SKATERS DROWNED Pleasure Seekers Meet Death in lcy Waters. DVER 150 PEOPLE ON LAKE. ee Lost Lives on Oncta Lake, in Massachusetts, and Two at Toledo,.O. nnie Mosenier, aged 20; Henry b, aged 20, and Frederick Norris, d 16, skated through the thin ice Onata Lake at Pittsfield, Mass. day afternoon and were drowned. /illlam Suttle, aged 16, who was ting with Norris, was saved by liam Zapp, who heroically own life to drag Suttle from the er. the ice, which varied in thickness m one to two inches, when edy occurred. Norris and Suttle e skating about 400 vards from the re, when, with a crash, they went pugh, crying for help. app reached Suttle in time to save . Norris had disappeared. ce were immediately informed by pphone of the . accident. ite was informed by an excited ter that a young man and woman just gone down withou: an out- scme hglf mile distant, just south | Several boards, the center of the lake. ng men, with ropes and hed on skates to the rescue. They md a great hole in the ice. * A gray floated in the hole. Some min- s before Ano and i been seen skating together about lake. They did not succeed in ding the bodies. \t Toledo, O., Frank Ballmer, aged and Trank Felix, aged 12, were bwn~d while skating in a slip along river. Their bodies were rccov- bd. The older boy made a heroic empt te rescue his comrade and d in trying to save him. CONGRESSMEN FIGHT pute Leads to Insult and Exchange | of Blows. epresentative John Sharp Wil- s of Mississippi and Representa- David DeArmond of Missouri, intellectual. heavyweights, but physical bantamweizhts on the hocratic side of the House, engag- in fist ficht on the floor of the mber, directly after the House hail urned for the day. irst, there was a conversation re fing in a difference of recollec- In, the lie was passed and then there s an exchange of blows. How many were struck no one can I, but there were several, and. when hb combatants were separated by ir colleagues, the minority leader s bleeding from a long gash under left eve, while blood cozed from swollen nose of the dignified mber from Missouri. Fhe affair was entirely impromptu, it could scarce have been more ctacular so far as surroundings if it had been pre-arranged. nly two or three b cpeaker had declared the journed and left the hall re still on the floor, however, a hdred or more members, newspaper bn and clerks and the galleries had vet been cleared of spectators. a HA Slain. United shot and in- destroying a the notorious Revenue Man Hendricks, a officers, was killed “while bekade distillery in onshine Smithtown settlement of akés county, N. C. The shot that led Hendricks was fired from am- sh, and while it is known that onshinerg did the act, it is not own, who the murderer is. Tuberculosis Resolution Held Up. An unsuccessful attempt was made the house to pass a resolution an- orizing the department of state tc rite foreign representatives to the ternational «Tuberculosis Congress Washington, September 1 to Oe: yor 12. 1908. Mr. 3archfeld of ttsburg called np the resoluticn, but Rartlett of Georgia objected "and laid aside. Decrease in Em ration. . The remarkable falling off in the w of emigration from Fiume, Hun- rv.« to the United States is well strated by the empty steerages of » departing steamers. Instead of a customary 2,000 or 3,000 emi- ints on each vessel, the Carononio rried only 300 steerage passengers, ile the Carpathia had on board s than emigranfs. wv W. States rene hntly 50 Doubkle-Header in Wreck. frain No. 23 on the Southern, bound m - Atlanta for = Birmingham, ran o an oven switch at Tallapoosa, .. killing Engineer Downey of At- 1ta and injuring two firemenn. The in was drawn by two engines, both which left the rails and turned or. Secretary Taft Returns. Vigorous and joily and looking l-groomed as if returning from an ting at Atlantic = City, Secretary ft reached Washington December , after his 120-day trip around the orld. Dealing in grain futures is prohibit- by a bill introduced by Represen- tive DEWEY HAS CELEBRATION dmiral serve Birthday. Admiral George Dewey gave a din- | on | er December 18th, at his home street, in celebration of the seven- eth anniversary of his birth. The actunal anniversary does not oc- ir until December 26, but the: cele- ration was advanced in order that e president, who was anxious to ac- pt the admiral's invitation to at- bnd, might be present. The dinner fas informal. risked | tion | : 3 { by Pver 150 young pebdple were skating | the | | the The | Chief | Miss Mosenier | I destroys as it proceeds | animals minutes before, | House | There | : : 8 hi { is that New. York has had up to this of i eral | the Scott of Kansas, the new chair- | an of the committee on agriculture. | Gives Little Dinner to Ob- | INTERPRET RATE LAW Inter-State Commerce Body's Ruling Affects All Claims. Official interpretation of limitation provision of rate law has been made Inter-Commerce Commission This action. is the first importance regarding all claims now pending likely for damages or reparation. The commission simply directed that the following entry be made on the minutes of the body: “Claims filed® since August 28, must have accrued within two prior to the date when they filed, otherswise they barred the statute.- Claims filed on or fore August 28, 1907, are not affect- cd by the two-year limitation in the act. “The commission vill jurisdiction of, or recognize dietion over, any claims fer or damages WHich are the statute of limitations preted by the commission: and the commission holds further that it will not recognize the right the rier to waive the provisions of statute. “Relative to law as to the act. went 1906.” An {two-year railroad the the hy Of or 1907, years were are by bhe- take not its juris- barred inter- of car: that the constitution of the statute of limitations into effect August 28, ‘CURE FOR INSANITY of Inhuman Form Now Yields to Surgery. A cure for one of the most forms of insanity, hitherto considered in expert medical works as 80 cent incurable, has been found, hoped, in the surgeon’s knife by N. M. Owensby, physician-in-chief at Bayview = Insane Asylum, Baltimore. This form of insanity is known to the profession dementia nraecox. [It the human thought and victim little a mos{ de- Madness pitiable per it is | re Dr. as qualities of resistance, speech, rendering the more than a beast-—-often praved degenerate. Selecting from the worst case in.the asvium. Dr. -Owensby last July per formed the operaticn. The case was kept under observation for months without the slightest indica- tion of a return of symvtoms Last Jetober the case was dismissed and the man- has since secured employ- ment and doing intelligent Four other eases were operated upon and three of these showed the return of intelligence. LWO is work Game FIND MANY BAD CATTLE York Investigators Discover High Fercentage of Dovir Tuberculcsis New a iC revelation of tubereulo 2 IIS A startling alence of bovine York state. and of the i the legal means for the control of this disease has been made 1 the Tompkins County Medical Dr. V. A. Moore, ha Cornell university. Dr. Moore stated that tested by Dean Law cf the Cornell Veterinary eollege, 16 per had the disease The official 3-0f the state in 1904 wl-that tested, per cent nu yefore Soeiaty by cterinlogist 1.086 cows cont repot sho wx 16 disease. The New condition in ceclared, for this Dr. Mcore reas York n state, vear no inspection of a.:.nals srougt into this state, while her states have had such inspection. New York has thus become the dumping ground tuhercenlosis cattle. other MAKE DEPOSITORS SECURE Imposing a Tax to Create Fund With Which State Can Settle With Creditors. A new banking law providing a guaranty fund for the protection of depositors, in insolvent! banks, will become gperative on Feb- ruary 17, 1908. Each bank is required to pay to the state banking board a sum equal to 1 per cent of daily ave » deposits. When- over this sum will increased by further assessment, Whenever a bank fails bank examiner will step in and for with pay the depesitors from guaranty fund held by the bankir board. These payments. become first lien on the a 3 defune bank. for Qklahema, state its depleted it he the if the ol ih CAPITAL NOTES. has sighed a the Arkansas west-central Roosevelt proclamation creating National forest in the part \nsas, covering 1,000 000 acres. It will east ( any of the g forests. President more the of 4 be est 31 vernment's A claim for reparation will be mado because the damage suffered the Italian interests in the destrue- tion of one of the tobacco factories in Hopkinsville, : Ky., which. was burned some time ago by night raid- ers Fhe loss amounted to al thousand dollars. Italian Ambassador Planches has learned Italian consul at New Orleans the three men killed by a mob days ago at Chathamville, and supposed to be Italians, Hungarians: . The treasury the ‘Buftalo” ed at the of by sevel des the that Sev La., were Mayor through department announced appearance of a counterfeit $10 United States note, detect National Park Bank, in New York city. While the general appearance of the note is deceptive, lathe work and ruling are crude broken. The note bears the se- number 4,678,111. and rial Project Kongo Railroad. Petit Bleu Britain and State have at for the construction of a railroad be- tween Lado, on the east bank of the | river Nile in Eastern Sudan, and th Kongo f{rentier. . that Free announces the The Treat Kongo arrived an agreement Compuny pan quarterly The Proctor has declared { dividend of 2 per cent on the prefer- | red stock, payable January 15 | stockholders of record December the the! More Killed and Injured in Amer- | ; | anniversary MINE HORROR i bering 2,061 | Government | ders i-Garfield repara-r { to | ol. | ica than in Europe. 22840 DEATHS IN 17 YEARS This Due Ade- Government Experts Find Largely to Lack of quate Laws. In all world the stands United States and the preeminent in killing the death maiming coal miners, mines of nation many this times causing as men per 1,000 em- eo ployed as those of most European countries. In. the last 17 have given. up lives mines of this country. As many lent. deaths have occurred in mines during the six years during the preceding 11 years. number cof fatal accidents each year now double that of 1895. In 1906 6,861 men injured in the mines, the killed num- and injured 4,800, facts have been gathered by experts acting under or- Secretary of the Interior to investigate the nature and extent of mine accidents, and to make suggestions as how mining conditions may be improved and ac- cidents prevented. Since the reports country has been. startled with news of three mine explosions inz nearly five hundred. lives. The first occurred in the. Naomi mine at Favette City. Pa., early in December. and cost 34. lives, Then followed the Monongah disaster in West Virginia. wi a of nearly 100 lives and explosion in Ala- bama the other ay... with 65 lives lost. The 1506 22,840 in men the vio- the voars their last is killed ‘or wer the These from to the the O31 were written the indicate - that during men were killed or of this nher of these indirect- has been increase lack of regula- proper explo: condi: used the gas the fact that coal. mining figures near in and 7.000 th yal. mines injured the country that the nur iecidents, caused diroetly ly. by mine ‘ex steadily © inereasing. 1 been in part n and enforceable tions: in information C( or ions, This to. the mine lack of concerning the in mining, the whieh ti} be oper used and under in the dust. and in the developie cnly is but m or farther good sives tions safely and in not can ce: of part to nt of D the number of miners FINE CHURCH DEDICATED is One of the Finest of Eccle- siastical Structures. Wi elaborate th and impres de- His emonies, tion and tail” the otestant: ity avenue. and g. Was di new conal ehnreh. Walnut © str cated. The new examples of attained in I550.000. An clergvmen the exercises, } by. the Right 84 fice is church architecture vet this. country, and cost immense ¢ gation and lavmen. attended vhich conducted tev. Cortlandt Wlhife- hi Oishop of Pittsburg diocese. most imposing feature the coremonies was the procession the: boys’ choir, robed in followed by a delegation of ing clergymen and Rev. Dr. Mcllvaine, rector of the parish; IDDr.. Dl. Perris, -assistant’ rector; Right Rev. Vincent, Right Rev. Right Rev. William GW. Peterkin, A. Leonard and B Whitehead. one of the finest mgr of \ 1 1 ad, the Rev. shop ITALY REGISTERS KICK Ambassador Complains About De- st of Government's Tobacco. the ruction At the r of Italian Am bassodor Secretary Root has called upon the Governor of Kentucky intervene prevent the destruction by “night riders’ ff to. bacco belonginz to the Italian Gov- ernment and stored in Kentucky. The that he is in- quest to tO further ior. has reported igating the matter. Other matters about which the Ital- ian Ambassador complained related to the treatment of Italian laborers in Mississippi and Florida. In Miss 31 lab had heen abused be- cause ther were Italians, while in / made the vietims 1Ze worse than ners Florida of a sys slavery. STOLE GEMS WORTH $32,000 Boy Arrested as He Is Trying to Sell Them for $3. New York December White. aged 17, is the confessed thief, according to the nolice. of the §32.000 package of jewelry stolen from the United States Express Company. He was “arrested in Jer City, after trving to dispose of the entire collec- tion for $3. The of a 33.000 necklace for 25 to his cap- ture. The priscner was a helper on of the express company’s wagons, in Jersey City His wagon cairied the valuable package. which he put into his peecket-as the wagon was being unloaded. sey sale cents led ona MISSOURI FOR TAFT Stat= Republican Committee Passes Resolutions Favoring Him. With but ‘one member out of when the final vote was taken Republican state committee in sion at St. Louis, adopted a resolu- tion indorsi candidacy of Secretary for the Presi- line the ses- the Taft dooney. February 7.was set as the date for 1te convention, at which dele- cates to the national Republican con- ventien will be chosen. ‘the st G INCREASE | commemorative | sons: came to three incendiarism 20.—William | WHITTIER CENTENARY Memory of Quaker Poet Honored in New England. 17, the of the Whittier observances one hundredth birth of John was marked by in many societies in December Greenleaf schools and by literary many sections of the country, of which he is generally considered one of the most beloved and representative poet 3. ao At Amesbury, Mass., where the ‘poet: of freedom” spent many years of his life, the 100th anniversary of his birth: was celebrated with appro- iate exercises. By hundreds per- from out-of-town be at the observances. auditorium of the hall was decorated with laurel and a portrait of the poet occupied a conspicuous position on the stage. In the balcony were 100 school children, prepared to sing some - Whittier's poems. that had been to music. The principal rr Governor John Washington of Tuskegee, and Edwin D. Mead of Boston. A letter from President Roosevelt was read. Many visitors from : all sections went to Haverhill, the birthplace of the poct. Dr to present The elaborately bunting. and of set were For- Booker speakers D. Long, STEEL EARNINGS $200,000,000 Indicated by of the Big Companies. LLeading steel companies will show earninzs of $200,000,000 net at the of the current year, which will the largest in the history of the Profits .of Books 1 ¢rose 1 oe ‘country. The companies whose combined earnings will run close to this figure are the United States Steel Corpora- tion, Bethlehem Steel, Republic Iron and Steel, Jones & laughlin, Lacka- wanna Steel Company, Tennessee Coal and’ Iron, Colorado : Fuel and Iron, Sloss-Sheffield, Pennsylvania Stee] Company and the Maryland Steel Company. The increase in the earnings has been due largely to increased produc- tion and good prices received, which, however, have been offset in a meas- ure by the higher cost of labor and the higher cost of raw material. Ilmployes of the United States Steel (Corporation wil} receive some handsome Christmas presents this vear., They will come from the pro- fit-sharing plan. of the corporation, under which $10,000,000 will be dis- tributed between and January 1, 1908, now TO HELP FIGHT PLAGUE for Creation of National Tuber- Commission Is Intro- duced in House. ha creation of ‘nlozis. commission n members, the osis cul tuber- .of surgeons the the navy and the bureau of health and marine hospital and four tuberculosis experts to be chosen by the president of the United States from citizen surgeons, provided for in a bill introduced Representative Smith of Towa. of the commission are outlined as follows: “To inquire into the best methods for the prevention and control of tu herenlosis and to avoid the spread of thie and the recommend to congress, the legislators of the sev- 11 states and boards of health uni- methods for prevention, control and against its spread.” The commission is required to its final report within two. years he dissolved. national to consist a of army, public service by The duties disease, form file and CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. of night riders” and in the tobacco district of Indiana and Kentucky, insurance companies are cancelling policies on leaf tobacco in warehouses and barns. Ir National Exchange York announced an en- cagoment of $700.000 gold for import. Thiz makes a total of $106,050,000 cengaced during the present move- ment, On account ing NCW The Bank cof Senator Knox suggested an amend- ment to a bill proposed by Tillman, civing the varions states right to reg- ulate sale of original packages of li- quor. This right now belongs solely to the government. Wireless messages from Admiral vans’ big fleet say that the ships are now bevond the gulf stream and are sailing along in an unruffled sea. The {fleet was about 700 miles north- east from St. Thomas, D. W. 1. A pusse captured a man in a min- ing camp 100 miles from KEsenada, Cal., who is believed to be William Walker, thq man who absconded from New Drigain,~Conn., over a year ago, leaving a defalcation of about $500,000. Fividence brought out in ernment’s suit against the Tobacco Company showed that one one branch of the concern—that In New York-—did an annual business of $12,000,000, and controlled 75 per cent of the tobacco business New York and Yonkers. Destrover Breaks All Records. The turbine torpedo boat destroyer Tartar . broke all records in fast steaming in her final trials over the oificial course at Southampton, De- cember 17, attaining a speed of 37.037 knots. She also established a new record for a six-hours’ trial, cover- ing 235 miles in that time and main- taining the unprecedented speed of 35.363 knots. the gov- American in Noted Scientist Dead. TL.ord Kelvin, the noted scientist, | died._at_ Glasgow, Scotland, December | 17. The newspapers pay him the tribute as the foremost scien- the age. comparable with Newton and Faraday. William Thompson, first Lord Kelvin, was horn at Belfast, Ireland, June 26, 1824. He was a celebrated mathema- tician aud physicist, and occupied the chair of natural philosophy in Glasgow university from 1846 to 1899. He was knighted-in 1866 ‘and was created Baron Kelvin in 1892. highest tist of