KING AND CROWN PRINCE OF PORTUGAL KILLE Voliey Fired by Assassins at the Royal Carriage in Streets of the City of Lisbon. THREE OF REGICIDES KILLED One of a Number of Suspects Put Under Arrest Committed Suicide. Lisbon. — King Carlos of Portugal, and the Crown Prince Luiz Philippe, were assassinated and the king's sec- ond son, the Infant Manuel, was slightly injured but Queen Amelie, who strove to save the crown prince's life by throwing herself upon him, was unhurt. A band of men waiting at the corner of the Praco do Commercio and the Rua do Arsenal, suddenly sprang to- ward the open carriage in which the royal family were driving to the palace, and levelling carbines which they had concealed upon them, fired. The king and crown prince, upon whom the at- tack was directed, were each shot three times, and they lived only long enough to be carried to the marine arsenal nearby, where they expired. Almost at the first shot the king fell back on the cushions dying and, at the same, moment, the crown prince was seen to half rise and then sink hack on the seat. Queen Amelie jumped up and threw herself toward the crown prince, in an apparent ef- fort to save his life at the cost of her own, but the prince already had re- ceived his death wound. The police guard fired upon the assassins and killed three of them. The roval family were returning A SCATHING MESSAGE President Sends Remarkable Docu- ment To Congress. Washington. — President Roosevelt transmitted a special message to con- gress. It it a scathing document. Efforts ic blame the administration for the recent depression in business is objected to by the Nation's head. He declares he has nothing but scorn HOUSE APPROPRIATION BILL Four Hundred Thousand Dollars Cut from Items. THE ALDRICH BILL INTRODUCED for predatory wealth and its minions, Various Amendments Appear, But and that the responsibility for the Genera! Character of Bill Re- distress that is felt in business is upon the wrong-doing of the “wealthy malefactors,” whom he does not spare in his burning sentences. The President makes a plea for justice fer all people, labor and cap- ital. He asks that an employer's liability law that will stand the test of the courts, be enacted. Also, that beneficent combines and traffic agreements among railroads be per- mitted. The President especially would give government employes the right to recover for injuries sustained while in the government service. He declares his purpose to go on in the course he has mapped out for himself, and which he believes to be the only one for the Nation to exalt it in righteousness. He plainly warns against any reaction. Pleading against abuse of the power of injunction, the President asserts the right of injunc- tion must stand, and urges congress to consider means of making it justly effective. : Corporate abuses, stockwatering, over-capitalization, gambling in secu- rities and commodities, cornering, etc. are condemned in unmeasured terms, and congress is called upon to devise’ means to stop the alleged evils. | Greater powers for the interstate com- merce commission enlarged control of | corporaticns and law enforcement all | along the line are urged and declared | to be the fixed policy of the adminis-| tration. The Standard Oil and the Harri- mang especially are attacked as ini- mains the Same as at First Washington, Jan. 30.—After being before the house of representatives in committee of the whole for the past week, the urgent deficiency appropria- tion bill was passed substantially as reported. It then carried a total of $24,174,450, and in the course of the week something over $400,000 was stricken out. The principal appropriation went to the following objects in the sums named: Treasury department, $i, 652.331: District of Columbia, $304, 184; military establishment, $4,680, 875; back pay and bounty claims, $300,000; naval establishment, $1,611, 790; department of the interior, $344, 647; department of commerce and la- bor, $553,900; United States courts, $944,039: postal service, $1,605,851; Isthmian canal, $12,178,900; house of representatives, $623,758; judgments, court of claims, $187,569; audited ac- counts, $292,018. fn the senate, Mr. Aldrich reported from the finance committee the Ald- rich currency bill and gave notice that he would call it up on Monday, Februvary 3. Mr. Bailey, leader of the minority on the finance committee, announced that he woulfl later submit a bill em- bodyving the views of the minority. The mail subsidy bill was reported from the committee on commerce. A hill was passed authorizing a | new immigration station to be built at EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY | Alleges Young Women Have Only to Cry “Mamma, Buy Me That” and . 'Tis Done. Washington.—The mania of Ameri- can millionaire girls for acquiring foreign titles, illustrated by the mar- riage ol Miss Gladys M. Vanderbilt and Count Laszlo Szechenyi was the occasion for a speech of bitter denun- ciation in the house by Representa- tive Charles McGavin of Chicago. He begun by declaring that “as the house is in committee of the whole | house on the state of the Union, it may not be amiss to inquire what this state is coming to, in view of these international unicus which are of such frequent occurrence of late be- tween American heiresses and alleged nobilities from abroad.” Continuing he said: “In thinking of | these numerous weddings, I have] wondered what the early pioneers | who battled with the Indians, chal-| lenged the forest and braved the win- | ter’'s snows to establish a government | where manhood might be recognized for its true value, instead of for acci- dent of birth, would say if from their graves they could leok back and see so many of the women of this country sacrificing their souls and honor upon the altar of snobbery and vice. “I do not refer to any particular girl, nor have I prejudice against all of these titled men. for some of them are worthy to grace any home; some of them have added to the honor of their names and to the glory of their | country. 1 have reference only to those who wear a monocle in their eye and an idiotic look upon their faces—those who have neither the disposition to do good nor the ability to do harm. “Then I was curious to know whether the present tariff schedule in- cluded dukes, earls, lords and counts, and finding that these things were no- where mentioned, I thought that it might be proper for the customs | officers to classify them like frogs’ | of a merchant marine, | disgrace, was due to Republican pol- HOT DEBATE IN THE HOUSE The Lack of American Vessels to Carry Coal for the Navy. BLAME PUT ON REPUBLICANS Littlefield Cannot Explain Why Ad- ministration Continues to Break Laws. Washington.—The need of an Amer- ican merchant marine as an auxil- iary to the navy formed the principal topic of discussion in the house of representatives during the consideration of the urgent deficiency appropriation bill. Mr. Littlefield of Maine questioned the legality of the provision appro- priating $1,000,000 to supply a defi- ciency for coal for the navy caused by the transfer of the battleship fleet from the Atlantic to the Pacific. He criticised congress for its failure to make appropriations for a mer- chant marine. J His remarks elicited from Mr. Fitz- gerald of New York, the charge that the Republican party was responsible for that condition, while Mr. Sherley of Kentucky, maintained that the lack “a national icies.” Mr. Crumpacker of Indiana, ridi- culed the contention of Mr. Little- field and said: If it should be sustain- ed the gevernment simply would be selling its own coal and turning the | money into its treasury. “Will the gentleman suggest how | this administration can carry out its policies without violating the law?” inquired Mr. Fitzgerald, of Mr. Little- field. . “That is a thing that is not up to me,” replied Mr. Littlefield, who then launched upon a plea for an PLEA FOR THAW Attorney Littieton Asks for Acquittal for His Client on Ground of Insanity. New York. — Martin W. Littleton, chief counsel in the defense of Harry K. Thaw, asked for the acquittal of his client upon the ground of insan- ity, declaring he could not conceive how, in the face of the evidence, the jury could render any other verdict. The serious and sincere evidence of the defense, tending to stablish the insanity of the defendant, Mr. Littleton declared, has been answer- ed only by the sneers and insinua- tions of District Attorney Jerome. These sneers and insinuations, the young Pittsburger’s advocate assert- ed. were not the competent proof that the law required the prosecuting au- thorities to produce, once the insani- ty of the accused person is made an issue. He repeatedly urged upon the jury to remember that in a case of this kind, the burden of proof rests wholly upon the state