THE CORRECTOR DIAZ IS WILLI! BITTER...

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THE CORRECTOR Sag-Harbor , 27. I" . I5SOTLET D. SfiEIGirT , Editor It Proprietor. Published every Saturday mornlngf ia the village of S*g Harbor , Suffolk Ooasty, N. Y. Terms $2.00 per year in ftdrancs. CSTABUSHEO 1322. ALBERT H. ROGERS , Real E state , Sag Harbor, N.Y. KIERNAN & VAUGHN , ^fceal Estate , Notaries Public , Auctioneers ) SAG HARBOR, N. Y. THE SAG HARBOR GRAIN CO., WHOLESAL E Urate , Feed , Hour , flay and Straw. Fofl Welg&ts ind Full Measures. CAR. LOTS A SFKCIAT/nr . Maldston* Mill Box 25. SagHarbep FRANK McNALLY , Prop. CAFE AND SAMFLE BOOM, Washington St., Sag Harbor , N. Y. LICENSED PREMISES. Will open Oct. 1 , 1909, -with the best stock cf Winea , Liquors and Ale and Beer in town. Lager on draught or in bottles. Cigars , Cigarettes, Tobacco- Imported , Turkish, Egyptian or Domestic. TVaJcIi Our Window. If You Lilse Absolutely Pure Candy Just Sugar , Fruit and Chocolate, Then You Want the Celebrated Belle Mead Sweets WE SELL, THEM. We also have a complete Pharmacy, 'wher* * you can find Perfumes , Toilet Articles, Cijrars, Patent Medicines , Sundries and a Perfect Prescription Department Call and See V«. The Corner Drug: Store A. T. BROWN , PU. G. i STelepkoas . 31-L. DIAZ IS WILLI! TO CONCEDE ALL Message to Congress Commits Old Ruler to Many Things De- manded by the Revo- lutionists. Mexico City. —With civil -war rack- ing his domain from end to end , President Porflrlo Diaz, aged, infirm. ruler of Mexico , stood before th* Mexican Congress and declared his readiness to concede the main points demanded by his revolting people. Trembling with age and weakness , the ruler , In a scarcely audible voice, read his annual message to Congress, recommending the -reforms which have raised the red flag of revolution in his domini ons. He declared that he bowed to the " public opinion " and conceded the main points urged by the revolu- tionists. His sp ecific recommenda- tions were: " Effective suffrage for all. No re-election to the presidency. Reform in local , provisional and city government. A division of the large landed estates. Subdue d and silent the general legislature and a brilliant gathering of government officials listened to the renunciation of the iron tyrant. Not a sound interrupted the reading of the lengthy document, and when the President concluded a great sigh of relief was the only demonstration. Ministers, ' ambassadors and govern- ment ;.officials - - declare ;tnat> tliey.isee; the " erfd : ' of * : the * -\presen ' t-trouble ' ' vitf Diaz' s terms of surrender. The whis- pered verdict as the ruler was as- sisted fro m the congressional hall was that Diaz will resign immediate- ly upon the restoration of peace. All M-exicp City, usually a riot- of gayety of color , sank into somber gloom in the expectations of a pos- sible defiance by the President. Crowds gathered in the streets to await the news from the Congress, and when the details of the message were announced they filed away silently, without demonstration. American in Command. Mexicali , Mex. "General" Stan- ley, the American leader of the rebels in Lower California , took full com- man d Saturday of the insurrectos of Mexicali. Leyva , the deposed com- mander , has departed and is sup- posed to he on his way to Los Ange- les. ' Should Leyva he caught he is liable \o prosecution for violation of the neutrality laws of the United States , as he and Berthold organ- ized the original rebel force in Holt- ville, Cal., last January. Mexico's Chief Backs Down Before Revolutionists. ADVOCATES NO RE-ELECTION. TO WORK FOR WORLD PEACE Dr. Scott Qutts State Department to Go With Carnegie. ' Washington , D. C—Dr. James Brown Scott , solicitor in internation- al arbitrations of the State Depart- ment , has tendered his resignation. He has severed his government con- nection in order to assume the duties of secretary of the Carnegie endow- ment for international peace. Dr. Scott was a member of tne American delegation io the second Hague con- ference of 1907 , and was of counsel for the United States in the recentl y «3eci<ie<3 >Coxtli .Atlanti c Coast fisneri-es arbitration at The Hague. $500, 000 , 000 IN COMBINE 20 Coal Companies Form a Selling Agency. Pittsburg. —A combination of 20 companies , with a capitalization of $500 ,000 ,000 , is being formed here to be the selling agency of the princi- pal bituminous coal corporations in this section. The preliminary organization has already heen . . completed with G. J. Gams, of Uniontown , Pa., as tem- porary chairman. The concern will be known as the United States Coal Exchansre . LEWI S TO DIG COAL Mineworkers' Ex-President Declines Editorship. Bridgeport , 0. —President Tom.L. Lewis, of the United Mineworkers, will take a position as digger in the Wh-eeliag Creek mines , where he was employed be fore he became an offi- cial of the union. Mr. Lewis has refused several of- fers to become editorial Jiead of newspapers. Ke began worS in the mines here when he was only 12 years ole FIRE VICTIMS NUMBER 144 Sixteen-year-old Glri Who Jumped From the Ash Building is Last to D< e. New York. —The death of Sarah Kupla , 16-year-old girl , who Jumped from the eighth floor of the Asch building during the recent fire hor- ror , brought the list of victims up to a total of 144. The girl' s back was broken and she had been unconscious ever since the fatal leap. Tlie identification of another girl's body by a strange arrangement of buttons on her shoe brought the list of _ . unnamed . ' ; down. ' . ' "'to; - 14. ; There seems llttle lj ch ' ance ' of ^ further ^identi- fieation and. the Charities Boaid : has made arrangements to bury them in. the cemetery of the Evergreens in a plot owne d by the city. Assistants of the district attorney' s office and Fir e Marshal Beers , who are conducting investigations into the disaster , besides visiting the Asch Building, further examined survivors. Contributions to the relief fund amounts to more than ?58 ,000. An aged woman who said she was the mother of Annie Colletti , one of the fire victims, told the coroner that when her daughter ' s body was re- turned from the morgue for burial $1 ,600 which she says the young woman had sewed in her skirt was missing. She explained that her daughter was afraid to trust hanks and always carried large sums of money on her person. WOMAN'S DARING FLIGHT Mrs. Frank Coffy n in Airship That Breasts a Gale. Augusta , Ga. —In a high wind that uprooted trees , Aviator Frank Cof- fyn , accompanied by his young wife; made a flight of more th an 28 miles from Augusta to Aiken , S. C, in 41 minutes to keep a b reakfast appoint- ment with friends. No woman in America under wea- ther conditions of any sort has ever made a fight of this length . It was found impossible to take a straight course because of the direction of the wind. 11, 483 D]ED IN MONTH Plague' s Terrible Work Reported to Washington. Washington , I>. C. Tne plague is decimating Northern Manchuria , ac- cording to advices received from Har- bin by the State Department. At the end of February 6 . 4S3 deaths had occurre d in Harhin alone, in one region in Manchuria 5, 000 deaths occurred in February. Five Senators in One Famiiy, Elkins, W. Va. —A distinction that is probably unequaled by any other woman in the world is that enjoyed by Mrs. Blaine Elkins. Before her marriage she was Miss Mary Kenna, daughter of the late United States Senator John E. Kenna. Her uncle , Hon. W. E. Chilton , of Charleston , is now United States Senator. Hor husband's brother , Hon. Davis Elkins , was a United States Senator , as was her husband' s father , the late Hon. S. B. Elkins , and her husband' s grandfather, ex-Senator Henry Gass- away Davis. Year Book Coming Soon. Washington , D. C.—The govern- ment's "best sellers ," the Agricul- tural Year Book , Is on its way to the public. Half a million copies will be ready for distribution about April 3 0 , it was announced at the Department of Agriculture. JUSTICE O'GORMAN ELECTED SPUN Noted New York Jurist Will Succeed Depew. GETS THE INSURGENTS VOTES Mriitp'Gbftnan - . - Made.a Fine Rocord on Supreme Bench of New York City—For 30 Years One " of Tammany' s Best Orators. Albany, N. Y. —By- anxunanimous vote of 112 of 114 Democratic mem- bers of the Legislature, Justice James A. O'Gorman , of New York , was elected United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the expira- tion of the term of Chauncey M. De- pew. He is the first Democrat to be sent to the Senate from the Empire State since Edward Murphy was chosen in 1893. Fifteen of the 30 insurgents re- mained out of the caucus which pre- ceded the election. All of them voted for Justi ce O'Gorman on joint bal- lot. When the election was over, like Democrats of old , the insurgents and regulars thre w their hats in the air together and agreed to work shoulder to shoulder -for the accom- plishment of the important measures which have been sidetracke d by the Senatorial squabble. Confusion that almost approached disorder and thunderous demonstra- tions of relie f marked the termina- tion of the -remarkable 'deadlock, which has held the Legislature prac- tically at a standstill for 74 days— 10% weeks. The end of the long, wearing struggle came in the Council room of the City Hall , with the legis- lators , packe d like sardines in a box , and with the Democratic leaders standing by with eagle eye , worried almost to the last for fear their plans for a settlement would at the final moment be upset. A recess has been taken until April 17 tO give Workmen a chance t6 re- pair the damaged Capitol. Meantime the leaders will busy themselves with some of the important administra- tion measures, ana it Is ¦ expected that when the lawmakers reconvene on the day after Easter legislation will be put through with a rush. Governor Dix , whose business ad- ministration has been imperiled by the deadlock , has expressed deep re- lief that the warfare has ceased. His expressions of gratification have found echoes in the statements of practically all the leaders , Republi- can as well as Democratic. UNCLE SAM'S CASH BALANCE Largest That Has Ever Been Held in Treasury. Washington , D. C. —Uncle Sam balanced his books and counte d his cash Saturday and found the govern- ment on a paying basis, for the first time since July 1 , 1910. The Treasury began business for April with a surplus of $3 ,000 ,000 on all ordinary accounts. There was a corresponding deficiency of more than ?16, 000 , 000 a year ago. Treas- ury officials attribute the favorable gains to rapidly increasing receipts from internal revenue more than to any other cause. Customs receipts have declined 513, 000 ,000 , compared with a corresponding perio d a year ago _ . THE WEAK, PREY OF THE STRONG German Chancellor Says Disarma- ment is Impossible—Arbitra- tion Inadequate. " ¦ Berlin. Chancellor Von Both- mann-Hollweg, in the Reichstag, dis- cussed disarmament and internation- al arbitration , but without departing one iota from the well-known stand- point of the German government , often declare d on former occasions. The imperial chancellor saw the chief difficulty in a disarmament agreement in the impossibility of supervisio n of Individual states. "Control over these," he said , "I regard as abso- lutely impracticable. The mere at- tempt to control would have no other result than continual mutual distrust and universal turmoil. General dis- armament Is an insoluble problem so long as men are men. "It will remain true, " continued the Chancellor , "that the weak will he the prey of the strong. If any na- tion feels that it is unable to Bpend certain sums for defensive purposes , it will inevitably drop to the second rank. There will always be a strong- er one ready to take Its place. We Germans in our exposed situation cannot shut our eyes to this dire reality only so far as we can main- tain peace. "The nations, including Germany," said the Chancellor , "have been talk- ing ' disarmamen t since the first Hague conference, but neither in Ger- many nor elsewhere has a practical plan- been proposed. Great Britain wishes the' limitation of armaments, but simultaneously wants a superior or equal fleet. Any conference on this subject is boun d to be fruitless. No standard for a limitation can be found , and any conceivable proposal would be shattered on the question of control. " America s Attitude. Count Von. KaniCz , conservative , devoted the greater pari of his speech to American , affair s, contrasting . the speech of Commander William S. Sims, of the American Navy, at the Guild Half , London , . which called forth a reprimand from President Taft , with the utterances of Congress- man Champ Clark concerning the an- nexation of Canada , saying: "While an American naval officer is assuring England of the friend- ship of the United States a future president of that nation is talking of the absorption of Canada. " Canadian reciprocity, he said , rais- ed the point of what compensatory favors were to be had by Germany. Of the proposed Anglo-American complete arbitration treaty the speaker said that the plan promised little if questions like that of the Monroe Doctrine wer e excluded. BURNED WATCHMAN FOUND Body Where Fire Was Fiercest In New York Capitol. Albany, N. Y. —The body of Sam- uel J. Abbott , the one victim of the State Capitol fire , was found on the fourth ' floor in the southwest corner of the building, where the flames raged fiercest. It was charred be- yond recognition , but identi fie d by means of a watch. A volunteer salvage corps , includ- ing-' officers of the State library and headed by Library Director James L. Wyer, Jr., and N. H. Stokes Phelps , of New York , continued the search of the debris for value d manuscripts. Mr. Phelps, a man of wealth and leisure, who has specialized in the salvage of manuscripts, reclaimed many old papers from the wreck of the burned Turin library in Italy. The State Library School , regard - ed as one of the finest in the country, probably will be taken elsewhere the next term begins. The school , to operate, needs a big library, which it will be unable to find here for some time. Offers to accommodate the li- brary have been received from Utica , Syracuse , the Buffalo library and Co- lumbia University. Fatal Fall of Rock. Tunnelton , W. Va. —A fall of rock from the roof of ^ the new tunnels be- ing constructed here resulte d in the death of thre e and the probable fatal injury of one. The men were sev- eral hundred feet under the hill at th*> head of the tunnel . In prepar- ing to set off a blast they accidentally knocke d down one of the roof sup- ports and severa l tons of earth and rock rained upon them. Getting Down to Bedrock. Charleston , W. Va. —At a meeting * of the high school graduating classes of 1191 and 1912 resolutions were adopted providing that the total cost of each girl' s graduation shal l not exceed $25; that the dress for com- mencement night need not be new, and that the cost of the materials, in- cluding trimmings , shall not exceed $5. - . War on Long Hatpins. Berlin. Cards -requesting women not to wear long hatpins are posted In Berlin street cars. SHOWS ITS TEETH "J Air ON DODDER Spectacular Review of 9,0001 Men , All Fit For Battle. MILE-LONG LINE OF KHAKI. I Entire Division of Artillery, Caval- ry, Infantry and Engineers ( Pass Befc re