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HW DEAD WD HURT 10 IN COLORADO WRECK It, *" Denver & Rio Grande Train i Crashes Into a Freight n ENGINEER MISREADS HIS WATCH Only Twelve of the Victims Are Co Known?Unidentified Dead Aro th Women and Children Badly ini Mangled?None in Sleepers Hun W Lc Glenwood Springs, Col.?Twenty- Qn one persons were killed and forty in an ?ured, many of them seriously, in a head-on collision between a west- 0f bound passenger train and an east po bound freight train on the Denver rei and Rio Grande Railroad, betweenDotsero and Spruce Creek, twenty- en two miles from Glenwood Springs, at ch 9.36 o'clock at night. Following is a pa revised list of the dead and descrip- un tions that may assist in the identification of the unidentified dead. wl The identified dead were: J. D ag Mahon, Princeton, Ind.; A. A. Ham- co! ilton, Polo, 111.; W. C. Kettle, Ashton qu Neb.; Mrs. Mattie Kettle, Ashton thi Neb.; Mrs. Mattie Ezell, Williston, N. ga D.; G. W. Oleson, St. Louis, Mo.; Dr. Da Arville A. Oleson, either from Hik coi dreth, Neb., or Axtell, Neb.; the Rev. R. L. Meiley, either from Brooklyn to N. Y.f or Mechanicsburg, Pa.; Clar? th< ence A. Gooding, Washington; John of Williams, Clarks, Neb.; John Will- tec lams, Des Moines, Iowa; J. C. Davis, fo: of Davis Brigham Drug Co., Denver; coi Henry Dunn, St. Louis, Mo. I to The unidentified dead were: Twelve-year-old boy; eight-year-old j wa girl, wearing plain ring on tnira nn- mi ger left hand; .ten-year-old boy, light Stf hair; six-year-old girl, light hair and eyes; woman, full face, brown hair, th< abont thirty years old, wore blue Wa plaid petticoat and Catholic brooch; da: woman, no description, badly mutilat- oil ed; woman, black hair, dark com- Te plexion, plain gold ring inscribed jui "Nancy," shoes stamped "Selby Shoe Ju Company, Portsmouth, Ohio;" worn- ha' an, with red sweater, blue and white Th striped waist, about forty-flve years ck of age, weight about 110 pounds. tio All the unidentified are women 01 boi children, and their bodies are badly mangled. Ft While nothing official has been given out as to the cause of the Se< wreck, it is said to have been due tc a misunderstanding of orders on the part of the engineer, Gustaf Olson, of the passenger train. Olson, however, asserts he understood his in- th< structions perfectly, but that he mis- P?! read his watch, thus encroaching on Ga the time of the freight train, which was being drawn by two locomotives, thJ the first of which was in charge of wo his brother, Sig. Olson. we When the news of the catastrophe ^e< reached Glenwood Springs every ,as available jhysician and nurse In the city wa3 pressed into service and a relief train was made up. 'an A pathetic feature of the accident to was the killing of a father, leaving Se1 two small children, the eldest being four years old, the youngest two. The a(*< elder boy told a nurse at the sanitarium that his father called him Ben- a9* nie, and this is all he will say. From a fellow passenger it was learned that the family was en route to Grand Junction to visit relatives. It is sup^ . posed that Mr. and Mrs. Kettle, whose Go names appear among the dead, were the parents of these two little ones who are badly injured. ' None of the sleepers left the track ?* and none was killed or injured in these cars, most of the dead and in- ^0: jured being removed from the ruins *at of the chair car, which was complete- *61 ly split in twain. Pn kel nmme<v ciamtt v to rv\mm nnn 3W< oauajujaj. JU JL IO x' v v X/juojl/ i , ? C"? Police Think Man Killed His Wife, Jg Daughter and Himself. Ma Seattle, Wash.?W. L. Seeley, ai the attorney and former national banb Shi examiner for Illinois under Controller 5m of the Currency Eckels; his wife, Mrs. Ha Kate M. Seeley. a member of the coi Daughters of the American Revolu- cui Hon, and. his daughter, Miss Renee Seeley, a student in the University ol R Washington, werg found dead in a bathroom of their home in the fash- ?e, ' lonable Capital Hill quarter. The victims "had been dead several days. The women clad in night robes j apparently had been murdered with a vot hammer. the There was no mark of violence on cai Seeley. He is believed to have been Ro narflv ohlnrAfnrmoH anrt thon HrnwnpH Rp la the bathtub. All three bodies were Sta kneeling at the side of the bathtut Col with the heads in the water. Ma ma RINEHART GETS FIFTEEN YEARS hai Df 1 Wrecker of Fanners' Bank oi 3Pe