shall have your face, For stars—two eyes that shlno ■Whore my heart has Its dwelling place— Your own, dear Valentine! He turns to neither left nor right, But straight ahead he goes: Ilis guide is Hope, whose footsteps light The sunset pathway knows; He bears my message in his scrip, /Y song whose every line Shall turn to music on your lip, My own dear Valentine! Oh, when you hear his eager knock L'pon the door bi gin, Make base to lift the heavy lock And bid young Cupid in. Glad then shall gleam the skies above. And Rlad this heart of mine To be at last with h. r I love— With you, dear Valentine! —Frank Demster Sherman, in Ladles' Home Journal. V\ ;t T WAS the day be \jf- A fore St. Yalen \ tine's, and Clare 1 Clancey and Katie m '/'/'filiA Wood, after paus ®■/ i A/\ \ ing" a little before tlfr 1 12// rwv A t lie show window, % 112 \ entered the small >,V' A uptown shop, and were shown by a lady in attend ar.ee a number of choice valentines that came within re«?h of their purses. The two girls were great friends, each just 14, and pretty and full of fun. They were going to send this year a number of valentines to other friends and relatives, and had come in together to select them. As they stood before the little show A CABLE CAR-WAS CLANGING ITS BKLL WILDLY. case filled with those dainty combina tions of paper lace anil bright color so fascinating to the heart of youth and, ah, me! to the memory of age, perhaps, and as they lifted the filmy overlays to read the cunningly hid verses beneath they did not notice that standing in the door was a feeble oldinan leaning on a cane and watching them. His hair was rather long and silver white. Ilis face was cleanly shaven, and he had a large nose, a rather childish mouth ar.d clear blue eyes. As he moved away the two girls heard his step a: d turned. "Oh!" exclaimed Clare, whispering, "there is old Mr. Fessenden! He lives next door to us and is a cranky old bachelor, bet's send him a valentine." The other girl nodded. Then they watched him a moment through the window as he paused to look in. "He comes every year to look at the valentines," said the shopwoman. "Show us some funny ones," said Clare. "Some about old bachelors." The girls were not cruel; they were thought Jess. They picked out a high ly colored piet ure of a fierce-looking old man in a house that was in wretched or der, and under which were the follow ing lines: AN OLD BACHELOR. "You think yourself extremely wise, Since all your worthless life You've lived alone without the eare And love of a tinder wife. Perhaps, indi•< d, you've vainly Tied To wed, your whole lif. rough, And were so Klum and ei .1 ly lhat No wife would live with you." They did not like the word "worth less," because Clare said she had never heard that he dissipated in any way. but Katie said it did not mean that, but only meant that his life had been worthless because he hadn't married. By and by they went across the street to a bright r* d letter box and dropped In all their purchase*. As the; recessed they were talkirg busily and did not notice that a cable car was clanging its bell wildly and that the gripman was making a frantic effort to stop it. Ilut suddenly each felt herself pulled hastily backward, and realized that they had been drawn from in front of the deadly cable car just in time. Each gave a little scream and turned to thank her rescuer. It was the old gentleman. Mr. Fessenden. lie bad dropped his cane and leaned on them, trembling from the effort. The girls were abashed, and blushed and stam mered. Clare hastily picked up his cane, and he thanked her courteously. They crossed the street together in the direction of the little shop. "I suppose you were so taken up with the valentines you are sending that yot: did not notice the car," said the old gen tleman, gently. "I used to be very fond of them myself. Suppose we all go in and look at them a little." The girls could not refuse and shame acedly entered. The shopwomar. smiled at them knowingly, but they only smiled back in a feeble and sickly way. The old gentleman selected two valentinesthat thegirlshad not felt able to buy. "I want you to have these," he said, "to remember me by and to make you thir.k to be always very careful wlxet. you cross the street." The girls thanked liini faintly with downcast eyes. Then he bade them a courtly adieu. They noticed how feeble lie was as he limped aw-jy and won dered how he could have had strength enough to save them from the car. Then as they went out, each holding a prettily ornamented envelope, they looked at each other in shame and re gret. Clare was the first to speak. "Let's send him another," she said. "They have some beautiful ones down the street further. Let's go down there." They counted their money as they went along and put it all together. l?y and by they came out of the shop below with a valentine that, instead of being in an envelope, rose to the dignity of a beautiful box, tied with pink and blue ribbons. "I would give anything if we could only get that old letter box open." said Clare, anu. passing, they frowned at it as if it were to blame for everything. IT. Mr. Fessenden oil his way home paused here and there to rest. He was not so old' as he looked, but had been ill ] for many years, and the sudden exer j tion had been unusual and too much I for him. When he reached his home, which, as Clare had said, was next tc h< r own—-he elii>.bed the steps with dif ficulty and was trembling violently as he gained the top. Hisol 1 servant wh.> let him in helped him to bed, where he often spent the greater part of the day. As he lay back amid the pillows he was thinking of the- two rosy cheeked girls and the valentines, and tl n his memory went back ai»d back, and he was thinking of another rosy cheeked girl for whom long ago he had bough* other valentines. They ha<i been sweet hearts for awhile, and it was nearly 40 years now since they had quarreled — just 40 years to-morrow. The old gen tlAnan closed his eyes that he irhl remember more clearly. It had been about a valentine, too; a foolish quar rel. She had sent it to him in fun, of course, but he had been sensitive, and he had recognized her handwriting. He had gone to her accusingly and she had not denied it. So then they had quarreled and parted. "You will be sorry some time," he had said to her, as he turned away. "When I am I will send you another valentine —a beautiful one, with sweet verses on it," she had answered; and since that day he had been waiting for it. He had loved her dearly, and he be lieved s.. • had loved him in return. At first he had expected the valentine surely with the coming of each l'-b --ruary. Then by and by her parents had moved to the city, and his hope grew fainter each year. Later he had come to the city, too, but fie did not know her address. Jle had never married. He told himself that she must have mar ried long ago and that the valentine would never come. And yet he had never ceased to think of it when the day came around, and in his heart he had never ceased to look for it. When the shop windows were filled with val entines he would go from one to an other. looking at them all and wonder ing which she would send. lie' had done this more and more as he grew old--:', and to do; lie bad bought valeu CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1899 tines for the two little gir'* because one of them —Katie—had reminded him of the little girl for whom he had bought valentines so long ago. "If it iloe.s not come to-morrow," he thought, with a faint smile, "it will be too late." For he had been more feeble than usual this winter, and his doctor hud told him that he could hardly hope to live through another. Then he closed his eyes and slept, and perhaps as he slept he dreamed. He slept so late the next morning that his old servant was alarmed, but near noon he awoke and asked for his mail. The servant brought it. There were two or three small envelopes, let ters, probably, and one package —a handsome white box, tied with blue and pink ribbons. Then he put out his ha nil tremblingly and touched it. lie wished to be sure that it was not a part of his dreams. lie was so pale that the fid servant was frightened. "Are you ill—worse?" he asked. "No —no! 1 am well. Open—open the box." The servant untied the ribbons care fully. Within was a beautiful valen tine. The old inuii stretched his hand for it. It was very handsome, and in the center was a poem that told of love and constancy through all time. The servant read it to him. "See if there is any address on it— anything to tell where it was sent from." The old servant looked carefully. There was no address. "Then she will come to me. I »hall see her to-morrow —perhaps to-day." The rest of his mail remained unno ticed. It was a beautiful w inter after noon and the sunlight shone through the west window into the room where the old man waited, holding the white box, tied with blue and pink ribbons. By and by the servant went out and left him there. When he returned it was near evening. The old man still held the little white box and his face was turned toward the gates of sunset. But his eyes were closed and he was look ing through the gates of —eternity. And perhaps she had come to him, for when Katie's grandmother heard of old Mr. Fessenden she said, reflectively: "I used to know of a young man by that name more than 40 years ago. lie lived in the next town to us and went with a girl whose folks moved to the city just before we did. I didn't know 'em very well, but I heard once that about a year after they came