10,000 PEOPLE ARE HOMELESS Flames, Fanned By Gale, Spread With Remarkable Swiftness and Destroyed Over Five Hundred Buildings, In- cluding the City Hall. Boston, April 13.—An apparently in- significant fire, which started among rags on a dump in the city of Chelsea, was fanned by a northwest gale into a conflagration which obliterated nearly one-third of the city. Five hun- dred dwelling houses and’ public build- ings were destroyed, 1500 families were driven from their habitations and 10,000 people made homeiess. Two lives are known to have been lost, and it was reported that two other persons had perished, one a woman, having shot herself in a frenzy over her in- ability to save her property. From fiity to seventy-five persons were injured. The loss is estimated at $6,000,000, and the insurance at $3,500,000. In the confusion attending the sit- uation accurate estimates of the loss were impossible. The city solicitor es- timates it at nearly $19,000,000. The fire, which was the worst that Greater Boston has known in many years, raged before a forty-five-mile gale for more than twelve hours, defy- ing the utmost efforts of the combined fire departments of Chelsea and sev- eral nearby cities and a large detach- ment of Boston firemen and apparatus. Marines with fixed bayonets held back the crowds, while the militia and sailors helped families remove their goods. Advance squads of the militia and police were sent ahead warning out families living in the path of the fire, which leaped block after block with astonishing rapidity. The crowds generally were easily handled. Occa- sionally some excited house owner would burst through the cordon of militia and marines to dash into a house for some forgotten valuables, but the presence of so many uniformed guards overawed the rougher element. The fire started on the marshes bor- dering the eastern division tracks of the Boston & Maine railroad in the rear of the Boston Blacking company’s works, where employes were at work drying out rags. The exact cause of the fire is not known, but it is sup- posed that spontaneous combustion among the rags was responsible. High Wind Fanned Flames. A high wind, blowing at forty-five miles an hour from the northwest drove the flames from the rag heaps directly upon the wooden buildings of the Boston Blacking company. The buildings were soon a mass of flames. and as the surrounding property con- sisted largely of wooden buildings used for the storage of rags, the fire de partment realized that a serious fire was threatened and a general alarm was sounded. Soon a dozen factories and cheaper tenement houses west of Everett avenue were in flames and the firemen saw that they were utterly weable to cope with the conflagration By requisitioning ambulances from surrounding towns and cities and call ing into service all available carriages the police were able to speedily re move the inmates of the Frost hospital and the Children's hospital outside the city limits to retreats of safety. It was none too soon, for both hospitai buildings were shortly consumed. In the meantime Broadway and the water front, the southern section of the city, was in flames No one knew where the fire would spring up next. Householders piling up their goods out of doors occasionally found a mattress in flames in the middle of the street. All the firemen were in the center of the city and a halt mile square of the residential section was in flames and no protection available or possible. Men, women and children ran around the streets begging some one to call the firemen, but there were no firemen to respond. All the money men pos- sessed was offered teamsters to cart away household goods, but there were few teams to be had. Long Line of Refugees. Over Chelsea bridge into East Bos- ton streamed a long line of fire refu- gees lugging what few household ef- fects they were able to save. Push- carts, drays and even baby carriages were piled high with furniture and bedding. Hundreds of persons carried huge bundles tied up in sheets. These were mostly gray-headed women of the foreign class. One old woman stag- gered under a large bundle of clothes | and bedding, in the midst of which could be seen the wondering face of a Among these poor people there did mot seem to be any panic. There was no crying or wringing of hands. All seemed too stunned by the disaster that had wiped out their homes. These people seemed mostly of the poorer classes, who could not afford to lose what little they possessed, with factories and mills closed or earnings reduced by palf-time work. The greatest damage was done when the fire reached City Hall square. The First Baptist church, a lofty brick building, first caught fire on the high- est part of the