AVaynesburg, Pa., Taken to Pen. Pittsburg, Pa.?J. B. F. Rinehart, pol former cashier and vice-president ol i the Farmers and Drovers' National san Bank of Waynesburg, Pa., which in- Goi stitution failed over two years ago foi ;an $2,000,000, was found guilty ol wrecking the bank, and was imme- Ati diately sentenced to serve fifteen j years in the pentitentiary by United rya States Judge James S. Young. per The jury found Rinehart guilty ol , all the eleven counts, charging hiir N with making false reports to the . Comptroller of the Currency, and npon all of the nineteen counts charging him with making false entries and with abstraction in trans- t I actions connected with the Green? r*/M, 1 ?v* J ~ fi 1 ftAC POPi vuujlilj puuiitai tampai^u ui IJUJ. Murdered While Reading Bible. Matilda Eclund, while reading the Bible at her home, near Sandy, Utah, I was shot and instantly killed by Axe] yea Carlson, who fired at her through 8 Phi window. Carlson was arrested, and his said that he had been "wronged by ma the railroads" and "hounded by union men" until some one had to die. He Is believed to be Insane. Commander Brown Dead. j^j0' Commander Jefferson Brown, U. S ern N., died at his home in Brooklyn. Th< N. Y. stu About Noted People. President James B. Angell, of the ^ University of Michigan, reached hla lab eightieth birthday, and declared that i teaching wa3 man's noblest profes- of < sion. he: Plans were discussed for the erec- J tion of a monument in Washington, Sta D. C., in honor of Senator William nao Boyd Allison, of Iowa, who died last ( summer. me President Hadley, of Yale, declared leri that the reform of newspapers and ] the Government should begin with bil newspaper readers, who should learn ors to weigh evidence. feu IL COM 1ST PAY ' jxas State Courts Competent to Impose Large Fine. lited States Supreme Bench Unanimous in Fining Waters-Pierce Oil Company. Washington, D. C.?The Supreme urt of the United States affirmed e decree of the State courts of Texas posing a fine of $1,623,000 on the aters-Pierce Oil Company, of St. ?uis, and ousting it from the State the charge of violating the Texas ti-trust law. The court also sustained the action the Texas State courts in the apintment of Robert J. Eckhardt as an/4 fhna a train ainst the company, which sought to ve sustained the action of the Fecial court in appointing C. B. Dorester at the instance ol the comny. The decisions in all the cases were animous. The case turned on the point as to lether the proceedings of the State ~ ainst the company had been in acrdance with the constitutional re- ; irement for due process of law and ; 3 court held that it was. While re rding the fine as very large, Justice ! i.y's opinion held that the State ; urt was competent to impose it. ; One of the receivership cases came ; the court on a writ of error from ? j Supreme Judicial Discrict Court ; Texas, and the other from the Uni- ; 1 States Circuit Court of Appeals ; the Fifth Circuit, in both of which < arts the decisions were favorable ' the State. *, The principal opinion in the cases ; .8 handed down in the ouster case < solving the fine imposed by the 3 ite courts. < Dealing with the contention that ? j alleged conspiracy between the >3 iters-Pierce Company and the Stanrd Company to control the price of in Texas was outside the State of xas, and, therefore, ndt within the C -isdiction of the Texas State courts, stice Day said that the agreement d been executed within the State, is circumstance was, he said, con - - . 4.1 isive witn tne court tnat tne convic- ? ' n was had for acts inside the State's Vl rders. ' P; iii r? ' si rNDS TO FIGHT LAND FRAUDS. m S( crotary Garfield Wants $500,000 s* [ore Because of New Information. m Washington, D. C.?Information of olesale and astounding frauds upon 01 5 public lan8s has come into the si 3session of Secretary of the Interior si rfleld through special agents in the w Id. The serious allegation is made L it approximately $110,000,000 rth of lands in States principally d st of the Mississippi River have ai jn fraudulently acquired within the t? t two years by corporations and in- pi riduals. p; With a view of recovering these ids Secretary Garfield sent letters bi Chairmen Hale and Tawney, of the Q: late and House Appropriation com-j v iiees. icapcuuvcij, aoaius jlua au litional appropriation of $500,000, h; ich, if granted, with that already oi red for, will give the department pj ,000,000 for that