Gener- . i\ r al Carter. "^ San Antonio. The army as- sembled, at Fort Sam Houston reser- vation , not for maneuvers only, as President Taft has admitted , made a parade of its war strength over a mile long field of wild flowera. It was a review of a division— the first review of a divisio n of the regular Army of the United States that has been hel d since the Civil War. Nine thousand men passed General Carter—infantrymen with ball cartridges in their belts and artillery with service shells in their limbers. Besides the spectacle of sunshine on brown blocks of khaki and long lines of steel there was something of significance in. this-showing of the Army ' s teeth within three hours aeroplane flight from a foreign bor- der. Every arm in the service repre- sented in the division camp was out in full strength in the long line that serpentined back and forth across the field , except the indep endent brigade of the Ninth and Eleventh cavalry and the Ambulance Corps. The regiments were on the-move at S.30 P. M. The corps of engi- neers , with a brace of their'big pon- toon boats on wheels, 'pasjsedlslowlv the length of the field and took, up positions' away over where the gro und rises to make the sky-line by the brown tents of two cavalry camps. Then the . infantry fell in , company by company and regiment by regi- ment. Just a few minutes before 4 o clock General Carter and his staff rode down from division headquarters and took up a position about midway In the mile' s length of ' brown , immov- able blocks of soldiery. With the General were Col. S. M. Mills , Capt. M. Craig, Lieutenant Colonel D. E. McCarthy, Lieutenant Colonel H. P. Birmingham, Major J. Franklin Bell and Col. E. F. Land , all of the com- manding general' s division staff. There were also Major Hans Von Herewarth , the German attache , re- splendent in his uniform of blue-gray and pink; Lieutenant Colonel Mc- Lachlan , military observer attache d to the British legation in Washing- ton , decked in khaki , with . red fac- ings , and the Count De Chambrun , the French attache, who was dress- ed in a uniform of his rank in the Fxanch Army. EX-L.T. GOV. TILMAN DEA D Slayer of Gonzales Dies in Ashe- ville , N. C. « Asheville, N. C.—With only his physicians and a young nephew with him at the end , Col. " James H. Till- man , once Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina , died here Saturday night. He had been here for his health for the past six months. For years he was ono of the political leaders In South Carolina. In 1903 , following editorial criti- cisms in the Columbia_ State , he shot and killed on thp str««ts of Columbia the editor of that paper , N. G. Gon- zales. A jury later acquitted him oi the charge of murder. T. R. " BEGINS RETURN TRIP Has Reunion of Family at Home ol Roosevelt, Jr. San Francisco.—With the depar« ture Sunday of Col. Theodore Roose- velt for Reno , Nev ., the reunion oi the family at the home of Theodore Roosevelt , Jr., came to an end and Colonel Roosevelt b ega n the last hall of the journey which he has repeat- edly said is his final extended tour. Before he arrives in New York , April 16. he will speak in Nevada , Oregon , Washington , Idaho , Montana and Wisconsin , and there will be but two States , "Utah and Florida , which he will not have visited sfnee he left the White House. Millionaire Sent to Pen. Seattle, Wash. —Clarence Dayton Hlllman , the multi-millionaire real estate man , convicted of using the United States mails to defraud , was sentenced to two years and . six months" imprisonment on McNeill' s Island Penitentiary and to pay a fine of $5 ,200 and costs. C. R. SLEIGHT , FIRE INSURANCE AGENT , -fs continuing in the fire Insurant business in Sag Harbor , and orders for new policies, renewals, etc., a? well as money due for premiums, maj be left at the store of Thompson & Osborne , with ~ FREDERICK YARDLEY , Jr. 4- N EWkLIVERY STABLE , 'Ksg?- - '^lUiildn SfcrSag Harfaoiv; i "" ' -telephone Can, 19J. ^ ' ^ Having Baver^d my business connection -*rith tfa» DeCaatro iSvery Staolea . ^pn low- V ' -sr Main «tr»et, I beg to announce to for- mer patrons and the public in general that I have fitted up a first das* Livery and Boarding St£hle in the Tear of my resi- dence on Union street . With new horses *nd modern equi pment I ran prepared io lurnish the most up-to-dnte and stylish rigs in town. My wagonette will meet al] brata and trains, ana orders to call foi passengers for outgoing boats and trains will be promptl y attended to. I respect- fully ask a share of roar patronage. SEYMOUR DECASTRO. Sag Harbor , N. Y., April 14 , 1S06. TOOKER ? S Castilian Ointment Prepared and Guaranteed by WILLIAM R. REIMANN. Under the food and Drugs Act Jane SO , 1906. Serial Number 29335. ft Specific For Piles and a Family Remedy For Burns, Scalds, Chil- blains . Salt Rheum, Eczema, Inflamed Sores, Itch, Etc. ilailad to any address on receipt of price: 50c. per bos, 3 boxes $1.25. Prepared only by Wm. R. Reimann , successor to Wm. Wallace Tookcr , SAG HARBOR, N. Y. (Copyright . 1311.) DOC. U. S^-TH AT WILL TAKE SOME OF THE SWELLING DOWN. BITTER MEDICINE, BUT—- ">- *

