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t sum US HE ISDEPOSE Haitian President Leaves His Ca| ital, Wrapped in the Tricolor. GEN. LEGITIME SUCCEEDS HI Port-au-Prince Captured Withoi Bloodshed ? Fallen Executii Boards Transport, Which Wi Carry Kim to Another Countr Port - au - Prince, Haiti. ? Vain '-J ?? f t-v Vt Trc i n Ci 1 v SeeKlUg [Jluieuuuu nurn pu;oiv?. ?. jury and insult at the hands of t armed mob of men and women I having his aged shoulders coven with a French flag. President Noi Alexis abandoned his palace and tl Presidency of Haiti. He is safe no on board the French training sh Duguay Trouin. General Legitime has been pr claimed head of the provisional go ernment and the coup d'etat of tl revolutionists is complete. They a in complete control of Port-au-Princ An insurgent army of 5000 is marc! ing up the peninsula. Nord Alexis passed from the pala< to the wharf through streets we] nigh packed by enraged Haitian They 'heaped curses on the head < the President. At the landing a woman foug] her way to his side and aimed a bio at his heart with a knife. It fe short, and before she could renew hi attack she was seized by a soldier. A man struck Alexis a glancii blow on the neck. Alexis turned to M. Carteron, tl French Minister, who was his escor and exclaimed mournfully: , , "I told you it would be so, Yoi Excellency." The French officials participate actively in the scene to the exclusic of the American. In fact, one of tl revolutionary leaders charged th; the American Minister, H. W. Fu niss, was the chief of those encou aging Nord Alexis to resist. The flags of various nations ai fljing over the doors and from th w: ndows of the homes of foreign res dents. - Notwithstanding their hostility 1 the fallen President, the Haitians ai in dread of .the landing of forces froi tte warships. They especially fet tbe men from the United States crui ers Tacoma and Des Moines, whos reputation for 'putting down riot ar disorder has gone before. Infantry and cavalry are patrollir the streets, and although .there is panicky feeling, it is believed thei is little danger to foreigners. If thei is bloodshed at all it will be amon the various factions striving for si premacy. General Antoine Simon is the ai knowledged leader of the insurgei forces. MADE HER CHILD TAKE POISOI Chicago Woman Kills Daughter an Herself in a Memphis Hotel. Memphis, Tenn.?Mrs. Nicholas I Errington, of 242 Schiller street, Ch . cago, killed her ten-year-old daugl ter Therese and herself with carboli acid at the Peabody Hotel. Mrs. Ei ringtoh was undoubtedly insane froi 111 health. At 2 o'clock a. m. a watchma heard the cries of the child an forced the door of the room. Tfc woman died in the room and th child at St. Joseph's Hospital. Tb girl's face was fearfully burned by tb acid, and it was evident the mothe had forced her to drink it. ATHLETE KILLED AT FOOTBAL1 Sergeant Bird Dowdle, of Ashevilli N. C., Hurt Thanksgiving Day. Boston, Mass. ? Quartermastei Sergeant Bird Dowdle, of Ashevill* N. C., attached to the Eighty-thir Company, Coast Artillery, Fort R< vere, died in Carney Hospital as th result of injuries received in a foo ball game at the fort on Thanksgivin Day. Dowdle played left tackle o the fort team in a game against Gra Academy, of Hingham. In making hard tackle in the second half hi head and neck were injured. HI spine was affected and he becam completely paralyzed. KILLS SELF ON WIFE'S GRAVE E. F. Hass, a Prosperous Dentist Swallows Poison?Bride a Suicide. New York City.?Kneeling upo the grave of his young and beautifi wife?a grave but two weeks o)dDr. Rudolph F. Hass, a prosperou and prominent Harlem dentist, ende his own life by drinking prussic aci in Woodlawn Cemetery. She was a suicide, just as he was and just as her own mother was se\ eral years ago. "I'll soon follow Li! lian," he vowed as he looked at he body in their home, No. 1696 Lea ington avenue, on Friday, Novem ber 13. TTwifft Tmmiorrfltlnn Pfimmiccinnpr Daniel J. Keefe, president of th International Longshoremen's Union was appointed commissioner-genera of immigration. His home is in De troit. Mr. Keefe was one of the vice presidents of the American Federa tion of Labor, until the recent con ventlon at Denver, when he was dis I placed. Farmers Have Money. "It would surprise you to kno1? how much money is possessed by thi farmers of the wheat and corn belt,' said one land and loan broker o Kansas City, Mo. Stored Apples Rotting. There is a general complaint arcont the farmers of New Jersey that ap pies stored for winter use are rottin; more than usual. Notes From Across Seas. It is not believed in Paris that Mr White, the American Ambassador, i? to be transferred to London. Reports at Port au Prince state that a revolution has broken out lr the southern part of the Haytian Republic. The leaning of Turkey in favor ol the Serbs in her conference terms has alarmed Austrlans in the Russian capital. The rights of Greek voters are contested by the Turks at Constantinople because they do not possess certificates of identification. FHETWO-CENTFAREUPHELD THE ^ United States Supreme Court Renders important Decision. 