.1 'J r a r rsTAEusma) W7i , mm STR1KEATTIIG ' 1 ' V $ HARD TASKS Wcrk cf Reniovisg Bcdb From the Mine Was too ' Much for Them - CALL- FOR MORE MEN Work of Removing Burned and Je- oomposlnff Bodies Almost Bejroad Hainan Endarance Workmen Strike at Women and Volunteers Are Called for Bnt Slow to Re podNo (MMrtacie Now to Bring ing Ont the Uodly Except the If jicuii y in ueiung men to wont- Charred ' Bodies of Thirty Men Were Halved Early Today, ). klen Found Xllve. Cherry, 111.. , Nov. 20-' Twenty men were found, alive in the St. Paul mine this af ternoon. o a Cherry, Ills., Nov. 20 The firemen and miners employed in the work of bringing bodies from the St. Paul mine struck at dawn today, after an ' nouncing that it was impossible to continue work without oxygen .hel- mets. The bodies then being brought to the surface were in a terrible .condition and work was almost be yond human endurance. ! Volunteers' were immediately call ed for and a score of the male rela tives of miners -entombed in the' mine ralHed to the support of the Chicago Jre';omBhyt..un.det Captain Kenney, or engine company No. to who stock to It with TiiTMnehiJte : 'n.., -v; ' The difficulty xrt getting men to continue In work in the ' .poisoned, drifts angered Captain Kehney,: who Bhojited as he came to the top of the shaft: "Where are all you volunteers now: you were thick around here be fore we could get into the mine; now we can't find you."1 There lfj no obstacle remaining to bringing but all bodies in the mine. AU so far found are badly burned, as well as' blackened with smoke. The charred and blackened bodies of thirty men were recovered- early today. Thirty-six bodies were found by the fire fighters piled high and on top of. each other at the end of a blind gallery of the western gallery lit the second vein. Hundreds of men and women tried to Identify the re mains but failed. 'The southern drift was explored by members of the recovery crew .and through the smoke could be discerned a vast heap of dead men: lying about among dead mules and the wreckage of cars. JFhe crowd that remained at the mine all night waiting for the cage to rise bearing Its weight of burned humanity, increased as the dawn broke. . :-? . ::':. , , More than one woman, overcome by the awful sight,' reeled and 'fell to the ground and was escorted away to the troops on guard and was given aid by the Red Cross nurses. Even strong meq fled at the terrible. Bight. The belief that -back in V rift of the west gallery men who fled at the time of the fire and walled them selves in, may be still alive gave add ed impetus to the work of recovery. ' The heap of debris, and timber which walled in ;,.a large portion of the, west gallery ?' was energetically attacked with pick and shovel. "When the obstruction was cleared away the bodies of ten men lay. at the door-, their faces buried in their arms. . It was evident ' that, escape , had been 'cot off by" the approaching flames and that the falling timbers had emtombed them within the drift. The sentries, guarded,, the shaft constantly day d flight W first load of bodies came to the sur face, the crowd w&lobr had been held back at the m'iltary Unas, with one accord, moved toward the mine shaft, with a, wild, mad -rush; 'Only the presence of the militia Averted ,a dis aster. - ,'.-; v':--iwV"--- :,k '- preparations were made today to remove the bodies, '' place them In caskets and turn them over to. the relatives of friends who. would Iden- tffy them. , A' rear was entertained today rby rkitig at the scene of puysiuiauB wormug k me svune m the disaster that disease might he communicated , to the hundreds of men anu women wuu me view we lue . odles. r - -J -f trravu iA023 today mxsm v WAS AN ACT OF SAVAGERY of the Two Americans Was Due to Personal a?; 1 1 hie .charge ,wmutimm The Men Were Acctmedi ot. Jjtying Minerf to Mow Up Nicangnan War- ships Wre Tried -by Court Mar tial and Executed at Tfllayfc's Com inand. Although Army Official Opposed tliex ExecuUon-i-Case Is Absolutely Cnprecdhted 8Uto Department Not Satisfied With the Exptaaatfcm.. d Further : Steps : (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Washington, Nov. 20 The etate de partment this morning received a re port, from United States Vice CotiAul Calder, who Is at Managua, 'Nicaragua, dated 7 o'clock last night which roads as follows: "The telegraphic Instructions of No vember 18, U p.. m. were received No vember 19, Nlcaraguan. Minister for foreign affairs has informed me today that the Americans were executed on November 12,' at 10 al m., stating that they had confessed to laying mines