spire. Soon the roof was in flames, and in the space of a few moments every building in the square with the exception of the city taii building was in flames. City Hall In Ruins. For a time it looked as if the mag- nificent city hall structure, built of brick and saparated from all other buildings by a wide area, might be saved. The hope was but momentary, towever, for a tiny flickering flame was seen gaining heaaway under the coping of the cupola. Gathering force in the mighty wind, the flame licked the cupola. Next the elements se- cured control of the interior of the city hall, and then the entire structure was swept away, and a dozen new buildings in the vicinity had become ignited from the sparks and heat, Within a half hour in this one square four churches and the city hall were levelled to the ground. Down Maverick, Congress and Es- sex streets the fire went by leaps and bounds. It was the same story throughout the whole southeast side. House after house caught fire, and where a few moments before men had been storing their household goods in the street and watching the distant flames to- ward the heart of the city, now might be seen whole streets wrapped In flames their entire distance. LEFT $20,000,000 ESTATE T. B. Wanamaker’'s Property Goes to His Family. Philadelphia, April 14.—The will of Thomas B. Wanamaker, who died abroad several weeks ago, was admit ted to probate in the office of the register of wills. With the exception of a few bequests to household em- ployes, the estate is bequeathed to his widow, Mrs. Mary Lowber Welsh Wan- amaker; his mother, Mrs. Mary B. Wanamaker, and his two sisters, Mrs. Mary B. Warburton and Mrs. Eliza- beth McLeod, and his brother, Rod- man. The executors named in the will are Louis Rodman Wanamaker, brother of the decedent, and Samuel Welsh, a brother-in-law of the decedent. Samuel Welsh died last summer at Watch Hill, R. LL, so that Rodman Wana- maker is left practically in sole charge of the estate. The statement filed by the executors appraises the value of the personal property as “$100,000 and upwards,” with no ap- praisement of the real estate. It is understood that the total value of the estate may reach $20,000,000. BIRD IN WOMAN'S HAT But It Was Real and Had Nest and Disturbed Church Services. Swinfield, N. J., April 14—A blue bird accompanied Mrs. Simon Harrison to the Methodist church here, She did not find that she was not alone until services were interrupted by the atten. tion she attracted. The bird, after circling around her head, settled in Mrs. Harrison's hat. The hat was a new creation and the woman at first supposed it was the cause of the excitement. Disturbed by the gaze from the eves of all in the church, she removed the millinery and found concealed in its ribbons and feathers a nest containing four eggs, The hat was purchased two weeks —— CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. -——— A. — - OS — — Colleges & Schools. hl YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientific Farmer, A Journalist, in short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in lite, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE - OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1000, the General Courses have been extensive nl eh more varied range of electives, after the Freshman ing History Fhe Eng edn German, Spas yO OlORY ia Of those who seek ‘either t of ing, or a general College Education. modified, so as to fur- 3 an heretof: includ. ish, Latin and Languages and Litera. itica! Science, These courses are especially he most thorough training for the Profession The courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are amoung the very best in the United Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding pos fons. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. WINTER SESSION opens January 9th, 1908. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information respecting courses of study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County. Pa. ago and was placed in an unused room at Mrs. Harrison's home. Several pairs of bluebirds make the Harrison farm their headquarters. IN TROUSERS SHE ROBBED Woman's Accomplice Says It Is Hard Work to Climb Windows In Skirts. Bridgeton, N. J., April 14. — Mrs. Elizabeth Parson and her daughter are under arrest here, and the police say that they have learned that they dress ed in men’s clothing, and with Harry Blizzard, a boarder at their home, committed between forty and fifty rob beries here in the last few weeks. Until the arrest of Blizzard the po lice seemed to have been unable to find a clue to the robbers. He maintained through five hours of “sweating” that he knew nothing of the burglaries. Finally, however, he owned that his landlady and her daughter had been working with him and had worn men’s clothing because it was such hard work climbing through windows with skirts on. STRUCK BY 16-POUND HAMMER Ground Keeper of U. of P. Probably Fatally Injured. Philadelphia, April 14. — William Renwicks. popularly known as “Scot ty,” the ground keeper at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, was struck on the head by a sixteen-pound hammer at Franklin Field and probably fatally injured. Daniel F. Luby, of Peabody, Mass, threw the hammer down the field toward “Scotty,” who either did not see the throw or lost sight of the weight in the sun. The heavy iron struck him on the side of the head, knocking him several feet. He was picked up unconscious and removed to the hospital, where it was found he was suffering from a severe frac- ture. Renwicke was operated on, and it is stated that his condition is critical. Work For 105,000 More Miners. Wheeling, W. Va. April 14.—"All contracts between the United Mine Workers and operators, with the pos- sible exception of Illinois, will be sign- ed by May 1,” said President Lewis, of the miners’ union, who was in the city. “By Thursday 105,000 miners in Hood's Sarsaparilla. I 00D'S SARSAPARILLA FOR MORE THAN THIRTY YEARS — Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania will return to work, pending district set- tlements later.” 2000 Drowned In Floods In China. Shanghai, April 14. — Disastrous floods from a freshet are reported at Hankow, province of Hu-peh, and it is said that 2000 persons have been drowned. Seven hundred junks were sunk or wrecked. The waters caught the people unexpectedly in the night. Resumption at Cambria Mills. Johnstown, Pa., April 14. — Several departments of the Cambria Steel com- pany will resume operations this week, following a three months’ suspension, affording employment to 1600 men. $250,000 For Princeton College. At a meeting of the board of trustees of Princeton, university announcement was made of the gift of $250,000 from Mrs. Russell Sage for a dormitory building to be used by members of the freshmen class. The board adopted a resolution thanking Mrs. Sage. Gifts to the amount of $130,133.54 were announced, among which the principal donors are: The Princeton committee of fifty, $31,978.50; class of 1877, $10,000; class of 1881, $12,000; general education board, $64,666.66. Dr. Munyon Weds Actress. It has just become known at Al- joona, Pa. that Mrs. Pauline Nefl- Metzgar, an actress of some note and prominently identified with Altoona society, had been married in New York to Dr. J. M. Munyon, of Philadel phia, who has gained a national repu- tation through his proprietary medi- cines and who is said to be a million- aire. The bride, a daughter of Colonel D. J. Neff, dean of the Blair county bar, is unusually charming and talent- ed. She is twenty-four years old. Boy Murderer Gets Thirty Years. Joseph Wood, sixteen years old, con- victed of second degree murder for killing Ethel Nevins, a nine-year-old girl, was sentenced to thirty years in the state prison by Judge Garrison at Camden, N. J. Joe killed the little girl with a hatchet and confessed to the crime. THE GREAT SPRING MEDICINE In thousands of homes, for mor» than thirty years, Hood's Sarsaparilla has been taken, ax u Spring Medicine, by every member of the family. Peculiar to Itself in what it ix and what it does, it combines the best blood purifiers, appetizers and tonics, and effects complete cures of Spring Allments—all blood diseases, pimples, eruptions, liver and kidney complaints, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, tions of the system, eczema, scrofula, all stomach, all low or run-down condi Under the Pure Food and Drugs Law, no change was necessary in Hood's Sarsaparilia to conform to the law or to public sentiment. It is perfectly safe, genuine and reliable, tablets called . 100 Doses One Dollar. Hood's Sarsuparille is sold in usual liquid form or in the new form of chocolated-coated i Law, fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. 40-49 a KLINE WOODRING . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa. 51-1-1y in all the courts, C. BEINLE — Attorney Lav, Belle- . fonte, Pa. Office in Crider's Exchange, second floor. All fessional business will re- ceive prompt atten . 30-16 J H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attend- 8d $6 promply. Consultation in English or Sor ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY—Attorneys-at- Law, le Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue- censors to Urvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice | the courts. Consultation in English or Gorman, 7 M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law. Prac- . tice in al! the courts, Consultation in Office south of court German. rofessional business will receive Attorneys-at-Law. Meat Markets. mh = ————— J C. MEYER-A Law, Rooms 20 & e 21, Crider's Exel Bellefonte, Pa. 49-44 B. SPANGLER — Attorney-ai-Law. Prac- GET THE . tices in all the Courts. Consultation in glish and German. Office in Crider's Ex. change, Bellefonte, Pa. 40-22 BEST MEATS. 8. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at You save nothin bu , thin Garman House Block, You au ing by sayink Jeo LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and su Joy compmars wit ina Sth est, 0 blood and muscle mak ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. I always have DRESSED POULTRY, Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. Tay My Suor. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte Travelers Guide. puglian 8 (CESTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. prompt attention. 49-5-'y* | “Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1908 ssn smn ——— Physicians. 8S. GLENN, M. D,, Physician and Sur . geon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residence. 35-41 Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D.D.S., office next door to Y. M. C, A. room, High street, Bellefonte, Gas administered for painless extracting teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices reasonable, R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of experience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. 45 8-1y ATENTS, TRADE MARES, COPY- | rights, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and , description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable, | Communications strictly confidential, Handbook | on patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. 60 years experience. tens taken hrongh Munn & Co. receive Special Notice, with- out charge in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, (ak illustrated weekly. Largest efrenla lation of any scientific journal. Terms §ia year; four months §1. Sold by all newsdeslers. MUNN & CO, 361 Broadway, New York. Branch Office, 625 F St, Washington, D. C, 52-45-1y. rand Hair Dresser. ¥ou THE LADIES.—Miss Jennie Mor- gan in her new room on Spring St., iately used as offices by Dr. electricity, treatments of the scalp, facial mas. sage or neck and shoulder massage. She has tion shell pins, combs and ornaments and will he able to supply you with all kinds of toilet nrticles | including creams, powders, toilet waters, ex. | | racts and all of Audnut's preparations. soe’ Locke, is now ready to | tmeel any and all patients wishing treatments by | also for sale a large collection of real and imita- | Reap vown Reap or. ae Stations ws vl No 1] se 3 No 6 No 1502. a. m.|p.m.|p. m.|Lve. Ar. |p. m. |p. M.|&. mW. +7 05 6 55] 2 20 BELLEFONTE.| 0 10 505 9 40 T15 706 h.. .| 8 BT! 4 52] 9 27 TT 1l 1851 447/00 21 TUT 845 441915 79 .| 843 438 913 Ta {18 30 4 34/1 00 787 128 | 836 4 29] g 08 7 40.17 30 F834 4 27/19 04 7 42|17 33 eens | 18 32] 4 2410 02 T46, 738 reese | 18 201 4 2118 50 T4517 40 [18 26) 4 18/18 56 THTH | 822) 4 14; 8 53 7 56{17 49 lle,...|18 18 4 0918 48 0314 3 22/...Cedar pring...| 8 12| 4 08 8 42 8 08! 757 3 v5 .........Salona. aueies {810 sor] 8 40 8 10) 802 3 30 ...MILL HALL...| 8 06! 3 56 8 36 (N. ¥. Central & Hudson River R. R.) R 1 38 woes sa pletuey SholS 30 on MATT. v ve 15 ns 2) 11 30]Lve } WMS PORT} LFS 230 680 | ( Phila. & Reading Ry.) | T30| 860} PHILA........c..... gi 11 30 0 10, 9 00l.ucee.. NEW YORK......... 9 00 1 NEW YORK | | (Via Phila.) p. m.a. m.lArr. Lve.'s. m./p. m, {Week Days WALLACE H. GEPHART, Genera! Superintendent. JB ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAL. Schedule te take effect Monday, Jan. 6, 1908. WESTWARD | read down | 1No.5/fNo. oY a Lv Ar. a 6 %0 Bellefonte... | eee Coleville...... 10 2716 48... { | ..Lime Centre.. | 10 30/8 48 Hunter's Park. 0 846 50 ...,.Fillmore......| r. SIWERS &383” AM, | 19 15 mss” = 3 tt NEKE Kew suns 5383” HREKKY Koww ZERE= 5 a AST Cry &3¢C ae On on 00 i: g | 3 9 8 aa +] pi | o ?* : 2 3 F. H. THOMAS, Supt. A pass. ’ m—— Fauble's Great Clothing House IIREAITEETRREERR OOF, WHAT YOU GET¢" in the Fauble Clothes. | YOU GET the best models that the highest priced designers in this country produce. YOU GET tailoring that it YOU GET Materials and Linings equal to those that go into the finest custom Tailored Clothes. YOU GET Clothes that fit perfectly, that are right when you buy them and stay right when you wear them. YOU GET all this at prices that other stores ask for common place Clothing. 0-0-0-0-0 YOU WILL FIND IT WORTH YOUR WHILE TO SEE US THIS SEASON. is impossible to sur- \ 2 (e U lA - SOEEERTR > - ¢ BL MAL gril) | CIGAR RNR