rmssians lost at least 30,030 men. The revised esti- Kouropatkin’s mate places General : 4 a summ d, w 1 v | strength of 184 battalions of infan- TROnSd ae hel a Sguaig avey ire. 728 Saladions of eRVITY, With from the burning jail, armed men 579 aah HL. IY, Wil standing guard over each individual 2 % : ; roc The best information of the Rus-, rivet Jf > deparsmest sian War Office indicates that Gen- test Co y : a Abort 5 jec eral Kouropatkin lost about 17,000 Co as he men during the 10 days’ battle at pyar native country to enter the i Liao-Yang. TELEGRAPHIC 3REVITIES. Rev. Father Stanton found than 135 the Philippines. Minister Barrett has been jnstrucs ed to try to se‘tle the bound i pute between Panama and Colom Mr. W. W. Astor no less afrived in pe came Vicercy railroad and graph line es Harbin and den are both uninterrupted. w has been gazetted in St. Pe- g i only ships be allowed Jones, colored, was hanged mery, Ala., for the of an her negro. He collap on the scaffo.d when the black cap was placed on his head. The New Hampshire Democratic State Conven ion, at Concord, gave the Gubernatorial no mination by ac- clamation to Henry F. Hollis, of Con cord, who was the candidate of the | party two years ago. Judge A. Heaton Robertson, con- servative, was nominated by the Con- necticut Democratic convention, de- ler feating Mayor Charles F. Thayer, of Norwich, the radical candidate. Fire at Progresso, Mex., wiped out { an entire business block, causing a loss of almost $1,200,000, with little insurance. George H. Shibley, | ated by the Continen | cago as candidate for Vice President, has sent a letter of the party, {| nomina on. who was' nomin- declining the gen-; 42 2 new species of parasites in tal party at Chi- | to the notification | EIGHT PERSONS IRTHAED Tragic End of Pleasure Trip on Delaware River. BIG STEAMER CRUSHES LAUNCH. Only Four Persons Could Be Found When the Rowboat Reached the Place. The Delaware river steamer Colum- bia, on its way from Bristol, Pa., Sunday into a steam launch north of Philadelphia, grinding it to pieces, and causing the drowning of eight of the dozen occupants. of the night, crashed small boat. All the party were Phil- adeiphians. The dead are Joseph Fortescue, owser of the launch; Wade Auday, Thomas Duffy, Thomas Corvesier, An- na Young, Joseph Pfromer, Mrs. Jo- seph Piromer, Engineer James Brigss. of a day's pleasure trip om the river. The launch was owned by Joseph | Fortescue and the party had been made up from among a few of his friends. The day was spent in a cruise up the river as far as Trenton. The return trip was begun after nightfall, the pilot of the boat keep- ing close to the Pennsylvania shore on the run down the river. When a point was reached near Andalusia, the Columbia suddenly loomed up in the darkness. wheel to starboard, but just a mo- ment too late. ‘The big steamer | struck the launch squarely in the I iadte and cut it in half, throwing all the occupants into the water. A terrible shriek went up as the boats struck, which almost caused a panic among the passengers on the Columbia. Dozens of life preserv- ers were thrown overboard to those in the water and a boat was lowered. Notwithstanding the fact that Cap- tain Campbell, of the Columbia, in- stantly reversed his engine, the Co- lumbia was some distance above the | struggling people in the water when he came to a full stop. When the rowboat reached the spot, only four persons could be found in the dark- | ness. It is believed that several of the passengers were crushed by the | paddie wheels of the Columbia. DECREASE IN ANTHRACITE. Amounts to 837,548 Tons Compared With August Last Year. The statistics on the production of anthracite coal during the month of August, issued to-day, crease of 837,548 tons compared with the same month last year. The ton- nage for August was 4,331,844. The production for the year up to Septem- ber 1 was 38,212,288 tons, against 2,431,849 tons for the corresponding period last year. The decrease in production is due to the numerous suspensions in oper- | of ‘demand. | ations because of lack The leading colleries which have been idle since September 1, resumed operations to-day. With one excep- tic all of the Pennsylvania railroad colleries are expected that the production for Sep- tember