2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Ed,tor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fer ysar W OJ \ pal* la advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES; Airsrttsements are published at the rate ot •me dul:ar per square for one insertlo.! and tlfty (#lll per square for each subsequent Insertion. Rates Ov the year, or for six or threo montha, low and uniform, and will be furnished on ttpUcat'on. Lefsl and omclal Advertising per square »iree times or less, i 2: eacu aubsequent inser tion to cetiin per square. Local notices to vents per line for one lnser sortlon; 5 ce-ats per, line for each subsequent •en-ecutlvo Insertion. Obituary notices over fire lines. 10 cents per line. Slu pie announcements of births, mar* i Ha*es and deaths will he Inserted free. Business cards, five lines or loss. *5 per year; ever five lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for lesa than 75 cenla per lasua. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pbbsb Is complete rfxd affords facilities for doins tho best class of Work. P AJtTICCLAII ATTHNIION PAIDTO LAW riUNTIMO. No paper will be discontinued until arrear afes are paid, except at the option of the pub- Usher. Papers sent out of the county must be paid tor in advance RESULT OF SCIENTIFIC FARMING. A forthcoming circular of the agri cultural department will contradict the prevailing impression that the fertility of the country is wearing out, but will show that, notwithstanding the abandonment of farming districts in the northeast, not only is there an increase in the total volume of crops, but an actual growth in the average yield per acre under cultivation, says the Mobile Register. This result is ob tained by restoring to the soil those elements and compounds needed and consumed by different crops. The well-informed farmer of the present day does not blindly send his plants out to grope for their food; but sees that it is supplied them In proper meas ure. Kecent discoveries in bacteriol ogy have greatly assisted the plant er, enabling him to obtain bacteria, with which the growing plant may be inoculated and by which the nitrogen of the air is iixed in form available for plant food and fed to the plant as required. A few cents per acre spent inoculating the plants comes back to the farmer in Increased yield of many dollars per acre. Pennsylvania is doing well in for estry and in tree conservation. The state commissioner reports nearly 1,000,000 acres in the reserve, to which additions are being made, and has much to say about the effective sys tem of replanting, cultivation and general safeguarding. Replanting is a ' very important part of the work. Many millions of young trees have been planted, and with the appropria tion available it is hoped to add not less than 9,000,000 this year, while the ultimate number is expected to be 20,- 000,000 annually. An excellent insti tution is a state forestry academy, in which young men are trained for the forestry service. All this is Indica tive of active and intelligent super vision. Pennsylvania is a state of hills and valleys, and denuding the crests of trees has wrought incalcu lable mischief, a fair specimen of which is furnished by the freshets which so often sweep down the Ohio and other streams, carrying havoc for many miles. Dislike of the cigarette has often been manifested by fathers, mothers and guardians, and sometimes figures in the disposition of legacies. Thus a young man named Acker, of Atlan tic Highlands, N. J., has been left $25,- 000 by his grandfather on condition that for the next 24 years Acker shall refrain from indulging in cigarettes or participating in dissipation. To get tho regular allowance under the will Acker must at stated periods make af fidavit that he has complied strictly with the terms. That ought to be a pretty fair tost of a young man's preference. The sum of $25,000 should be an acceptable offset to deprivation of cigarette smoking. The plan, announced from Boston, of solving the problem of illiterate and impecunious immigrants by edu cating them and getting them into profitable employment is undoubted ly a good one. and would be effective if it could be executed, says the New York Tribune. Hut how such work is to be done for the scores and hun dreds of thousands who come hither is another problem of appalling diffi culty. lioads like t hose proposed in Eng land, on which there would be no speed limits for motorists; would set tle the speed problem for good and all. Sensible persons would all use Ihe other road, and the speed maniacs ■would soon bring themselves to their Jit end. Tb« time-honored swindling schemes do not show much variety, but then they probably rely, with more or loss certainty of profit, on the fact that there are no special novel changes in human nature. Now is the time lor gazing at the shell-load of plckels, plums, peaches and other preserves and letting your self think bow good they will all taste this winter. FOR AN EMERGENCY PRESIDENT TAFT EXPLAINS POSI TION ON INCOME