I A , r " " , , ' , " , R . , . . . , , , . , 1 " . ' 'j\W r " " - "ii1iiflKER'S ' - BODY fOUND IN TRUNK Lelsic l Sigel , Granddaughter of Fam . ous General , Murdered by Chris , ; tianized 'Chinaman. JERI VICTIM OF YELLOW : PERIL . . - . " ' ' , , ' Chung , Sin Tells of "Witnessing Crime , ' and Fastens Guilt on Leon Ling. , i 1\1155 Elizabeth Sigel mission work- 2r in New York slums , and grand- daughter of Gen. Franz Sigel of Civil War fame , was the victim of one of the most atrocious murders which has been : committed in New York in years. : r Her body was found jammed into a trunk in a Chinaman's lodging : .house : at 7S2 Sth avenue. The young : woman had been missing from her ihome since June 9. The police say tthe body probably had been In the 'trunk nearly that long. The Chinaman who had lived in the Toom where the body was found was Leong Loo Lin , known among his Eng- 'llsh friends as William L. Leon. He , wa . known to have been closely con- nected with mission work among his , countrymen , and was educated. He -.also was well acquainted with Miss Sigel and letters found in the room of the murderer even point to th@ sup- - ; positn ; the girl cared for him. An other letter , addressed to a Chinamar : by Leon , threatened trouble if tne lormer did not cease his attentions to .Miss Sigel. Leon had been missing ifrom the rooms for more than a week. "Wrote Jjove Letter to Chinese. Numerous letters signed Elsie , ad- dressed to Leon and breathing the spirit of love , were found in the room. 'There' were also found various articles .of jewelry , later identified as those . 4 " orn by ; , Elsie Sigel , and to render . ft -the clew to the identity of the victim snore complete the latter had been I missing from her home since June 9. .She had gone out that day with the intention of paying a visit to her , grandmother in the. Bronx. Two days . later her parents received what pur- ported ; to be "a dispatch from her at Washington , saying that she was well and > would return home in a couple I of days. It seems to be fairly well 'established that the dispatch was a : .decoy and that when it was sent from Washington Elsie Sigel was dead and iher ! body crammed into the "trunk. : Elsie's affection for Leon was recip- rocated ; and in view of this the question arises , why should he have ' murdered her , assuming that he is the murderer ? And here comes in .the fickleness of Elsie. While writ ing to Leon and professing her love , : for him , she was also deeply in love -with another Chinaman , Chu Gain , thet : proprietor of the Port Arthur , a restaurant : on Mott street just op posite one of the Chinese mission sta- -tions. Elsie's' profession ! ? of love for Gain , who is now under arrest and held . as a witness , was as strong if tiot stronger than that for Leon. Scores of letters writen by her to Gain have been found in which she oiot only addressed him in the most , . endearing terms , but discussed with him matters which a woman usually -considers her most intimate and secret . .affairs. AVlmt Chuns Sin Saw. Chung Sin , whose room adjoined that of Leon Ling and between which was .an unlocked , door , was arrested a few hours after the discoevery : of the mur- < der. Chung is 35 years old and a na- tive of Canton. He was captured at West ' Galway , N. Y. , a small hamlet aiear Amsterdam , arid was taken to , . Uew York without delay. . Baited and intimidated by detec tives , threatened with prosecution and confused with rapid-fire questions , Chuns Sin told of Elsie Sigel's mur- der. Under the terrific pressure of -the "third degree" the Iittle Chfna- inan admitted that he had seen the ; body in Leon Ling's room ; that he J .bad touched it while it was still warm ; that he had smelled drugs and ; had watched Leon Ling's preparations . : for placing the body in the trunk , -whe-re it was found horribly decom- posed. Chung Sin , in fact , if what was learned at the Criminal Courts Build- Illi ing . . : , . is , correct , described almost every- -thing concerning the murder of Maj.- ' Gen. ' * Franz Sigel's granddaughter ex 1 ceptthe actual commission of the -crime. He denied any implication in . it and protested stoutly that he was ignorant of the whereabouts of Leon - iiing . the supposed murderer. After - the inquisition he was taken before Coroner Harburger and held in $ 10- ; 000 bail in the House of Detention to await the inquest. Miss Sigel was buried in Woodlawn < cemetery , Washington , 'without serv- ice : : or ceremony , only her father and ' .wo brothers witnessing the interment. Automatic Railway Gate. . A . railway : crossing gate is opened . anci closed by the passage o ? ' gie gate itself has been installed near Mon- treax , Switzerland. As the car or lo comotive , approaches it makes an elec- tric current , which sets in motion a mechanism that lights road lamps , rings a bell and lowers the barrier across the highway. \ . , . . . . . . i"1' . - . , . - j. " . : ' ' " " . - . . . . , . " " ' ' ' ' ' * - - + , . . . . . ' . . I' ' . ' ' ' ' , "l ' ' ' , " . . : FREEDOM. rr..rl' in the forest now , " As on that old July ! Whoa fsrst our fnthers took the vow , The bluebird , stained with earth and sky , ShOuts from a'blowing bough $ In green aerial freedom , wild and , ,1 tijb - And co-.v , as then , the bobolink , Out on the uncertain brink Of the swaying maple , swings * * While over tho wood his proclamation rings , . A daring boast that would unkingdom kings ! / Even so the wild birds sang on bough and wall ' . That day the Bell of Independence Hall Thundered . upon the world the Word of * ' . Man , The word God , uttered when tae world began - That day when Liberty began to be , And mighty hopes were out on land and sea. But Freedom calls her conscripts now as then : It is an endless battle to be free. As the old dangers lessen from the skies New dangers arise : Down the long centuries eternally , Again , again , will rise Thermopylae" " Again , : again , a new Leonidaa - Must hold for God the imperiled Pass. As long as the ages run New Lexington will rise on Lexington ; And many a valorous Warren fall Upon the imperiled wall. Man Is the conscript of an endless quest , A long divine adventure without rest- A holy war , a battle yet unwon When he shall climb beyond the burnt- out sun. Each hard-earned freedom withers to a bond ; Freedom forever is beyond-beyond ! -Edwin Markham in New York Inde- pendent. Firecrackers 'Twas the day before the Fourth of July and Freddie had no firecrackers. He could hear the boom , boom of the cannon-crackers all around where he lived , and every place he looked it seemed as if the ground was covered with crackling squibs , but he had none. Still Freddie was not unhappy. He was only impatient. When his father came home he thought all would be well , then there would be lots and lots of crackers. Freddie met his father at the door and John Wilson , rough as he was , softened under the lad's greeting. "So Freddie wants some firecrack- ers ? What , Roman candles and squibs ? What ! And a whirl-a-gig ? You mean a 'cartwheel , ' don't you , Freddie , boy ? " Without waiting for an answer the father caught his son with his hands below the arms and hoisted him on his knees. "You'll have them , Fred , " he sal ' , "and , what's more , your old dad will help you fire them off. " Freddie's eyes shown like diamonds ; he clapped his hands together in glee and said : "Papa , you mind just be- fore mamma lay that quiet I couldn't wake her no matter how I tried , she told me I'd never want for firecrack- ers and squibs and everything good on the Fourth of July. She was right , too , wasn't she , papa ? And she hasn't forgot me yet , either , papa , for when I was in bed last night I seen her all In white as close as anything to the bed , and she kissed me on both cheeks and said : 'Little Freddie will have a good time tomorrow. : And that's right , Isn't It , papa ' ? " The boy fixed his eyesj with a con- fident look on his father and the par- ent turned his head away. He was afraid to let Freddie see his counte- nance. For the boy's eyes reminded him of a face fixed on his memory forever. John recalled a face with a lasting smile , with eyes that were the color of a clear' sky on a summer's morning , and dark hair hanging in abundant glory around her head. And for all that , he had been a hard drink- er since Mary died one year ago to- night His position had gone , and worst of all Mary's boy had been ill- treated. I "Yes , Freddie and papa will have a good time tomorrow , " he said at last. "And now when my boy knows what firecrackers and fun "will be his In the morning , doesn't he want to go to bed and take a big. big sleep , so that : he may be up bright and early in the morning to bang away the Fourth The father laid Freddie down to 6leep in his own bed. He watched the lad until his eyes closed in slumber , and a little later , when perhaps the boy \ras looking again at that white figure , John turned and went out of the house to buy the firecrackers. Wiping a tear away on hi $ coat sleeve as he reached the outside , John 'walked swiftly down -the street toward the notion store. As he turned a corner a , voice hailed him : "Hallo there , Jack ! What's the rush ? " . Wil- son looked back and there stood the "boys. " Just as the sun on the Fourth of July a year ago was peeping through house : Freddie opened his eyes , and without waiting to look around called : "Papa , papa , did you get" the fire- crackers ? " , But no answer came , for the father had not come back. Freddie was surprised at his father's absence ; it had often happened before during the past year , i > ut : "Today , to- day was ' the Fourth , and where was pap with all the firecrackers ? " Rising , the. boy surveyed the dusty room. No papa no firecrackers anywhere. Then he cJinibed out of bgd * nd pattered into f ( . ' - . ' , . : < > " . ' , - ' - - - - . . . . ' , . . . . . . . . , . . . ' . . . _ , , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 'f . . ' ; , " . 4"ar-- . . .ty' " < " " ; " ' I' " _ . . . . , \ , ; , - - . . - ' ' , . " - , , . " . , " " . ; . . : . \ . ' : ' " . ' . ' - , . " ' . . ' " . " . . ' . . ' " " ' " v , . . , . ' ' - " . ' " , . ' ' . ' " ' \to' " . . ' " . ' ! - t'f. . "I' . " , . ; . ' . - - ' ' ' ' ' " : ' ' . . I . " " r "r. ' " - ' - } ' " . : " "r. . . . . . . ! " - - - . YOU STARTED IT , ITffCLE. / : : I' ) . \ < > , ' . . . - ' ' - ' . - , \\\\\\r \ \ \ \ \ I ' \ \ , TITs > . s/p : v. \ \ iI/ / ' ) \ \ 1/ ' fPE : : ; Ip 4'1 4' /1 ' o3 . _ _ . ' ; ; ) CjJh - i'C ( a E .II . E4Eeo 111g1 17 \4//iltt . \1'1 ' 4 , \ / ( \ ' - ' < / / I \Y i I I L1 ti f/Ikc ' . , . / ' 1 . /b / ' . . " ' tI1b ' \ / / * 11' \ ' e t . ' . , / 7. 4 1 'Qf . . I I = ; aweA ) . . _ the kitchen , and still no father , no fire- crackers. Returning to the bed Freddie buried his face in the pillow and cried himself into a broken slumber. A couple of hours later he awoke with a start , and again calling : "Papa , papa , " received no answer. Then he remembered how his mother , in the night , had told him how he was "going to have a good time the Fourth. " Trustingly he be- gan to search the room and kitchen for wh'at "mamma had brought him. " Underneath the bed and old rickety table Freddie looked and looked. When his search revealed nothing he- burst into tears , and crying , called : "Ma-ma , ma-ma , Freddie wants a fire- cracker. " In time , the crying grew tiresome , and again/ the. hunt began. All over the room he searched. Not a corner of the kitchen was left unexplored. In an old desk he found a revolver. "Oh , look , look ! " he cried , "what mamma sent me. " He hugged the weapon tightly in both hands and carried it triumphant . ly to the bed. His eyes were aglow with pleasure. With all the might of his little fingers he pressed the trigger. A first , second , and third time the hammer fell. At each releasing of the spring he shouted with delight. . His fingers grew tired , and the fourth time he tried to raise the hammer and fail ed. Still , not to be defeated , he turned the pistol \ toward his breast and put his thumbs on the trigger and pressed. Slowly the hammer rese. Then there was a report and Freddie fell back on the bed with the look of pleasure on his face changed to one of pain. An hour later his father came in. He was sober , and in his arms was 'a pile of firecrackers. As he crossed the threshold he shouted : "Freddie boy , come here and look what papa has brought you. " But no answer came. Thinking the boy was asleep he stood in the kitchen and called : "Freddie , here's papa ; don't you want to see all the nice , big firecrackers ? " He walked into the bedroom. At the bedside he stopped and let the fire- crackers fall in a heap on the floor. As he lifted Freddie in his arms the little fellow opened his eyes , and with a look of wonder said : "Mamma , Tse had a good Fourth. " Then a quiver and all was over. The father laid his boy down and a far-away look came into his eyes. He looked at the firecrackers and then riveted his gaze on the pale face of his dead son. He lifted the revolver. A report followed. But the firecrack ers lay : intact on the floor. Sky Rocket Philosophy. The boy who was burned last year has a short memory. It is estimated that there are 80- 000,000 horses in the world. This is a good day to leave the skittish ones in the barn. The poet who wrote , "If you're wak- jng call me early , " lived in a country where they didn't celebrate the Glo rious. If there Is one particular thing that a boy doesn't want to be on the Fourth of July it Is a girl. Wouldn't an old-fashioned celebra- tion leave a good taste in the mouth ? Throw the ear trumpet away ; you will not need it to-morrow. We have forgiven the British long ago for licking them. We should pause for a moment in 1 our frenzied celebrations and solemn- . ly reflect on the great truth that Christmas is coming. Wli-cn Wc Are All Children. OJ - F .f ( .4 , ' , f . . , rh 0 Sri. Sri.i ! r. ; r't f N ,4 , I The Fatal Fourth. During the five celebrations of the Fourth of July from 1903 to 1907 , in- clusive , 21,520 persons were injured and 1,153 killed , according to statistics just gathered. The giant firecracker alone injured 1,489 persons in the cele bration of 1907 , killed eight and led to the death of eight more from lockjaw. So says one of the medical papers. A little thought beforehand will be bet- ter than a sorrowful recollection of the facts on July 4. ' Do not get out of the habit of celebrating the Fourth of July , but try to make it a celebration without an undertaker's bill. - Buffalc Express. Johnnie Wanted Cannon Crackers. Johnnie he's got pants on ; He ain't a kid no more. He wants cannon crackers That make a thunderin' roar. : He broke his cap pistol ; He says they're baby's toys. He wants qannon crackers Like all $ he other boys. Pape bought the crackers . ; This filled John with great bliss. ' There , was a loud explosion- this. like , went Johnnie Poor -Brookl on Eagle. How to Treat Injuries. Surgeon General Wyman , of tht Marine Hospital and Public Health Service , in a circular , gives instruc- tions as to the treatment of Fdurzh : of July injuries. Dr. Wyman suggests the injury be treated in this way : "Incise freely every wound. "Carefully and thoroughly remove from the wound every particle of for- eign matter. "Cauterize the wound thoroughly with a 25 per cent solution of carbolic \ acid. "Give a full dose of anti-tetanic serum. " J THE FIFTH OF JTHY - CAILING THE ROLL. i ( Adapted from a Famous Old Poem. ) I i N h vi 5 a r 0 4 ' - r , /Att 1/1 1 ' 1 I "Benjamin Jones ! " the father cried ; "Here ! " was the answer loud and clear , Prom the lips . of a youngster standing near ; And "here ! " was the word the nest re plied. "Johnnie Jones ! " and a silence fell This time , no answer , followed the call ; Only his brother saw him fall , Killed or wounded , he could not tell. i There they stood in the morning light On Jtely the fifth , the present year , And the roll was read in accents clear By the senior Jones , who was ghastly white. , "Charley Jones ! " At the call there cam Two ambulance men and. some doleful groans As they bore in the body of Chaney I I Jones , J Greatly dl ngUrt- . to an & : \ 'er nia u . u ue. "Albert Jones 1" ! and a voice said "here ! ' "Chauncey Jones ! " "He's down at St. Luke's With a couple of badly damaged 'dukes , ' The doctors say he'll be well nest year. " "William Jonesthen ! some one said : "A small toy pistol went off and shot him , And the ambulance people hurried and got him To make some repairs on his injured head. " 'Twas a gallant day but it cost us dear ; For that family roll when called to-day , . Of a total l of seven , that entered the fray , Numbered but four that answered "here 1' " -Chicago Tribune. M . . . . . " ' , ' " " ' " 1. < , j 1 < ! : . . , . . , " . - ' . . { .s R fo . . . U r ' ft " JdAlT STEALS CHICKENS Alfl GOES TO PRISON FOR LIFE. Law Providing Life Sentence for an. , ' . . : , : Habitual Criminal Put Into ; : Operation in New York. "They tell me I've igot to do a life - sentence for $17 worth of chickens , and I don't think it's right , " pleaded Charles H. Chaffee , as , trembling and fearful , he stood before the County , Court in