BURGLARS HOLD UP TOWN MOB KILLS MANY NEGROES Bee ; | Reign of Terror at Atlanta, Which Blacks Are Slain. FOUGHT LIKE TIGERS Bold Cracksmen Rob Bank While Citizens Look On. Eight masked and heavily armed burglars held the people of White Cloud, a village 45 miles north’ of Grand Rapids, Mich., at bay while | they rifled the Newaygo County Bank Eight in | | | —— | and attempted also to rob the bank of FE % Blacks Were Dragged Forth From R. Gannon & Son. gi y { The men rode into the town be- Wherever Found and Kilied | tween 12 and 1 o'clock in the morn- Like Cattle. | ing, surrounded the buildings contain- | ae | ing the two banks and posted guards A dispatch from Atlanta, Ga., dated | outside while other members of the Sunday night says: Twenty-four hours | S488 WO! ked inside. have passed since a race war of no I'he interior of the Newaygo Coun- mean proportions began in Atlanta. | Bank was completely wrecked by | In that period at least 10 lives have been sacrificed, and the number of injured will be at least 40, several of whom cannot recover. At 10 o'clock to-night the city controlled by the police aided by near- | ly a thousand of the State militia. Every part of town is patrolled by the | soldiers and the authorities seem to have the situation well in hand. This condition came as the result of numerous and repeated attacks or at- tempted attacks, upon white women | by negroes. The list of an even doz- | en of such attacks within the limits" of Fulton county, within the last nine | weeks, when four attempts such crimes were reported. Flaring | headlines in the special editions of afternoon papers wrought the popu- lace to a high pitch of excitement. The usual Saturday night crowds were largely increased by men and | boys who thronged the downtown streets. There was no leader and no overt act until late in the evening. | two explosions. tween $2,000 and $4,000 cash. mite was then used to wreck the Gan- | non bank, js | Were at work the townspeople gath- ered { them present that the guards evident- ly decided it was not prudent to wait longer. working in the bank before they could get | citizens on horseback. at | Proceedings to Bring Smith to Trial | torney of Salt Lake county, to appear in the criminal division of the State district court before Judge Armstrong and show why not direct the issuance of warrants for president of the Mormon church, on a The burglars got be- Dyna- but while the cracksmen until there ‘were so many of They called out the men the safe open and, covering the with guns, rode out of town AGAINST MORMON PRESIDENT for Polygamy. S. Christiansen, county at- was cited Harley he should the arrest of Joseph F. Smith, About 10 o clock a negro shoved a | charge of sustaining unlawful rela- white woman from the sidewalk On | jons with one of his five wives Whitehall street, in . the center of The citation was issued: on the town \linost simultaneously a ne-| ,oiition You Mau | isa 3 sl - | hetitior Jes. Mosty rons gress made an insulting remark to a | DoUion Of anes a white man on an adjoining street, and in ' id eer | a ; . E hd mony against’ Senator Smoot in the | he administered what he considere:d { due punishment. mob began its work of destruction. Five thousand men and boys throng- From this start the | proceedings at complaint making a statutory charge against President Smith. Washington. On September 11 Owen swore to a The com- { ! | ed the downtown streefs looking for plaint was based upon the fact that | Do News that a riot had|,, nay 21 last, President Smith’s | started brought thousands more from | forty-third child was born to Mary | their ho mes in the suburbs and resi- T ‘Schwartz Smith the Morton | ence riets on ss a? Hira) Gone dis stricts, until fully ten thous- president's fifth wife, at her home in | and men thronged the downtown sec- Salt Lake city \s witnesses to the | tion. They made attacks on the in- | he complaint ‘cited the Tour | ol ni o « 0 IQ dae aT 4 Ls 2 on & i Wm Se a Tach car was ian. wives of President Smith and | The (rolleys were pulled from the | Several apostles: and leaders of the wires and in the semi-darkness of the unlighted car negroes were beaten, cut and stamped upon in an unreason- ing, mad frenzy. resistance, or practically sure death. filled with negroes, an ouiside run. The mob dashed for the car. sistance was made by the negroes, who had not been apprised of trouble. One car, half Three negroes lay dead on the floor | | bordering of the car when it was permitted