V l)t Chatham Btanrb. H. A, LONDON, Editor and Proprietor, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 Per Year. Strictly en Advance :8 Items of Interest From Many Parts of the State MINOR MATTERS OF STATE NEWS Happenings of More or Les Import ance Told in Paragraphs The Cot ton Markets. Killed by Electric Car. Asheville, Special. As a result of injuries sustained by being struck by tm electric car on south Main street Ve1inesJa3-, Mrs. James Foster, of Lieeester township, died at Missior hosptial. Mrs. Foster, who is G2 years of age, attempted to cross south Main street just below Court square, ami passing behind a wagon, stepped direelly in front of the rapidly mov ing car. Bat for the prompt action and presence of mind of Mortorman Naushton, who quickly reversed with me hand while he reached over the front of the car and lifted Mrs. Foster lo one side, the old lady would prob ably have been instantly killed. The contact with the moving car, though slight., threw her to the ground and paused injuries which though not deemed serious at the time, were suf ficient, in view of Mrs. Foster's ad vanced age, to justify her immediate removal to the- Mission hospital, where she received every possible at tention. She failed, however, to rally a;id died Friday morning, paralysis, caused by the shock, being the direct cause of death. Mrs. Foster was a resident of New Found Creek, Leices ter township about eight miles from Asheville. She had lived iir'that lo cality for IS years, during which long period she had never, until last "Wed nesday, left that immediate neighbor hood. On "Wednesday, accompanied by her son, she made her first visit to Asheville, and her unfortunate death may perhaps be in part at tributed to the fact that until run down, she had never before seen an electric car, and probably miscalcu lated the speed at which it was run ning. There is no blame attached to the mortorman. who made every effort i "-1,1 10 avoia tne accident. Governor Says Willmington. Raleigh, Special. A letter was re ceived recently by Governor Glenn from ex-Governcr Heyward, asking that North Carolina co-operate with South Carolina in getting immigrants to come South; and also asking that ihe people of this state use their ef forts towards making Charleston the port of entry for immigrants coming into the Southern States. Governor Glenn in reply stated that he would be very glad on behalf of the people of North Carolina to aid in the mat ter of getting, immigrants, of a de sirable character, to come South, but that Wilmington is the desirable port of entry for immigrants coming to North Carolina. Crushed by a Belt. Shelby, Special. Blaine Dellinger, superintendent of the Vcrner Oil Mill ?t Lattimore, was caught in the main belting of the engine one night last "eek and was so badly injured that death resulted in about three hours. His remains were brought to Shelby for burial. Mr. Dellinger was the of J. P. Dillingcr, a prominent citizen of Shelby, and proprietor of the Yemer Oil" Mill. Ho attended school at the A. & M. College a few years ago. $50 To Public Schools. Prizes amounting to $50 in money are to be awarded at the nest stale fair to the public schools which shov the best methods in teaching agricul ture. The prizes are only for the pub lic schools, the colleges and higher institutions being excluded from' th$ contest. Bought a Mill Site. Fayetteville. Special. W. D. Mc Neill, W. E. Kindley and S. H. Mac Rae have purchased from Mr. Neil! Black very valuable property at Man chester. The purchase includes 129 acres tit land, the splendid water power with five hundred horse al l eady developed, on Lower Little river at Manchester, a saw mill, planing mill and several houses. New Enterprises. A whiskey distillery was chartered ft Wadeshoro the Pee Dee Distill ing Company, G. O. Fullenwider, P. T. Bennett and W. T. Mills, to mak. corn whiskey, the capital stock be ing $3,000. A charter is also granted the Peo ple's Telephone Company, Taylors vills. capital stock $20,000. Comimssions are issued to the offi cers of Company M, Third Infantry, of the national guard at Sanford, as follows: K. B. Griffin, captain; A. W. Teague, first lieutenant; "William Widdifield, second, lieutenant. Big Fire at Fayetteville. v Fayetteville, Special. The W, H. Sikes Lumber Company, among tho most extensive operators in timber and lumber in upper Cape Fear, lost its entire large plant, which has been burning all day, up to the afternoon. The loss is estimated at $40,000, with partial insurance, amount not yet known. Dwellings surrounding the plant were in danger, but were saved. flOMH GUROLINA AFFAIR VOL. XXIX, EITTSBORQ. CHATH A M -20 YEARS FOR HARRISON Judge Allen Fixes Bond at $3,000 and Harrison is Remanded to Jail Until Bond Can Be Certified Court Overrules Motion to Set Aside Verdict and Arrest Judg ment. Elizabeth City, Special The" jury came in at 10 o'clock and returned a verdict of guilty. Harrison dropped his head at the jury's anouncement, stricken with surprise and grief. The court ordered him to jail for the night, after the usual motion for an appeal was made. Court opened at 9:30 and ordered the disposal of the case of the State against Joshua Harrison: Governoi Ay cock arose" and asked that the ver dict be set aside on account of the ill feeling and prejudice against the prisoner and especially on account of the outburst, of applause in the court room. He jsaid that the wail of a child lost in the nie-ht thrills thp . cj hearts of men with such a -passion that reason is blinded and some one must perhaps unjustly suffer. lie said that they fled from the pass of Currituck to get a fair trial here, but that he found the Currituck had fol lowed them and packed the room; that Harrison had never seen the boy m his life; and with a deer, note of pathos inquired as to who would tell his loyal friend Jarvis of tne jury's verdict, and that his sis ter had perjured herself. He deelar ed that the verdict had brought limm liation to the wife, disgrace tn the children and hopelessness to the grand children ot Harrison. He wanted time in which the truth could be discovered, free from passion and prejudice. He referred to the deplorable applause and to the wo men who were the rjink of the ritv breaking into applause; that the feel ing ot tbe people broke into the jury box and influenced them. No action of his honor could take that influence out he said, and he asked him to come to the rescue . ot the law and set aside the verdict. Solicitor Ward spoke breifljy elo quently, masterfully, in reply. Hi asserted that the good people of this county were the descendants of that sturdy old English stock that land ed on these shores two hundred o? more years ago, that the case was of such a nature as to arouse interest and evoke a conflict of intellect,, said that he thousht that the. iurv would have brought in the same verdict if he had not spoken to them at all. He declared that he was sensative to th-? charge of influencing the iurv -bv promising upon a conviction the resto ration ot the child to his mother s arms within six months, and ve hemently denied that he intended any such thing. He referred pathet ically to Mrs. Harrison, and then warmly denied that he charged her with perjury. "Perjury catches its inspiration from a low, debased source, but loyalty and love that prompts a wife to swear for her hus band, catches its inspiration from the heavens. When her statement was placed on the Great Book above, the Recording Angel dropped a tear and blotted it out." Mr. Ward was followed by Mr. Sawyer and Mr. Pruden, who present ed able arguments as to why the motion for setting aside the verdict should be denied. Governor Aycock again took the floor and reiferated his belief that the jury had been in fluenced by the public opinion and passion and prejudice stating that ev en refined, cultured women were clam oring for a conviction, expressed by their applause in court. Judge Allen denied' the motion Then followed a motion for an arrest of judgment, during the argument of which a number of alleged flaws in the indietment were found by de fendant's counsel. Judge Allen over ruled the motion. The judge then proceeded to pronounce the judgment. The court, stated that if hfi had hsen on the jury, there were a number' of questions concerning which he would have had some doubt3. Judge Allen referred to the testimony of the Nor folk witnesses. He stated that he was not satisfied with the evidence of the Norfolk witnesses, but these ques tions were for the iurv to determine v and that they had found him guilty. He was satisfied that the evidence was, to them sufficient to convict him. "The judgment of the court is that he be confined in the penitentiary at Raleigh, for twenty years." The sentence was pronounced at 11:40. The motion for an appeal to the Supreme Court and the question of bond was taken up. The judge stat ed that hejvould like to have, the ap peals settled before he left the dis trict, which would be on the 15th of June. It was finally settled by the court that both the State and the de fense would be allowed 60 days each in which to argue the appeal, which will amount to 120 days. After con siderable discussion as to the amount of bail, the court fixed it at $3,000 and the prisoner was remanded to jail until the necessary amount couid be certified. Story of the Crime. It will be remembered that Kenneth Beasley, 9-year-old son of State Sena tor S. M. Beasley, mysteriously distp peared during recess at the afternoon session of the school he was attending near his home at Poplar Branch, Currituck county, this State, Monday, swamps were thoroughly searched by hundreds of people, in a systematic manner being divided into companies with captains of each party. Tho search continued for two weeks or more and, as is well known, no trace of the lost child .was found, i ; 1 . . i IN Sweep Through forests Along 1 Southwest Virginia MUCH PROPERTY IS DESTROYED . Patrick County, Va.t Being Swept and Already Much Property Loss Has Kesulted-Conflagration, Which Started Near Stuart, is Under No Control Whatever in Spite of Ef forts to Cut Down Timber and Con fine It to Certain Limits. Danville, Va., Special. A tremen dous forest fire is sweeping the county, of Patrick and heavy damage to property has already resulted and the lives of many are endangered. The-fire started Friday night, it appears, near Stuart, the county seat of Patrick, and the terminus of the Danville & Western Railroad, and has been raging ever since. Latest re ports are that the conflagration is under no control whatever, though a large number of citizens and farm ers engaged in an effort to cut down trees and confine the blaze to cer tain limits. From Stuart the fire has spread southeast in the direction of Danville. Sunday night it had reached Critz, a distance of about 15 or 20 miles from where it originated. The width of the conflagration is about six miles. About 30 farm houses have already been burned and the occupants bare ly escaped with their lives. At Pat rick Springs, an aid established sum mer result, four cottages located several-hundred yards from the main hotel were burned. The main hotel is located in a valley with woods on both sides. It is in an open space and was saeci only by this enclosiut. The spungs are located about two miles from Shufi, the railroad station, and several miles beyond Crit. As yet no lives have been repodel losi, but there have been many thrilling escapes'. The valuable dwelling hous es of W. N. Martin, a prominent citizen, was destroyed together with its contents. The occupants fled for their lives and no effort was made to save anything. The scene of the origin of the fire was on the plantation of the Stuart Orchard Company, which had manv acres cf apples and peach trees. Ail of the fruit trees of this concern, v.hich is the largest of its kind in this section of the State, have been burned. Patrick county is a mountainous country located about 60 miles south west of Danville and is famous for its timber lands, and as a fine fruit growing section. Apples grown in the county are shinned to all parts of the world. The fire is confined mostly to Bull and No Business mountains. The first named mountain was burned sev eral years ago. No Business moun tain is a srreat timber land and tha loss in'' this respect" will be heavy. In the area ot about lo bv six miles already swept only a few farm houses located in the valleys escaped destruc- iion. The Danville & Western a hranh line of the Southern, is the only rail way that runs through Patrick coun ty. No damage is reported to have been done to railroad property. It is impossible to get any com munication to any of the points along th.e scene of the fire. The first news was brouffbt here bv thf rew and passengers of a train arriving hera f C . CT in the afternoQn. No trains run on the Danville & Western Saturday and bundav. hence the telearanh offices are closed. The fires on the burning mountains illuminated this spctmn for miles around, the blaze being clearly seen by those on the train. By Wire and Cable. E. C. Fosburgh,"' of Norfolk, was elected presieht of the North Carolina Pine Association. John C. Blair, Assistant United States District Attorney for the Western district of Virginia, died at Wytheville. The Seventh District Educational Conference is in session at Wood stock. A student of the Univerity of Vir ginia who was accused of cheating was acquitted at a public trial, five of the university's alumni sitting as a court. District Attorney Jerome submit ted affidavits of alienists who con sider Thaw insane, and asked for the appointment of a lunacy commission. Brig.-Gen. Theodore J. Wint of the United States Army, died in Phila delphia. Floods have isolated four States in the Northwest, tied up "railroads in California and cut a gap 80 miles wide in a Utah railroad. John Alexander Dowie, who was buried Friday, left a posthumous ser- . . j i i mon threatening to return ana ""smite" his enemies. J. D. Howbert, a Norfolk and Wes tern official, admitted he was short in his accounts. Ambassador Bryce is going to Can ada to study the problems at issue between that country and the United States. . : . , . ,. FIRES FOREST COUNTY, HL C, THURSDAY. MARCH 28. FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED Remains of White Man Tound on Railroad T)rack Indicate Foul Play. Durham ,Special. The remains of Fred Williams,' a white man, found about two niiles out from Ilillsboro Sunday morning, causes mystery in that it is not known whether he was killed by a train or murdered and then placed on the track to cover the crime. His head is badly mashed, but there was no blood scattered about to indicate that he was killed by a train. The only- blood was a little that" ran from the wounds on his head, and his hands was folded across his breast, something unusual' in cases of kill ing by a train. The coroner 's jury investigated the case and returned a .non-committal verdict, simply say ing that he died from wounds on the head. Many believe that it is a 'ease of murder, and a telephone message from Hillsboro to : this correspondent says that since the coroner's jury has adjourned that some facts have been discovered to show that Williams was killed, it being stated that two men and a woman were seen hiding in' a cut near the point where the body was found, this being a short while before Williams should have reached that point. Treasurer of Junior Order Short in His Accounts. Concord, N. C, Special. Chief of Police Boger has returned from War Eagle, West Va., where he had gone after L. C. Dry, who is charged with embezzling funds of the Junior Order of this city. He brought his man, who is now in jail. Dry left hero four months ago and "after he left it leaked out that he had done away with about $150 belonging to the order. It seems thatJiis books had not been examined for four or five years and he being a mill operative and not a bookkeeper was not familiar with that kind of work. He bagan an investigation to find out where-he, stood and found that he was short. The amount was a small fortune in his eye and the fact unnerved him so that he fled. A Collision in Tunnel. Asheville, Special. A collision between a work train. No. 73 in the west end of Swannanoa tunnel re sulted in the slight .injury to several trainmen. The derialment of two en gines, damage to four cars and the delay of passenger trains Nos. 21 and No. 11 from Salisbury. Accord ing to the facts given out by the of ficials of the road the work train was backing up the mountain followed by the first section of No. 73. The work train stalled at the west end of the tunnel and No. 73 ran into it. Both engines were derailed and several trainmen bruised and slightly injured Millicious Prosecution. Spencer, Special. Capt. A. L. Pritchard, Conductor E. E. Tucker, J. H. Banks, E. II. Benson and S. P. Vaile, employes of the Southern Rail way at Spencer, who were jailed at Greensboro last week on the charge of robbing freight cars in transit were given a preliminary hearing at Grenesboro Monday afternoon and were acquitted of the charge. Cowt ordered a record of malicious prose cution and the matter was dropped. A large crowd was present and the men were given an ovation at the conclusion of the trial. They return ed to Spencer. Kills His Brother-in-Law. Selma, Special. Saturday evening about three o'clock Richard Cook shot and killed Gray Roberts at the home of Cook. It seems that Cook was abusing his wife who , was a sister of young Roberts, and her brother interfered to protect wher, whereupon Cook picekd up his gun and Roberts managed to pet it away from him and set.it down; but as soon as he set it down Cook grabbed it again and shot Roberts in the stom ach or abdomen as the result of which he died about three hours later. "A later report says that Cook gave him self up to "an officer. Fisherman Drowned. Kinston, N; C, Special Carl King, a negro man, was drowned in Con tentnea river, near Grif ton bridge, Thursday evening while "skiniing" for shad. King had a "strike" and started to "prize," when his boat turend over and though he was a good swimmer he lost his life. " Par ties who saw the accident went to his assistance, but could not save him. They got his body, however, and pulled up the net found the shad still in it. Death, of Two Prominent Men. Wilmington, Special. Robert "S. Collins, secretary and treasurer of the Cape Fear Machine Works and, a prominent young business man died Monday evening after an illness of a week with typhoid and pneumonia. Dr. A. J. Jones, a prominent physi cian of Kenansville, N. C, died Mon day at his home, he was 63 years of age. He had. been in the active practice of bis profession 40 years 2 OPPOSE INSANITY CHARGE Attorneys Tor Thaw Deny His Being Insane at Present SHARP FIGHT ON JEROME'S MOVE This With One: From Thaw's Mothar Supplement Unanimous Opinion of Defense Attorneys in Regard to , District Attorney's Suggestion! Looking to Appointment of Lunacy ' . Commission. New York, Special. The attor neys for Harry K. Thaw filed answer to the 'suggestion made by District Attorney Jerome to Justice Fitzger ald that Thaw is- mentally incapable of understanding the nature of the proceedings against him and is a sub ject", for a commission in : lunacy rather than for, a ; jury which holds only the power of liberty or death". Supplementing ; their own unanimous opinion, that Thaw does understand the nature of the proceedings against him and daily advises intelligently with his counsel, the lawyers have filed affidavits from 'the medical ex perts employed by the defense aifl a farther affidavit by Mrs. William Thaw, the mother of the defendant. Mrs. Thaw, however, does not address hereself to the question immediately at issue. She takes advantage of the opportunity, she declares, to state that in the direct line of descent for four" generation there has been no taint of insanity or epilepsy in the prisoner's family. . She resents the "malicious "misrepresentation and gross exaggeration ' ' on the subject. The principal affidavit made in Thaw's behalf is signed Delphin M. Delmas, attaches to his personal state ment a score or more of letters antt notes he has received from Thaw during the progress of the trial. These writings of the defendant, Mr. Delmas declares, clearly indicate his grasp of the proceedings and have contained from time to time valuable suggestions as to the course of tha defense. Turnpike Co. in Receivers Hands. Norfolk, Special. The Consolidat ed Turnpice Company, owning a large majority of the county toll roads and bridges in Norfolk county, under a suit brought by Arthur Depue of New York, holding $120,000 of the com pany's $180,000 bond issue, has been placed in the hands of H. L. Page, receiver. The remainder of the com pany's bonds are held principally in New York. The paralleling of the company's toll roads by trolly irfs, thus reducing toll collection ; the high cost of improvement material and high labor are assigned as the causes of the failure. Kept the Lamp Burning. Norfolk, Special. Striken with pa ralysis and scarcely able to move Captain Fimerson, keeper of the White Shoals lighthouse in the James river, stuck to his post until relief came. Although striken early in the night he kept the light burning. His feeble cries for help could not be heard. He hung out a distress sig nal when daylight . came. That was seen in the afternoon by a party of excursionists from , Smithfield. He would not leave the lighthouse until relief came. Captain Fimerson s home is in Portsmouth. It is believed that he will recover. ; ' ' Shot in Drunken Row. Clifton, Special. Bud Cupples and Lute Brooks became involved in a drunken row at Cerro Gordo Satur day and Cupples shot Brooks just be low the heart with a 42-caliber Der ringer. At last reports little hope was held ot for the recovery of Brooks, -' Timber Land Deal. Dickson, Special. A deal was con sumated by which George Eleazer,,a lumberman of this vicinity, gets pos session of a large tract of timber; in the Fifth Civil District, known as the Hall lands. The timber is" very valu able and will at once be manufactur ed into merchantable lumber. Negroes Suspected of Murder. Norfolk, Special. Charged ; with being implicated in the probable mur der of Charles F. Ferguson, the New soms postmaster and business man whose body, with pockets picked, was found in a lane here early Sunday morning, Thomas Tynes and Lee 1 Johnson,tw6 negroes, have been ar rested. The prisoners were seen com ing from the-lane and on their perr sons keys and eyeglasses supposed to have been the property of the dead man were found. New Steamship Line Savannah to Norfolk. Savannah, Ga., Special Announce ment is made here by the Merchants' and Mariners' Transportation xom pany that beginning April 23, a line of steamers will be put on be tween Savannah and Norfolk and Baltimore and Norfolk. This will be on account of the Jamestown Expo sition. A 40-hour trip between Sa TRnnab aacl Norfolk will be maJe, 1907 NO. 33. bits mm - Washington. - Secretary Taft ordered the literal enforcement of the eight-hour law on all Government contracts. President Roosevelt issued orders for the exclusion of Japanese labor ers from the United States and the dismissal of the suits against the San Francisco School Board. The President modified his recent orders withdrawing coal lands from entry, ordering the opening of about 28,000,000 acres onv which the Geo logical Survey had reported. i Secretary Cortelyou took further action for relief of the money mar ket, the principal feature being an offer to.redeem $25,000,000 four per cent. Government bonds. Secretary Cortelyou announced that the retirement of currency pro vided for under last fall's order would be postponed. The Bureau of Ordnance has com pleted plans for a torpedo factory at Newport, R. I. After the Isthmian Canal Commis sion reorganizes the seven members will probably all live i:i t'.uv vrir.al zone. Mrs. Mary Manning, wif of the late Representative Van H. Manning, of Mississippi, died at Washington, First Assistant Postmaster-General Hitchcock allowed fifty addition al clerks for the New. York Postofilce. , OUR ; ADOPTED ISLANDS. ' Belief is growing in Cuba' tlrat there will be an uprising of negroes in the island. The Philippine Government has voted $1,834,000 for the construc tion of hydraulic works and for- drainage works at Manila. " Mrs. S. N. Castle,an early mission ary in the Hawaiian Islands, died at Honolulu at the age of ninety. La Discusion, of Havana, indorsed the suggestion regarding an Ameri can protectorate for Cuba. Cuban Liberals are excited over the apparent majority . in the Election Law Commission in favor of allowing foreigners to vote in municipal elec tions. Consul Baehr thinks that the 183 central factories in Cuba will reach a total sugar production of a million and a half of tons, provided they have good weather for the cane har vest. y . DOMESTIC. The Memphis -Charter bill passed the House at Nashville, Tenn. It abolishes the city government of Memphis and gives Governor Patter son the power to apDoint new city officials. It has passed the Senate. Five Massachusetts physicians of standing, alter six years of experi ments, declared the human soul to be a material substance, weighing from half an ounce to one ounce. William H. Tanner, who disap peared from Lenox, Mass., seventeen years ago, revealed his presence in Chicago, 111. The Standard Oil Company ad vanced the price of all oils in Ohio ten cents a barrel, the new price be ing $1.78. Withdrawals of steamera from Bos ton were announced by the Leyland Line in that city. Indeterminate prison terms have been given Gotef and Gnadtus Gnastus at Terre Haute, Ind., two blackmailers. Mrs. Mary Eno Depue, said to be heiress to $2,000,000, escaped from a sanatorium in Stamford, Conn., to which her relatives wished to have her legally committed. William J. Bryan visited at Boston to keep a lecture engagement.- He was received by Governor Guild at the State House, and addressed both the Senate and the House. After his lecture Mr. Bryan addressed students of Harvard University at Cambridge. Nine little Japanese girls were ad mitted into the Redding Primary School in San Francisco.- Wireless messages were trans mitted from Point Loma, Cal., to Washington and Pensacola, Fla. Dr, Austin Flint, in answer, dur ing the Thaw trial in New York City, to a hyppthetical question containing 15.000 words and embodying Mr. Jerome's summary of the testimony, declared It his opinion that Thaw knew the nature of his act when he killed Stanford White. The 3ury disagreed in the case in New .York City against the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, which was charged with having paid rebates to the Sugar Trust. . FOREIGN. .Nicaragua has seized more than a thousand rifles aboard a steamship destined for Honduras. . A fatal case .of yellow fever oc curred near Paraje Nuevo, Mexico. The Diet of the Duchy of Bruns wick has decided to elect a regent, excluding the Duke of Cumberland and his son. . The Appropriation Committee of the German Reichstag approved the bill authorizing the issue of $87,500, 000 in treasury bonds. It was reported at Shanghai that a Wesleyan mission near Ning-Po had been destroyed and the missionaries killed. Restrictions on Japanese passports are believed by some Japanese law yers to be unconstitutional and have caused irritation. Lord Curzon was elected chancel lor of Oxford University, defeating Lord Roseberry by 1111 to 480. Anti-Hebrew riots occurred in Yel isavetgrad, Russia, but were checked by the intervention of the troops. , The taking of bodies from the hulk of the battleship Iena at Toulon, France, was completed, 103 being re covered. A dispatch from Madrid, Spain, says that the Government will prob ably lease the naval arsenal at Ferrol to a foreign company. Russian robbers cut off the heads of six men and one woman. A soldier and a . child who saw the butchery w$nt jnad, . ffllje Chatham Uecorfc, RATES OF ADVERTISING. 1 ... Ob square, on laatrtUa fl.00 On square, two Insertions ; 1.60 One square, one month - 8.60 For Larger Advertise ments Liberal Con tracts will be made. 1 THREE GRAFT SCANDALS Revelations at San Francisco, Harrisburg. and Albany. Testimony Showing How Huge Sums .Were Divided by iloodlcrs Wealthy Men Involvedr- San Francisco, Cal. Abe Ruef, the political boss of San Francisco, when he learned that he had been indicted on seventy-two counts in the gigantU bribe scandal, offered to confess if promised immunity. Theoffer was made to Detective Burns, who is guarding him in the San Francisco Hotel: , In all the amount of money in volved in the disclosures will reach $1,000,000. Of this sum nearly one half was given up by the city rail roarls for franchises. One telephone company, it is asserted, paid $200, 000, and another just half that sum. Two Supervisors confessed as soon as they -appeared before . the Grand Jury and the others soon followed their example. As told to the Jury, the railroad f und jof $450,000 wa9 so divided that Ruefl got $175,000, while the shares of the Supervisors ran from $15,000 down to S400C ep.ch. The Supervisors got $3000 each from one telephone company and $750 from a gas company. In the confessions made relativo to the actual taking'of money by the Supervisors it was not brought out that Mayor Schmitz has direct con nection with the deals made with the members of the Board of Supervisors. In the majority of cases Ruef-dealt with one mac, who passed the money out to his associates. First, and most important was the deal by which the United Railroads got an overhead trolley franchise. Ruef demanded $450,000 to carry through the transaction. This money was drawn iu installments calculated to be small enough to divert sus picion After glyi.usr $8", 000 to the Super visors and $85,000 for a person Ruef insisted must be taken care of, but who mav never have received the riwney. S2S0.000 was left to be di vifl't between Schmitz and Ruef. Tho corruption surroundiug the franchise granted to the Home Tele phone Comuany was even worse. Another transaction was the prize fight boodle of $20,000. Tames Coff roth. Willus Britt, Morris Levy and Eddie Graney, known as the "fight trust," each subscribed $5000 to se cure the exclusive privilege of prize fight permits for 1906. - GOT $90,718 FOR WORK COSTING $2060. Harrisburg, Pa. The ' Capitol in vestigating committee resumed its in quiry into the cost of the new State Capitol. The testimony showed that John H. Sanderson & Co., of Phila delphia, contractors for furnishing the Capitol, were paid by the State X90.74S.40 for the rostrums in the Senate and House caucus rooms. The sub-contractor sfor this work testified that he was paid $2060 by Sanderson for these rostrums. The testimony of the same sub-contractor showed that Sanderson's profit on the finished woodwork in fourteen other rooms in the building amounted to $126,645. 00. Murray Gibson, who was an un successful bidder against Sanderson for the contract for decorating and painting the building, testified that there was a difference of $1.99 Yz' cents a foot in favor of the State in his bid and that of Sanderson's, and that if the State had accepted his bid it would have saved more than $600, 000 on this item alone and he (Gib son) would have made a nice profit. JACKSON DEMANDS $11',161 ALLEGED CANAL GRAFT. Albany, N. Y: Colossal 'graft con nected with the $101,000,000 barge canal work has occurred, according to Attorney-General Jackson. As a result, he has demanded that the New York, Ontario and Western Rail road Company refund the State treas ury $117,161, which the Attorney General claims the last State canal board decided to pay the company without warrant of law for a brldgd of the company, displaced by the big canal in Oneida County. mt. Jackson says the improvement of the canal necessitated the' altera tion of the railway and the rebuild ing of the bridge across Wood Creek, antf that it was the duty of the rail road company to do the work at its own expense, the State being under no legal obligation to pay any part of the cost. THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH DEAD. Suddenly Loses Strength After Par tially Recovering From Operation. Boston. Thomas Bailey Aldrich died at his home in Mount Vernon street, aged seventy. Some weeks ago Mr. Aldrich un derwent an operation at the Homoeo pathic Hospital in this city, and al though for a time his convalescence was extremely slow the past two weeks have been so promising that the patient was removed to his home. It was thought the change would prove beneficial, although it was rec ognized that his condition was still serious. Early next day Mr. Aldrich sud denly became worse and gradually lost his strength. He died about 5 o'clock. ACCUSES A GOVERNOR. Says South Dakota Executive is Im plicated in Land Frauds. Washington, D. C. Representa tive Mann, of IUinois, has. publicly charged the Governor of South Da kota. Coe I. Crawford, with being guilty of a premeditated scheme to defraud the Government of public lands and with evading punishment through political influence. Mr. Mann presents affidavits of agents of the Interior Department and others ineupport of 13 charges.