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lieu reSes SOUTHERN S LMSE Removal nf a Hasp From a Stste to a Federal Court the Excuse. ALL TRAINS STILL RUNNING No Clash With United States Court Nor Evidence of Any Disturbance?Legislature May Provide For Receivership. , Montgomery, Ala.?Announcement was made by Secretary of State Frank X. Julian that he had revoked j the franchise of the Southern, Railway Company because it had removed a case from the State Circuit Court I of Talladega County to the United States Circuit Court in Birmingham. ' This action of the Southern is al- j leged to be in violation of the two ] outlaw acts passed by the Legislat- 1 ure last winter, each of which provid- ( ed that such removal should be pun- , ishable by revocation of the charter of the offending railroad. One of j these laws, the better known, was de- j clared unconstitutional by United States Judge Thomas G. Jones, but \ the other never has been enjoined by . the Federal courts. For this reason the action of the 1 State official was taken under the ] provisions of the second of these out- ] law acts. The State insists that this ; second outlaw act still is in force, and it is entireiy proper to act under ] its provisions, while the adherents ] nf thp railway mntend the r.Ct Of re- I ; vocation is in contempt of the Fed- i eral Court injunction, at least in spirit. Neither side would make an ] authoritative statement of the prob- ( able course to be pursued in the con- ] troversy. i The case upon which the revoca- ( tion was made out came from the i Circuit Court of Talledega County, in , the shape of a notification from Clerk ? , J. D. McNeel that a suit had been re- ] moved from the State Court to the s Federal Court. Secretary of State < Julian looked into the law and found that there was nothing else to do t save to mark the license canceled, as 1 the action of the statute is automatic, s Act No. 86 provides that when any 1 foreign corporation is sued in the State courts and removes such suit 1 from the State to the Federal Court, f the clerk of the court from which the removal was taken at cnce shall certify such action to the Secretary of Statf* "who shall thereupon imme- ? diately cancel said license and make and enter upon the stub thereof an order in substance." An extra session of the Legislature c will be held in the fall to adopt more stringent railroad regulation laws?to * \ meet the situation created by the va- J rious rate regulation laws being en- ^ joined in the Federal courts. 1 It is not unlikely that the Federal ' court may get into the row even if contempt proceedings are not ? brought. It may hold that the act is in spirit a re-enactment of the revo- ? nation bill that Judee Thomas G. r Tones has declared to be illegal. The effect would be to deprive the . Southern Railway of the right of do- . ing business in the State, a thing that , was contemplated if the other revo- * ;ation act had been allowed to stand. The jSouthern Railway owns more ? :han loOO miles of road in Alabama *nd millions of dollars' worth of prop- ? jrty. * ARTIST WEDS INDIAN GIRL. I . V 1 F. W. Canfield Spends Seven Years I Wooing Reluctant Maiden. Albuquerque, N. M. ? Frederick W. Canfield, of Utica, N. Y., an artist. J for several years at the head of the * irt department of the Carlisle Indian 5 School, was married to Anna Gouyt- Jj ney, a full-blooded Pueblo Indian, of ^ :he Seama village, eighty miles west of here. The wedding took place at .he estufa of the Seama village, and was performed first under the tribal ; :eremony. Immediately afterward '.he two were married by a minister 3f the Presbyterian Church. 8 Canfield is a son of W, W. Can- jj Seld, editor of the Utica Observer. c ^ He met the Indian girl while she was a pupil in the Carlisle School, and q ' wooed her for seven years. ^ ? v CAN'T GO HOME TILL IN LOVE, c } > Husband Banished For a Year and ? ? . . i * wire win xry ner unarms Again. Cincinnati.?Mrs. Andrew Soer- j ?el, of Bellevue, Ky.. will try to make her husband fall in love with her again. Soergel was arrested on the charge of mistreating his wife. She t declared in court she would have ? nothing more to do with him. Then Judge Webw interceded. He proposed that they live apart for one year to give the husband a chance to 3ee his mistake. Mrs. Soergel agreed. "When he gets out in the world he'll find what love has been and what a good home means," she said. "I fully expect my husband to come home at the end of a year and to live happily with me again." Will Obey Governor Gicnn. President W. A. Barber^ of the Carolina and Northwestern Kauroaa. telegraphed Governor Glenn, in Ra- < leigb, N. C.. from New York that his ? road would put the two and one- > fourth cent rate into effect Au- t :;t gust 8. ? Army Supplies For Philippines. Large quantity of ammunition and supplies for the army in the Philip- ' pines are being forwarded by the < ' transports Logan. Warren, Crook and Buford, which will sail from San s Francisco: In 'addition they will 1 carry 3000 men of the Twenty-fifth ' and Twenty-ninth Infantry, besides prominent officers. Author of "Blue and Gray" Dead. i Francis Miles Finch, best known as the author of "The Blue and the ' Gray," died at Ithaca, N. Y. 1 The Labor World. Denmark has 1156 local unions, with a total membership of 90,911. Winnipeg (Canada) carpenters are asking lor an increase o! ten cents an hour. The dockmen at Duluth refused taccept the terms offered and voted to continue the strike. The Federated Butchers'Employes' Union, of Australasia, has n'ov.* a membership of 4000. The Austrian Typographical Union recently voted 15,000 crowns to supt port the Social Democrat candidates for Parliament. EHBBI SUE 11 BOSTON New York Celestials Kili Three and Injure Seven. Hub's Chinatown Invaded by Hand, Who Open Fire on Fifty Men Lounging in a Wind Alley. Boston, Mass.?A gang of New York Chinamen belonging to the notorious Hip Sing Tong invaded Boston's Chinatown with revolvers and opened fire upon more than fifty of their fellow countrymen who were seated in an alleyway off Harrison avenue. Three Chinamen were killed instantly, three more were left dying and four were very seriously injured by the bullets of their rivals. The usual quiet pervaded the vicinity of Harrison avenue just before S o'clock p. m.. Chinamen lounging here and there smoking and talking. r ? iJ-i ~ c 1 r*rmrs-n\n. Lil tilt; iiiidbl ui iui5> [jca^ciui ictciiw a volley of bullets fell upon them. They rushed for their dens, falling Dver one another in their haste to get put of range. The Hip Sing Tong men chased their rivals into their homes and shot them. Having done as much murder as :hey dared, the invaders turned about ind sought refuge in flight. The dead are Chin Men Quin. aged forty-five, 11 Oxford street; Chin Leet, aged thirty-two, laundry proprietor; Wing Sing Jung, aged fifty, 24 Harrison avenue. The injured men are Goon Goon, Lee Kai, Goon Gouy, Shang Gu, Leo KwaP, Gon Jong Gon, all of whom ire seriously wounded and some of ivhom are sure to die. Ten Chinamen were put under ar-est soon after the shooting. One of :hese gave the name of Nim Sing, of \Tew York. Another who was caught vhile running from the Chinatown listrict to the South Station said his lame was Hong Woon, also of New ifork. Eight other men who are strangers to the Boston Chinatown police were taken into custody on suspicion of being connected with the iffair. The trouble is attributed by some :o the shootiug which occurred in Philadelphia recently for which it is laid Boston Chinese were partly )lamed. It is thought the Chinamen vho did the shooting came from New fork to punish the On Leong Tongs or the Philadelphia outbreak. CABBY KILLS TWO TARS. Jtabs Third, All From the Maine, in Quarrel at Phoebns, Va. Hampton, Va.?Thomas F. Madlock, chief master-at-arms of the batleship Maine, who was stabbed in 'hoebus, died. Garrett Walsh, a ireman, was instantly killed, and J. 1. Ackerman, a baker, was painfuly cut. Maddock and Ackerman eere from Boston and Walsh from ndianapolis. The men hired Fred Gutierrez's beach wagon" for a drive. Gutierez stopped to get a drink and the arines, who were in a hurry, proested. Gutierrez, it is said, stabbed Ac;erman in the arm with a large :nife, slashed Maddock and chased Valsh into a hotel. Walsh was ound dead, his throat cut, his heart iierced and his body slashed. Gui?rrez was arrested. Maddock distinguished himself by .allantry in the Boxer troubles in Jhina in 1900. {ELD FOR CROSSING TRAGEDY. jOng Island's General Manager Arrested and Put Under Bail. Long Island City.?James A. Mc'rea. General Manager of the Long sland Railroad and a son of James IcCrea, president of the Pennsylva- | lia system, was held in $10,000 bail y Coroner A. S. Ambler, of Queens bounty, on (a warrant charging him pith criminal negligence in connecio'n with the deaths of Dr. Edward . Gallagher and Miss Helen Madigap. " J I 1.51'a J U?r ney were ruu uuwu auu &iueu uj he Amagansett express on an un.uarded crossing at St. Albans on the light of July 21 while on an automoiile trip. It was at the conclusion of the in[uest into the deaths of Dr. Galla;her and Miss Madigan in Jamaica hat Coroner Ambler announced he yould issue warrants for the arrest if both President Peters and General Janager McCrea. 1AGILL PLEADS "NOT GUILTY." *oison, Strangulation and Suicide Pact at Clinton, III., Covered by Counts. Clinton, 111.?Fred H. Magill and lis girl bride, Mrs. Faye Graham Mafill, arraigned before Judge W. G. Cochran, pleaded not guilty to inlictments charging them with the nurder of Mrs. Pet Gandy Magill, the ormer banker's first wife. The indictments drawn by the spe :ial Grand Jury and returned to the :ourt recently specified six distinct :ounts?murder by strychnine, by arlenic, by chloroform, by 3trangulaion, through the agency of a suicide :ompact and by means unknown to he jury. Two Brothers Drop Dead. Bram Goodwin, a Sumter County (Georgia) farmer, dropped dead iD i cotton field. His brother Arnold vas summoned, and at the sight of he dead body he fell upon it and expired. $1,000,000 Leather Fire. The Tomahawk plant o 1 the United states Leather Company was totally lestroyed by fire at Tomahawk, Wis. f r\ Kn ! in crc on. 1 tha oroo t" I n*r iuoo yuiiuiu^o uuu \.n\s stock of hides in process of manufacture, and in the storehouses, is ;aid to be close to ?1,000,000. Six Killed by Lightning. Six persons were killed by lightning at Posen, Germany, and enormous damage was done to crops by extensive floods as a consequence of a terrific storm. FLURRY OVER COTTON REPORT. New* York City Traders Estimate the Output Less Than Demand. New York City.?There rvas a wild flurry in cotton as the result of the publication of the Government crop report, which estimates the condition of the cotton crop on July 25 at sevfmt.v-five ner cent. This indicates a crop of between 11,500,000 and 12,000.000 bales, whereas it is believed that the demand this year will reach 13,000,000 bales. The condition of seventy-five per cent, represents a g*:in of only eight per cent, during the last month. NO TROUBI ^/w?ll , somgqooyj)^ (got to pay that -finc. ! r- ^^-01 If . PRICE, OF OIL. ^ ! roRVieRiY Pef* 'NOW ., ,tiB., ;. v3 (* V * ^ // l^iv^ /< y* ?Cartoon by ROCKEFELLER'S PREDI July 8, 1639--John D. Roi July 8, 1933--Date to whi ably may expect to live, acc sielan. His Predicted Age--Ninet Yet to Live--Twenty-six 3 Cleveland, Ohio.?That John D. Rockereiier win live to more man ninety-four is the prediction of Dr. H. F. Biggar, his family physician. Dr. Biggar watched Mr. Rockefeller play golf over the Forest Hill links, and at the finish declared that the Standard Oil magnate was likely to live more than a quarter of a century longer. Mr. Rockefeller, who looked particularly well, said he had never felt better in his life and that he could eat anything. William Rockefeller, John D. Rockefeller's father, is still living and is ninety-four. Dr. Biggar said he sees no reason why the master of Forest Hill should not live longer than his father. "He is the best-trained athlete in the sixty-year-old class in the world 1 * - - J -l-A? o* ?? 10-aay, anu ue s siiij-eigui., <?<, he said. "He'll live longer than his father, I'm sure. Did you see his strokes on the links this morning? Did they look feeble? I tell you, Mr. Rockefeller has been born twice physically, and he is only fourteen years old now. He is growing up again, and growing up scientifically, adding to his muscle, to his lungs, to his heart power with every breath of fresh air he takes on Forest Hill, and with every drive he makes at the Golf Club." And it cost Mr.' Rockefeller $5,pOO.OOO for this second life. Those are his own words. It happened in this wise, according to Doctor | Biggar: "Mr. Rockefeller came to Cleveland in 1893, in the middle of the panic period, completely broken in health and spirit, He could eat nothing which would nourish him. Hie HCK f*miff'O ^/s"^ ?Cartoon PROHIBITIONISTS SING PRAISE. Enthusiastic Georgia Crowd Watches Governor Smith Sign New Law. Atlanta. Ga.?A large crowd of enthusiastic Prohibitionists watched Gov. Hoke Smith attach his official signature to the Prohibition bill. The new law is effective January 1, 1908. As the Governor affixed his signature the Prohibitionists sang "Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow." The Field of Sports. Philadelphia cricketers defeated the New York eleven at Staten Island by a score of 147 to 132. Miss Alice Potter won the final round in the handicap lawn tennis trttirnnmonf for wnmon nt Mpwnrjrt For the third consecutive year the Buffalo Automobile Club takes possession of the Glidden automobile touring trophy. Webb, of New Zealand, beat Geo. Towns, the holder, for the sculling championship of the world on the Paramatta River, at Sidney, N. S. W., by two lengths. . v ' - '< . ,E AT ALL! g III ~"T * ,[ ' S X ^ . T Snllivant, ia the New York Ameiicac. b, h CTED SPAN OF LIFE. st ti ckefeller born. ch Mr. Rockefeller reasonording to his family phvy-four years. ,ears. ( p( * ' h appetite was gone and his nervous j. system was a wreck. A "Doctor, I'm a sick man, I'm afraid w I'm going to die. But it is not on tl account of the financial situation ^ that I am sick," he told the doctor. D( "It is through disappointment of my ? friends." ' j. He asked the doctor to help him. After a few days Dr. Biggar went to d Mr. Rockefeller with this prescrip- w tion: Drop all business cares, take g regular exercise, keep in the open p air, forget everything but play, and w play as though your life depended t( upon it. ^ *'I was happy at the result," said e. Dr. Biggar. "Mr. Rockefeller made cj me a remarkab:e patient, an ideal a one. Although he had a terrible g( weight of responsibility then, he a dropped everything to get healthy. "A few years afterward we were talking of his recovery and Mr. Rock- ^ efeller said to me: "Doctor, do you ^ know how much it cost me to get ^ well?' I told him, of course, I didn't. 'Well, doctor,' he said, 'it cost me just t] $5,000,000. I lost that much by j, dropping business.' I t] "But he never for a moment re- t] gretted that, and neither have I, for ,t it gave him a second life. He's v stronger now than I am. He is ^ stronger than any business man in the city of Cleveland to-day who is anywhere near his age. He is a wonderful man, full of vitality. He never touched a drop of liquor in a his life. He does not smoke. He is r leading the most simple life imagin- a able, and yet it is the strongest life. J1 He can swing an axe as easily as he can a golf club. Why, Mr. Rocke- * .feller is husky, actually husky. He'li " live to see all of us in our graves.' iEDl . /^.ufcSS^Yoo wonV M1G-* \| 1 ne AT wV LITTLE 5l5tlk j y AGA1H 'ton, A ' ? ^ ~ " ' cr J w si by Brewerton. in the Atlanta Journal. CARNEGIE GIVES 3500,000. D In Contributing to King Edward Hos? rj pital Fund He Suggests Reforms. London.?Andrew Carnegie has deposited in the Bank of England t $500,000 as a contribution to the y< King Edward Hospital Fund. w The donation is unconditional, but 0, Mr. Carnegie in expressing the desire c) that the money be spent as seem? tj. best, added that the more strenu-. ' * in fnr r nf A r m tliQ Hoffroi* UUSiJ It 13 U3CU lUl i ^iui iu uiv, wvwvv. Qj it would be for all concerned. A Prominent People. Secretary Root is said to be the most inaccessible man in Washington. ri Ferdinand of Bulgaria is the only ti sovereign in Europe who speaks Yid- 6: dish. Nearly all the sovereigns of Eu- le rope have essayed painting as an tl: omncbmnnt nnrl K'inp' PVlwnrd nf ri England and the Kaiser have been $: more than ordinarily successful with la the brush. King Carlos of Portgugal, however, is by universal consent C] the ablest artist among crowned js heads. ' ; .? / Y- " > V*'mnn Ann 1 nsnnni A Kin fl IWSMtLLUHMBL/M, MOORISH FORCES ROUTED VJt v rench and Spanish Cruisers Send Troops Ashore. IARINES SHOOT DOWN MOORS 4> ort Demolished, Native Quarter Shelled, But Foreign Purt Unmolested ? "Tasha Surrenders After Allies Slay Hundreds. Paris.?French and Spanish troops e in possession of Casablanca, on le Moroccan coast, after a terrific jmbardment and hand-to-hand fightg in the streets. The Moors perpitated the conflict by attacking a .nding party on the way to the rench (Consulate. The ensign in >mmand was shot through both mds, but he gave the order to large. With fixed bayonets the manes cut their way through a colmn of native troops, leaving 150 sad and wounded in their wake, he marines reached the consulate, id the news of the fighting was gnaled to the French cruisers, i hich immediately opened fire with .1 their guns. More than 2000 shells ere fired. The native quarter of le city was wiped out and several undred rebels were slain. The last ispatch received by the French Govrnment is to the effect that the asha as Casablanca has formally irrendered the town to the allies. The casualty list is confined to eleva French marines and sailors ounded. An attempt was made by le rebels to work several batteries gainst the cruisers, but the guns ere quickly put out of commission, he fire of the cruisers was accurate ad terribly destructive: The bomardment lasted more than two ours, and fighting in the wrecked :reets continued intermittently un1 darkness fell. ^The' Arabs fought ith fanatical cdurage. Many of lem detached themselves from colmns of horsemen and rode down > the water's edge, firing their rifles t the warships. Shells were rained mong them, and the shore at one oint was thickly strewn with dead orses and the bodies of their riders. The bombardment was immediate productive of results. Mulai .mining, the commander of the [oorish troops, requested pardon of le French admiral, who replied that e was unprepared to grant it, and eremptorily ordered him to surrener to the French consul, which he id. The occupation of Casablanca is a irect outcome of the native uprising, hich resulted in the killing of eight luropeans at Casablanca. Both, ranee and Spain are hurrying other 'arships, with troops and marines, ) various points on the Moroccan Dast for the protection of foreignrs. Under the terms of the Algeiras Convention these two powers re charged with the policing of the jaports of Morocco, and their action t Casablanca has brought no protest "om any power, xne oiaies 01 iiu3pe have expressed their willingness lat France and Spain restore order 1 Morocco. No other countries are lvolved. France and Spain have agreed on le terms of a France-Spanish note, lforming the powers signatory of ie Algeciras Convention, including a* United States, of their intention > keep within the terms of the conention in dealing with the situation l Morocco. Moorish Pacha Yields. Madrid.?The Impaicial publishes dispatch from its Tangier corespondent, saying that the Pacha t r.isahlanra has surrendered tht jwn, and that guards for the promotion of foreigners will be landed s soon as possible at Mogador, Raat, Saffi and Mazagan. One report says that 600 Moors ere killed or wounded. SYRACUSE OUT 3250,000. lOCfl] Improvement Taxes Pocketed ill Treasurer's Office. Syracuse, N. Y.?The defalcation 1 the City Treasurer's office will sach $.250,000, it is announced. The mbezzlements are all from local imrovement payments, most of them =n years back. When payment was lade the money was pocketed bj JLLiC UUC 1U CUC vnw vuu* qn. gainst the property was left on the ooks and when the property was adertised for sale the property upon rhich payment had been made was dited out of the advertisement. This practice was followed for sevral years. The money abstracted as been on amounts of from $10 to 1000. AMERICAN SUICIDES ABROAD. ^ Ir. and Mrs. Buckingham Take Poi* son After Losses at Monte Carlo. Naples.?A Mr. and Mrs. Buckingam, who came from New York, comlitted suicide by taking poison at astellamare. The reason for the act was that ley had sustained serious gambling isses at Monte Carlo. Killed His Assailant. Attacked by Ephraim Alsbrooke ith a mowing blade, James Dunning lot and killed him at Hopkinsville, y. IES TRYING TO SAVE FRIEND. he Rev. Edward McConnell Drowns With Claude Friendship. Atlantic City, N. J.?In a vain attmpt to rescue Claude Friendship, a Jung Philadelphian, the Rev. Edard McConnell, of Absecon, plunged yerboard from the deck of a yaciit K Brigantine and went down wi:h le man he tried to save. The two young men were members a fishing party that went out from bsscon. The World of Sport. Atlee is Princeton's track captain. Horatio Seymour, Jr., is the best fleman at Yale. He won the Naonal Association trophy by scoring 2 out of a possible 75. When Paul J. Rainey gave his rease to Radtke, he sold first call on te services of the jockey to Frans Hitchcock for $2500. This is L'2,i00 Less than he paid for (he <l*s papers eighteen months ago. Travis is not now flie national lampion, officially speaking, but ie the best goiter in this country, a:acl e are just'y proud of him. BANKERS' File KILLS FOUR Crowd of Summer Residents Wit ness Tragedy at Aiiennurst, n. j. Mangled Bodies Tossed Into Fashionable Platform Crowd?No Safety Gates at Sccne. Allenhurst. N. J.?Three girls and a man, burled from a brougham by the impact of the "Bankers' Special," running sixty miles an hour, were instantly killed near the Allenhurst station of the Pennsylvania Railroad, at dusk. Two hundred society women of that exciu3ive resort watched the tragedy from the depot platform, and either fainted or ran away screaming in horror. The dead are: Thomas Edwards, aged thirty, of Allenhurst; employed as driver by the Norwood Hotel. j-ioreLia uictuei agcu twcutj, ^ New York. Jennie McDonald, aged- twenty-one, of New York. Hannah Murphy, aged twenty, of New York. Hurrying on their way from their homes in New York to serve at a big banquet in the Norwood, the three girls were being driven by Edwards to the hotel. As he reached the railroad crossing the driver, already half an hour late, pulled up impatiently when an empty excursion train passed. There was no gate and only a flagman to give warning, and as the last coach swept past Edwards whipped up his team and started to gallop over the tracks. The "Bankers' Special," carrying a hundred Wall Street men from New York to their summer homes, dashed out of the darkness, and the locomotive bit the carriage before one of its occupants could jump. The carriage was crushed to splinters and the horse, flung fifty yards by the cow-catcher, fell dead in a field. The three girls were hurled twenty feet straight up into the air and fell, instantly killed and mangled within a stone's throw of the horrified women on the depot platform. ? " - A. a o + uawaras was snot nuin m? oua^tered seat and struck with a fearful thud against the side of the flagman's 3hanty near the ti^ack. Every bone in his body was broken. When the train had been stopped in front of the station many of the Wall Street men hurried off to find their wives or daughters fainting or shrieking in hysterics. Others rushed back in the hope that at least one of the victims had escaped instant death. Ambulance doctors said death had been instantaneous in every case, and the bodies were picked up, almost unrecognizable, and carried to undertakers' shops. As a result of the frightful accident, the banquet at the Norwood was abandoned. Many of the hotel guests combined in a subscription tc buy flowers, and if need be, caskets, 4-V?/% -vri/ttimc LUi VUC TlObAWwi 4 DEAD; 25 HURT IN WRECK. Pennsylvania Train Hits Coal Gondola and Cars Are Crashed. Pittsburg,?Four persons were killed and twenty-five injured in a railroad wreck on the Buffalo & Allegheny Division of the Pennsylvania Railroad at Kelly, thirty-five miles from this city. The wrecked train was the Titusville Express. At 11.30 a. m., while passing through Kelly, the train was side-swiped by a gondola coal car; and the engine, tender, baggage, and express cars, wit.b the three day coaches, were derailed. The dead are: George Cockran, of Rimesburg. Penn. Mrs. Alonzo Huff and male infant, of Johnstown, Penn. M. B. Irwin, of Oakmont, Penn., engineer of the passenger train. DROWN AS FRIENDS LOOK ON Two Brooklyn Girls and a Youth Lose Their Lives at Newton, N. J. Newton, N. J.?Miss Harriet Slinkard, sixteen years old; Miss HeleD Bleemer, eighteen, both of Brooklyn, and James Johnson, twenty-one, of Jersey City, were drowned in Hunt'? Pond, while bathing. None of the three could swim. They had been splashing about on a raft which was moored near the shore. a,nd were later seen wading about, the young man between the two girls. Suddenly one of the girl's screamed and the three were seen to sink. None of those who were near them could swim. All they could do wae to watch the battle for life. The young women grasped Johnson tightly about the neck, and all three sank G. W. DELAMATER A SUICIDE. Defeated Candidate For Governor of Pennsylvania Ends Life. Pittsburg.?After taking his life insurance policies from the safe- and stacking them on a desk George Wal iace Delamater, formerly State Senator and a defeated Republican candidate for Governor, put a revolver to his head and shot himself dead. Friends of the family ascribe the act to grief caused by the death ol his father, George B. Delamater, and his son, James, within the last two months. His son-in-law, Shirley P. Austin, admitted that business reverses added to the motive for suicide. He was born in 1S49. Longworth Tired of Philippines. Representative Nicholas Longworth, in a speech made at the Commercial Club's luncheon in Honolulu, said he hoped that the Philippines 'would not long be with us. In the meantime, free trade with the Philippines would be a square deal and free ..u iitrii Hawaii " BUgcii UUUIU wvrt* * w Commissioner Hertle Suspended. Acting Mayor McGowan, of New York City, suspended John C. Hertle. Commissioner of Accounts, pending trial on a graft charge. , Turks Invade Persia. The Turkish forces which recently crossed the northwest frontier of Persia are reported to be marching on Urumiah, sacking and burning villages on the route. Ninety Christians are said to have been killed at Mewan. Johnston Elected Senator. In joint session at Montgomery the Alabama Legislature elected former Governor Joseph F. Johnston to the United States Senate for a term ending March 4, 1915. He succeeds Senator Fettus. ' Hen Hatches Eagle's Eggs. Shamokin comes to the front with an entirely original story. Two young eagles were hatched out under a hen. Two months ago Roman Ukleski, of Shamokin, received from bis brother in Germany two eagies eggs. He placed them under a hen antf awaited results. Tuesday night the eggs, having ripened, bore forth fruit, and two tiny little eagles are being cared for by the proud jnother hen. Thef& will be further doings when the lords of the air attain their full growth.?Philadelphia Record. A County's Champion Liar. A champion liar In Bradford Couhty makes a complaint 6t !bsfn| a cherry tree growing in his garden. Cherries are not plentiful this year, and the birds were robbing hii*. So, nr> Ma Hnithlp-harrelflil fihofc gun, he hastily loaded it, but, finding i he had no shot, he substituted tacks: He fired both barrels and succeeded in tacking every bird fast to the chcrry tree, but there were so many y of them that they flew away with it. \ ?Philadelphia Record. . TIRED BACKS. The kidneys have a great work to^ do in keeping the blood pure. WhSea ' they get- out of order it causes backache, headaches, dizziness, languor and distressSBBfel ng urinary troubles. Ceep the kidneys well <j&yKn9^ind all these suffer(nga will be saved yon. " Mrs. S. A. Moore, proprietor of a restauI Brant at Waterville, says: "Before'( asing Doan's Kidney Pills I suffered everything from kidney troubles for a year and a half. I had pain in the back and head, and al- ; most continuous ki the ioins and felt weary all the time. A few doses of f Doans Kidney Pills brought great; relief, and I kept on taking them until in a short time I was cured. I think Doan's Kidney Pills are wonrWflll " Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. J." . ? ?; :? juese niajeste in tne V. 9. They have started the lese-maJestA idea in America. Instructions have ,, been given to all State soos In the \ country that animals "in future are not to be named Teddy.?London Globe. ! Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Childrw/ teething,softens thegum8,reducesiqflanmuu tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a Dublin Castle. * ^ The name of Dublin Castle, the scene of the raid on the jewels of the Order of St. Patrick, is more formidable than its appearance. When it was built in the thirteenth century it was, doubtless, with Its four greaf ' towers and its deep moat, a thing of beauty compared with the present miscellaneous welter of jbuildings > gathered around two ugly' squares. Supposed to have been begun by a grandson of Henry I, Meyler PitaHenry, it was completed by Henry De { Loundres in 1223. In tbjose days-rthe days of its life as a real castle defending a city?a river ran past the building. The Poddle still runs, but it keeps its obscure course under the pavements of the Lower Castle Tard. It was not until well into the reign' of Elizabeth that the castle was first 1 used as the official residence of the Lord Lieutenant, then described as the "Lord Deputy." Although it has ever since retained that exalted tunction, Dublin Castle was so neglected about two centuries ago as to need rebuilding. Very little of the original structure remains.?Dundee Advertiser. ? Milan's Stable Spire. Since the sudden fall of the great Campanile at Venice a few years uga scientific experiments have been mads to afTord assurance of the stability . of other famous architectural pile? in Italy. Among these Is the unique cathedral of Milan, built all of marble, with scores of slender pinnacles, *nd a lofty main spire terminating in a great marble statue of the Virgin. The experiments of Professor Vincentinl on this spire, while demonstrating its complete stability, show interesting effects of the wind and solar rays. As with other lofty towers tha point of the spire describes daily elliptical curve, the size and precise \ form of whicb vary witn aimospmiric > conditions. But the greatest displacement never amounts to more than a single minute of arc, In thla case less than a third of an inch. A tempest of uncommon violence 1b ' July, 1905, displaced the top of the spire eight millimetres. ? Youth's Companion. SOAKED IN COFFEE Until Too Stiff to Bend Over. "When I ?rank coffee I often had sick headaches, nervousness and biliousness much of the time, but when I went to visit a friend I got in the habit of drinking Postum. "I gave up coffee entirely, and the result has been that I have been entirely relieved of all my stomach and nervous trouble. "My mother was just the same ttf/? drtcfnm nnw anrf way. we an unua J. uvt. I..., without coffee in the house for 2 years, we are all well. "A neighbor of mine, a great coffee drinker, was troubled with pains in her side for years and was an Invalid. She was not able to do her ' work and could noteven mend clothes or do anything at all where she would have to bend forward. If she tried to do a little hard work she would get such pains that she would have to lie down for the rest of the day. *' * ' * 1 a/1 Vio-* f A nf An "At last X peiauumju uc. IU Diuy drinking coffee and try Postum Food Coffee and she did so, and has used Postum ever slnca; the result haa' been that she can now do her work, can sit for a whole day and mend and c:ui sew on the machine and she neve. feels the least bit o? pain In her s de, !n fact., she haa got well, and it snows coffee was the caus.e of tha j whole trouble. ' "I could also tell you about several other neighbors who have been cured by quitting coffee and using Postum * ' ? " ?TU/M?AiO O DftnoAH ' ? in 119 pisce. I.ICIO J ? ik?uavui Look in pkg. for the famous Utttt "TbQ Roa<i to WollyUUk" ' V '