to | move on, and two more were seriously | beaten and unconscious. ‘When the crowd seemed to be get- | ting beyond control at about 10 o’clock | Mayor Woodward mounted a car; If a negro ventured | remonstrated, it meant ! approached from Re- | | ing that private reports received by Mormon church, including Senator Smoot and Governor Cutler. REBELS NOT FRIGHTENED Secretary Taft Sends Gloomy Mess- age to President. Secretary Taft has sent a gloomy message to President Roosevelt, say- {him from the interior are that a state | upon anarchy prevails throughout almost the entire island, exception being made of the sections on the coast. The arrival at Havana of three of the largest United States battleships, | the Louisiana and the Virginia, and platform on Peachtree and Marietta | two cruisers, the Cleveland and the streets, and urged the crowd to dis- | Tacoma, in addition to those already perse, of the white women would be ade- quately and promptly punished by due | process of law. Mayor Woodward was given a re- | spectful hearing, but when he finish- ed the werk sumed. In the fighting, negresses were the most warlike, urging resistance to the | of destruction was re- | declaring that the assailants | | there, has had little effect on the in- | surgents in the field, and when the leaders of the revolution were ap- | prised of the big squadron now in Cuban waters they greeted the in- formation with Spanish expressions to the effect that ‘‘they cannot come | to the bush.” | | It has is known that Secretary Taft decided absolutely not to treat mob and themselves fighting like | with armed rebel forces. This taken Amazous. jo mean that American intervention EEA TE ard American occupation must in- CAP. HATFIELD SHOT ovitably follow. Terror of West Virginia Wounded by | EXAMINE TAXATION LAWS Younger Brother. TF “Cap.” Hatficld, the state's most Governor Harris Appoints Men to noted outlaw, who for years has! Recommend Amendments. spread terror along the West Virginia = Governor Harris, acting in com- border, especially among the McCoy family, is reported dying at Wharn- cliff. Mingo County, from two bullet wounds said to have been inflicted by pliance with numerous requests from business and industrial organizations, appointed the following commission to examine the present taxation laws Dr. Klias R. Hatfield, his younger Of Ohio and report to him with recom- brother. | mendations as to needed amendments “Cap.” as usual, carried a Winches- {in time for transmission to the gen- ter rifle while the younger Hatfield | eral assembly at the opening of the had a pistol. The men began shooting when within 40 yards of each other. The vounger proved the better marks- man and put two bullets directly through the chest of his o utlarwbdca er. “Cap.” it is said, than a dozen men. SERIOUS DISORDERS has killed more ! Persian Society Utterly Demoralized by Continued Agitation. According to information received at St. Petersburg, disorders with the constitutional government. As vet there has been no bloodshed, but the situation is regarded as most serious. The constitutionalists are intoxicat- ed by the success of the political strike and are disposed to resort te such strikes on the slightest pre- text. Persian society ist utterly de maoralized. Russia to exert a restraining influence to prevent abuses of the ° ‘best’’ right of sanctuary within their grourds are urged. Nobles Expelied. At an extraordinary meeting at have | J | . o Ad i 2 broken out at Teheran in connection j burlap bag, was found in a hole 24 next session in January, 1908: Attorney General Wade H. Ellis, Ex-State Senator Alfred C. Cassatt, of Cincinnati; George E. Martin, of Lancaster; Thomas H. Hoggsett, of Cleveland, and Allen Pomerene, of Canton. MUTILATED CORPS FOUND New York Police Unearth Evidence of Horrible Crime. The dismembered body of a man, apparently an Italian, wrapped in the | feet deep forming a part of an exca- ‘vation at 604 West Thirty-sixth street, | brewery is York, where an addition to a to stand. The discovery was made by the day watchman for the building contractor and later a systematic search by the police re- New | suited in finding the parts of a man’s legs from the knees down, and the {arms and hands. Joint measures by Great Britain and ! legation | These were wrapped together in a newspaper of the date of September 10, and bound about the bundle was a strip of a woman’s skirt. All was | neatly and securely tied with a string Kursk, Russia, of the marshals of the nobility, it was decided by a vote of 98 to 2 to expel from the ranks of the nobility three members of the late parliament, including Prince Peter Dolgorcukoff, lower house who manifesto. signed the Viborg Year in Jail for Stealing Pies. For the theft of two cherry pies from the pantry of John Fallon, Frank Price was sentenced at Sidney, to one year in the penitentiary. William Somers, who remained outside, con- ! Poland. vice president of the! fessed to eating half a pie, and got | six months. { of the Mullins-Fleming factions John Torrey Morse, the oldest grad- | uate of Harvard university survivor of the class of 1832, his honie in Boston. He was 93 ofl age. and sole ; died at | years | | Fortv *shots were fired. suggesting deliberate preparation. Russian General Assassinated. General Nicolaieff of the artillery was assassinated at Warsaw, Russian General Nicolaieff was walking on Wiekla street in the morning when he was surrounded by five revolutionists and shot dead. The murederers escaped. Eight-Hour Law Extended. President Roosevelt extended the eight-hour law to apply to all public work under the supervision of any de- partment of the government. This order affects more particularly work on river aad harbor improvements. In an engagement between members in Pike county, Kentucky, James Ander- son, a member of the Mullin’s faction was killed, and Hiram Mullins, lead- er of the faction, mortally wounded. DYNAMITE SHATTERS TOW Twelve Killed and Many Injured by Explosion. REPORT HEARD FOR 20 MILES Property Loss Will Reach Million, While Many Who Escaped ‘Death Are Terribly Maimed. Twelve deaths, the injuring of scores of other persons and $500,000 damage to property were caused at Jellico, Tenn., when a car load of dynamite standing on a track near the Southern railway depot exploded with a report that was heard for 20 miles. Buildings were shattered in the business section of the town and nearly every piece of glass within a radius of one mile of the scene was broken. The explosion occurred at 8 o'clock in the morning. The freight car, one belonging to the Pennsylvania rail- road lines, contained 450 boxes, or 20,000 pounds of high explosives, consigned to the Rand Powder Com- pany at Clearfield, Tenn. Two causes are assigned for the explosion. One is that three parties were shooting at a mark on the car and that a bullet entered the car and caused the explosion. The other is that while the car was standing on a side track a carload of pig iron was switched against it, and that the im- pact caused the explosion. The dead are: George Atkins, John Cook, Walter Rodgers, John Gordon, James Sharp, James Lovette, Ida Kayne, James Reynolds, John Hoch- ma and Joseph Sellers. One body remains unidentified, { making ‘the total dead 12. There is a bare possibly that other | bodies may be recovered from ruins of buildings, probable. B. 0. Baird, the Mayor of the city, is among the injured. LIBERTY FOR RELIGIOUS SECTS Another Promise That Russia will Re- move Restrictions. A member of the Russian cabinet | is authority for the statement that | the freedom, removing restriction and disability under which the different faiths in Russia have labored, will be promulgated. This is the second point in the Stolypin pro- gram. The. first, including measures for the distribution of land, already has been published. Under the new laws, which will be published while no parliament is sit- ting, the varicus sects, unless they indulge in criminal or immoral prac- tices, may receive upon application the sanction of the government. This will confer upon their clergy practi- cally the same status as is now en- joyed by orthodox priests. They will have equal rights with the orthodox church in the matter of erecting school and church buildings and the receiving of proselytes. The cabinet will next take up the project of law enlarging the rights of Jews, which has just been elabor- ated by a commission. READY FOR A SUDDEN CALL Head of Army Desires t to Be Prepared in Case of Intervention Being Ordered. Army orders cabled to Germany di- rect Brigadier General Thomas H. Barry, assistant chief of staff, and Brigadier General W. H. Duvall, com- mander of the Department of the Gulf, to return to the United States at once. an army to Cuba they the expedition force. Orders directing the go to Havana were sent by wireless | to the vessels. The Virginia and Loouisana were off Charleston and the | New Jersey was off the coast of the State the name of which she bears. It was no trouble to pick them up by | wireless. BY BOILER EXPLOSION Parts of Engine Scattered Half a Mile as Boiler Blows Up. Through the explosion of the boiler of a Pittsburgh, Virginia & Charleston freight engine two men were killed, four others severely engine and caboose reduced to scrap iron: The explosion Houston run, four miles below Mon- | ongaheia City. The. dead: Amos Wilhelm, neer; killed instantly; Lawrence Pat- terson, fireman; died in tbe Memorial | hospital two hours later. KILLED ductor; Ed. Morris, flagman: G. W. Howermer, brakeman, and Alfred De- vore, brakeman. Skeletons Found in Trunk. taining one complete skeleton and a portion of another in the Mahoning river at Warren, O., has given the police a mystery to solve. The discovery was made by two men whose intention was first at- tracted to the trunk by seeing a hone protruding from a small crack. Break- ing open the lid they were horrified to find one whole skeleton and a portion of the vertebae of another. Gets Fifty Years and a Whipping. Charles Conley, the negro who at- tacked and seriously injured Mrs. Beartrice Frankish and her daughter, Miss Gussie Leitch, on a public road, in Delaware, 10 days ago, was senten- ced to 50 vears’ imprisonment and to receive 30 lashes at the whipping pest. The ordnance bureau of the Navy Department awarded to the Crucible Steel Company of Pittsburz the con- tract for %2 sets of three-inch gun forgings. . but this is hardly | { been the heaviest in the ls | within a few days law igi fanied her : ; 5 | w days laws of religious | wind and sea and avoid being driven | practically every | ashore. Latest advices from Hongkong state | | | damage. ONE AMERICAN SHIP WRECKED Generally Believed That Bishop Hoar Is One of Victims—Dead Bodies Strew Coast. It is now estimated, conservative- ly, that the property loss caused by | the typhoon at Hong Kong, will ap- | proximate $20,000,000. Thirty steam-! ships are known to have been wreck- ed and 30 more were seriously dam- | aged. Among the latter are the | American vessel Hitchcock and two Philippine steamers. It was reported, United States at first that the gunboat Callao had been damaged, but this proves to be un- true. She is unhurt and has done gallant work in the rescue of the un- fortunate natives. The loss of life among the Euro- peans was insignificant. Not more than six are belicved to have been killed. The native fishermen suffered worst. The wrecks of their little craft are everywhere along the coast, which is strewn with huadreds of dead bodies. It seems to be established that Dr. Hoar, the bishop of Victoria, is dead. The searching expedition that was sent out has returned and report that no trace of ‘the bishop could be found. Three steamers, with over 400 pas- sengers, are reported lost, and out of all the passengers and crew but eight are known to have escaped. Business in the city is at a stand- still and the confusion is such that it has been impossible to obtain an ac- curate idea of the extent of the dam- age. It is known, however, that the hospitals are overcrowded and temp- orary morgues have been establish- ed to afford shelter for the bodies of the dead. Several churches ings in the residence been wrecked. The loss of and many dwell- section have life has other native typhoon also ers and the junks and craft in the path of the WHEAT CROP BEATS RECORD . Harvest of 1906 One of the Greatest Ever Produced. The London Economist, in a long review of the wheat harvest this year, asserts that ‘“‘the world’s cereal har- vest of 1906, cannot fail to prove one of the greatest ever produced.” It remarks that ‘‘oats alone, among the TRAINS 60 THROUGH BRIDGE Cereal Many Killed, Injured and Missing in Rock Island Wreck. TRAIN DROPS INTO RIVER native quart- | | Many Thrilling Scenes Attend Res- cue—Some Float Fourteen Miles Down the Stream. Eight persons are dead, 20 more or less injured and as many more miss- ing as the result of the wrecking of a Rock Island passenger ‘train three miles from Dover, Okla. The engine, tender, baggage and mail cars, smoking car and day coach of passenger train No. 12, north- bound, left the high bridge that spans the Cimarron river and plunged into the stream .which is flanked bY Droachorges quicksunds. The loco- motive disappeared almost immedi- ately. The mail and baggage clerks vscaped from their cars and swam to the shore. ‘ The accident was due to driftwood, which piled against the bridge and swerved: it out of line. The train was an hour late and was running at high speed. The engineer did not see the condition of the bridge until he was within a few yards of it. He shouted to his fire- man and jumped. He landed on the verge of ‘the river and escaped un- hurt. ‘dhe fireman sustained severe injuries. When the engine struck the bridge the structure collapsed, precipitating the engine, smoking car and day coach info the water. Two Pullmans remained on the track. The current] whiried the day coach down stream and lpdged it against a sand bank. | | 7 occupants were helped out I'he through the doors and windows. The | smoking car floated to a sandbar and four men were seen to clamber | suffered most heavily. Pearl river and the surrounding waters were filled with native craft | | and it is believed very few of these | escaped. The Empress of Japan, was among the few ships to escape | This was due to her partly sheltered position, as well as to the engines which en-| her resist the fury of io strength of the that 5,060 lives were lost during the typhoon and that the damage to prop- erty, public and private, will amount to millions of dollars. were sunk, 24 were stranded, seven craft in port were sunk. The ship- ping trade has been paralyzed through lack of lighters. peans are missing. YANKEE SWINDLES BRITON Obtains Loan on Strength of Pretend- ed Donation from Alleged Uncle. gan, and representing himself to be a member of the Harvard rowing club | and a nephew of J. Pierpont Morgan, has been remanded for trial at the | Greenwich Police court, London, Eng on the charge of obtaining ey] ly a small amount of money from Dr. Dickey, resident surgeon of the Miller hospital. Morgan signed orders on an ex- press company directing the payment | of $5,000 to the hospital and promis- ing an annual payment of $125, to the! institution, saying these were dona- tiong from his uncle, J. Pierpont Mor- gan, himself. Then Morgan told Dickey he had lost his purse and Qb- tained a loan. He is probably the same young American who victimized | several West End tradesmen out of | If it becomes necessary to send | month battleships | Virginia, New Jersey and Louisana to | injured and the | occurred near | engi- | The injured are T. J. Hagan, con- | The finding of a small trunk con- | several hundred pounds sterling last by posing as a member of will be con- | the Harvard crew. spicuous figures in the preparation of | Connecticut Republican Ticket. The Republican convention in New | Haven, adopted a platform endorsing | Roosevelt and dealing with State issues. Following is the State ticket: | For Governor, Rollin S. Woodruff; | Lieutenant Governor, Everett J. Lake; | Treasurer, Freeman I. Patton; Secre- | tary of State, Theodore Bodeinwein. TWO WEEKS OF GRACE | Octcber 1 Fixed as Last Day to Set- i tle Cuban Trouble. | October 1 is the date set the administration by which Secretary Taft and acting Secretary Bacon are to bring about peace in Cuba. If their efforts are fruitless in the next two weeks the United States Govern- ment will intervene forcibly in the af- | fairs of the island. | It is learned on igh authority that it this is the plan of the administration. hy Secretaries Taft and Bacon arrived in Havana, September 18 on board the cruiser Des Moines from Tampa. | They were pet by Mr. Sleeper, the charge d’affairs, and are already go- ing over the latest developments of the situation. ’ Judges Appointed. President Roosevelt announced the appointment of District Judge Joseph | Buffington to be the United States | circuit judge, to succeed the late Marcus W. Acheson, of Pittsburg. Judge Nathaniel Ewing of Uniontown was appointed to succeed Judge Buffington on the district bench. Both appointments were recommend- ed to President Roosevelt by Sena- tor Knox. Churchill Defeated. After one of the most wonderful fights in the history of New Hamp- shire politics, Winston Churchill was defeated for the Republican guberna- torial nomination by Charles M. Floyd, of Manchester, by a narrow margin. Dowie to Quit Zion City. John Alcxander Dowie announced a farewell service at Shiloh House for next Sunday. Immediately after this service Dowie will leave for Mexico, and it is not expected that he will ever see Zion City again. which was | {in the harbor when the storm broke, | Twelve ships | damaged and one-half of the native Only a few Euro-| A man calling himself Gerald Mor- { through the windows and pull them- | | selves to the top of the car, calling { loudly for help. Those on shore were | unable to reach them on account of {the high water, and while they were begging for assistance a mass “of | driftwocod swept them away. Three other men crawled thtough the rear | door of the smoking car. rescued. { The most authentic accounts place | the number of passengers in the smok- at between 25 and 30. With have not been They were | ing car | few exceptions they accounted for. | One man was fished out of the river at Cashion, 20 miles from the disast- er. He was almost dead. Others | have been reported floating down the | river. The injured were hurried to King: | fisher, where the residents have | turned their homes into temporary hospitals. | It may be impossible to ascertain | the exact number of dead for several i days. Many of those reported miss- ing may turn up safe at some point down the Cimarron. TRAIN JUMPS BRIDGE | Accident Near Loidon Fatal to Ten, With Injury to Sixteen. ! The crowded train on the Grand | Northern leaving London was wrecked outside of. Grantham at midnight. The Bi shdita have stopped at Grant- ham, bus: failed to do so. Shortly after passing the station it left the | rails and jumped a bridge. The en- gine and several cars were dashed | over the embankment, the engine turn- | turtle. Several coaches immediately | took fire. | Ten dead and 16 injured have been | taken from the debris. The fire has | | | | been extinguished. At the spot where the express was | derailed there is a curve and it is i supposed the brakes failed to act. The | train appears to have gone upon a | | siding, smashing the parapet of the | bridge. : | Pays to Reduce Fare. LY An estimated yearly loss of nearly | $750,000 to the New York, New Hav-| en & Hartford railroad as a result of | reducing its passenger rate to two | cents already has been turned into an actual gain in gross receipts as compared with other years, through an increased volume of business. Big Four Will Lower Rates. It is unofficially announced that the Big Four will install its new inter- | state rates, based on 2 cents in Ohio | and 234 cents in other states traversed | by its lines on October 1, thus taking the. lead with the Erie in this regard. The Baltimore & Ohio has announced | that it will meet the Pennsylvania | railroad’s reduction to 214 cents for | local one-way fares on November 1° east of Pittsburg, but has made no | announcement for the lines west of | Pittsburg. The Pennsylvania lines! west are not yet ready to announce | their intention, but it is expected that ! this announcement will be that the | rate for every: mile of road west of! Pittsburg will be 2 cents. | Alleged Slave-Holders Freed. Rex Smith and James E. Smith, two | of the brothers who have been on trial at Cape Girardeau, Mo., on a | charge of peonage, were acquitted by ! Judge Pollock of any complicity in ; the conspiracy to deprive about 40! negroes of their rights. The Turkish commander-in-chief at Saloniki, is reliably informed that Bulgaria is massing a large force in the direction of Palanka. ZION TURNS FROM DOWIE Voliva Elected Spiritual Leader Overwhelming Majority. Ashen pale and with death hovel ing over him John Alexander Dowie was badly beaten in the election ordered by the Federal Court to determine the | spiritual head of Zion. Wilber Glen | Voliva won easily in a tidal vote ap- proximating 2,500. Propped up by pillows on a couch at an open win- dow in Shiloh House Dowie occasion- ally pleaded with or cursed his once faithful followers. by | pear ber ! linois, ! Philippine Islands, cereals in England, seem likely to turn out below the average in product- iveness.’ In most of the countries of Conti- nental Europe the harvest is a good one. The wheat crop is above the average in the great producing pro- vinces in the north of France, but it has suffered from drought in the south and west. It is thought that France will need to import very lit- tle, if any, wheat. Spain has reaped a good harvest generally, while Ger- many has good crops of barley and oats, as well ‘as of wheat and rye. According to the latest official esti- mate, Austria-Hungary will. produce a much larger wheat crop this year than last. From Russia reports vary greatly. The winter wheat crop has -been officially reported to be a good one, while the more important spring wheat crop is a poor one in all but a few provinces. Roumania is now ex- pected lo produce a record wheat crop, and Servia and Bulgaria have good crops of wheat. The Canadian wheat harvest on the whole will not prove a very abund- ant one. In Austrailia the crops, sown under favorable conditions gen- erally, have yet to undergo the haz- ards of the spring and summer seas- ons. India’s wheat crop harvested last spring was the greatest but one ever known. TUBE TRUST IS SUSPECTED Pneumatic Mail Service Will Necessar- ily be Delayed. Postoffice Department officials ap- to be up against a trust in the matter of pneumatic tube service in | the larger cities of the country. Bids were asked for on July 27 for con- tinuing the service in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Brooklyn and Boston. Bids for establishing the ser- vice in Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Balti- more, San Francisco and Kansas City and extending it in St. louis were asked for. None was received, how- ever. . The bids for the maintenance of the service in the cities that already have it were so high that, if they are accepted, the service cannot be established in any of the others. For instance, the contractors who own the tubes in New York~asked $467,000, which is more than one-third of the amount appropriated for the whole country, which was $1,250,000. The bids for the maintenance of service now in existence are all om i the basis of $17,000 per mile. The present contracts run from $13,500 mile to $15,000. When these contracts were made ! there was no competition and a com~ pany believed to be independent of the combination, now. suspected, got thie contract. But the Philadelphia company turned up with a bid identi- cal with that of its supposed competi. | tors. Ca CURRENT NEWS ITEMS Congressman Robert R. Hitt, of Il- died at his summer home at Narragansett Pier, R. I. Jockey Freishon, a 16-year-old boy, was killed before the eyes of 15,000 ie spectators in the grand stand at Gravesend. The Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany has awarded contracts for the construction of 12,400 freight cars at an estimated cost of $15,000,000. Several men have been killed in a mutiny on board the Turkish troop- ship Assari-Tewfik, at Port Said. Quiet has been restored. Boston was selected as the ‘meet- ing place next year of the convention of the Supreme Council of the Scot- | tish Rite Masons of the Northern jur- isdiction. Warren Riggs, 26 Littletown, W. Va., was accidentally drowned through a skiff capsizing while crossing the Allegheny river at Henrys Bend. Twelve ‘Japanese, arrested for poach- ing on St. Paul island, off the Pribyloff group, and convicted at Valdez, have been’sentenced each to three months in the jail at that place. Two men were shot dead and an- other man was severely wounded in a saloon ip Hammond, Ind., as a re- | sult of an argument over the merits of Battling Nelson; and Joe Gans, prize fighters. The bureau of yards and docks | awarded the contract to the Westing- house company of Pittsburgh for sup- plying the electrical equipment for the Norfolk navy_-yard, at $91,995. Contracts for all the structural steel required for the new Palace Hotel in San Francisco, have been awarded with the assurance that the materials will be delivered within four months after the specifications have been placed in the hands of the Eastern years old of { manufacturers. Maj.-Gen. John F. Qesteon, com- mandin~ tha department of Luzon, in his annual re- 41 stations have been port <«svs { abandoned during the year and there are 28 stations American troops. The recently elected President of i the republic of Chile. Don ' Pedro Monti, was inaugurated into office, with the usual ceremonies. Members of the diplomatic corps and prominent representatives of the army, the navy and the bench were present. 0. B. Stollard, cashier of' the Peo- ples State bank of Sedan, Kas., disap- peared, leaving a note saying he was a defaulter and had fled. The safe is time-locked and the amount of money missing is not known. by 7,560 native garrisoned troops and 2,488 200 Condemned to Die. ' Arraigned for trial before a military court composed of officers who recent- ly organized the terrible massacre at Siedle, 200 persons arrested while the outbreak there was in progress were condemned to death for alleged acts of violence committed during the massacre. . & 9 ade for; stu heig . opel force stat feet 000 out the the ture chin save Cha afte: acco foun that nish “1 not | lear High don pros “A grew not for ousn cines ued beca those who Grap “1 perie that ordin bette begai restft great ousne brigh studi with Nuts since am tl the turne Co., 1 i tle b in pk