here she died." —Albert Bigelow l'ainc, in N. Y. Herald. A DAY OF MATING. St. Valentine'* Day, a* Celebrated by the Romans, W'a* the Time to CllooMe Mate*. Mr. Donee, in his illustrations of Shakespeare, 'says, regarding St. Val entine's day:"it was the practice in ancient Koine, during a greater part of the month of February, to celebrat? the Luperealia, which were feasts in honor of Pan and Juno, whence the lat ter deity was named Februata, Febru aljs and Februella. On this occasion, amidst a variety of ceremonies, the names of young women were putin n Ikix, from which they were drawn by the men us chance directed. The pas tors of the early Christian church, w ho by every possible mealis endeavored to eradicate the vestiges of pagan su perstitions, substituted in the present instance the names of the particular saints instead of tho.se of the women, and as the festival of Luperealia had commenced about the middle of Feb ruary. they appear to have chosen St. Valentine's day for celebrating the new feast, because it occurred at nearly the same time. This is, in part, the opin ion of the learned compiler of the lives of the saints. It would s«»m. however that it was utterly impossible to extir pate altogether any ceremony to which the common people bad been much ac customed. a fact which it is easy to prove in tracing the origin of various other popular superstitions, and ac cording the outline of ancient ceremo nies was preserved, but modified by some adaptation to the Christian sys tem. It is reasonable to suppose that the above practice of choosing mates would gradually become reciprocal ir the sexes,and that all persons so chosen would be called valentines, from the day on which the ceremony took place." —Pittsburgh Dispatch. A SUSPICIONS COINCIDENCE, Mrs. Slimdiet—Yes; I got 17 comic valentines to-day, and I shall expect you all to settle tip at once. Chorus of Boarders- —Cut surely, Mrs. Slimdiet, you do not accuse us of send ing the valentines? Mrs. Slimdiet —I make no accusations whatever, gentlemen. I only know that I have IV boarders. —X. Y. World. Could Nol I nde rfita ml It. "There's one thing." said the prac tical joker, "that 1 coul<i itver under stand." "What is that?" "Why, when 1 can pick out such gen uinely witty comic valentines to send out to my friends, they should mal-.t such blundering and brutal selection | to send to me." —Washington Star. TURMOIL IN SAMOA. Ulvnl Faction* Continue Their U»r* fare l oiiaiilt at l.ossi'rlifailn, Auckland, N. /.., Feb. 2.—The follow ing advices have just been received here from Apia, Samoa, under date of Janu ary 24: There has been no further general fighting between the partisans of the rival ehieftans since the last ad vices were forwarded except that a party of Mataafa's followers was routed in the bush by Malietoans. It is expected, however, that fighting will be resumed, as Mataafa is re-arresting persons who have been already fined and released. The work of pillage con tinues, among the houses looted being the home of Ihe late Hobert L. Steven osn, the novelist. The exiled Malietoan chiefs were land at Pago I 'ago, on the island of Tutuila, the schooner on which they were being unable to proceed to the (aland of Manua, owing to adverse winds. The Tutuilan* gave tlr*m a hearty welcome and made an attempt to seize Mataafa's son. who was on board the schooner, but the captain put to sea. There has been a collision of author ity between Chief Justice William 1.. Chambers, of the supreme court, and famines llaffel. the (ierman president if the municipality of Apia. Herr lirosmuhl, a (lerman resident of Apia, who was arrested for smashing the windows of the supreme court cham ber. was sentenced bv the chief justice to imprisonment and to pay a fine, llaffel instructed the police authorities to release lirosmuhl, whose fine was subsequently fixed at Sl/XX). The (ierman consul, Herr Rose, thereupon wrote to the American con sul, Lloyd W. Osborne, and the British consul. E. I'. Maxse, protesting that the action of the chief justice in fining firosmuhl was an infringement of Ger man consular rights. Messrs. Osborne mil Maxse jointly replied in their offi cial capacity that, the proper tribunal having dealt with the matter, the con suls could not interfere. More than this, they declined to have further in tercourse with the (ierman consul or the (ierman municipal president except in writing, or to attend meetings, ex cept to consider the acts of the munici pal council of Apia, unless an apology with full retraction was offered for the behavior toward Chief Justice Cham bers. At the same time the supreme court summoned Baffel for contempt of court in releasing (irosmuhl. WEARY OF DELAY. I nili' Sam Think* the Uelauon Hay Arbitrator* are Too Slow. London, Feb. 2.