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& VICTORY FOR THE REVOLUTIONISTS| Venerable Executive Marches From I‘filtl’s FORGED T0 FLEE Capital to Take Refuge on Cruiser - Daughter Walks by Father’s Side—President’s Chamber- lain Shot DPead For Extending Her a Courtesy—Five Others Killed in Promiscuous Firing — Port Au Prince in Hands of Committee of Safety. Port Au Prince, Haiti, Aug. 2.—The cause of the revolution in Haiti has triumphed. Presic fled the capital todsy and took refuge on board the Haitien cruiser 8. 17 Decembre, which formerly avas the Yacht American. wife followers. ( Bound fob St. Thomas or Jamaica. ' The Decembre lies in the h night await chanti Eage Jama Capital The capital is invested on all sides the followers of General Firmin, by one o city | mittee of safety and there is no gen- eral disorder. Tonight numerous shots were have the o tratiol 10 The was not without disorder, however, for s he board ford demonstration in which the ex-presi- dent's Jeremie, ard five other persons, were Kkilled, daughter, and six other persons were wounded, Miss Simogs injuries - are ®light. Gen. Peralte Would Yield Nothing. Pre: four had been informed that one wing of the revolutionary by General Peralte, had denied his Te- qGuest cure Formation was conveye the French and British ministers, who went alte a Dema ‘The ing to recent summary executions by Simon's leave erwise he would attack the city with- wout Cuban ministers wiho went to Croix be warships’ has landed blue-jackets. Pre nt Antoine Simon ‘With Him are his and children and a number of his ‘bor to- and it is believed Simon is ing the arrival of a foreign mer- man on which he can take pas- for St Thomas (D. W. L) or fca. Invested By Revolutionists. f the revolutionary leaders. The tseif is In the hands of a com- heard but these are believed to been fired only in celebration of verthrow of the Simon adminis- n. Foreign interests are believed jecure. None of the foreign lent’s Daughter Wounded. departure of the aged president was embarking at the wharf on the American schooner Brad- C. French, there a riotous chamberlain, Deputy Prin, of and Clementina Simon, his sident Simon left the palace at o'clock this afternoon after he arny, commanded for three days in which to se- the safety of the city. out yesterday to parley with Per- nd found him obdurate. = nded That Simon Leave Capital. general informed them that ow- order the president must the capital immediately or oth- urtner delay. The German and Des Bouquets on the same errand had found General Ducaste, di: the rebel mmander there, sed to grant the truce, provided a committee of safety was appointed, " CLARY RESCUED FROM Had HIS LIVING TOMB Been Buried in Missouri Mine Since Last Sunday. —Joseph Clary, ) n in the White near this city since Sunday morning, was reached by Tes- cuers and v earth 1he shaft_and the; into tl 1o ghout. mmouth of the mine echoed ®haft. Sta groun their this morning. He was alive well. When the last spadeful of was removed by workmen in dropped through ritt, Clary threw himself jn- arms and wept while the s of thousands cheering at the down the he nding on a high section of d not yet reached by the stead- ily rising water, Clary, who had been entombed seventy-eight feet below the earth’ late I exper he told of his long he ini and Jowered through 's suface since Sunday morning, jast night related his remarkable ience to men on the surface. As terrupted the conversation now then 1o receive supplies of fooad the five-inch shaft which, after three hokes were bored in ~ain, finally reached the drift where he was held a prisoner, ADVERTISING MEN HAVE A WATERMELON FEAST Atlanta Contingent Entertains With Boston, Southern Hospitality. pitality. August 2.—A good old- southern watermelon cut- shioned was enjoved tonight by the 3,000 igates to the seventh annual con- vention clubs down ton's of Associated Advertising of America. The feast will go as unique in the history of Bos- many conventions and was held at the Victoria hotel, where real south- ern hospitality the Ji club. was dispensed under irection of the Atlanta “ad” men’s There were over a thousand of the largest, sweetest and juictest “rat- tlesnake” Georgia watermelons har- wvested this year. tary- Fred Hauser, secre- treasurer of the Georgia organ- dzation, in the garb of an old south- ern darkey, how avedges, while a showed the uninitiated to divide a melon into Georgia “darky” quartette gang fanpliar southern melodies. SAYS NEGRO RACE IS SLOWLY DYING OUT Mealth Officer Bases Conclusion on Birth and Death Rates. Richmond, Va. Avg. 2.