Transcript of THE CORRECTOR DIAZ IS WILLI! BITTER...

THE CORRECTORSag-Harbor, 27. I".

I5SOTLET D. SfiEIGirT ,Editor It Proprietor.

Published every Saturday mornlngfia the village of S*g Harbor, SuffolkOoasty, N. Y.

Terms $2.00 per year in ftdrancs.

CSTABUSHEO 1322.

ALBERT H. ROGERS,

Real Estate,Sag Harbor, N.Y.KIERNAN & VAUGHN,

f̂ceal Estate,Notaries Public ,

Auctioneers )SAG HARBOR, N. Y.

THE SAG HARBOR GRAIN CO.,WHOLESALE

Urate, Feed, Hour, flay and Straw.Fofl Welg&ts ind Full Measures.

CAR. LOTS A SFKCIAT/nr.Maldston* Mill Box25. SagHarbep

FRANK McNALLY, Prop.

CAFE AND SAMFLE BOOM,Washington St., Sag Harbor, N. Y.

LICENSED PREMISES.

Will open Oct. 1, 1909, -with the best stockcf Winea, Liquors and Ale and Beer intown. Lager on draught or in bottles.

Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco-Imported, Turkish, Egyptian orDomestic.

TVaJcIi Our Window.—

If You Lilse

Absolutely Pure CandyJust Sugar, Fruit and Chocolate,

Then You Want the

Celebrated Belle Mead SweetsWE SELL, THEM.

We also have a complete Pharmacy, 'wher** you can findPerfumes,

Toilet Articles,Cijrars,

Patent Medicines,Sundries and a

PerfectPrescription

DepartmentCall and See V«.

The Corner Drug: StoreA. T. BROWN, PU. G.

i STelepkoas. 31-L.

DIAZ IS WILLI!TO CONCEDE ALL

Message to Congress Commits OldRuler to Many Things De-

manded by the Revo-lutionists.

Mexico City.—With civil -war rack-ing his domain from end to end,President Porflrlo Diaz, aged, infirm.ruler of Mexico, stood before th*Mexican Congress and declared hisreadiness to concede the main pointsdemanded by his revolting people.

Trembling with age and weakness,the ruler, In a scarcely audible voice,read his annual message to Congress,recommending the -reforms whichhave raised the red flag of revolutionin his dominions.

He declared that he bowed to the"public opinion" and concededthe main points urged by the revolu-tionists. His specific recommenda-tions were: "

Effective suffrage for all.No re-election to the presidency.Reform in local, provisional and

city government.A division of the large landed

estates.Subdued and silent the general

legislature and a brilliant gatheringof government officials listened to therenunciation of the iron tyrant. Nota sound interrupted the reading ofthe lengthy document, and when thePresident concluded a great sigh ofrelief was the only demonstration.Ministers, 'ambassadors and govern-ment;.officials -- declare ;tnat> tliey.isee;the" erfd :'of*:the*-\presen't-trouble'' vitfDiaz's terms of surrender. The whis-pered verdict as the ruler was as-sisted from the congressional hallwas that Diaz will resign immediate-ly upon the restoration of peace.

All M-exicp City, usually a riot- ofgayety of color, sank into sombergloom in the expectations of a pos-sible defiance by the President.Crowds gathered in the streets toawait the news from the Congress,and when the details of the messagewere announced they filed awaysilently, without demonstration.

American in Command.Mexicali, Mex.—"General" Stan-

ley, the American leader of the rebelsin Lower California, took full com-mand Saturday of the insurrectos ofMexicali. Leyva, the deposed com-mander, has departed and is sup-posed to he on his way to Los Ange-les. ' Should Leyva he caught he isliable \o prosecution for violation ofthe neutrality laws of the UnitedStates, as he and Berthold organ-ized the original rebel force in Holt-ville, Cal., last January.

Mexico's Chief Backs DownBefore Revolutionists.

ADVOCATES NO RE-ELECTION.

TO WORK FOR WORLD PEACE

Dr. Scott Qutts State Department toGo With Carnegie.'

Washington, D. C—Dr. JamesBrown Scott, solicitor in internation-al arbitrations of the State Depart-ment, has tendered his resignation.He has severed his government con-nection in order to assume the dutiesof secretary of the Carnegie endow-ment for international peace. Dr.Scott was a member of tne Americandelegation io the second Hague con-ference of 1907, and was of counselfor the United States in the recently«3eci<ie<3 >Coxtli .Atlantic Coast fisneri-esarbitration at The Hague.

$500,000,000 IN COMBINE

20 Coal Companies Form a SellingAgency.

Pittsburg.—A combination of 20companies, with a capitalization of$500 ,000 ,000 , is being formed hereto be the selling agency of the princi-pal bituminous coal corporations inthis section.

The preliminary organization hasalready heen ..completed with G. J.Gams, of Uniontown, Pa., as tem-porary chairman. The concern willbe known as the United States CoalExchansre.

LEWI S TO DIG COAL

Mineworkers' Ex-President DeclinesEditorship.

Bridgeport , 0.—President Tom.L.Lewis, of the United Mineworkers,will take a position as digger in theWh-eeliag Creek mines, where he wasemployed before he became an offi-cial of the union.

Mr. Lewis has refused several of-fers to become editorial Jiead ofnewspapers. Ke began worS in themines here when he was only 12years ole

FIRE VICTIMS NUMBER 144Sixteen-year-old Glri Who Jumped

From the Ash Buildingis Last to D<e.

New York.—The death of SarahKupla, 16-year-old girl, who Jumpedfrom the eighth floor of the Aschbuilding during the recent fire hor-ror, brought the list of victims up toa total of 144. The girl's back wasbroken and she had been unconsciousever since the fatal leap.

Tlie identification of another girl'sbody by a strange arrangement ofbuttons on her shoe brought the listof _. unnamed .'; down.'.'"'to; - 14. ; Thereseems llttleljch'ance' of f̂urther^identi-fieation and. the Charities Boaid: hasmade arrangements to bury them in.the cemetery of the Evergreens ina plot owned by the city.

Assistants of the district attorney'soffice and Fire Marshal Beers, whoare conducting investigations into thedisaster, besides visiting the AschBuilding, further examined survivors.Contributions to the relief fundamounts to more than ?58 ,000.

An aged woman who said she wasthe mother of Annie Colletti , one ofthe fire victims, told the coroner thatwhen her daughter 's body was re-turned from the morgue for burial$1,600 which she says the youngwoman had sewed in her skirt wasmissing. She explained that herdaughter was afraid to trust hanksand always carried large sums ofmoney on her person.

WOMAN'S DARING FLIGHT

Mrs. Frank Coffyn in Airship ThatBreasts a Gale.

Augusta, Ga.—In a high wind thatuprooted trees, Aviator Frank Cof-fyn , accompanied by his young wife;made a flight of more than 28 milesfrom Augusta to Aiken, S. C, in 41minutes to keep a breakfast appoint-ment with friends.

No woman in America under wea-ther conditions of any sort has evermade a fight of this length. It wasfound impossible to take a straightcourse because of the direction ofthe wind.

11,483 D]ED IN MONTH

Plague's Terrible Work Reported toWashington.

Washington, I>. C. Tne plague isdecimating Northern Manchuria, ac-cording to advices received from Har-bin by the State Department.

At the end of February 6.4S3deaths had occurred in Harhin alone,in one region in Manchuria 5,000deaths occurred in February.

Five Senators in One Famiiy,Elkins, W. Va.—A distinction that

is probably unequaled by any otherwoman in the world is that enjoyedby Mrs. Blaine Elkins. Before hermarriage she was Miss Mary Kenna,daughter of the late United StatesSenator John E. Kenna. Her uncle,Hon. W. E. Chilton, of Charleston, isnow United States Senator. Horhusband's brother, Hon. DavisElkins, was a United States Senator,as was her husband's father, the lateHon. S. B. Elkins, and her husband'sgrandfather, ex-Senator Henry Gass-away Davis.

Year Book Coming Soon.

Washington , D. C.—The govern-ment's "best sellers," the Agricul-tural Year Book, Is on its way to thepublic. Half a million copies will beready for distribution about April 3 0 ,it was announced at the Departmentof Agriculture.

JUSTICE O'GORMANELECTED SPUN

Noted New York Jurist WillSucceed Depew.

GETS THE INSURGENTS VOTES

Mriitp'Gbftnan -.- Made.a Fine Rocordon Supreme Bench of New York

City—For 30 Years One" ofTammany's Best Orators.

Albany, N. Y.—By- anxunanimousvote of 112 of 114 Democratic mem-bers of the Legislature, JusticeJames A. O'Gorman, of New York,was elected United States Senator tofill the vacancy caused by the expira-tion of the term of Chauncey M. De-pew. He is the first Democrat to besent to the Senate from the EmpireState since Edward Murphy waschosen in 1893.

Fifteen of the 30 insurgents re-mained out of the caucus which pre-ceded the election. All of them votedfor Justice O'Gorman on joint bal-lot. When the election was over,like Democrats of old , the insurgentsand regulars threw their hats in theair together and agreed to workshoulder to shoulder -for the accom-plishment of the important measureswhich have been sidetracked by theSenatorial squabble.

Confusion that almost approacheddisorder and thunderous demonstra-tions of relief marked the termina-tion of the -remarkable 'deadlock,which has held the Legislature prac-tically at a standstill for 74 days—10% weeks. The end of the long,wearing struggle came in the Councilroom of the City Hall, with the legis-lators, packed like sardines in a box,and with the Democratic leadersstanding by with eagle eye, worriedalmost to the last for fear their plansfor a settlement would at the finalmoment be upset.

A recess has been taken until April17 tO give Workmen a chance t6 re-pair the damaged Capitol. Meantimethe leaders will busy themselves withsome of the important administra-tion measures, ana it Is ¦expected thatwhen the lawmakers reconvene onthe day after Easter legislation willbe put through with a rush.

Governor Dix, whose business ad-ministration has been imperiled bythe deadlock, has expressed deep re-lief that the warfare has ceased. Hisexpressions of gratification havefound echoes in the statements ofpractically all the leaders, Republi-can as well as Democratic.

UNCLE SAM'S CASH BALANCE

Largest That Has Ever Been Held inTreasury.

Washington , D. C.—Uncle Sambalanced his books and counted hiscash Saturday and found the govern-ment on a paying basis, for the firsttime since July 1, 1910.

The Treasury began business forApril with a surplus of $3,000 ,000 onall ordinary accounts. There was acorresponding deficiency of morethan ?16,000 ,000 a year ago. Treas-ury officials attribute the favorablegains to rapidly increasing receiptsfrom internal revenue more than toany other cause. Customs receiptshave declined 513,000 ,000 , comparedwith a corresponding period a yearago _ .

THE WEAK, PREY OF THE STRONGGerman Chancellor Says Disarma-

ment is Impossible—Arbitra-tion Inadequate. "¦

Berlin. — Chancellor Von Both-mann-Hollweg, in the Reichstag, dis-cussed disarmament and internation-al arbitration, but without departingone iota from the well-known stand-point of the German government,often declared on former occasions.The imperial chancellor saw the chiefdifficulty in a disarmament agreementin the impossibility of supervision ofIndividual states. "Control overthese," he said, "I regard as abso-lutely impracticable. The mere at-tempt to control would have no otherresult than continual mutual distrustand universal turmoil. General dis-armament Is an insoluble problem solong as men are men.

"It will remain true," continuedthe Chancellor, "that the weak willhe the prey of the strong. If any na-tion feels that it is unable to Bpendcertain sums for defensive purposes,it will inevitably drop to the secondrank. There will always be a strong-er one ready to take Its place. WeGermans in our exposed situationcannot shut our eyes to this direreality only so far as we can main-tain peace.

"The nations, including Germany,"said the Chancellor, "have been talk-ing ' disarmament since the firstHague conference, but neither in Ger-many nor elsewhere has a practicalplan- been proposed. Great Britainwishes the' limitation of armaments,but simultaneously wants a superioror equal fleet. Any conference onthis subject is bound to be fruitless.No standard for a limitation can befound, and any conceivable proposalwould be shattered on the question ofcontrol."

America s Attitude.Count Von. KaniCz, conservative,

devoted the greater pari of his speechto American , affairs, contrasting . thespeech of Commander William S.Sims, of the American Navy, at theGuild Half , London, .which calledforth a reprimand from PresidentTaft, with the utterances of Congress-man Champ Clark concerning the an-nexation of Canada, saying:

"While an American naval officeris assuring England of the friend-ship of the United States a futurepresident of that nation is talking ofthe absorption of Canada."

Canadian reciprocity, he said, rais-ed the point of what compensatoryfavors were to be had by Germany.Of the proposed Anglo-Americancomplete arbitration treaty thespeaker said that the plan promisedlittle if questions like that of theMonroe Doctrine were excluded.

BURNED WATCHMAN FOUND

Body Where Fire Was Fiercest InNew York Capitol.

Albany, N. Y.—The body of Sam-uel J. Abbott, the one victim of theState Capitol fire, was found on thefourth 'floor in the southwest cornerof the building, where the flamesraged fiercest. It was charred be-yond recognition, but identified bymeans of a watch.

A volunteer salvage corps, includ-ing-' officers of the State library andheaded by Library Director James L.Wyer, Jr., and N. H. Stokes Phelps,of New York , continued the searchof the debris for valued manuscripts.Mr. Phelps, a man of wealth andleisure, who has specialized in thesalvage of manuscripts, reclaimedmany old papers from the wreck ofthe burned Turin library in Italy.

The State Library School, regard-ed as one of the finest in the country,probably will be taken elsewherethe next term begins. The school,to operate, needs a big library, whichit will be unable to find here for sometime. Offers to accommodate the li-brary have been received from Utica,Syracuse , the Buffalo library and Co-lumbia University.

Fatal Fall of Rock.Tunnelton, W. Va.—A fall of rock

from the roof of ^the new tunnels be-ing constructed here resulted in thedeath of three and the probable fatalinjury of one. The men were sev-eral hundred feet under the hill atth*> head of the tunnel. In prepar-ing to set off a blast they accidentallyknocked down one of the roof sup-ports and several tons of earth androck rained upon them.

Getting Down to Bedrock.Charleston, W. Va.—At a meeting*

of the high school graduating classesof 1191 and 1912 resolutions wereadopted providing that the total costof each girl's graduation shall notexceed $25; that the dress for com-mencement night need not be new,and that the cost of the materials, in-cluding trimmings, shall not exceed$5. - .

War on Long Hatpins.Berlin. Cards -requesting women

not to wear long hatpins are postedIn Berlin street cars.

SHOWS ITS TEETH "JAir ON DODDER

Spectacular Review of 9,0001Men , All Fit For Battle.

MILE-LONG LINE OF KHAKI. I

Entire Division of Artillery, Caval-ry, Infantry and Engineers • (

Pass Befc re Gener- .i\r al Carter. "̂

San Antonio. — The army as-sembled, at Fort Sam Houston reser-vation, not for maneuvers only, asPresident Taft has admitted, made aparade of its war strength over amile long field of wild flowera.It was a review of a division—the first review of a division of theregular Army of the United Statesthat has been held since the CivilWar. Nine thousand men passedGeneral Carter—infantrymen withball cartridges in their belts andartillery with service shells in theirlimbers.

Besides the spectacle of sunshineon brown blocks of khaki and longlines of steel there was something ofsignificance in. this-showing of theArmy's teeth within three hoursaeroplane flight from a foreign bor-der.

Every arm in the service repre-sented in the division camp was outin full strength in the long line thatserpentined back and forth acrossthe field , except the independentbrigade of the Ninth and Eleventhcavalry and the Ambulance Corps.

The regiments were on the-moveat S.30 P. M. The corps of engi-neers, with a brace of their'big pon-toon boats on wheels, 'pasjsedlslowlvthe length of the field and took, uppositions' away over where the gro undrises to make the sky-line by thebrown tents of two cavalry camps.Then the . infantry fell in, companyby company and regiment by regi-ment.

Just a few minutes before 4 o clockGeneral Carter and his staff rodedown from division headquarters andtook up a position about midway Inthe mile's length of 'brown , immov-able blocks of soldiery. With theGeneral were Col. S. M. Mills, Capt .M. Craig, Lieutenant Colonel D. E.McCarthy, Lieutenant Colonel H. P.Birmingham, Major J. Franklin Belland Col. E. F. Land, all of the com-manding general's division staff.

There were also Maj or Hans VonHerewarth, the German attache, re-splendent in his uniform of blue-grayand pink; Lieutenant Colonel Mc-Lachlan, military observer attachedto the British legation in Washing-ton, decked in khaki, with . red fac-ings, and the Count De Chambrun ,the French attache, who was dress-ed in a uniform of his rank in theFxanch Army.

EX-L.T. GOV. TILMAN DEAD

Slayer of Gonzales Dies in Ashe-ville, N. C. «

Asheville, N. C.—With only hisphysicians and a young nephew withhim at the end, Col." James H. Till-man, once Lieutenant-Governor ofSouth Carolina , died here Saturdaynight.

He had been here for his healthfor the past six months. For yearshe was ono of the political leaders InSouth Carolina.

In 1903, following editorial criti-cisms in the Columbia_State, he shotand killed on thp str««ts of Columbiathe editor of that paper, N. G. Gon-zales. A jury later acquitted him oithe charge of murder.

T. R." BEGINS RETURN TRIP

Has Reunion of Family at Home olRoosevelt, Jr.

San Francisco.—With the depar«ture Sunday of Col. Theodore Roose-velt for Reno, Nev., the reunion oithe family at the home of TheodoreRoosevelt, Jr., came to an end andColonel Roosevelt began the last hallof the journey which he has repeat-edly said is his final extended tour.

Before he arrives in New York,April 16. he will speak in Nevada ,Oregon, Washington , Idaho , Montanaand Wisconsin , and there will be buttwo States, "Utah and Florida , whichhe will not have visited sfnee he leftthe White House.

Millionaire Sent to Pen.Seattle, Wash.—Clarence Dayton

Hlllman, the multi-millionaire realestate man, convicted of using theUnited States mails to defraud, wassentenced to two years and . sixmonths" imprisonment on McNeill'sIsland Penitentiary and to pay a fineof $5,200 and costs.

C. R. SLEIGHT,FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,

-fs continuing in the fire Insurantbusiness in Sag Harbor, and ordersfor new policies, renewals, etc., a?well as money due for premiums, majbe left at the store of Thompson &Osborne, with ~

FREDERICK YARDLEY, Jr.

4- NEWkLIVERY STABLE,'Ksg?-- '̂ lUiildn SfcrSag Harfaoiv;i ""'

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SEYMOUR DECASTRO.Sag Harbor, N. Y., April 14, 1S06.

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