FOUR KILLED BY BY EXPLOSION Half Score of Victims Are Likly to Die of Their Injuries. OTHER BUILDINGS SHAKEN UP Entire Works of Car Company, Cost-. ing $3,000,000, Was in Danger of Being Destrecyed. By thc explosion of cupola No. 1 in the cast steel wheel plant of the Standard Steel Car Company at Buf- Ter, Pa., four men were killed, 20 seriously injured and 10 received winor injuries. Nearly: all the wen were foreigners. The large wheel plant, 150x100 feet, was totally wrecked, causing a property loss of $100,000. The dead: eled; died in hospital; tar. burned to a crisp, died in hospi- tal: John Vereck, skull crushed, died before ambulance arrived; unknown man, totally dismembered; died half hour later. The explosion was caused by the upsetting of a metal pot in the cu- pola, which contained 5,000 pounds of molten metal, ready for casting. A gpan in the pot broke, allowing the Youid iron to spill over the wet sand. An explosion followed so quickly that none of the 50 workmen in the building had a chance to escape. Streams of the burning metal poured out on the workmen, many of whom were engulfed and literally cooked. Twenty men near the cupola had every shred of clothing blown off by the force of the explosion. Nearly all the injured suffered most from the effects of the explosion. Scarcely a man was able to leave the wrecked building without assistance. Many were buried under the wreckage and were not rescued for an hour after thee atastrophe. Buildings in the city, from the force of the explosion, shivered, as ir ghaken by an earthquake, and peopie ruched from their homes panic stricken. When lurid flames shot from the burning car works fully 10,060 people rushed to the scene, blocking streets and interfering with fire com- panics and ambulances. The car wheel plant” was finished ast season at a cost of $200,000. The wrecked cupola cost $30,000 alone. The car works proper, costing $3,000. - 000, was in danger of destruction, but the fire department soon had the blaze under control. At midnight was announced that probably 10 of the injured in the hospital will die. Ten others will be erippled for life. Nick Dorna, disembow- Nicholas Blo- TELEGRAPH TRUST NOW Suit Alleges Western Union and Pos- tal Have Combined. The Western Union and Postal Telegraph Companies were . ordered by Justice Ford of the Supreme Court of New York state to show cause why State Attorney General Jackson should not be permitted to sue then for forfeiture of their charters, on the ground that they have combined Ro increase telegraph tolls. Mr. Jackson, in his application, alleced that the combination was made Jan. 1, 1907, and that a new and increased schedule of rates was put into effect, and that the compan- fes agrced to maintain joint offices at certain points and divide the profits of business received therein. DIES IN POVERTY Street Magnate Ends Career Seeking Work by the Day. The newspapers. report the death and obscure burial of William Fran- cis Carey, who was a wealthy Wall street operator until the recent slump in stocks. Mr. home in fashionable Madison avenue, where he entertained extensively, ended his days in almost utter pov- erty. It is said that just before his death he was seeking employment by the day, though at one time he enjoy- ed an income of about $200,000 a year. Wall SOCIALISTS DRIVEN OUT Expels Spanish Agitators Who Wished to Speak. Four Spanish socialists who came to Paris to address the proposed Social- Ist mass meeting of protest against the French and Spanish operations in Morocco, were served with expulsion erders immediately on their arrival and left on the next train. Premier = Clemenceau said: *The government cannot admit the right of foreigners to come to France for the purpose of spreading the anti-mili- tary propaganda. Such a propaganda is illegal for French citizens, and, naturally, cannot be permitted in the ease of foreigners.” France SIXTY-THREE GIRLS KILLED in Cartridge Factory Ter- rible in Results. A terrible explosion occurred at the Takatsuke factory, Osaka, Japan, while a number of girls were at work sorting cartridges which had Peen condemned. Sixty-three of the girls were killed and a number were fnjured. The factory and a number of boats eontaining explosives were burned. Explosion Nine Drowned. Nine