—Dr. Arnest C. Levy, chief health officer of Rich- mond, bas come to the conclusion after elose comparative study of the mort- wuary statistics of this and other cities “The with deaths mgainst the coloreg race.” At ‘Grant, At At from that ;-oa# dying out and will be virtual extinct in American negro is slowly and the twenty-first century. colored race,” ou 38 per cent. of the ion has 96 per cent. of the d the birth rate is equally Steamship Arrivals. “July 31, - York. A President New Nesw Y TRAMP COMMITS A il in darkness | Carried Rifle On His Shoulder. Owing, bowever, to the attitude of General Peralte, it was deemed best that Simon immediately lay down the reins of government and leave the city. Promptly at four o'clock Simon came out of the main entrance of the palace. On his shoulder the old man who, almest up to the iast had de- ¥ared that he would fight to the end, if necessary, die in harness, carried his rifle. . With head erect he marched down to the wharf. Daughter Walked By Father’s Side. At his side was his daughter Cle- mentina. The other members of his family had already taken refuge on board the 17 Decembre but Clementina refused to flee and remained at her father’s side. " Miss Simon’s Hat Pulled Off. As Simon and his dafn:htar gained the wharf there was a rush by the mob which had gathered to witness the departure. ‘Miss Simon was the center of the attack and several wom- en, howling and shrieking, succeeded in pulling off her hat. Chief of Police Saint Lo rushed to the rescue and led the young woman away from the in- furiated crowd toward the Bradford C. French. Act of Courtesy Cost His Life. On the gangplank Deputy Prin also offered his arm to Mies Simon. He had scarcely shown her /this courtesy when an enraged man rushed up and thrusting the barrel of his rifle fairly into the deputy's face, ' . Prin dropped in his tracks, dead. Firing then became promiscuous and before it ceased five other persons had been killed and six wounded. Two Ministers Accompanying 'Him. ‘When the presidential party board- ed the schooner it ran out into ‘he harbor and alongside the 17 Decembre, on which they took refuge. Among those with Simon who will accompany him in exile are General, Monplaisir, minister of war, and minlster of the interior Sylvan. y: “President Since 1908, -, Antoine Simon assumed the .presi- dent of Haiti December, 1908, after Nord Alexis was disposed and on De- cember 17 was re; 1y elected exe- cutive by congyess. Rejoicing at Cape Haitien. Cape Haitien, Aug.' 2.—The news of the embarkation of President Simon was recelved with rejoicings. The city is calm but there is considerable anxiety to-find out who will be chose president. 2 FELONIOUS ASSAULT Maitreated Woman Who Granted H Regquest for Food. Cornwall, Conn., August 2.—The au- thorities of this town are looking for a man, thought to be a tramp, in connection with an assault committed on a Polish wonian in East Cornwall en last Monéay afternoon. According to the police thé man presented him- self Monday afternoon at the home of the woman and asked for some- thing to eat. She provided him with food. After he had eaten, he seized her by the throat, threw her to the floor and, threatening her with a re- volver, committed the assault. As he left the house he wrdered her under penalty of “bodily harm to say nothing of the affair to any one. It was some hours afterwards that the occurrence became known, the first person to learn of it being Theron Wedge, who lives five miles away. He at once no- tified the authorities and a hunt for the man was begun. The description which. the sheriff has describes a man of about 35 years, light hair, about five feet six or seven inches in height, and clothed in striped overalls, brown shirt and brown hat. YOUNG WOMAN’S BODY AFLOAT IN THE HUDSON Autopsy to Be Held to - Determine Cause of Death. Tarrytown, N. Y. August 2—The body of a preity young woman, proba- Dbly sbout twenty years old, was found floating in the Hudson river near Sun- nyside, Washington Irving’s old hote, just south of Miss Helen Gould's es- tatc, today. The mystery which the discovery causes is being probed by the police and the coroner. The lat- ter is inclined to believe that the girl tell or jumped fron one of the steam- ers which are continuously pagsing up and down the river. Coroner Illes found no marks of vio- lence, but an autopsy will be perform- ed to determine the cause of death. ey g R BRIDGEPORT WOMAN SEEKS NATURALIZATION. Left a Widow of an Alien, She Wants to Protect Her Children. Bridgepgrt, Conn., Aug. 2.— Mrs. Julia M, Brennan, 41 years old, made application to the superior court here today ' for naturalizatior papers. In 1907 her husband applied for his first papers but died before he had made application for his soccond papers. As a protection to her five children Mrs. Brennan made application for = the second papers today, a right she has according to the law, It is believed that dhe -is the first woman in the stite to apply for second papers. Another Grade-Crossing Fatality. North Haven, Conn., August 2.—An- drew Cuneo, 24 years ald, of New York, was struck and. instantly killed at the rgilroad crossing here today. Currey: was visiting_friends here. Wallingford Boy Drowned. Cabled_Paragraphs training squadron arrived here to- day. ¥ London, Aug, 2.—The Very Rev. Robert Gregory, D. D., died here to- day. - He was born at Nottingham on February 9, 1819, and since 1891 was dea of St. Paul's, resigning that office on May 1 last, Y. ‘Odessa, Russia, Aug. 2.—The local cffice of the International Harv@ster company was entered by armed men who siezed $1,800 after wounding Manager Olander today. The rob) shot “a policeman who attempted to block their flight. One of the robbers ‘wag arrested lates Berne, - Switzerland, Aug. 2.—Prof. John Clark of Columwia university to- |* day opened the International Peace Conference which it is expected will extend it’s sittings to ten days. The delegates were cordially welcomed to Switzerland by Herr Gobat, the na- tional councillor. P Moscow. Russia, Aug. 2—A dispatch to the Russian Slovo from Teheran says that Mohammed Ali Mirza, the de- posed shah, is nearing the Persian capital but faces several difficult mountain marches, An expedition sent against him is commanded by Sard- armokhe, a friend of the former premier, Naser-Es-Sultanet, Chiasso, Switzerland, Aug. 2.—An official communication from the Itali- an government shows that from July 21 to July 26 inclusive cholera cases ‘were recorded as follows: Naples, 68 cases and 29 deaths; Province of Na- ples, 157 cases and 78 deaths; town of Palermo, 130 cases, 64 deaths; Province of Palermo, 75 cases and 38 deaths. GRANGERS THREATEN TO SNUB PRESIDENT Will Not Take Part in Reception at the State Fair at Hartford. Hartford, Conn., Aug. 2.—The Times this afternoon says that the Connecti- cut State Grange has ° notified the Conneclicut Fair association that it cannot participate in the reception which is to be tendered, to President Taft*when he comés to the fair in Charter Oak park early-in. Septembe: as a guest of the Conmecticut Fair assoclation. The Times also has in- terviews with F. E. Duffy of Wes: Hartford, and John H. Hale, the latter a state railroad commissioner, both executive officers of the state grange substantiating the attitude of the grange. - Mr. Hale quoted as subscribing to the accuracy of the statément that “the cannot consistently par- ticipate in the reception to be tendered President Taft - when he comes to Hartford.”™ The attitude of the grange is attrib- uted entirely to the president’s atti- tude on reciprocity with Canada. How ‘widesp the feeling is can only be determined from an interview given the Times by Mr. Duffy, whose pro- tests ‘in Washington at the time of the reeiprocity hearings - created wide- spread comment. Duffy has charge ot the livestock department at the Con- necticut fair. He says: “Some time ago the manager of the fair invited the grange to . participats as the usual grange day was to be ob- served. This week- when it was learned that President Taft had a cepted on invitation to attend the f: the situation changed. The fair au thorities have been notified that the grange will not take part in the fair this year.” “Why,” he was asked. His reply is given as follows: “For the reason that the grange is opposed to the reciprqcity idea in all its aspects and as President Taft has been the leader in that movement the grange does not care to take part i any event in which he is a guest.” Mr. Duffy does not wish to be un- derstood as speaking for the grange in an official capacity. He is quoted as saying that the movement was of even greater extent than was indi- cated by his statement and that farm- ers and agriculturalists of the country would show their hand in the 1912 election. It is predicted that the alleged at- titude of the grange toward the pres- ident will arouse the city of Hartfor1 and other manufagturing centers where reciprocity is ‘ed _and that he will be en a vociferous reception when he comes to town. It was in- timated that every factory in this city and vicinity may be asked to close when he comes to town in order that the sentiment of the people may be expressed. It is already evident that the prornsed