will show a decrease over that of last September. MOB SETS FIRE TO JAIL. Alabama Lynchers Outwit Militia and Hang Negro. A mob, estimated at 2,000, set fire to the jail at Huntsville, Ala. after securing Horace Maples, a negro charged with the murder of a white citizen, hanged him on a tree in sight of the jail. and a company of the were unable to save the prisoner. The fire department, army. JAPANESE LOSSES 17,539. Estimate of Liao-Yang. A dispatch from Tokyo received at the Japanese legation in Washington places the total casualties on the Yabatsse Yang at 2 5 533 officers and men killed Official and nded. The number of offi- | cer led was 136 and the number | Ww 464. from the front says that and others affirm that the losses between the retreat nshan and the final fall ng amounted to over 25,- 000 men. Express Train Held Up. The Canadian Pacific’s westbound Transcontinental express was held four masked men west of Junction. At the point of the express messenger was compelled to hand over the val- uabies and the The safe was dynamited. mail also was ran- The robbers escaped to the bush and are supposed to have crossed the boundary. They secured | about $6,000 from the express safe. regis te 3 egisiered Captain Gridley’s Widow Gets $9,413. The Treasury Department has be- gun sending checks to the officers and men of Admiral Dewey's fleet in pay- ment for the awards of prize money for the victory of the American fleet | at Manila bay. Among the checks | so far sent out are those of Admiral Dewey and Mrs. Harriet Gridley Erie, Pa, widow of Captain Gridley. The check to Admiral Dewey is for $16,516 and to Mrs. Gridley for $9,413. | Philadelphia to | about 10 miles | The accident was the tragic ending Fortescue jammed his | shows a de-| idle this week. It is} and | The sheriff, his deputies | local militia, | which was | Casualties at | side at the battle of Liao- | 7, of JzALOUS WOMAN’S DEED. Family Quarrel Ends in Death of Man and wife. Mrs. Henry ‘Toler of Butte, Neb., in a quarrel inspired by jealousy ‘of: her husband, weni to. her room amd saturated her clothing vith keroseue. Coming out she szwzed irs and held him tightly which she set fire to her L skirts with a match. Struggling to break from her, the man tore from the house, but his wife held to him, communicating the flames and oil to his clothing. When she was so badly burned that’ she became unconscious her ‘husband broke from her grasp and with his clothing a mass of flames, rushed 0 a deep cistern some distance from the house and leaped into it. = His cries had attracted the attention of neigh- | bors, who rescued him in a dying con- | dition. Mrs. Toler was found horribly burned and in agony. She was wrap- ped in heavy clothes and the fire ex- | tinguished and she recovered enough | to tell the story of her attempt to | burn herself and her husband to death. | Then she became unconscious and the | physicians say she will die. { STEEL WAR BEGUN. | Steel Plate and Structural Associa- | tions Make Reductions. Members of the Steel Plate and Structural Steel Associations, at con- ferences held in the Waldorf-Astoria and in Jersey City, agreed to make important reductions in the prices of their manufactures. In this way they implicitly obeyed the expressed wishes of the United States Steel Corporation. It is blieved that this ends finally the uncertainty that has menaced the steel market for weeks, | so far as these lines are concerned. Representatives of the Lackawanna Steel Company were present at the meetings. The pools received the as- surance that the Lackawanna joined | hands with them and would live up | to the agreements that were made. Despite the protest of several smaller independent firms, who were | outvoted, harmony practically pre: vailed among the associated manu- facturers. Dominated by the Steel Corporation, they virtually opened the long threatened war upon the Re- public Iron and Steel Company. Prices were reduced in some cases $4 and in some $6 a ton on the ad- vice of the corporation officials, who argued that if rock bottom rates were | adopted there would be no secret cut- | ting and the agreements would be ef- fective. WAR MOVEMENTS. Kurapotkin Reaches Mukden—Will Carry War Into Korea. | The Russian commander has arrived at Mukden, and it is given out in St. | from Mukden filed Tuesday, says that the main Russian army is pushing northward and evacuating that place. | It is indicated that the Japanese are ! still harassing the Russian rear. | Further than this nothing is known. Russian preparations indicate move- ment south from Ham-Heung, covering the occupation of Chien-Pien and Yeng-Hung, will soon be made. The Russian commander officially has noti- | fied the Korean magistrates of these towns they must prepare quarters for a large body of troops for immediate use. GOVERNMENT TOTTERING. Paraguayan Revolutionists Capture Town of Encarnacion. The revolutionists of Paraguay have captured Villa Encarnacion, with its | garrison and their arms. The posi- tion of the government of Paraguay is becoming weaker daily and its ulti- mate surrender or complete defeat is inevitable. The report from Uruguay of the de- feat of General Vasquez, Minister of War, in the recent battle between the Petersburg that the bulk of his army | is now near there, while a dispatch | | Uruguayan government forces and the revolutionists at Cuchilia Negra has been published. The casualties of the revolutionists in killed and | wounded was 170 officers and over 600 | men. The government were 11 officers killed and ed; men, 83 killed and and 34 missing. WILL SOON RESUME WORK. Railroad Shops at Altoona Will | sume on Full Time. 53 wound- 345 wounded, erintendent of Motive Pow a i ei: Sup ny oye yor bb | of the Order of Knight Templars was the orders N. Durborow, of Railroad, issued Pennsylvania placing all on full time, hours 10 hours a day, Saturday. About 15,000 | been employed but 32 hours a week since spring. The orders apply to Altoona, Pitts- phia shops. Regarding ment of the suspended men no or- ders have yet been issued. It is ex- | pected that most of them will be taken back at an early date. Rear-End Smash in lllinois. The Kansas City passenger train on the Chicago, Rock Island and £aqt iast Re- | | casualties | { | { | | the company's shops on his division | and five | men | will be benefited, most of whom have | % . > | Wales. burg, Harrisburg and West Philadel | _{ the employ- | {| commandery, | Pacific Railroad was wrecked one-half | mile east of Tiskilawa, Ill, than 30 persons were badly injured, two of whom have since died. The passenger train collided with the rear of a freight train that had been broken in two. Half a dozen passen- ger cars were wrecked. Four Killed; Many Hurt. Train No. 41, on the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, consisting of an ex- press car, a mail car, two day coaches and a Pullman sleeper, was derailed at a trestle 22 miles southwest of Monroe, N. C., followed by the wreck of a light engine and caboose, result- ing in the death of four persons and the injuring of 35 others. The kiil- ed are: Engineer E. Y. Barksdale, 8. C.: Fireman Edward Roberts, col- ored, Atlanta, Ga.; Mrs. Black, un- known woman. and more | SEVEN KILLED IN IN A WAEL Many Passergers Imprisone d in Splintered Cars. DAY COACH LEFT THE TRACK. Heavy Dining Car Fell on Top of Day Coach Where Most Passengers Were. The southbound Wabash passenger train’ which left Des Moines for St. Loyis at 6:40 a. m., was wrecked near Pendleton, Mo: #killing seven passen- gers and injuring more than 30. The. dead: J. E. Nichols, Macon, Mo.; Mrs. Henry Folcht, Huntingdon, Pa.; Mrs. C. H. Graves, Laplata, Mo.; Ed- na Patterson, Laplata, Mo.; Mrs. Hen- derson, Laplata, Mo.; Mrs. Anna Brenner, Macon, Mo.; Miss Hebler, daughter of A. F. Hebler, Macon, Mo. The train, which was composed of an engine, baggage and smoking car, day coach, diner and Pullman sleeper, was well filled, it being estimated by Wabash officials that there were about 500 passengers on board. The train was running at its schedule speed when the accident occurred. The day coach left the track and plunged down ran embankment, drag- ging the diner with it. =~ The heavy diner crashed on top of the coach, and the majority of those killed -and injured were passengers in the latter. IN TRAIN WRECK. Four Others Are Seriously injured. Freights Clash Together. On the Buffalo, Rochester and Pitts- burg Railroad near Carman, 40 miles below Brockwayville, Pa.; two freight trains came together, killing two trainmen, seriously injuring * four others and piling up the engines and several cars in a shapeless mass of | wreckage. The killed: Fireman Clyde Osterstuck, of train No. 42, crushed and .sealded beneath, engine No. 233 and buried beneath a pile of ore and coal. Resided at Bradford. Head brakeman James Welsh, of train No. 42, riding in cab with Oster- stuck. Met, death in the same man- ner as the fireman. Lived at Sala- mahea. e The injured: Engineer Gordnier, scalded and crushed in cab of his en- TWO KILLED gine, No. 233. Taken to Bradford hospital. Home at Salamanca. Engineer McCord, of No. 282, slight- ly injured by jumping. Lives at Bradford. Fireman C. G. Volk, of No. 282, in- jured by jumping through cab win- dow. Slightly scalded and head and face cut. Lives at Bradford. Brakeman Wilson, of train No. 53. Badly cut about head and face, and legs injured in jumping. Lives at Clearfield. The wreck occurred on a curve and the trains came together before the brakeman realized the situation. The cause is charged to the misunder- standing of orders on the part of northbound train No. 42 drawn by en- gine No. 233. Vermont’s Vote, With only two small towns missing the Republican plurality of 31,500 in the State election is believed to be within a few votes of the correct fig- ures. Four years ago it was 31,312. The total vote for Governor without | the two towns is: Bell (Rep.), 47,- 991; Porter (Dem.), 16,492; a Repub- lican plurality of 31,449. The missing tcwns gave a Republican plurality last year of 68. The returns from 221 towns show that the Senate will be soiialy Republican. The State officers chosen are: Goy- ernor, Charles J. Bell, Welden; Lieu- tenant Governor, Charles H. Stearns, Johnson; Treasurer, John T. Bacon, Hartford; Secretary of State, Freder- ick G. Fleetwood, Morrisville; Audi- tor, Horace F. Graham, Craftsbury, David J. Foster, of Burlington, was elected to Congress from the First district, and Kittredge Haskins, of Brattleboro, from the Second district. John Grier Holmes, banker and cap- italist, of Pittsburg, died on board the steamship Teutonic in the Atlantic ocean September 5 of heart disease. TRIENNIAL CONCLAVE. Plumed Knights March in Fine Order Through San Francisco. The twenty-ninth triennial conclave | | inaugurated at San Francisco with a parade which marched over seven miles of the city’s streets, A strik- ing feature of the parade was the presence in the line of the Earl of Euston and several other officials of the Templar order, representing ‘the Knight Templars of England and Their distinctive uniforms attracted special attention and much applause. Joseph Leath, of Couer .de Leon Knoxville, Tenn.» dropped dead during the parade from apoplexy. The parade was one of the finest ever seen in San Francisco. It oc- cupied nearly three hours in passing a given point. The advance along the line of march of the more largely represented eastern commanderies was signalized by continuous cheers and when the band heading the Ken- tucky contingent struck up “Dixie” ‘the time FIVE KILLED. Accident QccurreditW hile Lowering Nitro- -Glyeerin in Weil. Five are dead and an equal number injured as the result of a premature explosion of a quantity of nitro-gly- cerin near Upper Sanduskdy, O. The dead: Malen Lookabaugh, Findlay; Lafe McKay, Findlay; Jo- seph Fox, Lima; Corine Wise, aged 11, Upper Sandusky; Emanuel Ur can, Cincinnati. . The injured leg mangled and internally will probably die; not expected to recover; injured about the head, condition crit- ical; Mary Gulliford, bruised about the body; Claire Lookabaugh, :face and limbs badly cut. ; The accident occurred while Me- Kay, an oil well shooter, was engaged in lowering the nitro-glycerin. At +his assistants, the Loeka- baughs and Fox, together with the others, were grouped about the well. include Ernest Wise, injured; ‘The cause. of the {Hosiog is un- known. _! DUEL IN THE STREET. 