purpose. * K HEARST AGENT ARRESTED. pi ai vernor Haskell Accuses Him of w Conspiracy, to Defame. ei 01 iuthrie, Okla.?Scott MacReynolds, jE Brooklyn, N. Y., attorney for Will- pi a R. Hearst, who haa been In Okla- tt ma for several months collecting a, :a to be used in the libel Buit for jf 30,000 against Hearst, instituted in f2 laha by Governor Charles N. Has11, was arrested here on a warrant tt orn out by Governor Haskell, ^ irging jMacneynoias wun conspir- te j to defame. Governor Haskell 0 had a search warrant issued, and cj cReynolds' person and rooms at nl s lone Hotel here were searched by, sriff John Mahoney and Orville T. ilth, private counsel to Governor skell, taking into their possession )ies of all data and evidence pro ed by MacReynolds. n< COT CHOSEN FOR SENATOR. " tr lator Raines' Speech Hails Root as h' the Leader. \lbany, N. Y.?By the unanimous ci e of the Republican members of Ci 1 Senate and Assembly in joint Pi icus here, Secretary of State Elihu St ot was named as the .choice of the publican organization for United pj ites Senator to succeed Thomas ilier Piatt, whose term expires on . rch 4. Incidentally Senator Raines, jority leader of the upper house, led Mr. Root as the future leader the organization in this State in a ech in which he warmly eulogized \ iator Piatt and bitterly denounced Hughes type of man in public and itical life. | rhe Democrats caucused at the ae time, and chose ex-Lieutenantfernor Lewis S. Chanler as their didate. _??_____ torney-General Condemns Sewer. I Lttorney - General Bonaparte, at shington, D. C., gave out an adse opinion on the right of the Pas: Valley Sewerage Commission of v Jersey to empty its proposed nk sewer into New York Harbor. Gift to Bowdoin College. Jy the will of Joseph E. Merrill, of vton, Mass., Bowdoin College is to ;ive $200,000. Rabbi Weds Couple and Dies. tabbi David Bliddem, for twenty rs a leader of orthodox Jews in ladelphia, Pa., dropped dead at home. He had just performed a rriage ceremony. Spring Hill College Burns. ?he famous Spring Hill College, at i bile, Ala., the oldest in the South- I State3, was destroyed by fire. I ,>re was no loss of life anions 22? I dents. The Field of Labor. Uberta, Canada, will pass a child or act similar to the Ontario act. a? Vbout one-half of the population ul Greece are agriculturists and shep ds. P Headquarters of the Minnesota h< te Federation of Labor will be ved from Duluth to St. Paul. d( Dwiug to a wage dispute 4000 B u have struck at Larmorgate col- pi ies, Rhouddah Valley, Wales. Efforts will be made at the automo- v< e show, scheduled for. Chicago, to sc janize a national union of chauf- tt irs. tr THE PASSING OF 1 ?Cartoon by W. j "Billy Possum" to ( t ? < Georgians Preparing to ] ! (Special Dispatch to the ] ! Atlanta, Ga.?All doubt has b ; has permanently dethroned "Teddy ; gia and adjacent commonwealths 4r ; visit of President-elect William H. ' ' dnstry, and to-day a factory in that ' opossums of the sizes and variety ol I extended period have held infantile i ; "opossum grin" is now a term as wlc ? smile." ! j IECRET JUST OUT ABOUT FRATERNITY WIT] ' \ < v ' >} J )rganization Never Before t Many Cities and Orlglna bers Give Bodies to ScU Chicago. ? A strange secret of lirty-one years' standing was re- c ealQd when more than a score of t rominent Chicago physicians and o urgeons admitted that they were t lembers of the Ustion Fraternity, a p jciety having for its object the dis- e sction of the bodies of its members a Eter death and cremation of the re- f tains. . This weird fraternity, to which i' aly memberc of the medical profes- c on are admitted, is of national g :ope. Its' headquarters are in a v ell furnished clubhouse at 3232 f ake Park avenue. p Chapters exist in New York, Phila- g elphla, Boston, Cleveland, Detroit t ad other cities. Its membership is s iken from the ranks of the, most t rominent practitioners in different t irts of the United States. fl Each chapter is known as a verte- d ra. The Chicago chapter, being the rst organized, is called the "Prime r ertebra." Its high officer is known t! 3 the "encephalon," and its next p [ghest officer is the "medulla." Its b ther officers are named for other \ irts of tfhe human body. c The members of the fraternity e iust undergo a preparation or ap- t renticeshlp of four years before they ^ re admitted to full knowledge of its s eird rituals. During this period h ich must study some physiological r medical problem entirely original v i bis own mind. If hla faith and ?rsevernace in the ironclad rules of " le society are deemed doubtful he t Des not become a partof the "body." s the showing is complimentary the v mtastic ceremonials are adminisired. The society is divided into r iree "degrees," through which its iembers must pass. They are fra- p srnity, autopsy and cremation. e Dr. P. M. Cliver, who lives in this d ty, is the supreme encephalon or fl itional head of the Ustionians. . '1 WHERE THE BIG BASEBALL TEAM New York City.-?With the an- t: juncement by Manager Billy Mur- ti ly, of the Philadelphia Club, that s ie Phillies will do their spring aining at Southern Pines, N. C., it c is been definitely settled where all t( National League. ew York '.....Martin, Tex. licago Shreveport, La. .B ncinnati ...Augusta, Ga. F ittsbuij; Hot Springs, Ark. \ Louis Little Rock, Ark. ?ton L.Augusta, Ga. I ooklyn Jacksonville. Fla. S liiladelphia Southern Pines, N. C. C /Vtinait- d"F"f r?; m m Four States give equal suffrage Utah and Idaho. Rhode Island, by legislative vo have refused to adopt equal suffrage In Kansas women have educatic * Eighteen States have school suf Montana and Iowa permit worn sues. Louisiana gives women taxpaye tions submitted to the taxpayers. New York allows women taxpay In Great Britain women who po can vote for all officials except mem Australia and New Zealand give Isle of Man, Iceland'and'Finland. In Cape Colony, Canada and Sw en vote under various conditions for Last year the English Parliame there was a riot in the House, worn grille-work of the gallery of the Hou "Votes for women!" The grilles ha< There is a National American V headquarters at Warren, O. The R WHAT NEW YORK SPENDS AM rnn f??r?c run i/rtnr Passengers -annually carried on New Carried by steam railroads in United Money spent by New Yorkers for str Population of New York City Outlay for car fare per capita Number of rides per capita Amount of gas sold in cubic feet.... Cost at $1 per 1000 cubic feet Outlay for gas per capita Amount of electricity sold Outlay of electricity per capita Halis of Congress. Senators Elkins and Hepburn spoke | jainst a change in the tariff scnea- u es. Services in memory of William ^ inkney Whyte, of Maryland, were ild. t( Mr. Foraker spoke on the use of a ;tectives in investigating the a rownsville affair and Mr. Lodge re- ^ ied. In a special message to Congress e ;toing a bill to dam a liver in Mis- a turi President Roosevelt pointed out le danger of a gigantic water power ^ ust. y A I"HE TEDDY BEAI > A. Rogers, in the New York Herald. lust "Teddy Bear." ? Put Out Little Animals. Vew York Herald.) sen dispelled that "Billy 'Possum" Bear" so far as the State of Geore concerned. Already the Atlanta laft has stimulated Southern incity began the manufacture of toy r the "Teddy Bears" that for an affection and adult interest. The iely used in this State as the "Taft A DOCTORS' WEIRD 3 A FANTASTIC RITUA 1tard of Has Chapters i ited In Chicago?Memince, Then to Flames. This strange fraternity had its i; eption at Hahnemann College, his city, in 1878. During the thirt; ne years of its existence its well eachings and practices have been rofound secret. It# members at tl nd of their probationary period tal ,n oath that silences their tongui orever. The life on this earth is enjoyed 1 ts utmost by them. At the end the olleagues, attired in long white su ;icai gowns, gatner about the bier c rhich lie the earthly remains of the riend. The spirit they know has d< iarted, and the clay that is left ;iven over entirely to science. The heories are augmented by this gre\ ome gift. When they have flnishe he rites are said. At a crematory a hat remains is given over to tt lames. The doctor that was Is r uced to a handful of dust. Dr. Fred W. Wood, former si ireme encephalon, acknowledge hat the fraternity was for the pu r\t <5 11 fnnov on/1 npamoflon "tX! woo ui auiuj;o; uuu viouiabtuu. T* elieve in three degrees," said D Vood. "They are fraternity, whic aeans the real fellowship on th arth; autopsy after death, whic lelps all mankind, and ' crematio rhich puts an end to the earth! hell that remains after the spir as flown." "What is done at the autopsy 1 ras asked. "I cannot say,replied Dr. Wooi Our oaths are solemn. What we <3 o the body is all in the interest < clence. It does no harm and it at ances our knowledge." "What Is the fraternity's belief i egard to cremation?" was asked. "We believe that cremation is pr< er. The bod? is but clay, and sooi r or later becomes but a handful < ust. When it is given over to tt re all is ended. The translation < [Jstion' means Are." S WILL DO THEIR TRAINING. he National and American Leagt sams will prepare for the champioi hip season. Following is a list of the trainin amps of the big league baseba ?ams during the coming spring: American League. few York Macon, G oston... San Antonio, Te 'Warfelphia Nct Orleans, L Wknington,..... Galveston. Te ih.cago Californ letroit ... Hot Sprini t. Louis ...... Houston, Te leveland Motile and New Orleai age For Woman. to women?Wyoming, Colorado, te, and Oregon, by popular vote, for women. mal and municipal suffrage. frage for women. en to vote on municipal bond isrs the right to vote on all quesers to vote on village taxation, ssess the necessary qualifications bers of Parliament. women full suffrage, as do the reden, as in parts of India, womschool and municipal officers, nt refused votes to women, and en chaining themselves to the se of Commons, while they cried i to be removed to get them out. 7oman Suffrage Association, with ,ev. Anna H. Shaw is president. DUALLY ! ARE, GAS AND ELECTRICITY York railways... 1,300,000,000 I States.. 780,000,000 eet car fare $65,000,000 4,000,000 $16.25 o 25 . ' . .7.7. .7.7.32,000.000,000 $32,000,000 $8.00 $20,000,000 $5.00 Women in the Day's News. Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay made he ebut as a speaker in an address i ivor of equal suffrage, in New Yor ;fw * VJ . Miss Ethel Dickens, a granddaugt ;r of Charles Dickens, is the head c large typewriting bureau in Londoi nd is described as a keen busines roman. In Tour States of the Union. Wyon ig, Colorado, Idaho and Utali, won n possess the same political righl s men, voting at all elections o tie same conditions. In Wj'omin tie right has been exercised for fort ears. ? * TRAPPED BY FLUMES, 53 PERISH ON LIE ' Explosion Sets Fire to Wooden Crib at Chicago. ' MEN BURNliD OR DROWNED Rescuers Have Trouble in Reaching Them?Some May Be in Tunnel Under the Lake ? Others Will Die. . . ' J Chicago.?Trapped by flames on a wooden crib, surrounded by water filled with huge cakes of ice, at least flfty-tfyree men perished. They had been living on the structure while en gagea in ounaing a section 01 a iunnel which was to draw pure water for Chicago from the depths of Lake Michigan. Powder and dynamite exploded and set the structure afire, and many were burned to death, while others perished in the lake. Fifty-three bodies were recovered, ? and rescuers report that at least three ** men slipped from cakes of ice and X drowned. Some men may be In the I tunnel at the bottom of the lake. I Only thirty-nine were rescued, and *<( many of these were so badly burned or chilled that they will die. | First word of the disaster came in i a telephone message to the offices of f the Jackson ''ompany on the shore, f which said: | "The crib i on fire. For God's I sake send help at once, or a dozen or I more of us will be burned alive. The t tug?" t Then the telephone wire burned off t and the men on shore heard no more. I The crib was one established by 1 the George W. Jackson Company, ? contactors, a mile and '.a. half out Mn the lake, and was connected with shore by an aerial tramway, which proved useless as a means of escape. T. F,*rent for a steel shaft to keen it in place the crib was made wholly n of wood and the flames spread rapidly. The fire was caused by an explot sion of powder or dynamite, and tj. flames immediately enwrapped the ID wooden istructure. y. Those who were not killed by the d first fiery blasts rushed out, to find a no means of escape. On every side ie were the waters of the lake, its surce face almost covered by great cakesof broken ice, A mile anid a half distant near the t0 shore lay tbeir only hope, the tug jr Morford. It could be dimly seen r. through fog and smoke. ,n On the shore a* dim black line inir dicated the gathering of crowds ate. tracted by the Acmes. ia - Captain Johnson., of the tug, had ix .already hoisted anchor, and the v. sturdy little craft was already buck>d ing the ice.' The firemen worked des]] perately getting up a full head of ie steam. e- From her deck the crib could be dimly seen. Black spots appeared j. and then disappeared into the waters id below. r- Some of the imprisoned men were re seeking to escape by swimming and ?"" ?^ nAovi /tlino f, ijyuic Ul UUVIU ffCIC OCCU LU VllUg VV :h cakes of ice for a time and then is disappear. b When Captain Johnson, after what n seemed to him an interminable trip, ly reached his goal, a scene worthy the it pencil of Dore greeted his eyes. Frantic victims, their hair singed " off and their skins blackened, were struggling in the water and ice. d Some fought agaipst their rescuers [a only to sink unconscious on deck si when forced aboard the tug, i. When everybody in Bight had been takein aboard a second muffled etin plosion was heard, probably marking the snuffing out of more lives in the > tunnel under the crib. a. 3l FOUR DEAD, MANT HURT. ic Towns in .Jersey Shaken by Dynamite and Powder Explosions. Dover, N. J.?Six hundred pounds of dynamite stored in the dynamite cartridge bouse of the forcite works ie of the Du Pont de Nemours Powder l* Company, on the eastern shore of Lake Hopatcong, near Landing, exig ploded, killing the four men in the 11 place and absolutely blotting out the whole building. The dead are: Charles Henderson and Stephen Gladis, of Stanhope; Louis Barth. ol * Kensil. and Joseph Sest;ak, of Landau ing. Their fellow employes found x only fragments of their bodies. All is were married men. Barth left a famP ily of six and Henderson a wife and x child. 11 "Vyoodbury, N. J. ? An explosion' that was felt for many miles around occurred at Gibbstown in the powder works of the Eastern Dynamite Company, which is connected with the Du Pont Powder Company. The first explosion was followed quickly by a second, and four of the buildings in the1 plant were blown to pieces. Twenty persons were injured, but no one was killed. Windows in houses all over ! Gibbstown and Paulsboro, four miles away, were wrecked. PROHIBITION WINS AGAIN". Holladay Bill Passed Over Governor's Veto by Tennosspe Legislature. Nashville, Tenn. ? The Holladay State-wide prohibition bill has been passed: over Governor Patterson's veto in both houses of the Legislature. The vote in the Senate was 20 to 13. and in the House 61 to 36. An enthusiasticdemowstration took place in each house waen the vote was announced. American "Widow Brings Suit. Mrs. Brodt, of New York City, widow of John E. McDonald, has brought suit in London for damages for Mr. McDonald's death ?jnd injuries to herself in the Sallsbi-ry train disaster. Settlement, With Venezuela. A protocol for the settlement ot disputes between the United States and Venezuela has been agreed upon at Caracas by Commissioner Buchanan and the Gomez administration. I Boston Honors Pee. r li Boston, as the birthplace of the j poet, honored the centenary of the I ( birth of Edgar Allan Poe: celebra.1 tions were also held at the University " of Virginia, Baltimore and other |f places. . 1 Anniversary of Lee and Jackson. The 102d anniversary of the birth j. j? Robert E. Lee, coincident with tiie E anniversary of the birth of Sconewall ' Jackson, was celebrated in Richmond, Va., and throughout the South. ~ "V-" ^s'^yr-Tr. FIRE WESJT MESSIH Fear That Possible Siirvivoi Were Burned to Death. Warships in Harbor Sounded Alar With Fog Horns and Sailors and Soldiers Were Rushed to Scene. Messins, Sicily. ? A serious fl started here among the ruins mat by the earthquake. The remains the Pennesi palace fell in and add< to the outburst. The flames spread in spite of tl feverish work of the soldiers to co trol them, and the situation becan serious. An odor of burning flesh mingl< with the smoke, and it is feared th persons still alive were consumed, large numbefr of corpses undoubted were burned. The flames had their centre in tl I'euuesi pmaut:, uui iub/ spienu uv the ruinB bf the City Hall and tl Bank of Italy. Tongues of fire leap< upward, while sparks fell in a heai shower for a considerable distance. The alarm was sounded on bugle while warships in the "harbor ble their fog horns and soldiers and sai ors hurried to the scene in large nur bers. A strong wind helped to spread tl flames, and the men experienced gre difficulty in working the pumps. Tl remains of the beautiful promenat along the harbor front undoubted were destroyed, and there is a stroi probability that the havoc will 1 much more widespread. It is supposed that the flames ha1 been latent under the wreckage f< days, and that the high wind durlr the night fanned them Into activity. The famous collection of coins b longing to Baron Pennesi is safe i Acireale, near Catania,"but ;xi)any. it portant and valuable objects of a buried in the ruins never will be r covered. The Duke of Genoa is here w6rl ing in the interest of the survivor He made a heroic rescue of a demeu ed woman, who insisted upon forcli tier way into a burning pile of rail to save her husband, who, Bhe d clared, was being burned alive. He dragged her back from ti flames, and eye witnesses declare 1 almost lost his own life in so doing. A large section of the quaysi< walls collapsed during the progre of the Are. The fire fighters work< at terrible disadvantage on account < lack of water and the fact that the: are no open spaces to check the pr gress of the fiames. A large aipount of valuables known to have been buried beneai the debris, and are now irretrlevab Jost, as'the ruins contained much ii flammable material. The flames consumed the bodies < many scores of victims of the eartl quake which had not yet been exti cated from the ruins before the could be got under control. NO ANTi-JAPANESE LEGISLATIO Governor Gillett Issues a Statomei at Sacramento, Cal. Sacramento, Cal. ? Governor G1 lett authorized the following stat ment: "After conferring with the leadii members of both branches of tl legislature 1 am convmceu mat l legislation directed against the Ja anese will be enacted. I am satisflc that tbe people of California and pa ticularly the members of our Leg! lature appreciate tbe efforts beir made by the Federal Gov.fernmejitai the representatives of Japan to stc emigration to this country of Japa: 2S9 laborers, skilled and unskilled. "There can be no doubt that tt s Japanese Government is acting abs< lutely in good faith in its endeavor 1 prevent its people from emigrate to our country, and in my judgmei It would be a serious mistake whi they are so doing to enact any lav directed against the Japanese people MANY SENATORS ELECTED. fha DonnMlrana X HIlMf Ui VICgUU KUC to Ante-Election Pledges. Washington, D. C.?Many Legisli tures elected United States Senator Governor Chamberlain. Democra won in Oregon, Republicans standi! by their ante-election pledges, T1 Senators elected were: New York?Elihu Root, Rep. Oregon?F. E. Chamberlain, Dem. Missouri?W. J. Stone, Dem.* Connecticut?F. B. Brapdegee, Rep New Hampshire?J. H. Gallinge Rep.* Pennsylvania?B. Penrose, Rep.* Iowa?A. B. Cummins, Rep.* Oklahoma?T. P. Gore, Dem.* Arkansas?J. P. Clarke, Dem.* Colorado?Charles J. Hughes, Dem North Carolina?L. . S. Overma: Dem.* Utah?-Reed Smoot, Rep.* Washington?Wesley L. Jones, Rep "Re-elected. JOHN H. WOODBURY A SUICID1 Found Dead in Bed at Hotel B Owned at Coney Island. Brooklyn, N. Y.?John H. Woo< bury, who widely advertised hlmse as the mender of ugly faces and tt manufacturer of beauty soaps and 1( nAmmlHtiH cmHoMp in the rnni WU1U44VWVM ? . he had been ocupying in the. Seacli Inn, Coney Island, since the hotel ha closed at the end of the summer sej son. He shot himself twice with revolver and left no note or oth< message to indicate what had cause him to take his life. CHAMBERLAIN CHOSEN SENATO Democrat Elected in Oregon by tl Republican Legislature. Salem, Ore.?Inability to bring i; fluential State Senators in line for Republican blocked the attempt 1 defeat Governor George E. Chambe lain, Democrat, chosen in the pr mary, for United States Senator i the Legislature. The vote in tt House stood 3 4, in the Senate 19, total of 53, or 7 more than was nece: sary to elect. THOUSANDS HONOR POE. Bust of Great Poet Unveiled aud Gii en to New York City. New York City.?The 100th ann versary of the birth of Edgar Alia Poe was celebrated by the dedicatio of a bust of the poet in Poe Pari Fordham, and afterward by a menu rial meeting in the auditorium of Ne1 York University. The dedicatory cei emony was attended by a large crow< despite the severity of the weathe Scores of women stood in the sno [ for more than an hour to pay reve: I ence to the memory of the poet. w*. tf.: [ft CATARRH IN HEAD. f Pc-ru-na?Pe-ru-na. ly ' 'J~ MR. WM. A. PRESSES. 30 TlyrR. WILLIAM A. PRESSCR, 1722 M Br iVl Third Ave., Moline, 111? writes: " l have been Buffering from catarrh ** ? in the bead for the put two months and V 'd tried innumerable so-called remedies with' fy out avail. No one knoWs bow 1 have suffered, not only from the disease itself, bat is, from mortification when in company of J. friends or strangers. f 0 I, "l have used two bottles of your med"* icine for a short time only, and it effected a Q complete medical oure, and what k better yet, the disease has not returned. le "I can most emphatically recommend Peat runa to all sufferers from this disease." ie Bead This Experience. Mr. A. Thompson, Box 65, R. R. 1, Marly tel. Ohio, writes: "When 1 began youx lg treatment my eyes were inflamed, nose ^ 3e was stopped, u'p half of the time, and was sore and scabby. 1 could Hot rest at ' ,V ? aight on account: of continual hawking 76 and spitting. 5r "I had tried several remedies and was ibout to give up,'but thought ( would uy ?eruna. 0. "After 1 had taken aboat one-third of a at Oottle I noticed a difference. ;"1 am now _ completely cured, after suffering with ~T datarrh tor eighteen years. . " "I think'if those who are Afflicted with 0- tatarrh would try Peruna they would never ^ CivM regret it." k-. Peruna is manufactured by The Peruna j a. Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Onio. t- Ask your Druggist for a Free Peruna Almanac far 1909. PILEgggg 10 Eook^t br mail FREIr.' tEA CO.. DEPT. B. A MINNEAPOLIS MINN. H Bill Against "Faker*.* id A Daniel has come to judgment in 3f the Vermont Legislature with a bill re Intended to guard newspapers against ?" "fakers." It makes the giving of . . false news to a newspaper with lnCent to deceive, punishable by a fln? . iy ranging from $5 to $20 for each ofn fense. "We bope that the% Vermont lawmakers will lose no time In makrf (ng the bill a statute," says the Boston Transcript. "Its enactment will 111 a long felt want of Vermont edl57 idrs and blaze the way for. the relief tt those of other States." v ' . -.. . ; . 1 m a xnai. at A Scotchman stood beside the bed ^ of his dying wife, and in tearful acsents asked was there anything he v }~ could do for her., ; "Yes, Sandie," she said, "I am hoplg (ng you'll bury me in Craeburn Kirk- '% $&. ie irard." 10 "But, my lass," he cried, "only P- think of the awful expense! Would ,d ye no be comfortable here in Aber- 1 ; J. r" deen?" ' > t IK "N?* ^andl?' Id 110 feSt mJr grave 'unless I were buried in Crae,p burn." a- "It's too much you're askin'," said ' the loving husband, "and I cannot ie promise you ony such thing." ,/ > "Then, Sandie, I'll nb give you ony peace until my bones are at reast in K my native parish." [g "Ah, weel, Maggie," said he, "I'D rs just gie ye a three months' trial la Aberdeen an' see how ye- get along.' ?Philadelphia Ledger. A Change of Tune. ** "Mamma, i m urea 01 going w school." "What's the matter, .Willie?" a. "Th' teacher?" ,t, "Now don't say a word against ig your teacher, Willie. I've no doabl l? you annoy her dreadfully, and sh? seems like a very nice sort of person." "Well,1 she said this mornin' thai she didn't think I had much of a rf bringin'up at home, an?" - . "Wait! Did she say that? Well of all the coarse Impudence! You sha'n't go back there another day!" \ J Exit Willie, grinning.?Cleveland Plain Dealer. D . M HER MOTHER-IN-LAW Proved a Wise, Good Friend'. A young woman out in la. found i wise, good friend in her mother-In? law, jokes notwithstanding. Sh? writes: [e "It is two years since, we began using Postum in our house, f was 1- greatly troubled with my stomach. If complexion was blotchy and yellow Le After meals I often suffered shard ^ pains and would have to lie dowa g My mother often told me It was th* d coffee I drank at meals. But wheo i- I'd quit coffee I'd have a severe head' a ache. sr "While visiting my mother-in-latf I remarked that shealways made such good coffee, and asked her to tell mg how. She laughed and told me It wa4 R easy to make good 'coffee' when you use Postum. ^ ?? 44I began to use Postum as soon a4 [ got home, and now we have the Q. same good 'coffee' (Postum) every a day, and I have no more trouble. In:o digestion is a thini; of the past, and r- my complexion has cleared up beaui tifully. "My grandmother suffered a greaf deal with her stomacn. Her aoctoi g. told her to leave off coffee. She then took tea, but that was just as bad. "She finally was Induced to try Postum, which she has used for ovei a year. She traveled during the winir, ter over the greater part of Iowa, vis- < iting, something she had not beer able to do for years. She says she owes her present good health to Posin turn." Ij Name given by Postum Co., Battle > Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to iv Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rear son." Ever read the above letter? A new r r- one appears from time to time. Thej w are genuine, true, and full of huuiux r~ interest.