The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, November 01, 1906, Image 6

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SURE SEEKERS DOWN
Electric Train Plunges into Arm
of Sea frcm Draw.
ONLY A FEW ESCAPED
Most of the Victims Were Bound for
Seashore for a Pleasant
Afteivioon.
More than persons—the num-
ber may rcach 75—the majority of
them Philadelphians out for a Sunday
holiday, lost their lives at Atlantic
City, when a three-car train on the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company's new
third-rail electric line from Camden |
to the sea was whirled off the draw-|
bridge over the Thoroughfare and
sunk in 20 feet of water.
I'he passengers in the two front
coaches, with one or two exceptions,
were drowned Up to midnight 44
bodies have been recovered, and it
is believed that at least 30 more bod-
ies are in the submerged coaches.
The disaster, the worst that has]
happened the terrible Meadow
wreck of , 1896, near the same
spot, oer at half past 2 o'clock
Sunday afternoon. The' train, made]
up of three Jeavy vestibule electric
coaches, whic left Camden at 1
o'clock in afternoon, carried at |
feast 80 passengers, as that number of
tickets are held by the conductor.
That official is uncertain, however,
just how many passengers were on |
the train, and until all the bodies
have been taken out of the submerged |
coaches, when the tide goes out,
it will not be possible to give the
fieurcs of the dead.
The Thoroughfare is a
tidewater which separates
City from {he mainland and the rail-
roads cross it on drawbridges. The
Iraw of the eleciric road had been
opened about haif an hour
express arrived
ed yacht called the Sinbad to pass. The
neck of
Sinbad had been abandoned at sea by |
ker crew,
wick island shoals.
cued ler and was
to Atlantic City.
When the bridge closed behind the
Sinbad the rails did not lock proper-
ly, it is supposed. The flanges of the |
wheels on the first car of the express |
struck the outside of the rails and in
a moment the whole
Her owner
bringing her
res-
baci
ff waler.
The third
ment, broke
brief. time. hung suspended over the
water. Brief as was this period,
however, it gave more than a score of
passengers an opportunity to escape
by the rear door.
off and followed the other
the water. It is believed
in the third coach escaped alive, al-
though all were injured.
The accident was witnessed by
many persons on shore and assistance
was promptly sent from Atlantic City.
Little could be done, however,
coach struck an abut-
in the submerged
water at the point where the train
plunged in was not deep enough to
cover the coaches at first, but as they
quickly settled in the mud and as the |
tide rose they were
sight except for
coaches. The
the trolley
the dead bodies in the coaches, but
as darkness set in and as the tide
ran more swiftly they were unable for
a long time to reach them.
Late in the evening a
crew arrived
wrecking
and with their aid and’
the use of a derrick the work of re-
moving the bodies began.
AGREE TO SEPARATE
Report Regarding Duke of Maribor-
ough and His American Wife.
It is reported that the Duke
Duchess of Marlborough have agreed
upon a separation, terms for it being
already arranged. The duke, it is
said, renouces all right to any por-
tion of the money settled on his wife |
at the time of their marriage,
come of which amounts
a year.
land House. .Neglect of his wife is
declared to be the cause of the duke's
trouble.
the in-
ICE TRUST LOSES
Circuit Court Upholds
: Toledo City Cases.
Circuit court at Toledo, O.,
the decision of Judge
common pleas court, in sentencing
Reuben Lemor, Rollin Beard and:
Joseph Miller, convicted of conspiracy
in restraint of trade in the sale of |
ice.
The sentences given the men were
$2,500. fine each and six months in
the workhouse, and if the supreme!
court affirms the lower courts the ice |
men must serve their sentences. The
circuit court also held the Valentine |
anti-trust law constitutional.
Kinkade, of
Will Prosecute State Board.
State Treasurer Berry, of Pennsyl- |
vania, who was elected last year by!
the reformers, said that he would
recommend to Attorney General
Carson that criminal proceedings be
instituted against members of the
Board of Public Grounds and Build-
ings who contracted for the furnishing
and equipping of the new State
Capitol at Harrisburg, which cost the
State $13,000,000.
Fatal Gas Explosion.