—The Berne corres pondent of the Pall Mall Gazette tele graphs that the decision of the arbitra tors in the Dtdagoa bay dispute may be expected not later than June. It is added that the l*iited States threatens in the event of further unreasonable delay to make grave representations to the federal council, which appointed the arbitrators and that EngTand will join in these representations. The interest of the Tnited States in the Delagoa bay railroad arbitration is due to the fact that the interests of the late Mr. Mc.Murdo are involved in it. In the course of the negotiations bet ween England and Portugal as to the action of the latter power in East Africa the claims of the Delagoa Hay Railway Co. for compensation for the seizure of the line by Portugal in IS,S3 were brought forward. Eventually it was decided that <ie Swiss fed. ral council should appoint arbitrators in the matter and the case has been lie fore them ever since. The delay is greatly due to the fact that the gov ernment of Portugal presented a coun ter claim to which the company sent a reply and Portugal then made a re joinder. The McMurdo claim, it has been asserted, would lie settled with an award of a sum under $1Q,00(J,000. CUTTING DOWN THE ARMY. An Orilcr Co Cluster l 1.000 Volunteer* Out of tlie Service l» Ifcaued. Washington, Feb. 2.—The war de partment yesterday issued an order to muster out about 15,000 volunteer troops. The regiments are: First Maryland, now at Augusta, Ga.; Third Mississippi and Second Missouri, at Albany, (la.; Eighth and Thirteenth Pennsylvania, at Augusta, Ga.; Four teenth Pennsylvania at Somerville, S. Fourth Texas, at San Antonio, Tex.; Fourth Wisconsin, at Anniston, Ala.; Seventh volunteer infantry, at Macon, Ga.; Eighth volunteer infan try, at Macon, Ga.; Eighth volunteer infantry, at Chickamauga; Tenth vol unteer infantry, at Macon, Ga. This order presages the abolition of the entire Second army corps now com manded by Maj. (ien. Young and for merly under (ien. Graham's commamV All of the regiments ordered mustered out are attached to that corps and their loss will leav# only ten regiments. These will be formed into four inde pendent brigades and placed in camp permanently at Augusta, Ga., and Greenville, S. C. Three regiments or dered out yesterday, the Seventh, Eighth and First volunteer infantry, are colored regiments. Foretold (lie Hour of lli« Death. New York, Feb. 2. —Rev. George H. Simons, of Urooklyn, predicted his own death, which occurred at midnight Tuesday, of pneumonia. Last Decem ber, during a heavy snow storm, he visited a sick child and caught a chill. Since then he had been ailing and on Tuesday was quite feeble, but was not apparently in any immediate danger. To his wife, however, lie said: "I do not believe 1 will live after midnight." Mr. Simons, who was pastor <>! Wykotl Street Methodist church, had been an impressive figure in Brooklyn for n long time. Found a #lO,llOO Shortage. Detroit, Mich., Feb. 2.—lnvestigation of the books of Robert Leailley, late chief clerk of the police justices' courts, lias resulted in showing a shortage of SIO,IOB. Lead ley i< widely known in baseball circles, having once been manager of the Cleveland Nation al league team and manager of the De troits when in the National league. Lead ley's term as police court clerk ex pired several months ago. The judge who had the appointing allowed him to hold over without reappointing him, and his bondsmen are not considered liable, Lcadley is missing. AN EXPENSIVE FIRE. roltimbiift, 0., In Vl»lted l>) " £750,000 Hlaze Kneml Firemen Very HnJly Hurt. Columbus, 0., Feb. 2.—'The most seri 9us conflagration which has visited Co lumbus since the Chittenden hotel tire of 1893 visited Columbus last night. Half a block of fine buildings in the heart of the business portion of the town was destroyed. The fire is thought to have started in the base ment of the Dunlap 'building, occupied by th** Chicago Bankrupt ( lothing Co It swept up the elevator shaft and soon the whole building was ablaze. The audience in tiie High Street the ater, which is across an alley from the burning block, was dismissed in a hur ry. and this crowd was soon swelled to enormous proportions by people from all parts of the city. The tire soon communicated to the Jones block on the left and the Soulder & Bright building on the right, and these with the wholesale millinery store of Sould er & Bright and the store of D. S. Ain bach. clothing, were as complete wrecks as the Dunlap building. A fire wall four feet thick separated tlii' fine block of Green, Joyce & Co., wholesale dry goods and notions, from the others, but this was no barrier, and at ! o'clock this morning the fire had eaten i!s wav through and was burning fiercely in the upper stories. At 11with scarcely any warning, the