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Which Shall Rule, America or England?
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SAR T S e _
This is the Panama Canal situation. Uncle
Sam dug it, John Bull proposes to boss it.
And servile, so-called Americans are cager
KEITH DROPS DEAD.
PALM BEACH, FLA., March 27.—The
body of Benjamin F. Keith, the noted
theatrical owner, who dropped dead at
midnight at the Breakers Hotel, was
taken back to Boston to-day by his son,
Paul Keith., The funeral will be held
in Boston
A death certificate was issued to-day
showing that Mr. Keith, who was 68
fi-ars old, died of valvular heart trou
e,
Mrs. lfellh. who became the bride of
the millionaire theatrical magnate last
October, was in a condition bordering
on hysteria. Her husband had been in
poor health for some time.
COUNTRY LONG ON CROPS.
WASHINGTON, March 37.—Los An
geles County, California, took the first
rank as regards value of crops of all
the 2,950 counties of the United States,
according to the final report on the
1910 census of agriculture Lancaster
County, PPennsylvania, ranked second?
Mclean County, Illinois, third; Whit
man County, Washington, fourth; Liv
ingston County, lllinois, fifth; lroquois
County, Hlinois, sixth; Las Salle County,
Ilinois, seventh; and Aroostook County,
Maine, eighth.
The valuation (at the farm) of the
crops raised in Los Angeles County, Cal
itornia, according to the census, was
$14,720,800.
LEAPS TO HIS DEATH,
NEW YORK, March 27.-—Robert
M. Friedman, a civil engineer, and
a graduate of the University of Ber
lin, ended his life to-day by jumping
from the circular stairway at the
twenty-fourth floor of the new Mu
nicipal Building. His body fell down
the well to the eleventh floor, where
his leg caught in the railing. That
checked his fall, but he was dgnd
when a doctor arrived.
In a letter to his wife he said in
ability to get work was responsible
for his suicide.
AGED COUPLE BURNED.
ARGOS, IND, March 27-—Mrs. An
der Yoast, 70, was probably fatally
burned and her husband, aged 72,
seriously burned to-day when they
rushed into a barn on their premises
to save a horse.
Mrs. Yoast was overcome by the
smoke and flames and would have
burned to death but for the arrival
of her husband.
THE GEORGIAN'S NEWS BRIEFS.
FLOOD IN NEW YORK STATE.
BINGHAMTON, March 238.—Bing
hamton to-day faced the worst flood
since 1865. With $500,000 damage,
two lives lost and the Susquehanna
and the Chenango Rivers rising at a
rate of two inches an hour, gangs of
men were building dikes to prevent
the flooding of the gas, electric light
and water plants of the city to-day.
Hundreds of families have moved to
the second floors of their homes.
Many manufacturing plants were
forced to close. The fire department
was pressed into service to pump
water from the basements of the big
department stores.
PREACHER UNFROCKED.
NEW YORK, March 28.—The Rev.
Willis 8. Macßorie, who was charged
by the select committees of his
churches at Springdale and Mount
Horeb, N. J., with immoral conduct,
has been unfrocked in the ecclesias
tical court of the Methodist Episcopal
Churen Conference in Newark, N. J.
The specific allegation on which the
court ruled was untruthfulness in
connection with statements made to
the investigating committee which
drew the complaint, acting on the
statement of a girl member of the
Springdale church
KILLED GIRL TEACHER.
HERKIMER, N. Y, March 28.—Eu
gene Giannini, 17, an Italian, who was
arrested early to-day as a suspect in
connection with the murder of Miss
L.ydia Beecher, the pretty teacher of
the Poland High School who had ex
pelled him from the school, confessed
this evening that he Kkilled the girl
and told the police where he had hid
den the knife and wrench with which
the crime was committed,
BLACKMAILER CONVICTED.
TARANTO, March 28.—After long
emotional speeches by Attorneys Par
abita and Spartira, respective counseé}
for Cicala and Carucei, who were
charged with blackmailing the Amer
ican singer Dorothy Mac Vane, the
former was convicted to-day and sen
tenced to eighteen months’ imprison
ment. He fainted when the verdict
was announced, Carucci was acquit
ted.
to oblige England and make English law rule in
this country.
Will the people who paid the bill and who
own the (fanal permit English rule?
SAVED BY A CHARM.
PARIS, March 28.-—Mrs. Jackson
Gouraud, of New York, returned to
Paris this week after her search for
the “quintessence of happiness™ in a
North African desert. She found per
fect cantent there, but at the same
time ghe came perilously near losing
her life When she threaded her way
across the sandy wastes it was also
with the object of persuading some
chiefs of the Dervish tribes to come
to Paris to figure in her great $5,000
prize fete, but when she was several
days beyond the reach of civilization
her native convoy mutinied.
Mrs. Gouraud next fell into the
hands of a small band of which the
chief was a powerful Dervish named
Sango Tomo, and was held a prison
er three days. She attributes her
eventual liberation to a charm repre
seting Buddha which was stolen from
a Hindu temple in the Indian hills
many years ago. 7This charm she has
worn around her neck since she was a
girl. On the fourth day Sango Tomo
espled the charm, and immediately
salaamed profoundly,
ARGENTINE AT FAIR.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 27.—The
Argentine Republic recently made an
appropriation of $1.300,000 (gold) for
an exhibit at the Panama-Pacific Ex
position.
Prince Sealea, of the Italian Min
istry, has advised officials of the ex
position that Italy will expend $400,-
000 on an elaborate and comprehen
sive national exhibit.
OLD PLEA GETS BY.
CHICAGO, March 27.—-“ My car
can’'t go 25 miles an hour” said J.
W. Herman, who was arrested for
speeding in his auto.
“1 hear that every day,” said Judge
Bowles, “but I'm discharging you this
time.”
PRISONERS GIVE SHOW.
AUBURN, N. Y, March 27—A
minstrel show with vaudeville
features in which all the performers
were prisoners was given at the State
Prison.
Relatiyes and friends of the prison
keepers formed the audience,
FEARED HE WOULD KILL.
PARIS, March 25.—"1 feared that
my husband would kill Gaston Cal
mette, I_didn’'t want him to have
blood on his head, because I was re
sponsible for the condition. So I de
cided to take the law into my own
hands.”
This remarkable statement wa9
made here to-day before the magis
trate by Madame Caillaux, who killed
Calmette, editor of the French news
paper that had been attacking Mme.
Caillaux’s husband editorially.
“l discussed the matter with my
husband on the morning of the trag
edy,” she declared. “My husband,
angered by Calmette’s attacks, de
clared .he would smash C(almette's
face, and I feared that he would go
even farther in his anger. 1 didn't
want him to be responsible for any
harm that might come to (almette.
So I resolved to seek out Calmette
before my husband could reach him.”
WON'T COLLECT BIG TAX.
CLEVELAND, March 25.—Ar
rangements to collect $12,000,000 tax
es from John D. Reckefeller have
been postponed. Kast Cleveland res
idents have been advised to prepare
for a rate based on the assumption
that Rockefeller will pay the usual
$51.60 into the suburban treasury,
Word has come from Columbus
that the Tax Commission did not
think Rockefeller would be in default
if he refused further to pay the $12,-
000,000 taxes demanded on his prop
erty here. This is considered as clos
.ng the case,
PRINCE IS JILTED.
PARIS, March 25.—A Bucharest
dispatch to The Echo to-day says the
Princess Elizabeth of Roumania has
jilted Prince George of Greece, to
whom she was betrothed shortly aflcee
the Balkan war,
The proposed alliance of the two
families was for political purposes,
WAR-TIME NURSE DEAD,
MOBILE, March 28-—-Madam Ro
sina L'Etonde, aoted Confederate war
nurse, once a prominent woman of
Paris, France, who was rescued half
dead on a floating door in the Gal
veston flood after losing a fortune,
died here to-day, aged 82 years,