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Three Men Killed and Eleven
Wounded by Strikers.
Over One Hundred and Fifty Shots En
tered Cars--Conductor Was Killed.
Eight Arrests Made.
Rirmingham, Ala.—Three men were
instantly killed and eleven injured,
two of whom will prcbably die, when
striking miners fired into a passenger
train on the Birmingham Minesal rail
road at Blocton, Ala.
The dead are: Conductor Joe T, Col
line; O. Z. Dent, deputy sheriff; Wil
lard Howell, non-union miner. The in
jured are: Major F. H. Dodge, super
intendent of safety, Tennessee Coal
company, wounded in hand and leg;
BE. E. Cox, superintendent of mines,
Tennessee Coal company, slightly
wounded in knee; A, E. Cross, chief
clerk, superintendent’s office, wound
ed in arm and knee; J. C. Johnson,
deputy sheriff, slightly wounded in
side; A. C. Bryant, deputy sheriff,
slightly wounded in side; J. B. Cor
nett, deputy sheriff, wounded in the
back; W. H. McAuly, soldier, slight
injuries; M. A. Pearson, soldier,
wounded in left shoulder; J. C., Mar
tin, wounded in head, back and arm;
A. J. Myer, laborer, wounded in leg;
Robert Sigmon, wounded in arm and
breast. |
The train was a special bearing!
non-unicn men to the Blocton mines |
under guard of soldiers and deputies.
On the outskirts of the town the en
gineer suddenly saw a log across the
track and at once a fusilade was fired
into the train. The engineer did nott
stop, but let ‘the cowcatcher throw
the log from the track and put on|
full speed. The place where the at
'tack was made was in a cut, the‘
ground being on a level with the low
er part of the windows. The assail-’
ants behind the rocks above poured
down 3 murderous fire directly into
the windows and at the engineer.
Practically every window in the train
was broken, and shots struck all parts
of the engine and cab. The train pro
ceeded to Blocton and the dead and
injured were returned to Birming
ham.
Dogs were hurried to the scene, and
took trails through the woods direct
ly to the union quarters. Eight men
were arrested and other arrests are
expected. £ ‘
Governor Comer held a hurried con
ference with Lieutenant Colonel Hub
bard, commanding the militia, and an
other company was hurried to Bloc-%
ton, |
The trouble caused widespread in
dignation, and a general demand is
being made that more strenuous ac
tion be taken looking to the preser
vation of order.
BATTLESHIPS REACH AUCKLAND.
American Fleet Drops Anchor in New
Zealand Port.
Auckland, New Zealand.—Sixteen
white ships, comprising the battleship
division of the United States Atlantic
fleet, under command of Rear Admi
“ral Charles 8. Sperry, arrived here at
8:40 o’cleck Sunday morning and an
chored in two columns in the road
stead abreast the city, afier a voyage
of thirty-three days from San Fran
cisco,
When the warships entered the har
bor the usual salutes were exchanged
between them and the shore batteries
and the Australian flagship Powerful
and the cruisers Encounter and Pio
neer,
The city is elaborately decorated in
honor of the visit of the Americans,
and thousands of persons have al
ready come into the city in order to
assist in paying homage to the offi
cors and men, The townspeople are
enthusiastic over the visit of their
American cousins, and throughout the
day thronged the water front of the
city to view the stately ships lying at
anchor in the roadstead.
WORK FOR MANY MEN.
More Than $2,000,00 Worth of Work
Awaiting the Idle.
Pittsburg, Pa.—Calling for 24,000
tons of steel plate, an order has been
placed with Pittshurg steel mills, forc
ing idle machinery into action and
summoning more men back to work.
With Pittsburg steel plate manufac
turers figuring on contracts for up
ward of 7,000 tons of plates for steel
cars for railroad requirements, there
comes another contract that is to be
awarded in a brief period.
New York City has awarded the
or in round figures a value amounting
contract for the construction of the
Amityville pipe line, a new water sup
ply main of steel. The tonnage is es
timated at from 24,000 to 27,000 tons
to $1,000,000.
DEATH Tu BULL WEEVIL.
Powdered Arsenate of Lead Will Kill
the Pest,
Baton Rouge, La.—That powdered
arsenate of lead may prove the solu
tion of the Doll weevil problem, is
the suggesticn made In a bulletin is
sued by the state crop pest commit
tee. The bulletin gives the resuits of
some experiments made this year with
the arsenate of lead, and mentions
that in one instance it killed 70 per
cent of the boll weevils in the local
ity where it was tried. State Ento
mologist Newell gays that two applica
tions of the preparation will clear a
fleld entirely of the weevils.
This is the first poison that the Lou
isiana state crop pest commission has
endorsed for killing boll weevils.
Tattoo Wives and Stop Bivorces.
Warsaw, Ind.—“ There would be
fewer affinities and divorces if all
married women in the United States
were tattooed on the chin,” said Rev.
Arthur Rawei, a native of Maoriland,
N. S., addressing an audience of 3,000
at Winona Lake assembly. He added:
“Now that I am headed for Washing
ton, I think that I shall ask President
Roosevelt to use his influence to have
such a bill put through congress.”
OF POLITIGAL INTEREST.
-3
Both Mr, Bryan and Mr. Taft are
much pleased at the results obtained
from the use of the phonograph for
the dissemination of théir political
speechés,
Missouri has come to the front with
a rush in the Taft baby naming con
test. W. F. Heavner of Lebanon, Mo.,
announces himself the preud father of
twins, As a good repudlican he has
undertaken to perpetuate the whole
tlonal ticket and the state ticket by
naming one boy Howard Taft Heay
ner in honor of Judge Taft and the
other Hadley Sherman Heavner, to
honor the second place on the ticket,
as well as Hadley, Missouri's republi
can candidate for governor,
W. J. Bryan is considering the sug
gestion of Harvey Garber, national
chairman of Virginia, to place a per
sonal letter in the hands of‘ every
voter in every doubiful state. Edsgar
B. Schmidt of Dayton, Ohio, went to
Lincol nto especially place the idea
before the candidate,
“Just call me Mr. Taft and if you drop
into colloguialism, call me Bill.” This
was Judge Taft's laughing reply when
granting an audience to a number of
newspaper men, who had severally ad
dressed him as “Mr. Secretary,” “Gov
ernor” and “Mr, Taft.”
Richard V. Qulahan, for many years
a leading writer with the New York
Sun, will have general charge of the
literary work for the republican na
tional committee.
Senator Taylor of Tennessee has
charge of the plan by which a straw
vote will be taken in every state in
the union,
Mr. Bryan has consented to speak
at the Minnesota state fair, provided
no admission to the grounds is to be
charged. :
The campaign for the election of
state officers of South Carolina has
stirred up a hot fight between the
ministers and politicians of that state.
The ministers have taken the stump
an dare bitterly opposing what they
term ‘‘ring rule.”
Mr. Taft's fatal gift of beauty has
led an Indiana %urglar to steal ten
thousand of his csmpaign buttons.
Mr. Bryan has issued an appeal to
the “common people,” asking for cam
paign contributions,
John Temple Graves, candidate of
the independence party for vice pres
ident, underwent a slight operation
in a private hospital in New York
City.
The democrats of New England in
tend to make a fight to keep their
section out of the republican column.
Henry Watterson has written sev
eral thousand letters to democratic
editors waking them up to the im
portance of getting in behind Bryan.
Mr, Taft has received from a Phil
adelphia admirer the left hind foot of
a rabbit, gold mounted. The gift was
accompanied by a note expressing the
hope that the rabbit foot would offset
the luck given to Mr. Bryan when he
was presented with a horseshoe.
It is announced that William Ran
dolph Hearst will start a daily paper
in Atlanta, Ga., in the interests of the
independence party.
Alton B. Parker, democratic candi
date for president igfi}}m‘!,”geliv.ered
his first speech of the present cam
paign in behalf of Mr. Bryan and Mr.
Kern before an audience of 2,000 per
sons at Temple Auditorium in Los
Angeles, Cal.
Lincoln, Nebraska, Typographical
Union voted to make Willlam Jen
nings Bryan an honorary member.
The .action of the union was nearly
unanimous, such opposition as there
was being on the ground that the ac
tion might be construed as bringing
politics into the union. To offset this
Governor Sheldon, who is a republi
can, also was made an honorary mem
ber.
The headquarters of the democratic
national committee have been formal
ly opened in the Auditorium Annex,
at Chicago,
Thomas E. Watson, the populist
candidate for president, is busy mak
ing speeches in his home state, Geor
gia. Mr. Watson is fighting for the
electoral vote of Georgia.
In order to relieve Taft of criticism
on account of the Brownsville sol
diers, General Corbin has given out
a hitherto unpublished dispatch from
Roorevelt, showing that the order
came direcily from the president.
Mr. Bryan has an engagement to
meet all the leading labor leaders of
the country for a conference at Chi
cabo August 22,
Mr. Bryan is availing himself of the
cool weather by utilizing every spare
moment of his time in preparing the
several sections of the speeches he
will make. The one on tariff is ex
pected to be an exhaustive treatment
of the subject and will be one of the
most important of his utterances dur
ing the campaign. The speech will be
delivered at Indianapolis.
Norman 18, Mack, democratic cam
paign manager, is in almost daily con
ference with Mr., Bryan over the long
distance telephone.
The action of the Western Tariff
Association in refusing te make spe
cial rates to Lincoln, Neb, upon the
occasion of the notification of Mr, Bry
an has caused much disappointment
among democrats who were prepar
ing to take a monster crowd from
the east,
A horseshoe bearing the inscription
“traveling across the continent to
bring good luck to Billy B. and the
democratic party,” has arrived at New
Orleans tied to the rear-end of a pas
senger train. It was transferred to
another road and started on its jour
ney to San Francisco.
Frank Hitchcock, the republican
campaign manager, is making almost
daily visits to President Roosevelt at
Oyster Bay.
Judge Taft, accompanied by Mrs.
Taft, drove forty miles across country
in a buckboard to attend a horae show
at White Sulphur Springs, Va.
John Sharp Williams, nominee for
senator from Mississippi, and former
leader of the democratic minority in
the national house of representatives,
absolutely refused to deliver a demo
cratic partisan address at a Preston,
lowa, -.chautauqua,
DEBATED GONSTITUTION
‘ k ———— : :3:.11
Of the United States---No Better
Governed Than Empires.
——e e
Theugh Not Democratic---Admiration is
Ex: r:ssed for Qur Supreme Court |
and Other Institutions. |
London, England.—The “constitu
tion” congress which has been in ses
sion at the Franco-British exhibition
discussing safeguards for the various
constitutions to provide for maintain
ing personal liberty and responsibility,
has closed with a debate on the con
stitution of the United States. Durh;%f
the course of the discussion Professor
Albert Venn Dicey of Oxford referred
to what he described as a “melancholy
paradox.” He sald that, while the
United States started with an advan
tage unknown in any other country—
with a constitution designed with
more care, more skill and more suc
cess than almost any other constitu
tion deliberately designed by man—
vet the candid American citizen would
say that, on the whole, they are little
better governed than the best Europe
an state; while the candid European
critic would put it that the United
States is not much worse governed
than the best states of Europe. That
was the paradox of a country filled
with noble people who were governed
in a way that would not for a moment
be tolerated in Paris, London or Ber
lin,
The city of Washington is well ad
ministered, continuel Professor Dicey,
because it was not democratically goy
erned. It is governed by commission
ers appointed by congress, a body not
nearly so democratic as the crown of
England. Professor Dicey expressed
admiration for the supreme = court,
which he said was “one of the most
successful institutions,” but he doubt
ed whether the balance of power ex
isting in the United States could ex
ist in any European country.
Guyot, the French political econo
mist and former minister of public
works, thought the constitution of
America has many advantages for a
democratic country, and, though pos
sibly too rigid, on the other hand, it
prevented wild enterprises.
AMERICAN GOODS WANTED.
Foreign Dealers Favor United States-
Made Products,
New York City.—Optimistic views
on business conditions abroad and the
outlook for American enterprises
there were expressed by Darwin P.
Kingsley, a prominent financier of
this city, who has just returned from
a four months’ trip through all the
principal countries of Europe, includ
ing European Russia. He said that
he sought out and met men of every
class and interviewed bankers and
government ministers in nearly all the
‘®apitals of Europe.
| “I found practically no hostility to
Americans or American institutions,”
he continued. “On the contrary, the
products of American enterprises are
today more largely in evidence than
‘ever before. «In every considerable
city there are handsome plants offer
ing successfully American plows, reap
ers and ail kinds of agricultural imple
ments, sewing machines and insur
ance,
“Government Tegulations are strict,
but friendly. I found the foreign in
surance departments friendly in their
attitude toward American companies.
None of the European countries has
{adopted any laws unfavorable toward
(the American companies, and they
|show no disposition to do. so.”
BEGINS GREAT WATERWAY,
Land Condemned for Right of Way in
North Carolina.
Raleigh, N, C.—Orders in seven
cases of condemned lands for right
of way for the inland waterway from
Pamlico Sound to Beaufort harbor,
have been signed by Judge Thomas
R. Purnell in the federal court for
the eastern district of North Carolina.
This starts the work on the great
inland waterway that will eventually
give an inland water route to com
merce from the great lakes and Bos
ton to North Carolina at least south
of the dread Hatteras and perhaps to
Florida. This will be the first link in
the gigantic chain of canals.
The contract has been let for the
construction of this portion of the in
land waterway and under the contract
the work is to be commenced Decem
ber 1. There will be about sixteen
miles of cut. This canal will prob
ably be dug before the deepening of
Beaufort harbor. The inland water
way will go on Pamlico river, Neuse
river, Core creek out into Beaufort
harbor. Jongress at its last session
appropriated $550,000 with which to
begin the woik,
!Traln Wreck Causes Three Deaths.
i Imboden, Ark.—Three persons were
Ikllled and four badly injured and a
[number of passengers siightly bruised
!and shaken up when engine No. 210,
| pulling 'Frisco passenger train 206,
was derailed twelve miles east of
this eity. The engine dashed headlong
over a 12-foot embankment, pulling the
.mall, bagage and smoking cars with
[it. The gas tank in the mail car ex
|ploded and the mail car, with all the
imail, was burned. A party of sailors
| put out the fire, which started in the
| baggage car, and saved the baggage.
!The dead are: Engineer Cooper of
| Memphis, Tenn.; Fireman Lee Booker
|of Memphis, Tenn.; man supposed to
|be H. F. Overs, residence unknown.
l r——————
‘Scores Are Mangled by Hurricane
! Szegedin, Hungary.—During a hur
|ricane which swept over this section
'of the country a large factory col
/lapsed and a hundred workmen were
| buried in the ruins. Four corpses
|and fourteen persons severely hurt,
| have been recovered from the debris.
|Seventy persons are still missing, Sze
' gendin is 96 miles southeast of Buda
pest, and after Budapest is the most
| populous city of the kingdom. It has
'an extensive trade and is noted for
! the manufacture of food products
© GERMAN AIRSHIP BURNS.
. i ——— e
fiouut Zeppelin’s Craft is Destroyed
After a Remarkable Voyage.
_ Stuttgart, Geétmany, — During a
Btorm the Zeppelin airship broke
Aaway from its moorings, took fire and
digappeared in the air. Several per-
Sons were injured. Count Zeppelin,
however, is safe,
A chapter of accidents occasioned
by bad moods of natiire and the fail
ge of mechanical appliances combin
ed was responsible for the untiizely
end of the balloon, the flights of which
‘have held the attention of the world.
. The Zeppelin airship had just com
pleted the most remarkable voyage in
;m history of aerial navigation, The
flight was successful in a great many
ways. The machine responded abso-
Jlutely to the control of its pilots, and
was navigated over the Lake of Con
stapce, down the valley of the Rhine,
over Strassburg and several other cit
’ln and was returning to Friedrich
shafen, its starting point, when the
‘accident happened.
An explanation of the accident by
’«'ejmerts is that probably one of the
‘balloonettes of which the immense en
velope was constructed, burst, and a
‘spark from the motor ignited the gas
‘»w‘hen the balloon was carried into the
air.
Count Zeppelin has devoted his life
‘time and his personal fortune to the
‘development es his airships. The ves
-Bel that was lost was the fourth he
had construcied. = When his money
had become exhausted the German
refchstag voted him $125,000 to con
duct further experiments, and number
‘four was the. result. The German
government agreed to purchase this
'hkip on condition that it fulfilled cer
tain requirements, the principal one
being that it remain in the air 24
hours and land on terra firma, This
stipulation has not yet been fulfilled.
But, on learning of the accident to
the airship, Dr. Von Bethmann-Hell
weg, imperial secretary of state for
‘the interior, after a consultation with
his colleagues, decided to forward to
Count Zeppelin $125,000, the proposed
estimate in the imperlal budget for
aeronautic experiments, as a reward
for the count’s many years of sacri
fice' of this character in the interest
of the tatherland.
= PYTHIANS ELECT OFFICERS.
Texan is Chosen Supreme Chancellor
of the Order at Boston Convention.
Boston, Mass.—Before adjourning
the twentyfifth annual conventfon of
the Order, the Knights of Pythias
elected the following ofiicers: Su
preme chancellor, Herry P, Brown of
Cleburne, Texas; vice chancellor Geo.
W. Hanson of Calais, Maine; supreme
prelate, Rev. Dewitt C. Cob, Salem,
N. J.; supreme keeper of records and
seals, R. L. C. White of Nashville (re
él%e )d); supreme master of excheq
uer, T. D. Meares, Wilmington, N. C.
(re-elected); supreme master at arms,
Samuel P. Davis, Davis, Oklahoma ;
supreme inner guard, . Allison Pow
ers, Quebec, Canada; supremem outer
guard, William D. Cemeron, Merid
ttd,{“ l!a.; board of insurance control
fi;‘ ix years, U. S. G. Cherry, Sioux
Cfills}fiflfn' and C. 8, Davis, Denver,
“The .”;xzmme lodge of Pythian Sis
ters elected the tollo_wing, W
Supreme-hies, Mrs. Nellle £ Mer
riam, Muskogee, Okla.; supreme se
nior, Mrs, Sarah I. Cotton, Weather
ford, Texas; supreme junior, Mrs. Ida
M. Johuson, Central City, Colorado ;
supreme manager, Mrs. Cora M. Da
vis, Union, Oregon,
" The uniform rank assembled, con
sisting of twenty-six brigadier gener
alg, formally appointed Major General
Arthur E, Stobbart of St. Paul, Minn,,
to succeed himself in command of the
uniform rank.
EBISON QUITS INVENTING.
Takes Up Study of Chemistry and Will
.. Take Life Easy.
New York City.—Thomas A. Edison
has begun to gratify an ambition he
has g¢herished many years and the
laboratory at Llewellyn, N. J., will
gsee comparatively little of him hence
forth, ..
Mr, ,#dison’s anibition has been to
give himself a roving commission into
public science and to steer clear of
commercialism, He does not want to
increase his fortune. He has got $25,-
000,000, which he thinks is more than
enough, All his life he has been turn
ing out money-making inventions, He
will devote his remaining years to in
vesting in anything that sirikes his
fancy, without regard to its financial
productiveness,
Now he proposes to devote himself
to chémistry. Moreover he is going to
take life more easily, He has prom
ised his family and his friends to give
up slaving night and day, Sunday and
holidays in Lis laboratory, Not only
that, but he is going to take jaunts
about to see the rest of the world. He
has bought himself a place in Florida,
where he will spend a couple of
months in the late winter and spring
next year,
FATAL DYRAMITE EXPLOSION.
One Killed, One Mortally Injured and
: a Number Hurt,
Brewton, Ala.—Silas Maddox was
killed and his brother, Lewis, fatally
injured by the explosion of dynamite
on a log traln of the Cedar Creek
Mill Company. Several others on the
train were seriougly injured.
The train was coming to town from
the Pish Pond logging camp when a
bucket of dynamite was ignited hy a
spark from the engine. Silas Mad
dox attempted to throw the bucket
from the car. It exploded just as it
left his hands.
There were about 150 men aboard
the train,
TURKISH SULTAN STABBED.
Coat of Mail Saves His Life—Would-
Be Assassin Arrested,
London, England.—A special dis
patch to the Exchange Telegraph com
pany says: “The sultan of Turkey
wag stabbed in the hreast hy a minor
palace official. The coat of mail
which the sultan always wears de
flécted the blow. The would-hbe as
sassin was arrested. Apparently he
had been bribed to commit the act, as
he had & large sum of gold in his
pockets ;7 1
2 .
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PR @3 AR $ 830900 UNUDENS $39090 e 0900 e 09000 ooameas 0
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