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TURKS ATTEMPT T0 REGAIN TRIPOLI Force of 3000 Put to Rout by Heavy Artillery and Rifle Fire of Italians HEAVY LOSSES SUSTAINED BY TURKS Cabled Paragraphs- St. Petérsburg, Oct. 10.—The newly appointed Russian ambassador to the United, States, M. Bakhmetieff, and Madame Bakhmetieff left last night for America. L. ull, Ecuador, Oct. 10.—As a a_disagreement with Presi- dent Hstrada, General Plaza has re- signed his office as minister of finance and _has been succeeded by Frederico intriago. / Berlin, Oct. 10.—It was officially stated todav that the first part of the Eranco-German negotiations concern- LS . 2 % ing the status of More Italian Fleet Follows the Retreating Army With Steady frtaied dn' Ui erccnscnt Bl iy s © be “initialed” by both parties as a Shell Fire—Three More Turkish Torpedo Boats Re- |sizn ot acceptance. s . — Ttali oy £ St. Albans, England, Oef. 10.—The ported Sunk—Italian Consul and British Authorities freedom of tie cite was besiowed today i vpon Andrew Carnegier This is the Have Controversy at Malta—Refugees Complain. 51st municipality to recognize_the gift 3 of a lbrary by thus honoring Mr. Car- regie. The American ambassador, Mr. . Reld, and Mrs. Reid were present, and , Oct. 10.—The Tuiks appar- | mid Abad, Alpagut and Antalia, while | the ambassador made a speech. ‘not intend to ahandon Tripoli | returning frem the lonian sea, were wns without further de surprised by an Italian squadron near | Hankow, China, Oct. 10—Twenty- resistapce. For several -days, | Mytilene, Cctober 9. A smart engage- I Clfineie res Slabicneien Bare boon horsemen have been recon- | ment foilowed and three of ‘the tor- |arrested at Wu-Ohang, capital of the ng in the vieinity of the Itaiian | pedo boats wire severely damaged and | province of Hupeh, and four of the outposis. Several times at night they | sank. The fourth escaped by hoisling | number were beheaded in front of the have ieen discoversd by scarchlights la foreign flas. . viceroy's yamen today. The arrests of the warships, and then shells drove | — and executions followed the discovery them back into u: hills. | REFUGEES AT MALTA. of a revolutionary plot in the Russian Attempt to Recapture Town. — & concession here. A\bout one o'clock this morninz a | Italian Destroyer Allowed Only Limit- \ force ord‘mul 3,000 Turkish troops, | ed Supply of Wates 5 P“"g.'";.[—'@t« w.—’nr ‘fl;teen day with fleld gups, was discovered a 'or which it was convoked having ex vancing in two columns, with the evi- Maita, Oct. 10.—The Ttalian destroy- | pired yvesterday, the session of the as- dent intention of recapturing the town. | er Borea, which arrived here yester- | Sembly came to an end. A measure A large body of natives rched with | esccrting the steamer Assyria, | was adopted authorizing the national the iroops and presented a formidaole ving mary Turkish refugees from |executive to construct the Panama and Srtiy. | . left pert this morming. She | David railroad with national funds now Italians Were Prepared. | permitted to take only enough |invested in the United States instead Fhe Italisr commander, however, | Water to carry her to Syracuse. EERaTne totouras Lo & loan, had an intimation that such an at- | Italian Consul Protested. . S gy ply be made and his| The Italian consul raised e BRIDGEPORT ITALIAN mep D ‘PeRaTed. alian guns i 4o tpo actien of the British authorities, ‘wl “<':“ |'::f-v|. nd ,xf- m‘»~] \'\W | contending that as thé Borea was es- GNTTRIAL:FOR MURDER b with a heavy artillery and ifle | corting a amer filled with passen- i to which tiey rep i with equallgers” who were liable to mutiny and Wadew: (Fellp Huw. Huskand Was Killed It was moonlight and the fleet | Seie a® e en e 12 1O PG con- by Former Boarder. turned the searchlights on the con- | Siide.g as boing empioyed for a war- % 559 : tending forces like purpose, and she should therefore | DBridzeport, Oct. 10.—Tlaking testi- Naval Caft Joins In. have free use of a neutral port. PEE el ele of LGl Murtincs . When the cnga t was at Refugees Make Complaint. B B shpatine aua MnE oD Whe e ] the night of July 13, Enrico Caputo, the bat ps and cr The refugces wers allowed to land | began in the criminal side of the su- 1 with their smailor batleries. | and will take the next steamer for | perior court here today. Three wit- ing the shells cover the Mal- | Gonstaatinople, They complained of | nesses were examined, Dr. S. M. Gar- fan front and flank. the il treatment at the hands of the |lick, medical examiner; Dr. D. J. Me- Turks Suffered Heavy Loss. Italians, saying that they had not been | Cartiy, whe performed an autopsy on For wmore than an hour the firing on | supplied with sufficient food or water. | the body of Caputo, and Mrs. Christine shore was " coniinuous, bl about two More Refugees Arrive. Caputo, widow of the slain man. o'elock it slack i gradwally ¥ " 5 he last named told of artino’s. ceased. The Tu: ed, but in | p A b e i‘,‘,‘g‘"f:m,‘,"{;‘,f‘ 250 | having boarded at the Caputo home, &ood order, &ith orted that | parted from Tripoli, arrived here this |and of being told to secure another they suffered he g Many of the refugees will |boardiag place by her husband. When 2 re by Fleet. | returnto Tripoli on steamers which | DI Martino left the Caputo home she \n irks tricd to turn | are now leaving daily. said e IeX; some of his belongings and he flank, but with- | Goods Tied up by War. L e o e Y 1 . BT oods p by Caputo's parber shop, where she was, out suee cillan casualties | st perershurg, Oct. 10.—As a_re- |and asked her to g6 fo her home wita were siight. ¢ Mot pursned the Te- [sult of the Turco-Itallan war, about|him ‘and get his things. Caputo re- treating Turks with a heavs shell fire | ;56 060 tons of goods have accumulat- | fused to allow his wife to go, and later until six o'clock this morning. ed at Taganrog on the north shore of | when she and her husband left the More Torpedo Beats Sunk. | the Sea of Azov and neighboring har- | shop for home, Di Martino, she said, Longon., Oct A despatch fo a |bors. Seventy per cenf. of the fotal | walked up to them, and after a few Londua says i amount is wheat, intendéd for the most | words fired at her husband twice, each the Turkish he , iia- part for Italy. bullet taking effect, As she ran to secure help, the accused also fired four T é times at her, (?illln; herhlhrge times in the back and once in the side. e g et e b e el She also stated that she did not BUILDING'S COLLAPSE | A GUEST OF HONOR.| ;5w Di Martino to speak to in Ital g = - Witness was under cross examination Sevaral men Have Narrow Es- | Peace Monument Unveiled in the Rain | (non' adjournment was thken until capes in Boston Disaster. i at Atlanta, Ga. tomorrow. Gt 10.-A single tmover | Atlanta, Ga. Oct. 10.—The Gate City | yUMAN HAIR GOODS it 4 parially completed six- | Guards of Atlanta went on a mission fdinz on the corner of peace throuzh the north 32 vears ARE UNSANITARY. nd izt Sireet.s gave way ago, visiting Philadelphia, New York, —_— tod and a portion of Boston, Hartford and other cities. To- Woman Tells of Conditions Under ling, tunm dowh on to a |day the crack military organizations Which They Are Manufactured. e. crushed out the life of those cities returned the visit. The and injured another. oceasion was the unveiling of a peace Oct. 10.—Rats, rolls, wigs sewh Adolph, con- | monument erected by the Guards in s ®hich women wear—at wor commemoration of the trip of many of them which' are made in man. Rain prevented ail speechmaking. In York—are manufactured under spite of the weather thousands of | unsanitary conditions, according to the people crowded the line of march. testimony of Miss Leonore O'Reilly at Governor Simeon E. Baldwin of Con- | a meeting today of the commission ap- pe . oo iy necticut, Mayor Revburn of Philadel- | pointed by Governor Dix to investigate Jlooked down | phia and Mrs, Mathew T. Scott, presi- | conditions obtaining in New York fac- en mass of £ hricks and timbers. | dent zeneral of the Daughters of the | tories. iv.ral ot workmen who were American Revolution, were the guests| Samuel Gompers, president of the benenth the broken part heard | Of honor. American Federation of Labor, presid- nd reached the street in | The only Confederate flag displayed |cd over today’s session. Miss O'Reilly s leaps, but (hose in the lit- | during the parade, which was more|said she had just inspected ten fa tie weoden office did not hear the warn- | than two miles in length, was carried| teries where Human hair goods were ing 9nd rwhelmed. by Atlanta veterans, who were escort- | made in ill-smelling rooms, with poor p oy I was the senior mem- ed on the march by the Old Guard of | ventilation, and she found it the o Ler of the firm of Adolph & Mazer, New York. tom among employes to eat which had the contract for the erec- v lunches at the side of the work tables, n of the building, and w - ‘\’1‘ ac- WOULD PROHIBIT WOMEN loos‘? ha vL’[‘l 'nhg_ahom 5 St iv charge the work. J. Mazer, | **Most of the hair comes from China,” the second man Killed. was'a son of | FROM SMOKING IN PUBLIC| ne voung woman. declared, “and is i member of the firm, while A éyed or colores londe or any other e i Charie A. Tracy, was | New York Alderman Calls It “an Af- | color Gesired. . In the same. bullding R aaeatative OF -5 BtWEL olilinig front to Decency.” with one hair factory was a candy and firm on Broad street, which had one | jelly factory, where conditions were of the sub-contracts. + | New York, Oct. 10.—“An affront to | worse than in the hair factory. Boiling e public_decency,” was the way Alder- | receptacles for the candy were not kept man Dowling characterized the pelic: clean, and much of the product was COAL ROAD CASES | of some rn-algurant keepers in allgwlng mixed with old materials in the un- IN SUPREME COURT 1 women to smoke openly in the dining | clean vessels. — prtad T iy room when the alderman today opened WVielation of Sherman Anti-Trust Law | S CAIPeEin EEiat CRIMIS SuoLAE LPOLE SUSPECTEDIOF Alisged. orously atlacked the practice. T be BLOWING UP BUILDING ey . lieve,” he said, “that we ought to have gl et WW“M":;:":‘- e eon by Whe | some sort of law to prohibit it.” He | Woman and Babe Killed by Explosion ®top alleged vislations of the Sherman | introduced & "';’";“““d“,:“‘"‘g‘ hescag at Wheeling. Snti-srust law by ihe principal rail. | Porition counsel to advise the board basirty Foads and coai companies in the Penn- | 2 Lo its power. “To prohibit tobacco | Wheeiing, W. Va., Oct. 10—John Bar- @ylvania anthracite coal region was |FHOKINE Dby females ,nflpuh”c places.” f 4o3h, a Pole, suspected of having blown Stged today by J. C. McReymolds, spe- | Lhtee vears ago an ordinance similar three-story building at Benwood, Slak asistant to the attorney & to the one proposed was passed by the {2 "suburb, today, causing the death of $n a three-hour argument bef pgetbost Al I’b Mayor MéClellan | \irs, William Markanas and her eight unal. He was followed by R = months old babe, is being sought here gxren, counsel for one of the de- - - and in a dozen neighboring cities. The fondents. the Temple lron compasy. |NEGRO BEING HELD FOR SEPibfion, Yo tustaulls 'flimy\;'e-ll by ttornes Gieneral Wickor- ire and within a few minutes the large Frx'-":xn‘»:-d % address the court COATESVILLE ASSAULT | rims building was o mass of ‘flames k= the application of the . 3 The . upper floors were occupied b e e 12 the Thcts I the case, | MeElkaney Girl Will Have. Chance to | many Polish families. but sl of it John G, Johnsqp, the noted Identify Him Today. twenty or more oceupants made their corporition’ lawyer, and othcrs escape with the exception of Mrs. Ma; Qefend the corporations attached. Chester, Pa., Oct. 10.—Thomas | kanas and her child. Hampton, 4 negro, was arrested late| The Black Hand theory, at first gen- S nesr Kennet Square, this county. | erally credited, was sosn dispelled. “ROTTEN EGE MIXTURE the deserintion of the mari | Bartosh had had treuble with s Srocer AT FIFTEEN BAKERIES | Who aitacked the McElhaney girl ves- | who had a store on the sround floor 7.4 terday. Hampton was found in bed in { the building, and had threatened _New York Health Inspectors Make hit mother's home with all his eloth- | vengeance for his allegel wrongs. Numerous Seizure: g o e — New York. Oct. ausual AcLVAY | of Tittle Washington schoolhouse ye TAFT AT B 48 evidenced in the onIoCe O i | Lerd:Y. near where the glrl was attack- < —_— SEMTE IR Saed o in ¢d. The McEihanes girl probably will | His* Mectings Thero the Largest of B9 &8 Yesterday, and the announcement | b€ ProuEht to the Chester county jail Present Trip. gBat fifty-four similar cases were on |, 4 ought safe to take }lnm‘rlnn 10 . - $he docket. Health inspectors today |20 ~NOUS D o tle, Wash,, Oct. 10.—President N raided fifteen bakeries on the P 1aln nd B u‘«m I\‘('l r\.;’lllarpflns at each ene of them se ernoon by, steamer for the uget e A what ther declare-to he rot- | WINSTED TO GUARD pund masy yard At Gremerion, . mixture.” All of the proprie- miles distant, where the presjdent was B aruaad fo opon e ASHINST S TURHOSD: zehoduled &g inspect the mew duck ;. an cliver an address at the warshi b g e by ::r ;:::;’}:;: ::' |';'"‘; °°I’;"’”""9 crews and workmen and then embark 3% o Want New Tri or Beattie. Jts Supply. g:at}nacorga: President Taft's two " B —_ cetings here were the largest h Righmond, (w. Oct. 10 —The work nsted, Conn.. Oct. 10.—At a spe- | nddressed since his vresengl lnu: ng % of preparinz lhe petition asking the ) meeting of the warden and bur- |gan, = Tha street crowds were very Virginia suoreme ~ourt of appeals for es of the borough tonight. it was | jar; Wien the president reached the & new tral for Henry Clay Heattie, | Unanimously voted to purchase or ac- | city hall scvare he found thonsands. Jr., recently . icted of h quire b; nation proceedings all ed to listen to him. He took for 30 @ered his wife, began todsy S0 to | land st g the bodies of wate *t the 'arbitration: treaties. gl- feady for submission 1w the court | vhich comprise the \\;.msr‘mx from Vo kg 3 com r S, Beat- cwhich the Jocal water supply is se. S B v otk ¢ xprotiged dne opinion | cu . This ction was taken hecanze | BOOKER WASHINGTON CASE L AR hat chanecs for o new trisl are by no | of the recent typhoid fever epidemic 5 R s oo oo * [T Porcimgton. on the waterthed ai | Set for Trial sin New York General Black Hand Leader Convicted. Y ork, 10.— Gl known as “The I of the Riack gullty today of ded upon his pers 8 re- for sentence. The jury wis thau five mivutes. The Tta.an s 5 A % Hand here, w hoinb and reputed | ve %fl“u o 3 TR | Ceystil lake the rand leanip fimade. = are farm buildings dvelling honse. ~ A therough of ‘the watershed will - be N | Lieutenant Foulois Comfortable. | Wasuington, Oct. 10.—Lieutenant j Foulois, the ammy aviater, stood the operition fob appendicitis well, ac- ttendi fiq./r ng Turfg 5 ‘;Ijv-} St New York, Oct. 10—Harry Ulrich, nho was arrested several months ago on a chargés of assaulting Booker T. Washington, wili be tried in general sessions court here next Monday. The me for the trial was fixed today. An essistant cistrict attorney apnlied fo the court today for several subpoenas in egnnection with the case. Ulrich s alib: ons Monday. iberty in 9500 bail —NORWICH, T McNamaras - Gain Weight BOTH . HEAVIER THAN WHEN T0 SEEK CHANGE OF JUDGE This to Be First Move of Defense at Opening of Trial Today—Not Known Which Brother Will Be Tried First. Los Angeles, Cal, Oct. 10.—Official uncertainty surrounded fonight every point of interest in the trial of the Mc- Namara brothers, except the fact that it will begin tomorrow. » May Both Be Tried Together. ‘Whether JWin J. McNamara, secre- tary of the Intyrnational Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, will then be placed on trial for murder in connection with the Lps Angeles “Times explosion of Oct. 1, 1910, which | gost 21 lives, or Dis brother, Jumes B. McNamara, will face trial on identical indictments, was not made known offi- cially today, because District Attorney M. D- Fredericks said the defense still had the right to demand that both stand trial together. James Likely to Be Tried First, Until the expressed preference for separate trials is made a certainty, which probably will not be before court opens at 10 a. m., the prosecution will not announce which man they will try first. The popular belief and_that of the defense is that James B. Me- Namara will be selected. Will Ask for.Change of Judges. Attorney Clarence Darrow, chief counsel for the defense, said tonight no effort to delay the beginning of the case will be made. “We shall ask for a change of judges,” said Mr. Darrow. “We ex- Dect it will be denied and the trial will 8o ahead. McNamaras Are Ready. The McNamara brothers, chatting in the corridor of the jail, apparently ex- pected no delay. “We've got to Dbe Teady,” said John B, McNamara. “It does not make any difference to us which of us is tried first. Weighed and Photographed. Both men at the request of news- papermen were weighed = and photo- graphed today, and George Gallagher, the dallers Ghecked ihelr ' present Weights against those recorded when they entered April 26 the jail which they have mot left since. “James B. McNamara, who then weighed 137 poun®s, now weighs 142, and his brother John has ‘gone up from 206 to 217 pounds. John B. did the talking for both, asking many questions on his own account. Interested Public Sentiment. “What is the sentiment about the case?” was his_first, specifying differ- ent localities. ~ Most of his other ques- ‘ons were about the machinery for gathering and distributing news of the "m& in which he seemed keenly inter- ested. TWO SUGAR MAGNATES 5 FACE IMPRISONMENT Judgment of Lower Court Affirmed by Court of Appeals. New York, Oct. 10—Unless they are sranted peminission to carry their case to fhe United States supreme court, Charles R. Heike, secretary of the Am- erican Sugar Refining company, and Ernest W, Gerbracht, former superin- tendent of the Williamsburg sugar re- finery, must within two days begin the terms of imprisonment to which they were sentenced in September, 1910, aft- er being convicted of conspiracy to de- fraud the government by abetting the underweighing of importations of su- gar. Heike and Gerbracht have enjoved liberty for more than a year on a stay of sentence pending an appeal to the TUnited_States court of appeals, and today Judge Lacmobe handed down a decision affirming the judgment of the lower court, and unless a writ of Te- view in the sipreme court is made and granted, Heike must then begin his sentence of eight months in the peni- tentionary. on Blackwell's island and to pay a fine of $5,000, and Gerbracht a sentence of two vears in the federal prison at Atlanta and to pay a fine of $500. . Those two men will be the last of ten employes and officials of the Amer- ican Sugar Refining company to pay the penalty for frauds committed in what wsa known as “the case of the seVenteen holes,” in which government scales ingeniously tampered with play- ed the practical part in defrauding the government of millions of dollars’ worth of sugar dutie: RODGERS ECLIPSES ATWOOD'S RECORD Arrives ‘at Marshall, Mo., Completing 1,398 Miles in Air. Marshall, Mo, Oct. 10—Exceeding the world's record for a cross country aeroplane flight by 133 miles and speeding at times at the rate of sev- enty miles an hour, C. P. Rodgers land- ed here at 31 o'clock this afternoon on nis air voyage from New York to n_Francisco. The former world's record, 1,265 miles, was made by Har- Atwood in a recent flight from St. Louis to New York. Rodgers has flown 1,98 miles, according to ra road mileage. “It was a bully day for a flight,” said Rodgers, as he stepped from his plane. “If T had started earlier this morning 1 certainly would have tried to_reach Kansas City tonight.” Rodsers will start for Kunsas City, iled distant, tomorrow morning. start made at Springfield, 1IL, o'clock this morning, Rodgers miles today. He made iwo cbo- and Thompson, Mo., Vo for gasoline. OBITUARY. Miss Georgina Ball-Hughes. Boston, Oct. 10.—Miss Georgina BaH- Fughes, daughter of the late Robert Ball-Hughes, the artist and sculptor, died today in Dorchester, 83. The old Lomestead, where Miss Ball-Hughes ed ever since she was 10 years more than 200 vears old. Flere entertained the noted men aud women in the world of art and lettess of her father's time, ificluding Charfes Dicksns. Miss Bali-Fughes inherited the ariistic sense in a marked degree. She stndied in Europe and did much original work. Her copies of famous paintings received commendation from critics. ~ She had lived much of her time in London and was a member of the Catholic Apostolic church/ sect, founded by Bdward Irving, in that vi’ cinity. P slts b:“r; Au\'n‘le inu‘Orgnnizins guerrilia Against e vern- ment troops "-;gl?flm-l o | caused a serious w. Representative - Had Hand Out INTIMATED HE WANTED MONEY’ FOR HIS VOTE. ~ ' A SENATOR OFFERED $2500 < Testimony of Former Secretary to ex- - Senator Hopkins at Lorimer Inves- tigation—Stephenson Developments. Chicago, Oct. 10.—John M. Pfeffers of Aurora, former secretary to former United States Senator Albert J. Hop- kins, gave a new furn to testimony in the Lorimer investigation before the senate committee late today when he named four men whom he said he sus- pected of voting fmproperly or cor- ruptly for Senator Lorimer. Three Were Hopkins’ Followers. According to_Pfeffers, the men were former State Senators B. F. Downing and William Fieldstack and former Representatives Carl _S. Byrgett and Johnson Lawrence. Pfeffers testified that all but Fieldstack were followers of Mr. Hopkins, Several Weak Ones in Camp. “For the last month of that 1909 deadlock,” said Pefeffers, “the whole idea of the Hopkins camp was to Keep our men from being bought. I sus- pected several of the weak sisters in our camp. They were men I thought could be improperly influenced.” Pfeffers began by naming former Sen- ator Downing. _Drank and Easily Influenced. “Did you have any suspecion at that tigne that Mr. Downing voted corrupt 1¥2” asked Attorney Hane: “Yes, I did,” replied the witness. “He was the sort of man that the Lorimer forces were getting right along. He was drinking and was easily influ- enced.” Fieldstack Had His Hand Out. Asked why he suspected Fieldstack, the witness replied: “I thought Fieldstack had his hand out all the time. I met him in Chi- cago just before the opening of the legislative session and I asked him if he would vote for Mr. Hopkins for senator. To thfs he answered: ‘It «cost me just $985 to get elected, and Ive got fo get that money back some way. I'm not for Mr. Hopkins, or anvbody like him. I'm out working for myseif. " Pfeffers said, however, that he had no proof of corruption against any of these’ men. McCormick Offered $2,500 to Change Vote. Pfeffers in his testimony related a conversation with former State Senma- tor George' M. McCormick, which he said_took place in Springfield just previous to the election of Lorimer. “Senator McCormick told me he had been offered $2,500 to change his vote from Mr. HopKins to Mr. Lorimer,” tes- tified Pfeffers. This was the same story which Pfeffers told the Helm committee at Springfield. Six More Witnesses Called. Although but three of the list of eight witnesses summoned before the committee today were examined, six more were called to appear tomorrow. STEPHENSON CASE. Man Who Brought Charges Fails to Make Good. Milwaukee, Wis, Oct. 10—The charges that United States Senator Tsaac Stephenson of Wisconsin secured his election through bribery and that he spent $107,793 corruptly to influ- ence voters were today put by the TUnited States senate investigating committee squarely up to John J. Blaine, a state senator, who brought the charges. As a result Blaine ad- mitted he had no facts or information personally known to him to be true upon which to substantiate his charges. He admitted that the charges were based largely on newspaper editorials, political speeches and hearsay. Believgd He Was Doing Public Duty. ‘And_upon such information you were willing to malke allegations which might jeopardize a United States sen- ator, and which if proven might send him to the penitentiary—is that true?” asked Senator W. B. Heyburn, the chairman. Blaine replied that he thought he was performing a public duty by hav- ing an investigation of what he said was current report. Possessed No Facts. “Do you think that a public duty to bring charges against a United States senator without facts to substantiate them?” asked Chairman Heyburn. “I thought s0,” replied the witness. “So when the ipvestigation is begun you have no facts to give to this com- mittee which could be admitted in a court of law as proper and pertinent to challenge the validity either of Sen- ator Stephenson’s nomination or of his election “None of my own knowledge. Purport of Blaine’s Charges. Blaine’s charges, purporting to give 16 specific instances wherein the law had been violated, in brief were that prior to his nomination at the prima- ries in 1908 Senator Stephenson coi ruptly spent $107,793 to secure hi election. The first tl pertained to the giving by Stephenson to E. A. Edmonds, paign manager, “a sum in ex £106.000 and approximating $250.000." It was developed that $107,793 was the correct amount. ree of the charges Senator FIVE ACQUITTALS IN NEGRO-BURNING CASE. Another of the Alleged Lynchers Found Not Guilty by Jury. ‘Westchester, Pa., Oct. 10.—Efforts of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to secure a conviction in connection with the burning to death of Zack Walker, the negro, at Coatesville, failed asain today when a jury acquitted Oscar Lampey, who was charged with being a_member of the mob ihat lynched ‘Walker. Lampey is the fifth defendant to be freed of a murder charge in con- nection with the lynching. i Steamship Arrivals. At Naples: Oct. 8, Hamburg, from New York. At Rotterdam: Oct. 8, Kursk, from New Yor At Liverpool:- Oct. 9, Mauretania, from New York At + Oct. 6, Oceania, from New York, At Bremen: Oct. 10, Kaiser Willielm, from New' York. At Antwerp from New York. At London: from New Yorl A Band of Zapatists Robbed # pas- senser train in Fuebia, Mexico, and Oct.. Oct. 10, 10, Vaderland, Minneapolis, Condensed Telegrams The Rev. Thomas J. McCluskey was formally installed yesterday as presi- dent of Fordham university. The Will of General Samuel C. Law- rence, the first mayor of Medford, Mass., shows an estate valued at $2,-\ 600,000, The st Vesseis from Cuba’s new navy were launched at the Cramp shipyard at . Philadelphia yesterday afternoon, A British Barkentine was reported at Boston to have been lost during a se- vere gale on the Georgia bank a weeck ago last Saturda: Judge Geroge B. Adams of the Unit- ed States district court at New York died at midnight “Monday at Hague, Lake George, N.. Y. Colonel Charles H. Lanchheimer of the Marine corps has been ordered to return from the Philippines and pro- ceed to San Francisco. Des™ Moines City Railway employ vesterday were ordered to g0 on strike at 1.30 o’clock this morning by the ex- ecutive committee of the union. Edward W. Wooll master of Jersey City Assistant post- v, N. J. was re- elected president of the National As- soclation of Assistant Postmasters: Richard Ferris, Ricardo Magon, Gen- eral Rh: Pryce, Captain J. R. Hasby and several others indicted for viola- :i?n‘ of the neutrality laws must stand rial. The Subcommittee of the National monetary commission will give public hearings on proposed banking and cure rency legislation in New York, Oct. 16 and 17. Announcement Was Made in New York and the Southern Iron and Steel company is to be reorganized and con- solidated with the Alabama Coal and Iron company. / Two Hundred Non-Union machinists from eastern citles arrived at the Burnside shops of the Illinois Central Railroad company vesterday, and gvere assigned to work. & When Charles Tatrinos asked Skalavores of Boston to run awav with him yesterday, that young woman drew a revolver and seriously wounded her would-be lover. A Discrepancy of Over $3,288,271 be- tween the material on. hand and that called for by the books of the Wash- ington navy yard was shown by the inventory of that yard, Attorney General James M. Swift of Massachusetts has been obliged to can- cel all engagements and hasten to his home in Fall River, where Mrs. Swift is to undergo a severe surgical op- eration. Under Instructions from the secreta- ry of the interior, the commissioner of the general land office released from withdrawal 560,765 acresof land in California and about 730,000 acres in Nevada. The Body of Patrolman William F. Frost, Boston, who disappeared from his home in Brighton on the night of Oct. 2, was_found floating in _the Charles river, opposite the Cambridge boathouse, yesterday. Anticipating a Reduction of the tar- iff by the democrats in congress, the textile manufacturers of Rhode Island have formed a tentative organization to conduct a campaign against the lowering of the tariff. Richard L. Freeman, the Boston broker of unlisted securities, who dis- appeared last August, is wanted on a specific charge of stealing bonds and securities valued at $10,500 helonging to Donald Cameron of LoweH. At Least One Fact Has Developed beyond controversy in connection with the excavation going on inside the cofferdam enclosing the wreck of the Maine in Havana harbor. That is the ship was not blown up by her boilers. Brigadier General Ralph W. Howe, U. S. A, stationed at St. Paul, Minn., and Miss Cora McK. Harbold, daugh- ter of Mrs, Mary Harbold of Harris- burg, Pa,, were married yesterday aft- ernoon by the Rev. Dr. Long of Dills- burg, Pa. The Divorce Granted Last Friday to Zoovarney Webster from Dr. Harry Elgin Webster, who is charged w the murder of his second wife, Bessie Kent Webster at Dixon, 1L, is held il- legal by Judge Franklin Platt of Iowa. The 40 Foot Sped Boat Wids, built at a cost of $4,500 and purchased six weeks ago by William Keith of Bar Harbor, was burned to the water's edge and sunk in the harbor vesterday by a fire originating from an explo- sion of gasolene. Seven Employes of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, isting of engineers and firemen, were arrested at Boston vesterds a charge of padding their pa Most of the men were employed on the Taunton division. An Attack on Freight Rates on grai rom Omaha, Neb.; Council Bluffs, To wa, and Kansas City, Mo., to points in northern and central ~Wisconsin was made before the interstate commer commission by the Wisconsin® St Millers’ assoclation. The Legal Domiciie of iMrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy, the founder of the Christian Seience denonfination, was the time of her death in Concord, H.,"according to the ruling of As- sociate Justice James M. Morton of the Massachuseits supreme judicial court. In the Presence of a Large launch- ing party from Boston, her home port, and christened with ~champagne by "Miss Dorothy Lewis, daushter of the ptain, the three masted schooner HBdward R. Smith was launched yes- terday at Phippsburg, Me, The schoon- er cost $34,000. Crazed by Jealousy over his irl wife, from whom he had Deen separat- ed, and her threts to get a divorce, Augustus H. Dennis, 22 vears old, a Baltimore baker's helper, ‘went to the home of her parents, fired a bullet in- to his wife's breast and then shot him.- self through the head. Extensive made Preparations lave been the' observing on Saturday of this week of the 125th -y of the founding of Iipiscopal church, Woodbur. Exercises will commence S and Stnday morning Bist 2rewster will offieiate, for ¥ The Police of Scituate, Mass., and the - surrounding towns and villages are searching for two ltalians who chloroformed Miss ‘Mamie Potter, 17 years old, in the store.of her grand- {ather, Amasa Potter, at North Scitu- ate. and after robbing (he till of tlomnpgmmggzqrean( | L N R s 1 | T Trooper at Fort ANOTHER GI [ Burlington, Vt, Oct. 10.—After kill- ipg two persons and fatally wounding a third dering a frenzied flight from Fort BEthan Allen today, Matthew Car- iisle, a trooper of the Tenth cavalry (colored), U. 8. A was cavtured by a detachment of troopers whom he held at bay for half an hour. Carlisle’s vie- tims ‘are all colored people. Trooper and Girl Killed. The dead are Andrew Fox, private, of Troop D, Tenth cavalry, and Miss Sarah Washington, aged 19 years. Another Girl May Not Survive. It was believed tonight that Miss Beatriee Stuart, aged 18, who was shot in the chest by Carlisle, could not sur- vive her wounds. With Carlisle, wio ceived a shot in the leg from the troopers 'who captured him, she was taken to the post hospital at Fort Ethan Allen for treatment. Had Grudge Against Fox. Trooper Fox, who is understood to have caused Carlisle’s arrest early to- day for not reporting for morning fa- tigue duty, was apparently the object of the attack But to messmates this ricon it was recalled tonight that Ca e said: “I guess this arrest means T'm through (with the army). I might well do something worth while, ile I'm about it Blew Off Back of Fox's Head. As he was under arrest “ih quarters Carlisle was allowed.the usual custody of his army rifie and ammunition, and when he strolled out shortly after 4 o'clock this aftern: carrying his rifle and with mmunition belt fastened about him, he attracted no attention. But he immediately headed for Private Fox and, firing at close range, blew off the back of his head with & single shot. THREE SLAIN BY bR Ethan Allen Kills Co o and Young Woman RL AT POINT OF DEATH Blew Off Back of Head of Soldier Who Had Caused'His Arrest for Breach of Military Regulations—Then Visits 2 House Killing an Invalid and Shooting An= other Inmate—Captured After Being Wounded.. CAVALF ; Held Off Soldiers With Rifle. A group of soldiers near by up at the sound of the shot, but Leld back by Carlisle, who, withopt a Wora, polnted the losaed sine at dhars and ran. He fired once when somse made a motion as If to give chase. After turning a corner he encounterad. 2 smaller group, but was past them before they could intercept him. Once more he fired and fled. led Invalid in Bed. Leaving the Fort Ethan Allen res- ervation, Carlisle took to the country. 10ad which leads to Burlington, down which he ran for half a mile to & building much frequented by the negro. troopers, occupied on the first floor by a restaurant and above used as a tem- ement. Rushing past people on the ground floor, he Tan upstairs and into a room in which Miss Sarah Washing- ton was lying in bed, il. She was found dead later, shot through the right chest, the left foot and the head.’ Shot Stuart Girl in House. He ran through this room into an- other in which several women were. All méde their escape safely except Beatrice Stuart, whom the trooper shot in the chest. Believing her dead, ap- parently, he left her. Though wotnded s severely that the doctors sald to- night death was a matter of only a short time, the younz woman_ dragged herself downstairs and into the near= by woods, where the others had sought refuge. Surrendered After Being Wounded. Meanwhile the guard had been called out at Fort Ethan Allen and after & time surrounded the house where Car- lisle was in hiding. He held them off for some time by firing occasional shots. from a window, but when a bullet from a trooper's rifle entered his leg he surrendered. ARMY MAN WEDS AT 1 A. M. ~ AND KILLS SELF BEFORE 7 Suicids Follows Elcpement With 17 Year Old Girl San Antonio, Texas, Oct. 10.—Second Lieut. John Lynch, Third cavairy, . who was married at one o'clock vésterday morning in Fort Sam Houston after routing an army chap- lain from hed, killed himsell in his quarters while his messmates were at breakfa He shot himself tiice, first near the heart and again through the brain. _The young woman he married was Gladys Caruthers, the 17_vear ald daughter of Mrs. Estelle Caruthers, who lives at a fashionable hotel and is knowa in army circles. » The officer and the voung girl-had Dbeen acquainied only a week and were apparently sreatld infatuated. To his brother officers, however, the wedding was as great o surprise as the suicide because tioned his at- tachment to a young woman in Lds Angeles, where his father, W. C. Lynch, ‘and three brothers live. Lynch was 26 vears old, and was commissioned from the ranks a year ago. He was in debt to the extent of $1,200 chiefly for th= outlay of cloth- ing asd horses required by an officer in_the mounted service. Officers say this is not enough to account for the suicide. Tea days «ze he was courtmartialed for drinking, and while the order has not been meGe public the impression in the post is that he would have been meroly reprimanded. Mrs. Caruthers says her daughter came to her room late. last night and told her that she and Lynch had tried to elope, but that the county clerk would not issme a marriage license. Lynch, who had waited in the hotel parlor for them, pressed Mrs. Caru- thers for her consent. They went to the home of the county clerk, got the license, and then, failing to find a min- ister, motored to the army post. Chaplain Pervy of the Third field ar- tillery iS the only chaplain in the post at present. and they got him out of bed. He was reluctant to perform the cerémony, but he was finally satisfied by, the statements of the three and rried the couple. Tt was then 1 o'clock. They returned hotel, where Lynch chatted un- rly 3 olclock. e left, saying he his quarters. welock officers heard the in Lynch’'s room. He was broke open the door. would go ta Abont EGRO LYNCHED FOR THE USUAL CRIME South Carolina Citizens String up As- sailant of Young Girl. Greenville, S. Oct. 10.—Willis Jackson, a nesro, Who criminally as- saulied an’ eleven vear old girl at Honca Path, this morning, was taken from the Greenville sheriff by a posse near here this evening, and a tele- phone message which reached here at midnight from Honea Path says that Jackson was hanged to a telephone pole there shortly after 11 o'clock and his body riddled with bullets. ~— Auto Runs Down Policeman. Waterbury, Conn,; Oct. 10.—Super- numerary Policeman William O’Day was run_down by an automobile own- ed by George P. Gabriel of Bridge- port_shortly before 9 o'clock tonight, on South Main street. Mr. O'Day was attempting to stop the auto, to pre- vent it from running down two wom- |'en_who were about to board a trolley car. He received a fracture of the left legand a ket scalp wound, bu will re- cover. Ne arrests have yet been made, Waterbury Woman Assaulted. Waterbury, Conn,, Oct. 10.—Mrs. Henry Gaylord, 40 vears old, was at- tacked by ihree men in a lonely part of Westwood avenue, near her home, at 8§ o'clotk fonight and assault at- lemptighe Her cries brought her son (o her Mistance and the men fled. The police were notified but have vet caught Yhe as: the mass hotel, on what h: vas o &1 b yas ilered = of debris at the Goudyear beert Main s MRS. VON CLAUSSEN'S SANITY QUESTIONED, Woman Who Sued Roosevelt to Be Placed Under Observation. New York, Oct. 10.—Mrs. Ida Von Claussen, who once started suit for & million dollars damage against Theo- dere Roosevelt and others because of an alleged conspiracy. to keep her from being presented at the roval court of Sweden, and who has gained notorlety in a variety of other ways, was sent ta the psychopathic ward of Bellevue hos- pital today for a five days’ observation # ag to her sanity. There was a scene in Tombs court when Magistrate Herbert announced his_decision. Mrs. Von Claussen ap- pedred in the supreme court ygsterday In her action for divorcs from br. Wils liam F. Honan. Justice Greenbaum of the supreme court received a_telegram Sunday, dated Chicago, in which Mrs, Von Claussen said: “Justice and liberty is all T ask. If foul play marks your decision, God help you.” " Justice =Greenbaum _believea that the woman's telegram indicated an unsound mind and he sent Mrs. Von (Claussen to the Tombs court for examination as to her sanity. “What are you doing?” she exelaim- ed, as the magistrate announced his decision today. “You are taking away my reputation. If you commit me T will communicate with the German em- peror. You will find you are handling fire. T have lived in Germany for four Years and I have applied for citizen- ship.” GOVERNOR BALDWIN ON THE NOMINEES IN 1912 Thinks Taft Is Réspected, but Not a Practical Statesman. e Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 10.—The Atlanta Constitutfon features a political inter- view with Governor Baldwin. He said: “I think the democrats will carry the country next vear.” “Asked of his opinion of the probable chances of Woodrow Wilson and Gov- ernor Harmon, he replied: “It is too far ahead to choose a man with any certainty as the stronzest candidate to put before the people. The demo- cratic party is rich in good men in every quarter of the country, and im every part of the country the people have vecome very tired of republican profession as compared with republi- can_practice I do not think the re- publicans will be apt_to nominate Mr. Roosevelt again. He has los zround immensely in the east, am largely in the west, since he went out of office. “At the present moment Taft has the best chence to be nominated, but, one cannot tell what will happen_be. tween now and nex: summer. I thin Taft is a strong man, and is every where respected. In practical statess manship I do not think he is rated quite so highly i Woman Sufirage Baaten. San Francisco, Oct. 10.—With res turns from little more than one-tenth of the state at hand, the indications at nine o’clock tonight were that Cali fornia today had refused to grant equal suffrage to women, but, by an emphat- ic_vole, had made the iritiative and referendum and _the recall, the latter including the judiciary, part of its or= ganic law. Leon Waives Examination: New York, Oct. 10.—Albert Leon, wha is wanted by the federal authorities in Chicago on a charge of circulating spu~ rious $10 bank motes, waived examina- tion when erraigned today and can. sented to return to Chicago for trial He was placed under $16,000 ball, Crooked Paymaster’s Clerk. ‘Washington, Oct. 10.—The navy. @e= partment._has Dbeen notified by Rear Admival Thomas, commandant of the Pacific_flect, of an alleged shortage of about $2,000 In the accounts of Charles A. Gibbons, paymasters clerk on the battleship Californ! MacDonald Purchases a Farm. Noifolif, Oct. 10.—State Highway Commissioner James H.",Mnnonud b has purchased a farm of about 190\ acres in ares in the outskirts of th town and expects to_mak in provements on it andsto et