TAX. Declares Emphatically He Is Not in Favor of Its Imposition at Once, Though He Would Have States Indorse It. In the light of extensive and widely varying speculation regarding the at titude of President Taft toward the in come tax. it is gratifying to note that In his speech at Portland, Ore., he set forth his views with a directness which leaves no doubt as to where he stands. Following his discussion of the corporation tax. the president said: "I am not in favor of levying an in come tax such as that which was pro vided in the bill, in times of peace T' am not in favor of it because I think it will prove to be too inquisitorial as to individuals, and 1 think it will be found also that it puts a premium on perjury, so that the .gentlemen whom, you are especially after when you levy an income tax will escape, and only those which are too conscientious will pay more than their share. In-times of dire need it is necessary that it (the government) should use such a tax. objectionable as it is in certain of Its features, and, therefore, 1 hope it will pass the states." The president's declaration must set at rest the allegations that he favors the imposition of an income tax at once, if the constitutionality of such a measure shall have been confirmed by the adoption by three-fourths of the states of the amendment submitted by the present congress. The president's self-defined position does, however, raise a decidedly in teresting question. If, as he hopes, the federal government is authorized to impose an income tax, how long will it be before it is compelled to do so? Mr. Taft believes tlie federal gov ernment should enjoy the right to im pose such a tax in emergencies. On the other hand, he would regard the exercise of that right under normal conditions as bad because, as he ex plains, it would put a premium on perjury and would probably prove im possible of equitable assessment. And yet the strength of the advocacy of an income tax as a normal method of raising revnue was clearly demon strated in the session of congress re cently adjourned. So great was that strength that at one time a majority of the senate was committed to it and. while there were no figures available, the leaders clearly appreciated that if the house had an opportunity to vote on the question it would adopt the tax by a large majority. The actual adop tion of the tax was prevented only by the influence which the president him self exerted to secure the enactment of the corporation tax as a substitute, a part of which influence consisted of the argument that to re-enact an in come tax without the authority of a constitutional amendment would con stitute an affront offered by the legis lative to the judicial branch of the government. The adoption of the con stitutional amendment would, of course, destroy the force of that argu ment and thus detract materially from the president's influence to prevent the imposition of an income tax. while the action of three-fourths of all the states in conferring 011 the federal government the power to impose such a tax would inevitably strengthen the position of those who favor it. Progress in the Merit oystem. When compulsory civil service re form laws were first introduced they needed to be guarded from abuses by certain strict provisions. In making examinations the test for appoint ments and in eliminating elasticity from the system, no one could say an ideal method of appointment was be ing established, but only that a great Improvement was being made over old methods and that the very inelas ticity was necessary in order to give the new system a lair start in the struggle lor existence. Now, after ten or fifteen or twenty years ol experience, the time has tome when the rigid barriers may to some extent be relaxed. The old spoilsmen enemies of the merit sys tem naturally sneer at the change, but. nevertheless, what is happening I Is strictly logical and marks distinct advance. It it has become pos;lble to I facilitate the discharge of incompe tent employes without too much red tape, that is one gain. If, as has just I happened in New York state, a reduc j tion in the weight given to formal ex- I aminations can be made all ahfcig the line and a corresponding increase I made in the weight given to experi ! ence as judged by the appointing j power that is another gain. At the I start such provisions would have been sources ot weakness, not of strength. In New Vork state ,he development hf\s gone to a point at wnich the civil service commissioners, instead of con cealing information in a way still known to occur in some places, are giving it the largest publicity. At this year's state lair a large civil service exhibit is to be installed. If will con tain statistics of positions and of past examinations, maps, chaiinforma tion pamphlets and everything possl ble toward acquainting young men who might consider entering the state's service with what steps they must take to that end. As providing an agency lor "peopieizing" the civil service, ihe idea Is not a bad one. Can't Beat Him. You can't beat him, anyhow. Col j Bryan is about to celebrate his silver I wodding.