te prove the sanity of the defendant beyond all reasonable doubt. Mr. Littleton warmly defended Evelyn Nesbit Thaw against the at- tacks of District Attorney Jerome. Heo said he could not understand what she had done, what great crime she had committed, considered in the light of all she had confessed herself to be. that the prosecutor should transcend all the rules of propriety and decency and attempt to destroy her when in the next breath he was ready to ‘“‘coddle and hug and vouch for the testimony of such a scoundrel as Abraham Hummel—the very ver- min of the New York bar.” RUSH TO ENLIST IN ARMY | Recruiting Stations Have Increased Their Former Records by 300 Per Cent. New ‘York, Jan. 26.—Several thous- and men, it is estimated, have been asd | from Villa Vicosa, where they had mical in their practices, and the| legs, as poultry, for it is the general | Amorican 3 + & a ne Shih been sojourning, and were on their country is warned that they have | Boston. : : opinion among Americans that they | Jneen gin Re i turiieg away from the United Sustes itrnad. stati banded together for reaction, which, | Amendments to Aldrich Bill. ite ocose. nn , RE , £ any | army recruiting stations in this city way from the railroad station to the tog n, which, | i J gee millions had created a naval fleet and lin the last tw th palace. A strong guard was in at-| the President says, must not and will| The various amendments which “We upon this side of the house Ss wi or 15] ast two Joos 5 & : | os 3 yet that fleet was without power to Every recruiting station is so rap- tendance because of the recent up- not be tolerated. | have been published from time to | have in recent years referred tri- support itself except within the radius | idly listing p rising in the city and the discovery of —_— | time appear in the Aldrich bill, al-| umphantly to the fact that as between | o¢ jg operations J y iv isting meg for the army that a plot to assassinate Premier Franco HOLDS EVELYN UP TO PITY | ihoush in general character the bill | this and other nations, the balance of AL amrortion ov NM: iitticacd Shutl he ormer records are inceased 300 and overthrow the monarchy. But the ; | remains the same as when introduc- | trade is in our favor, but nowhere in|, “«gistinenished Democrat senator” | par cent. 5 ; band of murderers had selected the Murder the Result of Low Figks for|ed. There has been an effort on the | the summary can be found a referefce| haa talked the ship subsidy bill to | > na thie since fhe war hay dhe mast advantagecus spot for the com- Possession of Woman, He Says. | part of the committee to emphasize | to such trades as these, where soiled | jeath prompted a query by Mr Fite] to recruiting stations been so mission of tleir crime, for they were| New York.— William Travers Je-| the emergency nature of the act that | and frayed nobility is exchanged for|eerald as to Why the Re sublicans | great, and while only a small percen- concealed from the eyes of the police | rome, representative of the people | is proposed and to this end various | a few million American dollars Wrung| who have been “in uninterr n d S| tage of those applying for enlistment i s carriage hi : nde s ” i | amendments are inserted in the bill | from the lambs of Wall street, with a errupted pow- | are accepted, the officers in charge of until the carriage had wheeled into | made a masterly plea that justice be] 3 3 3 ’ er for eleven years, had failed to rem- | the stations decl h the Praco do Commercio, a large | done in the case of Harry Kendall which are intended to cause speedy | woman thrown in ‘to boot. edy the condition. ssi lo » Sociere Dok 1h Feud be square. 0 | tewnance of pudvilons) currency when| sBresviday seein if be bargain-day | Ar. Littlefield’s reply was that the ga i 70 Assassins Attack Carriage uations, all were lacking; lo ic analy-| 2 Stringency occurs. fn the city of New York, whether it|q op0sti did fo ify hi 0f-nen Now enfigted 17 goth oF the : : , : s, king; logic analy The follow a tis t i y > | suggestion did not modify his state- | minor defects were overlooked. Before any of the guard were aware | sis and a calm consideration of facts he following amendment Is jnser be for a yard cf ribbon or a pounc| ment one iota. Th aiorit : of what was happening the assassins | were their substitutes. It was no =d in the first section of the bill in | of flesh; whether it be upon the re- The real purpose of sending the t . ho y of ie men who are leaped toward the carriage and in-| blind appeal for the vengeance of the lieu of the provisions which gave the | tail counter of Broadway or the auc-| fleet to the Pacific was qustioned by it] ay acluds mer ml a Fusilinde of shots ong of, law that Mr. Jerome addressed to the ompLTOle oY ihe ney Power 1 ton block of Fifth avenue. Mr. Johnson of South Carolina, who ag : Shame 2 a moment all was terrible confu- | jury, but ever and always there was| | ne : > ET BATES EXIS said that, whatever the object, it sion, the king and crown prince be-|the note of fairness, even atl times when application 13 made, according SECRET RATES EXISTED caused a millicn doilar deficiency and DRIVEN BACK BY NATIVES ire shot down without the slightest|of mercy. to his judgment and at his convenl Investigation ih Case Against Stand would cause other deficiencies. He | 5 i EE chance to save themselves. Police The year that has elapsed since the ig omotroller of the currency =n i 9 attacked the purchase of coal lands merican Expedition in the Kongo ~ Hi guards sprang upon the regicides, the | first trial had wrought a wonderful | oon ismediniely the a 51 ar oil Company as to HI- in the Philippines and declared that Forced to Beat Retreat. go 1 nomber of whom is somewhat uncer- | and startling change in the prosecu- ti th. his y dati op inois Roads. “somebody got the money and we got The American Bxpedition led by ming fain, aud killed three of them and | tor. No longer attempting to shield 2 100, ns mes ation, 20 Waghington. — That secret ratesja gold brick.” The people, he in-|R. Dorsey Mohun, which was seeking WwW captured three others. One of these the name of Stanford White, he ac- ee ny ou e Joan wh were adopted by the Chicago & Bast- | sinuated, had been “buncoed” in that | to penetrate into the wilds of the hor committed suicide after being placed | cepted the story told by Evelyn Nes- oo. » Hin ig wu a i; 74 oo ern Tllinois Railroad and by other | transaction. Kengo Kree State in the interests of key? in prison. It is charged that one of | bit Thaw as true—all but the drug- PS aa NS a 304 railroads in Illinois, was developed Mr. Tawney disclaimed any person- | the American Kongo Company, was : the murderers was a Spaniard named | ging—and he made frank confession shall ack . Po a be in tho trial of the cases of the Gov-|al responsibility *‘for buying any al- attacked by natives and compelled Th Cordova. to the jury that the velvet swings and and smell 5 ermine the y Be : ernment against the Standard Oil |leged coal islands or coal lands.” to withdraw. Mr. Mchun was the for- when The bodies of the king and the mirrored rooms of the studio house Soe nd fix pe, amoung wi i the | Company. ag mer American Consalar agent at . to th crown prince were removed from the | described by the girl were indeed a imitations ereinafter imposed, 0 Mr. Durand, deputy commissioner KILLED IN EXPLOSION Boma. ¥ healt marine arsenal to two closed car-| miserable reality. fe sadam circulating notes to be | of corporations, continuing his testi- : The object of the expedition was to riages to the royal palace, the Paco, No longer attacking Evelyn Thaw : , ise a mony, said that in conversation with | pugt Thought : pave the way for the large Ameri- das Neccssidades, the late residence | as a skilled adventuress, Mr. Jerome For Equitable Distribution. Mr. Dodge, one of the vice presidents | : oe Be Cause of Disaster PR lg Yn Bi i Ma of ithe king, escorted by municipal | pleaded for the girl, because she “fn order that the distribution of | of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, he ear Hawks Nest, W. Va. Ryan, the Guggenheims - and other dwell guards mounted. never had had a chance for any. of | Poles tO be issued under the provi | had asked Mr. Dodge whether it was| Charleston, WV. Va.— Another was | capitalists are to make in that coun- » comm Young Prince Manuel was proclaim- | the higher, cleaner, sweeter things sions of this act shall be made as |a habit of Illinois railroad to make added to West Virginia's long list of | try in the exploitation of the rubber, Of ti ed king of Portugal. Premier Franco | of life. The climax came, however, equitable as practicable between the | secret rates wholly in the State of Iil- mine disasters by an explosion that | mining and railroad concessions made cater remaing at helm. One of the dcad| when Mr. Jerome denounced. both | various sections of the country, the | incis. Mr. Dodge had replied that occurred near Hawks Nest, Fayette | to them by Belgium of sil regicides was identified as soldier and | Thaw and White in one breath, and secretary of the treasury shall not | secret rates were made at times, not county, in one of the mines of the : : Id th tutor. classed them as “two degenerates approve applications from associa- | particularly with the intention of con-. Boone Coal and Coke Company. Nine KILLED HIS CHILDREN youn; LR quarreling over a woman.” tions in any Se in ins of he cealing the rates from shippers, but Pex we known to have lost their shelt IRON TRADE REVIEW And the woman, the prosec _| amount to which suc state woul to keep them secret from other rail- ives and it is believed five more | Murde y % large: iL clared, knew no a be entitled of the additional notes | roads. bodies are in the workings. rd or wl Botes Saye They will pass Prices Sagging and But Little New taught no more hy the world—than to herein authorized on the basis of the : et niie The Dead Are: e stter Off Than With erpill Business in Bar Iron. play one against the other until in | Proportion which the unimpaired cap- MIGHTY DEER HERD MOVES Grover Bowles, Lawrence Shares, Their Mother. ing } 4 a 1 : n | ital and surplus of the National bank- EE Harry Wilson, Wilbur Wilson, Gradi- call 1 Cleveland. — The “Iron Trade Re. | jealous rage, in blindest hatred, in|, : 3 : : view” says: vengeance of “an undeniably gross |. 2 associations in such state bears | 100,000 Caribou Strike Southward for son Coles, Charles Workman, William Chicago. — William HH. Muetsch, a consy resulted in increasing orders to any shot and killed the architect. he tas of the United Rome, Alaska —The largest herd of | fom the ae wm | re 5 an hick TT oe fi a ari e 5 V i : ol it > ey SR TABLE BRYAN RESOLUTION er Proved BOR ro that In Fok Wigs Mh ios ed in the branches of a tree on the | his two other small children. dense , 0 8 a lat case e applications from associa- | i : ie : mountain side. It was terribly mu- He coniéssed after his arrest © cente at the meetings of iron and steel| .. ... p..cetts State Committee Acts | tions in any state shall not be equal river working 13 way southward to| tjjated and has not been identified. |he intznaed to Kill another d % Sant to fi representatives to be held in New ‘ ; escape the frigid cold of the Arctic deed i : A aughter- : thi % ih ominat In Harmony, But Balks at to the amount which the associations | "© The explosion is said to have been | 18 years cld. whe was absent when waitin York this weer the predominating thors t of such state would be entitled to | "7 ° caused by dust. Deputy Mine Inspec- | the tragedy occurred weath sentiment will be in opposition to ndorsement. rh Varoitings The herd has been moving for 100 i : oh > 3 : 4 ! Be Ata hn i under this method of distribution, the | tors Warner, Boyd, Strangeler and Muetsch said to Captain Harding: feedin further reduction. There is some in- cston.—At a harmonious meeting . S00 ©07 | days now and there seems tobe no| : 3 ? ? i oh ys ptain Harding: i i ang : - i secretary of the treasury may, in his : 3 : | Phillips, who have been here sever-| “The children ar : i hine mills, | the Democratic state committee per- end to the string. It is estimated that | € sever. en are better off dead than crease in activity of finishing mills. : : : discretion, to nfeet an ‘emergency, as- BE R ; at | a] days testifying before the legisla-| alive and under th ; 1 Ment: At a meeting of pig iron manufactur- fected its organization for the year| _. . 3 "| more than 100,000 caribou have cross-| i; . glisla > e care of such a 2 I h love. | and took preliminary steps for the sign the amount not thus applied for | 4" "ciream and wended their w | tive committee investigating the Mon- | mother. She cursed at them and ers of the central west, held in Cleve- | © Ty ; SA to any applying association or asso- |. ¥ ‘ay | ongah disaster, left this evening for | home was n living hell. M ; land, a more harmonious feeling than | SOpae. eony i bs Spo an | .iations in states in the same section ee he igi of the mountains | no" scene of the explosion, and will | old daughter Hoy in th y pli par had heretofore prevailed was man-| executive committee to take charge| + (po country.” ; 0 e lower Yukon territory. ms : 20m, 2 ree months ments C y. make a thorough investigation. The | 280 because of do ti ” ifesterl. of it. a \ — gi . Se ¢ mestic trouble. colors Siac A resolution indorsing William J. Limit Is Raised. THE U. S. STEEL REPORT | mine in which the explosion occurred rae a taking THAW SENT TO ASYLUM Bryan as candidate for the Democrat- | The clause of the original bill fix was one of the smallest operations Lapps Eat Dogs and Cats. malad fe nomination for the presidency was | ing 75 per cent of the market value | Unfilled Tonnage Almost.Cut n Two | of the company, which is owned by Serious famine conditions are pre- nishec iy offered. Several members spoke of all municipal and risey bonds as —Regular Dividends Declared. | Toone Br ony the oldest and | valent in the iren mining district of the Ww : . a against its adoption, and it tab. | the limit of the issue o notes against Wa i Wr ’ most experienced operators in the New Northern. Lapland. The jnhabitants same Jury Decided That White's Slayer 5g a Sony u, 854 wos to them has been amended so that rail Ti york. Qua terly dividends of | River field. Only 25 men were em-| of Velhelmina “have fain dogs The Was Not Guilty by Rea- gi : road bonds alone are to be taken at hod 9 or iy a Prefored toon ployed. It is said that only about|and cats for food. ed: i 5 ir ? 2 Nn | half this ) y r hE son of Insanity. HOWE BILL IS DEFEATED | [3 per cemt of thew marker value | 2 I OB es toot tion | Loe this ST Woe Bi Work Wier = Was i Notes may be issued against deposits the accident occurred. BUSINESS BRIEFS citeme = Resublicahs Solidly Opposed — Tem: | ot munieipal and county bonds up to poration were declared today. These t a red | New York.—Adjudged not guilty of Pp Y. Opposes M-| 90 per cent of their market value. dividends are unchanged from the last CHICAGO HAS $1,000,000 FIRE Thirt ia : melan j : perance Committee Recom- Gol : previous quarter. Wu, _ Thirty railroads for the third week the murder of Stanford White by rea t : The limit of circulating notes that The net euraings for the three EE In ‘Tonuary Show gross earnings: de- becam son of insanity at the time the fatal mends Local Option. may be issued under the act has been | ys ended December 31 were $33, Department Fails to Confine Blaze to creased 7.89 per cent effect ; Columbus, O.—By a vote of 15 ayes | raised from $250,000,000 to $500,000, | --5 gg o $32, : - . Lg shots were fired, Harry Kendall Thaw to 20 Roos, Oe Tatol helen 553.995, a decrease of $9,180,969. TUn- Point of Origin. Directors of the Columbia Rail % : was held by the court to be a danger Howe bill, proposing to SN fh : —_— filled orien on hand Were 4,624,553 | Chicago.—The third disastrous. fire | and Light Company have a way lin cus lunatic and was sent to the state | the franchises of public service cor- Pig IRON PRODUCTION aay Io rw | n ise of ins oity Jngant of 11% per cent, payable Feb- of mix j jminal i orations. An ’ pill 8 y say oss, esti- | ruary 15. hospital for the criminal insane at D Every Republican senator voted 167 Furnaces In Blast at End of 984,477, an increase of $4,360,202, as mated at more than $1,000,000 in ihe | The banks of Denmark and Matieawan, against the bill, snd in adaition,| Yser-—3%0 In Previous December. | compared with 1906. almost complete destruction of the | have reduced their official a 4 The verdict came after 25 hours of a nia De] The American Iron & Steel Asso- ; Tree | building occupied by Alfred Peats & | rates from 7 to 61 2 secrnt ' A waiting, and when every one connect: Gp Rho cher Democrats Suporiod ciation pas received from the manu- Russia Strengthens Persian Hold. | Company, dealers in wall paper, the per cent. od with the case had abandoned all it SroopL Carter dnd Bosheiner, who facturers complete statistics of the Tiflis, Trans Caucasia.—Traffic has | building adjoining, occupied by John Judge Grosscup, in the United Ad hope of an agreement ever beinz | Oe absent : production of all kinds of pig iron been opemed over the Julfa Railway, | A. Colby & Sons, furniture dealers, | States court at Chicago, has over- “Be! reached in this or any other trial. ae ben. Coiaeranks. coammitise in the United States and Canada in connecting Russia and Persia. This and those in the rear, occupied by ruled the motion for a reduction in in sun Four hours after the foreman's lpS| o ,; onded the Rose copnty option i107. The total production in the | line clinches Russian hold on the! the millinery firms of Gage Brothers | |e Standard Oil Company’s bond of ing in fad framéd the words “not guilty, bill for passage > ; United ‘States was 25,781,361 tons, North Persian provinces and will fac- | & Company, Theodore Ascher &.Com: $6,000,000. . means, with the - accompanying insanity rn against 25,307,191 tons in 1906. The ilitate military intervention in Uru- | pany and Edson, Keith & Company. |- The United States treasury" deficit nating clause, Thaw, protesting he was sane, py. tonight destroyed the steam total number of furnaces in blast on miah. : ee for January is about $7 000.000, % using was on his way to Matteawan. ers Fay and Planet in the harbor, the December 31, 1907, was 167, compar- Tr | The Woermann liner Ascam Woer- | compared with a surplus of over as ter th A little after nightfall he had been : ey : ’ "| od with 3 the same ti i Mrs. Bohan, mother of 25 children, | mann, which recently wen LE h a surplus of over $4. g arial Pennsylvania freight depot on the | d with 340 at the same time in 1906. | , y t on the | 000,000 at this time last “Wh received in the jmstithtion under com- lake front at Cleveland with 20 In Canada the total production in died ot the age of 100 vears at her | rocks off Grand Bassa, Liberia, and | deficit is accounted for 1 Your. Jue mitment papers Yack direiad is 09 nt is ig aad 1907 amounted to 581,146 tons, against home at Neoware, N. J. Ten of her | became a total wreck was looted by |in revenue of $4,000,000 SA fii ps4 P tention “unti ischarged y ue as 5 541.957 i : children are living. negro pirates. : i Py ‘re rE ian I Ee B two small ouses. 541,957 in 1906 py ( Regro Dp in cxpendiinros of $7,000,000. some ( ir pie ; ; Twenty Killed In Persia. To Investigate Mine Disasters. No Prohibition for South Carolina. | CON SME after b teel Plant fi : . VERT BECOM RECEIVER FOR RAILROAD a ay hina teel | Teheran. — Renewed conflicts be- Washington. — A joint resolution, Columbia, S. C.—The Prohibition ES REPONTANY try abo — ew T= ) steel | tween the Constitutionalists and the appointing a committee of six sena-| pin w a Confesses to L : : 5 thrown Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Company nfant is to be erected at Hankow, | Reactionaries have broken out at Ta- | tors and six representatives, to inves- hia » as kifled In the house of repre: and N ong Series of Crimes, “Up Charged With Defaulting on China bs 2, SOUP ine hf | briz, and 20 persons have been report. | tigate the recent mining disasters in| sentatives by the vote of 64 to 353. mi i oH in Jail. accusto rely 5 ass ed killed. the United States, was passed by the | The senate also is opposed to Prohi- Minneapolis, Minn.—-During : . a oupons. ; . te ori ; , 3 ff 2A E 1 g a mo tine h ; its Bond C p sored i erection of the pions fv primarily for | al a senate. The resolution was amended | bition. County local option is now | ment of religious excitement at the bn from i Detroit. = Fhe. Detroit. Toleto the purpose nL sponge steel for the | jt js stated on excellent authority | fo limit to $75,000 the amount of | provided for throughout the state. Minneapolis Charity mission, Nolan disord Ironton Railroad of which Eugene goptirnetion 9 - Big railways | {hat the reorganization plan of the | money that may be expended for the re J. Whiteside arose and drmaticaily the I Zimmerman of Cincinnati is presi-| 1! Ceittral and Northern China. | Westinghouse Electric and Manufac | investigation. Whole Town Wipsd Out confessed a long series of crimes, the left Se dent, went into the hands of receive Ji | turing Company will = be carried | Ari = Albert Lea, Minn—Twin Lakes, a chicf among them being a particular- Su : y on application of the Knickerbocker Not Ready for State Prohibition. through, as the plans of the receivers dine ‘niles southwest foie ly beld burglary committed four years : Xo over Trust Company of New York, which Mich.—A proposal for e creditors’ committee are be- Not 4 siractiore. was tori | 222 at Madison, Wis. Nam: alleged that the road had defa Ited prohibition was re- >d out with sat and the ontire SR fon oF | He wag given into the custody of ’ Creek, oni the coupens of $10,000,000 worth he Constitutional Conven- | mportant factors in ela 1 ae Rl a de € and will be taken to Wellvil] of outstanding bonds. jon by a vote of 55 to 39. : t Madison. : son.” i -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers