he falmtine democrat SUCCESSOR TO CHERRY COUNTY INDEPENDENT ROBERT B GOOD - Epitok Pitor VALENTINE NEBRASKA STRIKERS ARE UGLY CLEVELAND FEARS TROUBLE THIS WEEK A Well Tounded Rumor to the Ef fect that the Strikers are Arming and Drilling Creates an Uneasy Reeling Wreck in Illinois Strikers are Arming A startling piece of news in connection with the Brown -strike at Cleveland which comes from an apparently reliable source is to the effect that the strikers are arming themselves and drilling It was said that forty of the strikers had organ ized a company elected a captain and purchased revolvers The company drilled Saturday evening and it was an nounced that the purpose of the men was to avenge the death of the two men who were shot at different times in conflicts between union and non union men Pour companies of militia are on duty at the works and a large force of police will be on hand to guard against trouble when the non union men go to york TWO KILLED TEN INJURED Carelessness of Trainmen Causes a Bad Wreck in Illinois Through- the carelessness of trainmen a frightful wreck occurred on the curve just east of Birkbeck a small station on the Illinois Central five miles northeast of Clinton Passenger train No 504 going south and passenger train No 501 going north collided while going at full speed Both engines are a complete wreck and one mail car was reduced to splinters and the other mail ear and both baggage cars were badly damaged Engineer Burchnaugh leaves a widow and three small children He was a man of iron nerve and -when advised to jump by his fireman Swartwood he said No I will stick to her to the last and he did He had been in many collisions and was in the Chattsworth 111 wreck William Baker mail agent was also killed OVER 00 MILES AN HOUR Remarkaole Time of an Engine with a New Friction Gear The tremendous speed of over ninety four miles an hour was reached at the trial of the Holman friction geaied loco motive drawing a train on the tracks of the South Jersey railroad The speed did not however meet the expectations of In ventor Holman who is bent upon send ing the engine along at the rate of 100 miles an h our lie declares that any good well huilt engine can be made to go at the ivDroiles a minute if equipped with the friction gearing POUR THOUSAND PERISH Tidal Wave Inundates a Section of the Chinese Coast A tidal five miles long swept in from the sea and inundated the coast ol Hayehau in the province of Kiang Su China Many villages were destroyed At least 4000 people were drowned An immense number of cattle perished The rice fields were totally destroyed A famine is feared in that district A Million Dollar Failure The business community of Columbus -Ohio was shocked by the announcement that the Columbus Buggy Company one of the oldest concerns ofthe city had made an assignment In the statement sent out the cause of the assignment is given as due to the general business de pression slow sales collections a curtail ment of the companys line of credit numerous failures among their customers and the inability of customers to meet paper at maturity It employs about 1000 men when run ning full force and about 600 were at work at the time the failure occurred The lirm had branch houses irf a dozen of the lead ing cities of the country and was recog nized as among the foremost buggy com panies of the country No statement of assets and liabilities has been made but they will each approximate nearly 51000 000 CI Nearly Cuts His Head Off Frank Davis killed Robert Pickett at Cripple Creek Colo cutting bis head nearly off with a razor and also cut May Rivers so badly that she will die He then cut his own throat but it is not thought the wound is fatal The woman was an inmate of Picketts dance hall and the jealousy of Davis the porter of the place caused the tragedy Ten Per Cent Reduction v An order has been issued at the Valen tine Iron Companys works atBellefonte -Pa that commencing with Aug 1 a ten per cent reduction of wages will be Over 600 men are affected by the reduction Walkerton Firm Fails T J Reece Co hardware dealers at Walkerton Ind have made an assign ment with liabilities of about 4000 and assets near 53500 Cause of the failure hard times and slow collections Buggy Makers Fail Emerson Fisher Co Cincinnati Ohio manufacturers of buggies and carriages have failed The liabilities are 5393000 assets 5450000 Silk Merchants Fail JJreyfus Kuhn CosilK commission merchants of New York have assigned to Levi D Hans and OScar E Rosenheim with preferences The amount involved is reported to be about 5300003 They have been in business about twenty eight years Crop Failures in Southern Russia An Odessa dispatch t the London Times announces that official reports are tothe effuet that the haivest has been a failure throughout the most fertile grain producing in the south of Russia TRADE FOR THE PAST AVEEK Better Prospects hut No Improve ment to Speak Of R G Dnn Cos Weekly Review of Trade says Business conditions have clearly improved though business has not It is now the torpid season and better prospects have little effect as yet The signing of a compact to control for eign exchange by a syndicate pledging the use of 750000030 for that purpose may render it uuneceseary to use the gold and has given some stocks a slight ad vance Gold exports have been stopped and foreign trade is- more promising of j an early demand for our product The prospects for large crops of cotton and orn are still excellent Wheat is already going out with more freedom than is usual for the season and Atlantic exports have been 1931119 bush els flour included for the week against 900248 bushels last year Western re ceipts are also remarkably heavy and if part is old wheat so much the greater must have been the surplus from pre vious crops Lower railroad rates helped corn to make a new record at 80 cents and prospects are generally favorable Sales of wool now reported are less than a quarter of a full weeks consump tion for the week being only 1619700 pounds against 0072450 last year Leather is stubbornly held without change in prices but hides have turned downward sharply at Chicago declining 5 per cent for the week with heavy ac cumulatiods QUEEN VIC TO RETIRE Rumor that the Prince of Wales Will Go On the Throne A rumor that Queen Victoria intends to retire in favor of the Prince of Wales is again current in court circles Much anxiety is felt regarding the condition of Queens health She seems to feel greatly the weight of her years and is quoted as having remarked on the occasion of the marriage of Princess Maud and Prince Charles of Denmark This is my last visit to London NINETEEN TO DIE and of Austrian Murderers and Robbers Sentenced The trial at Agram Austria of the Stenjeve band numbering thirty six charged with eighteen murders and nu merous assaults and robberies resulted in the condemnation of nineteen including two women to death sentence of nine to imprisonment and the acquittal of eight Fatally Wounds a Minister At the Cotton Belt Railroad depot at Texarkana Ark Col John Hallam a Arkansas attorney and au thor of Dairy of an Old Lawyer shot and frally wounded Rev W A Forbes one of the most prominent Baptist ministers in the state and who is at pre sent pastor ot a church at New Lewis ville Mrs Hallam recently obtained a divorce from her husband Hallam charged Forbes with alienating his wifes affections and bringing discord Into his home Accident at a Summer Resort A terrible fatality occurred at Lake Ottozee a summer resort five miles from Knoxville Tenn A Sunday School pic nic was in progress and the recently erected chutes were doing a good business As one of the boats came down the chutes having aboard thirteen small children a row boat crossed its path as it struck the water and four occupants of the row boat were killed or injured Youns Maceo to Join Cubans Among the passengers that arrived at New York hy the steamer Caracas from Laguyara was a son of Jose Maceo who was killed in Cuba recently The young man it is said held the post of chief of police in Port Limon Costa Rica and is together with ten other young Cubans on his way to the islaud to -join the rebel army He learned of his fathers death on landing Americans Killed in Peru A man named Cooper an American citizen has been Idst in the forestatCara barary Peru Two Germans who were members of his party have arrived at the San Domingo mine The remaining four said to be gold seekers have been killed by Indians It is said that the San Do mingo mine has just been purchased by Americans and that it is producing im mensely Met Death in the Flames Christ Heller and wife living in the northern portion of the city of Ottawa III received burns from which the woman died and the man may not recover Fire broke out in their home and in seeking to quench it the womans clothing took tire Her husband attempted to extinguish the flames burning about her aud was ter ribly burned also Woman Bicyclist Arrested Angelina Poopel a typewriter girl and Bert Fish a clerk in the Nickel Plate Railroad office Chicago were arrested Miss Poopel is alleged to be the woman bicyclist who ran into William Klink re cently resulting in his death Fish is said to have been with Miss Poopel at the lime of the accident Boy Stolen by Tramps Reclaimed Albert BnJgeman the 8-year-old boy who was taken from tramps at Logans port Ind last winter and since kept in the Orphans Home there has been re claimed by his grandfather Samuel Bridgeman of Morehouse Mo He was found by means of an advertisement German Cruiser Lost The German cruiser Illis was lost in a typhoon on July 23 about seventy five miles southeastof here - Ten of the crew were saved All the others including the officers perished The number of men on board is unknown Five Killed and 100 Injured The explosion of a fire works factory magazine at Fuenfkirchen Austria re sulted in the death of five persons the in juring of 100 others aud the wrecking of the town hall and other houses Fatal Shooting in Springfield During a quarrel between Richard Shep herd a iartn hand and Gue an emigrant mover at Springfield 111 the former was j shot and mortally wounded by the latter THE NOTIFICATION OF BRYA MAIL TRAIN DITCHED A Will Take Place August 12 at Madv ison Square Garden Upon receipt of intelligence from New York that the hall at Madison Square Garden could be secured for that date Mr Bryan announced that he would re ceive the notification committee of the Democratic national convention there August 12 It is known that Mr Bryan is now preparing his speech of accept ance of the nomination and it is further known that it will contain much that will more thoroughly challenge attention and criticism than did his utterances in the Chicago convention He expects to lay in his New York speech the ground woijr for the campaign Remarkahle Escape of Passengers on the Chicago and Alton The Chicago and Alton fast mail train No 33 was wrecked near Cazenovia The tender baggage and mail cars and the coaches Vere derailed the two rear coaches being overturned The escape of all the passengers seems mjraculous They wereall in the -smoker which did not turn over The track was torn up for a distance of 100 yards and oneurail was forced clear through a coach within a few feet of the passengers The accident U attributed to the rails spreading HIS LAST RACE Joseph Greibler the Crack M inne apolis Rider Instantly Killed Joseph Greibler of Minneapolis one ol the crack bicycle circuit riders was killed at Lima Ohio on the 29th Greibler was probably overcome by the heat for he leftthe track ran straight into the crowd and was thrown upon a fence receiving injuries which resulted in his death a halt hour later Greibler was in the lead in the half mile open race at the time tho accident occurred VICTORY FOR UNION WORKMEN A Pittsburg Iron Mill Signs tho Amalgamated Scale The Olivers Tenth Street iron mill at Pittsburg which has been nonunion since 1892 has signed the amalgamated pud dlers and finishers scale and 450 men will be put to work The Olivers signa ture is considered as a big victory for thi workmen RAILROAD LINE WIPED OUT Flood Destroys the Catskill Branch of the Union Pacific The fact has just become known that the recent flood entirely destroyed tho Catskill branch of the Union Pacific Den ver and Gulf Railroad forty miles in length running from Trinidad Colo t the Maxwell land grant in New Mexico Young Ohio Woman Missing Five weeks ago Miss Luella Emrie of Walnut Hill Cincinnati living at 27 Gil bert Avenue left that city for Petoskey Mich and has not been heard from since She has spent several summers with Mrs J B Gage who keeps a fashionable boarding house at Petoskey and was ex pected for this summer Replies received from inquiries addressed by MrsGage to Cincinnati indicate that Miss Emrie left there as she had intended to and that nothing had been heard of her at Indian apolis where she intended to visit friends A trunk unclaimed at the Chicago and West Michigan depot Petoskey is un doubtedly hers She was an attractive woman 20 years of age and of excellent reputation Yellow Fever in Mexican Cities A telegram from the United States coi sul at Vera Cruz to the surgeon general of the United States marinediospital service announces the existence of yellow fever at Vera Cruz A report also has been ceived from the United States consul at Acapulco Mexico announcing the ap pearance of yellow fever in that city Killed in it Runaway A hack at Buffalo Minn was over turned the team iunning away Misy Winnie Meg inn a passenger was killed California Fruit in London The second annual shipment of 5000 boxes of California pears and a few boxe of plums have arrived inLondou Death by Poison Mrs John Black of Niagara N D committed suicide by taking poison Do mestic trouble is the supposed cause MARKETS Sioux City Hogs 2 85 2 92 Cattle Cows and Heifers 2 75 Blockers and Feeders 8 25 Veal Calves 1 53 Sheep 8 40 Wheat 41 45 Corn 15 1J Oats 15 Hay 4 00 5 00 Butter 10 18 Fggs 10 Chicago Hogs 2 65 3 50 Cattle Beeves 8 15 4 40 Stockers and Feeders 2 25 3 GO Wheat 58 61 Corn 25J 25 Oats 18K 20K Rye- St Timothy Seed 3 10 3 15 Flaxseed 73K South Omaha Hogs 2 75 3 05 Cattle Steers i 8 00 4 00 Cows 1 25 3 25 Feeders 2 50 3 40 Kansas City Hogs I 2 60 3 10 Cattle Beeves 3 00 4 00 Feeders 2 45 3 65 Sheep 2 25 5 00 Minneapolis Wheat July SO 55 September December - i Flax 63 Oatse I OE A GREAT STATE NEWS FROM ALL PARTS OF NEBRASKA A Deal Involving the Transfer of 100000 Acres of Land and the Bringing Into tJe State Money to Improve it Consummated at Omaha Big Deal in Real Estate A deal involving the transfer of about 100000 acres of land and also the bringing nto the state of a large amount of money to improve it which has been the subject of negotiations for over a year was closed up at Omaha recently The land is that owned by the Equitable Live Stock In vestment Company aud includes some of the finest land in Keith and Lincoln coun tiesv The purchasers are Turple Brothers of Toledo Ohio and the price was 250000 FOUND NO GOLD IN ALASKA Two Nebraska Men Return from a Long Journey H G Crissey and F D Rothell two Crab Orchard young men who left John son County the first of last March for the gold fields of Alaska have returned They tell anything but inspiring stories of that supposed gold abounding country and express satisfaction at being able to reach home alive The gentlemen joined a company of four friends at Seattle Wash last March The company was fitted out with camping equipment tools etc and made the trip to Cooks Inlet a point about 1400 miles northwest of Sitka by water Discouraged at their luck the party left Cooks Inlet the middle of last month the Johnson County members reaching home just forty two days thereafter and were continually on the road They return home much richer in experience but somewhat poorer in wealth satisfied with the opportunity to re embark iu business in a country more favored by the elements HURT IN A KUNAWA Y Capt Beck His Wife and Two Other Persons Injured As Capt W H Beck Indian agent on the Omaha and Winnebago reservations accompanied by his wife daughter Mrs Wales of Fort McPherson Ga little son and Mr Hill is secretary to the superin tendent of Indian schools were driving down a hill from his residence to the agency the neckyoke broke and the horses started to run overturning the car riage throwing Mr Hillis about twenty feet and injuring him slightly Capt Beck and wife were thrown under the carriage and injured more or less seriously Mrs Wales was injured in the lower limbs Her little boy escaped without a scratch The captains injuries are internal and very painful vReunion Was a Success The Grand Army of the Kepublic re union at Falls City was a great success Judge Harback of Kansas City spoke Wednesday and the campfire was pre sided over by Captain Henry on Thurs day Church Howe and T J Majors entertained the crowd with their oratory The reunion was a success in every sense of the word the average attendance each day being at least 6000 people Boy Terribly Mangled Quite a sad accident happened near Holstein lately Young Munson the 9-year-old son of H C Minnix while riding one of the head horses on the harsester was thrown to the ground and before the horses could be controlled the harvester passed over the boys body lie was horribly cut up and it is almost cer tain that one arm and one leg will have to be amputated Fine Team of Horses Poisoned A son of Zachariah Schrader who lives m West llock Bluffs precinct attended church in Murray Sunday evening driv ing in with a team of fine horses On the journey home the animals began to show signs of physical weakness and one of them suddenly dropped dead in its tracks The other horse succumbed the next morning and Mr Schrader is satisfied that the animals were poisoned Mailed Obscene Literature William Warner was arrested near York by Postoffice Inspector D J Sin clair Warner is charged with sending obscene matter through the mails A let ter mailed by him at Wahoo addressed to C It Greene of Hedrick la is in the hands of the officers Warner has a di vorced wife at Hedrick and once served a year for larceny in the penitentiary at Michigan City Ind 4390000 Shortage State Auditor Eugene Moore has com pleted the abstract of assessment of the state and has given it out to the press In round numbers there is a decrease in he assessed valuation of 4390000 for the past fiscal year At the rate of assess ment of 7 mills this would result in a de crease in collections for sCate purposes of 307300 York Boy Missing Carl Olson of York left for Denver several weeks ago in search of work He has not been heard from for some time and the police authorities have not yet succeeded in locating him Investigation shows that a postoffice money order sent to Carl by his parents was cashed by a stranger The matter is a mystery Fruit Tree Swindler Abroad A fruit tree fakir is getting in his work fn this stale He sells fruit trees on the installment plan and takes fruit in pay when the trees begin to bear He takes an order aud it turns up in the bank a col lectable note Womens Art Palace Among the features of the state irriga tion fair at North Platte will be the womens art palace It will be construct ed of carved stone 28 by 56 feet in dimen sion Air Full of Grasshoppers The air in the viciuity of Columbus was full of grasshoppers on the 29th passing south and southeast They were visible for several hours Drugged and Robbed hy a Tramp B D Delebar a German painter resid ing at Tecumseh is minus a horse and buggy all on account of taking a tramp into his confidence The tramp wanted to ride with him and he consented On the trip the tramp gave him a drink of whisky and Delebar remembers nothing after having taken it Waterworks Bonds Floated Bancroft city bonds of 5000 for water works weie successfully sold by the elect ors of Bancroft and work will be speedily pushed Shot by a Brothel Keeper John Slicker a young man aged 22 and an employe of the packing house at Ne braska City was shot and instantly killed at an early hour Sunday morning at a house of ill repute in the lower bottoms near that city It seems that Kicker and some companions had been drinking all evening and toward midnight called at the house conducted by Mrs Anna Sopher under the name of Anna Smith One of Kickers companions states that they rang the bell but were denied admittance by the Smith woman who was at the window of an upper room She ordered them to leave which they refused to do upon which she opened fire on them with a 82 caliber revolver firing five shots one of whichstruck Kicker in the back just below the neck lodging near the spinal column All the inmates of the house were placed under arrest The Smith woman denies the killing but states that it was done by a man named Spencer a pian player Robbed hy an Ex Convict One Melroy World a former convict ai Lincoln who came to Schuyler Thursday and left Saturday morning is suspected of robbing E T Hodson of 10 and Albert Jenkins of an unknown amount but pre sumably a largo one as he displayed a large roll of bills around town and was known to have received about a 1000 loan upon land in Butler County Hod son lost hfs roll from his vest pocket Jenkins was drinking but went home be fore midnight Later his father heaid a noise upstairs and on going to his sons loom met World who remarked that he might seem an intruder but he had brought Al home Noticing Albert lying in the room nothing was suspected I I Skull Fractured in a Fight Some time ago William Schroeder a farmer living four miles southeast of Fair mont was appointed guardian of the estate of Alexander Frye deceased and since that time he lias been having trouble with Samuel Davis who married the widow Frye and has lived on the farm with a lease from year to year The two men met in a store and had some words when Davis picked up an iron nail puller and struck Schroeder on the head cutting a gash three inches long and fracturing the skull Thieves Quickly Caught John Jones and James Sullivan stole a dozen studs and pins from a traveling man named Lowenshein while he was displaying the same in a clothing store at Grand Island They were apprehended five minutes later with the goods in their possession and lined 50 and 20 Not be ing able to pay they were jailed Both aie believed to he professional crooks Young Mans Neck Broken Robert Spencer son of K J Spencer living near Plainview was thrown from a buggy and killed In company with Tiemnes Hawk he was out driving when the horse suddenly turned throwing them both out Spencer was picked up and carried into the Commercial hotel and died in a few minutes The doctor pro uounced his neck broken Robberies Are Numerous Petty burglaries are getting to be nu merous about Falls Cily lately Several houses were entered during the week either at night or while the lamilies were attending the reunion among them being the homes of A F Lewis and Nap De Me is - Still Chews B P McCutcheon of Grand Island pur chased a bottle of stuff guaranted to wean him from the use of tobacco He kept it in the barn The other night he go hold of the wrong bottle and swallowed a big gulp of spavin cure He still chews Salt as Moth Exterminator Grand L land has been successfully worked by a smooth young man who selis small packages of fine salt for 50 cents a package by asserting ils superior qualitie as a moth exterminator Banner County Treasurer Short Examiner N Fodrea has just completed the examination of the books of Hender son L Graves county treasurer of Banner Count- and made a report of a cash shortage of 10209S Death from Poison At the inquest held at Wymore over the body of Maud Eaders the jury decided that she came to her death by poison but it was unknown to the jury who admin istered the same Valuable Team Stolen A valuable team was stolen from the stables of Ed Hughes on Kock Creek near Fairbury The harness and nets were taken There is no clew to the thief Prospecting for Oil n A Barney of Kearney is boring for oil He has been bothered with oil in his well and is sinking it still lower to find if there is oil there Injured in a Runaway A runaway accident near Western re sulted in the serious injury of Minnie Witt Rosa Gummings and Mary Wahl Struck hy a Rattler An infant child of a Mr Smith at Mitchell was struck by a rattlesnake Its life was saved with difficult Nebraska News Notes Nelson Sioues residence at Juniata wes struck by lightning but every member of the family dodged the bolt Rev A D Wolfe pastor of the Seward Presbyterian Church has resigned to ac cept a pulpit in a Missouri church D H Price of Elwood lost a finirer while irying to ruu a corn sheller aud look the other way at the same time The Old Settlers Association of Yoric Seward Butler and Polk Counties will abandon its annual picnic this year Charles Ayres of Ashland nearly lost his scalp because he happened to be stand under a heavy meat ax which fell from a shelf The physicians of Seward County have organized an association with Dr D D Potter president and Dr F A Marsh ei retary Lightning struck the barn of Joseph Ellen berger nine miles from Lincoln and burned it entailing a loss of 1300 on the building and contents A party of eastern real estate men 200 in number are expected to make a tour of Nebraska during the month of August Platte County people are enthusiastio over a young woman evangelist Miss Martha Johnson whose eloquence has at tracted marked attention One of the largest real estate mortgages ever filed in Ked Willow County wa3 placed on record at McCook It covers a 2000 acre farm and is for 2500J The Eikhorn railroad is ballasting Us track with gravel using twenty four car loads a day The track gang is now working between Scribner and CrowelL 1 OVER FORTY DEAD FLYING EXPRESS CUTS EXCUR SION TRAIN IN TWO Awful Disaster Occurs at a Crossing Near Jersey City Reading Express Catches a West Jersey Excursion Broadside Sixty Are Injured Scores Are Killed A flying express train on the Reading and Atlantic City Railroad crashed into a West Jersey Railroad excursion train at the crossing of the two roads Thurs day night At least forty people were killed outright and about sixty injured Of the killed twelve were women twenty four men and four children The crash was the most disastrous in the history of eastern railroad traffic The accident was the result of a col lision between the 540 p m express train from Philadelphia over the Reading and Atlantic City Railroad and an excursion of Red Men from Bridgeton N J and vi cinity returning from Atlantic City over the West Jersey Railroad at the crossing of the two road a short distance out of Atlantic City At the second signal tower the tracks of the two roads cross diagonally The Read ing train jyas given the signal but it either failCdto work or the speed of the express was too great to be checked in time It caught the excursion train broadside and plowed through it literally cleaving it in twain The engine of the Reading train was shattered to pieces Every car was jammed to its fullest ca pacity As soon as the news reached Atlantic City the utmost consternation prevailed Relief trains were dispatched to the scene loaded with cots and hearing staffs of surgeons As fast as the bodies were re covered they were carried into the local hospitals and undertakers shops A gen eral fire alarm was sounded and the de partment promptly responded and aided in the work of digging for the victims The worst fears were realized aft the vigorous work of the relief gangs revealed the awful extent of the disaster The first Reading relief train bore into the city twenty seven mangled corpses men wom en and children The next train not an hour later carried fifteen of the maimed and wounded and two of these died soon after reaching the city Hospitals Overtaxed As train after train was hurried to the scene of the wreck and came back with its ghastly load the sanitarium which does duty as the city hospital quickly found its capacity overtaxed Meanwmle oth ers of the dead and injured were being carried to the private hospital at Oceau and Pacific avenues Edward Farr engineer of the Reading train was killed outright as was another road man who rode on the engine with him This man saw the collision coming and leaped from the cab an instant before the crash Almost at the same instant the engine cut its way through and canght him directly in its path His body and that of Farr were found under a heap of debris but the engineer lay in what re mained of the cab and his right hand still grasped the throttle He had been faith ful unto death and met it at his post The fireman on the train had leaped a few seconds before and escaped with trifling injuries J Not Known Who Is to Blame The excursion train was made up of fifteen cars the foremost of which was a baggage car This and the next two coaches caught the full force of the crash and were utterly demolished What re mained of the third car was tumbled into a ditch at the roadside The responsi bility for the accident cannot now be fixed Charles C Rynick of Bridgeton who was in the excursion party was in one of the rear cars When we saw that a col lision was unavoidable he said thu scene in our car was terrific Women fainted and men rushed in mad panfc for the door But it came almost before we had time to think One car was cnt right in two and the lower portion of it lifted bodily from the track and tumbled over The roof of one of the cars fell in a mass and everybody in that car was buried un der it It simply dropped on top of the people I dont know who is to blame When we were about two miles out from Atlantic City N J wo came to a stop out in the meadows and stayed there for sev eral minutes but I do not know why I think there must have been -fully eighty or 100 killed The dniy person with me was my G-year-old son and he was -not hurt Fourteen of the injured arereported to have died at the sanitarium p Superintendent L X Sw igqrd of the Philadelphia and Reading Company places the number of dead at thirty seven and the injured at about the same num ber William Thurlow the operator at the block tower situated at the crossing ha been placed under arrest by order of tho coroner Scene at the Fatal Place An Associated Press reporter was on one of the first relief trains sent out by the Pennsylvania Railroad The train was in charge of a nnmber of railroad offi cials and Prosecutor Perry of Atlantic County It drew up in the darkness a few feet this side of the fatal point Stag gering in and out of ditches and stum bling over masses of broken timber with only a few lanterns the rescue gang set bravely to work Axes and shovels were piled with the greatest vigor and almost at every half a dozen strokes a mangled form was brought up and laid tenderly on the pallets It was a terrible- task and the strongest of men turned aside faint from the revelations of the workers A heap of blood stained timbers turned aside by one of the rescuers brought to sight a womans arm It had been renched off at the shoulder Not five minutes later a chance blow from a pick revealed a human heart Her Troubles He What are you looking so wor ried about darling She Oh I was thinking what a dreadful thing life would bava been if we had never met Illustrated Month ly It Is That affair on the end of my tail said the rattlesnake may not seem handsome but He skillfully threw a coil Its a rattling good thing Yes New York Press -