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mx«wmrmu til mm»mmnmofmm- —_— »e v r'z-mc- ud"ln:“t'm into e hhw!m(lflo‘m. will be reeovered, within a few oeh tracted relatives of the;vietims who thronged shaft. TAFT FOR NOMINATION. Dopow Predicts He Will Be Only Re- publican Candidats Next Year. pre- s 7.—“When the na- convention meets in but one neme before Taft,” nmau.-tod former senator lican club T - gt Dlom ar mc-l neyer | original b Wemen and Children Faint, a 0! Ihmlt i.m Mfl'fid restrained - violetice and m.n faint- At Wm in “Blind Tunnet” fire, kllm and the generated m m" ‘before these m mraa lifferent wrrrklnp got. m by Vll"oll.‘ll Could N.t Live ‘Five Minutes. James Vickers; a fire boss, Who was &omhnmwhen ‘o fire {e!ecflv.. a o! resene armor, push- the slope, and later came geveral hodies_strewn along .the r-ndw ‘where the men had fallen been | OVer one another in their frenzied fight to get to the .end of the slope. Bodies Removed After Dark. The bodies were carried to the foot | the shaft, to be taken out after of the spectiicle would be hidden b: onhbm the sight of the s the mouth of the An Up:te-Date Colliery. The. colliery is owned and operated | by the Price-Pancoast Coal company, at the head. of which is John R. Bry. den, general -mManager of the Outario B L 01 O B and most P to-date collie in the region. = “WHOLLY SCANDALOUS AND IMPERTINENT.” Amendment eof Mrs. Eddy’s Son So Charatterized by Scientists. Concord, N. H.,, April 7—Still an- other thread was woven into the tan- tion over the estate Eddy late today: 'This wes in the form of & moflon filed in the sdperjor court by counsel for Henry ‘M. Baker of Bow, executor of Mrs. Bddy's. nhte --d othen. a‘ninn W. ;lhom ?;‘l'l. over, S D. u brmxkht suit in’ this court in an anemm to prevent the distribution of the residuary estate, valued at about $2,000.000, to the First church of cmn, cfentist, of Boston. The motion i§ that the plaintiff's mmamemfifl!ad March 26 last, to ‘he iR equity be expunged. This amendment declared that Mrs, Bddy wak unduly prejudiced against her son’by members of the Christian Science church.and influenced to leave B ieis maotion. adasy s lon. ay the defendants declared a‘ this ‘amendment “is ‘wholly scandalous and . impertinent, and they aecordingly move that the #ame be expu from ‘the records of this court” e motion ews the plea. and answer filed on Feb. 4 last to the original bill, and continues: “Without ‘waiving the foregoing. bllt upre-ly Ing thereon,. the defend- the Christian Science , no drugs are em-. operations p rormed.” " murrm»rgfl MINORITY 3 _LEADER IN SENATE #tate of mental and physical ¥ ,nmunmum-v--munm Jbars of the prisoners’ cage. SEALING le- w,«mmmmrm ‘mmam-daum <“" o St over M Paul's llhnd. 3 uny are heh‘ quartered ng = e an nters dd& to the ice, But a short time erwards the destruction of the steamer had been. completed.” Followed a Treacherous Course. As far as the eye could. see was ice. Shl&ln‘ their way in the direction in ‘which they believed land was nearest, the men followed a treacherous course, reaching St. Paul’s Island,where the: Canadian gove ess station, ' 1i saving apparatus. ‘wireless' oper- ator at the lonely station sent the news of the w! to the Halifax bureau and this city. Was’an Iron. Steamer. The Harlaw was an .firon steamer, Tegistering 449 tons net. s}m was built at Hull, England, in 188 She owned by the Halifax and Newf land Steamship company, limited. She was outfitted by Crosbie Halifax. DISMISSED SUITS IN CASE OF NEW YORK AMERICAN. Officers of Corporation Not Responsible for Libelious Matter. New _York,” April 7.—Officers of a newspaper corporation .cannot be held personally responsible for the newspa- per’s publication of libellous matter. & Co. of| S (,g mwm’ it is of " uthorized the definite statement ¥ that hehad niot been informed of ‘Yoga: ‘any plan for a of the war elfhé! %h his father or anyone he hnd no intention of instruction” in all the important walks !tire‘uall'mdfinlmwwts more thoroughly than do the when rieeded. In the field of science and m rery. mort lt‘.g—lm as well as a promoter. The hqifihatnndroean antarctic. expedition kmeuya attwo cents a day. The, Bulletin’s news service J-.mmfafiouim threo times 1ts ¢apacity and is growing all the time. ‘A person -who wisties o know whit.is going on, how -to live economi- e Bas the a0y ‘mewsy er the || aft. - Wednesday. * April 5 Thun(q lpnl 6 a ] and : life ‘do} lh.n per year,” in “his- opening Te- marks as officer at this aft- ernoon’s: session, when the subject of industrial insurance and retiring al- lowatices was discussed by experts all sections of the country. anlu Mflm for _Civil Employes. S Ve paid, ‘war pension B-t, acVeag] % “lt As most-impo n9 that a pension list:be establ 7 the civil Such was the decision of the appellate | the_ division of the supreme court today in Bradford Merrill, treasurer, and Edward H. Clark, secretary, of the Star company, publisher of the New York American. The court orders all proceedings against them dismissed. As officers of the newspaper. #lon, Carvalho, Merrill and Clark wers arrestel on the charge of ur!mlnu M- bel.” The newspaper article for which it was sought to hold them responsi- ble relatd to alleged abuse of work- ingmen by-a corporation, which, it was Bt‘ll'lmlled: John D. Rockefeller, Jr., con- o INCREASES ITS CAPITAL STOCK TO $50,000,000. American. Implement Company. Will Absorb Smaller Companies. Inefficients on ‘the P-ynn, “We cannot thraw these old men and ‘women out into the streets. You would net . have us do it amy more than we ‘will do g Therefore; we keep them, even ‘atter- thth' “efficiency has deteri- . So_you can 'see wihy we are Du mioney by paying salaries -for ineficiency. in place of having efficient emiployes 'and a retifing list for those whose efficiency, has departed. No Public” Spirit in Question. “Fvery, argument .in favor of indus- trial insurance and pensions in com- merce and industry bas full force and effect in the government. The troubie lies ot with ess. Congress is a much more am: body than it gets credit_for-being.; The real trouble is is ‘no public spirit on the Favors Oontflbuhn. System. “The-civil employes themselves ham- Chicago, April 7.—The American Im- | per the movement because they are di- plement company raised and filed the certification with the sec- retary of state at Springfield. "It 1s a forming company for tHe reorganizé- |.sy: tion of Deere & company, implemént manufacturers, of Moline, I, and 21 other smaller companies which it has ‘bought out, paying for it with its ewn stock: company was formed as a basis of ‘reorganization and it takes over the ‘business of Deefe & company, the Marseillos company ‘and ohe other company, intact, substituting its char- ter for the old one, which would have in 1918. Its stock is that of Deere & company and will be used in buying out the - smaller oonunh-, ‘When_ this tion 1s the American Implement NEGRO HANGED AND . 5 FIL:ED VIH’H IULLIY' its - capital | vided on the: stock from $10,000 to $50,000:000 today | pemsiuu or the con of a e the 1l ever Iaihle' ‘ilhad will: be’ the g n‘, but you. . un't get them to BEtyeian it.” question Clwohnd. 0,, Apru 7.—Shortly aft- %Lm&b’? e oorwlMe ! how ‘torkeep himself snd all ‘ his axmm up-to-date ‘must *from @ live dally paper.. Louse distribution’ 5. proportion to d. You want it because or-for 12 cents a week. . nudhr rate card #nd Local 153 130 General 1023 113 222 Toljl 1263~ 320 433 426 213 3202 749 1956 .‘blng to a point near El Paso or any other place with a show of recejving communications relative to peace. All his’ plans were for a continuation of hostilities. Planning to Take Chihuahua. San Andres. Madero’s: Camp, Near Chihuahua, Mexico, April 6,"via La- redo, Texas, April 7.—With every in- surrecto provided with ammunition and rea#y for instant marching or- ders, the impression grows in camp that’ Madero’s opjective point is Chi- hushua City. Many “Houses Deserted. Giuseppe Garibaldi, a2 descendant of the Mtalian patriot, and a veteran of many Central reyolutions, has just completed .a reconnoitering expedition about that city. .He found It the houses In the outsiirts apparently on- warning the Mexican officiais that all non-com- batants should seek safety.in the city. Thirty' Killed While They- Slept. From the insurgent lines the federal pickets may frequently be seen out- lined on the hilitops. Skirmishes have been almost - daily Nows Teatiet chep Todey of the attack, at Aldama last Saturday when the federal troops came upon the in- surrectos and Kkilled thirty while they slept. . A Girl “Massacred.” The killing of eighteen non-combat- ants, including a girl, was described by Madero as a massacré. He ds- merted such tactics only served to enrage the insurrectos and ntake them less mereiful when they fought No ome in camp believes peace is.in sight. Madero himself does not take an optimistic view so far as immedi- 8. concerned. More Ammunition Coming. cmz April 7.—Ninety-five e ed to the |} shipment is.a “portion -of an ord cently placed by the pwgnmz ‘with. a G-m..n powder and cartridge hc- | - | Two Y‘uu .oeloty me-n of W& ington, t enlay the first two Dorotuy wxmun- tion_of ’Delpg the United States to make & mne fi an aeroplane at the it tmu. GOVERNMENT WAR ON THE “BLACK HAHU. tion. of Gianni _Alongi Chicago, April 7..~The-United States government today won its first.case §n the fight it has begun to drive out of Chicago members 'of the Black by the police to be rve- | sponsible for nearly fity dynamite ploliau and a score of murders. Gf an< .ni Alongi. was found :guilty’of the mails in Sending threaten ters by a jury im mo United ’ nul g‘ltflct eoan tnd c’fllmu ; of d‘th ihou*g Al be convicted. ‘Alongi was accused of having writ- ten ; threatening letters to & Marsala, a_meat dealer in the section near Death Point, whera, 'tgun‘ mlnslom and murders have ‘Marsula refused to uy fl:e manded ln the letter near hlb dmg h muted. effarts w. Extraol ,fiev-m. m"mrhh of Ahn h}’ plrec-utlonl ©of the governmert: detec- tives. . Chief Inspector Stuart also was threatened. COLLEGE GRADUATES CAN BE MOsT U'EFUL. of Their’' Opper- ‘Washington, Ayrfl 1.~The increase in the number of college uates in this country will be nut directly, so far as those graduates feel a sefise o! respansibility growing out of their ed- ucation, said President Taft tod-v.y ln an address at thé White delegation o‘ /the hltemoll'eihu Olv‘lc league. “I would Rot like to stir 22 enyious college indu the best. men artainty oy have thi ”“"“mmq'""""c“ certain| ey have the oppo! o be mo);u the most useful; énd ‘the way to be useful is not only to hegood members of the community -ini - b%;l ness and in professions, but-aiso to feel | that just as you pay your faxes—=and | I hope you all will have som g on which to pay taxes—just as Jou have jury duty, you owe’ the duty of - tributing a part of your time, wher- ever you happen: to be, . to ‘helping along the government.” Not-ail men are anitad-to polltlfl’. president said, but if efimen were to remember ihat %hn Ve, 8 duty to their town, their staté and the nation, the country would bsueflt. 'Eh- president had watched wi he said, the careers of col the government urv!ee. %" siasm, their disciplined common sente and. logis tended to make them .nna ‘men, the president said. ‘ LESEAE BB, ATLANTIC FLEET TO : * CRUISE IN BALTIC SEA. Second Division Will Prebably. Make Stop in’ Germany. ‘Washington, April 7.—The . a @lvision of the American Atlan fleet: will make a cruise in the tic: this spring and summer. The' of the vessels has not yet b itely determined, ofl’l ‘that q now in the hands ‘ment, whieh is taking u;"‘&: throigh & feelings by saying that liplomatic channels. Cruise the warghips will in bility maka stops at mn ret 'fi"d'c:“n God vy Ju turn: i 1 is_composed: second div cumm.nded by Réar Adm -zxrn\cz TRUMBULL “fll‘; x.n‘d, wrench ‘apart her. _stout 1A flv-frnqln fi’u-n.on. e Mmmmdn:r iberty spen 3 emlinia‘ hours, before cofmi- Not AIIM to Land: Although the health officers had in- ected all on board during the trip up m the scene of the disaster and had 0. K.‘ the ship’s Bill of health, it was usly unwise to permit the steer- lapd at Hoboken, ghip with hom : r“‘;«ntfll me shores iz- at hand. Passengers Transferred in Five Hours - ‘Lene Hill, L. I, Life Saving Station, ipril 7.—In just. five hours and- ten putes the™,720 cabin and steerage wgern on the stranded North Ger-, lo}d Hne‘t Prinzess Irene were is afternoom to the deck flf her Bllte!' ship, the Prinz Friedrich 8 , and ome . hour after night- fall they were safely on their way to New York. The feat is unparalieled in the history of marine disasters and will, perhaps, so remain for years to come. night’s r. ing to her Worhan and Baby First Off. /Not a life was lost, not a case of ic_was reported. The first passen- r off was a. woman and the second a bnb he cabin passengers, masters of the situation, generously gave prec~ edence to the more timorous Liner Tied yp for a Wesk. i "As for the liner on the bar, night- fall lhcwu her hard and fast in the p q sands, and Captain God ‘dard dt nze Lone Hill life saving sta- -tion_ etimates that: she be pris- nuér ‘at least a week, perhaps & fort- might., In the thirty-six hours since | she struck, she Has been favored with ‘comparatively light weather, but a (8tiff blow from the southwest might ‘open her glates, crush in her bulkheads steel The ‘smhll boats, two tugs and the nllef ship took part in the rescue to- 18. a revenue cutter and a der- dbptroye stood by. All the 1,486 steerdge passengers were led down by the forward Ccompanionway; thente clambered down a rope ladder imto No Sign of Hysteris. ‘When the work was all over, Cép- tain Goddard, the veteran of the Lone Hill station, satd ne had never han- dled ‘a more docile lot of passengers. Among the Greeks and Itallans, the life savers had feared hysterical and . perhaps blind, savage panics omn the narrow companionways, but they came ahoard - as tame as sheep behind & trusted beil wether, All of them were cheerful, many laughed and some wers Jocose. Captain Stands by His 8hi Tonight Captain Peterson is still standing by his ship with his crew of 380 men, Throughout the day he paced the deck, a moody, downeast marines, but when the last passenger left his spirits rose. He repeats that he cannot unmderstand how he hap- pened to be standing ten miles off his course when he struck. How Passengers Killed Time. There was no sleep for the passen- gers aboard the Prinzess Irene last qight and this morning, the hours hung heavy on their hands. Some of them played bridge, others sat at the plano and sang, and a few went to bed as usual, but the greater part sat up all night, watching a lowering sky and wondering if a freshening wind would yet prove a gale. “Ten Women and Babies in First Beat. At 12,45 the first life boat put omt with ten;women and their bables. At one oclock the tide had risem far enough to be of some service and the tux Tl frut hnlk towering above her and was tely in safe and comparatively lee water. From that mo- the work of fransfer was greatly ited. - The tug Nichols followed the Timmins and one life boat succeed- ed another until thers wers ten of them clustered about the ship and He work of transferring the pas-- sengergs now went on with precision and alimost with automatic smoothness. - n took about fifteen minutes to load fifteen minutes for her journey tll !he relief ship and fifteen minutes to ‘unlead her. “All Aboard” fer New York. Two tugs alternated and before nightfall all the g{oidnl safe on {.’1‘2 - Shortl; :fie o'clock shé headed for - swell ,mdwu'd-alm ”mh.raerudhrmmnth& Ta Glco. Ffflly and Saturday. ' ‘Ndh Afl; 1.—!“-5‘1 nt\ the 3 of the uuhy to close Mrau Saturday. A'pe: