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Carolina Henator Talks to . .Atlanta Newspaper Men on Poli tics and “Joe" Cannon.—Sajrs Democrats Played Game Poorly. His Klght with Wlljr Speaker. Sv • “The Democrats played thelr game pforly,” said Senator Benjamin R. v Tillman Thursday In the first In ti vview he has given since his 111- ii'’K8, according to the Atlanta Con- tit' tlon. He sat by an open window a Robertson’s Sanitarium, but the o' :.y evidence of his recent Illness was a slowness of enunciation and a s' vhtly enfeebled voice. THs mind was keenly active, and ^trifi-h interested in the recent “ernp- ti'.o,’’ as he called, it In Congress. “They played their game poorly/’ h' 1 repeated, “when they called fpr tT't vote tt> declare the Speaker’s choir vacant. It rallied the Reoub- li'ins. insurgents and all to Can- r< Vs support, for a Republican is fi:st, last and always a Republican, and a patriot—secondarily. "There was no need for that move,” the Senator continued. “Can non had been shorn of practically al! power when they took from him the privilege of naming the com mittee on rules; and if the Dem ocrats had let matters stand, he would have been politically lost. The result of the call for a vote restored, in a measure, his piesMge.” “You do not think that Cinnon will ever regain as much power ss he held formerly, do you?” "No,” the Senator replied, “never as much. A part of his powo- <* gone, but he hasn’t slipped far enough to break his neck.” “What do you think will be the eventual result?” was asked. "He will probably retire at the favorable opportunity,” said the Sen ator. “Will that not, practically, be an admittance of defeat?" “Well, in a measure,” the Senator replied, “but he is 74—” “Are you and he friendly?” the mrestion was put irrelevantly, but it brought a slight, humorous twinkle to the Senator’s eye. ’’Well, we are now, but I believe I am the only man that ever downel Cannon. "It was about getting the Gov ernment to pay an old debt to the State of South Carolina. First they tried to show that my State owed the Government, but I got the re cords for l>oth and In the end it was shown that the Government owed the State. I wanted them to pay the debt, but old Joe was opposed to it. "I got Allison and Hale, two of my personal friends and leaders pn the Republican side, to Insert my claim for South Carolina In a civil bill that came up for conference ad justment on the 3d of March, the Iasi day before final adjournment. "Cannon said that It shouldn’t go through; and I swore be d—d that it should go through. Some of my friends said that they would help me to filibuster in the session which met at S o'clock, and they kept the House busy; so 1 sent out and got Byron’s Vision of Judgement.' "Have you read it?" he interject ed. "Well it Is one of the keenest of Byron's satires, and some people think that it is blasphemy, but I have always thought it a good piece of work. I was going to read them that. "But seeing that if the civil bill was not passed an extra seaaion of Congress would have to be called to consider the naval and civil blHa, the opposition gave in and I got the bill pased. "It took Cannon a long time to< get over that,” interposed Mrs. Till man, a quiet, knowing little woman, th^ Senator smiled pleasantly. “Do you think Cannon will be re turned to Congresa?” was the next question. “He will, if he wanta to be. His people like him—probably because he gets things for them. ~ “That's the reason Atlanta hugs old Lon Livingston so closely, be cause he got the United States pen itentiary for it, and I do not know how many other things. Atlanta had a ’sweet tooth.’ ” “The Cannon fight was (he first _thing jhat really Interested my hus band since Tillman. ~ “Just six weeks ago, do you remember?’*-she said, turning to her husband, "you became 111, and now you are getting well ao quickly. So much more rapidly than any of us dared to hope.” Mrs. Tillman had taken part in all the conversation and ahbwed auch thorough knowledge of the political situation that the reporter aaid, laughingly,’aa the Senator and Mrs. Tillman started oat for their usual afternoon walk. “Mrs. Tillman knows almost ss much shout politics ss yon do. Sen ator.” ‘Mra. Tillman is s better pelltfc* clan than I am/’ replied the Senator, S. CL, THURSDAY. APRIL 7,1010! SHELL KILLS EIGHT TURN OF TIDE She May Seek Divorce on Ground of Incompetoacy as Hnshand Is la Charge of a Trustee. (One day of bliss was all that Wil liam D. Ashley, formerly of New York city, was allowed to enjoy with his bride, Mrs. Bessie- Carye, a wM- ow^ of Amsterdam, N. Y. They were married last week in Jersey City and Ashley created such a rumpus after the wedding that his bride had to take three bottles of whiskey from him. The groom is past 76 years of age and his bride has passed 56. Then years ago Ashley was ad judged incompetent to manage his es tate of $80,000, Inherited from a relative. After a time he was com mitted to Blackwells Island but be got out and sold a mortgage of $3,- 000 on hla farm. For some time he has been corres ponding with the woman at Amster dam, she not knowing that he was in charge of a trustee. With his $3,- 000 they left his home In Newburg, N. J., and went to Jersey City, where the ceremony was performed. The next morning Mrs. Ashley left for home, declaring that she realised a mistake had been made and she would seek divorce. Ashley did not appear a bit sorry as he accompanied his bride to the railroad station. Later he called upon a lawyer and accused the woman of desertion. It Is probable the marriage will be an nulled because the man had been de clared Incompetent and could not 'in ter upon any contract or agreement that would stand upder the law. HELD IN AN OLD MILL. • ♦T, as h« walked slowly toward the a. " door Young Pennsylvanian Tells Weird • Kidnapping Tale. A strange tale of being kidnapped and held prisoner in an old, aban doned mill Is told by Harry Bushy, aged 22 years, of York. Ps. He re turned to his home, last week after being absent for over three months Young Bushy disappeared myster iously. He says he was struck in the head and rendered unconscious when he went to his father's barn one night to investigate a peculiar noise. He was then taken to an old mill, so his story goes, and there locked up and fed on bread and water. I^ast week, he asserts, he was drugged and later found him self, without coat or hat, lying on the ground near his father’s barn. fiusby can give no * information that will lead to the location of the building. There Is no mill In the vicinity of his home where he could have been imprisoned. The youth's father is wealthy and it is now be lieved that the kidnappers inteded to hold him for ransom, but were afraid to make this move. Bushy's home Is near Dillsburg. in the north ern part of the county, not far from the South mountains, and it is be lieved that he was hidden away in a secluded part of the hills. WIDOW READ SHE WAS TO MAR* RY A VERY RICH MAN. He Was a Nobleman and Worth 990,000,000; Now She is Wiser, the Knowledge Costing 98,000. In the bustling German city of Hanover lives Frau Stler, who be came lonely after she had lost her husband, so lonely tbirihe decided to mend her heart with another. With that view she consulted Frau Nixdorf, who advertised to straighten out life’s tangles by card reading. All the card* ran the Widow Btter’e way and she was told that the was to marry a wealthy nobleman, Cham berlain von Buelow, who was worth $20,000,000, and would forever live happily. In a few days Frau Stier’s phone summoned her to a love avowal, the voice at the other end of the wire professing to be that of Chamber- lain, who said that one glance of her on the street had so excited his emotions that he could no longer re strain himself from declaring his undying love for her. He begged her to give him hope. Them and there the accepted him. Another telephone call, a few days later, purporting to be from Chamberlain, gravely Informed her that he had discovered that she was a woman of lowly birth, and that it would be necessary for her to be ennobled before he could wed her. This could be accomplished, he said, by a deposit of about $3,000 In a Hanover bank, believing In the cards, tds widow deposited the money. Then came the awakening. Frau Stler accused Von Buelow of the crime, but he had no trouble clearing himself and showing that he had alxmlutely no knowledge of her love affairs. Then her lawyers turned to Frau Nixdorf. That proceeding brought to light a Journeyman shoe maker as the sender of the telephone messages, and the law soon made short work of both him and the soothsayer. OrmcrMi Will Sm« py . Rehsia WOODROW WILSON LITLK BOY KILLED. SENATOR TILLMAN IMPROVING. He Is Becoming interested in Poli tics Once More. A dispatch from Atlanta says as evidence that Senator Tillman is re gaining his faculties, he discussed politics for an hour Thursday, at the sanitarium where he has been a pa tient, since coming from his home In Trenton, S. C. His theme was the recent “eruption,” as he termed it, In the House. "The Democrats play ed their game poorly,” said the Sen ator, "when they called for that vote to declare the Speaker's Chair va cant. Cannon had been shorn of practi cally all power when the took tom him the privilege of naming the committee on rules, and if the Dcm- acrats had let matters stand, he would have been politically lost. The result of the call for the vote to declare the Chair vacant, restored in a measure, his prestige.” Senator Tillman believes that Con- non will retire from the Speakership at the first favorable opportunity. He beleves that Cannon will have no trouble in securing re-election to Congress If he asks for antoher term. Senator and Mrs. Tillman daily take a long walk. Editor Webb’s Son Dies Under the Wheels of Trolley Car. Little George Robert Webb. Jr., son of George R. Webb, editor of the Horsecreek Valley News, was run over and instantly killed Thursday morning by a car on the Augusta- Aiken railway. The little Mlow, who was not quite two years of age, was presumably playing near the trolley track, at Mr. Webb’a home at Warrenville, and ran on the track. Mr. and Mrs. Webb and family reside at Warrenville near the car line, and Mr. Webb’s printing office is faclne the track, a platform running to within a few feet of the road. The have passed the old maid limit, but morning, passing Warrenville about nine, was going down grade just be fore reaching Fox’s crossing, when, It is said, the little fellow ran from behind the platform on to the track and the car, oting in, a f w feet distant and going down hi:;, c. u’d not be stopped until the little boy's life had been crushed out under the w heels. YOUTHFUL GRANDMOTHER Yound Mother Brings Distinction on Her Family. All the records for youthful grand mothers have been shattered by Mrs. Everet Parker, of Richmond, Ind. She enjoys the distinction of being grandmother at 28, before she has passed the old maid limit. Mrs. Par ker w'as married at 13, and her daughter, now Mrs. Charles Lane, of Indianapolis. Ind., Is 15 years old The child horn to the latter is the fifth generation in the family, of which the oldest is 90 years. "It does seem rather odd, when I come to consider it,” laughingly exclaims Mrs. Parker, "to think that I have become a grandmother even before I have passed teh old maid limit, but I guess it runs In our family.” BRAVE NEGRO BOY. BRAINS HIS NEIGHBOR. Quarrel Over the Closing of a Road Result in Death. Thursday night In the northern his llIheM/* ~§ar<T Mrh. t P* 1 " 1 Sampson county, -N,- C„ Cohere Denning was killed by Hosa MfWtfr the weapon used boing sn axe, Ijennlng’s head was crushed. The ifen fell out over the closing of s etfl road by Denning and fought wlt4 the above results. May nor fled and ti yet at large. Both were sub stantial’ white farmera and near neighbor. Saved the Life of a Little White Baby Girl. The rare presence of mind and bravery of Clarance Douglas, a 13- year-old colored boy saved the life of two-year-old Alice Purcell, white, at West Point, Ky.. Thursday. The child ran on the railroad track in front of Uto englna ol t fasUapv freight train. The engineer retort ed the lever and whistled'the alAftfi, but the girl still continued ta9*fd the train. Women and men w«fe tertifled to the point of helplessness by the spectacle but the boy mprti to the child, caught her up gjii jumped to saftey Just as the •nr** passed. The President of Princeton College Predicts that the People in their Dlstreas Are Turning to the Dene ocratfi for Relief.—He Telia How the Country Will Be Benefited. That the political tide la now turning Democratic, and Ihe day when the Democratic party must take charge of this country’s affairs, Is almost at hand, were declarations made by Woodrow Wilson, president of Princeton university, in a speech at the Democratic dinner In Eliza beth, N J., recently. Mr. Wilson out lined the character of legislation which the Democratic should give the counter to meet the present economic problems. In this connec tion he said: "In the first place we should wish not merely to curb the trusts, and above all, we should not wish to regulate them In such a way as will make them either partners or crea tures of the government itself, we should wish to square their whole action and responsibility with the general interest regarding them, not as objects In themselves, but mere- Hy as conveniences in our economic life and development. Recent pro posals or regulation have looked too much like a wholesale Invasion by government itself of the field of bus iness management “Our regulations of public Inter est must be legal regulation and not direct management. "In the second place, it Is clearly our duty to take the government out of the business of patronage, the business of granting favors and priv ileges, of arranging the laws so that this, that, or the other group of men may make large profits out of their business and draw it back to the function of safeguarding rights general, not particular right; the rights which make not so much for the prosperity, which enables small groups of individual to pile up enor mous fortunes, as for a general stim ulation, a universal opportnnlty for enlightenment and Justice. I am thinking of course, of tariff legis lation. Whatever may be our views with regard to the policy vagely called the policy of protection, it Is clear that in fact It has long since, as dealt with by congress, ceased to be a policy of protection, and become a policy of patronage. "We are told that the present ex traordinary high price of commod ities is due, not to the tariff bbt to the fact that we are not pro ducing enough to keep up with the daily demand, and that Is particu larly true with regards to things we eat and have dally need. Take meat for example and see what the truth Is. The truth Is that the meat trust has been aible to con trol the meat market to such an extent that scores of ranchmen have been driven out of the cattle raising business because it was unprofitable. The short supply of meat is due to the monopoly created by the meat trust, ft is therefore true that the supply is short compared with the vast dimand, but it has been made short by the operation of a trust unquestionably fostered by the legis lation of the government. "In the third place It is one of the chief duties of the Democratic party to introduce such reforms in local and federal governments as will secure economy, responsibility, honesty, fidelity. "In brief our program should be a general revival of popular politics, of common counsel, of responsible leadership. We must supply efficient leaders, and eschew all the lower personal objects of politics. It is a case of must as well as a case of may a case of necessity as well as a case of privilege. A new day has come. Men and measures are be ing scrutinized as never before. For myself I veritably believe we are upon the eve of a new era of political liberty, when more literally and tru ly than ever we can realize the Ideals of popular government and of in dividual privilege.” FATAL EXPLOSION OCCURS ON THE CHARLESTON. United States Cruiser Was Holding Target I*rartice Off Olougapo ig Phiilippiae Waters. The premature explosion of a 3- Inch-gun on the United StaUi erals- er Charleston killed eight men and injured aeveral other this week while the ship waa In target practice off Olongapo in the Philllppine Islands. Seven of the victim* were killed in stantly while the other died on the way to Cavite. The dead are: - «PfcHip McKee,- -master-at-arms, W. Nantlcoke, Pa., Walter Anstedt, seaman, Trenton, 111. Henry Heater, seaman, Smithlahd, Ky. Leo Rommele, seaman, Omaha. Neb. Harry Graden, seaman, Chester, Pa. Ross Barkman, seaman, McKinley, Md. Maxle Barnerd, seaman, Kave-ln- Rock, 111. 'Edward Molin, private marine, Rockford, 111. The cause of the exploslnon is not known, hut was probably duVto tbe premature discharge of the gun. Rear Admiral John Hubbard, commander- in-chief of the Aaiatic fleet, has or dered an Investigation. The bodies of the victims will be burled at Ca vite. It Is known that when the shell cut loose It flew across the deck and mowed down the men who had gathered to watch the target and cut through a steel sanchion. MOTHER CLEARS POOLROOM. LOVED EACH OTHER YOUNG DOCTOR AND HIS SWEET- \ HEART TOOK POISON. Because Their Folks Objected to Their Being Married on Account I ARRESTED IN Proprietor Had Allowed Her Sons to Hang Around. Enraged because her two sons had been allowed to loiter about the place and asserting that one of them had lost most of his earnings there in games of chance, Mrs. Lena Fine- berg of Trenton, N. J., went to the poolroom of Juiius GiUInski and cleaned out the resort with a cue. When Gilllnski and his friends at tempted to escape the wi^qw bom barded them with billard balls and several of the men were badly cut about their faces. The breaking of the windows and mirrows followed. Mrs. Fineberg then grabbed her boys by the collar and took them home. She declares that she will repeat the raid with increased severity If Glllinskl does not keep the boys from the resort. Oillinski dare not prose cute, for it is against the law to al low boys under 16 years of age In poolrooms. At Wilmington, Del., Dr. Lachlan fr- Beaton, a well known physician, and his fiance. Miss Annie Narlton, a Swede, tried to sag. their lives by taking big doses of Isudnum Thurs day because tls mother and sister objected to their marriage. The acts followed a quarrel which the doctor and his sweetheart had with the physician’s family. The lives of the qbuple were saved Ire- cause they took overdoses of the poison and medical asistance was quick at hand. The girl was hurried to the Dela ware hospital, where the stomach pomp was used. Emetics adminis tered to Dr. Beaton had to* d«*ired effect while the patient waa being rashed to his home In an auto. At a later hour It was announced that both would recover. Dr. Beaton is about 30 years old, Miss Narlton is 24. The mother of the girl likewise opposed their en gagement? - The pale went to- M iss Narlton’s house, where they effected a reconciliation with lira. Narlton. They then proceeded to the doctor's drug store where they encountered his mother and aister. They objected to the marriage, it Is said, on the ground of social equality, and a strong Interview end ed with the girl leaving the store and going to the sidewalk, where the girl produced a bottle of laudanum from her handbag and swallowed the contents. Then shp shrieked for help and waa hastily sent to the hospi tal. When Dr. Beaton learned of this he went behind the counter in his store and took a doee of the same poison. Dr. Bemton lives In 1811 Washington street, an exclnslve aec- tlon. Miss Narlton's home is near the drug store. They Wen * to New York, Where 1 T GROWING MORE SERIOUS. VERY RARE CASK. Man Provide* for His Wife and Then lieave* Her. An Atlanta dispatch says the dis appearance of E. Y. Crockett, a prominent Atlantian who left his home, March 22nd and whose friends thought he had -been the victim of foul play, was explained Thursday by the reception of a touching let ter written from New Orleans, In which Crockett spoke of his wife and children and family in the most loving terms yet explained that he and his wife were not congenial and that he had finally decided to go away and remain away forever, rath er than make them both unhappy. He left a considerable amount of property in Atlanta all to his wife, sufficient to provide her a neat in come after all his debts are paid. — -. ^ ^ KILLED BY A STORM. Natives and Liberian Troops Are En gaged in War. Advices received at Liverpool state that fighting continues between the natives and Liberian troops at Cape Palmas, Liberia, and U growing more serious. The Rev. Mr Spnar, a na tive pastor at the mission In Cape Palmas, has been shot and killed and tbe lives of the white resident* are said to be In danger. The hostile natives appear to be getting the fetter of the troops. The latter were sent to stop the native trade In French territory. It was their excesses that caused the out break. The natives are said to be anxious to have a few Englishmen killed with the object of bringing about Intervention by Great Britain. The Liberian gunboat Lark, tem porarily commanded by a German of ficer, bombarded the native villages, but did little damage. A German gunboad arrived and Its commander offered to bombard Hoffman Station and plukc, but the authoriltes de clined assistance. With Several Big Contained the Stoles Two men charged by postal In spectors with robbing the at Richmond, Va., sometime Saturday night and early morning, were arrested night at tbe Grand Central New York City. Both offered stubborn and were not overpowe warp knocked swell man escaped. They were New York by means of three shipped from Richmond wi seizure of which $S0,0<H! worth ( the $85,000 lot of stampe In the robbery were recovered. The prisoners gev* the maau Frank Cheater, 54 years Old. Paul, Minn., and Frederick ham, 34 years old, maintains that he ta a that his home is in London, (Both men appeared at too Central station late Tuesday accompanied by the third ani dentlfled man, who made hie Chester went Inside, while nlngham and the third man outside on the sidewalk. Chaster called a her, gave him a trunk check and asked him to tain if It was In the baggage In the baggage room wee stationed Joseph Daly, a Central office detec tive, who had been called Into toe case by the Federal authorities. He was guarding a suspected trunk end when the lad made. Inquiry for it, the detective followed him beck, ap proaching Chester, who attempted to flee from the station. The detective grappled with him, but Chester Is of powerful build aa4 both men fel) struggling id the floor. Women passengers screamed and a panic was created In the Station unfit the officer subdued Chester with his club. Meanwhile the two men sta tioned outside, warned by the notes of the struggle broke and ran. Can- aingbam, however, waa bowled over by two pedestrians and was quickly overpowered by the police. Exam ination of the trunk revealed In addition to the flMOr-worth of stamps, a set of burglars tools, de scribed at headquarters as the Unset ever brought to New York. There were also two SS-callbre revolvers In the lot. - One of the men arrested toe po lice believe la "Eddy Fay/* a mack wanted fugitive, whose picture to In - every rogues' gallery of Importance w; l/S,*' , ■ -? - - ,«:$3 v?? 1 FATALLY SCALDED Eighteen People Perish and Hoafles Down. Many Another Big Trust. At Albany, N. Y., the American Telephone and Telegraph filed with the Secretary of State Koenig a cer tificate, of Increase of capital stork from $2flA.»00,000 to $500,000,000. $his quite* it next to the largsflt cor poration-'In th* world, the united Staten Steal Corporation being the Died for Love. At Dawson, Oa., MU Shepherd, a 16-year-old negro klrl. committed suicide by shooting herself with a breechloading gun. She hai} been refused permission by her parents to go with a certain suitor, gnd In consequence she borrowed th* wea pon with whleh she put an end to her existence. Child Drank Booze. At. Mr. G. A. Gulgnard's planta tion south of Camden Thursday one of his hands, Joe Bjlerbee, colored, placed one of his pint bottle of whis key too near the bed and hla tbree- year-old child got ^Bold of It~ and drank the entire contents of the bot tle. The funeral of the eblld * largely attended by colored folks The Governor of the Fiji Islands telegraphs to the Colonial office, at London, that eighteen persons, all natives, were killed by the hurricane that swept the Islands last Thursday. The material damage was limited to Suva, the capital, and to the vicin ity of the Delta of the Rewa, where practically every white man's home was seriously damaged and a great number of houses of the natives were wrecked. Small shipping suf fered severely, as did the sugar cane induatry. The banana crop was de stroyed. Shock Too Great. At Muskegon, Mich.,, while in a state of . bigb excitement over^ the catch of an unusually large pickerel. J. R. Shuler was stricken with par alysis and fell Into the Inks. Ho was rescued but Is In a serious con dition. Lost Life for Shoes. /At New York Alfred Payne, _ a clerk, lost hi* life in an early morn ing tenement fire because he stopped to put onhls shoes after he had bean awakened by the cries of the ten ants below. Fireman found his dead body seated upright on the edge of the bed. He had been pulling bn his shoes when smoke and flames swept In through the air shaft and suffocat ed film. In Attempting to Escape from Offi cers Fell in Vat. Alonza George, the negro man who was fatally burned In a hot well at the Stephens pottery, Macon, Ga., Saturday night while he was attempt ing to make his escape from county officers who had closed In on a skin game, died at tbe Macon Hospital Monday evening. The negro Is salg to have gone to the skin game afong with about 15 or 20 others. The sheriff's office got a notice that tbe game was in prog ress and deputies went out on tffe case. The party was flushed and Alonzo George ran Int# a hot well, which waa then carrying a temper ature at about the boiling point. The officers pulled the man out and found that scarcely a spot on his body was not terribly burned. He was carried to the hospital and there he put up a plucky battle for life, but finally succumbed to bis burns. I>nu>k Poison for Boose. As the result of mistaking a bot tle of carbolic acid for whiskey, J. Luther Abbott a clerk In a tobacco ware house at Danville, Va., killed himself. Abbott had a bottle of whiskey on a bureau and beside it was another bottle labeled whiskey, Trot Torntrfntng therpoison wlrlch he drank. H# died In terrible agony in thirty minutes- In th« country, and for whose ap prehension a total of about fSO.POt n rewards have been offered In var ious cities. This prisoner Is the one known a* “Cunningham.** H* wag recognized by Detective Peabody and other oldtimers, who said that as “Eddy Fay” he was known as one pf the best all-round safe-blowers la tbe country. According to tbs detec tive bureau, “Fay” 1* wanted la Los Angetes tor bftrirtng tbe bate of the postofflee In 1908 and getting nWsy with $10,738 worth of stamp*. A . ... year later he'again blew ~tbe same- safe, and this time made off with $74,000 worth of stamps. ' Postofflee Inspector Mayor ed during the day an alleged of the prisoner, Chester, whose real name Is given as Richard Harris. He 1* said to have been known a* “Disk** . ‘iKA-vgUi ' '0^‘m - - r .-- _ ■•am Gypsies Drowned. A caravan of fifty Gypsies broke through the ice Thursday on Cher- emenetskl Lake, near Lags, Rusal*, nearly all of the 50 men. women and children wen ’ -J?'' ■ Too Many Hold Ups. A At Pittsburg, Pa., the unique spec tacle of traction motormen and con ductors riding armed with rifle* 1* being witnessed nightly, account of bold holdups In outlying districts ths street railway officials have tarnished arms to and givi w - night or otherwise molested. “ ~ Miner* Killed. "*"' At Wilburton, Okla., six miners were killed Thursday by a mysterious explosion to Great Western Coal and Coke company** mine Nb. 2 The blast is supposed to hive been the reenlt of § shot going off premature ly. The bodies were recovered late Thursday afternoon. Harris, alias “Little Dick” Harris, alias Frank M. Willis, altos Willis .lames, alias Frank Holden, allM^*s. Mason. He la described as a and jewelry store sneak-sad %to glar/* Early Thursday night found two more trunks and chel belonging to the robbers, - which they recovered stamps, and later office Inspectors found from which they recovered $17,--. ’ stamps. This trunk was found at the Pennsylvania railroad at Courtlandt afreet, and was to the police station* where the < er trunks were. Thlamsktotft/ worth of stamps the authorities <1 recovered out of tbe $85,000 stolen. In one of the trunks found c In the night was what detectives is the most elaborate and iahed set of burglars tools ever seen. Each tool was _ erate ease of Russia leather. - tbe rougher jimmies wsr* \ ie tlssus paper, tnd-t>r of the hardest, modern “high si ■••rttorte As® V to s tool steel. With some of which length, and six seta of Another s<H, UM so ed Wednesday night log yet waa a that th# compiler had raid oa f Killed to Wreck. A Rhelms dispatch states that 50 German aoldlet* war* killed outright W Woiaded la a collision Hated. names of the their •'t jJ*K- Mrafl