—New York livening Tele grara. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, IW EFFECT OF TARIFF ON PRICES Impossibility That Reduction of Duties Should Result in Immediate Price Reductions. Tariff reformers need frequently to be reminded that the tariff is only one of many things that influence the prices of commodities. By harping too much upon the effect of duties as a tax on the consumer, they give rise to the expectation that a reduction of duties must be Immediately followed by a reduction of price—an expecta tion very often disappointed. There can be no doubt that the duty upon hides increased the cost of im ported hides, and allowed a correspond ing addition to the price of domestic hides. The removal of the duty was thus an advantage to the American tanner. Other things being equal, it would reduce the cost of American leather, and the import duty upon leather being also reduced, there is an enlarged opportunity for competition, which might be expected to reduce the price. Thus far the reasoning is clear. Rut suppose the demand for leather to In crease more rapidly than the produc tion, and the demand for '-ides more rapidly than the supply. The price could not be raised as fast or as far as under the protection of high duties, but it does not follow that it would not be raised at all. If it is true, as Is asserted and as appears probable, that the revival of all kinds of industry has created a greatly enlarged demand for leather In all forms, even beyond the general ratio of increase, it is evident that we have influences to consider to which the tariff can be only secondary. The uses of leather have increased enormously of late years and In many fields. Even the automobile is said to have made an appreciable difference. People are wearing American shoes all over the world who never wore shoes before. It may safely be con cluded that if the duties on hides and leather had not been reduced, all prices would have been raised to the highest possible figures. The "re vision" has checked an artificial ad vance. It is also demonstrated that the reduced duties are more than ade quate for all desirable protection. Judge Gaynor's Pose. Judge Gaynor. the Tammany candi date for mayor of New York, is con ducting one of the freakiest cam paigns iu the whole history of queer streak politics. He is the willing nominee of the Tammany organiza tion, but continues to harangue against municipal corruption and 'o discourse in general upon the exceed ing sinfulness of all the arts and methods by which Tammany has been accustomed to win elections and to thrive upon the boundless opportuni- r graft that have followed the_ various winnings. He is the nominee of an organization that has made po litical crookedness a science, but con tinues to point with pride to "my Ufa record and my life work for good gov ernment and to destroy low and cor rupt government" without an appar ent touch of embarrassment at the ridiculous pose in which he is placed. A candidate of Tammany hall preach ing reform in politics is somewhat in the same classification of that notori ousin dividual who upon occasion and to subserve his own ends is supposed to rebuke sin, The Tammany candidate has even made the spectacular play of sending back money which was forwarded to him for campaign purposes. Possibly that SI,OOO check which a Brooklyn merchant sent directly to the judge through the mail was for the very pur pose of giving him an opportunity to write a letter declaring "I have de cided not to use a dollar in this elec tion." Even in the primary which re sulted in the nomination of Justice Gaynor, Tammany influences were ac cused by several of the New York dai lies with having stuffed the ballot boxes to assure the election of cer tain convention delegates And to think that the candidate of an organi zation that could resort to such meth ods i.s opposed to the using of a dollar to notnote his candidacy! Gotham must be growing pretty solemn if it is not touched by the gayeiy of such a situation. Taft's Antipodal Critics. Taft is the type of statesman who incurs criticism from both the oppo site extremes of opinion. lie is too conservative for the radi cals, and too progressive for the ultra conservatives. He may lie defined as a progressive conservative. He Is the man who thinks hard before speaking: looks before leaping; and wants to be reasonably sure he is right before go ing ahead. He is a reasonable man. He is cap able of compromise - the essence, ts j Burke says, of statesmanship. He be lieves in progress, but he steei'3 by settled principles; and he knows when to shorten sail It is because of such traits of tem perament and training that the bulk of our people regard him as the ideal man for the presidency at the pres i ent time, when "slow speed ahead" is I the needed word in legislation. The business world, big business I and little, employers and employed, I breathed a sigh of relief when he was j elected. The labor world felt that I while there might under him be less | vociferous lip service to the "square j deal." there would be more of the J real article all around. It had diseov j ered that while threatening and alarm ing capital might be good fun for the ! gallery. It was death lor work and j wages.— Milwaukee Sentinel. Mr. liryan is at present engaged <r j making the next congress Democratic j and. Incidentally, in keeping himself j advertised for lecture ouruoses ® e j OF A i ! WEEK'S EVENTS! • • • : • • " • • Latest News of Interest • • • I Boiled Down for the • • Busy Man, I • • PERSONAL. Horace H. Lurtun of Nashville is believed in Washington to have the best chance for appointment to the bench of the supreme court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Jus tice Beckham. Lurton i.s an old friend of President. Tal't. G. A. Simpson, a Grant county (Ky.) tobacco grower, who shipped 75,000 pounds of his 1009 crop, with the aid of state troops, says he will move to New Mexico, as he fears night riders. Jacob M. Dickinson,' secretary of war, says if his candidacy for senator in Tennessee would unite the Demo cratic factions in the state, he would make the race. Prof. Headlee of the Kansas agri cultural college says chinch bugs cause from $5,000,000 to $25,000,000 loss annually to the farmers of the state. He is experimenting with destroyers. Dr. E. B. Morgan, an eye and ear specialist of Paterson, N. J., lias come into possession of 51,000,000 through tin- generosity of a brother who made $7,000,000 in stock deals and shared his fortune. Cardinal Gibbons says he pities the friendless rich. "Millions," he says, "avail nothing to a man if he have no one to give him solace in sorrow." Kichard Croker's trip to the United States this fall is not in response to a tall for aid from Charles W. Morse, according to a statement by Mr. Moise, who is a prisoner in the Tombs at. New York. Emperor of Russia was accorded a cordial and gracious reception on his arrival at Racconigi, Italy. His meet ing witli King Victor Emmanuel was signalized with booming of cannon and cheers of the multitude. GENERAL NOTES. President Taft and party left St. Louis for a four-days' trip down the Mississippi. At New Orleans they will attend the fourth annual conven tion of the Lakes and the Gulf Deep Waterways association. Five hundred Indian bucks and squaws, after receiving their annuities, indulged in one of the wildest orgies that the Leech Lake (Minn.) agency ever witnessed. It was the last day when saloons could sell liquor to the redskins. Mrs. Frank Stanley, at Pana, 111., shot and killed her husband, Frank, during a struggle for the possession ol a shotgun. The woman claims she shot in self-defense. Frederick Gebhardt, the New York selt confessed wife murderer, admits he has been guilty of three such crimes, for th< j purpose of securing the women's money. Grand jury at Chicago in their final report to Judge Tuthill, declared the jury-drawing system of Cook county "rotten and corrupt," and charge the commissioners with wholesale viola tions of the law. Gen. Oliver O. Howard, the last of the union commanders of the civil war, died at his home in Burlington, Vt., of heart disease, aged 79 years. Credence is given by Tokyo officials to the report that the assassination of Prince Ito was the culmination of a plot, the ramifications of which ex tended through Korea and into China. Federal Judge Holt, at New York, handed down a decision which will allow Gustav 15. Kissel and Thomas B. llarned. who were among those in dicted along with the. American Sugar Refilling Company for criminal con spiracy, to escape prosecution through the provisions of the statute of limita tions. John it. Walsh, the former Chicago j banker, lias received SIOO,OOO for an option on his railroads from the United States Steel Corporation, which will enable him to settle his financial diffi culties for the time being, ac least. Sheriff Strassheim of Cook county, Illinois (Chicago), was lined SSOO and costs by tin' Illinois supreme court for contempt in not promptly obeying a mandate of that tribunal. Gov. De mon will pay tin? fine, if the decision stands, as tiie sheriff wus.it. is alleged, following ilia instructions. Harry K. Thaw's contention that he was illegally committed to the Matteawan asylum was overruled by the New York court of appeals. By !