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DASHED TO DEATH OVER ATHESTI.E Capihd Twenty-Five Passengers on Lehigh Valley Paragraphs Kiel, Germany, August 25.—The Ger- man battleship Hessen, while execut- ing maneuvers with a torpedo boat flotilla in the outer bay last night, ran By Atr Route Wamd -Mnney | For His Mother Condensed Telegrams former Mex- Madero Accuses Re; L b reachery. ican minister of war, of John C. McFarley, 30 years old, of Shot FOIIowed Woman’s Scream down and sank the small ‘wedish St. Louis, was druwned at Atlantic steamer Askersund. . The .crew of the Catye ” - steamer was rescued and no one was -, The Lowell, Mass., Machine Shop [ DAMAGIN ESTIMONY GIVEN Train Have Lives Crushed Out hurt., |ATWOOD BEARS MANY MESSAGES | YOUNG GEIDEL'S a'rA'r:MENT IO, Fhe, Lewell, Myst; Migiine Shdo GING T MANY VETERANS AMONG THE DEAD List of Injured Will Reach 60—Train Wias Late ‘and Was Making Time-—Disaster Attributed to a Spread- ing or Fad Rail—Identification of Victims is Slow —Woreck to be Thoroughly Investigated. Mancheste: ing eastward behind passenger train ley r. N, X Aug. . 4 ran into a Speed- me, Lehigh Val- Mrs. R. S. Uncle, Southreld, N. J. Joseph Hickey, residence unknown. Helen Powell, Newton, Pa. London, Aug. 25.—Fire destroyed a jeweler's ' shop and two adjoining houses at Sengenhydd, near Bargoed, Glarmorganshire, Wales, today. Ail of the property. burned was owned by Jews, and it is rumored that the fire was of incendiary origin, though it was not accompanied by rioting. Paris, Aug. 25.—Giulio _Gatti- Casazza states that ha will produce at the Metropolitan opera in New York in December and January Thuille’s “Lobetana” and Moussorgsky's “Boris Godounoft.” with a Russian ballet un- der an arrangement with Max Rabin- off, the Russian impresario, who is now in 'New York. * Viterbo, Ttaly, August 25.—All of to- day’s session of the Camorra trial was taken up with the confrontations of the accused with witnesses who swore Complefed His Trip by Landing at erday—To ly over New craft; Harry = Boston aviator, arrived in New York on his aeroplane today. the first man in h‘lstory to travel'as far as from St. Lou FOR BOSTON GIRLS. WILL NOT FLY TO BOSTON Governor's Island 'cron the Country in October. New York,'Aug, 2 Atwood, the 27 year to- New York by way of —Sailing serene- -York's myriad -water- its ferryboats and ocean liners, Geidel, - tha 17 old a | hotel, Knew Geidel, He Said, Liked Him—Warned the Lad of His Rights After He had Been Arrested. New : York, Aug. tion rested today in the case of Paul DISTRICT ATTORNEV. WHITMAN ‘ ON THE STAND and - Rather 25—The prosecu- year old bellboy on trial for his life on a charge of mur- ‘dering William H. Jackson, the aged ‘Wall street broker. Whitman, who lives in the Iroquois in the room adjoining that in District Attorney tember 5. Infan Paralysis Has Made its ap- pearance in Somerville, Mass.,one case having fatal result. George H. Stoops, who for the last 18 years had written a letter every Fri- day to his aged parents, is dead at Waynesboro, Pa. Rev. Dr. Edward _ Octavius Flagg, said to have been New York's oldest preacher, is dead at-his home in New ork. . The Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railway has declared a dividend of 2 3-10 per cent. upon the common stock. The Protection of American Interests in Hayti is now in the hands of the AGAINST BEATTIE. AUTO HAD STOPPED IN ROAD Young Man Wearing Brownish S Similar to Beattie's Was Apparently _Fixing Tire Near Scene of Murder. Chesterfield Courthouse, Va., Aug. 25. L. Snyder, a dairyman, Sam Tul- day laborer, and A. K. Briggs, ths 15 year old son of a Richmond con- tractor, tock the witness stand in oid Chesterfield courthouse today and gave what the prosecution regards as the most important and ths most dramatis hearsed a great deal of the testimonv lone gunboat Marijetta at Port au " % 5 - spread rail on a trastle near here today | C. P. Johnstone, address uhknown. |that they had seen jewels, presuma- | heavier-than-air machin which Jackson was killed, was the last | prince, T e I T e and two day coaches from the mid-| A. M. Hunsicker, Vineland, Ont. bly those of Maria Ciiocolo, Who, with | Epoch Aninals of Asrenautic witness for the state. . el Ersn ey EEEES Ir.. talee section of ile train plunged downward | Edgar Pangbun,’ veteran, Brooklyn.|her husband, Genaro ~Cugcolo, was| .co " . AT 5 District Attorney Knew Geidel. Rev. George M. Irving, formerly | ndictment for wife murder. 40 feet. striking the east embankment | Nine unidentifid women, murdered, it is alleged, by the Camor- |y i, Re%C S “fiei s o ot | - There was a personal note in the | United States commissioner of educa- Twelve Witnesses Heard. like a pair of projectiles.. In the awful fierl man, rists, sold on the day, following the | [S15nd Afler B¥lng down from Ayack, | oore N S D nitman. whe had | tion at-Douglas, Alaska, died in Seat-| In all an even dozen witnesses wire plunge and crash at least 25 persons| Joseph Hickey, Philadelphia. night when the crimes were commit- i e 0 X g tle, aged 78. head, but Paul Beattie, the star wii- are tonight known to have been Kkill- Woman, age about 40. “M. E, H.” | ted. ness for the commonwealth, was not ed and more than 60 injured. The in- | on breastpin, blflflk skirt, white waist. Cutting His Throat with a plece of |among them. He may be called lats Juries of several are so serious that| Man, 70, with, “P” on cuff button. | MOVING PICTURES OF FIGHT glass, Thomas Cotter committed sui- | tomorrow afternoon. During H it is feared they will die, Wore truss made by Sentz Sons of | cide in a cell of the Barre, Vt, police | morning session thz witnesses e- War ki, ima (P exwereo ar san mason || ADVERTISING A CITY The wreck was the worst in the Woman, ager \about 35. Gray and station yesterday. that came out at the coroner's in- history of the Lehigh Valley line in |Plack finely chvcked dress, short black | Promoter Arrested and Prominent J. Clarence Price, an attorney and |quest. this state and one of the, most disas- | Ba8ir. Citizens Called as Witnesses. v treasurer of the National Permanent Dairyman Saw Auto Stop. trous ever recorded on the system.| Girl, blonde, blue eves,’ age 18, blue — . s Building association of Washington, | The dairyman swore that between Crowded with passengers, many serge skirt, green and W te "striped Bar Harbor, Me., Aug. 25.—A public The spoken word is one of the easiest and least effective ways of shot and killed himself. sunset and dark on the nizghf of the Whehs - were War U et A e rare | SmITtWAISE ~ N[ SO B als, exhibltion of ‘'moving - pictures of booming & city. The best advertisement any city can have is its own : : niurder h> saw an adtomobile gimilar sionists from the G. PB. encampmant Girl, aged ahout 22, bhck hair and | Jeffries-Johnson prize fight for_ the character—if it is of good character it is made attractive, and if of poor | . The Chipapas Mines Near Arizpe,|to Beattie's halt on the roadside oz at Rochester, traim No. 4, made up of | 98Tk eves, hesad edushed. heavyweight championship - of the character .repulsive. What gives character to a city is its physical and Sonora, Mex., have been raided by |far from ihe scene of the crime. A 14 cars, drawn by two big mogul en- Woman, te = skirt, with black | world, given in a local hall Wednes- artificial beauty, its homes and churches, its standing as trading-center, ‘bandits, who robbed stores and offices | jone man stepved out, he said, and gines, was 40 minutes late when it |Sttipe, gray :skirt, about 42 years. day night, resulted today in the sum- its conveniences and its lack of vice and burdensome taxes. Home of money and provisions. this man, the prosecution will attem reached Rochester Junctioa, and from |, Woman, ‘agjed about 35 years, with | moning of a number of prominent citi- trade and steady growth s usually its best recommendation, for that 2 = to-show, was Beattle, conpsaling B0 there sped eastward to make up time . P.” o1 watch; shoes bought”in | zens of Bar Harbor to appear as wi means - better #tocks of goods in its stores, more money in circulation While Bathing in a Small Pond on | gun with twhich it is alleged he before reaching Geneva. v‘vlflflelphia ne::gst_ asm:lst l:he _prD{noler! of (;“é and in the banks, more building, more trading, more nmulemem;, and t}le eg;bd Sv:merswart?é N. H., M_au(-] his wife. i 3 i Gromn, 1 exhibition at a hearing tomorrow. One steadily increasing grand list—in fact money spent at home booms rice v, 14 yvears old, was seize Pullman Tiop o B Do fa8, . arrest had been made today and sev- || o Gty and money spent elsewhere s a lag upon it The home trader || with cramps and was drowned: Tally Heard Scrdam and Shet. The engine and two day coaches had | '83,” about years of age,"brown hai¥, | eral “Joe Doe” warrants ware issued helps his city forward; and the trader at other centers is a retarder of | Tally swore that about 11 o'clocie just passed the center of the 400- |slightly gray. for the promoters. A large crowd saw civic progdess. Money spent at home bujlds up the home: city while | __The Purchase of the w"cuu.-, that night, sitting on the back porch t trestle over Canandalgua Outles, | Woman, aged about 55 years, dark | the pictures, which had been shown a fioney elsewhere spent builds up the other city. Increasing trade and Nashua & Rochester railroad by the |of his home, mot far from the road- vards east of the station at Man- | blue jackek, black skirt. few evenings previously at a private population means a higher value upon every man’s home as well as §|Boston & Maine, was approved yvester- | side, he heard the scream of a woman, chester, at 12.35 o'clock. when tha Pull- | _Woman; gray hair, 70 years. “A. M. | party dinner given at the summer resi- every man’s business. This is the way we help ourselves by hélping day by the raiiroad commission. then a shot, and finally the noisz of an man Austin, the third of a long train, | K.” on sif jnet ring. dence of Edward B. McLean of Wash- others. . Home trade is really a good investment as well as an expendi- automobile starting. left the tails It dragged the dining | Man, aipout 55 years, body crushed |ingion. The first arrest made was that(} fire Advertising in home papers and keeping them evidences of a Joseph Jackson, Aged 50, a recluse, Boy Saw Auto on Roadside. car with it and two day coaches and | bevond ) peogpition. of C. E. Lindall, who is in the motion live business place is a constant boom for the city they rppresent. A who lived in a little shack near Croj The Briggs boy testified that some two Pullmans, in this order, followed. | Uniden tified boy, about six years old, | picture business. half starved paper is the same kind of & boom for 'a town, as'a half moor, N. Y.. was burned to death when | g 15 ¢ CEES (00 CERTIEC HIEL Tame Day Coaches Go Down Embankment. “The cases will be the first to be tried starved domestic animal is for a family or home. To boom a city prop- his shack was destroyed by fire. night he and a number of companion. Dead at Rochester. in Maine under the state law prohibit- All bumped over the ties a short dis- tance when the coupling between day oach No. 237 and the rear end of the broke. The forward ond of the dragged the derailed Pullman. Austin, and the diner over safely, after which both plunged down the seuth ly things must be kept looking right well as going right. To keep informed what space costs send for a rate card of The Bulletin. Adverfising rates are as reasonable here as anywhere; and ~there are bargains in advertifing for those who understand the busi- ness. To. know what is going on and where to buy goods at most' Trea- sonable prices it is necegsary to take the Norwich Bulletin. The in an automobile, passed a car at the roadside, a stonz's throw from whers the murder was committed. The man, he said, apparently was fixing a tire; the woman was standing on the run« ning boarg. motion ing the public exhibition of . i r figh Mrs. Russell Sage is to be requested pictures of prize ts. to pay an inheritance tax on all her Minnesota lands, held under contract of sale, amounting to nearly $600,000. D. M. Bolt, veteran, Los Angeles. Henry; Becker, brakeman. T'he Injured at Shortsville. A re port from Shortsville gives this list of injured Miss Cleveland Not Engaged. New York, Aug. Friends of Mrs. A Broken Steampipe on the Plant 5 2 Grover Cleveland tonight announced e e A Doy R ustaten . ont Only Auto He Saw. e s S S D 5‘.";;.'.'.""-&'»‘.’.'1&.’.'.'.""{-‘fu'&é’iu?n‘;f' bt s Bulletin Tj{‘gmll Loca/ Gemera/ .Total thiat greamer from HANRS for Baston | crdss, examination by the. detenss Ho followed by a Grand Trunk day céacn h, Sayre, Pa. = z & 4 Henry - Donohue, the Newburyport, | maintained that they passed no- otber #frinped the rear guard off (he soutn | Mirs; Theo W. Merrihew, South Phil- Sotwrday. Aug. 19 120 145 1190 14 ., Dostoffice Clork, arrested, charg- [ car on. the- remainder of the journey side of the trestle and plunged to the |ade!phia. Jle¥ with larceny of funds from that of- | to Richmond. Some of his companion® Sonnew Eivethed. more than 40, Cegh boulie Laure. Bt SHRuburs, - Monday. © Aug. 21 123 144 223 fice, was held for & continued hearing. | will be called to testify along this line elow. aterboc, Pert] . N. 3 ey e g Strike Wall With Terrific Force. 2. o] P*g‘l;ip-bur: S = Tuesday. Aug. 22 142 148 231 521 m;o«:_eT::‘: o AL Miiige: Joone Was Near the Bleo:!l‘pu:. r anny Gouber, dystone, Pa. 2 — £ = o 181 “Just betwean sunset and dark.” tes- went over seruc the sagt enmankncnt | argarst” Jaccbsen, Philadeiphia. Wednesday. Aug. 23 124, ~ 138 204 466 [deny Chiisuan sssodstdh Ui, | ned Snyer in direct examination, 4 of solid masonry and with the other i i 2 » " saw a big automobile going —west “aainst he wal with (sirifc force. Richardson, ' Germantown, Thursday, Aug.24 114 . 145 = 297 556 [|the vear 0% was i tnat carr & y 2 Mrs. Harry Hamilton, S The Trustees of the University of | . = 100 People Buried in Debri vl o4 et T8 aimi) Friday, Aug. 25 133 120 224 477 Piine decioed t buy the sesldence ot | LOne MERT e passed?” Both cars were filled with humanity Capt. Roobort Sl'l;hué’y, Phxla(lnelphll. —_— —_— the late lh?:clxgrorgg ;v;;rl:;o“r,: ié?;é; “He ran around and stopped ahead as the plunge was made and in a few ) S. P. Draper and Emetine Draper, e Bangor, of me.” moments the cars lay a mass of crum- || Lancaster, Pa. L Tota/, 756 840 2369 3965 || undig. “How mear was the place he stopped to the bioodspot which marked the scene of the crime?” Not more than 30 feot either way” said the witness. Young Man With Brownish Sult. “What did the man dog” Beattie leaned forward and gaze! intently the question was bied wood, metal 'and glass, unfler’l which 2 hundred men, women and chil- dran, many of whom were Kkilled in- were buried. The most de- struction occurred ir the day coach No. 237 and a dozen mersons ‘were later taken dead from the second day coach, which, having followed the firsf* over the trastle, snapped its rear coup Nng and thus saved the rest of thei Agnu Garden, Atlantic City, N. J. Mrs. H. . O. Douglas, Newton Square, the structure. Identification Is Difficult. A harrowing aftermath of the wreck is the scantiness of means of identify- ing the victims. Rescuers, in their haste to remove clothing and effects from the persons of the victims, nes- lected to keep the various articles with Robert B. Marshall, chief geographer of the geological survey, was appoint- ed ciairman Jf the American delega- tion to the geographic congress to be held in Rome. Despatches to R. G. Dun & Co. dicate a spotted trade situation, larged operations in some sections be- a. Geraldine Inman, Philadelphia. At Hahnemann Hospital. ‘The following injured are at Hahne- mann hospital, Rochester, besides three who are unconscious lad uni- dentified: Emnl Kohlerkaged 2 known young Geidel, and declared that he “rather Hked him.” The district attorney nad heard the confession of Geide! at policz headquarters, he said, an¢ declared he nad warned the bell- boy of his rights. a fog which made him only dimly vi: ble to the million eyes that watched him, was a notable incident in the annals of aeronautics. He not only broke the world’s record, covering 1,263 miles in an air line, or perhaps 100 in his ssat the witness ae ed. in- en- at Lancaster, Pa. train from being dragged over. rajeuski, aged 25, Buf- | the proper owners and many of the|mies in an air line, or perhaps b 1ac ing offset by a tendency toward quiet- ‘When I left him,” said Snyder, “he F dead, upon whom at first sufficient 4 Warned Geidel of His Rights. others. was working in a ditch at the rhflfl Sscond Coach Stood End Up. an Krajeuski, azed ten years, a |means of idontifcation was 1o pe|neW all the way in the same biplane, o side on the machine's right rea “When 1 saw Paul In the commis- ioner’s office,” said Judge Whitman, William H. White of Mariboro, Mass. T asked him if he knew ma and who | 73, committed suicide cutting his I was, and Le sald he did. Then I throat in a woodshed at the home of said: ‘Remember, Paul, anything you | his daughter, Mrs. V. T. Nickerson, at say now can be used against vou, and j Exeter, This second day coich struck on thie bottom and stood end up, the rear erid | projecting a few feet above the top of tha irestle. All of the passengers in this car wera piled in a tangled miass of broken seats at tne bottom of h.» and with no important mishaps. Aeroplane Weighs 1,192 Pounds. Atwood’s flight is comparable only to that made by fast trains, for he found, were soon laid out at the morgue, where careless visitors mixed up garments and identification ‘tags. to Complete List of sister. Rov. and Mrs. J. T. Whitley, aged couple of Boygton, Va. Julia Phillips, aged 45 years, Phila- delphia. “Was he a young or an old “He was a young man, and wore & brownish suit.” Color Same as Beat: jTime Required s Suit. covered the distance in-an actual fly- Dead. . H., yesterday. There was a hush in the courtroom 3 X ing time of 28 hours and 31 minutes. | y. - unles: — o the b - Totente, ong s | T Winterbury of || The breaking down of the telerraph | Wind resisiance and power thas. coms | Jou oanet (13" o Lo sey SSHIE unlens | Whe Fell Dead in Gramercy B soat winh: Dy Beattsas o aha Pullman Passengers Rescued. Peter J. Spindler of Olean, whose F;r:;lce“ad%eld to lfhehcnnf“!;;m becluge bined to bring through the air that|that, but wanted to mske a state- | park, New York. after he had attempt- night of the murder. The witness sai Indescribable pandemorium folloiwed. | wife at St. Mary's hospital, Ro- |Of the inability of those who are safe|disiance and that speed a weight of | ment. ed to speak to a man and woman Pass- | .n oior of the wa t resembled The Puliman car Emelyn, which. re- |chester. to send advices to anxious relatives.|more than half a ton, for Atwood's IR S ing him, was identified vesterday as|ina¢ ¢ the coat worn by the man at mained on the bridge with one'end | Howard Headley, aged 12 years, of |, Wil Probably be davs before the | apparently frail litile craft weighs with | Wanted Money for His Mother. | gy 4. Dix, a noveli the roadside. He instructed ‘s projecting over the guich and senieral | Philadelphia. r;amr e ad is ;flu:ad‘vmm i its passenger exactly 1,192 pounds. “I asked him what he wanted with ks look &t the defendant and to state If ’ cars behind it dsralled, and in inime- | Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hyde, New York | fat! e P Tatt et eation % Greeted by Army Officers. the money he expected to get from Mr.| Admiral Togo Will Not Be the Guest | 0 7 "0 ST ONE BOC T S8 e diate danger of going over on: the/mahs |city Will be dimeult o on " MY €351 stwood's final lap in his long jour- | Jackson, and he said: ‘I wanted to|of Vancouver, B. C., at a luncheon on | of wreckage belew, were soon emptied H. Sadler, colored porter, SR s - ney was a glide through the 1o send some to my mether in Hart-|Sunday, as was planned, following the | *%5 .« (10 the dalryman, slowly, of all their passengers, and thesq, aid- | Sharonville, Pa. Pathetic Sight at Station. doudi s - hags: veil ford.” " receipt of many protests aga “about the e1 by gangs of railroad employes:' from At Homeooathic Hospital. A pathetic sight is seen in the Man- | 35 miles from N was termed “Sabbath dese: . F I the big frelght yards:at Mandpester,| The following injured are at the Ho- | chester station tohight, where the hats | had stopped over night. ie landed, = mobile since wis rushed to aid. As the groans .of the [meopathic hospital: of the men in blue, with their gold | dapper and smiling, hatiess and hun- | NEXT ENCAMPMENT OF Diampnds, Champagne and Tobacco | asied. He t gene injured ard dving were heard below,| Miss Sue Everett, Virginia avenue, |braid, and the more pretentious hesd- in the arms of a handful of G. A, R. AT LOS ANGELES | were among the luxuries imported into agreed uhh the roadw. ily seen on th, Auto Started Afler Shot Was Fired. it car he had all pessible speed was made, but. it was several minutes before anybodv reach- ed the cars at the bottom tic) effect Niagara Falls, gear of the Sons of Veterans, are piled M‘u‘Swunoy, 50 vears, Philadelphia, lup with baggage, bloody garments, um- eritica the United States during July in quan- tities far in excess of similar importa- tions in the same month last year. ited States army officers and men, who hailed him with three cheers and Sons ef Veterans Made the Official brellas and other personal effects, tigér as America’s greatest aviator. R 4 orke resoues. W. P. Rundle, postal clerk on Le- | most of which are the propedty of the Escest un Bir Dosmens e e, Yok dq’." Cars Did Not Catch Fire. hizEl:’ Valle)Klelflcusly injurea. > dead. From Pacific to Atlantic. Bt Y., August 25.—The The Cotton clm;xwlill. of m? ;?}:orn. am(.u,,m_. followed Snyde - G iward Keeler, veteran, Washing- : ” 2 13 o4 =2 ke company in the village of orn- | stand. The cars did mot catch fr e ng. Coroner Up All Night. ot A e Gk 2800 At | foriy niftn annial encampment of the | o SmBanY in the village of Thorn- | SN o witting on the hack parch o8 were secured and hodyiafter tody Mrs. lda Deugl: Chi Coroner Eisline at 9.30 o'clock said: | 1 ay G. A, R. came to an end at 6.45 o'clock | S1E% 10 g EN 0 B0 T K nille | my house, about 200 vards from the toved end carried By the 'rescuer rs. lda Deuglass, Chicago. . ‘I guess the next lons distance fligat | O:, oclock Jand the p 7 : from k| Mr-and Mrs. A. W. Walker, Lake- | I am going to stay up all night and | for ‘me will be from San Framelsco or | tlis evenins with the installation off i, Fonasvillc have closed for two weeks. | road.” Taily testificd in direct s e deep in the riverbed to the banxf Mr-and | am doing my best to get out a list of | (o A% ida o e aviamtic oasty " |Judge Harvey M. Trimble and the Zmination, “when all of & sudden, the west side of tha trest/p. Thore identifica G other national officers elected earlier William L. Barron, a commission |about 11 o'clock, T hoard the screa o dead and infured were l4}d out on Others Injured. Eosir A Prasntly. Telegram Changed His Plans. in the day. Judse Trimble announced | o okl woe illed, &nd Harry Clark | of 4 woman. (hen 3 shot. Tn Aot 4 e B e | ol Bacrge. ity sund wite:sandi esn | - The.ysecked thatn was in charge of | Atwood's coming was unexpected on | {hese appointment A st eSen: | was sericusly injured when the auto- | minutes more I heard an automobils § cendirnes requisilicned and | Johd, azed 12, Ridley Park, Philadel- | Conductor James Hillick of Geneva, | Governor's Island, as it had been her. | éral, Charles R E. Kocii, Chica80; | mobile in which they were riding went | start. 8 e e sl o A | ‘ with Enginzers Bowman and Callan on | 2lded that he would land at Sheeps- | Qunrtermaster general, Col, . R. Sto_ over an embankment near Glenfield, Other Witnesses. x e 5 - = head ‘Bay. but a belated telegram from | Witz, Buffalo, N. T, 3 Pa, Among the o . sxea at the ecial Tralns , Bring Dpotors and P Swrwh NIl aay ihe, cheines. Conructor Hillick had| N ew. York changed his plens at the |sdvocate general, W, A. Ketcham, In- atternoon session were T. P. Pattigrew, 'S ‘Miss Amanda Williams, Philadelphia. | just stepped from the dining car to P dianapoli: assistant quartermaster general, J. Henry Holcomb, Philadel- phia. Los Angeles, Cal, Tobacco Growers of North Carolina and Virginia are gathering at Green; boro, N, C.. for a two days’' secret conyention called to discuss plans for Nurse: It was more than an hpur * before many of the injured could. be removed and special trains from 'hoth Geneva last minute. Down at the Sheepshead race track thousands linéd vantage points, looking skyward. Atwood ex- pressed regret at their disappoint- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ruddach, Bal- [ the next car in front when the dining timore, Mrs. Joseph Gottchell, Captain Robert S. to whom a nogro dolivered the N. H. Jacobs. a Justice of the of Chesterfield county: Eddie ardson and James Thomas, buth nee neare Shep- car left the tracks. He pulled the Philadelphia. | signal for brakes and both engineers ¢ S Hansbury and [respondsd instant Engineer Bow- was selected by = an almost uranimous vote for the e ling this year's crop of tobacco in |groes, who live near the scene of the Hoohester Biought: onyaie: wife, Philadelphia. man of the second engine was leaning < 912 | pooling vear's groes, who oty Tediont puriblian. . Sita Josaph P. Bartiliucei, 727 South Sev- | from his cab window and as he turned Declined to Delay Flight. s e e Niviet, | the two states. crime. AR AP T dreds awaited treatment. and the rail- | enth street, Philadelphia. on the brakes he looked backward ic wanted me to wait until to- | the official G. A. R. headquarters are | thomh URT road staton at Manchyster, a_oider | Mise Lena Richardson, Germantown, |learn the gasse of the trouble. He saw e e sl teling of Uhe.tel ppa 0L B It e m;‘\ru:‘.-o Leaping from ihe Roof of 2| MOROCCO GENERAL HURT FLYING and an ice house | were used . g of e . am from tl my 4] H Rive Semincary Wherier | S teToat r. and Mrs. Robert Todd, 1918 |the rest of the railroad men he hurried | jacal lrrlngex:ynl:n n charge of the| The encampment voted to make the Tn'vesterday, John Barker was picked | Kaid Belton, Exile in Chicago, Frase “and_promised to have a’big crowd: there. delay my fiight.” Sons of Veterans the official escort to Ninéteenth street, Philadelphia. the civil war on all Thomas Orr and wrh Frank Finner and wi 1612 North Sixteénth street, Philndelpl'ua.. injuries slight. Mrs. George B. Taylor, 512 Plymouth avenue, Buffalo, condition critical. Mrs. Lottie Smith, 2443 Burke street, Philadelphia, slightly injured. Mrs. M. M. Nixon and Miss Elsie Nixon, 2626 North street, Philadelphia; no: eritical. Mrs. Thomas Menihem, Fitzhough| street, Philadelphia, will recover. Telegraph Service Cut Off. Owing to the fact that the derailed dining car, in going into the ditch east of the trestle, had brought down sev- eral telegraph poles, with scores of wires, telesraphic service was‘broken and will not restored until tomorrow. Aid had to be summoned by telephone. up without a scratch or bruise from a | hammock in the rear yard into which | he had landed. A Stick of Dynamite Left in the old | Chipman sflver mire in Newbury, Mass., fifteen or twenty years ago, suddenly exploded yesterday, instantly killing two workmen and serfously in- Juring two others. Hurled to the Road with great force when the automobilé which he was driving skidded in the mud and was overturned at East Brookfield, Mass. Edward Myers, colored, of Cumberland, Md., was killed yesterday. Judge Harvey M. Trimble of Illinois was unanimously elected commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, when Col. John McElroy of ‘Washington, his opponent, énded a bit- ter contest by withdrawing from the race. to the rescue. Heartrending Scenes. There were many heartranding scenes and a number of miraculous escapes. One woman was all that re- mained alive from a family of four. Two men jumpe through a window end _escapsd with siight cuts. Most of the passengars were bound for points in eastern Penmsylvania. Happened at Worst Place. Two theories for the cause of the wreck have been advanced by rail- road men. It is their opinion that it was causzd by a broken rail or .the spreading of the rails. Had it oc- curred 100 feet either east or west of the trestle the ioss of life would have undoubtedly been far less, for beyond this distance either way the track pass over a level stretch of country Road Blocked Several Hours. The read to the refugees, Wiany Veterans Killed. It was necessary td. chop through the sides and bhottom df the day coach at the bettom and the work of remov- ing the vlct!rn& movied with painful slowness. had' come swiftly to many, 2 large numer of the dead hlvill‘ had their slculls crushed in hen they were thriywn with terrifi€ \aloflty against the ¢ar seats and pro- The maortality was high smong the ‘older pa: . -most of whom were battle-scarred veterans of the civil war, and thleir wives. 23 Bodiss in Mergue. ‘The dead remove(l from the wreck- e and brought ta the, morgue of J, Steddard at Shectsville, near here, at nine e'clock tonight, numbered 23. Two other persons 'died i Rochester from their injuries. Several other per- sons with prebably mortal injuri are lying in the -ho:pitals “at Roches. ter, Geneva and Clifton Springs. The number of :il'rlmmly injured Iy esti- mated at sixty. ies Sent te, Shortsville. The following bodies ‘were sent to Shortsville tro&inuchuur in charge of Cornivr zs tures Leg in F-I!ing 125 Feet. Chicago, August 25.—Gen. Kaid Bel- ton, who conquered Morocco and placed Mulai Hafid on the throne in 190%, was the victim of an aeroplane accident yesterday. When Belton was expelled from Mo- rocco, a year or more ago, he came to Chicago and took up the study of avie ation. Last evening he fell from an aeroplane at_the flying field, 117th street and Union avenue, fracturing his right leg, bruising his hand and dislocating his wrist, He was flying at a height of 125 feet when his mo. . tor stopped and he tried to glide t the ground. He lost control of the machine, and, when a few feet of the ground, he cleared himself of the machine and jumped. “JOE” CANNON'S OVERC6AT LOST But I couldn’t | the veterans -of ©The off lected by the Ladies of officers electes Yy e es o Left Nyack at 1.53. the G. A, R. are: National president, Atwood left Nvack at 153 this after- | \ry ~Catherine Ross, Denver:: senor | noon after freeing his machine from a | yice president, Mrs. Jennie Trexler; position where a start would have been | Allentown, Pa.; junfor vice president, difficult and perilous. He whirled in|Mrs Rose E. Houghton, Seattle, Wash.; the usual gpiral ax he left the 8round | treasurer, Mrs. Katherine De Lacey and pointing the ncse of his lflm Roach, Scranton, Pa.; chaplain, Mrs. south, was soon lost in the wist. Camilla E. Ellum, Omhl, Neb.; sec- followed the Hudson at a low amznde retary, Mrs. India Ward, Colorado. the-entire distance, .2 million eyes fol- [ "~ lowing him and a“babel of welcomes springing up to greet him. Wind Takes His Cap. As he sped gracefillly down the Hud- son the whirr of his rapid engine was broke from the Shoe Machinery Investigati « Boston, Aug. 35.—With the close of today’s session the federal grand jury completed its investigation of the United Shoa Machinery company s$o far as the hearing of evidence from witnesses goes. The grand jury was convened Aug. 1 for the purpose of investigating alleged violation of the lost in the din thal. river craft and factories lining the shores. - At Yonkers, as he leaned for- ward to wave back a silent reply. the wind, clipped his cap from his head and wafted it down to the waters, Describes a Complete Circle. Thousands clustered around Grant's tomb and slong Riverside Park shore roared their enthusiasm when Atwood passed. - The aviator -was flying low and not very ,speedily. Ae he av- prcached the recreation pier at Fiftieth stree, whpn,mat r crowd clustered, however. he rose to a height of abput 200 feet. turned machine so that s¥rept in‘y copy plate circle from one alde of the the other, and then nzrtgd Io‘n re: onee more. The spectacle; was a beantiful one and the Page Eight) Coroner Investigates. was blocked for seve: Corener D, A. Eisline of Shortsville took - charge of the wreck and was assisted by Coroners A. W. Armstrong of Canandaigua and George Flint of va. Coroner Armatrong was as- signed particularly to investigate the legal aspect of the disuster and after a preliminary examination of the scene he said: Track Bad, Probably Broken Rail. “It I90ks 0 me as though the track was bad and there was probably a broken rail. It appears as if the first truck of the first car ml(\ms derailed left the rails about feet from the Ex-Speaker Last Wore It in Farewell Call Upon President. Fours and the westbound tr: ln4 over York Central trae Wreck to Be Investigated. Albany, N. Y., Aug. 25.—A thorough invesyigailon into the cause of the Manchester wreck is to be made by the mmissien. When In- reck by telephone to- No report. by “the grand jur: = as o the results of the inguiry wiil ?e made at:this time, the federal au- ufluu announced. it was inepessary to send the By a Practically.Unanimous _Vots the Carmen’s u; of Ties Moines ratified the action=of the executive committee of the wnion in mccepting the terms of the new working contract already agreed to by officials of the street car company. Washington, Au Cannon, ex-speaker representatives, has lost his best over- coat. duy he put in the entire morning in his automobile, trying te find it. Among other places he stopped at the White house and inquired I€ anybody had seen the ceat. He ex- plained that he had it with him om the closing day of congress, when called to say good-bye to the dent, and had not seen it since. been seph (7, the house of Steamship Arrival At Rotterda Aug. 25, from New- York At Libau: Aug. York. At Marseilles: from New York. At: Glasgow: Aug. troAm L\‘ow Ynlrk t v-rpoo < ~ftrom N Ryndam, 21, Bifma, from New 22, Madonna, 24; formed of the day, the comwmission immediately or- dered Arcnibald Buchanan, Jr.. perviser of squipment. and Henry X Rockwell, acciden: inspetter. to go to Tanchesier and report their. findings without delay. They left for Man- chester late today. A Race of People who have mever before beheld a white man nor an Indian has been discovered in the Arc- tic regions of British Columbia hy Vilhjmar Stefansson. leader of the fi erican museum’s scientifi its su. Aug. Caledonia. August 15, m | lwest end of the bridge. We will hold ho-inquest untit-we- mw bodies.” Second Coach Topples Over. - Late tonight, while the wrecking crew was trving to remove part of the wreck, the day coach that stood on end fell into the gully and added more wreckage to the pile at the bottom, under which it is possible a few more bodies may be cincealed. Members of the wrecking crew had narrow escapes and the jar of the big car as it slid along the trestle side before it plunged down frightened many who stood on told that it had n Mr. Cannon looked | c