3 Holds That the Virginia Railroads ^** Were Premature in Obtaining ^ Federal Interference. M _ Washington, D. C.?The opinion of at the United States Supreme Court in / i re the two-cent fare bill was announced ill by Justice Holmes. The case came y. before the court on an appeal of the , . State from the decision of Judge Pritchard, of the United States Cirin cuit Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, holding the proceeding by which the rate was fixed to be uncon2d stitutional and prohibiting the carry?/1 In cr r\f +V10 intrt offoot ; VI v*. VUV V* \?Vi AUW V*4.\*V/V. T ie The rate was named by the com- ^ mission in accordance with authority ^ w bestowed by the Virginia constitution, ' ip but the order had no sooner been anaounced than the railroads of the ^ State began action in the Circuit ^ Court, in which they prayed for an Injunction against the enforcement of 10 ;he decree. The application was ''e based on the ground that the present e- rates of the companies are reasonable 1 b- ind not discriminatory, either as be- vtween individuals or localities. * ce It was contended on behalf of the W- roads that the effect of the rate pros' posed would be to reduce charges be- ?1 of low a reasonable and just compensa-: mi tion; that, indeed, the order was con- JY kt fiscatory and would have the effect of w taking their property without due process of law. The State authorities Br attacked the jurisdiction of the court, claiming that the commission itself '8 was a court as provided by the State constitution, and that its decrees Bai ie could not be interfered with by a harvei Federal tribunal. army After hearing the arguments in the engag ir jase Judge Pritchard, Decrtnber 26, lock s 1907. issued a final decree, granting saw n: id the prayer of the railroad companies, In n and enjoining the enforcement of the used ie commission's order of reduction. He the gi at held that the commission's duties any lc r- were administrative and not judicial. in mo: r- This decision was overruled by this ions o iction. Justice Holmes In his opinion groun re said that the proceeding of the com- ,ary ya is mission was legislative and not judi- and hi i- cial in character, and that the court's On I rtenisinn nf reversal was based on the about to failure of the railroads to exhaust emplo e their rights in the State courts. ways i m Justice Brewer alone dissented men, ir from the result. been s b- young *e AGREEMENT WITH JAPAN. go lnt id * of ass Mutual Guarantee For Peaceful Commercial Development Passed. often re Washington, D. C.?Despite official , A v e reticence information from reliable eral c g sources has been obtained of an choppi I* agreement of far reaching importance who e between the United States and Japan small 3- covering the policy of the two coun- trees; it tries in the Pacific. sleds; The agreement is based upon the sleds; Idea of encouraging and defending rious f free and peaceful commercial devel- logs; < opment in the Pacific. It contains camps , not only a mutual guarantee to re- lery ^ spect each other's territorial posses- The v sions there, but defines the attitude month 3 of the two countries toward China, I usuail j. binding each to defend by every The j. peaceful means China's independence stretcl iC and integrity, and to give equal com- miles r. mercial opportunity in the Chinese and il r empire to all nations. But more im- Quebe portant still, the agreement, in the is lab n event of complications threatening ning 1 ,j the status quo, bindstheUnlted States dark, l and Japan to consult each other with meals, ie a view to acting together.^ baked. \ nowad : food L ? WOULD STOP THE INAUGURAL. >l Stevenson Will Try to Keep Deneen NAT Out Until Contest is Decided. Chicago.?A writ-' of prohibition tc ^ stop the inauguration of Governor 1 Deneen until the contest over hi3 election has been decided will be p^i .. asked by Adlai E. Stevenson, the BOn> < 3 Democratic candidate for Governor, veterii d as soon as the Legislature convenes. tfc6 m >. This move was decided upon by a(jy ^ e Charles Boeschenstein, chairman of ease." t. the Democratic State Central Commit- murra g tee, Secretary Arthur W. Charles and names D other members of the committee at a ancj a y conference in this city. fectioi a - mined [a TO REORGANIZE NAVY. blister la corone e President Invites Secretary Root to the cl Head Commission. the cc It is Washington, D. C.?The President swine. 2t confirmed the announcement made re- suscep cently in dispatches that he hoped to i0U8 d t, effect a reorganization of the navy, The and was considering the creation of a has n special commission for that purpose. The v n Secretary Root, who effected the re- tions. il organization of the army, has been is - invited to head the commission, but case, t s has not yet reached a decision. pass'tl d The Bank Wreckers Sent to Prison. throug , William L. Tilden and Chauncey L. ' olo nP tho AmoHnon r. ? ?* *vmwuiu ?vMM Virus [. Steel Ball Company, were sentenced Bevera r by Judge Chetlain, in the Superior <jiseas, .. Court, Chicago, 111., to serve from r^g _ L one to twenty years in the peniten- jn(ecti tiary on charges of conspiracy. This apDeai conviction of Tilden and Graham was tl a sequel to the failure of the Mil- greatii waukee Avenue State Bank a few someti 6 years ago. gevere l| ence i Servians Ambush Austrians. in cat' i. A newspaper at Budapest states grees. r that a detachment of Austrian infan- brane try bound for Bosnia was ambushed dened, . by a band of Servians and four of the n Austrian soldiers were killed. ' cud^ce Warsli Gunboats Poi China. Rear-Admiral Harber ordered three jyjg^ v United States gunboats to Chinese nnw f. Q waters. stateg " v ?????? color x f Texas Farmers Most Exclusive. among The Texas Farmers' Union..is going fashio: to be exclusive. New by-laws were ers ai adopted at El Paso and they forbid New ] infidels becoming members. The laws Navy prohibit any but bona fide farmers showy I joining and enjoin all bankers, law- ionabli yers, merchants and preachers from the gr entering the union. enemy Feminine Notes. Women of China a;e said to be Rlcl j keenly anxious to have a voice in pub- * lie affairs. old i The "Victoria Legislative Council Cas< [ has passed the bill empowering worn- diseasi en to vote at State elections. report Mrs. Josefa Osborn's will, filed in yniJ ; the Surrogate's Court, in New York *. i City, left 575,000 to Ernest Lawfora, JrWfe'u t the English actor. Hot Si Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst told his ^ro1 congregation in New York City that c-? , any woman whose big hat obstructed the view of those behind her com- !Y*"cp muted a tb?ft liberty ?Cartoon [AINE'S LOG H OOO Men in Cami scot?Markir Igor, Me.?Maine's annual log 3t/is now in progress, and an of. 18,000 or 20,000 men are ed in felling spruce, pine, hemmd cedar for the supply of the illls and the pulp mills in 1909. the olden time the lumbermen to wait for the snow to cover ound before attempting to haul >gs, but now the crews are sent nths before snow falls, and mlll? f^et of logo are yarded on bare d. Ab6ut the middle of Janu .rding is supposed to be finished auling begin. the Penobscot alone this winter 6000 men and 1500 horses are yed. Years ago there was al- i i good supply of regular woodsbut latterly the natives have ' eeking other employment. The men of this day do not care to 0 logging cfcmps, with all sorts ociates, to eat beans and swing all winter for' $25 to $30 a i. Therefore great difficulty is experienced in getting crews. ,-oods crew is composed of 'sevlasses of workers. There are ers, who fell trees; swampers, aake the roads, clear away the growth ^.nd trim the fallen teamsters, who drive the log sled tenders, who load the markers, who cut with axes vadlstinctive symbols upon the cook*, who are the chefs of the , and cookees, who do the. sculpork and wait upon the men. rages vary from $15 to $30 a i 1 with board, and the season Is y from four to five months. c.amps are scattered over a vast i l of territory, extending for 200 or more along the Penobscot a hranrhes awaV back to the i c boundary line. Woods work orious and monotonous, beginfvlth daylight and lasting until tfith three halts for hearty , consisting for the most part of beans, although in some camps lays a considerable variety of .1 3 provided. / : URE OF THE "FOOT rinarians Agree on Syi Cause of th ladetyhia.?Dr. Leonard PearState Veterinarian, and other narians here are agreed upon ] ain characteristics of the mal nown as "foot ana moutn aisIn Europe It is also called in, and the principal scientific t for it are eczema, epizootica pthous fever. It is highly inis, and its Identity is deterby the eruption ?f vesicles or i s in the mouth, around the i it or top of the foot or hoof, in eft between its parts, and (of iw or she goat) on the udder. : most common in cattle and i The human species is also i itible to it, but rarely to a ser- ; egree. i specific cause of apthous fever ot been clearly demonstrated. ] irus is contained in the erup- I Authorities say that the cause : sumably a germ. If that is the i he germ is so small that it will 1 trough a Berkefeld water filter, i infection may be indirect, 1 ;h the stables, the straw, hay i er objects with which diseased i Is have come in contact. The < may be carried by an animal 1 1 months after it has had the 1 e and has recovered from it. eriod between the moment of 1 on and that when the eruption i *s is from twenty-four to sev- I o hours. The symptoms vary y in different epizootics, being imes mild and at other .times ; . The first evidence of its pres- ] s a rise of temperature, which i Ho rarolv trnoa hovnnH 1 flA rtp- I Fahrenheit. The mucous memof the mouth becomes red- < the appetite is diminished and 1 jmination or chewing of the s ases. i jps to Be in Fashion 4 Are Painted "London Smoke." r York City.?Dame fashion is istening her grip on the United < Navy. "London smoke," the i vhich is all the rage this season i ; smart dressers, is being made c lable for the battleships, cruis- t ad gunboats. The battleshijr 1 Hampshire, at the Brooklyn E Yard, is the first to yield her ? white coat to one of the fashe color. This color blends with 1 ay of the sea and bothers an < 's range finders. i Newsy Paragraphs. lard Croker arrived in New I!Ity, and was warmly welcomed friends. 3s of the foot and mouth cattle i developing in children were ed at Danville, Pa. ted States Senator N. B. Scott enry Gassaway Davis, of West ia, visited William H. Taft at irings. test was made in Washington, at the report on cholera condin Manila, upon the strength of Rear-Admirai Sperry refused ; to the men of the fleet. r VE STARTED THEIR WORK bv Berrvman, in the Washington Star. ARVEST IS ON. p Along the Pcnobig of Logs. The day's work concludes -with a big supper, for which the men have ravenous appetites, and thefn follows a smoke talk, when some of the men* play cards, some sing rollicking songs of the woods and the drive, others discuss the latest prize fight and a few mend their torn clothing. The majority are so tired that they roll, into their bunks as soon as supper is over and drop to sleep when they have smoked their pipes out. It is at the landings that the most Interesting operation of . logging Is performed?the marking of the logs. The great sticks are here branded with various symbols to denote ownership, just as in the case of cattle. The marks must be indelible or they would be worn off by the bumping and grinding of the logs against the rocks and shoals on the long drive to the boomg, and in all the ninety VAjira nf lnmheH-nc nn the PpnnbRroti no one has ever been able to devise a better method of marking than with a sharp axe in the hands of a skilled woodsman. The marker is deft and rather artistic, and makes vety few slips or errors. There is a head marker and several assistants, and they stand , upon the great log piles, swinging their axes with confidence and precision, as proud of their skill as any chiseler of marble. , The marks cut upon the logs are of, wonderful variety. There can be no two alike and each must be distinctly cut, else there would be confusion at the sorting . booms and loud complaint, if not7 lawsuits, among the owners. , To the common eye log marks mean no more than the hieroglyphics on the Central Park obelisk, but to the markers they are as plain as A, B, C. There are ' crosses, girdles, stars, daggers, crowfeet, fishes, various letters and combinations of letters, links, notches?a long and complicated list, and for every new log owner a new and distinctive mark' must be invented. AND MOUTH" DISEASE / mptoms, But Don't Know s , The eruption appears two or three days later. It consists of small yellow-white vesicles or blisters, varying in size from a hemp.seed to a pea on-the gums and inner surface of the lips, the insides of the cheeks and the under surface of the tongue. They burst soon after their appearance, sometimes on the first day. The blister to ay remain a day or two more and then disappear speedily, leaving deeply reddened areas of erosions, which are very painful. They may become normally/ covered again', or may be converted into ulcers., At this 3tage saliva forms in large quantities and hangs in strings from the mouth. In eight or fourteen days the disease may nave entirely disappeared. From the eruptions on the feet or hoofs there Is a viscid exudation, and the animal is subjected to so much pain that frequently it moves ibout on its knees. This is especially true of sheep. The sores on the udder >f .the cow become exceedingly painful, and after a little she ceases to ?ive milk. The effect of the disease Dn any animal is to cause it to become extremely emaciated, and even If it recovers promptly to greatly lessen its value. Post-mortems reveal affections of the lungs, dilation and fatty degeneration of the heart and gastric and intestinal lesions. Washington, D. C.?Secretary Wilson said that the anxiety in his department over the threatened epidemic of foot and mouth disease imong cattle had subsided. "We have the disease well under control now, and I don't believe it will spread to any other locality," he said. "It has been necessary to slaughter about 1000 head of cattle." 'Uncle Sam" Provides Polo Ponies For the Army. Washington, D. C.?In order to sncourage polo playing in the United states Army the War Department is n the open market for the purchase )f 330 polo ponies, or small messenger horses, as they are called. One lundred and seventy of the desired >00 have already been obtained from t contractor. It is planned to distribute five lorses to each troop of cavalry ami ;ach battery of field and mountain irtillery. The Field of Sports. The Cincinnati baseball nine lost to Umendares, in Cuba, by a score of 2 n 1 Larchmont Yacht Club defeated tfanhasset Y. C. five In trap shootng match. The auto-aero committee of the \.uto Club of France has offered a jrize for aviation of $40,000. The :ompetition will be held next year. Michigan's once great scoring ma:hine had a heavy tumble against the ' Michigan "Aggies." A 0?0 scoro vas_a long drop from 46?0 of 19 0?^ 1 1NM3?P05T0FFICI President Puts 15,000 Postm. ters Under Civil Service Rule: i Territory Affected is That North the Ohio River and East of the Mississippi. I Washington, D. C.?By an exe tive order just Issued nearly o third of the fourth-class postmast in the United States were placed the classified Civil Service. , The der does not apply to all seetions the country, but covers the territ* north of the Ohio River and east the Mississippi. Postmasters holding office will i have to take an examination, but new appointees must be approved the Federal Civil Service Commissi Vacancies may be filled without < amination until the commission ready to make certification. There are 54,312 fourth-class pc masters in the Uilited States, whom 15,488 are affccted by t order. Of the numbor affected th< are in New York, 2301; in Ne^ J sey, 636;-in Pennsylvania, 3 3$ 8; Connecticut, 28.7, and in the N England States, including Connet cut, 2639. Other States affected the order are Ohio, Indiana, Illinc Wisconsin and Michigan. Inquiry has been made without feet to ascertain upon what basis i selection of States was made, a why all the fourth-class postmasti Jr? all of th? Stntos werp nnt fnrludi At the Civil Service Commission was suggested that the present ore was in the nature of an experime and that the President might he thought it wise to start with a limit number of the most populous Sta before making the order general. It is suggested, too, that the four class postmasters in the States eluded in this order may have exert more pressure to be put in the claE Bed service than those in other s tions of the country. It is assumed that Mr. Taft consulted before the present ort was issued which deprives him auch a considerable portion of 1 "patronage." There is reason to 1 lieve that Mr. Taft would not 01 approve, but welcome, any actios movement which would free him the clamorous demands of the "] hunters." If the new arrangement is found work successfully, it seems higl probable that, even if.Mr. Roosev does not. Mr. Taft will,-upon assu a fV?n fniirfV?_Al 1 1115 Uilil^c, U1LJUUC lUb U4 I.U.- Wil postmasters in other States un<! the terms of the order. f ALE STUDENT COMMITS SUTCI1 John Alan White Leaps From the T of-West'Rock, 100 Feet. | New Haven, Conn. ? John A] White, twenty years old, of Walt< N. Y., a student in the Yale gradm school, committed suicide by jumpi from the top of West Rock to t ground below, a distance of 100 fe The body was found by Whit roommate, Harry L. Agard, and tv oadly mangled from having cone jontact with the rocks at the x When found White had been ue about twenty-four hours, and t Coroner in giving permission for t removal of the body said that it "w undoubtedly a case of suicide. The finding of the body was t :ulmination of a search which -w oeing made for White, who had be missing from his boarding place siz Monday morning. That White contemplated taki ais life is borne out by a letter whi a-as found In his room addressed ais father, and which was taken tc relative here, who opened ;it. T :ontents of the letter were not giv jut, but it is understood that in it ?ays that he contemplated suicide. Is thought that his mind was temi rarlly deranged from overwork a worry over the illness of his brott ind sister with typhoid feveu. KILLED IN EMPEROR'S JURILE ? > 140 Persons Injured Owing to Crow ed Condition of Streets. Vienna, Austria.?In honor of E perGr Francis Joseph's diamond ju lee th? city was illuminated op scale of unprecedented brilliant The pressure of the enormous cro^ In the streets caused several sefric accidents. Four persons were kill and, forty or more seriously injur* and a hundred others slightly injuri At one time a panic ensued direc in front of the Hofburg, where t crowds converged from three din tions. Hundreds were trampled the ground, among them being Pi liamentary Deputy Holzl and a wo an, both of whom were crushed death. It is estimated that th? were 1,500,000 persons in the stree It is believed that in addition to t official list of killed and injured ma others were injured, but toe re al to reach their own homes. WILL REAPPOINT NEGRO. President to Keep Dr. Crnm as C lector of the Port of Charleston. Washington, D. C.?The announ* ment was made at the White Hoi that the President had decided to ! appoint W. D. Crum, colored, as C lector of the Port of Charleston;- S. His term will expire very soon. The nomination of Dr. Crum, wh submitted to the Senate early in J Roosevelt's first administrate aroused much opposition and the cc firmation was long delayed. November Coinage Was $S,817,21< The total amount of coinage e: cuted at the mints of the Unit States in November was $8,817,2: Of this amount $7,933,740 was gold, 58ZU.UUU in Sliver auu 16* <v one-cent pieces. ( Bryan's Vote in New York. The official canvass of the v< cast in the last election shows tl Bryan received in New York Cour only 53IS votes more than Taft. Among tlie Workers. The unemployed question is beco lng acute in Great Britain, New Z< land and West Australia. Trouble is brewing at Bluff (N Zealand). Colliery, where the mini have been notified of a slash in he ing rates. The Melbourne (Australia) Timl Stackers' Union has scored a victo the recent strike having been sett] in its favor. President Roosevelt gave a dim at the White House for a number personal friends closely identif with the labor movement. V . * .1 *" ' V ' ' ' \ ? V "' * * r ESI MIKE EXPLOSION BURIES ?. - DUE HUNDRED MEN 5. Accident Near Pittsburg Followed of Inspection of Mode! Workings. VICTIMS BADLY MUTILATED cu- ~ ne- Great Backets Filled With Dead Boders ' < ies Drawn Up From the Agnes in and Rachael Shafts of Pittsburgor Buffalo Coal Company's Mine. Marianna.Pa.?Great buckets filled with dead bodies, mutilated and dis? membered, are being drawn up from a0? the bowels of the Agnes and Rachael all shafts \?f the Pittsburg-BufTalo Coal by Company's mine, in which a terrific on- explosion entombed at least 138 mine*~ ers. Identification is practically impossible, for of thirty-eight bodies, or ist- what seem to be that number, recov-. ?f ered on the day after the disaster, severed heads, arms and legs are"^o }F0 er_ mixed that there can be no absolute in surety about a single feature or form. ew Just one' living man has been >ti. brought from the awful pit alive. He 'by is Henry Arnold, a track layer, but ,lSf so dazed and helpless is he that he cannot yet tell the awful tale of his ef. escape from the explosion ana suno;he eating fumes that followed.' *n(j By a strange fate, the one body 3rg that has been positively identified 3d is that of John Iville, Jr., first cousin it Df John H. Jones, president of the ler coal company. He was a favorite at, wltfr his millionaire kinsman, allVe fcnough employed in the comparative;e(j ly humble task of timekeeping/ He tes was aged twenty-three and was married only two weeks ago. Death came th. through suffocation, his body being. in. the single exception in the way of e(j mutilation. ' isj. The rescue of Arnold was dramatic. ec. It was about 10 o'clock a. m. when a shout was heard at the mouth of the ras shaft that there was a living man beler low. There was a rush fot the safety 0f helmets, and with these and a hlH stretcher a rescue party was lowered t,e. away in the bucket, the men, buckling jiy on the helmets as they descended. or ' It was nearly naif an hour before of the party reappeared with .the form pie of a man who proved to be Arnold. He had been found pn his feet In the t0 mine, and wheir asked what he was jly doing there muttered that he was eit 'just walking around." m_ After reaching the mouth of the lss ^ mine he became unconscious, but reler vived slightly after he was carried on a stretcher to the nearby power bouse. How he came to survive puzzles old miners. The fact encourages the bope that others are alive, but of this ' " the lliost experienced express doubt, i .Several times during the day it was an said about the mouth of \the stafta )n> that another explosion was Imminent, ite Each time there was a panic rush on ng the part of the crowd, while others he hysterically shouted down the shafts et. - waiu luc icotucia. e's Those who remained longest at the ras P^, despite these alarms were the in wives, mothers, sisters and children , se. of the entombed miners. Some wept, ad some screamed, some moaned and lie drew as near the edge as they dared, he tioping and praying, as" the big iron -as bucket came up, that it would bring the glad news of others rescued alive, he All day long the officials and em'aq ployes of the company were unsparing en In their efforts to search and bringto lce the surface every miner dead or alive who was knovn to have been at work ng when the explosion occurred, ch Near young Iville's body another to was found. The victim had placed , a his *ace a P??l of water, as all minhe ers are advised to do when an erplo. en sion occurs, in the hope of escaping he suffocation until rescued. It It is estimated that one-fourth of jo- the victims were Americans, nd Experts from Pennsylvania and Ler West Virginia are in charge of the work of exploration, and they are bewotAflollv ocaiafbrl hv T W Traill ;E# and Clarence Hall, of the United States experimental and testing sta> rd- tIon- HAVANA MILLIONAIRE S^AIN. bi- Tirso Mesa, a Sugar Planter, Shot a Down on His Estate. rcJ' Havana, Cuba.?Tirso Mesa, a multi-millionaire. and a member of the d London Board of Directors of *he United Railways of Havana, was shot and killed on his estate near Aguado Ij' de Pasajeros, Matanzas Province, by Ramon F. Victorio. Victorio is a lo' cal merchant, and it is supposed that the trouble arose through a business quarrelMesa, who was a prominent sugar t" planter and the owner of muc!: rpal eatate in Havana, received five rhots, tg causing instant death. His assailant jjg was arrested. , Germany Resents Queries. Germany regards as impudent the questions asked by our Consuls of her manufacturers in order to get data for the committee of Congress which Qj Is working toward tariff revision. Reclaiming Barren Lands. ce" A syndicate plans to pipe New York lse City sewage to barren land in Suffolk r?* County, L. I., and convert the land into farms. Heavy Transportation Tax. jj? Experts of the Public Service Com)n' mission figured that each man, worn' an and child in New York City paid 317 nickels in 1907 to the stree'; railroad companies. ' Bulgaria's Hope. *e* "Bulgaria will be Bulgaria if the crop of 1909 fulfils present pronij ises," Premier Malinoff said, in speak]n ing of the purposes and prospects of the newly proclaimed monarch:-. WoodrufT Not to Run, After a conference with William ite H. Taft at Hot Springs, Va., Timothy lat L. Woodruff witnarew irom cue race ity lor Senator from New York in fr. :o: of Elihu Root. About Noted People. m- Former Congressman Darwin R. , sa- James died at his home in Brooklyn. Victorien Sardou, the great French ew dramatist, died aftef1 a long illness in srs Paris. !W" Andrew Carnegie in a magazine article declared that our industries are jer no longer infants in need of protecry, tion. Iprl Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, in a speech at Kansas City, declared the Sherman anti-trust law a, menace, . and asserted that amendment was necessary to give the people themselves, not the corporation, reUef. \ : ?? HEALTH VERY POORRESTORED BY PE-RO-NA. U : Catarrh Twenty-five YearsHad a Bad Cough. 1 Miss Sophia Kittleiien, Evanaton," 111., writes: "I have beerf troubled with catarrh for , nearly twenty-live years -and have tried many cures for it, bnt obtained very little ' help. "Then my brother advised me to try Peruna, and. I did. "My health was very, poor at the time \V 1 I KamU f a 1- i W dr pAMinn Mo 4 It t<nn^ nrrt? wvguu VOAJUK 1. tl una, iU/ viiluclv na? very sore and i had a bad cougb. 4 "Peru-kahas cured me. % he chronic catarrh is gone and my heallhitvery much improved. > 1 recommend Peruna to all my friend* who are troubled as 1 was." PERUNA TABLETS{Some people prefer tablets, rather than medicine in a fluid form. Sucn people can obtain Peruna tab" ' lets, which represent the medicinal ingre* dicnta of Peruna. Each tablet equals on? average dose of Peruna. / Man-a-lln the Ideal laxative. Ask your Druggist for a Free P?? runa Almanac for 1009. . f .. News Before the Telegraph. Before the advent of the telegraph news traveled slowly, and in times of war reports of victory or defeat were anxiously awaited and were at times long delayed. One writer,' relating his own experience, tells us of the exhilarating scene in Glasgow when the . | mail coach arrived bearing the news of some great victory, such as the Battle of the NUe or the Battle of Waterloo. "On such occasions," he says, "the horses were decorated with laurels and a red flag floated from the roof of the coach. The guard, dressed in i scarlet, sounded his horn as they galloped through the echoing streets. Along uaiiowgate xney wem who au ever Increasing crowd till at the foot of Nelson street the coaqh pulled np, the guard discharged his blunderbuss into the air and communicated the newB, which spread like wildfire."? Glasgow Times. fvfar on Bird Batchers. , The appeal of the National Association of Audubon Societies for funds with which to wage war on the bird butchers to the country should meet with hearty response, especially from the farmers, whose annual crop loss from Injurious insects, the natural food of birds, is conservatively esti- i mated at $800,000,000. In many States the laws against the killing of m insectivorous birds are practically dead letters, particularly in the Far South, where thousands upon thousands of these birds are slaughtered by pothunters in the winter months * ?? ? /* 4- i/iTr 1 n {(ntAMIlf (1I1U SIlipjJCU l^ui iu w uvaio iguv* palates under the names of reed and rare game birds.?Washington Post . - ^ Our Dumb Friends. At the meeting of the S. P. C. A. ' some extracts from school children's essays were read. "Feed your horse with horse radish and horse chestnuts If you want your horse to grow," said one child. Another wrote: "If A' you are very kind indeed to your dog \ it may even follow you to your grave." A little girl wrote: "The Esquimau are very fond Indeed of their rein- 'i deer; in fact, they love their reindeer sometimes more than their wives. But then, they are very useful to them." ?London Dally Mail. T nrrvn A nvncnTT&RMICNT. Glow of Health Speaks For Postum. It requires no scientific training to discover whether coffee disagrees or . not. * , Simply stop it for a time and use Postum In place of It, then note the beneficial effects. The truth will appear. v "Six years ago 1 was In a very bad condition," writes a Tenn. lady, "1 suffered from indigestion, nervousness and insomnia. "I was then an Inveterate coffee drinker, but it was long before I could be persuaded that it was coffee thai hurt me. Finally 1 decided to leave" It off a few days and find out the truth. "The first morning I left off coffee I had a raging headache, so I decided I must have something to take the place'of coffee." (The headache w?j ? caused by the reaction of the coffee drag?caffeine). "Having heard of Postum through a friend who used It, I bought a package and tried It. I did not like It at first, but-after I learned how to make It right, according to directions on pkg., I would not change back to coffee for anything. "When I began to use Postum I weighed only 117 lbs. Now I weigh 170, and as I have not taken any tonic in that time 1 can only attribute my recovery of good health to the use nf Postum in nlace of coffee. "My husband says 1 am a living advertisement for Postum. I am glad to be the means of Inducing my many friends to use Postum, too." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. , Read "The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time, i They are genuine, true and fall of hu? man interest.