Two persons were killed,
missing, four were seriously injured
and 20 more hurt in an explosion of
natural gas that demolished five two-
story brick business buildings at
Coffeeville, Kan. The dead are:
Jesse Roos, a negro, Mrs. J. E. Mec-
Daniel.
Overcome by his exertions during
an ‘amateur football game, Leonard
Hammerle, aged 15, of Pittsburg, ter-
rified his young companions by sud-
Jdenly dropping dead.
true
Atlantic |
before the |
to permit an il-omen- |
and was washed up on Fen- |
train had been |
whirled over and dropped into 20 feet |
its couplings and for a |
Then the car slid
two into,
everyone | °
toward |
saving the lives of these imprisoned !
soon hidden from
poles. !
Divers were sent down to try to reach!
and |
to $175,000:
The duchess will get Sunder- |
Decree in|
uphelg |
- | mining
one is |
REMARKABLE WIRELESS FEAT
Station Keeps in Touch With Vessel
its Entire Voyage.
achievement in wire
i! ess telegraphy is reported to the
| Navy Department from Pensacola
| station. That plant has been able
[ to keep in constant communication
| with the United Fruit Company’s
steamer Preston from the time that
| vessel left New York until it arriv-
ed at Honduras
The station also received messages
| from the Preston while that ship was
| entering New York harbor, where she
was undoubtedly bathed in electric
waves from other stations and ships.
A curious fact is that the Pensa-
cola station has not been able to re-
this performance with another
steamer than the Preston, notwith-
standing the fact that the plants are
alike on all the United liners.
During
| A remarkable
peat
BERING SEA TUNNEL
| Company Chartered to Connect Old
and New World by Rail.
The Trans-Alaska-Siberian Railway
Company was chartered at the office
of the Secretary of State at Trenton,
{N. J. If is the purpose of (this
concern, which is issuing an author-
ized capital stock of $6,000,000 to
connect the Western Hemisphere with
| the continent by all-rail route.
This will be done by tunneling un-
| der Bering strait. It also proposes
[to install a telegraph and telephone
system, connecting these widely di-
| ver sified sections of the giobe by al-
| most instantaneous methods of com-
| munication.
QUITTING BUSINESS
| sale of Bank Follows Disposal of
Other Mormon Enterprises.
Reports that the Mormon church,
as an organization, is to retire from
| commercial busin were further
{ verified, when it was officially an-|
{ nouced that the Utah National bank
had been scld to W. 8S. McCormick.
The bank’s stock was largely owned
{ by the church.
In the last four months, the Mor-
mon church has disposed of its big
Light
controls the
>s in Salt Lake
and ‘Salt Lake
great pavilion at
retail department
| holdings in the Utah
way company, which
i principal public utiliti
City; its Angel
railroad, with its
Saltair, and its big
store at Ogden. °
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.
l.os
=
i
vi
i George J.
work is to be
| ture on the
| Wabash
| between
The strike of
Portland,
trikers
I providea
drawn
tracking of the
entire distance
and Chicago.
double
system the
Pittsburg
grain handlers at
Ore., has been settled. The
agreed to return to work,
that the police
from the piers.
Jamestown, in Monit-
miles from
The bank of
eau county, 35
City, Mo., was entered by
who blew cpen the safe
$2,700 and escaped.
The 1lllinois mse
cost $200,000 and
! tribute of Illinois to it
fought in the siege
dedicated at
Military Park.
Jacob M. Stoudt, supervisor of inter-
lockers of tira Big Four railway, was
instantly killed and M. F.
superintendent of bridges, was badly
hurt just north of Milford, O., on
i the Delaware div
While the
flotilla was in Newport
| cently its record for
practice is reported to have excelled
cany previous
torpedo boat flotilla of the navy.
Deputy Sheriff John Worthington,
shot and killed James Aikin at Five
Forks, near Belair, Md., while trying
to serve a warrant upon Aiken for
wife-beating. Aiken threatened the
officer with an ax and then procured
a shotgun.
In view of the
from Morceco the
ernment has decided
cruisers ready for
1 West coast for . the
Spanish subjects.
robbers,
and secured
:morial temple that!
was erected as the
soldiers who
of Vieksburg was
Vicksburg National
boat
re-
torpedo
waters
second
alarming reports
Spanish Gov-
to hold several
dispatch to the
protection of
Major Dreyfus, who was detailed |
{for duty with one of the artillery |
regiments at. Vincennes, has been
i given an independent artillery com-
{ mand at St. Denis, France.
i The Pulajanes in Samar attacked
boats carrying supplies on the]
| Surigao river, killed three scouts and |
| wounded one. Five Pulajanes were |
killed. The supplies, were saved.
| Troops are now pursuing the Puljanes.
Louis G. Hampton, assistant secre- |
| tary of the United States Trust Co.,
of New York, shot and killed Vic-
| toria I. Taczkow, a beautify] young
i woman, in the Hotel Griffou in West
{ Ninth street, and then
suicide.
|
Good Fortune Left.
A dispatch
| nounces the will of George Gregg,
| died there a week ago,
tune of $100,000 to Bellefonte, Pa.,
heirs. Mr. Gregg was a native of
Centre county, Pennsylvania and for
vears was associated in business with
Frank Thomson, the late president of
the Pennsylvania railroad. Later he
was connected with the Carnegie
Steel Company and 20 years ago went
west, where he made a fortune in
and real estate.
|
Sage's Servants Remembered.
Mrs. Pree=ll Sage made several
cash gifts to servants of the house-
hold out of the fortune left to her
by her late husband. Charles Boss,
the coachman who has served the
family 40 years, received a cash
present of $2,000. Willam Boss, his
son, also received $2,000. Three fe-
male servants each received $2,000
and the caretaker of the Sage town
house on Fifth avenue was given
$1,000. Mrs. Sage is building a $4,-
000 cottage for Charles Boss.
and Rail- |
Gould has announced that
started in the near fu- |
were with- |
Jefferson |
Potter, !
ision. oud
torpedo target |
marksmanship by a!
committed |
fromy 1.os Angeles an-
who |
leaves a for- |
COMPLAINT BY JAPANESE
Secretary Metcalf Sent to San
Francisco to Investigate.
INSIST UPON TREATY RIGHTS
Discrimination Against Merchants
and School Children on the Pacific
Coast is Alleged.
As a result of alleged discrimination
against Japanese children by the
school authorities of San Francisco,
which, it is charged, constitutes a
violation of our treaty obligations
with Japan, President Roosevelt has
directed Secretary Metcalf of the de-
partment of commerce and labor to
go to the Pacific coast city as the
special commissioner of the President
to inquire into the charges. The
secretary will confer with the gov-
ernor of the state, mayor of the city
and school officials in an endeavor
to learn the exact facts in the case,
and will bring back to the President
a complete report of the whole mat-
ter.
President Roosevelt is determined
to avoid any misunderstanding with
Japan, and hence the visit of Mr.
Metcalf to the coast. Until the
President hears from his commission-
er he will not attempt to take any ac
tion bearing upon the situation. Mr.
Metcalf, in view of his long residence
in California, is peculiarly fitted for
the mission, and he is expected to
get at the facts in the case without
delay after his arrival.
It is charged that Japanese chil-
dren in San Francisco are excluded
from the schools provided for white
children, and that it is the determina.
tion of the authorities to place them
in separate institutions.
{ The determination to send Secretary
| Metcalf to San Francisco was one sof
the resulfs of the requests made by
Viscount Acki, the Japanese ambassa-
dor, who, at a conference with Sec-
retary Root, asked in behalf of his
government that the Japanese in
California be accorded their full
rights under the treaty of 1894, includ-
ing that of the children to attend the
public sc¢hools of the city.
REPORT FROM EXPLORERS
| Sailing Master and C Cook Refused to
Do Duty.
have been received from
the Anglo-American Arctic expedi
tion, left Victoria on May 24
| on the schooner Duchess of Bedford,
! dated from Port Hope on July 25.
On July 8, the schooner had a nar
| row escape from going ashore ip
Behring straits during a heavy fog
While at Teller City the sailing
| master, Parker, and the cook, refus-
| ed duty and only when threatened
| with ircns on the revenue cutter
| Thetis did they, return on board on
the condition that they be replaced
at Point Barrow. A good supply ol
dogs was sccured for the ice trips at
| St. Lawrence island. Ice is report
ed heavy this year, but the explorers
were hopeful that they could round
the fringe and reach winter quarters
at Prince Albert land where the
schooner will be anchored to a depot
and a camp will be made ashore.
Letters
which
WANT MORE PAY
| Every Railroad in the United States
Wili Be Asked to Increase
Wages.
It is officially announced at the
headquarters of the Brotherhood of
| Locomotive Engineers in Cleveland,
i O., that requests have just been made
not only to the lines of Chicago, but
also to a number of the big eastern
systems for higher wages and better
working conditions, for all classes of
train men. Similar requests will prob-
ably be made to every railroad in the
United States.
The requests made by the engineers
include a revised and higher wage
scale for the men in all classes of
the service, passenger, freight and
vard engines, and better working
conditions looking toward shorter
hours for a day’s work.
TRAIN HITS FUNERAL PARTY
Three Persons Killed and As Many
| Injured at Grade Crossing.
Three persons were killed and
three seriously injured in a collision
t at Woodside, I. 1., between a railroad
| train and a coach which was return-
|ing to New York from a funeral at
Calvary cemetery. The dead are:
| Patrick Healy, Anna Healy and Elea-
nor Healy. The injured: Mrs. Pat-
rick Healy, Thomas Lynch and Ed-
{gar J. Griffin,
| front of the approaching train. The
| coach was demolished, the horses
killed and the occupants hurled in
all directions. Healy and his two
{ children were instantly killed.
Army Officers to Test Balloons.
Fort Omaha, Neb. is to be the
scene of many interesting balloon ex-
periments within the next few
months. French manufacturers ship-
ped to the signal corps of the army
a pew spherical silk balloon which
| will be thoroughly tested at the Ne-
i braska post.
Flyer Wrecked.
The Cleveland flyer, train No. 310
of the Cleveland & Pittsburgh rail
road, due in Pittsburgh at 12:10
o'clock, p. m. ran into an open switch
directly in front of the Bellevue sta-
tion, near Pittsburgh, severely injur-
ing six people and partially wrecking
the train. The entire passenger train
left the track and sideswiped a freight
train that was standing on a siding
to the right of the track on which the
flyer was running and wrecked the
caboose and a refrigerator car next
to the caboose.
or
Griffin drove the vehicle directly in’
SHAW AND MOODY WILL RETIRE
Postmaster General Cortelyou Will
Get Treasury Department and
Metcalf the Navy.
The following statement regarding
prospective changes in President
Roosevelt's cabinet was made public
at the White House:
“On retirement of Secretary Shaw
and Attorney General Moody from
the cabinet the following changes
will be made:
“Secretary of the
George B. Cortelyou.
treasury—Hon.
“Postmaster general—Hon. George
Von L. Meyer.
‘““Attorney general-—Hon. Charles
J. Bonaparte.
‘Secretary of
tor H. Metcalf.
“Secretary of commerce
Hon. Oscar S. Straus.”
It is expected Attorney General
Moody will retire on January 1, 1907,
and Secretary Shaw on March 4
1907. The new appointments, ex-
eept those of Cortelyou and Meyer
will, accordingly, be made the first
of the year, and theirs on March 4.
Mr. Meyer, who will become post-
master general, is ambassador to
Russia to which place he was ap-
pointed on March 6, 1905, having
been promoted to that office follow-
fng his service as ambassador to
Italy from 1900 to 1905. He is a
native of Massachusetts, and has
been well known as a business man.
The appointment of Mr. Straus will
be the first of a citizen of the He-
brew race to a cabinet position. He
was born December 3, 1850, and is
well-known as a merchant, diplomat
and author. He represented the
United States as minister to Tur-
key on two different occasions, amd
was appointed by President Roose-
velt to fill the vacancy caused by
the death of ex-President Harrison
as a member of the department of
the permanent court of arbitration
at The Hoguk
, WOMEN STORM PARLIAMENT
the navy—Hon. Vie-
and labor—
Suffragists Make Trouble and Police
Eject Them.
Unusual excitement in connection
with the reopening of the British
Parliament was caused hy the pres-
ence of about 100 woman suffragists,
many of whom, despite the protests
of the police, managed to find their
way into the outer lobby of the House
of Commons with the intention of
buttonholing the members in support
of their movement.
A number of the suffragists mount-
ed vacant chairs in the lobby and
began to harangue the few members
of Parliament present in that part
of the House.
The police, after
made a strategetic
the invaders, taking the women
singly, and gradually ejected them,
one by one, from the House.
The most militant of the women
strugglca so desperately that two
officers were required to remove
them. Their hysterical shouting and
screaming brought crowds of mem-
bers from the House, and the un-
wonted scene created temporary ex-
citement such as has seldom been
witnessed in or ohout the House.
SIXTY out oF 400 SAVED
being reinforced,
advance against
Russian Coasting Steamer
Floating Mine and Sank.
Forty-seven of the passengers and
13 members of the crew of the Rus-
sian coasting steamer Variagin have
been rescued by Chinese boats. The
Variagin struck a floating mine and
sank near Vladivostok. It was first
reported that only one of her 400
passengers had been saved.
Confessed Killing Actress.
Edward E. Nicholas, a theatrical
agent, who was taken into custody by
the Chicago police during their in-
vestigation of the death of Mrs. Mar-
garet leslie, the actress who was
found dead in her room at the Palace
Hotel, confessed. In his confession,
which was made after the police had
all but decided that they could not
zonnect him with the crime, Nicho-
las named George l.copold, a drug
zlerk, as his accessory.
Ministers Want Prohivition.
At the Presbyterian synod, in
zion at Lancaster, Pa. A resolution
was adopted pleding members of the
synod to use every effort to secure
the adoption of an amendment to the
constitution of the United States
‘prohibiting the use, sale transporta-
tion and manufacture of liquor, ex-
sept for scientific and medical pur-
poses.”
o
Struck
Dominican Rebels to Quit.
The advices received at the State
Department at Washington are that
aegotiations for peace between the
Government and the rebel forces in
the neighborhood of Monte Cristi,
San Demingo, which were recently
broken off, have been resumed, with
svery prospect of success, and that
the immediate disarmament of the
rebels is promised.
While no official statement is
tainable, unofficial information con-
firms the report that the President
will appoint Attorney General William
H. Moody of Massachusetts to the va-
:ancy of the supreme bench made va-
sant by the retirement of Associate
Justice Henry B. Brown.
Moody Against Oil Men.
sring proceedings against the promi-
sent members of the Standard Oil
Company under the terms of the
Sherman anti-trust law, which pro-
vides penalties of fine or imprison-
ment for persons guilty of the mis-
demeanor constituted by conviction of
Its violation.
The Variety iron works of Cleve-
land, one of the bridge companies
pusted from Ohio for violating the
anti-trust laws, has filed a motion
asking a hew trial.
ses-
ob- |
Attorney General Moody is about to
hour.
SEVEN KILLED IN EXPLOSION
Disaster Occurred in Mine Near
Johnstown, Pa.
FOUR WORKMEN HAD LEFT
Men in Adjoining Heading Knew
Nothing About the Accident Till
Quitting Time.
Seven men were killed and two in-
jured, one very seriously, by an ex-
plosion of gas in the Cambria Steel
Company’s coal at Johnstown,
Pa.
The first alarm of the disaster was
given by John Gilbert, a driver, who
was not in the chamber where the
explosion occurred, but who, as an
experienced miner, felt the earth
tremor which followed. The disturb-
ance was so purely local that men
working ‘in a heading adjoining the
scene of the explosion knew nothing
of the accident until quitting time.
The dead are Sampson Luther, aged
30, shot firer; Constant Fish, aged 45,
loader; Adam Pavlpvsky, aged 25, cut-
ter; Joseph Kamelsky, aged 34, load-
er; Frank Gaviek, aged 30; Mike
Sulada, aged 19, loader; Joseph Pat-
rick, aged 24, scraper.
The injured are Joseph Flack, lab-
orer, and Mike Borovochik, Slav.
Both were overcome by afterdamp.
The explosion occurred in heading
2, off what is known as the Mill
Creek dip, about one mile from the
Mill Creek shaft, and two or three
miles from the scene of the disaster
in the Klondike section of the mine
four years ago. The surface above
the explosion chamber is in Somerset
county.
Superintendent Robinson states that
13 men went into No. 29 in the morn-
ing, but four of them left toward
noon, having completed their prelimi-
nary work. The heading had been
examined for gas, as usual, and an
inspection of the dead bodies as they
lay on the mine floor proved that not
one of the men had taken a pipe,
smoking tobacco or cigaret paper to
work with him. Every one had a
safety lamp, each one of which was
found locked as per teqnitements.
LIVES FOR 102 YEARS
mine
David Howard Did Not Know His Age
But Authorities Learn It.
The Washington, county, (Pa.,) au-
thorities were requested to furnish
data by which the age of David How-
ard, who died recently! at Libert-
vville, Ia., might be fixed.
AFTER NEW BEEF TRUST
United States Attorneys Ordered to
Look Into Latest Merger.
The national Government took not-
ice of the report that an incorpor-
ated trust is in process of formation
among the big packers. From the
Department of Justice lefters were
sent to the attorneys of the districts
in which acts in connection with the
formation of the holding company
may be done.
“The only information I have on
the subject of this alleged merger,”
said Secretary of Agriculture Wilson,
“has been gleaned from the news-
papers. 3ut we have a bureau of
corporations, whose agents are
especially charged with looking
into matters of this kind. We have
a Department of Justice whose ma-
chinery was designed to be used in
just such a case as this. We have
our own attorneys general to talk to
grand juries. We have grand juries
to listen and to indict. We have
petit juries. And we have peniten-
tiaries.” :
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S TRIP
Chief Executive Will Sail
Isthmus November 8.
According to the present program,
President Roosevelt will stop at San
Juan, P. R, on his way back from
Panama. He expects to arrive there
November 22, remaining one day, and
will thence return to Washington di-
rect. He will not stop in Cuba.
Joseph Bishop, the secretary of the
Panama canal commission, will ac-
company Chairman Shonts when he
for the
sails from New York for Panama,
where (hey go to make all the
necessary arrangements for the trip
of the President and Mrs. Roosevelt
to the isthmus.
The President’s party, which will
include Surgeon General Rixey, of the
navy, will start from Washington No-
vember 8 and transfer to the battle-
ship Louisiana in Chesapeake bay.
MUST WORK OR MOVE ON
Jonesville Will No Longer Stand for
Loafing Negroes.
A special from Jonesville,
county, S. C., says a proclamation
was posted by white citizens warning
every idle, indolent negro in the
community that unless they go to
work at once or leave the community
drastic measures will be taken.
The proclamation is the outgrowth
of threats made against a prominent
farmer by several negroes, one of
whom was captured and severely
whipped. He broke away from his
raptors and created a panic inta ne-
gro church by dashing into the
| building while services were in pro-
Howard |
was unable to read or write and did |
not know his age. He was supposed
to be 109 years old, and stated that |
when he was 36 vears old he helped
construct the foundation for the old |
Washington county court house.
By his will a considerable sum of |
moeney he had saved was to be used
for a monument over his grave. D.
W. Garney, postmaster at Liberty-
ville, desiring to place the dead man’s
age on the monument, wrote to the
lccal authorities to ascertain the date |
court house. |
of the erection of the
Word was sent back that the build-
ing was erected in 1840,
ing that
age.
DCWN TO BOTTON OF THE SEA
Dumped Into Havana Harbor.
The statement made by Secretary
of War Taft on the eve of his depart-
ure from Guba that he would put all
the arms surrendered by the insur-
|
!
thus show-
Howard was 102 years of
ress.
JAP MIDDY RESIGNS
in Studies and Is Forced to
Leave Annapolis.
At the request of the Japanese Em-
bassy at Washington Midshipman
Asahi Kitigaki of the third class at
Fails
| the aval Academy, at Annapolis,
Md., has submitted his resignation,
which will be accepted. Kitigaki is
a son of Baron Kitigaki of the Im-
perial Privy Council. He entered the
American Naval Academy in Septem-
ber, 1904. ‘
Fine Cathedral Dedicated.