*. decision of the Illinois supreme court Chicago will have n> pay $700,- fioo for cars burned during the big . railroad strike of 1890. The western section of the Northern Illinois Teachers' association met in Galena, 111., with Cyrus Grove of Free port presiding. Fifty thousand people greeted Presi dent Taft upon his arrival at. Cairo, 111., during his trin down the Missis sippi. Rumors are in circulation at Chica go that final steps looking to a gigantic merger of the various Hawley and allied lines into one compact rail road system have been consummated According to the new minister of war Spain has decided not to push further tho Moroccan campaign. The McConnick Theological semtn iry at Chicago celebrated the eightl 3th anniversary of its founding, cmi •u-nt theological educators and divines from many cities taking part in the ceremonies. The honorary commercial commis sioners of Japan and their suites ar rived in Washington and visited Po tomoe drive, along which will be plant ad 2,000 cherry trees which the em peror of Japan has presented to the government. John D. Rockefeller has given a mil lion dollars to aid in the extermina tion of the disease of "book worm," ar "lazy disease" germ in the south am states. He intrusts the expendi ture to a commission of 12, including his son and noted scientists. The federal court of appeals has re fused to grant the petition of the gov ernment that. John It. Walsh be placed in prison pending the appeal of his case to the supreme court of the Uni ted States, thus giving the banker a year's liberty at least. Mrs. Chapin, a suffragette, in at tempting lo destroy the ballots at an election in London, broke a bottle of acid over the ballot box as a protest against the exclusion <of women from the right of franchise. Several offi cials were painfully burned and she was arrested. A general uprising of Korean revo lutionists is feared following the as sassination of Prince Ito at. Harbin. His murderer has been identified as a Korean newspaper editor, and the open declarations of approval of the murder has caused great alarm. Mrs. Charles Edgecomb and four year-old son were tound dead at their home in Chicago from gas asphyxia tion. It is believed the child turned on the gas instead of the electric light. He was in the habit of playing with the latter. Frederick Dietz and his wife perish ed in a supposedly incendiary fire which destroyed a tenement at West Thir teenth street and Third avenue, .New York. Inventors are to benefit from a clas sification of patents undertaken by the United States patent office at Washington. Erwin Weinspach, a Los Angeles druggist, his wife and Jesse R. Thorn ton, who started for the Sierra Nevada mountains eight weeks ago, are miss ing. A searching party is togo out. The body of Prince Ito, Japan's murdered statesman, will be taken to Japan on a warship now at Dairen. N'ine alleged accomplices of his assas sin are under arrest. The new tariff bill is not reducing the treasury deficit as predicted by its authors, it is shown by a statement just issued that, the deficit for the fiscal year ending October 21-i was only seven million less than the same pe riod last year. By the will of Caroline Phelps Stokes over $3,000,000 is given for the erection of model tenements in New York, the education of negroes. North American Indians and white students and for several charitable objects. Arthur P. Heinze was sentenced to prison for ten days and fined $250 by iudge Ray in New York on a charge of obstructing justice by advising a witness to evade service. Suffolk county (Long Island) offi cials have found Minnie Rosenau, who says Frederick Gebhardt, con fessed slayer of Anna Luther, mar ried her in Russia 14 years ago. The woman is supposed to be one of Geb hardt's many wives. Tiie "unwritten law" figures in the case of John Sickles of Dallas, W. Va., whose trial for murder has be gun. The defendant killed Randolph Ritchie, his nephew, whom he found in a room with hia 15-year-old daugh ter. What is known as the opsonic treat ment., discovered in England and tried on human beings to combat germ dis eases, is found at the Colorado Agri cultural college to be successful when applied to animals. Earl W. Spencer, with an office in the Rookery building, Chicago, has written to Flower hospital. New York, offering assistance to Edith Thomas, who attempted suicide after writing a letter to her mother saying she pre ferred death to becoming bad. Baron Rudolph von Outmann of Vi enna, who has just sailed from New York for Europe, has returned from a remarkably successful hunting trip in Alaska and Siberia. Ho says that big game shooting in Alaska is the best in the world. A report reached Shanghai that Prince ito, the Japanese statesman was killed by a shot fired by a Corean at Harbin, Manchuria. The Japanese consul general and president of the Manchurlan railroad were in jured. Knud llasmussen, tl - Danish ex plorer who has reached Copenhagen, reiterates his former statement that lie believes Dr. Cook reached the north pole and snys lie saw the phy sician's diary and cannot believe it was false. A brewery combine of $10,000,000 in Fayette county, Pennsylvania, is -Mid to be hacked by the steel trust, lin vn effort to curb drinking habits of employes in the mills. The corpora tion would stop the sale of beer in kegs. No details of frontier excitement in the early days i:; lacking in the "Rush of '4ii" celebration at Stockton, Cal. for which a typical gold camp has been reproduced on the public square Eluding her children and grandchil dren, Mrs. Rebecca E. Walworth, 71 years old. of Berkeley, Cal., was mar ried to P. P. Chamberlain, a San Farncisco contractor, who is 75. Deputy Marshal Otto W. Zitndars was tound dead in front of the j.i 1 at De Pere, Wis . with a bullet wound llis watch and revolver were missinp and the jail ltej was broken off in thf door. MILLIONAIRE SUICIDES MYSTERY SURROUNDS THE ACT OF PITTSBURG MAN. Suicide Goes to a Hotel, Writes Letter, Stands Before Mirror and Blows His Brains Out. Pittsburg, Pa. —Pittsburg is si nig gling with one of the most sen sational suicides in its history. Ed ward Steinhauser, member of one of the oldest families in Pittsburg, sup posed to be worth more than $1,000,000 in his own name, killed himself in a most tragic manner at the American house here. It is intimated by some that Steinhauser had been plunging In the stock market. Steinhauser, who was 38 years old. put his last thoughts on his mother, grandmother and sisters, whom lie did not want thrown into a panic by hav ing news of his suicide telephoned, nor did he wish them to see his mutil ated body until it had been fixed up. Hi- arranged for all this just before footing himself. The North Side- mil lionaire in the afternoon slipped into .he American house and registered as '•W. F. Lawrence, City." H<- asked to be shown a room and stipulated that the room be large, well lighted and clean. Asking that stationery be sent to his room he sat down and in a round, flowing business hand, wrote the following letter: "Mr. \V. S. Wilson, No. 925 Pen ave nue. Pittsburg—Dear Billy: Break the news to the dear ones at. homo. Tillie and mamma are at Annie's for supper, but grandma is at home. I cannot help this. Forgive me, dear friends. I cannot rest until I am with George. - "P. S.—Will: Don't 'phone home about this. You might startle them. You goto Annie's yourself and tell them. And. Will, have my body fixed up right before I am taken home. Let them remember me as 1 was. Goodby, old pal, goodby." "Lawrence" then carefully removed his coat, vest and collar, and standing in front of the mirror blew out his brains. The shot and sound of the falling body brought help, and the locked doors were battered in and the still warm body found. j TRADE REVIVAL IS NO DREAM Reports from Various Sections Make the Close of the Year 1905 One of Prosperity. New York City.—Bradstreets says: Trade as a whole is good or better. | the former word, in fact, hardly sufficing to characterize the buoyancy and breadth of demand shown in many lines. Industry, in turn, responds with advices of lull manufacturers' order books. full of o\ertime run and gen eral reports of an insufficiency of skilled labor to meet the requirements. Altogether the situation is. all things considered, a very satisfactory one and the rate of improvement in the late months of the year promises to place 1909 close to the front in the list of years of prosperity. While mild weather lias tended to retard retail trade in some sections of tlie northwest, the general report is that tho advance of the season and tin marketing of the year's crops if. bring ing out a large volume of trade in the country districts, while enlarging pay rolls, fall festivals and state fairs are all helping to stimulate distribution in the cities. MANY VICTIMS OF WRECKS Two Dead and Six More May Die as Result of Train Crashes in Two Different States. Ft. Wayne, Ind. —In a collision between a westbound immigrant train and an eastbound freight train at Tocsin, on the Chicago & Brie rail road, 3f» immigrants— men, women and children—were injured, some of them perhaps fatally. Samuel Barnes, fire man of the freight train, and six of the immigrants were taken to Huntington. Barnes and four of the foreigners probably will die. Rochester, N. Y.—Two men killed, two seriously injured and one injured in a lesser degree, an engine practic ally demolished, the wall of the freight house caved in anil dozens of freight ears with their contents damaged or completely wrecked, is the result of a wreck that occurred in the Kent street yards of the New York Central rail road. The train took a wrong switch and crashed into freight cars. Twenty-two Miners Killed. Karran, Wales.- Twenty-two miners weie entombed in the wrecked shaft ef the Rhymney Iron Co.. fol low an explosi*" when 48 o: the crew were entering. Lighted! succeeded in fighting their way out. and a rescue party saved eight more. After hours of work rescuers succeeded in digging out of the choked mine shaft 11 bodies, including that of .Mine Manager Bowen. When these corpses were recovered all hope for the survival of any of the 'J- miners caught beneath the slide thai followed the explosion was given up. Husband Finds Wife Sl-iin. New York City. The body of Mrs. Rose Banks, with her head almost severed, was found in her fiat here. Her husband is under arrest. Banks and neighbors told the police that he had broken in the dcor and found his wife dJtul. Korc?ti Rictero Busy. Seoul, Korea. The mien .station here of the Seoul-Fusion rail: c.td wa» attacked by 300 rioters and partially burned. The rioters were finally dia oorsed.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers