liiTcbatbam H?ccor&. Zbe Cbatbam TRecorfc; IA. LONDON RATES OF ADVERTISING: One Square, one insertion $i. oo One Square, two Insertions. ... i. 5 One Squ-re. Ane month auo? -7CZ AND PROPRIETOR. XMs OF SUBSCRIPTION: For Larger Advertise merits Liberal Contracts will be made. 1J j IJ V w - ' I jtHCTLY IN ADVANCE , VOL. XXX. PITTSBORO. CHATHAM COUNTY. N. 0., WEDNESDAY MARCH 13. 1908. NO. 32. W m m a a V Ml .5 f TAR HEEL TOPICS Charged With Abduction. tfiNon, Special. Thursday . even- 1 Jesse Hrinkley, a married man 3 1 has been living apart from his for several months, eloped with s Ma:y Vann, daughter of Mr. ykri. C. V. Vann. These two pie have caused no little trouble isaffistrates circles here. As to , direction taken by the runaways ,one seems to know some, saying vent through the country in a ; others that they went away on i "train; still there are others who thev left on the shoofly. Soon r hearing of the elopment a re ter interviewed Mr. Vann in re d to the matter. He said: "I i't know what made me suspicious, ; about S o'clock Thursday night r0t it into my head that every zs was not going on around home ;t; so I began to get suspicious ' mv daughter's actions; I went crairh the house and looked for, in , t, looked everywhere that it was isible to find her. Finally I found ere she had passed out through a j ,el in the fence. Gaining the out- of my yard 1 was told that my hter and Jesse Brinkley had just on a busrgy. I immediately ap- pj to the proper authorities and iair.ed a werrant tor Brinkley, rzhvz elopment. Friday morning it changed to read ''abduction" T - 1 i J? i. J? mv (iausrnier is unuer luunmi 4rs of c?e. Later I went to Salem anest of the runaways but could I no trace of them. I shall spare efforts to apprehend them and iseeute Brinkley to the limit." Bobberies ir. Thoma-sville. rThomnsvilL?. Special. Thursday bt the home of Mr. L. R. Imber entered bv a robber and a num- of things were stolen. Among m was about in money. The iilv was sleeping in the room at time, but no one awakened and robbers escaped. Early Sunday mine the front window in the re room :n toe yene tJiocK oc- k:.ed by Max Wager, clothing mer- it. ivr.5 broken, and robbers en- ed the store and stole a lot of rhes. hats and other furnishings. izer.r search is being made to ap- iehend the robbers, but as yet no is suspected and it is doubtful the perpertators will ever be Wihdrigton Merchant Assigns. Vilrr.ir.-ton, Special. Capt. S. F. is. retail grocer at 614 North lirth street, has made an assign- jent. carnins: A. G. Hankins as as fcwe. The liabilities schedule a tie over SD.OOO with assets about e same The creditors are largely 'ilmington wholesale grocers, J. W. rooks beinsr the largest to the ".nun's of something over $900. fpt. Crair reserves for himself the pi real and personal property. In- mty to collect outstanding obliga te is assigned by Capt. Craig as e ear.se of the assignment. Taken Back to Madison. Asheville. Special. John Randall, 5 Madison countv man charged with murder of his wife wbo was 'Vdzht hern spvornl wpelcs aero for o t'e keeping on account of intense ehnjr against him, was taken back Marshall by a deputy sheriff- of at countv who came here for him. I is said that feeling" against the 'e?ed murderer has abated and at it is believed there is ,no lon- jtr any danger of mob violence. Spanish-American War. Kaleigh, Snecial. There was sent Jri Governor CVnti nbnnt ."30.000 for ''o Sapinsh-American War soldiers Xorth Carolina not already paid. this amount only about $15,000 & been paid to claimants and there ; still or. hand about $15,000 which as not yet been claimed. Great Month's Collections. Ralci-h, Special. The State De partment of Insurance by its collec ts for the nast mnnth has broken of its previous records. For Feb- "2ry the collections amounted to '5G.67l.irt turn- d over to the State Treasurv. ' the - ooks showing that this amount was fixers of the collections in any er one rnoath of the existence of epartment. The fiscal year will On the first nf Arril jmd the col- - . Wiov.? for the year will-be in excess Bitten by Rabid Bog. Ralegh, Soecial. There came . to Kal?h last week. Mr. R. E. Smith, Chnlybeate Springs, who was on ;ls v.ay to Baltimore to obtain the enr treatment for his little girl. '!e bttie one is -inst -fiv vnars old. ' u ate Monday afternoon she was bltten by a rabid dog. It is to have 7 O'-st treatment that she is being tak. e& to Baltimore. .i??3feafcfe-fe- iitiiw win mi oemuns or tne ocate 2f "WORK BEGINS SOON. On Construction of Teachers Train in School. Greenville, Special. The trustees of Eastern Carolina Teachers Train ing School appointed by the Legisla ture of 1907, et here last week and inspected the site selected, on which to locate the school. Those present were: J. Y. Joyner, Raleigh; T. J. Jarvis, Greenville; C. W. Wilson, Scotland Neck; J. C. Parker, Tren ton;; I. T. Turlington, Smithfield, and T. T. Armond, Kinston. The board met and organized with J. Y. Joyner president; C. W. Wilson, sec retary; R. J. Cobb, treasurer; T. J. Jarvis, J. Y. Joyner and Y. T. Or mond ,executive committee. H. Buck ingham of New York was elected landscape designer and Hook and Rodgers, of Charlotte, and H. W. Simpson of New Bern, associate architects in competition. Work of construction will begin as soon as plans are completed and material col lected . Clamis "Unwritten Law." Asheville, Special. Claiming that he had killed Paris Sumner, and that he was justifiable in doing so under the "unwritten law," James Tardy, a well known citizen of Limestone townskip, twelve miles from Ashe ville, aroused Deputy Sheriff Mitch- J ell at the county jail here about mid : night and demanded admittance. The shooting occurred twenty- nve yards irom rrady's Home. Frady and Sumner, both well known and highly respected citizens, are neighbors. Frady alleges that Sum ner was intimate with his wife and ; finding the two together, opened fire on Sumner. Frady shot five time. ' three of the bullets taking effect. ; Then Frady beat Sumner's skill in I with the butt of his pistol, r:d left j his victim for dead, coming to Ashe ville to surrender. Sumner was shot through the lower part of the abdo men, the right lung andright shouldei while an operation was necessary to remove the fractured pieces of skull. CHARLOTTE GETS CONVENTION The Queen City Will Entertain This Year the Democratic State Con vention, Her Claims Having Woe Out Over Those of Greensboro For This Honor. Raleigh, N. C, Special. The State Democratic executive committee in session here Wednesday night select ed the 24th of June at Charlotte foi the meeting of the State Democratic convention, and by a close vote en dorsed Bryan for the Presidency. Th resolution to endorse Bryan for Pres ident and C. B. Aycock for Vice President was warmly debated and was finally defeated. Serious Play With Pistol. Asheville, Special. An accident as a result of playing with- a pistol occurred near Weaverville, tin miles from Asheville, and it is feared that two boys, Harmie Black an an 8 year old lad named Eiler, will die. Young Black, 15 years old? was at tempting to drive a 32-cal ire cart rid ere into a rjistol of 22-caf- bre bore when the cartridge explodf j. Ellei was standing close by wafr aing the ' effort. The bullet entered J--. pt undei .his left eye and, going tb, mgh the head, lodged under the ski back of tb nVht ear. Two of BH k's fin gers were torn off and bios 1 poison has developed. Neither of :he boys are expected to live. Sales of Fertilizer. Raleigh, Special. The president of the Caraleigh Phosphate Mill says Ithat orders are now coming in verv j'well. He cannot yet tell how the I sales will compare with those last season, though there is a general fall ' ing off of about 25 per cent., it seems. ' The Agricultural Department will in a few days saaJce up us nguiea a: to sales of fertilizer tax' tags. Receiver Uegins Action. Saisbury, Special. In the United States Circuit Court for the Western district of North Carolina action was begun by Hon. John S. 'Henderson. thp Whitnev Company ! against the T. A. Gillespie Company, contractors, for non-performance oi ' work at the Narrows. The complaint was filed and the warrant of attach ent was issued by Judge Boyd, at Greensboro against all the property i of T. A. Gillespie Company in North 1 j; i. Tvrwco nf boldina Carolina ior ux - the property of the defendant to sat isfy the paintiff's claim. Many Out of Work." Raleigh, Special Labor Commis sioner Varner says that great num bers of people are out of work all over the State and tha tthere is no kick about scarcity of labor. He sayS many persons are going back f ro-a the towns to the farms and that this movement is quite a large one and growing. THE WORK OF CONGRESS Doings of Onr National Law-Makers Day by Day: Tha Postoffice Bill. After having been sidetracked for nearly a week, the postoffice appro priation bill- was further considered in the House of Representatives. Mr. Small, of North Carolina, spoke in opposition to the proposi tion embraced in a separate bill to increase the pay to ocean steamships for. carrying the mails. He declared it to be nothing more nor less than a ship subsidy. ; A similar view was entetained by Mr. Finely, of South Carolina, who characterized the . proposition as an "indefensible and cowardly subter fuge." H accused th9 Republicans of attempting to deceive the country into the belief that the bill was in the interest of the. postal service and challenged them to come forward with a proposition for a ship subsidy, pure and simple with its purposes and objects clearly stated and unequivocally avowed. Mr. Finley's Plea. Mr. Finley pleaded for larger ap propriations for the rural free de livery service, for the establishment of a rural parcels post, for more clerical assistance in the third-class postoffices where the salary is less than $1,600 and for greater compen sation for fourth-class postmasters. Mr. Clark, of Missouri, inquired ol Mr. Overstreet, of Indiana, what was about to bedevil all of us into in sanity." Mr. Overstreet replied that memr bers become frightened at what really was' a small matter. The pro posed Penrose measure, he said, pro hibited the admission to the mails of publications which once had bee declared unmailable. He assured the House, however, that the bill would not be reported at this session. Mr. Clark maintained that the Postoffice Department had ample authority tc settle the question of what were' le gitimate and illegitimate publica tions. "All that it needs," he de clared "is a little, nerve and some common sense." The advertising publications which the department was hitting at, he said, could all be shut out if the department exercised ordinary discretion. "But," he ad ded, "the trouble with the Postof fice Department is that it will noi draw the line between a publication that is evidently and simply an ad vertising scheme and a legitimatt newspaper. ' Defends Newspapers. He maintained that there nevci 'was a legitimate newspaper in th United States that abused the privi lege of sample copies, and he said that Congress never intended tc strike at the number of sample cop ies issued by legitimate newspapers. Ten per cent., he anrued, was not i sufficient allowance of sample copies for legitimate newspapers. On the subjest of fraud orders Mr Clark said that the Postmaster Gen eral exercised powers not given tc the Czar of Russia. Hs protested against injury to a man's business by ex parte action of the department and insisted that fraud orders should not be issued until a fair hearina had been given and that the aggriev ed person should have the right ol appeal to a court of justice. "Tne quicker that system is remedied," ht declared, "the better off the country is going to be." On a point of order by Mr. Wan-, ger of Pennsylvania, the provision for a second assistant postmaster foi Chicago was eliminated from the bill Mr. Wanger is chairman of the com mittee on expenditures in the Post offico Department. An effort was. made by Mr. GoebeL of Ohio, to double the number oi postoffice employes drawing salTi of $1,200 but his amendment to thai effect was voted down. An amendment by Mr. Goldfogle. of New York, to jrive 30 days' an nual vacation to clerks, carriers and other employes of first and second class postoffices and offices having s city delivery service suffered a simi lar fate. Consideration of the bill had not been concluded when the House ad journed. For Greater Norfolk. Norfolk, Special. The question oi the consolidation of Norfolk an Portsmouth under one municipal head, is again being agitated in bus, ness circles, and several of the pron inent business bodies of the city have committees named to take the mattei up and push it. In addition, there u a strong movement looking to the in corporation of Huntersville and Lam bert's Point within the city limits, for sanitary reasons. Norfolk has grown out to both of these suburbs, and the annexation is urged. Walsh Wants a New Trial. Chicago, Special. Motions for a new trial in the case of John R. Walsh, the aged financier who was convicted of irregular practices in hi management of the defunct Chicago National Bank, will probably be ar gued soon. Attorneys for Walsh are confident that they will yet secure th acquittal of their client. MORE COMPLICATED S. C Supreme Court Takes a Hand in Dispensary Muddle WILL JUDGE PRITCHARD RECEDE South Carolina Supreme Court Hands Down Unanimous Opinion Uphold ing Attorney General Lyon ir. Dis pensary Matter Next Move Up To Judgo Pritchard. Columbia, S. C, Special On Sat urday, the South Carolina Supremo Court handed down an opinion, con curred in by the entire court, uphold ing attorney general Lyon's conten tion and declaring that the action of Judge Pritchard 's court was contrary to the constitution of the United States. Monday's dispatches from Colum bia say: There is no mistaking the fact that the members of the State administra tion are feeling good over the decis ion of the State Supreme Court ren dered Saturday afternoon on the mandamus petition of Attorney Gen eral Lyon wherein the court sided in vigorous language with every princi ple of law contended for by the At torney General in the contest between the State and Judgo Pritchard ovci the dispensary funds in litigation. Attorney General Lyon and Attorney W. F. Stevenson, ass ..iated with him, expressed themselves as much pleas ed with and gratiiied at the decision. Ir was everything that they ' could hope for. And Governor Ansel has given expression to lil.j sentiments. Opportunity For Pritchard to Reccds. But whether there will be an extra session of the Legisiatuie following, ili;- (!iu-ini is stii m. iv .ibt. AL, v nfc Round tree and Anderson, oi Atlanti. wili be here soon for con-sui-!.-n !.: with Atlornev eral Lvo.. m.d other counsel associated witu him the subject. The opinion seeis v '. that Judge Pritchard should be g!c!i an opportunity to recede iMn his i sition. in the .vay opened for Inn1. to.yl'! in iho decisio.. v!' the Si-ntli Car Una Sr.-:?ie Com. 1C he dors not give way, or if he niaA.:j :iM .:-.tv . cstile move, it is likely sin extra se. ..on will be called to ena- t such leg.:-."tion as will put tlie SiaL-'s attorneys and the diLptnsary comnjis mission in full charge of affairs. Now that the receivers have quali fied, the intimation is that the next move on the part of the opposition vii! be to attempt to get possession it the funds by a call upon the com mission. Members of the administra tion have all along expressed perfect "fidence in being able to score a plete victory in the Federal :ts when the case is finally got re the United States Supreme rt. but at the same time Govenor nscl, as peace-loving as he has al vavs shown himself to be has mani fested a disposition not to allow the funds to go into the hands of tha Federal Court. Just; Debts Will Be P?id. New York, Special. In r. state ment issued by Eugene P. Carver, counsel for Charles W. Morse, decla ration is made that the indicted bank er believe?, he is able and with the co-operation of his creditors proposes to pay all his just debts. Morse's counsel further states that all legal riabts and remedies will be invoked to" accomplish the settlement oil obli gations and that all pending criminal matters before the State and Federal courts will be urged for a quick de termination as to matters of law and facts. Richmond as Dry as the Desert of Sahara. Richmond, Va.. Special For the first time in the history of Virginia no liquor can be had at the various social' clubs. The Byrd bill closing all bars on Sunday went into effect Sunday and even at the oldest and most influential clubs, no intoxicating drinks were served. For The Army and tho Navy. Washington, Special. Navy De partment officials appeared before the congressional naval affairs com mittee and urged the purchase of the Jamestown Exposition grounds by the government, to be used as a naval training station. Secretary Taft and a delegation apeared before the con gressional committee on military af fairs and recommended the purchase of ten thousand acres adjoining Chicamauga National Park for man oeuvring grounds for troops. Judge C. D. Clark Dead. ' Knoxville,- Tenn., Special. Judge C. D. Clark, who was appointed to tho Federal bench by President Cleve land in 1S95 as judge for the east ern and middle districts of Tennessee, is dead at Chattanooga, aged 61. He had been at Asheville, N. C, for some time for his health, and only recent ly was removed to Chattanooga. He was a native of Tennessee. FAVOR PURE FOODS Dr. Witey Addresses Congress of Mothers ETERNAL VIGILANCE NEDrb Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry, Declares That With the Housekeepers Rest3 the Best Means of Executing the Pure Food Laws. Washington, Special. An urgent plea for pure food in the household was made by Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, efcief of the bureau of chemistry of the Department of Agriculture, in an address before the international congress on the welfare of the child, which is being held here under the auspices of the national mothrs congress. Dr. Wiley emphasized the import ance of the mothers of the country being eteranlly vigilant as to the source of food products that came into their homes to see that they or fresh, uncontaminated, palatable and wholesome. Continuing Dr. Wiiey said that the best means of executing the pure food law is in the household. Importance of Purity. Dr. Wiley called attention to the great importance of purity in such articles as butter, maple syrup, honey and particularly of all dairy supplies. "Especially where there are children in the house," said he, "the import ance of the purity of the milk can not be sufficiently accentuated. The actual danger to health and actual threat of death in the case of infants that are fed impur milk is one of the greatest curses of the country." Dr. Wiley advocated the formation of a union of the mistresses of house holds, which, he said, by singleness of purpose, unity of action and power or organization could secure a better conformity to the law than any vig ilance on the part of the executors of the law would be able to accom plish." At the afternoon session, addresses were made by Clifford Webster Barnes, of Lake Forest, 111., on "Moral Training Through the Agency of the Public Schools," and by Miss Jane Brownlee, of Toledo, O., on "A Plan For Moral Training." A symposium on parent teachers associations was conducted by Mrs. Edwin C. Grice, of Philadelphia, at the night meeting following which five minutes reports were made from the different States. Miss Alice Leckey, chairman of the food committee of the national con sumer's League, spoke on "What the Consumer Can Do For Pure Food.'-' Greek Laborers Attacked. Washington, N. C, Special. Ac cording to reports arriving in this city there came near being a race riot in Belhaven Tuesday night. It seems that the Inter-State Cooperage Company, employing between 400 and .500 men in Belhaven, had broughl down a party of sixteen Greek labor ers to take the place of negro work men. These Greeks, one of whom was married, were living in four dwel ling houses on the company's prop erty. Tuesday night about 10 o'clock while in these houses and unarmed, the Greeks were attacked by a mob of fifty or sixty negroes, supposed to be led by several whites. This mob shot up the houses and forced ,the Greeks, both male and female, to flee to a nearby swamp in order to save their lives. Later it developed that five of the Greeks were seriously, if riot fatally, wounded. The mob, un able to find them in the swamps, dis banded for the night. Washington, Clerk Kills His Wife. Washington, Special. Walter Hil lis, a clerk in the War Departent, shot and killed his wife Friday. When arrested he said he took his wife for a burglar. Hillis' statements are corroborated by his mother, who. as serts that there had been no trouble between husband and wife. Soldiers in Havan Riot. Washington, Special. The Secre tary of War has ordered an investigation of the part tak en by the American soldiers in a riot early Wednesday morning, be ginning with a disturbance created by a drunken private in a cafe of the "Redlight" district and followed by an unsuccessful attempt by his com rades to rescue him from the police, and a free fight in which several shots were fired, , and finally by the arrest of forty soldiers and their re turn under guard to Camp Columbia. News in Brief. President Roosevelt delivered a ser mon to the delegates to the Internat ional Mothers' Congress, who were received at the White. House. James Clark & Co., a Baltimore firm of distillers, in answer to a Gov ernment suit, attacked the legality of the whiskey provisions of the Pure Food law. The visit of King Alfonso to Barce lona was marked by great enthusiasm. D,V0RCE v Wife of the Murderer of Stanford White Has Instituted Proceedings For the Annulment of Her Marri age. New York, Special. Evelyn Nes bit Thaw has instituted proceedings for the annulment of her marriage to Harry K. Thaw. The action will be based on the allegation that the de fendant was insane when the union was contracted. Thaw purposes to defend the. suit. The papers in the case were served Wednesday and an early trial is expected. In the mean time the two, by mutual agreement, will remain apart. In official statements by , counsel for both parties was confirmed the long suspected culmination in th wedded lives of Stanford White's slayer and the woman whose story m his defense brought her an unhappj notoriety as wide as the reading world. For weeks it has been gos sipped that a divorce was imminent and even during Thaw's last trial, through which his wife stood gamely by him, it was pretty generally be lieved that whatever the outcome foi the prisoner, the two would nevei again live together. These reports were frequently based on rumored opposition to the young woman oh the part of the Thaw family. Ii their; statements, however, counsel de nietl that Mrs. William Thaw, Har ry's mother, had taken any part is the proposed separation. Lunatic Threatens Bank. Omaha, Neb., Special. A bold at tempt was made to rob the Mer chants' National Bank at Thirteenth and Farnam streets by a man who, although at first thought to be a des perate criminal, . is now believed by the police to be a lunatic. . The man gave his name as L. L. Fee, form erly of Rockford, 111. He walked in to the bank soon after it opened and meanacing Vice President Luthei Drake with a bottle which he said contained nitro-glycerine, demanded $5,000 cash. Mr. Drake though be lieving for the moment that his lift and those of his fellow officials anc employes of the bank might be ir imminent danger, conferred calmly with the would-be robber until othei officials called the police and tht man was taken into custody. Test? by the police, seem to show, that tht contents of the bottle were harm less. , Slaughtering Moors By Hundreds. Paris, By Cable. General D. Amade is slaughtering the Moorisr pretender's followers by hundreds according to official reports from th seat of the warfare in Morocco. From the enegy with which the cam paign is being conducted it is hoped that he will soon have the Pretendei himself prisoner, practically ending the hostilities which have been rag ing for months. Sultan Weds No. 6. Paris, By Cable. According to ad vices frbm Morocco, Sultan Mulai Hafid is now celebrating his sixtt wedding since his proclamation a sovereign in Marrakosh a few months' ago. The bride in the present nup tials is a daughter of Kaid Ghlawl, z powerful supporter. It is alleged ir Fez .that Mulai Hafid is collecting taxes to pay for his numerous wed dings. Bsptist Workers Conference. Center, Tex., Special. Baptists ir large numbers assembled here Mon day for the East Texas Workers' con ference openeing in the evening to ex tend through Tuesday and Wednes day. The work of all the schools, in stutions and organizations conducted by the church in this section will b fully discussed. Night Riders Kill a Negro. Louisville. Special. A. hundree night riders captured the town oJ Birmingham early Tuesday, shot sij negroes, one fatally, and whipped five others. The tobacco troubles die not figure in the affair. The actior folowed repeated warnings to the ne groes to leave the town. The raiders were masked and shet into every ne gro cabin in the place. 1 Prince Expelled From Germany. Berlin, Special. Prince Ludwif Menelik, a near relative of Emperoi Menelik of Abyssinia, has been ex pelled from Germany as an "undesir able." The prince was expelled froa Saxony some time ago. Charges oJ drunkenness and disorderly conduct have been preferred against him ill several cities. FoT some time he lias been trying to organize companies tt develop Abyssinian mines and rubbej and cotton plantations. Four Battleships, Says Hoson. Washington, Special Representa tive Hobson, of Alabama, who, al though on the Democratic side ol the House, has been supporting tht President's greater navy propaganda said that the House would vote foi four battleships this session in spitt ef the fact that the naval aHairs committee reported in favor of only two. In "Brief MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST $ .Two persons are dead as the re sult of forest fires that swept over part of Sampson county, North Car olina. North Carolina retail merchants in large numbers have resolved to boy cott Virginia shippers because of their efforts to defeat the efforts of North Carolina cities in procuring fairer freight rates. More than one hundred laborers have been laid off 'from the Spencer, N. C, shops of the Southern Rail way. At Columbia, S. C, 50 were laid off, and the shops at Atlanta, Ga., and at Selma, Ala., have been closed. 200 to 300 have been laid off at Knoxville, Tenn. Napoleon's Union School, at To ledo, Ohio, t the property of which was valued ' at $110,000, was totally destroyed by fire on Tuesday morn ing. The children were just begin ning to enter the building when tho fire was discovered, hence there was no loss of life. Joseph H. MeCullough, of Green ville, S. C.j has withdrawn from tho race for United States senator in or der to devote his whole time to hi duties as one of the receivers ap pointed by Judge Pritchard to wind up the offairs of the old State dis pensary. Railroads own over $150,000,000 in coal lands that must be sold under the commodities clause of the Rate law. Perry Belmont predicts that tho Democratic candidate for President will carry New York State. Delegates from all parts of tho world will attend the Mothers' Con gress in Washington this week. An unidentified foreigner pleaded for a job in Norfolk, got it, became ill in an hour and died. A son of J. L. Rodgers, of Grafton, who disappeared, is dead, and Mrs. Rogers is delaying the furneral in the hope of her husband's return. Conditions in the iron and steel industry are reportedto be improv ing. A bride of a month turned from her husband in -New York when he was accused of theft and by hi silence admitted the charge. Hiram Maine, 64 years old, was ar rested at Indianapolis for writing threatening letters to Speaker Can non. The action of the Attorney-Gener- f al of South Carolina in attacking Judge Pritchard and advising the State board not to turn over the dis pensary fund to the receivers named by him is severely condemned at the Judge's home. Warden Frank Co'nley, of the Mon tana penitentiary, was badly gashed and Assistant Warden John Robin son was killed by three prisoners who tried to escape. Congressman Adolph Meyer, of New Orleans is dead. The British public is deeply anger ed over the alleged attempt of Em peror William to meddle in British naval affairs. Shanghai distrusts the protesta tions of the Japanese that their in- . tentions are peacable. General Stossel has been senten ced, but it is believed the Czar will commute the sentence. It is rumored in Lisbon that the young King of Portugal will wed the only daughter of Emperor William. All of the little ictims of the Colinwood school fire wer buried. The attitude of Japan is regarded as an intentionally menacing one by Chinese officials. The city of Barcalonia has made preparations to receive King Alfonso, but fears that anarchists will make good the threat to kill him while he is there. William Dean Howells was receiv ed in private audience by King Vic tor Emmanuel. The Minnecota Democratic Stale Convention declared for Governor Johnson after a hot fight by Bryan supporters. Chancellor Day, of the Syracuse University, is charged by Rev. Geo. A. Cooke of violating the laws of the Methodist church by his attack on Roosevelt. The brother of Walter F. Baker, of Boston, who died under strange cir cumstances in New York, has prevail ed upon 'the New Jersey authorities to make a searching investigation. A Philadelphia boy confessed start- ing 11 fires to see the engines run. Ellwood T. House, first vice-president of the Union Trust Company, of Detroit, and a native of Wilmington, Del., shot himself dead because of financial worry and ill health. The enforcement of the Local Op law in Knt countv has resulted in four hotels being advertised for 6ale by the sheriff. Bishop Worthington's will, filed probate at Pittsfield, Mass., contains public bequests to the amount' of $50,000. -