St. Paul’s cathedral, the new and
magnificent structure in Bellefield,
| Pittsburg, was consecrated with sol-
| emn ceremonies by dignitaries of ine
Guns Taken From Cuban Rebels Are! Roman Catholic ohare
| bishops and priests
Cardinal Gibbons,
gate Falconia, a large
Shovsolic Dele-
number of
jn various
sections were present. The building
is one of the finest church edifices in
| this country.
gents where they would do no further
harm was verified when a company of
the Cuban artillery
noon tnrcwing these weapons into
the sea from the outer bastion of
Morro Castle, at Havana. Thousands
of rifles and carbines were
20 fathoms of water.
Some unrest continues to prevail |
in the provinces of Puerto Principe |
and Santa Clara, where small armed |
bands are roving and committing
minor Sepredafions.
' Argentine Meat Worse.
leplying to a question in the
house of commons President Burns
of the local government board said
that of 41S tons of meat seized and
condemned at the Smithfield meat
market, l.ondon, between July 19 and
September 13, 24 tons came from the
United States and about 232 tons
from the Argentine.
Religious War.
Information was received at Shang-
hai that serious fighting had occurred
at Fenghsien, between: Protestant
and Roman Catholic converts. Many
Chinese were reported killed and
wounded on both sides and the
French Catholic mission church is
reported demolished. Troops have
been sent to the scene to restore or-
der.
New Battleship's Test Successful
The new battleship Minnesota, a
product of the Newport News Ship-
building Company, ha a successful
endurance trial, maintaining an aver-
age speed of 19.851 knots an hour.
Her contract speed is 18 knots an
Pussians Eat Dogs and Horses,
The Statistical Correspondence
Magazine of Berlin, analyzing the
official returns of the slaughter
houses of Prussia for 1905, finds that
the slaughterings of dogs for food in-
creased 33 per cent and that of horses
19 per cent over the figures of 1904,
the total number of dogs eaten in 1905
being 1,560 and the number of horses
81,312.
Mayor Charles A. Snyder of Dayton,
O., was drowned while hunting near
White Fish bay, Lake Superior.
spent the after-!
sunk in
cu RRENT NEWS ITEMS
The steamer H. M. Carter, with
| 1,00 bales of cotton on board, sank
lin the Red River, L.a. No lives were
lost.
At Chicago, Judge Bretano has
authorized the sale of the Milwaukee
| for
| Wickes,
| president of the Pullman company,
| Avenue State Bank, which was wreck-
ed by its president, Paul O. Stens-
land, to the Assets Realization Com-
| pany for app oximately $750,000.
The derailing of the Sunset Limit-
ed on the Southern Pacific railroad
at Boutte, near New Orleans injured
40 negroes, one of whom died.
Three hundred chauffeurs employed
by the New York Transportation
company, which operates 350 public
electric cabs, went on strike today
an increase in. wages.
The will of the late Thomas H.
of Chicago, formerly vice
was declared valid. The will was
contested by the family of Wickes”
first marriage.
The stockholders of the King’ Phil-
lip cotton mills at Fall River, voted
to authorize an increase of 50 per
cent in the capital stock, as recom-
mended by the directors. The new
capital will be $1,500,000.
Pennsylvania railroad has prepared
plans for freight terminal and ware-
houses to cost over $2,000,000, to be
built on the East Liberty stock yards
site, Pittsburg.
Cashier D. R. Anderson of the First
National bank of Masontown, Pa.,
was arrested and gave bail for a
hearing on the charge of embezzling
the bank's funds, the alleged short-
age being $36,000.
ENTIRE TOWN DESTROYED
Bluefields, Nicaragua, Laid in Ruins
by/ Recent Tornado.
The steamer Limon, which arrived
at Boston from Port Limon, Costa
Rico, reports that Bluefields, one of
the most prosperous towns of Nicara-
gua. was in ruins and that all the
banana plantations had been destroy-
ed by the recent tornado.
Little Corn island, off Nicaragua.
Captain Porter of the steamer re-
ports, showed no signs of life when
the Limon passed.
Union.
9,
*
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