front and rear walls of the Dunlap building, as though rent asunder by an explosion, fell, one on High street and the other completely filling the alley in Hie rear with bricks'and de bris. Fortunately the police had kept the street fairly clear, or the loss of life would have been enormous. As it was a number of firemen were caught while flying front the crumbling walls Whitey Davis is missing, and while his comrades and the police are mak ing every effort to discover his remains, they have not yet been found, (apt. .Tack Welch is seriously injured. Otis V. Kilbonrne was bruised about the head and body and may die. John Donahue was hurt internally; has bad scalp wounds. Charles Connors was badly injured. Miss Carrie Johnson was knocked down and run over by n hose reel. Her riirht leg was broken. She has nu merous other injuries and is in a pre carious condition. Scores of other peo ple were -lightly injured when the walls gave way by flying debris. The State Journal places the entire loss at $750,000. TOOK FLIGHT SUDDENLY. The Notorious Count liwterliazy Leave* Pari* 1« li«<-Hi»e Arrest—Latent l*liH»e ol'the lire} 111* A Hair, Paris. Fell. 2.—Count Ferdinand Es tcrhaz\ was officially informed on Tuesday that, his testimony before the court of cassation in the Dreyfus in quiry being concluded, proceedings against him on criminal charges would be resumed in 24 hours. He left I'aris at once. Esterhazy's flight to evade arrest on the charges brought against him by his cousin, Christian Ksterliazy, of ob taining money under fraudulent pre tenses. i< the sensation of the day. On reading the warning letter wiiich was brought to him by a detective, ICster hazy swore and called the letter a "trick worthy of the beasts I have had to deal with." It is understood that the hasty with drawal of the sale conduct granted him was the outcome of his cavalier treat ment of M. Bertulus, the magistrate. The latest victim of the anti-Dreyfus part v is (.rand llabbi Xadok Khan, who is being denounced as the "ringleader of the infamous Jewish conspiracy against France," on the strength of a story .just published to the effect that, after Dreyfus was sentenced, the rabbi, at the request of Matthew Dreyfus, tried to get through a friendly Jewish officer in Esterhazy's regiment some particulars as to the counts move ments. Le Soir demands the resignation of the rabbi, and as the latter is virtually a state official it is not unlikely that the agitation will become a serious matter for him. Curiously enough, the editor of Le Soir, which is one of the most violent of the anti-Dreyfus or gans, is himself a Jew, named Gaston I'ollonias. According to a dispatch from Cayenne, capital of French Gui ana, Dreyfus was so angry on learning that ( apt. Renault had asserted that Dreyfus confessed nt the time of his trial and degradation that he declined to answer any more of the questions put to him by the court of cassation unless taken back to France. Itottredam, Feb. 2.—Ferdinand Fs tcrluizy arrived here yesterday from Paris and let't immediately for Amster dam. SECRET WAS WELL KEPT. IndlctmeiitM Airalii«t Slierlfl" .Hartiii mill lli« Deputies WfrfUuimlii'd Sev eral tlolltllK A jto. Wilkesbarre, Pa.. Feb. 2.—District Attorney Martin, who prosecuted the case against Sheriff James Martin for the killing of 21 miners and the wound ing <>f over 50 others by the sheriff's deputies at Lattimer in September, 1807, announced yesterday that the re maining indictments against the sher iff and his deputies had been nolle prossed. Sheriff Martin was placed on trial 112 ir murder one year ago and was acquitted. There still remained 19 in dictments for murder and 30 for felon ious wounding against the sheriff and his (is deputies, which are now dis posed of. The nolle prosequis were en tered last September, but owing to the fear of the effect of publicity fin the miners it was deemed advisable to withhold the announcement until all danger of an outbreak had pasesd. Tom Jmliiimoii'm Now Departure. New York, Feb. 2.—Tom L. Johnson, capitalist, ex-congressman and the late Henry George's most prominent disci pie. announces that he has determined to relinquish his business cares and de vote the rest of his life to promulgat ing the doctrines of the single tav. Fatal Call lor Four* Dubois. Pa., Feb. 2. —One man was instantly killed and three others fatal ly injured yesterday by falling a dis tance of 50 feet while working on a bridge on the extension of the Buffalo, Rochester A Pittsburg railroad near Punxsutawne\\ I CHEAT RECORD. Business Failures in January Were Very Few. THE REVIEW OF TRADE. The Remarkable Gains in Many Branches Continue. DECLINE IN WHEAT'S PRICE. A r»r<>|> o( Five (>iil« I* N'otrd for tlio Lu»l Willi Market lor Cotton unci \l oolcll t.ooilx Ik Strolllroll l'rud urt.H Advance in I'rice. New York, Feb. 4. —R. O. Dun Co.'3 Weekly lieview of Trade says: Failures in January were smaller than in any previous month except August, IH9B, and July, 1v.17. There were only seven failures for 8100,000 or more, and the average of liabilities per failure is smaller than in January of any other year, and the small failures are not only fewer in number but smaller in average liabilities than in any previous year. The volume of business in January was far beyond all precedent. Ex changes through clearing houses were 44 per cent, larger than last year, and 59.7 per cent, larger than in 1892, and while speculation in stocks at New York materially increases the volume of payments, it was larger outside this city by 33.3 per cent than in 1892. The remarkable expansion in the aggre gate of business payments comes in spite of a material decline in prices during the past seven years, so great that payments of $82,000, t. 00 would cover about as much business as pay ments of 5i00. 000,000 in 1892. It is not strange that European exchanges are disturbed. The most remarkable fea ture of the week has been the decline of five cents in wheat, with only half a cent in corn and only a sixteenth in cotton. The government estimate of the wheat cr0p,675,000,000 bushels, had more influence than any other from that source for years, because it is rec ognized as the result of great elforts to get at the truth, and is therefore considered about the lowest estimate admissible. A very strong market for cotton goods has prevailed. The advance in goods has been unusual and has been sustained by heavy buying, especially of print cloths and kindred products. The prospect is that the outco will place dealers and manufacturers in a stronger position than they have held for years. A better tone appears in the woolen goods market also. The iron industry is advancing prices of products rather than of materials, l'ig has remained without change this week, anticipating that six or seven furnaces will be put into blast as soon as possible. The demand is strong, but apparently urgent at the chief markets. Eastern bars and plates have advanced with very heavy de maud, and cut nails have been hoisted by tfle association of makers. The rush of orders for the future does not cease and the works are generally cov ered for months ahead with orders. Failures for the week were 224 in the United States, against 335 last year, and 24 in Canada, against 30 last year. Tlx* Kxpo Will a <■<>. Philadelphia, Feb. 4.—Mayor War wick has signed the ordinance author izing •' temporary loan of $200,000 for the erection of buildings for the Phila delphia museum exposition of manu factured goods of tin' United States, to be held in this city next fall. This will -liable the exposition managers to comply with the conditions attach ed to U'ie congres.iioual impropriation aiding the exposition. The congres sional appropriation provides that the $300,000 appropriated shall not be avail able until an equal sum shall have been raised from other sources. Iloli l ((narantiiied. Olivia, Neb., Feb. 4.—Tile spectacle of an entire hotel full of guests being quarantined and armed policemen standing at every door and window to prevent the people escaping is present ed in Omaha. Friday morning three cases of smallpox were discovered at tlii- Vt'Vdome hotel, located in tin- cen ter of the city. The health depart ment was notified and a squad of po licemen raced to the scene and when the guests started on their morning duties They were driven back into the house by force. MllO.l III)- ill (lie C'liair. Albany, N. Y.. Feb. 4.—The court of appeals has handed down an order di recting the warden of Sing Sing prison to electrocute Mrs. Martha Place, some time during the week beginning Feb ruary 20. Mrs. Place Killed her step daughter at. their home in lirooklyn. Tin' governor was petitioi«»d by women to commute the sentence to imprison ment for life, but he has refused to interfere. lti»li<>|> O'Hara IMi'«. Scranton, Pa., Feb. 4. —iliyht Rev. William O'lhira, the venerable bishop of the lionian Catholic diofci*se of Scran ton, died last night, after a lingering illness, lie was 82 years old. l'lilll|> tiolii a Sworil. Xew York, Feb. 4. —Commodore Philip was presented with a sword and album Inst night ;it the residence of (Jen. Daniel lUittertield, in recognition of his services at the naval battle of Santiago, July :i, 180S. Gov. Itoosevelt presented the sword to Commodore I'll i 1 i p. I'oimln ->> I9ar<i Itonixls. Xew York, Feb. 4. —.1 in* Bernstein, r>f Xew *1 orU. got the. decision over Y*>ung Pluto, of South Africa, at the Lireeiiwood Whletie club in Brooklyn la~t night after n liai'4 tight of 110 i ry'iui'.U. . 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers