RIOT AT PANAMA ELECTION President Amador Accused of In- terfering, and Threatened. SOME SHOOTING OCCURRED Guatemalans En Route for tha Isth- | mus to Take Part in Expected Uprising. The administration of President Amador, has been perpetuated as a result of the elections at Panama, but | conditions are now such on the isto. mus that were it not for th pres ence of a large body of poll marines, well armed and equipped, | and several gatling guns mounted along the canal sirip, a re would already be in progress. As matters stand there is a feeli ng of sullen discontent among the more progressive of the inhabitants of the | Panama Republic, which may break out in open revolution. of assassination are freely made. but it is openly asserted by the Liberals that Dr. Amador will hardly live much longer. Election morning dawned cloudy | and fairly cool and in the early hg urs | there was no trouble. As the day wore on the feeling became intense, and: just after noon a conflict took | place between a detachment of police | and a band of Liberals. The latter insisted on their right of suffrage and a free-for-all fight followed. The police were getting the worst of it, when they drew their revolvers and shot two men, probably fatally wound- ing them. A number of others were | arrested. volution als learned that the police had used their weapons they issued orders to their forces to abandon the elec:ion and this was done. All of the leadesr | and workers withdrew from the polls | and the word was passed not to do anything more in the line of voting. | The rank and file were instructed to stay away from the voting places, the intent being to let the Amador | people have their own way and then | to attempt to have the United States! later set the election aside, or else | by revolutionary methods overturn | the present administration. It was rumored that a large num- ber of Guatemalans were en route to the isthmus for the purpose of aiding ! in the attempt. Color is lent to this | report by the pres2nce on the bord- | ers of the city of a detachment of | 300 Americans with gatling guns. | They were sent here by xovernor | General Magoon, who has so far de- | clined to eXpiain their presence. | MEAT ISSUANCE SUSPENDED | No More Tinned American Products! « for Irish Soldiers Till Colonei : Hobbs Reports. War Secretary Haldane, answering | ‘a question of Captain Craig, Irish Un- | ionist, in the house of commons, said | the issuance of tinned beef raticns to the militia of county Down was by lo- cal arrangement, and not by the war office. The latter, however, had issued or- ders suspending the further issue of American tinned meats in Ireland un-| til. the report of Lieutenant Colonel! Perey Hobbs, whe has been sent to | the United States to inspect the meat intended for the British army, has been received and considered. | ANARCHISTS MEANT BUSINESS Bombs Intended for King and Queen of Italy Found. The police are now willing to admit that their activity prevented an at- tempt by Anarchists on the life of the King and Queen as they were return- ing from Ancona, Italy, where they participated in the exercises in con- nection with the laying of the corner stone of the new hospital Sunday. Search of a suspected farm house near the station revealed four small dynamite bombs about the size of oranges, but of the most powerfui na- ture. Three men were arrested and have been identified as well-known | Anarchists. SiX DROWNED Canoes Overturn on Lake Memph- remagog and Potomac River. Through the overturning of a ca- noe on Lake Memphremagog, four persons were drowned. The victims were: Fred S. Paquin, his wife and sister and George Daily. The cause of the upsetting of the canoz is not known. Edward H. Saalbach and wife were out canoeing in the Potomac river, above the aqueduct bridge Sunday | afternoon. Thelr boat upset and be- | fore assistance could reach them both were drowned. Saalbach was a clerk in the war department and was about 45 years old. He was appointed from California. Yellow Fever in New Orieans. One case of yellow fever was re- ported on the 24th at the Mississippi | river quarantine station, 97 miles be- low New Orieans. This is the first case reported this vear, by the board of health. The patient is a Cuban | sailor. Christ has promised to be with His! disciples always; that promise in- cludes all others. Green Frogs Rained Down. A heavy rain storm, accompanied by a gale, swept over Aljon, II, and a deluge of small green frogs] was precipitated. The frogs fell so | plentifuly that thousands were hop- | ping around the streets. By unanimous vote the Executive Board of the Western Federation of Miners rejected the application of the coal miners of Ohio and [llinois, affiliated with the United Mine Work- | ers of America, for admission to tn2 federation. | resembled a yet | Threats | | pure food | number of years ago there has been a | tables, Mr. i line | asked a member. So soon as the leaders of the Liber- | . | Holding | the glucose factory.” (19. tha encounter. | overcome by superior numbers. | department of justice was gone over carefully by the President and his , advisors and tbe attorney general | Pittsburg. garding his son's testimony, he | brought his fist down on his knee and said: ‘That is a bare-faced lie.” | credit to the Dowie family. | him to college in Edinburgh. | that { The FRAUDS IN FOODS. Congressman lllustrates Use of Adul- terants and Short Weight. The space in front of the Speaker's desk of the House of Representatives weights, a graduate and a funnel for | the purpose of demonstrating the con- t tention of the majority of the Com- mittee on Inter-State and Foffign | | Commer cessa ce that a pure food bill is ne- Mr. Mann contrasted the features of | the Senate and House bills, remark- ing ot it was not the aim of the | House committee to recommend leg- | | islation as to what the people should | | should eat or dink, but to call atten- | tion to what they are eating or drink- ing. Most foods are not adulterated, ac- cording to Mr. Mann, and since the agitation which began a reduction in adulterations. Taking his position behind the Mann began a rapid ex- | | | | | | decided | planation of every article there. Mr. | Stevens of Minnesota assisted Mr. Mann and handed the articles to him. | Taking up a bottle of bright-colored cherries, marked ‘Marischino Cher- | ries,” he explained that the cherries had been picked green; that they were then bleached and colored with ana- dve and, holding up a bright-co- lered bit of cloth, he said, “This cloth was dyed with the same dye.’ “What are these cherries for?” “I understand they are used-one at a time in a well-known drink,” re- plied Mr. Mann, amid laughter, some of the members recognizing the cock- tai! which goes with the cherry. up a bottle with a light-co- red liquid in it, Mr. Mann said it was honey, “yet it never saw a hive, much less a comb. It is fresh from A fine grade of olive oil used by the Union League Club of Philadelphia turned out to be cottonseed oil. Mr. Mann received an ovation when he concluded. The bill will again be considered tomor- row. NATIVES KILL FIVE POLICEMEN Philippine Guards Have Encounter With Band of 300 Pulajanes. A band of 300 Pulajanes under Ceasario Pastor attacked the town of Burauen, on the island of Leyte, June They killed five policemen, wounded five and captured the re- mainder of the force except the lieu- tenant who was in command. Pastor, the Pulajane leader, was killed during The attack occurred at an early hour in the morning. The police vere caught unawares and their senti- nel was rushed from his post. The bandits then entered the tribunal and a. hand-to-hand fight took place. The poiice fought desperately, but were The loss of the Pulajanes is believed to have been great, but it cannot be estimated, as thev carried off their dead and wounded after the fight. WILL PROSECUTE RAILROADS. for Prosacution Wil} Pared Without Delay. The Government has decided to prosecute the ccal-carrying roads for violation of the Sherman anti-trust and interstate commerce laws. That decision was reached at a sccret| meeting of the cabinet. The testimony in the hands of the Cases Be Pre- was directed to prepare the cases for prosecution without delay. The roads, against which prosecu- tion is to be bagun, the the Pennsyl- vania, Baltimore & Ohio, New York Central, Chesapeake & Ohio, Norfolk & “Western, and Buffalo, Rochester & FAITH CURE QUEERED HIM. Dowie's Father Appear in Court at | Chicago. With documentary evidence to sup- port his claim, John Murray Dowie, | who says he is the father of the | “First Apostis,, appeared in Judge L.andis’ court at Chicago. From Essex, [a., his home, J. M. | Dowie brought with him a grip con- taining a fharnace certificate, a cer- tificate of his son’s birth, and various letters and affidavits from Scotland. all of which he collected after the “First Apastle,” on the occasion of the New York visitation, declared that the Towan was not his father. When asked what he had to say re- Dowie related how he had worked to make his boy, John Alexander, a He spent in sending | his last shilling, he said, “He was all right until he got the | faith healing business into his head,” | he continued. “That sent him off the heaten track.” Cuban Town Oestroyed. New Orleans, June 21.—Cablegrams | | | reporting the destroying of Sagua la Grande, a town of abeut 13.000 inhabi- | tants in Santa Clara ‘province, Cuba, | has been received. Two messages | were received, the first announcing the town had been flooded, and the second saying that it had been entirely destroyed by fire. At Narlidere, recently, a detach- | | ment of Turkish troops surarised a Greek band of 14, killing six of them. remainder escaped. | ruler | durance. | all parts of Europe flocked into the | gregated over | delphia. | Charles | was the CROWNING OF KING HARKON | Norway’s New Ruler Initiated with Simple Ceremonies. | small section of a deli- | | catessen store and a corner grocery . with cereals, jams, jellies, tins ot Sweoey WAS NOT REPRESENTED i | | Peas, tomatoes, corn, bottles of} re | whisky and wine, imported sausage, mM : : : i > any Americans M ed Wi he brandied cherries and other edibles : y 2 ingjed tht { and "drinkables scattered over two Great Assemblage Throughout tables aand to the picture | the Grand Festivities. there were a scales with | King Haakon VII. of Norway and | June 22 in the Trondhjem cathedral. The ceremony toric interest, Haakon is the first Norway has had to itself for nearly 600 years, the Norwegian king- dom having been bound either with | as | Poported { known was one of great his- | riot which lasted for MANIACS RUN AMUCK Russians Seem to Have Taken Mat ters in Their Own Hands. News of serious rioting in every part of Russia has been coming in al most continuously. It begins to look now as though the people, despairing of securing any relief from official oppression, by means of the Duma. have practically decided to take mat- ters into their own hands and the re- sult is that a state of anarchy pre- vails in many of the prov inces, . The most serious of the outbreaks comes from Yuriev-Polsky, 25 miles northwest of Vladimir, where | Queen Maud were formally crowned | a religious procession passing (hrougt | the streets was fired on by some un- party. This precipitated 2 several] hours, the fighting the fiercest character. All of the troons and the garrison were ordered out, but repeated charges | failed to clear the streets and 70 were being of Sweden or Denmark since the 14th | killed and more than 200 wounded. century. | No attempt was made to imitate the ! only | picturesque coronation ceremony the old viking Kings. Everything was carried out with the utmost sim- plicity, in this respect resembling more closely the inauguration of an | American president than a royal | pageant. Trondhjem was selected for the coronation because all the old viking | kings were elected and crowned here. It was crowded almost beyond en- Thousands of tourists from city, and it was almost impossible to | move about the streets, so dense was the throng. Several delegations from the Unit- | ed States attended the ceremony as official .representatives of Norwegians in America. The principal delegation was from Chicago, and numbered six, Mr. Gade, the Norwegian consul Chicago: Mr. Duno, Mr. Steensland, Dr. Quale, Mr. Ray and Mr. Altogether about 1,500 Norwegian | Americans came to Trondhjem for the ! ceremony. Of all the European countries to which invitations were extended to send delegates to the coronation, Sweden alone refused to accept. At the conclusion of the coronation the King and Queen marched out of | the church and proceeded to the roy- During the whole ser- bells throughout al residence. vice. All church Norway were rung and at the conclusion two royal salutes of 21 guns were fired from every Norwegian port. In the evening King Haakon gave a banquet to 400 guests, including the special ambassadors to the corona- tion. FINED FOR REBATING Heavy Penalties Imposed on Packers and Railroad. Eighty-five thousand dollars in fines were imposed in the federal court at Kansas City, Mo., by Judge Smith McPherson upon corporations and persons found guilty of violating the anti-rebate clause in the Elkins bill. In addition two men were sentenced to jail respectively for four and three months. The penalties are as follows: Chicago, Burlington & Quincy fined $15,000. Cudahy Packing Company fined $15,000. Armour Packing Company fined $15,000. Swift & Company, packers, fined $15,000. Nelson Morris & Company, packers, fined $15,000. George 1.. Thomas, New York, freight broker, fined $6,000 and sent- enced to four months in jail; L. B. Taggart, his clerk, fined $4,000 and sentenced torthree months in jail. Canal Will Be Lock Type. The senate passed a bill, by Senator Hopkins of Illinois, pro- viding that a lock canal be construct- ed across the isthmus of Panama. The Senate followed the lead of the House and the desires of the Presi- dent by a lock canal, thus further clearing the way for adjournment by removing a cause of dispute that at one time threaened to result in a deadlock be- tween the two houses. MEAT EXPCRTS, $1!80,000,000 England Takes Ninety Per Cent of Country's Shipments. Washingten, June 21.—Exports and meat products from of meats the | United States in the 11 months of the 1906, ended with May, ag- $180,000,000 in value, according to a report issued by the department of commerce and labor. These figures for 11 months, says the report, show a larger exportation of meats and meat products thaan in the corresponding period of any other vear in the history of the export trade, and an increase of practically 60 per cent., when compared with the corresponding period of 1896. Four Drowned. The carelessness of one man step- ping on the side of a launch and cap- sizing it resulted in the drowning of four men in the Delaware river off the extreme northern part of Phila- The other two occupants of the little craft mnarrowiy escaped death. The dead were John Zwald, John S. McCann, John Hannigan and E. Keenan. fiscal year Steamer Sinks With Eight. The Danish schooner sunk near the South Goodwin light- ship as the result of a collision with the Dutch tank steamer American from Antwerp for New York. Eight of the schooner’s crew were drowned. Peter Norholm, the captain’s only survivor. The can proceeded, not having any damage. Ameri- introduced {tives a 11 per cent. voting for the construction of | Opstad. | of | | | | lost heavily at | | | provinces, | { Bertha was | The fighting was checked for a time, to break cut again later in the afternoon, when a mob of nearly 000 people, carrying red flags and singing revolutionary songs, attack: ed the hospital where many wounded were confined, broke all the windows and attempted to set the structure on fire. Repulsed here by a troop of Cos sacks they marched to the Govern- ment buildings, which they wrecked. B,: KOREAN REBELLION SPREADS Japanese Putting it Down With Harsh Hand. Empress of China, | from Yokohama, brought further ad- vices of the revolution in Korea, which was spreading. The insurgents at Hongju. the Japanese blew up the city gates a protracted street fight took place, but the Koreans, with obsolete arms, were helpless before the modern weapons of the Japanese. Two Japanese were killed and wound- ed and 85 insurgents killed and 175 made prisoners, including the wound- ed. The rebellion has spread to four being most serious at Kongwando, Kangneung, Uljin and Yongehun, which were ° looted. At Uljin the Government offices were burned and at Yongchun the magis- trate’s wife was carried away, the local treasury looted of several thousand yen and a quantity of arms taken from the military barracks. MEAT INSPECTION BILL The steamer When House Passes Measure to Sanitary Precautions. The House passed the meat inspec- tion bill, which will give the Secre- tary of Agriculture authority to com- pel the packers to keep their places clean and put only clean and whole- some meat into the tin cans labeled so as to give the impression that they contain toothsome' delicacies. The bill passed is a compromise measure between the President and the Committee having the bill in charge. The points vielded by the President were: No date on label, levy of as- sessment, omitting words “in the judgment of the Secretary of Agri culture.” Points yielded by committee: Court review provision, ail appointments tc be made through civil service. Other changes mutually agreed upon: Right of inspectors to packing plants at all times was amplified tc read: ‘‘“Whether the same be ir operation or not.” Appropriation of $2,000,000 annual ly for cost of inspection. Textile Workers Get Increas=. The cotton manufacturers of Fal River, Mass., have granted the opera- ‘increase in wages. About 25,000 hands are benefited. The new scale, which will take effect July 2, is practically the same as that pre- vailing previous to July 1, 1904. As other New England cotton manufac- turing centers follow the lead of Fall River, as a rule the change is ex- pected ultimately to affect all cotton mill workers in this section. Must Not Take Gifts. As a result of the exposures of graft among railroad men by the in terstate commerce commission, an has been sent out to all offices of the subsidiary companies of the United States Steel corporation, for- bidding any officer or employe of any company, owned or controlled by tha steel corporation, under pain of in- stant = dismissal from accepting any present, whether it be for Christmas for a wedding, birthday. or any other cause, and which present comes from any concern or corporation doing business with the subsidiary compan ies of the corporation or the corpora- tion itself. Four Men Killed. Four men were kilied and a fifth was fatally injured attempt three life convicts to escape from An- gola, La., state convict farm. The dead are: Capt. J. W. Block, foreman Compel order during an by of state convict sawmill; Jim Single- ton, convict; Byrd, convict; Dutch { convict. The ‘wounded man Gibson, a guard, shot thro body. Another Bridge to er oss Niagara. The Trans-Niagara Bridge Company was incorporated at Ottawa with a capital of $1,000,000 to build a bridze across the Niagara river north of {tha upper steel arch bridge at’ Ni- agora Falls. The bridge is to be for only son, ! sustained passed 1 bs Wordly ar draws inward, like | the sponge; heavenly glory gives outward, like the spring i railrcad and general traffic. A primary election bill, a provision inténded to of negroes at pri the l.ouisiana COT nta ning voting | ate. TORN TO PIECES BY MOB: Aged Jew Beheaded and Ghastly Trophy Carried through Street. THE RIOTING HAS BEEN STOPPED The Inhumanity Would Do Credit to Mongol Hordes of Genghis Khan in 13th Century. The anti-Jewish rioting at Bialystok is ended. The troops are in full con- trol, and it is not probable the au- thorities will not permit a renewal of the horrors. This entire region is greatly excited owing to the fear that the Bialystck massacre was only the signal for a general attack on the Jews throughout Poland, but if any such conspiracy existed it is too late to carry out the plans, as the most imperative orders to prevent further outbreaks have been issued to the governors and governor generals from St. Petersburg. When the correspondent arrived at Bialystok Sunday morning the worst was already over, but on all sides there*was revolting evidence of sav- age bestiality on the part of the blood-drunken mobs, which sacked and burned the Jewish houses, shops and stores. For 12 hours the mad orgie of blood and pillage went on unchecked. At first police and troops urged on the mob, but finally when dismayed by the bloody deeds accomplished they reluctantly sought to obey the orders of their superiors to put an end to the work of slaughter. During the rioting the Jews were hunted by ferocious pursuers, who in the majority. of cases were not con- tent with killing more victims, but tore them to pieces like wild animals. The .soldiers watched the butchery, sometimes laughing, but never failing to fire into houses where Jews, some- times to the number of 100, were making a stand against their assail- ants. The tales of atrocities committed are innumerable, and while some of them may be exaggerated, enough has been established to make almost any- ‘hing creditble. The mob seemed to delight in torturing the victims. Strips of flesh were cut from their bodies, children were snatched from their mothers’ arms and taken by the legs and brained on the pavement before the eyes of their parents. An old Jew was beheaded and the ghastly trophy was carried all day at the end of a pike through the streets. In many cases the heads of victims were beat- an to a jeliy with stones. At the Bialystok railroad station, where the mob searched the trains for Jews, a rioter seized a 5-year-old girl by the throat and held her at arms’ length until she strangled to death. Mutilated corpses, swarming with flies, were left lying about the streets in some cases, for days. M. Schepkin, a member of the par- liamentary commission which is in- vestigating the massacre, expresses the belief that the outbreak was not organized in St. Petersburg. While it is impossible to give the exact figures, the visits of sthe cor- respondent to the hospitals and ceme- teries enables him to approximate the killed at 100 Jews and 20 Christians and the wounded at 150 Jews and seven Christians. HEART WASHED OFF. Contractor Undergoes Novel tion—Expected to Live. To have his heart taken out and the particles of sand washed from it as it beat, and still survive, has been he experience of C. A. McCartney, a Pasadena, Cal.,, contractor. While riding a motor cycle he came in col- lision with a hay wagon and a wooden rake prong pierced his breast. The surgeons found that particles of sand from the road had been driven {nto the wound as far as the heart. They took that organ out, washed it thoroughly and then replaced it. The Opera- fndications are McCartney will re- cover. The Boston Wool Market. Any hope of activity in the wool market seems to have little founda- tion, ‘to judge from present indica- .ons. For days the trading has been extremely quiet, owing to an appar- ant inclination on the part of both Jealers and manufacturers to hold back. Lacal buyers feel that the re- port of no stock in the West is large- ly fiction, while the dealers main- tain that the effect of the buyers to cheapen goods by refusing to trade has been carried to the extreme. Territory wools are dull. New med- ium half-bloods are priced at 28c; three-eights, at 30c, and scoured at 68 to 70c. Pulled wools are feature- less and foreign grades are quiet. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Pennsylvania—XX and above, 331, fo 244e: X. 31 to 3%¢: No. 1, 27 to No. 2, 37 to 38¢c; fine unwashed, 25 28c; quarter-blood, unwashed, 32 to 32c; three-eighth blood, 33c: one-half blood, 33c; unwashed de- faine, 28 to 29c¢; fine washed delaine, | 36 10..37C 38c; 35 to If great histories and biographies are to vou ‘‘dry,” your brain is “dry- tng up.” Big Warship Must Wait. On motion of Congressman Burgos, of Ohio, the House by a vote of 12 to 114 agreed to the Senate Smond, ment to the naval appropriation bill providing that before the proposed 20,000-ton battleship is the plans for it shall be submitted to Congress. This means the probable Indefinite postponement of the con- struetion of the intended rival of the great mew - British battleship Dread- begun AID FOR SAN FRANCISCO Secretary Shaw Will Deposit $12,« 000,000 and Fake City Bonds as Security. A tactic agreement was reached by the President, Secretary Shaw and the delegation of representative citi- zens of San Francisco, by which sub- stantial aid will be given San Fran- cisco by the Government. It is proposed that the United States treasury deposit with the San Francisco banks $12,000,000 of Gov- ernment money with bonds of the city as security, the money to remain with the banks until such time as the Government shall call for it. This may not be for a number of years. It is proposed in California to or- ganize a corporation with a capital of several] million of dollars, compos- ed of prominent and influential men in California and other States, and to issue bonds to guarantee the Govern- ment against loss through the banks. The House passed a bill to the State of California five per cent of the net proceeds of the sale of public lands. PRIZES FOR DEAD JEWS Anti-Jewish Movement in Russia is Appalling. Reports from many Russian pro- vinces and towns indicate a ravnid and appalling spread of the anti-Jewish movement, which is now virtually out of bounds, and: resulted in general massacres, in which death in the most horrible ard barbarous forms has ben visited upon Jews of all ages, station and sex. ’ Open rewards of money for the heads and bodies of Jews are offer- ed at Mischien by rich Gentiles. Al- lowances of $5 are being paid for each Jew killed, $2 for each Jew wounded and $1 for each male Jew child slain. These offers arouse the cupidity of the peasants and have led them to form Jew-hunting expeditions. Negro Gave False Alarm. Fully 1,500 spent a day outside of Madison, Wis., because of a super- city as predicted by a negro exhorter, who said that the waters of Lakes Mendato and Monona would rise up and engulf the city because of its in- iquities. The exhorter called him- self Prof. Jones. The prophecy was the talk of the city for several days and scores of timid persons drew their deposits from the banks and left town. Senate Passes Canal Bill. After five days of debate the bill incorporating the Lake Erie and Ohio River Ship Canal Company was pass- ed by the senate by a vote of 41 to 11, one Republican voting against and three Democrats for it. The bill wiil go to conference and probably become a law before adjournment. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. Senator Knox and family sailed for Europe. Cyrus W. Davis, two years Democratic candidate for was nominated by Governor of Maine. The directors of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company declared a semi-annual dividend of 3 per cent, an increase of 14 of 1 per cent over the last previous semi-annual divi- dend. The House committee on appropria- tions authorized favorable report on a bill appropriating money not to ex- ceed $25,000 annually for the travel- ing expenses of the President. » The Rev. Thomas A. Goodwin, In- diana’s most noted Methodist, died after a long illness. He was the first graduate of Ashury, now Depauw uni- versity. The Bank of Paris and the Nether- lands, which has been managing the issue of the Pennsylvania railroad loan in the French market, reported that the entire $50,000,000 had been taken up in three days. Of the 1% appropriation bills are required to run the Government, but four have become laws. These are the urgent deficiency, the pen- sion, the diplomatic and consular and the army bill. The President sent to the Senate the nominations of the following postmasters: Pennsylvania—William H. Underwood, Washington, Ohio— ago Governor acclamation for Frank H. Gamble, Van Wert; John Ramsey McElroy, New Comerstown. BOLOGNA KILLS THREE Father and Two Children Dead, An- other Daughter lil. J. B. Baremore, a farmer residing near Fort Smith, Ark., and his two children, Emma, aged five years, and James, aged 18 months, died in a hospital at Fort Smith of ptomaine poiseninz. They had eaten bologna sausage. A daughter, aged seven vears, is at the point of death. The mother ate none of the sausage and is not affected. The sausage was purchased from a street lunch stand. Engineer -and. Brakeman Killed. In a rear-end collision between traing on the Atlantic Coast at Aholskie, N. C., Engineer O. O. King, of Ports- mouth, Va., and Brakeman Walter Carter, of Windsor, N. C., were killed. Equitable Mutualized. The directors of the Equitable Life Assurance Society voted unanimously to adopt the amended charter which provides for the mutualization. The new charter provides among other things that the policyholders shall elect 28 directors out of 52. Cassie's Wardrobe Brings $4,025. All the personal effects of Mrs. Cassie LI. Chadwick, including a large guantity of wearing apparel, were sold at public auction at Cleveland in one haught. lot for $4,025. granting stitious fear of the destruction of the . - which “- v . o . al & - . - . - ww A - - s _ Ee » . s . vw a d = lea 000; t 114 la the L year i includ: don b; as gre extrav With 1 reach t blood « 10 cure Hall’s actsdir Hall's | Mt was cians i ular p best to blood | cous su the tw wonde; jor test FJ Sold Take found Now made would investi Pat: the oc All w voyage * came paratic made, 3 which © were | finally long a “his -h SOITOW “We were thougt own Ag A tr tice of many food 1! it to a “11 palate apd ca soften: or the render fever | find C very n recipe follow. Nuts i strain of an « or flav of nou stoma distres “My uses G many “Per Nuts © ideal sick.” Battle In a vous days’ wonde buildi: troubl proves Lool book,