1 of Lambert to’ collect a bill Dispute Over a Bill Leads to a Shoot : ing Affray. In a street duel at Green Shoals, W. Va, two men were killed, one fa- tally injured, another seriously injured and two, who escaped, are supposed to be wounded. The dead: Allen Framficld, a jus- tice of the peace; William Adams. The injured are George Mead, shot twice, and + John ' Lambert. Two brothers of John Lambert who en- gaged in the fight are believed to be wounded, but escaped to the moun- tains. The fight started over an attempt from Adams. The men engaged in an ar- gument over the agcoubt several days ago. ! ARKANSAS ELECTION. Governor Davis Elected for Third Term by 20,000 Plurality. Sufficient returns from the State election have been received to indi- cate the election of Governor Davis to a third term by a plurality of 20, 000. Several other State officers were voted for, but all the other Demo- cratic candidate had an open field ‘Davis alone having ‘opposition. Gov- ernor Davis will run something like. 16,000 votes behind his ticket two years ago, when the total vote was 120,000 in round numbers. This year there has been an in. crease of 10,000 votes, and if Governor Davis’ plurality is not over 20,000 his loss in the aggregate will be 30,000 votes. The Prohibition vote will possibly fall short of two years ago, when Kimball, for Governor on that ticket, polled less than 5,000 votes. CHARGED WITH FORGERY. Former Clerk in Newark Bank Ar rested in Cincinnati. As a result of sensational develop- ments connected with the recent sus- pension of the Homestead Building and Savings Bank, of Newark, O., a former clerk, Robert C. Lingafelter, 27, was arrested in Cincinnati. Chief of Police Sheridan, of Newark, im- mediately after the arrest, tele- graphed Newark to arrest Lingafelt- er’s father, James Lingafelter, the former president of the bank, and his wife. The charge against all three is forgery. It is alleged that they forged notes and receipts amounting to $75,000. Relief Expedition Fails. The Norwegian steamer Vircola, which has arrived at Hammerfest, re- ports that she met the Ziegler relief expedition steamer Frithjof, August 17, in latitude 79 north and longitude 52 east. The Frithjof up to that time had been unable to reach Franz Josef land. The Frithjof, having on board the Ziegler relief expedition, which arrived at Vardo, Norway, August 4, after an unsuccessful attempt to reach the steamer America, bearing the Ziegler Arctic expedition party, sailed irom Vardo August 5 for Franz Josef land with coal for the America. The latter vesscl sailed from Trondhjem, Norway, for Franz Josef land on June 23, 1903. Gypsies Sent Away. Seventy-five of the group ' of 200 gypsies from various Bohemian coun- i tries who ‘have been on Ellis Island for about a week were sent aboard the Cunard liner Campania for de- portation. The remaining 125 mem- bers of the band will be deported as soon as the 40 children sick with measles have recovered. NEWS NOTES. Vice Presidential Candidate Davis made a non-partisan speech at the Wheeling fair. Gregory Fiscus was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter at Greens- burg, Pa. He was charged with kill- ing George W. Hedinger, at Delmont, July 4. Miss Anna Phillips, of Wellsville, O., has sued the Cleveland and Pitts- burg Railroad for $10,000 for damages for the death of her brother, Conduc- tor John Phillips. William Dickson, colored, plead | guilty to murdering Lawyer Notting- the enthusiasm of the spectators was | unbounded. New York, Pennsylv and Illinois made a fine showing. Discover Prehistoric Animal. At a depth of about 14 feet laborers excavating for the Spearman avenue sewer at South Sharon, Pa., uncover- ed the tusk or horn of some prehis- toric animal. It is semi-circular in shape, six feet long and five inches in diameter at the base. Those who nia | have examined it say it is the tusk of | a mammoth. Five laborers were killed in the ex- plosion of a threshing machine ene gine at Bricelyn, Minn. | ceeding $3, ham and was sentenced by Judge W. D. Wallace, of New Castle, Pa., to 15 years in the penitentiary. Office Holders Warned. Acting Secretary Oliver of the War Department has issued a circular warning against political assessments and partisan activity of office holders. This circular embodies the provisions of the civil service act of January 186, 1883, making politica] assessments of federal officers and employes a mis- demeanor punishable by a fine not ex- $5,000 or by imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, or by fine and imprisonment both, in the discretion of the court. Louis Lookabaugh, Ea Alice Wise, © N bad to he ney was Duri: using healt (Si Milbs by al