In the v Ban Juan river with the object of blowing up Nioaraguan ships; that they were tried by court martial, Sal amon Selva, acting a prosecuting at torney,,.;.; v-.;"'v'' 'i The case is absolutely . unprecedent ed. The commander-in-chief ofr"-the Nicataguan army, and the minister ajan. erftl of- Nicaragua, opposed the etocu- won.v it was croerea "uy-- iTestdent SSelaya, notwithstanding this and. due undoubtedly .; to . personal : antagonism, although 'Cannon had -been jnveived In revolutions against' : the Nicaraguan government, lawyers here who have been ''consulted have asserted that the execution was unwarrantable savagery. Letters to the families of the deceased have been kept for evidenc." It Is known that the state depart ment does not feel satisfied with this explanation. It . is not improbable thtt-t further important action will be taken, me answer nas been reoeivea and it is understood that it substanti ally covers the points in the dispatch received from the United States civil consul at Managua. The department has not announced when it will make public the letter received from the le gation. It is said that President Zelaya's -grudge against Cannon is due to some action that Salvador took against Nlc. aragua In which Cannon took part. A Land of Murders. - . Washington, Nov. 20 Secretary Knox last night received from Panama a dispatch signed by Charles Salvador Chamorro, Marcus Velasquez, and Adan Canton, whiph may. cause. .the United , States to take immediate action In as-, sistlng the Estrada revolutionists. . The dispatch is as follows: "Despotism Zelaya atrocious. Coun try turned into all, penitentiary. Man. agua .general horrors where thousands of cltlxena t are -tortured in order to wrench off their last -cent. Prisoners are . starved, flogged, slain. Terror be. yond description Zelaya hires adven- turers, the scutt of all nations to serve Him as executioners and -diplomatic agents. ' Ires, ' secretary , general of Zelaya oyernmnt,-murdered his col league, y'Almtamarano, minister ot forelgti relations. By such- men IS TTS! If Uig ito free Nicaragua from this burn ing- shame. ' Government Costa Rico tolerates occupation its territory by trnnnn- Onvfirnment Honduras is Zelaya's allyi' i .x . : "We protest, uj, the name or numan- ity ;and cftlllaatlon; and call on. the sons of wasnmton ana uncoin 10 synipathise with the oppressed peo- pallot was ordered, there being six pie pt Nicaragua." : ; nt eiect. There being only The state department declined to tnlrty.four of the iaymen, their l.al make any comment on ahe dlspatchi lA -. hut if " C -m nioti made It I believed the- department will take action as will give full re- poe-nltlon to the Estrada lorces, as belligerents. Defense of Wo Avail. 1 Washington, Nov. 20-It Is' said at the state department today that the claim of Zelaya's officials that Leon- ard Grace and Leroy wnnon were w outad because they ww wr7j' mite mine, in the f tempt to deetroy Tdeferisrtor the shoottogTof b! found berths at that Ek .TJTil'J -.V.:t. nra and Cannon. 'nmM nv that the ,w,ntng ot river or haror in times of war against an enemy is in acoraanoe with the rules of civilized warfare, i ... j fcALEIQH, N. tERIODISTS AGAIN HAVE FINE SESSION Dr. J. C Kilgo Discusses the . Status of Education In N ; This Country Delegates to the General Confer- ence - Elected Yesterday Hev. Charles Py Sherrell Will be Tried 5 on Charges Made Against Him Clwrch ExtenHitfh Secretary Talks " Some of e Evidence in the Sher rlll Cae Conference Will Prob ably Get Through' and Adjourn .. Monday and . the Preachers Will - On p&i to Their Homes. ' (Special to The Times) j Hickoryi N. C, Nov. 20- Finishing the morning session yesterday, it was announced (hat Ir. S. A. Steele would speak again at 3:30, and at 7:30. Dr. John C. Kllgo would de liver an educational address. Both were atrnals for the Catherine of a large crowd, "flfling the spacious church till" people, were turned aawy tZ ai,l'Jl i v.. ?.vyy U "-s" the afternoon, and the address was in- spirlng in every way, as he gave in- Cldent after Incident of how young peopla Had been reached and put to work through, league Influences, A Dr, pjuuuD's wvwiAuanu n jwiumau Steel is a wdwderfuily gifted man, both as a -Ifospel preacher and plat form speaker with an experience few men have had. -. Dr. Kilgo Speaks. : The 7:80 service waa m charge of cwvb.- aM,.aM.oi miy. chufilT, CTarJotte, and president : of Mader died in agony within a very the board Of Education in the confer- short time after ho had sampled the ence. ' . v; . , Ipeiiets. tii W"4.' nivnn iaaA ''"When the news tf thA nlnt hnil he- ahd the conference trio, as mentioned" n public, a wave of excitement yesterday, sang a selection, "The "went the public. Today meetings Good Old ' Fashioned Way," at the were organized to denounce the Sorv- Close Of Which Or. Kilgo was present- t-was asserted that tho crisis ed and nroceedad at once Into thefliS- Wpl,ld becone.to aeute that the gov- ea ana proceeded at once into unsure ertmntlt wouI1 have alternative but nuU110 nZfJ? lter ,t8 ta tK Ba,ton8 0ae th.s country. He told how the gen- more artje. eral board comes south once a year in This would result in international Pullman co rs, Sit ddwn to a banquet, -complications and Rustcia and Italv deplore the-conditions of education, would be '.immediately involved. The and go back home feeling that they recent, pact made between Osar Nich- have transformed the educational olas and King Victor Emmanuel for conditions Of the south with never a the preservation of peace in tho near thought that the church has any part east 18 one of the most lmPrtat fac- ln the education of the people, said to ta he ?tnt,,m t??aly: The pills ..f nif their ignorance" and aent to the Austlmn officials were en- ..T.'k nL nI fminda 'Closed ln etteT that the slffna- With that as a preliminary fOUnda-. tm.e of MfJnapUta FTancls.. most, tion the doctor proceeded to dilate - trustworthy secret agents of Austria upon the conditions, giving figures to show that the churches of thff land, with 80,000,000 people, were fur nishing 80 per cent of all the stu dents in school, and such has been the history of the churoh and educa tion, and gave figures to show how this branch tf the church ' was fur nlshing a larger per cent, saying that the churches are at the back of the educational movement today, rather than the Pullman car crowd that break champaign bottles in "some ho tel dining room, getting inspiration therefrom. , " Then with figures he showed how the church colleges have furnished and are furnishing the majority of prominent men of the nation. Delegates to General Conference. Pridav mornins's session of tie conference was another one f real .,..1. An 1Ana awaw nna "wake and wide awake. Ten-ihirty was set as the hour for the election of delegates to the general confer- ence to meet in Asheville next May, land for the first time in the sessjem. ytne laymen assemmea on uie ien oi the bishop and the clerical members jn front and to the right, ana tne nrsi took six ballots to get the six men. On the first ballot W. R. Odell. P. 8. Weaver, ex-Governor W. D. Turner and J. L. Nelson were elected. Sec- ona ana tnira Dauois were iruiumo, with R, L- Durham, C. H. Ireland and S. A. Odell In the lead. The fifth ballot landed' C H. Irehfhd and the sixth found Mr. F. S. Lambeth, who aa not Deen leading to that time. With the clerical members there was a long'and tedious count on the ar(t ballot, taking nearly two hours thm, gn(J on, twQ of thfl time, these the pastor here, and Dr. T. F. Marr, presiding elder of the Wmston district. Fol- towing Close ana mickmib uuiy w Continued on Page Seven.) ..u oi i. C. SATURDAY, IIOVEITBR 20, 1909. VIIOLESAtE ! POIXriCAL MURDER PLOT HugVlIp in Austrian GovermentService LAID TO SERVIANS r- .s- Baron Mnder . Dies As a"fWult of Poison Mailed. nAm Many Other Officers Receive. Poison la Shape of Pills, Bnt jf Are Fony wonted by Death of Iwron Madcn. plot in Laid to Servians and Meet. ings Organized Denouncing Them; Secret Service Med at Work J lay Cause International Complications 'if Indica'tloiutAre Correct. Vienna. Nov. 20 A wholesHln politi cal murder plot, in which the lives of several of the highest , Austrian offi cers were imperilled and one was kill ed, was uncovered today by the death of Baron Mader. Excitement is W Jense. The plot Is laid to Servkhe, and it was predicted today that Balkan crisis had again been tho sol . name,- -oione. naron .uaaer a ed early to. 'containing deadly poieon sent to him through the mails. Similar pills were gent to na)f dozen other h,gh mltItarv and olvll offloials. The phK were put ln the form of sample and appeared to bo part of an -advorthilna campaign for a new cure. BaoK of 'fels was a threatening political plot 0 has do- sent only to foes of Servla. i A labratory examination of the pills made immediately at tho -'instigation of the foreign offiw, revealed the fact' that they were filled with one of the mt deadly-poisons (cnowAiyThe effecM 4hte. iramwKgte; uaVenr were immediately put on the case. The quick discovery of the nature of the pellets, due to Baron Mader's death, probably saved the lives of many of the country's leaders. A tiny bit of the subtle poison would be sumcient to end life. In each pill was enough! to cause the death of a dozen men. JOSEPH G, CAXXOJT. Sneaker Cannon, who is bitter at ' Representative Herbert Parsons be- cause of the accusations he made some time ago that Vncte Joe-was re- elected to the speakership through a deal with Tammany. The Speaker now favors congressional probe Into the Sugar Trust fraud's. Parsons' father was counsel for the late Henry Ot Havemeyer, ' .-L.: 2 ;QfANY Representative Representative Herbert Parsons, is - f ; non's re-election to that position was brought about through a combina- m with Tammany Hall, have so nngerl Cncle Joe that lie proposes to start a probe In the Sugar Trust. John E. Parsons, lalher of the repre- wntative ami counsel of the late Henry O. Haveiueyer is already under Indictment. The recent ''disclosures, however, have impressed Speaker Cannot, with the Idea that .the opportunity wa DEATH FROM FOOTBALL GAME ty iaseti wire to The Times.) ' : West Orange, N. J., Nov. 20Poilce fftday began Investigation Into the death Of Albert P. Wiberalske. the 17 year old boy. whose spine was broken m a football game vesterdav His in- markaby smr to those which caused the death of Cadet Byrne of West Point and brought Midshipman Wilson, of Annapolis, near death, Wiberalske was right half back on the West Ch ange high school team which played the. Trinily Chapel team of New Yorok on the Walesslng Oval, when he was fatally hurt. One result f the fatalit- b( e"ort a' anti-football legislation in this state. 11 was in the second half that the boy was killed. Wiberalske was given ti, h,n nnri rn.-ri. it tr ti thi.-tv yard line. He was tackled low, and m falling pitched on his head doubling n tinder his body, The lad was rushed to the Memorial Hospital, two miles away in an automo bile, and was placed on the operating table. He never nes9, however. regained eonscious- LONNIE MILES PARDONED TODAY Governor Kitchin today pardoned Lonnie Miles, who was sentenced at the May term of Wake county court to serve twelve months on the roads for carrying concealed weapon. The reasons for pardon are: ' I Police justice and prosecuting at torney both recommend pardon on the ground that six months sdr-vice on the roads Is sufficient punishment' for his offense. As no aggravating circum stances appear, I think a less punish ment inun twelve munins wm swumy the law, and I therefore, pardon pris oner. Explosion on Battleship. (By Cable to The Times) Portsmouth, Engld Nov. 20 A battery explosion occurred on board a submarine In the harbor this 'morning. Two engineer artificers - were seriously burned and the in terior of the vessel was badly dam . aged. Aged Couple Mnrry. L,easea wire w ine nmes; South Hooksett, N. H., Nov. 80 Abyl Cheney, 90 years old, and Mrs. Eliza J. Martin, 72, were married last night at the home of the bride, near Rowes corner. The bride has a fifteen acre farm" which she will -fell. She will make her home in Concord, Va., where her husband has lived for nearly naif-a century. OTHER- MkWUPAP.. ; , i v ,v r TWELVE PAGES TODAY Herbert Parsons whose charges that Speaker Can- ripe for a congi-esslonal DIED FROM ATTACK OF HYDROPHOBIA (By Leased Wile to The Times.) New York, Nov. 20 Mrs. Goldea Freilnnder, of Carniel, N. J., who was taken to IJellevue Hospital with acute hydrophobia two days ago, died early today, strapped to her cot and in the most terrible agony that her attending physician ever witnessed. Opiates failed of all effect against the hydro phobia poison. Her hushnnd was at her liL-dsldo and was almost driven Insane at seeing lier tortures. The woman displayed superhuman strength, so great was her vitality. Late last night, when she was In the last stages of tile disease, she suddenly burst the bonds that held her to her cot and sprang up. She darted to the other end of tho room before the nurses could stop her and it was only after four persons struggled with her that they were able tp drag her back to the cot. There she was again strapped down and the bonds held though she strngled madly. Mrs. Freilander was bitten October 10 by a pet mastiff. WINSTON-SALEM TOBACCO SALES (Special to The Times) Winston-Salem, Xov. 20 Approxi mately 2,010,000 pounds of tabocco have been sold on the Winston-Salem market this week, at an average price of J9.60 per hundred, which, consid ering he quality of tobacco this year, Is a good price. Records of long standing have been smashed. There has never before been anything like it in the history of Winston-Salem. Since Monday there have been hund reds of wagons here and the ware housemen have had to work as they never had to before. By actual count one day there were S29 tobacco wagons here. Secretary J. S. Kuykendall, of the board of trade, has estimated that about 40,-! 000 tobacco wagons visited this city last season. Coupled together like railroad cars, they would have made a string 122 miles long, and with the usual distance between they would ; have mado a string nearly 500 miles i long. Fire Started by Cigarette. (By Leased Wire to The Times) San Francisco Cal., Nov. 20 A fire, supposed to have been started by a cigarette. fro.m, a skater at the ColiseUm consumed that building this morning and licked tip eleven adjoin ing .houses. The loss was ,1150,000. The Coliseum janitor is reported missing. LAO' EDITS price! 0 czxta ELLIOTT IIAS CONFESSED: IHELIURDi Hiram Elliott Makes Parted Confession in Which Hj Says He is the Man SAYS SELF DEFENSE Hiram Elliott Says He is the Guilty Man and That Don Coble, Father of the Murdered If an, is 'Innocent. Thought for Several Day That He Would Break Down and Confess Elliott Will Plead Self-defense Young Sign Painter Released Parents of Thirteen-year-old Boy .Will Sue Hospital for Performing Autoywy. . (Special to The Times) . Greensboro, N. C Nov. 20 "You. can turn old man Dan aloose and then you will have the right man in jail," was the practical admission of guilt made by Hiram Elliott yester day afternoon in a conversation with Deputy Sheriff Crutchfleld at the jail. Elliott, along with his father-in-daw, was committed to Jail without ball after a preliminary hearing Thursday for the murder of Simpson Coble' in Greene township laBt week and since . the trial he has appeared,, to , be jn great distress and it was freelyj pre dicted that it would not be long'-h-fore he made a clean breast of every thing. The rumor that Elliott feftd made a partial confession wai veri fied by county officials late thte af ternoon, they saying that Elliott had , completely exonerated Daniel Coble from any connection with- the Actual, killing of Tiler son, though he adhtftt that the old man was aware all along that he was the man who struck the fatal blow. While it could not he verified It is generally believed tl(at Elliott claims that Coble was advanc ing upon him with an open knife when the fatal blow was struck and that his plea will, be self defense. George S. Dodson ,the young white man who was arrested several days ago upon the charge of attempting to alienate the affection of the wife. Of Edward Wertley, of Charlotte, was discharged from custody yesterday, the city attorney announcing in mu nicipal court that he would take a nol pros in the- case. Wertley came here last Monday and after going to police headquarters and - surrender ing two pistols made the charge against Dodson, declaring that unless he was locked up and punished he would kill him. The police had no trouble in locating Dodson, but the investigation since his arrest did net disclose evidence which was consid ered sufficient to convict the young man. It was learned here yesterday that the parents of Chester Riley, a thirteen-year-old boy from Haw River, who died in a local hospital last week, were contemplating bringing a snit against the doctors who , per formed the autopsy on the body of the boy without first obtaining per mission from the relatives. The boy died after a sudden attack of -peritonitis, and it is alleged that the doc tors performed the autopsy in order to find out if there were other com plications .the operation being per formed after death had taken place. An effort was .. made by a Times representative to find out If any of the doctors who performed the au topsy had been notified of the suit, but all who could be found refused to make any statement in connection ' with the matter. ' Moroccan War Ended. (By Cable to The Times) Madrid, Nov. 20 The Moroccan war is practically at an -end. It was declared today that General Marina, in command of the Spanieh force, reched an agreement almost' 'Com plete in his conference with 4he rep resentative of the Kabyle chiefs -yesterday and no further trouble is look ed for. This is an Important victory for the new cabinet, formed after the Ferrer case had reached Its climax. Hill Returns to Post, (By Leased Wire to The Times.) i Washington, Nov. 20 After alx weeks' vacation in Rochester, N. V.. and this oity, Ambassador David Jayne Hill will return to tibia post In i Berlin a week from today. Wr. HIH bad been absent from this coantry two years and returned to visit fsia tives and attend to personal buajp . ness, .. ---- : V " f HI i i 8 v A- ' " 1 m