uuuuui _ up . . / , J t \ ELECTION Of SENATOR ENOS LONG DEADLOCK . r - . " t , Short 'Story of the Great Illinois ! , Battle Ending in Senator- . Hopkins' Defeat. . .I 'LOEMER'S RISE IN POLITICS ; 0 , ' . ; " : " New Official Is Chosen in Spring- field by the Aid of Many A ' . Democrats. . ' The deadlock on the United States „ senatorship , which ended Wednesday with the election of Congressman Will iam Lorimer of Chicago , and which is without precedent in Illinois political , _ history in many important particulars , began Jan. 20 , when the first ballot was cast in joint' assembly , Hopkins < receiving 89 votes , Stringer 76 , Foss ' 16 , Shurtleff 12 , and Mason 6. Many attempts were made during the first month of the deadlock to break the Hopkins strength. Frank O. Lowden sent an agent to Spring- field and maneuvered- a month in the hope of breaking in. William B. HcKinley and Lawrence Y. Sherman were introduced as dark horses , but 1i 1 i . k , , : ' " ' " " , s wf . . .4. ! s : . I ' , , + P ' " or a ! / ; a "WILL'IJlM I ; . LOR."IMB'R- : . failed to get more than two or three votes. W. J. Calhoun enjoyed a brief period of .mention. Edward D. Shurt- leff , starting with twelve Republican votes , gained occasionally. April and most of May passed with out development. The second week in May William Lorimer began actively -working 'for himself as a candidate for Senator , having Mr. : Shurtleff's , support , and claiming sixty Demo- , crats. . Up to the ninety-first ballot , 135 . I : . . . men : had been voted for during the : " deadlock , 114'being Democrats and 22 _ , Republicans. Of the Democrats John . . , , C. Eastman received the highest vote , 49 , outside of Lawrence B. Stringer , the regular nominee. William Lorimer is a Republican -and is serving his seventh term in Con gress. He was born in Manchester , England , April 27 , 1861 , second son of a Presbyterian minister , and came to Chicago with his parents in 1870. His father died in 1871 , leaving the family in straitened circumstances. , Soon : after his father's death young "Billy" began to earn a living. He worked his way from selling newspa pers , shining shoes , through positions at , the stock yards , and as conductor on the lines of the Chicago street rail- way to political control in the old Sixth : Ward. BIGGEST : DRY GOODS COMPANY. Jnpitnl of Xew Concern Launched in Xevr York Is 51OOO,000. . .The world's greatest dry goods com bination was launched in New York Friday. Its capital is $51,000,000 , three times that of the Associated Mer- chants' Company , up to this time the * * * largest aggregation of capital in the .dry goods business. John Claflin , pres ident of the Associated Merchants' Company , is head of the new company , which has been christened the United Dry Goods Companies of New York. . The incorporation papers were filed in Dover , Del. Two of the three direc- ' tors named in the papers are Eugene D. Alexander of New Brighton , S. I. , and Kenneth McEwen , clerks in the of- - , fice of Gould & Wilkie. The other di -rector is Thomas F. Bayard of Wil- -mington , Del. , counsel for the company in thh.t State. There 'was much uncer tainty as to the exact purpose of the new company , but it is understood it will take over the already tremendous 'business of the Associated Merchants' - : " -Company. TOWN GETS FIRST CHURCH. 1 'Former County Seat Has Had JOBS t House as Only Ifluce of Worship. The corner stone of the Methodist . church , the first Christian place f of l - worship " \ . in Hawthorne Nev. , was laid t ' Wednesday. ! A tov/n of 1,500 persons , ; / ' prosperous , , formerly the county seat ! , 17 : and in the heart of a rich mining dis- trict , Hawthorne never has had la ( ° 1 . . . - . ( . hur h. The only religious edifice has' l "been a Chinese joss house , which was pract.ically abandoned more than a year ago. . Several years ago Goldfield 1 - succeeded in taking the county seat t sawayfrom Hawthorne-one of the .ar- t guments being that "Hawthorne ; did j Tnot have 'a , church. " y I . ' . \ " - . . _ _ ' , - , . . ' . . _ . . . . . ' ° _ " , . - " " ' . . . . - W - . : . : : : ; : : : - : r : : : .a : ' ' ; " . : = : ; : : : : : - " " : = : - : - _ _ _ - : = : : : - : : : . _ : : - : : ; ; ' : = = : c : : - = : : : : : : = = . . . . . - . . . . ' , . " : .a ' . _ . - ' . " - " ' _ . . . . . . . . . - " . . , " IT KEEPS RIGHT ON DANCING. , : t. ! . ' . , " , " . . 'f . _ , . ' 't. u.- . . w. ' , ' , " . , . . . _ of < ; < ( -1 J . . " . _ ' . ' . J ' " ; " . . _ " , " " _ . " , . , 7 . ; . \ " " " , _ % % " , , . ' ' _ . ' ' W . - . ' , . ; " . [ . ' : _ $ ; ; ; % % . - - . " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . /i , ' , , i " " ' SJEP . , ' ' , , , ; i ' , . \ . ' ' . ' I < : : ; ' I LVEL' ) ! ( ! ) i" . . f . . : : - ' - . I ? . - : 'a , . . N , QPTTBrv . ' , ' " , \ \ : "ii' ' ! ? 5b . \ . . \ . * . ; . . - / . I / / ' . : . ' . * \ N \ ' \ 1/ ' / I. ir V611" f1H * : . 1111 tq i fI1 / / ' 9 " I ! # \ ( 'i : \fli \ I $ c ' ' \ \ \ \ \ \ \ L. \ \ . S \ 11(1 ( S " I / ' . * . S / % I S 1z : : : , - L ) ; : " p E4 BANDITS BOB TRAIN. Force Engineer to Apply Brakes and Clerks Give Up Mail. Four masked men held up and rob- bed Union Pacific train No. 2 , known as the Overland Limited , a few miles west of Omaha just before midnight Saturday and secured a number of registered mail pouches. The exact number of sacks taken is not known , but they are believed to have contain ed a large sum. The robbers are be ing sought by squads of Omaha police in automobiles. The hold-up occurred about a mile west of the city limits , in a deep cut along the recently constructed Lane cut-off. The robbers climbed over the tank , forced the engineer to stop his train and then proceeded to the mail car. The clerks were forced to open the door and hand out a number of pouches of registered mail. Once the robbers secured the bags , they hurried I I away in a southerly direction and per mitted the train to proceed. The pas sengers were not molested. As soon as the robbers left the train proceeded to Omaha. Two of the robbers climbed into the engine with drawn revolvers and forced the engineer to stop the train. The engine crew was ordered < out of the cab and two of the robbers stood guard , while the other two escorted the 'engineer and fireman to the rear. The quartette were apparently well ac ' quainted with the ground , as they forced the train to stop in a deep cut. There were eight clerks on the mail car and they were forced to open the door. The chief clerk was singled out and asked to point out the registered mail. ' This he did and the robbers gathered up seven pouches and the leader then remarked : "This is all we can get into our automobile.'They ' left the scene quickly , walked down the track 300 feet and clambered out of the cut. A continuous fusillade of shooting was kept up during the robbery , evi - dently to intimidate passengers and crew. A flagman who went to the rear narrowly escaped being shot. Several ] passengers who had not retired started to get out of the vestibules , but in no uncertain tones the robbers ordered them back into the cars. fO 'JL S @ } pOLITIcIANj Judge Milton D. Purdy has resigned from the United States District Court bench. J. Adam Bede is expected to make a fight to recover his ' seat in Congress from the Eight Minnesota district. To the amazement , of West Virginia liquor interests , the city council of Charleston voted 22 to 7 , to make the ; ity dry. That the census office has in its em- ploy in one bureau the , -wife of the secretary . of a representative in. Con- ; ress , the wives of two officials of the War Department and the wife of a prominent : official in the Treasury De- partment was the charge made by Sen- ator McCumber in criticising the con : erence report on the census bill. The c North . Dakota Senator saTd Washing ' ton ' was getting to be a 'city of official' families , the younger members ' of , vhich . had never seen the , § tates to vhich they were credited.'t " 8 : , OKLAHOMA TOWNS ARE FLOODED Heavy Rain Jiiid Hail Storm Causes Damage Over Wild Area. One of the heaviest rainfalls In northeastern Oklahoma in recent years has swollen Grand River and other streams to the flood stage , causing much damage to railroad property and farms and partially submerging the town of Afton , twelve miles east of Vinita. " At Catale , a portion of the trestle work , of the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway bridge has been carried away. Other bridges are in danger and train service is demoral- ized. A terrific downpour following a contiguous rain of four days caused the Canadian and Arkansas rivers and their tributaries to rise rapidly. The streets and many houses in Muskogee were flooded by the storm. Six inches of rain fell in three hours in a terri- tory : fifteen miles in length , extending from South Haven , Kan. , into Okla - homa. The rain was accompanied by sheets of hail that beat the grain into the ground. , 60 CRIPPLES SAVED FROM FIRE. Doctors . and Nurses Carry ; Children - from Burning Hospital. Something more than heroism was needed at 8:30 o'clock Saturday night to save sixty spine-twisted children when a fire started in their ward of the King's County Hospital in Brook- lyn , N. Y. And the something more was forthcoming. Not only did the doctors , and nurses get out every child unscathed by the flames , but forty-two of the patients were removed to safety without being unstrapped from their Bradford frames , contrivances for molding bent bodies into shape. The children's wards are in a three-story brick building in the rear of the main hospital. Spinal cases are all cared for on the top floor of the rear build- ing , and it was on that floor that the fire broke out , in the surgical room , opening off the long apartment in which the cots are placed. _ . . . . . . _ . , I NEGRO IS HANGED BY : MOB. I Three Hundred Men ynch Black at Pine Bluff , Ark. Lovett Davis , a negro charged with attempting to attack a 16-year-old white girl in Pine Bluff , Ark. , last Friday night , was taken from the jail at midnight by a mob of 300 men and hanged from a telegraph pole on one of the principal streets. Just as the negro was being raised above the street the rope broke and the body fell to the ground , .but was raised again and left hanging. Early in the night the sheriff had secreted a number of heav- ily armed deputies in the jail , but they were overpowered and the jail was entered with t sledge hammers. Several prominent men made speeches to dissuade . . the mob , but of no avail. - , : - , . . . DOG RESCUES TWO PREACHERS. Saves John Wnnnmaker's Pastor and Brother from Drowninsr. ; Rev. Asay Ferry , pastor of Bethany Presbyterian Church , Philadelphia , which John Wanamaker attends , and his brother , Rev. Ebenezer Ferry , pas tor of the Morrisville , Pa. , Presbyter ian Church , were saved from drowning by a shepherd dog. The brothers ca noe [ upset in the Delaware River. They could make no progress and both were rapidly ! becoming exhausted when the dog plunged in and swam out to them.I I The . dog seized ' ' ? is master's collar in his teeth and dragged him to shallow watefr. ; The big shepherd went back I I after .the Philadelphia minister and j ' sooa pulled him to sharp ' [ 1 I 194 SAVED FROM SEA DEATH. Woman Among Those Braving Dan- gers of Alaskan Coast Disaster. With 194 survivors , including one woman , of the wrecked ship Columbia , the mail steamer Dora arrived at Seward , Alaska , Monday. The wreck occurred April 30 near Unimalm Pass. The experiences of all on the Columbia were harrowing in the extreme. There was no wind at the time , but a ter- rific surf was raging. On the vessel were Italians , Japanese , Americans and Scandinavians. All were passive and obedient in the face of danger , except the Italians , who were in a panic. These atttempted to seize the boa.ts , but were restrained at the point of guns. At daylight the feasibility of a surf landing was established and the boats were given to the Italians. .They made land. Two days later they returned for provisions and were com pelled by revolvers to take only food and refrain from looting. Two former life-saving men , Christ Christopherson and Ernest Anderson , on that day sue-- ceeded in establishing a life line to the-shore. On 'May 2 'storm caused the final abandonment the wrecked Columbia. The same day' the ship burned. SLAYER OF MRS. GUNNESS i ? \ American Sailor , Held In Norway , Says He Aided in Murders. A young American sailor is under arrest at Frederikstad , near Chris- tiania , Norway , as a self-confessed mur- derer. He told his captain that he helped Mrs. Belle Gunness kill four persons on her farm near Laporte , Ind. , and that he then killed Mrs. Gunness herself. The man did not impress the captain as being insane , but as one forced by his conscience to tell the truth. The sailor is now under obser- vation as to his mental condition. The case has been reported to H. H. D. Peirce , the ' American Minister to Nor . , . . . . . . . , way. 'w - l- " ' * ' - -I. ; \ . I" , A , , r e i - Gilbert , a retired French merchant , whose declining years have been made miserable by speeding automobiles , has bequeathed his entire fortune to churches in certain French cities for masses for the repose of the souls of the victims of the "diabolical ma- chines which have' poisoned my last days ? - ' - The outbreak4 of the Albanian gar- rison at Uskup , Tuesday , about 100 miles north of Saloniki , where the de posed Sultan of Turkey is a prisoner , was believed at Constantinople : to be the beginning of an uprising under the leadership of the Sultan's son , Berrhen-Eddin , for the purpose of re instating Abdul Hamid on the throne. The commission which is taking an inventory of the property at the im- perial palace at Yildiz has discovered , according to the local newspapers , bank notes to the value of $2,250,000 and a large quantity of jewelry , In- cluding one rosary alone valued at $375,000. i 'Papers seized at the palace show : ; that Abdul Hamid had - over $5- 000.000 on deposit in foreign banks. These refuse to give up the cash to the Young Turks. . . ' - - - - - . - - - - , - - - - - - - , - - - - - , . . . . . - CHICAGO AND VICINITY SHOCKED BY A ijUAKE Jolt Pronounced Most Severe Ever Experienced Throughout the Territory Affected. . TREMOR FELT IN FOUR STATES f Disturbance Noticeable Over Wide Range in Middle States , but No Serious Damage Reported. An earthquake. the first in several years. was felt in Chicago at 8 : 40 o'clock Wednesday morning , em- bracing many States in its range. From Springfield to Milwaukee and from Burlington , Iowa to Kalamazoo , Mich. , reports of the progress of the trembler kept wires busy in all direc- tions. In Maywodd , Lockport , Joliet , . Riverside. Downers Grove , Hinsdale , Naperville Elgin and Evanston dis- tinct shocks were felt. No serious damage was reported at any point , however. The progress of the quake seems to have been from south to north. The oscillation of the earth was recorded on the new weather bureau seismo graph at Peoria at 8:38 o'clock. It was 8 : 40 when the trembler gripped the Federal building in Chicago and 8:45 : when it was felt in Iowa. Vari ous descriptions of the effects of the slight quake were given. Its duration was estimated at between five and ten seconds in Chicago , but outside the time was given in some places at half a minute. Press dispatches brought ! a succes- sion of accounts of the earthquake from Springfield , Peoria , Freeport , Au- rora , Bloomington , Kewanee , Geneva , Streator , Dixon , Rockford , Moline , III. ; Milwaukee , Janesville Beloit , WIs. ; Cedar Rapids , Dubuque , Burlington , Iowa ; Kalamazoo , Muskegon , Mich. , and many other points. Broken china and windows were reported from South Haven and Benton Harbor , Mich. Fires were believed to have been started by the disturbance in Aurora , but no losses were : sustained. At Strea- tor half a minute was given as the duration of the quiver of the earth , the shake being accompanied by a faint rumbling noise. Chimneys ; were displaced in Joliet where apparently were some of the most serious effects. "The last earthquake of which the Chicago weather office has any rec- ord , " said Professor Cox , "occurred at 5 o'clock in the morning of Oct. 31 , 1895. Quakes are very rare in this locality but ' no place is immune from the tremors occasioned by readjust- ments of the earth's surfa' e. There is no seismograph in the Chicago office. It would be impossible to use such an instrument effectively in Chicago , for it must be removed from local , vibra tions and nlust' be established ' 6n bed rock. " OPENS 800,000 ACRES. President Provides for Homes for Settlers in Western Reservations. : President Taft has issued a procla mation providing for the opening up to settlement and entry of about 440,000 acres of land in the Flathead ( Mont. ) , 200,000 in the Coeur d'Alene ( Idaho ) and between 50,000 and 100,000 in the Spokane ( Wash. ) reservations. Reg istration , which will commence on July 15 and close Aug. 5 , must be exe - cuted and sworn to at either Kalispell or Missoula , Mont. , for the Flathead land ; at Spokane for the Spokane land , and at Coeur d'Alene for the lands in the Coeur d'Alene reservation. Appli cation for registration must be deliver ed through the mails only to the su perintendent of the opening at Coeur d' A ene , which will be the point of I drawing for all three reservations. The drawing will begin at 10 o'clock Aug. 9 and will continue until com pleted. u. , - .j. * - ' [ 4 5' HN Fire at Long Island , Kan. , destroyed four business buildings. Loss $100- 000. 000.C. C. L. Hutchinson of Chicago was' elected president pFthe , American Fed- eration of Arts at , the Washington meeting. Ruth Mitchell , aged 5 , was instantly killed at Highland , Cal. , by the acci . dental discharge of , a revolver in the hands of Harold , her brother , aged 8. Fire , believed the result of trouble giowing out of the strike in the East Side bakeries , .destroyed tin plaut of th ° Star Baking Company at . 10.S - Thomas street , Brookljn , N. Y. Loss $100,000. Two hundred thousand dollaj- : > loss - was caused by a fire which swept through one end of a five-story build ing at 433 to 537 7th avenue , New York , used by : the Grand Rapids Fur niture Company as a warehouse. Surrounded by fellow fraternity men I and distinguished guests , Frank W. Carpenter , secretary to President Taft , ' I was tendered a banquet in Washington by the members of the Georgetown Ac I tive and Washington Alumni chapters I of- the D in Hhi ( fraternities. : Ii I i , i . u , , : : - " " : - . . ; - - . - - - . - - - - , - - . - , - - . - . . . _ - - . - . - . - . , - . , , . . " 'r -r.- ' " r' ' , ' , , ry ' . DA YLIGET PLAN PUSHED . ' , . Delegates Meet in Washington w'i Talk Over the Plan. " ht'hours. ' " will . A "daylight hours' conference bi L held in Washington that It is hoped , by the delegates will influence the United States Government to author- ize a change in the working hours and' In the standard time of the nation. ' The first delegation to arrive will be that from Cincinnati , but there will , be delegates from most of the Eastern and Middle Western States. They are business men , as a rule at the head . , of large enterprises. It-is their plan that the clock shall be put ahead two hours all over the continent , so that what has been o a. m. shall be 7 a. m. The quitting . . L ' time of the work day will be pushed two hours also , so that the' workers , after * he day's task is finished , shall have two more hours of daylight. It is the contention of the advocates of daylight hours that the human , - being is as much benefited by sunlight as plants and animals of a lower spe- ' c es. They believe that the extra hours " - in the sunshine in the afternoon will make workers more fit for the next - . . day's task. The plan is to move up the clock on each May 1 and to move ; it back two hours on each Oct. 1. : . NEW LEGAL POINT OKLAHOMA Minor Claijns Marriage Has Given Him Rights of Majority. Proceedings were started in the Su- . preme Court at Guthrie , Okla. , to de- termine how far a minor's marriage : gives him the rights of majority. The matter was brought up by an applica- tion of Franklin Springer for a writ . , of prohibition against W. T. Glenn County Judge of Choctaw County , to . prevent him from ordering the sale of Springer's land. Springer states that he is 18 years old ; that his brother , Samuel B. Springer , was ap pointed as his guardian on June 19 , I 1907 , but that his marriage on June . 6 , 1008 , ended the guardianship. A territorial statute gave a minor the right to control his own property I after marriage , but on account of the abuse which had arisen in connection : : . . -J with minor Indian lands on the east side of the State , a bill introduced by Senators Russell and Keys was passed by the last Legislature modifying the former statute. Under the modified law , the . minor could receive title to property , but could not convey. This . suit will determine the exact effect of - : Elie i law. GRANDFATHERS RUN RACE. Fourteen of Field of Thirty-six .Com- , plete Five-Mile : : Run. It was a real grandfathers' long dis tance race that was run ; in South Chi cago when thirty-six men , all over 50 , started on a five-mile jaunt just to "show the kid runners of the district that they were- just as , good as ever. " . . The course was from 88th street and Buffalo avenue to the state line and , return. Fourteen of the runners fin- ished the race. ; "I'm running to let Dr. Osier and r these young athletes around here know that a man over 60 can still print Joseph Killduff , 67 , the oldest entrant , said before the start. At the , ' finish it was seen that all over 55 had been eliminated. The winner was Charles Bittner , 52 , a switchman. John Kane , 51 , a steel-worker , was second , and Joseph Gassner , 52. a switchman . third. / . FINDS GERMLESS MILK. ; , . Government Expert Make Xotable Discovery at Cincinnati Show. Dr. Clarence B. Lane , United States in of the government expert , charge . contests at the National Milk Show , in Cincinnati , announces that for the second time the government has found milk which the tests prove is abso- ' lutely free from bacteria. The first was in Chicago in 1906 , but only one sample was found germless. The sec- ond is in the Cincinnati show , and San Francisco , California , carried' away the honors. A remarkable feature is that the perfect sample of milk , in two quart bottles , was on . the road eight days - - - from San Francisco , and stood for sev- eral hours here without being iced , and : the warm weather , before the gov- t. z > * - -r- - , ernment test was made'I ; ' 'IJ , r . J " ' . - -.4- - _ , . Offer Money : iit Signal Mars. : Two newspaper Owners of Fort Worth , Tex. , having telegraphed 1 Prof. Pickering of Harvard that the people of Texas would undertake to ra"lse the $10,000,000 necessary : to test the mirrdr method of signaling to the planet Mars , as outlined by him recently , the professor replied that he would advise waiting until further experiments : were made to determine whether Mars i " is actually inhabited by intelligent be ings. For ' this purpose he would ad- { t vise the creation of a great observa- tory in Texas , where he and other as ' tronomers could carry on investiga- tions of the whole subject. This could i be done for much less than the sum , ° named. Next fall when Mars is to 'J' ' reach its nearest point -would t-2 -a . , good time to take such observations. , t ts s To Fly Acro.Hw the Atlantic. , Henry H. Clayton a meteorologist who recently resigned from the Blue Hill Observatory , is planning to dem- ' . onstrate his theory of a steady plane- y tary air current from west to east at R a height of two miles or more by at- tempting to crCssthe Atlantic Ocean - . . _ . . . : . . ! in. a mammoth balloon. As a. pre- ; ! ' liminary test he proposes to try a bal- - ' r loon trip..from San. Francisco to Nay' , _ : . ; . ' ' - : York. " - , c ' , \ , . , , . . ; ' " , - - - " - . . . +