Syracuse , N. Y. , to be sen tenced to hard labor in Auburn prison , for the remainder of his natural life. ' While the law , which gave Judge Ross no opinion whatever in the mat- ter of a life sentence after a fourth \ conviction , provides that after the . maximum , less computation , for a sec- ond offense , the parole board may al- low liberty , there is no chance for Chaffee , as he already has half of a twenty-year term coming to him. Assistant District Attorney Standen said the court had no discretion in the matter and that the indictment had been drawn with a life sentence in view. He said it was what ought to- be done with Chaffee , who had been saved once from the charge of assault with intent to kill his wife. Jt , was . on . . Pec. S , 1896 , that Chaffee got his sen- . tence of nineteen years and six months and [ was allowed to go on parole in 1906. Judge Ross said it was a aad case and simply the result of the prisoner's own selection. The life sentence was . not because he stole $17 worth ot ' chickens , but because he had selected a life of crime. Chaffee is 45 , and a carpenter by trade. , , WEALTH IN OLD BIBLE. : Civil War Veteran Lifted to Compar- ative Opulence by Mere Chance. Steve Marsh : , of New York , who for many years has been living on a pen- sion of $12 a month , which he earned . during- the Civil War , took down the old family Bible left him thirty-five years ago by his aunt , Sarah Marsh. The Bible was in a good state of preservation save for the fact that the dust of ' - its thirty-five rs was on , binding. He was merely endeavoring to ascertain whether it were better to give the vohime to the next door neighbor or leave it for the next per- Eons who occupied his hall room. For Marsh was going to Denver to t spend his last years with his son , and he reasoned there would be plenty of % Bibles in the Colot11do- cltj- if he de sired to read one. Carelessly his fingers scraped the leaves of the book. Suddenly the digits stopped. There was something in this Bible of which he had not been in- formed. He opened the book. A dollar bill was between its pages. No longer did he hesitate. He exam- ined e'Oerjleaf from Genesis to Rev- t elations . with a care as great and as eager as tlJat displayed by the most famous theologian. He even went over the pages from birth and death . . . entries and the index. When he had completed the task $4,267 ! : laid before him. He looked at i * and sighed. For thirty-five : years this money had been in the Bible and he had been living on $12 a month. When Steve Marsh took a taxicab to the Grand Central station he held the Bible clasped to his breast. . , , „ . . . Canadian civil servants have organ- ized a civil service federation. A new union of cigarmakers has been organized at Red Wing , Minn. Striking lobster fishermen at Syd- _ ney , N. S. , have decided to become' packers. Waltham Mass. ( . ) C. L. U. has gone on record as opposed to the licensing . of pawnshops in that city. The total number of organized work- men in Norway is 56,862 , as against barely 10,000 ten years ago. Cloth mill operatives at New Bed- ford , Mass. , have been refused a resto- ration of the 1907 wage scale , which was 10 per cent higher then at pres- ent. Representatives of the furniture trade societies of New South . Wales , Victoria , South Australia and Queens- land recently met in conference in Melbourne to form a federation. Boston p'I ( SS. ) Hebrew Painters- and Paperhangers' Union , which is an independent organization , wishes a flat $3 a day minimum , far painters and a considerable increase for the paper- hangers. . . .The National Union of Journalists , delegate meeting was held in London England , recentlOne of the resolu tions passed was in favor of "the- ! weekly : day rest bill , so as to obtain one clear day's rest per week for all journalists. " The National Letter Carriers' Asso- ciation 'has acquired a tract of 160 acres of land in the vicinity of Colo rado Springs as a . site , for a home. . , The land is contiguous to that of the _ ' ' : Union Printers' home. _ . The labor organizations of Stock- ton , Cal. , are making arrangements to build a four-story temple in that city It will be built by the San Joaquin Labor Temple Association : , which has- - . incorporated with a capital stock of 75000. , -4