action of the grange will be counter-acted with, vigor. . Grangers Not.So Small. Many of the directors of the state fair association took exception to the stand taken today by the grangers, among them F. Heublein of this city, who said: “My opinion is that the directors should pay no attention to this. If the grangers are so small, that they will not attend because the president of the country is there, weli, they are pretty small.” C. W. Pratt, also of this city, said: “I think Mr. Hale.and Mr. Duffy are extremists; it will not make the slightest difference to the fair whether they are there or not.” President Soby said.he hoped that the president would come and that he would speak on reciprocity, and that he thought the whole thing would blow over. . A BABY GIRL BORN TO MRS. NEAPOLIANO. Infant Will be Turned Over to Chil- \ dren’s Aids Society. Sault St Marie, Out, Aug. 2.—A taby girl was born to Mrs. Angelino Neapolitano, at the General hospital here this afternoon. 74 The child will be turned over to the Children’s Aid society which now has care of other four children of the con- victed woman. Mrs.' Neapolitano_was sentenced to be hanged on next Wednesday by Jus- tice Brittin at the Azzizes for the mur— der of her husband. Owing to the widespread interest which was mani- fested in her cose, the Sentence was commuted to life imprisonment and soon as she has recovered she will be taken' to the Kingston Penitentiary. New York Has 5,000,000 People. New York, August 2.—The popula= tion of New York city passed the five- million mark on August 1, according to figures prepared by the health de- partment. The statisticians estimate that the city now has 5,000,000 resi- dents, & _gain of about 230,000 for the past year. White Fi e ishes His Testimony. ‘Washi n, Aug. 2—Charles A. ‘White, the Tllinois legislator who says he was bribed to vate for Willlam Lorimer for_ ‘senator, completed his testimony before the sen- Leurent and Mile. nieces of Mme. Rambaud, SEVEN OTHER OCCUPANTS OF AUTO BADLY INJURED. CAR TURNS A SOMERSAULT Dr. Rambaud of Pasteur Institute In Critical Condition—Faifed to Reduce Speec In Making a Sharp Curve. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Aug. 22—Of eight persons who were riding in a large touring autgmobile when it turn- ed a somersault on a stats road three ‘miles from this city today, a two year 6ld-baby was the only one who escaped without @ scratch, D# Rambaud’s Condition Unfavorable. including Dr. George head of the Pasteur insti- tute, New\York, and his wife, wera in- jured to such extent that all had to be removed to Vassar hospital. It was said_ tonight that the condition of ail excepting Dr. Rambaud was distinctly favorable to recovers. The Injured, The injured: Dr. George Rambaud. Mme. Rambaud, Valentine Gerville, sister of Mme. Rambaud, Mlle. Paule Simone “Leurent, Kinsley Albert Styles, Adirondack guide, Jaquet, chauffeur. Baby Taken to Hospital. The infant sén of -Dr. Rambaud, Paul, aged two vears, was not injured in the least, but was taken to the Vas- sar_hospital with his parents. Were Returning from Vacation. The accident happened, on the Violet avenue state road, one of a number of inside roads now being used by tour- ists because of repairs on the Albany post road. Three miles from Pough- keepsie there is a very sharp curve. The party had been at Saranac Lake on their vacation and were returning to New York. Dr. Rambaud was ‘driving. The Adirondack guide had served ‘hs party in the mountains and had becn invited by the doctor to ride to New York. Failed to Reduce Speed at Curve. The party approached the curye trayeling about 30 miles an hour. They bad never been over this road:and from the mnorth the turn appeared to be slight. There seemed no need of re- ducing speed, but before the curve was rounded Dr. Rambaud perceived his mistake and attempted to apply: the brakes. Almost at ths same instart the car gave a lurch-and then turned over with such violence that all the occupants were thrown eut into a field by the side of the road. Found by Farmer’s Wife. A farmer’s wife came upon the tour- ists lying unconscious by the road and the baby 20 feet away, crying, but un- scratched. * She summoned heip. / Removed to Hospital. /| Physicians were rushed to the scene in the polica motor car, followed by the Vassar hospital ambulance, and these conveyances, with several automobiles, took the injured pemons to Vassar hospital. Couple Married Secretly. Dr. Rambaud and Mme. Gerville- Reachs were married on Nov. 11, 1909, secretly, at the home of friends in New Jersey. The French soprano did not ant her wedding to