' EUSH TO GILT LANDS. 1LOV/ER BRULE RESERVATION THROWN OPEN. Sam Gives Avray .inOOO Farm * in South IJaUota Five Slillicm JV ren Slore Await nomeseelcers In X * I ml ian Reservations. "Uncle Sajn is planning to distribute during the coming year ncnrly n,000COO acres of land among about 35.000 home- seekers. This will bo the biggest dis- tributioii made by the United States coveramcnt since Oklahoma "rcas opened - ed for settlement The land is situated on oi it different Indian reservations in four States. Nearly all of it is re garded as first-class for fanning pur poses. It h-s : been decided to open all of the -tracts by the lottery system. The reservation vation- with their acreage , follow : Ixnvor ISrule , South Dakota , S3. i.COO acres ; FUifccad. Montana , 1,000.000 acres ; Ittaekfoet , Montana , 500,000 acres ; f'oeur d'Alcne , Idaho , 310,000 acres ; Hemhi. Idaho , 04,000 acres ; Ya- klma , Washington , 3,1 .1,000 acres ; Col- 'villp. Washington , 1,000,000 acres. Divided into tracts of ICO acres the total would provide 30.091 homesteads. But the homesteads in some of the reservations will be limited to forty acres each , so this will bring the total number of farms close to 35,000. The forty-acre homesteads will be iu recla mation districts , and will be under government irrigation. The first reservation opened was the Lower lirule. and hundreds of home- seekers filed applications for lottery tickets in the big drawing , whieli took place at Pierre , S. D. The land has been appraised at from $1.25 to $4 an acre , to be paid in annual installments. A feature of the Brule lleservation Is that it already is surrounded by cities and farms of modern civilization , being within ten miles of Pierre , capi tal of the State. The Missouri River runs through the center of the district , with Skmx City and Omaha 150 miles to the south and Minneapolis and St. Pavjl a short distance to the northeast. "To the west are Ueadwood and Lead , the great mining cities of the Black er difficulties and dangers in ee- ? Uscle Sam's lands have fecoa eliminated and it is now rather a pleasant experience to take a change on a quarter section farm. The method of registration and allot ment by drawing instead of tbe old fx-H-rneH "rush" gives everybody a -show. Undar tbis deaf an uuuccom- . .paniedroman may register without embarrassment and , lias Ibe same chance as a man in securing the best prizes In the reservation. In some of tbe recent openings women have drawn splendid lands near the sites of towns which made them quarter sections worth small fortunes. The Brule is a member ol the great Sioux tribe , the most . 'numerous and powerful of tiie Western nations. While the Sioux may not have been as fierce individually as the Apache or TJte , he was collectively stronger and was the last-to be subdued. Iu spits of t&is condition tbe Sioux1 has in re cent years shown probably more of a disposition to make his "living oiifc of the land given him than many of the other tribtiS. The Brule reservation contains 50- 5CO acres. School facilities are - provided vided ki withholding certain * sections by the government. With its opening -another Sw : i song was sung by the original American. Thin marks an ad ditional set in tbe process of elimina tion of the Indian and is one of the last of his plors of land to be giTijn sSTor to civilization. Government surveyors arc BOW busy In other reservations , but rt will re- scare time to complete the I > al > or T-aiv in Effect. The neir eight-hour child labor law , which went into effect in Now York State "Oct. 1 , will have an important bearing on the children of the State , as it is es timated that it will protect 700.000 chil- -dr < m in Now York City alone. This statute prohibits the employment of persons under - -der 10 yenrs of age in. the factories be fore S o'clock in the morning and after .5 o'clock m the afternoon , o * for more -than eight hours in any one day. It is expected that this will materially affect -attendance at the public schools. Christian ScicntlHin Coiivl rtcci. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Watson , Chris tian Scientists of Mount Holly , N. J. , were convicted of manslaughter , in having neglected to call a physician for the treatment of their 3-ycar-uld POOwho died of meningitis. John Mitchell to Quit. John Mitchell , whose term as president of the United Mine Workers will expire April 1 , 1908 , announces ia the Dn.ted iliac Workers' Journal that he will not bo a candidate for re-election tile reason . { jiven being ill health. GENERAL BOOTH RET1WE8. Founder of Salvation Army Announce * that He Will Quit. Realizing his age General William Booth , octogenarian founder and lead er of rhe Salvation Army , has an nounced his retirement. His successor has been selected , but the announce ment not yet made public. It is prob able his eldest son , Dramwell Booth , of London , will be chosen. The general , on his American fare well visit , while in Chicago , expounded some of the virtues of the army. "It GEXEE.VL WI7.UAM BOOTH. is not with the aristocracy but wltli the common people that I live and breathe and have my being , " he said. "I associate with the upper classes foi their own benefit. The army is not a passing breeze of excitement and emo tion , but a permanent and mighty in fluence of good. Religion is not merely a possibility , a desirability , a privilege. It is a necessity. I would rather be noticed with a brickbat than irot be noticed at all. Go after the individual ualis the practical way iie sums up the problem of reclamation. "Appeal to the heart and the conscience of the man and the woman. What the vrorld needs is more consecrated .men and women to grapple with these problems. The Salvationist despises the idea that a man need not try to save a soul if he is not paid to do it. . " East River Tunnel For the first time passengers were car ried through the New York and Long I LOCATION OF LANDS WHICH WILL BE OPENED TO SETTLEMENT. Island City tube under the Hast river , vrbaa Aujrust Belmont , who financed the undertaking , acted as conductor of the car containing the officials connected witli the work and members of the public ser- vieo commission. Superintendent'of Mo tive Power Banghard was the inotorrnan. The car went from Third avenue and For ty-second street , Manhattan , -Jackson avenue and Fourth street , Queens , in four minutes. This is a reduction of at least thirty minutes in the tune between these two points under the old conditions of transir. Iu general appearance the tube is sim ilar to an ordinary city subway , being perfectly dry , well lighted and equipped with heavy rails and a modern signal sys tem. The cars are of the regulation type , operated by trolley poles. The atmos phere is from 10 to 15 degrees cooler than on the surface of the street. As the car nearly fills the tube , it acts as a piston , pushing the air out in front and drawing a fresh supply after it. Not a War Fund. American Industries , the organ of the. National Association of Manufacturers , replies to an attack made in the Federa- tiouist by Sampel Gompers , president of the American Federation of Labor , wherein - j in he referred to the 500,000 a year j which the manufacturers are to raise as a j "war fund to crush the unions. " The reply in question ridicules the idea that a' war of extermination is to be waged upon organized labor , and quotes from its resolutions adopted in 100. } as follows : "The National Association of Manufac turers is not opposed to organizations of labor as such , but is unalterably opposed to boycotts , blacklists and other illegal acts of interference witli the personal lib erty of employer and employe. No per son should be refused employment or in any way discriminated against on account of membership or non-membership ist any laJ > or organization , and there should be no discrimination against or interference with any employe not a member of a la bor organization by a member of such or- IIcavicHt Failures in Decade. According to the reports of the commer cial agencies , the year 11)07 thus far has shown the heaviest commercial failures of any like period in the last ten years , the month of September being particularly notable , as its failures in point of liabili ties have surpassed those of any month since December , 1003. 3IolTctt'.s Charges The examination of President .Tamos A. Moflctt of the Standard Oil Company of , Indiana by the Federal grand jury at Chicago cage resulted in a complete failure to show any shipper who received rebates from the Alton Railway similar to those granted to the Standard Oil Company. Coke Field l.i Strnclc. A lGO,000-acre extension f the now failing Connellsville coking eoal region has just been discovered , the Oonnelte- villo Coke 'Company having tapped a 9- foot vein at Tower Httl , Pa. I Bu Pont Powder Mills Near Fen = tanet , Ind. , Are Wrecked TOWN'IS WIPED OUT. More than Six Hundred Hurt and Scores of Others May Die. DESTRUCTION IS WIDESPREAD. My'sterioxis Blasts Buin Village and Spread Death and Injury. Forty or more persons dead , almost as many fatally burned or hurt , GOO others injured more or less seriously , and a prosperous town leveled to the earth such was the harvest of a series of terrifying explosions at the Du Pont blasting powder mills near Fontancr. Ind. , Tuesday morning. After the explosions , which followed one another with frightful effect , came fire , and what the one horror left un done the other completed. Thus , many people who might have been dragged from the ruins and revived were ihe < % victims of the flames. IIo\v many bodies have born in : inerated is ; i mat- Then the idea struck the United States. The eastern cities took it up. Xow it has spread to almost every village. Some idea of the extent of the business may be gained when it is stated that a man who lias a booth at a seaside resort uear New York sells S-15 worth of postal cards a day. It is estimated that as much as $200,000 a day is spent for picture postal cards in the United States. So large is the number of picture postal cards passing through the mails every day that special regulations have boon adopted for them. It was only recently that per mission wns given to write a message on the address side. It is interesting to add in this connection that the ollicial csti- U.AT IEMAlM-i : > OF THE I ) . iMN . ' J'J > \ . i i.l . < iiU.A l1 ! UN iA.KiIND. . . AFTER THE EXPLOSION. fer of guesswork , but twelve hours after the catastrophe the fatalities were believed to be below fifty. The worst explosion came when 40,000 kegs of powder blew up. Governor Ilanly and a detachment of the Indiana National Guard at once took control of the death tamp. Sol diers paced up and down the wreck- crammed streets. In and about the j smoking ruins of the great powder plant privates in the ranks in detach ments endeavored to discover the re mains of unknown victims. Scores of riato of the ? number of souvenir po > tal cards passing through the British post- offices last year was 500,000,000. The value placed on these cards was estimated at 5,000,000. The revenue to the various governments from postage on souvenir cards approximates millions. Penver I yVii A young scientist of Lyoas. France , asserts that he has discovered a means of transmitting electricnl energy without wires and experiments along that line are now proceeding with a miniature car run ning on rails , which is said to have been propelled a distance o 200 yards by HOMELESS FONTANET PEOPLE OUTSIDE OF THEIR RUINED HOMES. wo-nen and children whose husbands and fathers were missing were in the background , anxiously awaiting word from the relief corps. ToTrn IN Ilopclcnn Ruin. Tuesday morning Fontanet wns a prosperous , cozy little town of 1,000 persomj. That night it was a hopeless Every building , including homes , stores , offices and factories , was shaken into pieces. A hand of infinite power sweeping all before it with demoniac wrath could not have worked greater havoc. The dead and more seriously hurt have been removed to other points most of them to Tere Haute , eighteen miles distant. At least 500 inhabitants of Fontanet remain , however. Nearly all of them bear bloody traces of the visitation. They are camping out in tents hurried there by the Governor , and must be fed and cared for during many months to come. The town is devastated. Yet its people , so far as possible , seem determined to remain and make the best of their misfortune. Tbe explosions at the powder mills came without warning. What caused the first one is a mystery and may never be explained. Once the combustion had started there was no stopping it and one by one seven mills were shot into the air in spjinters. Two hundred men were employed at the works , but luckily only seventy-five were at their labors when the first explosion took place. ' Bis Mill I Shattered. The big press mill was destroyed first. This was at 9:15 : o'clock. Tbe shock and detonation were indescriba ble. The ground shook for miles 'around it is reported that the effect was felt at a distance of 200 miles buildings rocked as if riding a seismic swell. And then within two minutes the glazing mill was ruined. The building burst outward and upward , shooting timber , metal and glass in all directions and killing many. Xext. the two coining mills and final ly , as an unspeakable climax , the mag azine and cap mill were torn to bits. The magazine was situated about 300 yards from the main buildings of tbe plant and did not ignite for over an hour. Then tbe llanies which wore licking up the debris bad so heated the Atmosphere that the magazine respond ed. There were 40,000 kegs of blasting powder stored in the magazine and every one blew up seemingly at tbe same moment. It was tbis detonation that shook to pieces the homes and stores and factories in Fontanet and which brought death or injury to scores miles distant. Shoclc Ts Felt Fnr Off. Throughout the surrounding country , in farmhouses and country schools , where women and children sat , build ings crashed to the ground. Persons out in the open , walking in the road far from the powder plant , were hurled off their feet and injured. A passenger train on the Big Four Railroad , nearly five miles from the magazine , was all but blown off the rails. Every window in each coach was broken and a number of passengers were cut by flying glass. THE POSTAL CARD CRAZE. . / What Was Originally n Fad Has Be come a Great BtiHlucs.f. Three years ago souvenir or picture postal cards were on sale in about 100 stores or shops in the United Stales. To-day they may be had in 80,000 differ ent places. What was originally a fad fcas become a great business. The picture portal card flourished for years on the continent. Every small town or inn had a pretty souvenir of this kind , while , in tlie big cities , every place of interest was reproduced on a postal. means of power from an electric trans mitter. Details of the process are with held for the present. Patents were taken out in August and a syndicate of bankers has been formed to develop the invention. Football claimed two more victims in the deaths of Thomas Bertram , 20 years old , at Altoona , Pa. , and Eugene M. Bourne , 13 nrs 6T3 , at Salt Lake City. HAS BURNED FORTY-FIVE YEARS A Coal Mia" Fire to Which a lle- ntajiee Attaches. On Paint creek , about iwcnty miles above Charleston. W. Va. , a coal mine fire is racing. At ni ht the mountain side is ablaze with a weird play of Hphtr by day a column of sinoko Ascends lib * a monument. In truth , the mountain is afire , an unquenchable fire , as those wuo have already lost $20,000 in a vain at tempt to smother it will testify. In the late "O's of th last century rlie Kanawha Coal and Oil Company was DAMAGKD HOUSE , TWO MILES HlliM TIIK FOXTAXET EXPLOSION organized for the purpose of producing oil from cannpl coal found in the moun tains divided by Paint creek. The vein located was a comparatively thin one , lying in the hnrt of a thick scam of tJio bituminous coal. The company was busy with its operations when the Civil War broke out , but continued at work for some time thereafter. The superintend ent was a blunt old Englishman named Gordon , who had a handsome daughter , Roweha , who w-as the dell'sht of her fath er's heart and the despair of the young men of the neighborhood. There was tha usual courting and flirting , with tha usual final selection of one man and tha inevitable prepaialiens for the The lucky man w : s one Adkins , a native of the mountain , a srapping : young fel low. who had won the lather's favor as a workmen even before lie won the daugh ter's esteem as a lover Thus the coursa of true love seemed to run smooth. Cue the war caaer and the Paint creeS section was as badly torn by opposing factions as any other small part of tha rntire country. The natives were of tha South , while most ot those who had comate to work in the mines were Union men. Of the latter -was old maa Gordon , white Ailkins was a regular fire-eating son of Dixie. Adkins was forbidden to enter tha Gordon home , and Itowcna was ordered not to see him. lie enlisted in the Con federate army and mart-lied out with Wise on his famous retreat up the val ley. This was in the spring of 1SGL In the autumn he returned home on a fur lough and sought to renew amicable re lations witli tbe Gordons , but was repals- ed by both father and daughter. It ia said that in a spirit of revenge he set fire to the drumhouse of the mouth o the mine. The fire was communicated to the rich vein of canncl coal inside , and , obtaining a good hold , has been burning ever since. Adkins returned to iiis regiment and was killed in battle. The Gordons left the country teen after , and their subse quent history is not known. In the late ' 80s a company was form ed by Charleston men. to extinguish the fire and reopen the mine , but. after spend ing $20.000 in a vain attempt , the enter prise was abandoned. It is probable that the fire will be allowed to burn until tha entire vein of coal is consumed. Of late it has been burning visibly at night , tha extent being perhaps 100 yards along the face of the mountain. The Helena , Mont. . Record publishes a story to the effect that numerous Moa- tana and Washington investors have been ; mulcted to the extent of more than a third of a million dollars through the discovery that certain placer mines near Lander , Wyo. , had been salted and that the prop * erties are worthless. The union labor city anil county con vention of San Francisco nominated a ticket headed by P. n. McCarthy , presi * dent of the Building Trades' Council , fol Mayor. The other candidates named art the present officers. The program of ex Mayor Scmnitz was carried out to thf letter. i