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Noisy Welccme Given Amen-ca,nl
Battleshxp Fieet by Japan. |
Streets of City for Miles Were Walled
With Entwined Americn and
Japanese Emblems.
Yokohama, Japan.—The American
battleship fleet dropped anchor in the
harbor at 9:30 o’clock Sunday morn- |
ing, :
It was in the gray hours before |
dawn when the leviathans of Amer
ica's great white battleship fleet were
dimly discerned maneuvering off the!
entrance to Tokio bay, while sixteen
warships, the pride of Japan, in som-.
bre color, swung at their anchor buoys
outside of the breakwater, ‘
From thousands of flag staffs and
buildings at every point in the city
floated the stars and stripes, and the
entire lengths of miles of streets were
atmost walled with intertwined Amer
ican and Japanese emblems.
The enthusiasm of the people was
evidently sincere, though mixed with
the natural curiosity to see the big
fighting ships from America, the long
and successful cruise of which has
marked a new epoch in naval history.
Foreigners were in the minority in
the crowds, but wherever they ap
peared, they were treated with excep
tienal courtesy because to the Jap
anese all foreigners must be Ameri
cans .many of the Japanese being un
able to discriminate between Ameri
cans and those from other lands,
When the fieet rounded Honmou
point and came into full view of thas
city of Yokohama, the sixteen assem
bled Japanese warships began firing
the salute to the rear admiral in com
mand of the American fleet. The
roar of the guns, the bursting fire
works, bombs, the shriek of the steam
sirens with the drone of the deep
whistles of the liners, filled the air
with overwhelming sounds. Ashore,
bedlam broke loose and words fail to
describe the enthusiasm of the assem
bled thousands.
When the American fleet finally
came to anchor, it presented an impos
ing spectacle. Thirty-two great war
ships occupied four long columns of
elght each. The Americans taking
the place of honor in the forefront,
the Japanese immediately behind
them,
As soon as the fleet came to anchor,
a reception committee and attaches of
the various foreign embassies and le
gations and the mayor of Yokohama
put off from shore for the flagship
Connecticut,
Every vernacular newspaper in Yo
kohama and Tokio printed special il
lustrated editions containing enphusi
astic articles with reference to the
coming of the American fleet,
ADMIRAL EVANS" SON GUILTY.
He Will Lose 150 Numbers and Be
Publicly Reprimanded.
Yokahama, Japan. — Lieutenant
Frank T. Evans of the battleship Lou
isiana, who recently was court-mar
tialed on a charge of absenting him
self from his post while officer of the
deck, disrespect to his superior offi
cer and intoxication, has been found
guilty of the two former charges.
Rear Admiral Sperry received the pa
pers while the battleships were at
Manila. and has just announced, his
verdict, The sentence pronounced
provides that Lieutenant Evans shall
lgse 150 numbers and shall be publicly
reprimanded.
NIGHT RIDERS BURN GIN.
Gin Had Been Posted Previously by
the Night Riders.
Seottsboro, Ala.—News has just
reached here of the burning of the
large cotton gin of Butler & Co., at
New Hope, by night riders. No par
ticulars have been received except
that the s‘i’n had been posted to gin
no more cdtton at the present price.
The gin continued to run and the burn
ing followed,
This is the first report of a gin
burned in Alabama by the night rid
ers. L
CAPTAIN LEAPED INTO SEA.
Norwegian Captain Was Despondent
Over a Broken Leg.
Pensacola, Fla., — The Norwegian
bark Majorca, which arrived here, re
ported the suicide of the Master Cap
tain Ellefsen at sea two weeks ago
on the voyage from Buenos Ayres
here. The vessel came into port with
flags half-masted and in command of
the first mate,
The latter stated that the captain
had become despondent over a broken
leg, and, going up on the bridge of
the vessel, leaped into the sea, The
body was not recovered.
AEROPLARE FALLS 50 FEET.
First Attempt at Aerial Flight in the
South Ends Disastrously.
Chattanooga, Tenn.—ln an attempt
at flight in an aeroplane, G. M, Mal
lory of this city, the inventor, fell 50
with a few slight bruises, Mallory's
feet with his machine, but escaped
aeroplane was partially wrecked.
The aviator’s wife witnessed fi-e ac
cident;-and was frightened into hyster
fcs. ~She ran with her baby in- her
arms to the spot where the aerog‘lane
had fallen, and on her -knees b¢gged
her husband’never again attempt an
other flight.’ The inventor announced
that he would rebuild his machiné-and
try “ib, again. This is the first @f
tempt at aerial flight in the south.
" 'FATAL DYNAMITE EXPLOSION.
Attempt to Pick Cap Off Mis-shot Re
sulted in Disaster,
Fort Colling, Colo.—Sßix persons
weregnstantly killed and twenty-one
others injured by an explosion of dy
namite at the Ingleside Limestone
quarry. The dead include two Japan
ese and four Mexicans,
Five charges of dynamite had been
placed, but only four of them explod
od as arranged. While an attempt
was being made to pick the cap from
the unexploded charge it went off.
E Sl ' |
“© LATE NEWS NOTES,
I. H. Whaley of f{noxvme, Tenn,,
was struck and killed by 'J. W. Green,
a blacksmith, Green struck Whaley
under the jaw with his fist and Whal
ey’s head struck a railroad rail as he
fell. Whaley died an hour and a half
later, )
- The national convention' of the
League of American Sportsmen, in
tenth annual meeting at' Lawton,
Okla., was addressed Dby Geronimo,.
the famous Apache chief, through an’
interpeter. He deplored the staugh
ter of American game by white men.
The jury in the trial of .Uhland Cul
pepper at Opelika, Ala., eharged with
the murder of Msay Elvin Haaen, who
was shot and killed near Phoeniw
City, Ala., several weeks ago, by a
bullet believed to have been intended
for her father, returned a verdict ot
guilty. Culpepper was sentenced to
life imprisonment,
Six buildings were totally destroy
ed and a number of others damaged
by a fire of incendiary origin at Olive
Hill, Carter county, Kentucky. The
losp is about SIO,OOO.
D. O. Seaman, a farmer, of Golds
berry, Me., went to the district school
called out his two sons, aged 10 and
12 years, respectively, shot one of
them dead, mortally wounded the oth
er_and then shot and killed himself.
The cause of the tragedy is not
iknown.
1 George Harold, of the El Paso. Tex
as, city detective department, who
‘worked up the cases thewe and in Chi
Ehuahua against the Mexican revolu
tionists, tound a rudely constructed
‘bomb at the front door of his resi
‘dence with a charred fuse attached.
iHarold has received several unsigned
:notes informing him that he is mark
ed for death.
. Several girls were slightly injured
jand one hundred more had a narrow
escape from death when. the ferry
steamer Ariel, running between Walk
‘erville, Ont.,, and Detroit, Mich., col
lided in a fog with the small freight
er Energy. There were about onc
hundred girls, employes of local fac
tories aboard the ferry, and a panic
!I‘eigned among them for a few min
utes, >
‘ The store of the Merchants’ Gro
cery company at Mobile, Ala., was
{gutted when fire broke out in the sec
ond story among paper bags.. The
building was damaged about SIO,OOO,
lcovered by insurance, and the stock
is a total loss amply covered by in
‘surance, Two firemen were injured.
i The Jenkins lumber mills plant at
|Blaine, Wash.,, was almost complete
'ly destroyed by -fire. The loss is es
timated at $500,000.
A freight engine on the Southern
railway exploded at Mayo, Va., killing
the engineer and injuring the fireman
and several of the crew.
One-half of the 'business portion
of Bonner Springs, Kans., a watering
resort, twenty miles west of Kansas
City;” wasidestroyed by fire, causing a
loss of SIOO,OOO.
After sixteen years of divorced sep
aration, during which each had re
married and had each been bereft
through death, an aged German ecou
ple in New York City, who were mar
ried in their fatherland forty years
ago, procured a marriage license in
order to at once re-enfer for their de
clining years, the ties they had legal
ly set aside so long ago. Conrad
Knubert’'s second wife died in New
York not long ago, and when he
heard that his former’s wife's hus
band had also died in Germany, he
wrote the partner of his young years,
asking her to come to New York and
marry him again. She cabled her re
ply—that she was coming, and on fi;e
next steamer, and when she reached
there the ceremony was performed at
once,
’ The women of Mexico have organiz
ed a mother's congress, ‘which will
hold its first meeting in December.
The president is Signora Luz Gonzal
ez Casio de Lopez and the object is
to aid all mothers who need protec
tion, advice or assistance,
Thirty-one counties with a popula
tion of more than a million peaple,
have voted to go dry in Ohio in the
first forty-one days of the operation
of the Rose county local option law
passed by the last legislature, and
within the next thirty days eight hun
‘dred and thirteen saloons and whole
sale liquor houses will have closed
*as the result. There are now thirty
[five counties entirely dry in the state.
' The battle of Guilford Court House
was reproduced at Greensboro, N. C.,
|by United States cavalry, infantry,
lstate malitia and a Gatling gun. The
result of the battle, like that fought
in 1781, was in doubt, both - sides
claiming victory, Colonel S. W. Miner
commanded the British, while Colonel
P W Craig commanded the Ameri
[ecan forces, About 25,000 people wit
’nessed the battle.
| Foster George was arrested in St.
;Louis, Mo., on a charge of stealing
'diamonds and watches worth $35,000
‘from 8. F. Powell, a wholesale jewel
‘er at 170 Broadway, New York, Twea
'ty-five thousand dollars’ worth of the
!jewels were recovered from George.
'The man was betrayed into the
'hands of the police by Mabel McCoy,
a companion with whom he quarreled
|after refusing come of her requests
‘for money, When the police raided
' George’s room diamonds were found
In every possible hidioz place. A ra
}zor case was stuffed with gems worth
183,000, In a valice were mearly one
‘thousand small diamonds; in George's
§Shoes were dozens ‘of gems, some of
'them as large as two carats,
Captain Monroe and five of the
crew of the British schooner Siroceo,
who were supposed to have been lost
|when their vessel was wrecked off the
]Florida coast, on October 1, were land
'ed at DBoston, Mass.,, by the fruit
| steamer Horatius. All of the mem
|bers of the Sirocco’s crew have now
ibeen accounted for, two seamen hav
ling been landed at Newport News,
|Va, . The Sirocco, which was bound
!from Brunswick, Ga., te Abaca in the
| pahamas, was wrecked on Mantanilla
‘reef, in a tropical hurricane, e
For Seventy-Five Miles Michigan
is a Solid Mass of Fire.
B : -
Bolton, Scuth Rogers; Metz and La-.
* ' Recque Are Among 'the~Villo'ge.l ;
-. Destroyed-<-15 are Dead. - -
Alpena, Mich.—Fifteen. people , lost
their lives in the burning of the De
troit and Mackiraw railray relief train.
which was carrying the inhabitants
of the little village of Metz, 23 miles
north of here, to safety from the for
est filres, which were sweeping away
their homes. The ill-fated train was
ditched by spreading rails at Nowicki
Siding, a few miles south of Metz,
and the terrified refugeas were forced
to abandon the cars and rush for safe
ty either down the track, with burn
ing forests on either side, or into the
ploughed fields near the siding.
Hleven of the victims were women
and children, who were unable to es
cape quickly enough from the gondola
car, which they were occupying. Their
charred bodies were found there when‘
rescuers reached the scene, Two of
the men victims were members of the
train crew, |
When the forest fires closed in about
the village, a special train of three
empiy box cars and two coal cars was
rushed to Metz, in charge of John E.
Kinville, conductors; William Foster,
engineer; Arthur iee, fireman.
As rapidly as possible the people
and their goods were loaded into the
cars. Some refused to abandon their
‘goods, or the train might have left
earlier and have reached Alpéna in
safety, When the train finally start
ed there were about one hundred
frightened people abroad. The flames
‘were already sweeping through the
village. ngineer Foster started his
itrain for Alpena, Nearing Norwicki
‘(’mssing, he saw Dblazing piles of ce
dar ties on either side of the track.
‘Oponing wide the throttle, he tried
to dash through at full speed, but the
‘heat had loosened the rails, and they
‘had spread, and the train left the
‘tracks, Blazing piles of ties surround
‘ed it, and in an instant the cars had
caught fire,
.~ The terror-stricken people, caught
by the peril from which they were
fleeing, jumped from the cars and
rushed down the track. Three moth
ers and their little ones were not
quick enough and were cremated in
‘the car, where they were caught.
Brakeman William Bartlett sprang
into the water tank behind the en
gine, only to be literally boiled to
death, as the flames swept over it.
Engineer Foster and Conductor Kin
ville fled down the track through the
fire and smoke, and were the first
to reach the ,village of Post and re
ported the wreck and asked for as
sistance. Behind them straggled a
burned and wounded procession of
refugees from the wrecked' train, It
was a fearful march over the hot ties,
with the flames from the burning
weods on either side of the track
roaring and snapping ' in the faces.
Engineer Foster was terribly burned
|about the head and face, "but is
|thought he wil Isurvive, Conductor
Kinville was badly scorcheq,
The survivors of the frightful ex
perience seemed dazed by their -peril
land sufferings. They seemed to real
iize nothing except the intense heat
and menacing flames.
I Bolton, South Rogers and Metz are
among the destroyed villages. Only
the church is left at the village of
Cathro, and it is crowded with ref
ugees, ;
A strip twenty miles wide, from
übbard Lake to the Au Sable river,
in Alcona county, is burning, More
than fifty farms are reported to have
been swept by the fires and their
buildings destroyed.
ROGSEVELT GOES TO ENGLAND.
Will Also Visit France After His
African Trip. '
London, England.—The Times lis
informed that President Roosevelt
}will visit KEngland after his African
ltrip early in 1910, He will deliver the
, Romanes lecture at Oxford, and on
|the occasion of the university com
memoration will receive the honorary
degree of D. C. L., which Oxford has
already bestowed upon Emperor Wil
liam. According to The Times, Pres
ident Roosevelt zlso will .visit Paris
and deliver an ‘address at, the ‘Sor
'bomne. Neither the dates nor the
*subjects of the lecture«dre yet known,
| The Times further states that accord
ling to the political plans, Mrs. Roose
|velt will join the president at Khar
|toum on the journey southward,
| Rescued Just In Time.
| Hull, England—The German bal-
Iloon Plauen, which left Berlin Mondav'
in an endurance contest, was picked
[up in the North sea by a trawler.
| Clinging to the balloon were the two
{aeronauts, Hackstetter and Schneider,
{in an almost exhausted condition, The
rescue took place about 249 miles
(from Spurnhead,
" Typhoon Damagad Amoy.
| Amoy, China.-—A typhoon destroyed
[noarly all the buvildings erected for
the reception of the officers and men
|of the American battleships except
Ithe main reception hall. Many stores
fin the town were badly damaged, and
ithe electric lighting plant is under
|gix feet of water,
' Cofton Seed 01 Trade,
| Washington, D, C.—Cotton seed &,
'has become the second largest article
|of export from the United States to
T’l‘urke;.'. reports Ambassador Leish-
Imann at Constantinople, He points
out the possibilities in the Turkish
fmarket for this class of shipments,
and states that when America real
|izes the advantages of canvassing a
'market hitherto neglected the sales
{of cotton seed oil will be widely ex
{tended in Turkey, ’
! e GBI T e TR g T )
~ BAISE PRICE OF COTTON.
Object of Farmers’ Union When They
* Meet at New O:leans.
Union" City, Ga.—The Farmers!
union’infends (0 boost the, price of
cotton, and to this end, whigh." will
mean s 0 much for the south, Presi
dent C. 8, Barrett has isSued an offi
cial call to the national bodrd of.di
rectors, all state presidents and rep
resentatives from all county, parish
and local unions in the cotton belt,
{0 .meet in ‘session at New Orleans,
November'll. L
', The union will hold an executive |
session on that day, and on the fol
lowing day, all southern people inter- |
ested, and willing to aid in raising |
the price of cotton, have been request
ed to he present and Jend their sup
port.
The Farmers’ Union, having a mem
ship, as it does, of every prominent
plantes in the ecotton belt, generally
does something when its meets, and
this time, when the gavel raps for or
der and all heads get down to busi- |
ness, the price of the snowy staple is |
bound to grow by several cents,
FIRED AT PRIEST.
Attempt to Assassinate Father Field- |
ing in Fashionable Chicago Church, |
Chicago, 111.—An attempt to assassi
nate Rey. J. K. Fielding, pastor of the
Corpus Christi Roman . Catholic
Church, was made by an unknown
man, After twice shooting at th(:!
priest in the Sunday school hallway
of the church, the assassin, knocking |
down . several children that stood in
his way, ran into the street and es
caped, The priest was not hurt, The
shooting and the screams of the chil
dren created wild excitement in one
of Chicago’s fashionable residence
‘quarters. |
__ Under the conviction that one or
more men had entered into a con
spiracy to kill Father Fielding and
other priests, the police have placed
an extra watch over all <Catholic
churches throughout the city,
| UNIFORM BILL OF LADING.
Railrcads Wil Notify Shippers of
New Regulations.
Chicago, Ill.—Announcement has
been made that all of the 416 roads
in official classification territory have
larranged to address notices to ship
pers’ to the effect that on and after
November 1, shippers using the new
uniform bill of lading prescribed by
the interstate commerce commission
will be charged the regular rates pro
vided in the “official classification.”
If a shipper shall elect not to accept
the conditions of the new bill of lad
ing and shipping order, the property
will be transported at carrier's liabil
ity, limited only as provided by the
common laws and by the laws of the
United States and of the several
states in so far as they apply, and
the charge will be 10 per cent higher
than the regular rate,
GETTYSBUR& BATTLEFIELD.
Park Commission Trying to Preserve
It in Its Original Shape,
Washington, D. C.—To preserve in
its original shape the features of the
batdlefield of Gettysburg, the Gettys
bury National Park Commission inits
annual report states that, in pursu
ance of the. fixed policy of that body,
large tracts of woodland have been
purchased, old road lines have been so
altered that they now parallel the
lines of battle,
The commission ih carrying forward
this work has kept in view the pur
pose of preserving the features of the
battlefield as they were during the bat
tle, and also rendering all varts of it
accessible.
ENGINEER SHOT DOWN.
By Naval Stores Operator Near Pan.
ama City, Florida,
Pensacola, Fla.—Kugene Wood, en
gineer on a log road of a milling con
cern, was shot and killed by Jack Gil
bert, a naval store operator, near Pan
ama City. The engineer had passed
Gilbert’s place ‘without stopping to
take on freight.
On the next trip Gilbert placed a
red flag on the track, and then stood
near with his gun, When Wood left
the engine he was shot and instantly
killed. B
- 800 BALES OF COTTON BURNED.
Big Cotton Warehouse at Rock Hill,
S. C., Was Destroyed,
Rock Hill, 8. C.—Another destruc
tive cotton fire visited Rock Hill, The
warehouse of Bdward [lewell was
burned with 700 or 800 bales of cot
ton, with a loss of about $25,000 on
the cotton, and $3,000 or $4,000 on
the building.
The cotton was insured upon the
basis of market value of course. On
the building Mr, Fewell had about
$3,000 insurance, This warehouse was
badly damaged on September 13, and
900 bales of cotton burned,
SEAT RATES REDUCED.
Pullman Company Files New Sched
ule Covering Entire Country,
‘Chicago, Ill,—Seat rates in every
Pullmgn parlor car have heen reduc
ed, according to a new schedule sheet
which has just been filed by the Pull
man company, The rew schedule
which covers the entire country is in
tended as a substitute for the com
pany’s four rate sheets of the north
western, northeastern, gouthwestern
and southeastern districts,
“The new hook is a re-adjustment
rather than /a regulation of rates”
gaid General Manager Dean. There
are a few general reductions hesides
the small seat rate cut, but none is of
great importance,
HIGH DIVER KILLED.
Rebounds From Net-—Skull Crushed
| and Neck Broken,
Decatur, Texas—Ollie McKenzie, a
professional high diver, was almost
instantly killed at the fair grounds
here when he dived from a height of
eighty feet, striking the netting feel
first., McKenzie rebounded high in the
air falling head first on the outside,
crughing his gkull and breaking his
neck. McKenzie, who was 23 years
old, lived at Mangum, Okla.
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Steeet and No,, P.O. Box, or R.F.Dy e
alc? ST o
... Booka, for iGirls i+ ©
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... Yound§*@ople’s Library
... Business Guide
....Cook Baok
Stock Book
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v.rsDictiongries
oo Kings of Platf’m & Pulpi
oo American Star Speaker
oo Wild Beasts, Birds, ete.