be known at the time, because of her work, and it was not announced untfl after she had re. turned from Paris with Dr. Rambaud in the early part of the following Feb- ruary. Dr. Rambaud is a graduate of the University of Paris and specialized in the Pasteur work. His wife has been famous as an opera singer for several years. BONES IDENTIFIED AS THOSE OF MERRITT. Two More Bodies Beyond Identification Found Yesterday. Havana, Aug. The bones found yesterday in the ward room of the bat- tleship Maine and believed to be the [{) remains of Assistant Engineer Merritt were fully identified today.. They con- sisted of the entire skull and a greater part of the frame. The identification was based on the configuration of the skull. “The skeleton was that of a {a'l man, which corresponds to Engineer Merritt's [height. Near the bones wer found a ;‘amon of an officer’s cap, uni- form and buttons and a fountain pen. The remains of the officer;were ais covered in the central passige imme. diately~forward of the ward room and at the spot where Midshipman Boyd testified that he and Merritt wera sep- arated by the inrush of water while struggling to make their way from the junior officers’ ward room to the main deck. Engineer Merritt's class ring has not yet besn fofnd, but it may be in the ‘debris, which is being ecarefully sifted. S The exploration of the after berth deck, on which the officers’ staterooms were situated. bas besn _completed without the-discovery of other bodie! Many personal effects were found, however, including Lieutenant Jenkix: revolver, with his nams engraved -on it, one shotgun and some cutlasses’and rifles and a quantity of minor objects. Two more bodies, both of them be- yond identification, were found today near ‘the warrant officers’ quarters on the port side of tha berth:deck undes superstructure. Thes: made the total number of bodies recov- ered 21. Suicide Follows Loss of Work. Stamford, Coan., August 2.—With one end of a tube in her mouth and the other end attached to a gas jet, Mrs- E. Osgood was Jound dead in her room at A boarding house on Atlantic venue tonight. Her husband has been out, of employment for several months. She has been working in a local’ factory. -Three days ago - she iost her place and is supposed to have bledo‘gme despondent. She was 50 years, ol Boston Lumber Fire. . Boston, August ;2—The lumber yards of the A. M. Wood company, a stable owned by Charles L. York, and 5 tep story “wopden house occupied by ef, all on Dunstable street -in Charlestown district, ear the Massachusetts state prison, s’gldeatmyea by fire today, causizg estimated at $40,000. T nville.—Dr. Joseph H. Town- send of New Haven and Pheodore K. McKenzig of Southington, members of the stat® board -of 'health, were in DEMOCRATS ENTHUSE OVER UN- DERWOOD'S ATTACK. A MOST REMARKABLE SCENE Stand Up in Chairs, Wave Handker- chiefs and Yell—No Word of Defense for “Boy Orator. of the Platte.” / — ‘Washington, August 2.—Demdtratic representatives %001 .apon their chairs, waved handkerchicfs and yelled at the tops of their voieces today, thus acelaiming Representative Oscar W. Tnderwood of Alabama, democratic ieader in the house, when he fired a verbal broadside at Willlam Jennings Bryan for criticising his position on extension of the teriff revision pro- gramme, ' v Denounced Bryan’s Statements as ; False. It was the most remarkable scene in the houss since the beginning of the extra session of congress. Mr. Un Gerwood denounced Mr, Bryan's stal: ments as false, defended his (Ugde ‘wood’s) attitude as to revision of the iron and steel tariff schedules and said n had placed upon every demo- cratic member Amplications unfounded in faet. y Calls for Corroboratien. He called on his democratic col leagues on the ‘ways and means com- mittee for corroboration of his atti- tude in committes and in caucus. No One to Defend Bryan. Mr. Underwood was backed up in a similar_striking speech by Represen- tative Kifchin of North Carolina, Iong a devoted friend of Mr. Bryan. Mr. XKitchin expressed surprise that any dem)crat should so mal: Mr. Under- wood and the party. Throughout all this arraignment not a voice was rais- ed in defense of Mr: Bryan. The Cause of It All It all came about from a published interview, which purported to be “au- therized by Mr, Bryan.” This said it was time that Mr. Underwood was “unmaske: GOVERNOR DISCUSSES COMPENSATION BILL Lo St e Belisves It Was Not . Drawn Up Al Proper Lires. New Haven, Conn., Aug. 2.—Gov- ernor Baldwin tonight in commenting on' the failure of the house to pass a ‘workingmen’s compensation and em- ployers Hability bill said that he did not think that.any full workingmen’s compensation bill would go through the present general assembly. In the statement issued tonight he cited his recommendations made in his inaug- ural message and said: “In drafting any project for such a statute, if made compulsory upon those whom it concerned it would be-necessary to of employment not in fact involving great and special hazards.. . “The bill that has been rejected in the house was not drawn oy the lines above suggested. It covered all oc- cupations, hazardous and non-hazard- ous, with a few exceptions Some of these exceptions seemed b me allow able, such as cases of domestic serv- ice, or causual emplovment, or em- ployment by charitable institutions not for money making purposes. Others seemed to me not legally allowable, such as farmers, landscape gardeners and horticulturalists.” _— WOMAN’S HATPIN MAY COST MAN HIS SIGHT take great care to include no kinds! __Chicopee, Mass., Is Facing the pros- pect of am unnreedd‘enl:cd tax rate. Our Cavalry Officers Have Received notice that they - it horsemanship. ey .nf\n- ‘hmrovu fn ‘A Serious Uprisin, Ha-“Ouurud" against the Cub:n go%ermflgn: at Ha- vana, led by General: Acepedo, o The French .New: rs Declare in favor of another A’;‘edmp. conference to.solve the Morocco ,problem, 5 ~ “C. E. Hall, a Native of Vir has won the prize of thrsonle?y of Beaux Arts, of architects, in Paris. i : t Trade of Engfand is seri- ously threaténed by a strike of 12,000 dock laborers at the London docks. Mme. Moronzorff, owier of the larg- est cottor mills in Russia, who died DTonesday. leaves a fortune of $40,000,- ARBITRATION = PACTS WITH FRANCE AND GREAT BRITAIN, A LONG STEP TOWARD PEACE French Treaty to Be Signed First— Bryce Coming From Summer Home in Maine to Sign the British Treaty. Washington, August 2.—The general arbitration treaties belween the Unit- ed States, Great Britain and France, constituting the most advanced step ever taken for the peaceful settlement of national disputes, will be signed tomorrow. Paris and Washington will e the scenes of the conclusion of the negotiations for the conventions, French Treaty to Be- Signed in Paris’ The first signature will be appended to the French treaty by Ambassador Jean J. Jusserand, who is now in Par- is, at two o'clock tomorrow afternoon. This will be 9 a, m. Washington time. British Treaty at Washington, The signing of the British treaty here will not take place until 3 o'clock in the afternoon, or six hours aftgl Ambassador Jusserand has commit- ted France to the arbitration of any dispute she may have in the future with the powerful repunHic of the west. To_Sign in East Room. In the presence President Taft, who invited all natfons to join hands with the United States in broaden! the arbitration principle, Secretary ol State- Knox will sign both the Brit- ish and French treatles in the historic east room of the White house. Bryce to Sign for Great Britain. Ambassader James Bryce/ of Great Biitain will sign the British treaty. He will arrive in Washington for this purpose tomorrow. He will come from Seal Earbor, Maine, the summer home of the Pritish embassy. The King of. Spain Had an Exciting experience on a yacht that was dis- mantled in a squall during the yacht races off Cowes. David Silverman, a New York few- eler, wag shot by a burglar, who snatched three watches as he fled from Silverman’s store. Hartford Postoffiée Receipts - Show’ an increase of $10,000 for the past month compared with the eorrespond- ing month last year. A Sturgeon Weighing 113 Pounds ‘when dressed was taken from the Hudson river off Catskill Point, N. Y., by Harrison Peason. Notices Were Posted in the Fall River Iron Works company mills that after August 4 they would be shut down until further notice. Experts Testified Before the house committee th: the ores owned by the ‘Tennessee. 1 and TIron company ‘were worth $200,000,000. Gov.,Aram J, Pothier Declared yes- terday that he would clean Rhode Is- land of the gamblers and drive these undesirables from the state. President Diaz of Nicaragua and General Mena, his minister of war, have reached a friendly agreement in regard ‘to all their differences. The Politicat. Situation In Panama becomes more complicated. All gov- ernment employes who do not favor President Arosemena’s re-electjon are to be dismissed. * oy King Frederick Declined to Bestow his support upén the International An- imal Protection and Antivivisection congress in Copenhagen because it is opposed to vivisection. TWO GIRLS IN SURF WORE UNION 8UITS Missouri Constable Takes Boid Bath- ers to the Calaboose. Kansas City, Mo., August 2.—Word reached Earl Dawson, deputy censta- ble of Harlem, across the river from Kansas City, that two girls were bath- ing in the Missouri river “without the proper amount of clothilig on.” %nun he arrived he found a large part of the population of §Harlem on the river bank gazing waterward. Dawson appealed to the more ex- perienced present to say If they were bathing suits the girls had on, and if not what they were. He was told that if they were bathing suits they cught not to be. One man, wWho Worke ed in a department store, said they were “just plain union suits.” Deputy Dawson then showed his star.and called upon the girls to come out. They came readily enough and Dawson retired behind a clump_ of willows while ‘hey dressed. The girls gave their names as Grace Dal- ton, aged 19, and Nellie Noise, aged 16, both of Kansas City. Deputy Daw- Bon escortad them to the calaboose fol- Attorneys Representing the princi- pal magazine publishers questioned postoflice department Officers yester- day at the 1 inyestigation of sec- ond class postage Fates. Secretary of the Navy Meyer, Thom- as A. Edison and Wiillam C..Brown, president of the New York Central railroad, sailed for Europe yesterday on the steamer Mauretania. Governor Denaén of lilinois has hon- ored the requisition of Governor Cro- thers for John R. Nichols, Chicago, wanted in Dorchester county, Mary- land, on a charge of forgfiry. %The Trial of the Camorrists at Vi- terbo, Italy, was interrupte@ while one of the prisoners was tried, convicted and sentenced to two months’ impris- lowed by a cavalcade of indignant Bt or Contempl v Puts Harlemites. Then the girls were fined, \ The Southérn Pacific, beginning this month, is putting into erect a rule that hereafter no women are to be employed as clerks or stenographers the company’s passsnger .department. The Vicksburg Park Commission is appealing to the relatives of the offi- cers who took part in the fampus siege of Vicksburg to) contribute portraits TRIED TO MAKE MAN OF HER HUSBAND Failing in That, Mrs. Langley Kills - Him in a Saleon. San Francisco, August 2.—Unable, Female' Thrmagent Then Turned on ictim and Called Him,Brute. San Francisco, August 2—The. turn- ing of a woman’'s head may cost Dan- iel Mack, a vaudeville actor, his sight. Mack attempted to make his way through 2 dense theater crowd-.on Market street last night. A woman eside him turned her head. A long steel pin projecting from her hat passed through Mack’s right eyelid, through his nose ard into his left eye. “You brute, how dare vou touch my hat,” the woman cried as she felt a frantic tug on her headgear. With- out looking around, she wrenched the pin free and disappeared into the crowd while Mack staggered blindly about the sidewalk. Mack has been placed “in a dark Toom, Neck Broken by Falling Clay. Middletown, Conn., Aug. 2.—Anto- nio Graptoni, employed at McDonald’s,| brick ds at Smith Crossirg, was killed )today by being struck on the of the neck by a block of clay ing 100 pounds, his neck being brokdn. He was bending over work- ing when there was a cave-in and the large piece of clay fell squarely on the back of his neck. He was 3lgyears old and unmarried. Upton Sinclair Released from Jail. ‘Wilmington, Del., Aug. 2.—After 13 hours’ imprisonment in the Newcastle county workhouse, where they were sent by a magistrate on a charge »f violating the Sunday laws prohibiting the playing of sports on the first day of .the week, Upton Sinclair, the writer, and nine of his fellow members of the single tax colony at Arden, near ‘here, were given, their liberty today. Despondent Over Love Affai Burnside, Conn., Aug. 2.—The medt- cal examiner of East Hartford stated tonight that Miss Jessie Henderson of this place, who died three days ago, committed suicide by drinking car- bolic acid. Apoplexy was originally given as the cause of death. She was 27 years old, and is supposed to have been despondent over a love affair. Baby Famine at Pasadena. Pasadena, Calf., Aug. 2.—This city, said to be the home of more wealthy people than any other of its size in the world, is facing a baby famine. Statistics for July, completed yester- day, show that 48 babies were born during the month, Local health au- thorities say that 200 ‘babies a month wanld be a minimum estimate for the city ‘which has a population of 40,000. Pope Able to Take Drive. Rome, Aug. 2—For the first time since his recent indisposition Pope Pius Tl!omsgmvme Monday, to inspect the site selécted by the Thqmpsonville ‘Water company for its proposed mew m"w*" bl h of the present was strong enough afternoon to take a short drive in the vatican gar- d: When the sun set and the air cold his holiness ed to 0] ‘breese from the she said, to “make a man” of her hus- band, Anna Lahgley, a frail woman 19 years .old, today shot and killed him. They had been married fifteen months. Early today James Langley left homg, saying he did not intend to return. Mrs. Langley bought a revolver and in bronze for the embellishment of the park. - That Former Gov. James K. Varda- man received a sufficient number of votes in the democratic primary to insure his election to the United States i i ; | started to hunt her hushand. 8he senuté iflrom Mississippi, is practically o hirs ifi & salooh, . Acoording. te T bystanders, Langley turned on her with a torrent of abuse. ‘Without a word, the wife fired five shots. One struck Langley and he died on the way to a hospital. Mrs, Langley was arrested. “I do not see why I should be de- tained,” she said at the eity m. “I did nothing wrong and I am mnot sorry. Since our marriage I have sup- ported my husband end myself by working as a stenographer. I tdfed to make him stay away from saloons, T endured his abuse. I tried to instill some ambition into him and coach him for the firemen’s civil service ex- amiration. He would not try. I ceuld endure no more.” BODY OF MISS SAWIN FOUND IN THE SOUND. Was Drowned While Sailing With Her Sweetheart Last Wéek. New York, Aug. 2—The body of Lil- Han Sawin, the 19 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank E. Sawin, of Mt. Vergon, N. Y., was found off Port- chester. N. Y., in Leng Island_sound, today. The gody of Lorimer Demike, ‘her sweethealt, had alraady been found. Mr. Sawin expressed a belief that the bruise found on his daughter's for head was caused by the boom of thelr little yacht being swu: around sud- denly when the boat was caught in the swell of a passing sound steamer. He Dbelievad that she was knocked ever- board and that young Denike lost his life trying to save her. The drowning occurred on the after- noon of July 26. Denike’s body and the boat were found the next day. MOTHER OF FOUR LITTLE ONES HAS FATAL FALL Was Hanging Out Clothes On Roof of Shed at Hartford. Hartford, Corh., Aug. 2.—Mrs. Pas- quale lllrollo, while hanging out clothes today, fell from the second story of her home on to the roof of a shed, fractured heér skull and died goon after reaching a hospital. She was 31 years old and leaves a hus- nd and four children, all under five years of age. Congressional Reapportionment. Washington, Aug. 2—Final debate on the congressional reapportionment bill to_increase the house m The Mexican Government has Drom- ised -the United States that vigorous and prompt measures will be adopted to protect American life-and property in the serious mining strike situation at El Oro. Not in_the Past Forty Years have temperatures in the United States dur- ing the late spring and early summer been so uniformly high for so long a period and over such a large portion of the country as this year. Refusing Absolutely to Accept the suicide theory, Mrs. Alexander J. Cam- eron of Augusta, Mg, whose husband’s clothing was found on the bank of the Kennebec river, declared her be- lief that he met with foul play and was Tobbed. Mrs. Belle A. Mansfield, 65, the first woman ever admitted to’ the practice of law in the United States, died at the home of her brother, Judge W. J. Babb of Aurora, I, Tuesday night. Mrs. Mansficld was admitted to the Towa bar in mS& A New Theory in the Beattie Murder case at Richmond,, Va., came to light sterday when . detectives investigat- ing the murder are said to have con- cluded that Henry Beattie, Jr., knocked his wife down, stood on her prostrats body and fired the fatal shot. Organized fer the Purpose of con- ducting a crusade against smoking in public and semi-public places, the Non-Smokers’ Protective league of ‘America, with principal office in New York city, vesterday filled papers of incorporation with Secretary of State Lazansky. John H. McMahon, Sécretary of the Connecticut Brewers' company, and who has been located in Meriden for the past eight years, died early this morning at the home of his mother in Bridgeport from typhold-pneumonia. He was 31 yéars old and a prominent A Jcint Investigation to Datermine the cause and place the responsibility for the head-on collision of Bangor & Aroostook passenger trains at Grind- 'stone on Friday night, by which nine rsons lost their lives and 24 were fl'ed. was held yesterday at Milli- ycket, Me. o Ri Hev. Dr. W. 8. Rai ol Iaoher rosien b8k George's church, ‘Stuyves: Rainsford are spending t! fleld. The doctor square, ‘and summer at en: