2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Per j«ar 00 Y paid In advance I ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements are published at the rate of ■tie dul.ar per square for one Insertion and llfty ► •nta t«M>quaru for each subsequentlnsertion Raten tiy the year, or for six or three months, are low and uniform, and *lll be furnished on ppplicat.on. Legit 1 and Official Advertising per square Ihree times or less, - each subsequent inser tion to cents per i-quare Local notices lu cunts per line for one lnser •erilon: 5 cents per line (or each subsequent •ouiecutlve Insertion. » Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, ir.ar rlaces and deaths will be Inserted free. Business cards, live lines or less. i 6 per year, ever, nve lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted tor less than 75 cent* per Us us. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Prbss (scomplete and affords facilities for dome the best class of Work., PaHTJCULAK ITTINi ION PAID TO LAW PfUNTIHO. No paper will bo discontinued until arrear u(i are paid, except at the option of the pub lisher. papers sent out of the countj must be paid lot In advance. Life-Saving Work. The stai-s in their courses condemn the idle woman. The quiet forces of nature reproach almost as severely the woman who voluntarily overworks, and tiius makes hereelf a hindrance Instead of a help 't the busy world. "Ttoe keenest, impression left by Prof. Maimer's noble biography of his wife, Alice Freeman l';tln»er, is that of her wonderful -skill in Adapting her work to her strength, and in finding strength for all important work, says the Youths' Companion. She always scoffed at the idea of "saving herself." She saw clearly that a woman's vigor is not like a cistern, containing so much water, but rather like a spring, flowing for human need, and to be .guarded at its source, not at its mouth. Says Prof, l'almer*. "If there is any one lesson which Mrs. Palmer's life preeminently teaches, it is the life-pre serving influence of persistent, severe and judiciously managed labor." She experienced every sort of demand which may be made on a woman, ex cept. perhaps, that of monotonous toil at some long-continued drudgery. Even that, one can fancy, she would have irradiated by her joy in every human relation. In her varied and exacting life she steadily built up her physical strength. Her power of physical en durance, not gi-eat in girlhood, in creased as her judgment ripened. "She believed continuous work to be conducive to health, and proved it so by practice," her husband testifies. She died of an acute disease, which could not have been foreseen or pre vented, but her too short life is a glo rious witness to the value of a sound mind in a sound body. Lawyers are not so prominent as legislators in Great Britain as in this country. Mr. Asquith, the new pre mier, is the first eminent lawyer to hold that office for almost a century. Lord Melbourne, it is true, was called to the bar, and Disraeli was a lawyers clerk, but neither of them practiced. Lord Salisbury and Mr. Balfour were landed proprietors and their profes sion, if any, was that of statesman ship. Public life attracts men of means in England, a large proportion of whom regard it as a duty to give their time to the service of their coun try. Neither the members of the house of lords nor of the house of commons receive compensation for their serv ices, and although the Irish National ist and members of the Labor party are paid from funds privately sub scribed, the amount they receive is quite moderate. The ordinary English lawyer is so busily occupied making a living that he does not often seek an election to parliament until middle life. In this country young lawyers enter public life as a means of making themselves known and thus increasing their clientage. It looks as though the gypsy moth, which has committed such ravages in New England, has met an enemy ■which cannot be overcome. Scientists iti the service of the Massachusetts gypsy moth commission have devel oped a parasite which attacks and de stroys the insect, and these foes are to be let loose in great numbers to hunt up and prey on the victims. The lines #i!ong which the commission has been working are those suggested by the ex perience of investigators at Washing ton and elsewhere. It has been shown that the gypsy moth, the cotton boll weevil and other pests which do vast damage to the trees and ere ps may be overcome by employing the right kind of parasite. With the encouragement and protection given to birds and the propagation of insect-eating parasites the work of getting rid of the pests should be greatly accelerated. It was in Germany that the fireless cook-stove was perfected, and now conies news from a special consular ' agent that the Germans are making a | firoless railroad locomotive. it is equipped with a boiler after the man ner of other locomotives, but the wa- 1 ter in it is heated to the necessary temperature from a stationary plant. Enough power can be stored in it to operate it for hours for switching pur poses in a railroad yard, and it does not take more than 15 mlnutee to' charge it. TRIBUTE TO HANNA 1 LEADER DESERVED WELL OF HIS COUNTRY. In Twice Steering the Republican Party to Victory His Service to the People Was a Very Great One. The addresses at the unveiling of Mr. Hanna's statue at Cleveland de scribed a worthy and most successful man. We have not had in our affairs a politician superior within the same lines to the leader who twice steered the Republican party to victory. Un trained in statecraft, unread in politi cal history, his life until he neared the 60-year mark devoted to business pur suits, he came upon the scene at a critical period for his party and for the country, took charge of his party's campaign and won the battle. Draw ing a senaiorship as a reward for his services, he at once became a leader also in that field, and inveigled, as it were, into a discussion in the senate one day he discovered to his own sur prise that he possessed talents for de bate, and from that hour was account ed a strong force in the list of the sen ate's speakers. The record is as strik ing as unique. It is said of some historical person ages tint they died tt a fortunate 112. r their fnmo. This i;i the judgment. j in Mr. Lincoln's c-uc, and hi Mr. Mc | Kiniey's. I 3 it true also i.i Mr. Haa ; na's case? Sir. Hanna aspired to the presiden cy, and there were leaders in his party who whetted his appetite for the of fice. They thought his time had come in 1001, and he was persuaded himself that there was a call for him. He be gan coquetting with New York influ ences, and they began the spreading of Hanna "literature" over the coun- j try. This, as Mr. ilanna soon discovered, I was a mistake. Mr. Roosevelt was the I man of that hour, and in a firm but I friendly way he put the matter up tc Mr. Hanna, with the result that the ! latter retired from the field. Then fol- | lowed, to the general regret. Mr. Han j na's death. Had Mr. Hanna lived would his in- | fiuence on public questions have in creased or diminished during the past | four years? And would he to-day he a quantity in the contest for the Chicago nomination? Who may answer these two questions witli confidence? Mr. Hanna and Mr. Roosevelt remained friends to the end. Hut they differed I in, and about, many things, and the j time since Mr. Hanna died has been marked by controversies which would j have strained the relations of the two j men severely. Mr. Hanna died, therefore, with the halo of his big achievements bright | about his head. The country was still I ringing with his praises. His one check he had gracefully met. Had he lived and received another, his bearing ! might not have been so successful. He ! might have passed from the scene a j disappointed man.and not unwilling j that the public should know his feel- ; ings and his party feei his resent ment.. Sunshine and Prosperity Platform. To keep the dinner pail full. To keep the: pay car going. To keep the factory busy. To keep the workmen employed. To keep the present wages up. This is the platform suggested by j the Business Men's league of St. Louis i lor adoption by the National Pros perity association recently organized in that city. It could not be im proved upon. it will he a glad day for the people of this country when the platform or j the national Republican convention shall pronounce for The full dinner jftil. The perambulating pay car. The busy factory. The busy workmen. The unreduced wage rate. On such a platform the Republican party can win. Long live Sunshine and Prosperity! Good Work on Panama Canal. The Americans took hold of the | work of building the Panama canal in : Ihe spring of 1904. At first their work I was merely exploratory and expert j mental. Then ii suffered various de- 1 lays, practically all the men being ! called off for some time in 1905 for sanitary engineering work. Neverthe- j less, in scarcely four years—three years and 11 months, down to May 1.1 190S, they have excavated a total of I 35,17(5,608 cubic yards, or 411 per cent, of what it took (he French more than 23 years to excavate. Moreover, and this is (he most significant feature of the case, of that amount 12,".96,462 cubic yards were, lilted in these four months of 1908. That is to say, in four months our men have done 15 per cent, of what the French did in 278 months —15 per cent, as much work in only 1.4 per cent, as much I time. Compromise Agreement. The house and senate reached a | compromise agreement by which was | stricken from the pension appropria tion bill the house provision lo abolish I I (lie 18 pension agencies and consoli-j I date the entire pension work in one I 'central agency at Washington. The | compromise leaves in the trill the en ' j lire amount of money appropriated j for the conduct of the 18 agencies, but ' with a provision that only so much of j if as is necessary in the opinion of ! the president shall be used, the presi- I dent having the right to abolish such j nf the agencies as in his judgment I 1 may be wise. I CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1908. | CHANGES IN DINGLEY LAW. Washington Star Sees Action to F«fc low the Election. While nothing will be done during the campaign under the two turift res olutions adopted by congress the ac tion taken is a good thing. de-<cSs»re» the Washington Star. It confirms to the country the attitude of the- party in power on the tariff question, and is notice to the business world, even i*» advance of the deliverances «£ the two national conventions, that revision is at last on the way. There will be plenty of time after the campaign closes and toefore the new congress meets in extra session for the collection and classification of all the data necessary in the premises. The senate finance committee -will be assisted by experts selected by itself, while the ways and means- committee will, if it so desires, turn in any avail able quarter for information needed. Everything now is plain enough, so far as the general proposition is con cerned. The Dingley law, harirg served the purposes of its enactment, is to be overhauled in the interests of a fairer adjustment of rates. By whom shall the work be done? By those who believe in the spirit of the law and would preserve it in the new legislation, or by those who opposed the law when enacted, cm the score that its spirit was bad, and who would eliminate that spirit from the j t l Onomii: policy of th* government.' Mr. Payne ua> :> —and speaks fci' tiia i party in the statement —that the- new I la»v should be founded on protection, i in a word, the Dingley law must "le I brought up to date. Just as the policy J of protection was followed in framing I a law for the conditions that existed jin 1 897, it must be followed in the j framing of a new law to meet the con | (litions that next year will confront ns. Whether the times are- bad or good, a | protective tariff is necessary t» the I well being of this country. On the other hand, the Democratic | contention is that protection ais a dis I tinct object is an exit 1 . It is charac | terizfd as the mother of trusts, and ! the source of all our woes. We should renounce it by forma? declaration, we are told, and proceed by libera? de j grees to get rid of it altogether by | legislation. As rapidfy as possible, all ! tariff duties should be laid on the low jest lines, and the country brought to 1 the basis of a tariff for revenue only. What fay the people? The vtr-i*? In November will turn largely on ' issue. NEW THEORY AS TO LAW. Method That Does Not Seem to Work as Well as the Old. Mr. Uryan, being the Democrat it candidate for defeat, ratified by the Republican preference of him in that capacity, his ideas upon such a sub | Ject as the currency at this rime are I important. They seem similar to those ! of Mr. Roosevelt regarding the anti | t rust law. that is, that our currency | laws are bad, but that they should lie enforced. Thus, in his colloquy with President Forgan at the Chicago dln ncr.as reported in various papers, he declared that, certain National bank offi cials ought to be sent to jail, although, "ii tlie law had been enforced in New- York during the panic, rhe panfc would have been a great deal worse." That is the new fashion in legisla tion. The old theory used 10 be that the laws embodied the best practice of ' the commercial community. The new I theory is that the commercial commu nity, at its peril, shall adjust itself to the happy thoughts of the legislators. It is within the record that the new method does not work as well as the ! oil. In fact, it hardly works at all. Al j most nobody goes to jail, and almost no impression is made upon commer cial practices which are sustained by public opinion and good merchant cus tom. The chief fact is that the law is brought into disrepute and loses its sanction as a standard of good prac tice. It is obvious that if in fact the law was capable of producing an alteration of ancient and approved mercantile 1 practice we should have easy and fre | quent commercial convulsions. We do j not have them, nor will Mr. Bryan I have more success than Mr. Roosevelt | in rallying the opinion which counts in | the last analysis to the support of laws [ discredited by universal rejection of 1 them because of ti- > faults of the laws, j rather than because of the vices of the | violators of the law. The idea is gain j irtg headway that the better way of i getting the law obeyed is to pass laws ! deserving to lie obeyed, rather than to j send good men to jail for breaking I laws incapable of being obeyed with | out disaster. Imports Falling Fast. A glance at the latest monthly sta-t ! tistics of the foreign trade of thej |l 7 nited Slates shows that the sweep ] ; changes wrought by general econo-{ ; mies since the panic last fall are still) Jin lull swing. In April, for example. I j the imports of merchandise were val-j ! iicd at only $87,481,000 against $129,-1 j £5-1,0011 in the corresponding month of ' ! Inst year. The decrease of more than 5 j $42,000,000 means a decline of 33" per - j cent. It far more than offset the Ibms j ! of $21,000,000 in exports and left rhe [ j balance of trade on tlu> side of the j j American producer and shipper B*r at-1 moft $4(1,000.000 instead of less t&au ' j $28,000,000 in April, 1907. j- This country is still paying old : i debts to Europe, still rolling tip for ' eign credits, still reducing the amount ! of American securities held by old ■ world investors. The change is so j swift and steady that it must exert a j great effect upon the future of bus! j ness. BOLD ROBBERY IS SUSPECTED REGISTERED MAIL POUCH NO WHERE TO BE FOU.JD. Would Prove to be One of the Largest Losses in the History of Post office Department. I/os Angeles, Cal. —Reluctant ad missions made by postal officers of three cities Wednesday confirm to soaie extent the belief that the disap pearance of a registered mall pouch somewhere within the Jurisdiction of the Kansas City postoffice last Satur day night will prove to be one of the largest losses in the history of the postoffice department. From private ■ourcea it was learned Wednesday that • package of at least $50,000 In cur rency was among the contents of the pouch which carried, in addition, ati unusually large number of letters and packages containing money and other valuables, the amount of which can only be conjectured, but it may reach • total of SIOO,OOO. The pouch wag In transit from Dos Angeles to New York and the postal Inspectors, who have had the case in charge for 48 hours, refuse any ex planation of the manner in which It became lost to sight. That a pouch of tal-ae has disappeared was admitted Wednesday by the department at Washington, by the postmaster at Ix>s Angeles and by the inspector, attached to the Kansas City postoffice who ap pears to have the case for Investiga tion. The fact that the mall in process of transfer at the I'nlon sta tion at Kansas City is handled In a temporary sub-station since the de struction of the regular branch office by lire several months ago, supports the theory that advantage was taken of conditions presumed to be more lax than ordinarily. There is reason to believe that the package of currency was a shipment made by a I«os Angeles bank to Its New York correspondent. Postmaster Flint of Ivos Angeles stated that it would be impossible for any officer of the department to estimate the total contents of the missing pouch until the holders of receipts issued on the day of shipment had made affidavits as to the valuables mailed. The cashier of the Farmers and Merchants National bank Wednesday night said: "According to our information a mail pouch made up here on June 3 and leaving for New York on the following morning, has disappeared. A conser vative valuation of the currency con tents. furnished by the other banks of this city, will be $. r io,ooo. The total amount is made tip of between 30 and 50 packages. Our correspondent at New York is the Chemical National bank, to whom our portion of the ship ment was consigned." Barnum's Legacy is Cupid's Aid. San Francisco, Cal. — P. T. Bar mini's wealth, $275,000 of which has Just been received as a legacy by his granddaughter. Miss Elden Hall, brought quick hymenal action here tor the legatee and Wm. Bryon Mc- Knight. Miss Hall and her sweet heart were clerks in a department stare here when the legacy was re ceived. They married at once. Ohioans in Automobile Accident. Cumberland, Md. —An automobile containing a party of Columbus, Ohio. people upset on a hill near Frostburg Wednesday night. Mrs. Ethel Clahane suffered a double fracture of her leg. Mrs. G. B. Feig ley, her son and D. Kelley were severely injured. The machine skid ded on a muddy road and overturned. Five Hundred Homeless. New Orleans, La. —Over 500 peo ple are homeless, one death has been recorded and a property loss of over $200,000 has been brought about as a result of two fires which de stroyed several blocks of stores and residences in different parts of New Orleans Wednesday. Wants Divorce from Sixth Husband. Chicago, 111. —Mrs. Grace Ixive filed a snit for divorce from Hugh ft?. Ixjve again on Tuesday. This Is the second time she has filed this suit and lx>ve is her sixth husband. The allegations are the same as when her suit was filed April 14, extreme cruelty being the principal ground. Chair Cars on Mileage Basis. Chicago. 111. —The Pullman Palace Car Co. officials have notified the Michigan railway commission that within 30 days charges for chair car , rides will be placed on a mileage basis ! instead of a trip rat? as at present, < according to advices received Wednes jj day night. ! Milch Cows for Canal Zone. Washington, D. C.—Twenty Jer sey milch cows raised in the Texas fever district so that they may be Jm [ uiune from that affection are at New [ Orleans awaiting shipment to the ' isthmian canal zone where their milk i la 10 be used for the hospital patients. Admiral Evans Gets Leave. j Washington.—Rear Admiral Robley ! D. Evans has been granted a three t months leave because of ill health. '(Accompanied by his family, the ad mi nil left for his summer home at | I*aUe Mohonk, N. Y. Hitchcock Not Guilty. New York City.—Raymond Hitch cock, comedian, on trial for mis conduct with young girls, was found not guilty at 3 o'clock Thursday morn ing. after the jury had been out since 1 Wednesday evening. ANTI-GAMBLING BILL HADE LAW I FAMOUS AGNEW-HART RACE TRACK BILL PASSED BY VOTE OF 26 TO 25. INVALID SENATOR LEAVES BED Kentucky May be Effected More Than New York—"lmprisonment in County Jail or Penitentiary for One Year" is Penalty. Albany, N. Y.—After a struggle, the precise like of which no man in or about the legislature has ever seen, or expects to see again, the famous Agnew-Hart anti-race track gambling bills are now laws of the state of New York. Gov. Hughes, by his signature affixed to each of the bills at 4:35 Thursday afternoon crowned a legislative victory, the bril liancy of which equalled only by its unexpectedness, is conceded even by those who fought him ji the matter to the last ditch and beyond. The nnnals of legislation In this state may be searched in for a day like this. The decisive votes which passed the bills, were cast by Senator Otto G. Foelker of the fourth senate district of Brooklyn, who crawled from a sick bed and made a 60-mile railroad journey to do It, so weak and distressed in mind and body that he seemed on the verge of utter collapse, and by a new senator, Wil liam C. Wallace of Niagara Falls, who was elected at a special election in the campaign preceding which the gov ernor himself toured the district speaking In behalf of his election. The bills which now constitute chap ters 506 and 507 of the laws of 190S in no way affect, so far as their lace j provisions go, the state racing com mission in particular or horse racing in general. They relate solely to the penalties for gambling, pool selling and book making, which as before, are declared by the law to bo "a public nuisance." Chapter 506 amends the . racing law by repeating that pro- | vision under which an exclusive pen alty of simply recovering at civil suit of the amount wagered was incurred, which has applied to gambling within a race track enclosure, thus exempting such gambling from the penalties ; operative elsewhere in the state, and j It also provides that this general pen- j alty shall be "imprisonment in the | county jail or penitentiary for a I period of not more than one year," I without alternative of fine. Chapter 507 amends the penal code in like manner and in addition charges the grads of the crime from that of felony, which any gambling was until j Thursday, to that of a misdemeanor, thus bringing the offense within the i jurisdiction of the minor criminal courts. Kentucky probably will sufTer to a greater extent by the passage of the race track hills in New York than will New York. Many wealthy east erners own large farms in the blue grass region and operate hundreds of breiAling plants there. Millions of dollars are Invested in these plants, and a small army of men is employed. Porterhouse Steak 30 Cents a Pound. New York City.—Beef is higher than it has been since 1892 at this time of the year and the cost of other meats has risen in sympathy. Porter house steak is retailing at 30 cents per pound. Other steaks and beef cuts are J proportionately high. There can be little relief, wholesalers say, until July when the grass fed cattle are put on the market. With this increase in price the consumption of meat Is grow- j ing less, people seeming to have found i a substitute. Doctor Prescribes Beer; Is Fined. Peoria, 111. —Dr. Roy Richards of Hopedale, 111., was fined S2O and costs in a Pekin justice court on Thursday for violation of the "dry" or dinance of the village. The physician prescribed beer for a patient. The physician ordered the beer from an other city and on delivery receipted for the package and took it to the patient. The doctor entered a plea of guilty. Wreck on B. & O. T'niontown, Pa. —In a head-on col lision here on Thursday night be tween the Fairmont express and a coke train on the B. & O. railroad, said to have been caused by the coke train attempting to gf*t on a siding on the passenger train's time, the engineer and fireman were perhaps fatally in jured and 15 passengers eut and bruised. Suffocate in Trunk. Fall River, Mess. —After a long search Thursday night the bodies of - Joseph and Andre Beaudry, 8 and 5 . old respectively, were found suffc;- ( eated, locked in a trunk in which the ( children are supposed to have hidden j themselves in order to escape going ] to school Thursday morning. , Two Killed by Train. I Greensburg, Pa.—Two women were Instantly killed as the result of being j caught between a safety fence and a ( fast moving express train at Ix>ckport s SOIBIF.OS SKDOT NIGHT RIDERS TWO MEN ARE WOUNDED IN THE OHIO TOBACCO FIELDS. | Two Prominent Farmers Arrested— Soldiers Are Given Orders to "Shoot to Kill." Ripley, O. —Lieut. Kennedy of Co. A, who is in charge of the outpost, at Hiett, reported that his sol ! diers Thursday night shot two night j riders. One man, whose name is sup ; posed to be Miller, was shot through ! the lung, it is said, and the other man, , whose name is not known, was shot !In the knee. The men were carried 1 away by their companions. | Friday Major Becht and Marshal | Miller visited a number of families | named Miller, searching for the | wounded night rider, as it was ru- I mored that he died Friday morning. He was not found, but the search wa» renewed Friday night. Tip Martin, a farmer, who went to the aid of the soldiers fighting the night riders, found a note tacked to bis barn door Friday morning which reads: "You got two of us, but we are coming back, and will get you and five others." David Maddox found a similar notice tacked on his ware house. This; is believed to substan tiate the ;t"»ry that two men weiai shot. Newton llunn and William Frost,, yroiiiinr-nt farmers, v.'cre arretted Fri day night for an attack on Bert Hook's house. They v/eie relea ed oh fI.OOO bail each. I.ieut. Kennedy was in Ripley Fri day to get a supply of ammunition and said he expected another battle, any night as the night riders in the vicinity of Hiett have become des perate and dare the soldiers to fire on them. "Shoot to kill if you are molested." These instructions were given to three soldiers, members of the state guard of Kentucky, who arrived in Newport, Ky., Friday morning with rifles in their hands. The soldiers were seated on a mammoth wagon in which were several thousand pounds 7 ef tobacco. DUN S WEEKLY REPORT I Gains Outnumber Losses in Commer cial and Industrial World. New York City.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Gains outnumber losses in reports ol commercial und industrial activity, business being remarkably well main tained considering the propinquity ol political conventions, to which was at ! tributed the dull security market. Tn i usually good duplicate orders are still | received from retailers who under j estimated current requirements, but ! v.-holesale and jobbing departments are j chiefly occupied in making prepara tions for fall and winter trade, about which there is a feeling of confidence. Full returns for May indicate that building permits were only about 2(i per cent, less than in the same month in 1307, the best comparison of any month this year, and anthracite coal production surpassed ti,000,000 tons for the first time on record. All other news regarding the Iron and steel industry is of little sig nificance this week in comparison with the lower prices for steel pro ducts named by the leading interests. Thus far the better terms have brought no increase in volume of busi ness, consumers deferring operations in the hope that still mor? attractive prices will be fixed. About a third of the bar requirements of agricultural Implement makers have been filled at the lower prices named last week. BILLIK GRANTED A REPRIEVE His Neck Was Bared for the Noostt and His Guards Were Ready for Death March to the Scaffold. Chicago, 111. —Herman Billlk, the? clairvoyant condemned to die at 11 o'clock on Friday, was granted a re prieve as his neck was bared for the noose and his guards were ready for the death march to the scaffold. Judge l.andis ordered a stay of execu tion at 11:10 o'clock, thereby giving Billik time to carry his case before the supreme court of the United States. The incidents attending the stay of execution were dramatic in the ex treme. Billik was snatched from death almost at the foot of the scaf fold. He had received the right of extreme unction. With Father O'Cal -1 ayhan he had uttered his last prayer. His neck hail been barsd for the. noose and the jailer was forming the march to the scaffold. Outside the jail. Dearborn avenue. Michigan and Illinois streets were packed from curb to curb with peo ple. They could not see the hanging and knew it, hut they were attracted hither by that morbid feeling that would be satisfied only when the drop fell, the sound of which is usua'ly dis tinctly audible in the streets sur rounding the jail. Two Die in Packing House Fire. Kansas City, Mo. —Two laborers lost their lives, two others w«r» seriously injured and property loss es timated at 000 was caused l>y two explosions followed by a Are in tfr v packing house of Morris & Co. in Kansas City Friday. The exp'osions ruined the cold storage building. Nine Die in Railroad Camp Ex-jlos : ?n. Winnipeg, Man. —Nine men v. r • Killed and several other's injur <! y a premature explosion of <iynu in a rail read camp east of hero Fr.dfcj.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers