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VBL. LII.—NO. 171 . PRICE TWO CENTS TRAILED DR. KEELER FOR TWO YEARS| C2ved Authorities of America and Europe Have Search- ed the World Over For Him ONCE PROMINENT NEW _YORK DENTIST Charged With Swindling a2 Brooklyn Woman Out of Valuable Bonds, After $15,000 Marry ng Her—Is now “in Hands of Detroit Police— Woman with Him who Fosed as His Sister. with poseq as his sis: in getting the “Sister™ Accordi ties of A searc] and the been s Cash Eesides Charged rer ave once dentist, was In company s alleged sted him Recognized by Detectives. uthori- ve been pur- zni ey heard leave th ain for | being “Swindled His Bride. o at Ocean Grove = taken the woman. e in Mexican land | properties, and soon married Mrs. e day, say the police, he mention- ed to his bride that he was in trouble with the federal authorities over his Mexicam land. It would take consid- erable money to straighten the matter up. So the doctor, his bride and his “sister” went fo a Manhattan bank to Zet $12,500 of the pride’s mone: went -in an automobile, the onti l\t&s The doctor and his went. into the bank. The waited outside, and for nearly They bri e vears ane” has been waiting be- cause the doctor and “sister” went out another door, and it was not just cer— tain till today where they did go. Prisoners to Be Taken to New York. New York, July 19.—The New York police were advised today of the ar- rest in Detroit of Dr. Henry B. Keeler and his woman companion, who they | sey is his wife. Details of the alleged | swindle are substantiated by local po- lice records and by the complainant. Mrs. Wilhelmina Lynch Keeler, whom the doctor is alleged to have married and then victimized. Officers will go to Detroit at once to take charge of | the prisoners. FOUGHT AND SHOOK DICE | FOR HAND OF GIRL. | Two Staten Contest—She ougin dice game acted heart and ha by Tn youn ~ored took. ™ Miss Br the qu. Mor Bat dice. rched off triums r answer n 160 persons saw ané watched the throwing of the | ern Pacific said today on his return island Men Had Double | Wi Accept Victor. Walter N Brighton, - are admirers | West New ller and Miss cing. They met waere words and Newell unter. Miller ac- by Accompanied {Ak® = chance with him in a | r to have an un- Brice's 2 was fa- s coat he | rm and that the com MAN FROZEN TO DEATH. Friends Used Too Much lece on Heat Vietim. be frozes fate of a oniy as was em- ployed a Iron foundry and n the int rday he was < iis boarding was called and he ad- < about the sufferer's tor said the man’s con- @ition was not The eager fri MUST FAY FINE OF $7870. Arocther St Over Naw Yo > 18 —Anothe amship Captain in Trouble “Slesper” Trunks. r steam- SBIp capiain. chavged with nitting ks to be lav st _the necessary permit, This time Coliector Loeb ssn-«» Peudis: st fuy Setsns will not 4 Genova t ptain of the Italian to pay a fine of » put on the ship: s containing valua- here in May. 1909, Attornevs for the persons unknown creted the trunks estigation insisted Elected Secretary to Succeed Charles New Yor At a_meeting ©f the directors of the American Re- ng company today, Joseph E. Fr man, assistant general was elected arles the recent During the 2ed that R Population of Rhode Heike, testi- vear. his convie- awaiting sentence. Island May Be Knovmn Today. ‘Washington July 19.—Rhode Island will be th state to w its total pepulation svealed by the thir- teenth census announcement for the entire st Imost ready~ and may be made public tomorrow. Special efforts by the census office were made * some loeal quire- > ation has been given t returns will show in f increase or decrease. Peace Pact of Great Organized Labor. Juty Cincinnati great bmpor 19 &nd to the country Importance to 9.—A peace pact of to orgunized labor s well wis reached Bero. tonight between officers of the American Federation of Labor and members of the Stove Founders' Na- tlonk! Defene association. The effect <Of the agrecient is 1o cnd the bitter warfare between Bor and the Bucks Stove and Rangs of St 1 <ompa: the factorie: s of 1e Federation of La— A _go7) mary leag pencils are made remberg. Germany. every year re_use up over fican cedar an- voman ané | 15 went o a enue. West 11y pounded n hour Miss haa re- and should | s heav- im and victor | NEW HAVEN MAN - ARRESTED IN SAN FRANCISCO. | Identified as One of the Robbers of the Overland Mail. Haven, Conn., July 19—Carl | Dunbar Bishop, who was arrested in Sacramento, Cal, last night, charged with horse stealing, and later identified in San Francisco as having been one of the men who robbed the Overland | miail at Goodyear last April, lived here until last September with his_parents at 4: South Water street. When he left Terc he said nothing to his father, | wha iz a bla ith, of where he was | gams, excep that he was going west, Jani if was s feral months before a let- | ter came from him, in_which he said that he had been in Texas and was goirg to Oregon. Since that time ne has been heard from him. In shop was arrested for thaft, but tho cane “wus Bolied; his next salice covst record appears in 1904, when he | was ac:ésted for assauTt with intént to Kill, anc was sentenced to two years in_ftice pricom, which term he served. The police have no record of a Charles Dunbar, who was arrested with Bishop, and he s not known-at the homes ‘of any of the Dunbars in the cit: San Francisco, July 19.—“We have | the right men in_custody,” Chief Spe- | cial Agent P. G. Kindelon of the South- | from Fairfield. Solano county. “The taller ome, who gave the name of James C. Brown, has been identi- fiea from letters in his possession as Carl D. Bishop of New Haven, Conn. When we arrived at Fairfleld this morning we found that during the trip from Sacramento he had removed the blacking from his shoes and with it aged his hair. He was shamppoed, re- storing the hair to its natural soft brown color. Charles Dunbar,the oth- er suspect, also is from New Haven, but of him little is kmown.” The men are being held at Fairfield for further identification. DOWN BROADWAY 1 AND CIRCLED TIMES SQUARE. Acronaut Frank Goodale Flies Over . from Jersey o New York. New York, Jul —Frank Goodale, | the young aeronaut who flies over from New Jersey every now and then, jour— neved to New York in his dirigible balloon tonight and sailed successfully wn Broadway from Sixty-efghth rest to Times square (Forty-second street and Broadway), where he cir- cled the Times building three times | He was plainly visible above the city lin the glare of the electric lights and he theater crowds cheered him as he |pased. A searchlight thrown from the Times building made the craft stand out like a cameo as it approached the iower, and hundreds of _automobils hiorns sent up their greetings. The boy aeronaut turned northyard up Broaway on his homeward jour- {ney, then shqt” away to the west to- ward New Jeresy, disappearing in the night. ZEPPELIN GAS WORKS IN RUINS. Plant of Airship Co. at Friedrichshafen Demolished by Explosion. ) Friedrichshafen, Germany, July 1 The gas works of the Zeppelin Airship company were demolished by an ex- piosion today. Seven persons were in- jured. The managers of the plant were not present at the time and the cause of the accident has not been ascertained. Shortly before noon the gasometer burst and the surrounding walls were blown to a great distance. Several coitages in the viclnity fell in heaps of ruins at the shock, whil2 other near- by buildings which held to their foun- ions Nlost their windows and doors. The detonation was heard for many miles around, causing a panic in the district, and even among those residing on the opposite side of Lake Con- stance. The neighborhood is sparsely popu- lated and chiefly by those employed in the Zeppelin factory. ROOSEVELT DECLINES To Exert influence for Any Ohio Can- ate. ew York. July 19.—Theddore Roose- it hopes the republicans in Ohio will adopt a progressive platform, but, tak- i an attitude in line with President { Tare, he declines to exert influence for {any caudidale in the ante-convention situation. He made this plain in New York today after a conference with | Judge Reynolds Kinkade of . Toledo, Wwho is regarded as the secend choice of these Ohio republicans whoare sup- porting James R. Garfield, ex-secre- tary of the interior, for the guberna- torial nomination. ‘It is understood that ‘Mr. Garfield had a hand in Judge Kinkade's visit today and that Gar- field’s supporters have agreed to throw mesx a".';m“‘"‘ to the judge if Mr. Gar- nominated. Paragraphs obe, Japan, July 19.—The Ameri- cap secretary of war, Mr. Dickingm, and party left here shortly after mid- night for the Philippine islands. / Bogota, Colombia, July 19.—The Am- erican company resumed the operation of its street car servico today and riot- ing followed. American lives do mot appear to be in peril. Dublin, Ireland, July 19.—Forty per- sons were injured in an accident on the Great Southern railway at Ros- crea, in the northwest party of Tip- perary count,v, today, None was kill- ed. Bournemouth, England, July 19: Robert Loraine, the actor, who on July 16 in an attempt to makc a filght in a biplane to the Needles and return, in a haevy raiastorm, and was obliged to land on the Isle of Wight, flew back to the mainland this evening. made a safe landing here. Hamburz, July 19.—In the second round of the international chess mas- ters’ tourney, played here today, the American champion, Marshall, ~was beaten by the Bohemian expert, Tar- takowar. Schiechter leads Leonhardt, Salwe, Speijer and Tartakower with half a point. Kingston, Jamaicd, July 19.—The Hamburg-American ~ line steamship Schwarzburg, which stuck in a mud- bank off Port Roval while attempting to leave the harbor on Sunday night, was still fast today, but it was be- lieved that she would be floated when relieved of her cargo, which is being taken off. Cerbere, France, July 19.—The Span- ish refugees, including revolutionar- ies and the reservists whqe deserted last summer to escape service in the Melilla campaign, are leaving for Spain upon the assurance of Deputy Lerroux, chief of the republicans of Barcelona that the Spanish government will per- mit their return. Puerto Plata, Santo Domingo. Juli —The disappearance of Dominican children near the Haytian frontier has been explained by the horrible conf: sion of a Hivtian woman that she had murdered them, eating four. This African cult is prevalent in Havti ure, severer measures to prevent immigration and thus protect the er civilization of this republic. The Dominican press demands Haytian high- YOUNG BANK TELLER UNABLE TO FIND BAIL J. Howard Lowrey Telis of His Wan- derings Since Leaving Utica—Em- bezzier Played the Stock Market Alone. JUtica, N. Y. July 19.—J. Howard Lowery, the young bank teller, who was arrested in Philadelphia vesterday on the charge of embezzling $115,000 from the Utica City National bank, was brought here today and arraigned Defore United States Commissioner Senior. After a hearing he. was held to await the action of the federal grand jury, bail beingfixed at $10,000, which he was unable to furnish Lowery was visited in his cell at the Omeida coufity jail today by the offieials of the bank, to whom it is said he told the story of his wanderings since he left Utica, Now that he has been arrested which he says he had long apprahended he is anxious to have the term of the imprisonment begin as quickly as possible in order that when it is_over, having learned a terrible lesson, he can start over and avoid mistakes in the future. Willing to Confess All Lowery says he desires no bail and wishes to make no defense; that he is perfectly willing to make a clean breast of it to the officials. He told the bank officials, it is said, that he had played the stock market alone, and unguided, and some times bad won At one time he said he owed the bank only $2,000, having returned all but that amount. Soon afterward, how- ever, he says, he lost $12,000 in one slump and twice lost heavily by the failure of New York concerns. Once Thought of Suicide. When the alleged defalcation was discovered on April 27, Lowery said he left the bank and started for Onel da lake, determined to end his life. He missed his train, however, and went to Syracuse, thence to Philadel- phia, where he took an outward bound ship for Port Antonio, Jamaica. He traveled second class. He crossed the island by train to Kingston, endeavoring to zet work Later he started for Panama, but was deterred by a Cuban whose discourag- ing accounts of opportunities for work Lowery to return to_the states. Lived on Ten Cents a Day. After about a week in Jamaica, he took passive in ‘a fruit stéamer and went to Philadelphia, landing there with $10 in money, He secured a room and hunted work. Tor the first week the nearest ge ot to obtaining a place was when a man who stood just in front of him got the polition at $5 a week. He had to live economically and there were .times when ten cents a day was his total expenditure for food. He found a_good clerical position in | a manufacturing establishment finall but gave it up the first day because a man he had known in Utica was with the concern. From then until the time of his ar- rest he had no work of any account. When arrested he insisted on going home by way of Binghamton and the detectives agreed. They arrived this mornine. RAILWAY STRIKE IN ENGLAND. Serious Trouble on the North Eastern Road—No Notice Given. London, July 19, strike that threatens to reach serious dimensions has broken out among the employes of the North Eastern railroad. Traffic is disorganized. No notice of the Intention to strik appears to have been given by men, who declare that the strike i “protest against the generally tyran- nical methods of the official The trouble started in:the N aistrict,“where 3,000 employes of vari- ous grades went out at 10 o'clock last night. This morning the diaffection spread to Sunderland, Hartlepoo! Blyth, and other points, where many ceased work. the Carried a Passenger in Monoplane 35 Miles. Bournemouth, England, July 1 J. Drexel, Jr, the American aviator, ihis evening carried a passenger in a Bleriot monoplane from Bournemouth to Beaulieu, in Hampshire, a distance of 36 miles. The flight was rtly across the sea, and the passenger kept ‘@ log of the journey. Open-mouth Policy Favored. Anatomists sav a man can hear best with his mouth shut. But he can’t hear himself with his mouth shut, and he may ngt want to hear anyone else. —Macon New German emperor has 7§ titles. fi‘h of Spain 42. He | Christianity appears there to be a fail- | Fingermarks 0f a Young Man LED TO HIS DETENTION BY YORK DETECTIVES. iEW STOLE 400,000 FRANCS In Jewelry, Bonds and Cash from a Vault in a Bank at Liege, Belgium, Last January. New York, July 19.—Fingermarks found on a rifled safe in Liege, Bel- gium, last January; fingermarks on a little” photographic ~ mrint sent from Liege to the cent marks freshly pulled by central office detectives to- duy—these Jed to the detentign this afternoon of a young man giving the name of Louis Mendelbaum, charged with the robbery. Looted Belgian Bank Vault. the morning of January 7 On last found that the vault of their bank in Liege had been opened by an electric- driven drill and robbed of 400,000 francs ($80,000), in jewelry, bonds and cash. A private safe in the bagkers’ | house, adjeining, had also been reed, and on its doors were found finger prints in oil. The Belgium police thought they recogmized the workman- #hip, and sent to the police here a de- iption and photographs of the fin- gerprints of the man they believed guilty. He Claims to Be Innocent. | A Belgian resembling him was ree- nized here last May, but got away before he could be arrested. Today the police were ore careful, and at headquarters it was said that.his fin- gerprints tallied ctly with those sent from Belgium. Mendelbaum is years ol and protests that he does not know why he was arrested. The bonds were recovered some time ago in London, but not the cash or the jewels. PRINCESS LWOFF-PARLAGHY PAINTS PORTRAITS FOR FUN. She Has a M on Dollars a Year for ¥~ Pin Money. New York, July 19.—The Princess Livoft-Pariaghy, who has a string of castles in Austria and Russla, a mil- lion dollars a year for pin money, and who paints portraits just for fun, de- parted for Furope today after a four- teen months’ sojourn in New York. She wili Teturn in a few months, when she hopes to do a portrait of Presi- dent Taft. The princess was accompanied by a royal physician, a chemberlain and le- gal adviser and a seuadron of maids and other menials. While in Naw York she occupied a roval suite at ono of New York's most fashionable hotels | and has retained a_$25.000 suite for use when she returns. Joseph = H. Choate and General Daniel E. Sickles of Civil war fame are among the American- celebrities she has done on canvas. CLAIMS THRONE OF ZION CITY. Man Who Declares Himself Brother of Dowie Appears on Scene, Chicago, July 19.—There are pros- pects of ‘another fight over the rule of Zion City. “King” Dowie, who says he is a brother of the late John Alex- ander Dowie “Hlfjah IL” and is a | claimant to the throme of a South sea | island, has arrived here with the In- tention, it is sald, of overthrowing Wilbur Gienn Voliva, the overseer. | Voliva sai¢ last night that he would ignore the seM-styled king. “I know of him only from what I | have heard,” said Veliva. “So far as T am aware John Alexander Dowie had no brother.” “King” Dowie is supposed to be at present in this city, having arrived from Minneapolis yesterday. With him is “Pope” Schraeder, who is in charge of a chureh in San Francisco, Dowie claims the rule of Zion City by the right of succession. BALLOON DRIFTER LANDS. Fails to Break the Forty-four-Hour Record for Time. Harrisburg, TiL, July 19.—A balloon believed to the Drifter, which ascend- ed at Hamilton, O., last night carry- ng Walter J. Collins and George How- arg of Cincinnati, passed over here at 5 o'clock this morning. The balloon came from the mnorth- cast and disappeared in the south- west. Two men were visible in the basket. Harrisburg is about 240 miles from Hamilton. At 6.15 o'clock the acronauts landed at Mt. Pleasant, 11 miles south of here. The men had | plannead to remain in the air until they had broken the forty-four-hour rec- ord, \ I s O IMPRISONED IN MEXICO. Three Americans Arrested and Badly Treated for Trespass. Colima, Mex. July 19.—The recent arrest and _imiprisonment of | thr Americans, R. I Horton, general man- | ager of the San Jose Lumber company | and two assistants, and the subsequent treatment which they received from the local authorities have caused un usual excitement among the forcigner. | here. The men were arrested on charges of trespass for moving ma- chinery over the land of M. Heliion, and were photographed as criminals and imprisoned in underground cells, it is alleged. Bond was furnished by | the British consul. | HEAD OF WELLESLEY RESIGNS. Miss Hazard No Longer Able to Hld Position Owing to Iil Health. Boston, Fuly 19.—Miss Caroline Haz- {ard, for the last cleven years prasident fof Wellesley college, one of | known women educators in try, has resigned, and her resignation bas been accepted by the poard of trustees of the college with regret. The resignation is due to poor healt] Miss Hazard's administration had been the longest in the history of the college. and -under it ths growth of the number of students has been note- rd worthy. M born in was Boston Woman Found Wandering in London. July 19.—A\Ii Vears of age, wandering in a confused in the streets today. She refused to give the addresses of friends she is said to have in the United States, but it is belfeved that she comes from Bos- ton, Jane was _found (e of mind London, Ha- ven, Afty To die worth a lot is to have spent a life worth nommsvfi W. West, at Livernool. |President Taft office here; finger- | imprinted on a proof | the brothers Francois and Emile Marck | | Jong and seven - At Eastport THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE MUNITED STATES. T REACHES BAR HARBOR: TODAY Where He Wiil Remain Three Days— Made a Ten Minutes’ Speech, But Did Not Touch on Politi Eastport, July 19.—Beginning 3 in Maine, President Taft reached the northeast corner of the United States today. It was the first time a chief magistrate of the nation had visiteq this section of the | state, and for Mr. travels to the four quarters of ghe country. He has not been to ey West as president, but he said toda. that his tours of the United States d!- ways deeply impressed him with th homogeniety of the people— their air ambitions and their ideas of tru American citizenship being everywhere the same. President Taft and mem- bers of his party are sleeping tonignt | aboard the yacht Mayflower, which lies at anchor in the harbor. He will sail | from here at 9 o'clock tomorrow for Bar Harbor, where he will arrive at 3 ». m. for a three days’ stay. Hour and a Half Ashore. The president spent an hour and a | half ashore this afternoon and after an automobile trip which carried him Taft it completed to all points of interest on Moose Is- | land, he made a litde ten minutes’ speech from the front of the Peavev library in Water street. Everybody in Bastport was there to see and hear him, and some had come into the city by trains and automobiles. Mr. Tart. | following the purpose he announced from Beverly, did not touch on politics. He did say, however, that he did not see just why Maine should have her elections twé months earlier than most of the other states of the Union. The election here is to be held this vear on September 12, and the republican leaders who have @ hard campaign on their hands are hopeful that Mr. Taft's presence in the state and his speeches here and at Bangor,Rockland, and pos- sibly Bar Harbor may have a good morel effect. JUDGMENT FOR MRS, CARTER AGAINST A. O. U.W. GRAND LODGE Ownership of a $2,000 Insurance Po cy Determined. New Haven, Conn., July 19.—By a decision handéd down by Judge Wii- liams in the superior court today judg ment is found for Mrs. Annie S. Carter of Meriden in the case brought by her Against the Grand lodge of the An- cient Order of United Workmen for the purpose of determining the owner- ship of a $2,000 insurance policy takca out by her father. Peter, of.a .Massa- chusetts organization. In the policy Carter had named his mother, who lived in Ireland, as bene- ficiary. The Grand lodge held that no one outside the boundaries of the Unit- ed States or Canada could under the rules of the order be so named, and that when Carter mamed his mother he did not give her residence. Carter | died in 19509, and shortly afterwards his mother died. The Grand lodge held that the money should revert to it. Counsel for Mrs. Carter contended tha® the laws of the order also stated that if all the beneficiaries had died and the holder had made no other legal desig- nation the money was to be paid to the widow or other heirs share and share alike. CHAMPION JACK JOHNSON ONCE MORE ARRESTED. Charged With Reckless Driving—He Denounced the Police. New York. July 19.—Jack Johnson, the heavyweight champion,was arrest- ed once more thisz afternoom, charged with recklessly ariving in his big rac- ing automobile. Johnson characterized his arrest as an outrage and said that he had been informed on good author ity that the bicyele policemen all over the city had made the declaration that they were out to “get” him. He protested that there was no cause for his arrest and denounced the police in_roung term: When his pedigree was takén he was told that he would have to furnish $100 bail for his appearance in court in the morning or be locked up. Johrt- son produced the necessary $100 and departed. . R v o e T 2 200 CATHOLIC PILGRIMS Sailed from New York With Naples as Their Destination. New York, July 19.—More than 209 Catholic vilgrims sailed from New York today on two steamers which leit/ port at the same nour and will en- deavor to keep within hailing distance of each other all the way to Naples, their destination. The steamers wer: the Baropa of Le Velace line and the Cunarder. Pannonia. hoard of them are under the spiritual irection of the Rev. A. Van De Vyver, bishop of Richmond, Va., and they in- tend to visit the vatican and see the pope early in Augustyand later go to Oberammergan to withess the Passion Play. s WIPED OUT BY FOREST FIRE. The Town of Ryan, on the Columbia River. Spokane, Wash., July 19.—The town of Ryan, on the Columbia river, fwelve miles south of the Canadian boundary. is reported to have been wiped out by a forest fire. The fire zae last night covered ap- proximately the whole territory from Bossburg to Marcus along the west side of the Columbia river, and from Bossburg morth fo Ryan on the east side of the viver, a tract fifteen mjiles iles wide. Millions of feet of timber are reported destroyed. Coldest July 19 in Norfolk, Va., in . Forty Years. Norfolk, Va., July 19 day marked the coldest July 19 in Norfolk. with two exceptions, in forty years, the mercury having drepped o a minimum today Of 67 degrees., Us to this Ume 5.8 iuches of rain Bave fallen during July % A. O. of H. Centennial Convention. Portland, Ore., July 19 —Neither Dublin nor Cork_was more typically Irish today than Portland. for at noon the forty-seventh centennial conven- tion of the Anclent Order of Hiberni- ans began its weeK’s session. The con- vention_ formally copened at ucon in the Masonie. te programme began with pontif nnqlunnn-m cathedral. - The pilgrims on | Condensed Telagtams' William Lyon, a handbook - maker, committed sujcide in his cell. STATIONS BUARDED BY DEPUTIES No Act of Violence Had Been Reported Up to “Three O’clock this Morning Marcus Watson, an Octogenarian of Biddeford, Me. married his fourt] wife. Secretary of War Dickinson left To- kio for Kvoto to embark today for the Philippines. A School B ng Conducted ln Chi- cago to teach hubby how to button his wife's dress, THE GRAND TRUNK STRIKE SI:I‘UATION James Pierson, a Flrm!r, was killed { hile in & buggy by a trolléy car near / = oy s At End of Fipst Twenty-"our Hours Eoth Sides Seem Joseph C. Sibley, colored, was ar- Satisfied with the Outcome—Through Passenger Trains Kept Moving—No Attempt Made to Move Freight Qut of Montreal—Wabash Men Out. rested for murder committed during a race riot in Camden, N. J. E of the tional Railroaders’ union in Paris has decided upon a general strike. The Six Year Old Son of Pet Ol- | son_of Madison, Wis.. was ey 1 by a torpeds he swailoweat® Y| sontreal, July 19.—The end of the | ployes. Thus far no acts of violenco | i Arst twenty-four hours of the strike | have been reported. | Edward W. Lampton, presiding bish- [ Of conductors, trainmen and yardmen | inducement for Strikers to Return, | op of the African M. E. church of Mis- | 0% the Grand Trunk system finds both | " omoial of, the Central Vermont sissippi, died in Petorkey, Mich. Sides Drofessing satisfaction with the |, 'S¢, Albans said tonight that the ~ : : stikers will be given every opportunit | John Kratz, of Onawa, la., shot Mys, | , The company succeeded in keeping | {o"efh VUL BC N GV ORROTEARTE Asnes McCoy, with whom he was in- | 8 throush passenger trains moving. | .."5rovided they act at once and be fatuated, and’ then killed himself. Sucn delays as have occurred were NOt | ror, 'y date which Is very shortly tc i gayaust ;“"m“ "‘““’? ‘“""“[““l”“" ioce ‘[‘ | be announced by the railroad v | Eben B. Phillips, 2 B 2 ade their trips without inciden i > e Sl ,,‘f;' m,f}f;’r“ Tnon- | manned by crews taken . from the | Additional Strike Breakers Reach New | haming a mate nurse as corespondent. | )Orking“forces in other départments. London. The suburban service out of Montreal | Now London, Conn. July 19— TLate | The Sunrems Court of Georgia has! Naw been .ouspended.. but rortunetery'] tonien: Conaoh, Conn. Tuly. 19 —La rendered & decision maintaining (he | { for the commuters the tracks of the |.rg arrived and were housed with those | validity of the Georgia prohibition law. | Canadian Pacific parallel the Grand | already here. Another party. of eight Trunk througn most of the suburbs. | which arrived from New York was met | Mrs. Harris Phelps, formeriy Miss| NO attempt was made to move frelght | ¢ the stagic strikers and induced P»-n of New York, hds taken steps in | QUL Of Montreal. to retur steamer New York of | t for divorce under the French Prediction ‘of Long Strike. | the railroad line is expscted to bring Taw. = + % two hundred more men tonight and S Vice: President Fitzhugh of the [ e, "Will o™ diatriputed along ‘th i Major John Talbot, a retired army':‘}:‘:";{1&‘:1:‘"::{1'\?‘V|;Lfl::l:v‘;l’rl (il Al ’wn.» tomorrow. The station was pici | officer who had a brilliant record as P’ - o freight | Stod, by the striliers tonight. and | an Tnalan’ nonter died I Chevenne,| MOYIng without “friction the frefeht | {(ilcn kep: on all incomink trais By ¥ | business will be taken up. “This is | “A¢ half past 10 tonight Superinten | ' :'\“")_ ":::‘l “\'hf"‘ ftz]::xlx:; 2 ‘.‘j"" ”"” dent Costello started on an engine fox |, Saloons and Gambling Joints are | pany avent Into it Knowing what it | Laimel: Mz, to bring back the mafl rumning gvide agen 1 (e EIgipaly was facing, and is determined to se y 3 Q ey SHy H o : in | p£=Oklahoma. despite S She luroipot it through to the end. It cannot afford | g laws, ity ' | Special Detectives to Protect Strike: A Resort Made by the Department | Never Expected to Tie Up Passenger | acts breaker: el of commerce and labor shows the cost Trains fqomeliton, . OBE - JuiE 10 RIS { of living in the families of wage earn- | Vice President Murdock, the train | Gramd ‘Trunik hera (o protect strike. ers in Germany. men’s organizer, says thal they never | i tin Mhedld dovs gl zer, ikers on their 'way homf. At on« ; expected to tie up the passenger serv- | i O B 0 B B Atrike Investigation Has Shown the state|ice and he poinis 1o the non-ope ng Ugoongd Ay B e g, S of New York to be a large loser in| tion of freight trains and subur el Sy o G QLB Ly Tevenue from stock transfer stamps by | trains as proof that the men s esomipany omsialshecat” seiii an illicit business. cause for satisfaction over the leoaea pos R ocaral ol s o pleased because several of the old cons ~ 3 sults-of the' first day of the strike, | B ooea Do ne Maea th atar on Aty The Hamburg-American Liner Cleve- 4 .y land was in coliision at seg with the A Bridgé to Be Crossed. e 3 ~ fishing schooner Reliance, but neither | Members of the union c TOOK TICKETS FROM CRIPPEN vessel was injured. informgtion that members of ON AFTERNOON OF JULY 12 & | organization in the United States wi o' Reinstated With Absolute Control of | not bandle freight cars or passenger | French Train Guard Certain He Saw Zion City, Wilbur Glenn Voliva an- | coaches turned over to their roads by the’ Pualtive nounced that he would continue the|the Grand Trunk, The rallroad off- 9 ! | policy of the founder. clals apparently rexard this proposi- | parig yuly 19.—A guard on the aft iy tion as a bridge to he crossed When | o.no0n” hoat train runming between A Convention Will Be Held in Phil- | reached and uniil the issue presents | JRoOR Dot traln munfink betsers adelphia July 28 to mominate candi. | itself decline to say anmything about | Dy*PPe SO0 Fieris declaves that o dates in opposition to the republican | it. Bambling tiie . demcriptions @e or Tiine anq @emocratic state tickets. Arbitration Offer Coldly Received. |yen and the Leneve woman, The man, - _ So far the only attempt made at | the guard savs, spoke with an Ameri: Mrs. Horace Prahm; Jr, was drag-| eqecting a settlement has been the | chn accent. Ie did nowssee in wihiah Fed-from the mire of Penn Horn creck. | offer of the mimister of labor (o do | direction they went heir arriva g ! he r er of laho do | direction they went pn thely arrivat iy D oK oy oyer a Tundred | anything possible to bring about peace | Paris, as he was at the ofhier eng of ards on a plank to a place of safety. |y means of arbitration, which he sug- | the train. The guard was shown the gests Bhould be binding upon both pa ,1« t photographs of Crippen and Bthel GREAT BRITAIN ASKS ties. The offer for further arbitra- | Leneve by a Scotland Yard detective, FOR DETENTION OF CRIPPEN, | tion was coldly received. “We are the |and he unhesitatingly identified them aribtrators rov.” declared the strike | as the persons he had seen Alleged Wife Murderer, Should He Be|leaders. The rallroad officials had no | The Irench police are not hopeful of 1 Pound:in Amoriin comment to make on the latest sug- | t1is clye, and believe that If the eoup e gestion from Oitawa | were the suspects they merely pussed ‘Washington, July 19.—The British " No Attempt at Disorder. through the city, as ali the hotels have government has asked the United | myere has o peen (he siigncest at- | P¢CN Acoured in vain for traces of him States for the arrest and detention of | o ore BB FO% DAl (18 BURDIest 010 | Vernet Los July 19.—A mian Dr. H. H. Crippen, who is wanted in | tempt at di (Oontreal The | anawering the description of Dr. Criy London in connection with the murder | [TéiEht yards are quiet and only trav- ) pon arrived here Sunday night. He T I e Mo he eotma ga| clers are allowed to enter Bonaventure | [of¢ armont immediately for Spain, The America. depot, > wolice feared to arrest the man with The difficulties which have attended Montreal Repair Shops Closed. out a_war | the extradition of Portér Chariton.| The repair shops were closed todas nee, July 19.—The po. i wanted In Italy on a charge of having | and as a resuit there has been consid- [ lice have discovered that Dr. Crippem } murdered his wife at Lake Como, will | erable grumbling among the men, it |and the Leneve woman were here for not ariselshould Dr. Crippen be ar-|being maintained that the company | two days, May 20 and 21. Crippen e rested in Jtha United States. Great|should not penaiize the shop men be- | turned here alone about the end of Britain ard the United States adherc | cause the train men went out June, and has not been seen since, De. to the policy of surrendering their own 4 tectives . from Scotiand Yard have citizens who are accused of commit- Strikers Gain Recruits been searching Le Touquet, & hathing ting crime in the other country, and | Vice President Murdoch aunounced | place, and other resorts nearby it is understood that this policy would | tonight that 350 men had been added | L A be adherzd to in the case of Dr. Crip- | to. the strikers by the caliing ont of | NO REDRESS UNDER pen, If all the other requirements for | the men employed on the Wabash, extradition shaild be met. which has running rights over the NEW YORK STATE LAWS, = e Grand Trunk tracks from Windsor to - SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE Nisgara Falls. The calling out of | Stakeholder in a Bet May Keep the — these men has caused some discuss Winnings. To Be Talight the Inhabitants of the|in Montreal because of the fact t Holy Land. two other railways. the Intercolonis New York, July 19.—If vow deposit ol nd Delaware & Hudson enter this |money with a sthkeholder and win Washington, July 18.—American sci- | ¢ity over the Grand Trunk tracks, the | and he chooses not to give you the entific agticuiture is to be taught tp|trains being manned by emploves of [ winnings, you have no redress under the inhabitants of —the ‘Holy ‘Land. |these companies. The Intercolonial is | the laws of New York state. This Americans are about to gstablish an |the property of the Canadian govern- |was a magistrate’s decision today in agricultural experiment station at the | ment and has running rights on a |discharging R. R. Saltz, former man foot of Mount Carmel in Palestihz, | rental basis over the Grand Trunk {ager of the Hotel Albany whom @ | seven miles from Haifa. * tracks betwew1 Montreal and St. Ro- | group of negro sporting men, includ The American consulate at Beirut|salie. It is practically in the same [ing Baron Wilkins, Jack Johnson's today reported to the state depart- | position as the Wabash and it is | friend, had arrested in Buffalo, charg ment that Aaron Aaronsohn, managing | argued that if the Wabash men have [ eq with grand larceny. The negros { director of the “Jewish Agricultura)|begn orderad out the Intercoionial men | raised o bool of 3650 and placed it Experiment Station,” incorporatad in ming into Montreal should be also | \ith Saltz 4o be wagered on Johnson New York and enjoying the liberal|taken off. This would, of course, bring [at 7 to 10. ~When the fight was ower financial support of prominent Ameri- | the government into the fight, and it [ {hey had trouble getting the money, can Jewish citizens, had arrived Iy |is pointed out that the Brotherhood |und Saltz was arrested Syria to make arrangements for the | may not be anxious to do th The | ““Gounsel for Saltz made the point establishment of the station. “'° | Onty freight trains entering the city | hefore the magistrate that as betting — today, over the Grand Trunk tracks, |was illegal, according (o tho anti-prizo NOTORIOUS FORGER ARRESTED | with the exception of a short stock | fight law, fhe winner had no legal titlo train from Brockville, were those man- | 15 the winnings, and that consequentl On Steamer at Boston—His Name is| ned by Intercolonial men. no orime had been committed. The Gus Raymond. court shared this view. = NO FREIGHT HANDLED. As soon as the defendant was dis Roston, July 19.—Accoxding fo the AL chiurged, however, he was immediate |, Ty L i - | Entire Time Divoted to Maintaining ] oy ramreran s for wiolariow of settion Calvin Austin vesterday as she was Passenger Schedules. 712 of the penal code, which provides { about ta sail for St. John, N. B. is no inat acting as stakeholdor i a misde | Gther than the notorious Gus Rax-| Boston, July 19.—Not a freight train | neanor. No complaint was made { mond, forger, swindler' and once an|has stirred over any of the Grand iagainst the men who had put up the associate of Langdon Moore, the noted | Trunk or Central Vermont lines in | wakers as they were to act as wit raformed bank robber, who died a few | New England today, the railroads | nesses for the prosecution. days ago in West Swansex 1. [ abandoning all attempts to handle el { Ravmond was taken before Judge Mur- | treight for the present and devoting [ NEW WORKING CONDITIONS ay of the municipal court today and | their entire efforts to maintaining was held in $1.200 for a héaring next | their passenger schedules, Thih haw ON PENNSYLVANIA ROAD Thursday. He was arrested while en- | been spccessfully done (o 'a large ex — Eaped Y i lleged in rMing & suit | tent, altnough in some instances (rains | Arranging of Details at Conferences have been reported as running consid- Proceeds Smoothly. erably behind-time and in a few cases case in one of the staterooms. 19 Speaker Cannen in Kansas—He “At- | early morning trains were abandoned | Philadelphia, July The arrang Herington, Kansas, July 19 Speak-| ~The stalling of freight trains has not | pennsylvania_raiiroad company to its er Cannon’s’speech delivered here this | caused any serlous inconveniencg, as | rain men and conductors procesded so et g Rl bt S yet. but a continuance of present Con- | umoothly at the conferences today he elny e, e B ditions for a few days will give mill | {\een the committec of the men ana Alma, Kan. July —Speaker Jo- | gwners and manufacturers who de- | the various superintendents of the seph G. Cannon arrived her€ shortly | pend upon the system for hauling their | company that Wi. Lee. president of before noon today and was escorted|coal amd other supplies, considerable | (ho Bratherhood of Railroad Train- D e leie he. ASRIEN el /TaEYe N men, who had remained in this eity e T mihes of his. last 043 in the | But One Passenger Train Into Palmer [ to supervise the carrving out of thh Kansas primary campaign. All the scheduled passenger trains |agrcement, decided that his presence Mr. Cannon plunged directly into an |on the Grand Trunk moved in and out [ here was no longer required and left attack of insurgenc of Portland, Me., today, although the | tonight for the headquarters of his — e — arrivals were from ome (o two hours flrE:"‘” ation in C 1";\"4' l:‘~ o Aty Embezziina Cashier's Bail Reduced. [late. The only portion of the system rere are a multitude of detalls {0 Boston, July 19.—George W. Tufts,{in New England where passenger | be arranged for,” he said, “but every fom O e of the Rockport Na. | trains were not in operation during | thing went 5o smoothly at the two O bank of Rockport, was released | the day was_on the Central Vermont | conferences held today that I do O b it today After haviig spent | ime north from Pulmer. One train | anticipate any hitch in completing aviral davs in the Charles street it | pulled into Palmer during the day. pgementx. - 1t will require & w in ihis city pending #etiom on. ghe | Thet wus a train from New London, | or ten days for the committees to com- charge of embezzling $7.000 of (he | Conn. wanned by two detectives from | plete the. various grhedules bank's funds. Tufts’ bail was original- | the railroad docks in New London, It i Iy Set at $15.000, but a few dave ago|went ouly @s far as Palmer. There | Marine Corps Headguarters Staff Or- this amount was reduced 1o $5,000. the cars were lefi and the engine re Sicod 6N Pouks. twrned to New London, “light ™ Stations Closely Guarded. Stations all along the line of the Grand Trunk and Central Vermoni particularly at the junctions and ter minal points, are being closely guard- 4 by officers and deputies, many ot have been n-ulm from the 19, Ax/a of w court of In- Washingtou, July quence of the report quiry that unsatisfuctory conditions existed in the marine corps. largely a3 the resull o Mmany oficors having been in Washington ton long, hond- quarters staff, with only & o excop- tions. was todny ordered to new posks o! the 'plu. Steamship Ardivals. . PR July 16, Ttalia, from New At Antwerp: July 18, Vadrejsad.from New York. July 19, Bl!' from New Yorl Kaiser & Grosse, ¥ At Copenhagen: from N" York. i