lives were lost at the Foggs eolliery, near Bolton, Eng. Oct. 4, owing fo a rope slipping off a pulley and precipiflaing an elevator cage to the bottom of a deep shaft. There was 75 feet of water in the shaft and into this the car plunged. The occu- pants were drowned. Evidence submitted in the Stand- ard Oil inquiry showed that the Standard ships oil to Afraca for half what its competitors were forced to pay. i | | will operate over it | PRESIDENT AT MEMPHIS Told Vast Audience That He Favored Better Water Facilities and Im- proved Farm Methods. Forty thousand people frem all the states of the Mississippi valley came | to Memphis to see the President and | demand a water channel from Gulf of Mexico to Chicago. deep enough to float a battleship. The President also contemplates deep wa- ter to Kansas City and Pittsburg. The President came down the Mis- sissippi steamboat on the big river. He reiterated that the undesirable | still undesirable. He told that he had no excuse to his former declaration. citizen is the pecple offer for of the law and the men before the law.” Mr. Roosevelt was strong for deep water, and also took an into anew field. “equality of all He wants the peo- ple to -be better farmers, and not. let! the hillsides wash into the streams. | He advocated intelligent farming and | saving of the forests and the utiliza- | tion of water power in manufactur- ing. After considering the deep water scheme, the President said the gov- ernment should . also deepen the channel of the Columbia, the Sacra- | mento and San Joaquin rivers of Cali- | fornia. The Illinois delegation was by far | the largest in attendance. Congress- | man Lorimer was made chairman of | the committee on credentials. Leaving Memphis the party proceeded. down the river Louisiana. TELEGRAPH CONTRACT Western Union Will Operate Wires on! Pennsylvania Lines. Official -announcement was made by { the Pennsylvania Railroad Company | | of the contract signed by which the Vestern Union Telegraph Company | the lines west of Pittsburg. nouncement states: “The Pennsylvania lines west of Pittsburg have made a new contract with the telegraph company which covers all of the lines and distinctly defines the rights and privileges of both parties, to the satisfaction both. “The contract is for 25 years, ing from Oct. 1, and will not fere with the Postal Telegraph Com- Pennsylvania The pany’s agreement for operation of the | lines east of Pittsburg.” BOUGHT BY STEEL TRUST | Property Which Cost Over Two Mil- | poration of New Haven has been pur- | | chased | Corporation. Announcement of the purchase was | made by the officials of the purchas- | Meets Waterways Carey, who at one time had a | lions Picked Up for $600,000. The National Steel & Wire Cor- by the United States Steel ing concern. The purchase is said to have been made at receiver's sale ‘and is believed to invoice a sum ap- proximating $600,000. The ! National Steel & Wire Corpora- tion affairs have heen in the courts. It operated two large | its raptcy factories in New Haven. The original | is said to have cost of the property been abcut $2.500,000. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S TRIP Men at and Goes Down the Mis- sissippi. From Canton, O., where the Presi-| dent delivered the address at the] dedication of the McKinley Memorial | he went to Keokuk, Iowa, to attend | a notable gathering of distingiushed | men, including governors of more than a dozen states, members of both houses of Congress and the Inland { Waterways Commission. The occasion of the President's visit was the movement for a deep waterway down the Mississippi river to the Gulf, and Keokuk was seléect- ed as the point of embarkation for his voyage down the river on his out- ing. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. German-American Alliance condemned Indiana Methodists for defeating Vice President Fairbanks for delegate to the genral conference on account of the cocktail episode. The Secretary Straus has determined to | adopt extraordinary measures tao prevent Japanese and other Asiatic laborers from coming to the United | States by way of Canada and Mexico. The engagement of Gladys Vander- bilt, Vanderbilt, chenyi, of Hungary, was announced by her mother at Newport. The wed- ding will take place in a month. All tho mystery enveloping the dis- | Percival | appearance a week ago of G. Digby, law librarian of Allegheny county, Pa. was cleared away by find- | ing his body in the Ohio river, at the foot of Lighthill street, Allegheny. Pennsylvania day at the Jamestown exposition was marked by the ex- change of compliments between Vir- ginia and the Keystone state, fine speeches by Govs. Stuart and Swan- son, Lieut. Gov. Murphy and others, parade and receptions and a large at- tendance. Kentucky Almost Dry. Another county in gone “dry” in a local option election. | In - McLean county the temperance forces were victorious by a majority of 1,055. Only 19 of the 119 counties in Kentucky remain “wet.” Bubonic Plague Spreads. Fifty-one verified cases of bubonic plague have developed in San Fran- cisco to date. deaths. About 30 suspects are under observation. the | and proudly announced that | it was a Roosevelt who ran the first | All | the time he talked for the supremacy ! excursion | presidential | to | an- | of dat- | inter- | became financially embarrassed | several months ago, since which time | bank- | Keokuk | daughter of the late Cornelius to Count Ladislaus Szee- | Kentucky has | There have been 30 MUCH FAVORITISH SHOWN Lubricating Oils. | | Railroads Pay Varying Prices for | CORPORATION CONTROLS TRADE oo Balance Sheet Compzany Show and frcome - Acccunt of Parert Enormous Profits. That the Galena Signal Oil Com- pany, a subsidiary of the Stantiard Oil! Company, lubricating oil business with fie rail- roads of the United States: awd that | the price for its products are not uni- form with the railroads was written in the records of hearings of the fed- eral suit against ‘the ‘so-called”- oil trust in New York. Tee C. C. Steinbrenner, an accountant for the Galena company, told in de- tail how contracts were made with railroads whereby they were guaran- teed a maximum cost for the lubrica- | tian of the road, based on mileage for engines and cars, and when the cost was found at the end of certain per- invoice | price of $1.75 for 1,000 mites? which | all railroads paid when they -rocoived | the oil, the Galena company. made a refund of the difference. Pion state- | ments compiled from the Galena com- pany's books, Mr. Kellogg was able to show that in some cases: the { amount of the refund was nearly 50 per cent of the invoice price. Mr. Steinbrenner testified that the | iods to exceed the standard Inbricating oil furnished to the Penn- | loss. | The Galena company fixed the stand- | for en- | sylvania railroad was sold at a | ard invoice price of valve oil gines last year at 48 cents a -gallon, and Mr. Kellogg drew from the wit- the refund was deducted, obtain- ed its oil for 24 cents. Mr. Steinbren- ner testified the New York Central, I U'nion Pacific, Delaware & Hudson and Southern railroad paid 48 cents a gallon, or the full invoice price, without a refund. The Baltimore & | Ohio paid 38 cents a gallon, while the Teledo, Peoria & Western obtained its oil for 26 cents. Mr. Steinbrenner ing of the minimum cost of tion to a railroad was a matter { hard bargaining. 3 A letter written in 1905 dent Miller of the Galena to Vice President Marony Pittsburg, Shawmut & Northern railroad, and placed in evidence, stat- | ed that the Galena company was sup- after said that the fix- Jubrica- of by company of the controls ‘97 per ‘ced¥ of the | ness that the Pennsylvania railroad, | I Chamberlain, Presi- | | murder plying 9715 per cent of the total mile- ! {age of the United States, Canada and Mexico. One of the | lena | Mr. railroads that the Steinbrenner said, was the Tide- water railroad, owned by Henry H. Rogers, vice president of the Stand- ard Oil Company. The witness said that the Galena companyv-had tried to obtain the contract with the Tide- | water railroad, but had failed Mr. { Kellogg suggested that, perhaps, Mr. Rogers thought he could get better oil elsewhere. For the first time there has just been made public the income account and balance sheet of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, which is | Blanco county coroner. Ge he company did not supply with oil, | : | bachelor, | mur derer, the parent of the Standard Oil Com- | | panies of the world. The report shows that the wealth | pany has at no time been overestim- ated. The income account shows that { while the company paid $40,000,000 in dividends in the year ended. Dec. 31 last, it carried more than $83,000,000 land left as a surplus for the year something more than . $43,750,000. Added to previous surplus the total | surplus in profit and loss accounts amounts to $261,000,000, or more than rine times the amount of the great fine. Ths balance sheet of the company shows total assets of $371,664,532, as compared with a capitalization of £100,000,000. Apart from the capital stock outstanding and the profit and loss surplus, the only liabilities are accounts payable to the amount of $12,264,000. CUBAN BANDITS CHASED Rural Guards Kill One, other and Capture a Third. Rural guards under Lieut. Martinez overtook a band of brigands near | Mayari. The rurals killed one brig- and and wounded and captured an- l other. They also captured some arms. The soldiers suffered no loss. Arturo Santana, who was captured by the bandit leader Cachero, was held a prisoner for two hours, but on refusing to join the rebels was re- leased. He saw only seven of the | bandits, ied 80. It is reported that the rebels fieceing toward Tunas, with | guards in pursuit. | rural Baptists Won’t Consolidate. 1 Consolidation of Free Baptists with | the Baptist Church is not advisable at this time, according to the report of the special committee made at the national convention of Free Baptists iat Cleveland. The report of the com- | mittee did not go into details as to the reasons for opposing the proposed | amalgamation. Root Guest of Diaz. With the members of the Mexican Diaz re- | ceived Secretary Root at Mexico City, in the hall of ambassadors in the na- tional palace. The meeting was most cordial. | cabinet present, President At the annual meeting of the Ohi- cago & Alton railroad Edwin Hawley ' of the Clover Leaf was elected to suc- ceed E« H. Harriman as a director. Robt. Mather was re-elected and R. A. Jackson was chosen to succeed | Jas. Stillman. of the com-! ; | Russian | it is appearaing in new provinces. Wound An- | | | shead-end AIRSHIP IN HURRICANE Aeronaut Loses Control and Floats Up So High He L»ses Sight of Earth, Riding the hurricane in rain and darkness, Capt. Frank Fuhr made the longest trip in an airship on record in America-—40 miles from Newark to near the Holmes county line in Cosh- octon county. He made an ascension at the New- ark fair and struck a gale 3,000 feet above the earth. His ship became unmanageable and there was nothing left for him except to ride with the wind. Newark crowds followed him several miles till they lost sight of him. He veered to the south wind, and finally alighted in field on William Mowry’s farm. farm hands were terror-stricken. “I'm hungry. Is supper over?” Fuhr’s salutation. He afterwards said he was sp high he lost sight of earth. The airship lies where it alighted in the field, with gas out. He could not hold it down while it was inflated. with the an open The was “METEOR” TRAIN WRECKED Engine Jumps Track on Sixteen Mile : Grade. The fast train on the ’Frisco road, known as the Meteor, was derailed and wrecked near Dixon, 135 miles southwest of St. Louis, and two per- sons were killed, one seriously injur- ed and the passengers . were badly braised, but none was killed. The dead are: Engineer Chambers of Springfield, Mo., and Mail Clerk Frank E. Crissy of St. Louis. : Fireman Stockstill of Springfield, Mo., was injured. Dixon hill is a steep grade, 16 miles in length, and the engine jumped the track while speeding down the grade, tearing up a section of the track and ditching several of the cars. Two mail clerks were injured, | two locomotives were demolished and a number of head of cattle ikiiled in a | collision near Anaconda, be- | a southbound passenger train | freight train on the ’Frisco| tween and a road. Mail Clerk C. E. Harrei and H. 1 both of St. Louis, were will recover. injured, but MURDER MYSTERY SOLVED Details of Crime of Years Ago Re- vealed in Deathbed Confession. Through a deathbed confession of John Reiston, victim of a railroad wreck in Rio Blanco County, Col, several days ago, the mystery of a committed at Findlay, O., 12 years ago, is cleared. Particulars have just been received from the Rio One winter morning, after a thaw, dead body of Peter Rouen, a was found in an abandoned | stone quarry. His skull 3 crushed. | No clew to the murderer was ever | found. Rouen, it was supposed, kept | $300 in the house. In his confession: | Reiston said he was paid to haul the | body to the old sione quarry. The | whose name is withheld, died shortly after the crime. Reiston said he had particulars of the crime in writing ever since it occurred, but was afraid to divulge the secret dur-, ing his life for fear he would be ar- rested. CHOLERA KILLS THOUSANDS Provinces Being Swept by Epidemic. The epidemic of cholera which broke out in Russia early in August, is spreading rapidly, and already 12 provinces are affected. The disease is reported mostly along the Volga, but it has reached as far north as Archangel and made its appearance at Semipalatinsk, Omsk, Tomsk and Uralsk in Siberia. - The peasants of Kanzan, Samara, Saratov and Nizhni-Novgorod are the worst afflicted. The deaths already reach into the thousands. The great- est mortality is in the towns, the doc- tors in the country finding it easier to handle she cases effectively. It has been found impossible, however, to check the scourge and every day Rapidly NEW STEP FOR CHINA Now Has Compulsory Education as Prelude to Constitution. An imperial edict dated Sept. 30 decrees compulsory education for everybody in China and declares, ! furthermore, that the people are to be taught the principles of constitu- tional government that they may be | better fitted to elect representatives but heard that they number- are | i made by G. B. Babcock, | ary and were continuing to do so. when a parliament is created. The throne expresses anxiety to es- tablish parliamentary institutions, but adds the success thereof depends: upon the education and knowledge possessed by those called upon to govern. Japanese Coming In. As a result of the investigations a special agent of the Upited States treasury department, a force of federal offi- cers will be installed at the interna- tional boundary line to keep back the scores of Japanese who are daily crossing the Canadian border into the United States. Mr. Babcock found ! that hundreds of Japanese had illeg- ally crossed the international bound- Japs Honor Taft. Rarely has the army and been so largely represented at any social function as at the luncheon given in Tokyo by Lieut. Gen. Ter- auchi, minister of war, in honor of Secretary of War Taft. Among those | present were: Vice Admiral Saito, | minister of marine; Field Marshal Prince Oyama, Admiral Count Togo, Admiral Count Yamamoto, Gen. | Count Nogi, Gen. Count Katsura and | 20 other prominent generals, all of | navy | whom showed the warmest goodwill. | ly { Scattered through 3 | proximately swamp land, the reclamation of which | Cleremont county. lin South Dakota commenced an ac- | cation for FAVORS GREAT WATERWAYS President Recommends River Improvements. TOWN WITH A STORK MAYOR Pleasant Greeting Sent by President to the Town of Alton, Il. and Its Mayor. President Roosevelt. in a St. Louis, declared it the nation’s duty to control centrally interstate | railroads, and to restore the Missis- | sippi river to its proper place as a great artery of commerce. He term- ed the proposed 14-foot channel from ! the lakes to the gulf a national | task.” He warned against plans | which might “entail reckless gxtrava-| gance or be tainted with jobbery, but urged a liberal waterways policy. The President's ardor was not di- | minished by the fact that he was drenched by a sudden downpour of rain while en route to the Jai Alai | building, where his speech was Jolie | ered. Thousands of persons were congre- | gated on the levee when the Presi- | dent arrived on the steamer Missis- sippi from Keokuk, Ia. The Presi-| dent, on landing, greeted 15 governors | from states bordering on the Missis- sippi river, and some from distant | states, members of congress and offi- cers representing the city ~ of St. Louis. At the Jai Alai building he | was introduced bv Gev. Folk. After his address the President and orher distinguished visitors wer2 guests of the St. Louis. Business Men’s League at luncheon in the Jef- | ferson Hotel. There were no cet speeches, but the President respond- ed to the toast of President James E. Smith of the league by expressing | the wish that the ends of the league might be achieved, that is, the procur- ing of a 14-foot river channel. On the voyage down to St. Louis from Keokuk, the President thorough- enjoyed himself in company with his ©ld Rough Rider friends, Seth Bullock. Gov. Franz of Oklahoma, and Commissioner Mecllhenny. At Alton, Ill, speech at | just above St. Louis, | a huge sign on the water front greet- ed the President and made a great hit with him. “Alton is 25 miles from | St. Louis, has 25,600 population and | a stork mayer.” So pleased with the | greeting was the President that im- | mediately upon reaching St. Louis he dictated the following telegram to | the mayer of Alton: “Congratulations to 253,000 people, including mayor.” Alton and her her stork HOMES FOR TWO MILLIONS | Vast Acreage of Waste Land Is Seek- ing Reclamation. A. G. Bernard, chairman legislative committee of the National Drainage Association, issued a call for the next annual congress of that | associiition to be held at Johns Hop- | kins University, Baltimore, Nov. 25- 27. The call for the convention says: “The drainage of the swamp and overflowed lands of the United States is just as much a governmental fune tion as that of irrigating arid lands. 37 states. are = ap- 80,000,000 acres of of the | means millions of dollars annually to the business interests cof the country over what is now enjoycd “If these lands were drained and subdivided into 40-acre farms they would afford homes for 2,000,000 farmers independent of the urban population which would inevitably follow.” WHERE GRANT WAS BORN Bronze Cannon and Memorial Tablet Now Mark the Place. In the presence of a distinguished gathering a memorial tablet at the birthplace of President U. S. Grant at Point Pleasant, Clermont county, O. was unveiled, Oct. 2. It was the first i of three days’ celebration of the cen- tennial and heme coming week of; A bronze cannon and memorial tab- | | let had been placed on what is be- | | lieved to be the exact spot where was located the house in which Gen. Grant was born, and about this were Gov. Andrew L. Harris. Henry C. Corbin, U.:S. A., retired; Brig. Gen. Fred D. Grant, a delegation of the Ohio command- | ery of the Loyal Legion and relatives | and other guests A detachment of | regular soldiers from Fort Thomas acted as a guard of honor. gathered Lieut. Gen. | | Tanabe SEEK TO ENJOIN STATE | Railroads in South Dakota Bring Ac- tion Against Lower Fare. All leading railroads having lines | Court at for a permanent | tion in the United States Sioux Falls, S. D, injunction preventing the State Board of Railroad Commissioners from put- ting into effect Oct. 15 an order re- | ducing passenger rates in the state | from three to two and one-half cents a mile. The commission was temporarily | restrained pending a hearing before | Judge Cartland, Oct. 29, on the appli- a permanent injunction. Santa Fe Raises Wages. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe ! Railway Co., at the general offices in Topeka, Kan., announced an increase of wages to its 5,000 machinists and boiler makers of two cents an hour, and an increase to helpers of 112 cents an hour, effective Oct. 1. Secretary of War W. H. Taft and { his party were entertained at a sump- tuous banquet by the Emperor of Ja- pan, following which the Secretary | and the Emperor engaged in a private | conference. l born fon Aug. 21. | an | of -costs was left open, counsel | plaintiffs to submit a brief thereon | her i Chamber of Commerce at of | cisco, | nothing in “Magoon’s Order | & special train, | been i again | suing | dent ly | the Premier company, | pool, i ceived from Maiden STORM STRIKES NAVY Lieutenant and Seamen Killed in Ad- miral Evans’ Fieet. A terrific storm off the New Iing- land coast played havoc with Admiral Evans’ fleet at target practice, off Cape Cod. and resulted in two fatali- ties. Lieut. John H. Furze of the bat- tleship Illinois, was thrown violently against a hatchway, receiving injuries which resulted in his death. He was in South Carolina and appoint- ed to the naval academy from Georgia. Harris Carroll. an ordinary seaman, { was swept overboard from the Minne- | Sota and lost. He was a citizen of Dyersburg, Tenn. and enlisted at Oklahoma City last February. Adniiral Evans notified the navy de- partment of the loss of lives. The II- linois, by his orders, proceeded to Boston, where the body of Lieut. Furze was taken ashore and his rela- tives notified. | SUIT AGAINST MRS. EDDY ENDS Question of Costs, Which Amount to $7,000, Is Not -Yet Decided. At a special session of the superior court por Aor imas county in Con- cord, N. , Judze Chamberlin grant- ed the hE to dismiss the suit ot Eddy Frye, filed by the plaintiffs, This was the “next friends” suit instituted by George W. Glover, son of Mary Baker Eddy, for accounting of the aifairs of the head of the Christian Science Society, VS. {and its dismissal ends the litigation | then begun. The question of the apportionment for the by 15. dy, Oct. 10, and the other side by Oct. The trustees named by Mrs. Ed- on March 6, to take charge of property, were admitted as par- ties to this question of costs, which amounts to about $7,000. WAR WOULD BE A CRIME Secretary Taft Declares at Tokyo That America’s Friendship To- ward Japan Is Solid. A banquet in honor War Taft was given municipality of the of Secretary of jointly by the capital and the Tokyo. The Secrctary, in responding to the speech of welcome, said in part: “Now, for the moment, there is only a little cloud over our friendship of 5) vears, but the greatest earthquake the century could not shake our amity. I cannot trespass upon the { jurisdiction of the department of state and discuss the events in San Fran- but I “can sav that here is them that is incapable of honorable and full ator oy or- dinary diplomacy. “A war between America pan would be a crime and Ja- against civiliza- | tion.” WILL HUNT DOWN REBELS Is to Capture, Kill or Drive Them Into Sea. Thirty additional men of the rural guard left Santiago, Cuba, Sept. 6, on to aid Capt. Dough- erty in running down Adalfo Lacalle and his band of 49 men, who have been loeated in the vicinity of Guaro. Lacalle is paying cach for his supplies at the country stores. The small band of rebels which has traversing the. country in. the northern section of Santiago Prov- ince, according to late dispatches, has exchanged shots with the pur- rurales. .. The latter are close at the heels of the bandits. Governor | Magoon has determined to deal with | outlaws and insurrectos with a streng it is drive hand. The orders of the rurales, stated, are to capture, kill or them into the ocean. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. United States Se Sen ator Wm... E. Borah was acnuitted on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the govern- ment of Idaho timber lands. John Sharp Williams has ed his intention of retiring from the House of Representatives to engage in a course of study during the next two vears for the life of Thomas Jef- announc- | ferson, which he proposes to write. Theaters on ocean steamers about to become a reality through -a deal Charles Frohman has just closed with the Cunard Co. Senator Foraker, in an address at Cincinnati denounced pessimism emanating from critics of the Presi- in his efforts to enforce laws and declared that its continuance among big business men would invite panic. Sultan Abd El Aziz, accompanied by the Marabouts, or Holy Men, made a pilgrimage to the tombs of the Holy Men outside of the city of Rabat, Mo- rocco, Oct. 5, where a white bull was | killed and its blood offered as a sacri- fice. The DeBeers Diamend Co., coramon- called the trust, and its principal competitors, including have formed a according to cable advices re- Lane (dealers, and prices will be firmly maintained. Because he had been refused food, independent la tramp took vengeance by beating | Mrs. John Hathaway, of Oquawka, Ill, to unconsciousness and then, ty- ing her 4-year-old son to a tree, burn- ed him to death. Citizens are scour- | ing the country for the murderer. Forty-two Killed in Wreck. Forty-two persons, including 30 Japanese soldiers, were killed or in- jured by the derailment of a south- bound train from Seoul, Korea. The responsibility for the wreck has not been placed. A revolution has broken out in the province of Corrientes in the Argen- tina republic. The insurgents have seized several positions and in the fighting with the government troops many men on both sides were either killed or wounded.