THE NEWS Near Waldron, Mo, A. C. Veack shot and killed Charles Morris on the evening of his marriage to Miss Jane Jones, Both men had been paying attentions to Miss Jones, ——W, 8 Mackey, wholesale boot and shoe house, in Sedalia, Mo., has been closed on a deed of trust, setting forth the preferred indebtedness in the sum of $27,500, — John Powers, a motorman, was badly hurt in a collision be- tween trolley cars at Clifton, N. J. William Murray, aged twenty-sight, a clerk of the British Mercantile Insurance Company, was held in £10,000 bail at the Tombs Police Court in New York. He was charged with embez- zling from the company, It is said his steal- ings amount to $16,000. — Colonel CW. Taladee, an inventor of national reputation, died in Freeport, Ii, from the effects of an overdose of morphine administered by his own hand, —Mrs, Mary Eilworth was ar- rested in Jackson, Mo., for killing Henry Stiff, —— The stables of Charles Whitehead at South River, N. J., burned. Of thirty-four fine trotting horses in the stable when the flames were discovered, all but four were rescued. — In the trial of the American Rall- way Union officials at Chicago the examinn- tion of rallway strikers was begun,——The Minnesota state officials considered plans for assisting the people in the burned district. Owners of the mills will be asked if they will rebuild, and, if not, it is designed to make an agricultural country of the burned territory. In the Hudson county (N. J.) jail, Bernard Altberger was hanged for the murder of Kate Rupp.—At Mount Holly, N. J., Wesley Warner was hanged for killing Lizzie Peak, and at Pittsburg, Noel Maison was banged for murdering Mrs. Sophia -The Robinsou Machine Works, at Hollidaysburg, Pa. is in the bands of a recelver, — Lutz, an old soldier, killed himself lipsburg, N. J.—The Mary J. Castner, with a cargo of scrap Iron from Bos- Raes, - schooner ton for Philadelphia was run into and scnk of ( Mass.,, by the four-masted K. Park during thick weather, -Frank Gorman, of killed, Miller freight collision on hatham, schooner Wm, The crow were saved, — Wilkesharre, Pa, Reade badly hurt by a the Lehigh Valley road near Wilkesbarre, All the prisoners except one in the county jail at Milan, Missouri, ~Anton von Karab, trina, was adjudged insane at Chicago.— Peter A. Deyo, assistant postmaster at Moriah Centre, N. Y., arrested, charged with rifling registered letters ~The of insurance underwriters, in NX. insurance « Wis and escaped. was nvenlion session in Watertown, , agreed that { life The eo the Iowa soldiers Colonel H. C, Cross, of Empx dent of the " Ba the expenses mpanies are excessive, —— yrnerstone was nid in and sailors’ ria, ex-pr . Kansas and Texas Hoad, and enealdnt ph the First National Bagok died suddenly at Island, Miel Oo f Hig oh i es to a well to escs of Emporia, the Hote of Isaac 1, Mackinac ~The family Wis, , flames, Meado A relief! party a dug Bridge, went in the found there dead,—-Fisher was wiped out by the fire,, Towney, wh Ape were found eighteen dead bodies in Sandstone, Over one thousand destitute refugees from the burned towns in Minnesota cared for in Duluth, —' in Hinckley, we President James J, Northern Railroad, Donald Smith, of Montreal, to the fund for the fire are being ‘he property josees Mion. , amount to over £600,000, Hill, of! the and nes Great his yelate, each gave #1! aul flerers, — Alston by the Second West Virginia district Republi. cans, to run against Mr, Nergeant Nicholas Sheehan, was murdered by two burglars, whom he was pursuing, Pitts burg in the equity suit brought against John 8. Duss and other trustees of the E Society, by Christian Se ginia, nad others, ——In a A. Winchester and Joseph Moore at Lock Haven, Pa., stabbed the latter and then Reeder, who interfered, —— Henry Riley, a well-known colored horse trainer, was killed in Accomac county by a bh Wilson. ~ Police of Cleveland, O - Testimony was taken at eonomite rae, —— Wm, 8. sixteen, in Jacksonville, Fia, —— At Savbrook, Kutz, both of Brooklyn, N. Y., two and fifteen years respectively, drowned near the mouth of Oyster River, Wm, Curnew, a wealthy coal run down by a train near Shamokin, Ya. and killed, Mrs. John Kauffman shot her Cincinnati, who sued her for divoree st. Louis, ——Myron RK Kent, formerly a prominent real estate and insurance man of Mandan, N. D., was arrested in Arlington by Walter Ebrlickman, a Minneapolis detective, Kent is charged with complicity in the mur der of his wife, and also for embezzlement and forgery, ——At 8 meeting of the execu- tive and financial committees of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad Come. pany, D. W, Caldwell, president asd man- ager of the Nickel Plate road, was appointed general manager in the place of the late John Newell, president and general manager. ——— Erwin, Gregory and Shumaker, atiorneys for FE. V. Debs and others in the omnibns in. junction, filed in the United States Court in Cincinnati, a demurrer asking that the case be dismissed on the ground of the court not having jurisdiction and insufficiency of ebarges. —John R. Murphy, director of the department of public safety of Allegheny City, waived a heariug for court on a charge of misdemeanor in allowing disorderly places to exist and receiving bribes from the keepers, KILLED IN A STORM. & Belt of Lighta'ng Slay Two Children and Lestroys a House A terrible storm visited Wichita, Kas, The lower part of the town was inundated by a cloudiburst and many telephone wires are down, The lightning was incessant and wt the home of Thomas Herman a bolt of Hght. ning killed his 83-year-old boy, (atally burned @ Y-year-old girl and liternlly tore the house to pieces, cm IIIs 5 ee Tne last pensioner of the Revolution, Sam. uel E. Bakeman, died at Fredonia, NX. Y., in 1860. at the age of 109, He was a private in | Washington's army, and lived for four years RAGING FLAMES. Three Hundred and Sixty-Four Dead in Minnesota, WISCONSIN AND MICHIGAN. The Intense Heat Cooks Vegetables In the Ground on the Farms Desolated by the Flames.- Miles of Rails Warped and Ties Burned, It seems probable that 500 lives were lest by the forest fires in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, and it may be that double that number perished, have gone over the burned district of Min- nesota think that 1.0 an extravagant estimate of the loss of life in that State alone, or par- Railroad surveyors who 9) is not The towns that have been entirely tially destroyed inciud Hinckley, Pokegama, Missouri Creek, Mino Benoit, Spence, Higl Brtdge, Ashland, Washbu Baronette, Granite Lake, Shell re ake and Core k, Wis; and South Rubicon, Mich, In the latter State the towns of Allonez, Phoenix and Eagle River have not been heard fron three days Sandstons, aud Poplar, Marengo, Bashaw, i stoe The property loss is as difficult to estin as the loss of life, All that is postively ko is that it is in the millions St. Paul, Minn, to spread destruction ine wo foraets through the Blazing counties, and lives and towns still fall killed is still As many in the have u The list of those 500. 81 arsely settled district ndoubted! ¥ perished without leaving a trace, the exact number be kn So far will probably never own, as can Le learned the foll towns have been destroyed and io numbers Minn. , 500 to 600 hi are dead, Hine 25, dead; Kiey, 1000 to 1200 iiees Pokegama, Minn, next stat of Hine Mission y, on the BL skiey: 500 inbabitants, fifty d Creek, next static Paul & Miller, Minn. , twelve dead, Wis. Mil near line, Washburn of lumber destroyed it, Wis, In ashes, except on Bashaw, Glidden, Saxon partly destoyed, Glidden was 16 ¢ when last beard fr Hau Wis, Shell I Lake, ren, wiped ort. Barogetie, Gran geville Comstock and | Wisconsin beriand, Pi lamber towns in wa Falls and Superior, partly d fF A The number of dead in these towas and other parts of the « hippewa Falis and Superior 100 persons, The Minnesota conf agrati thing in its path from Fine pear Duluth, The loss to wrty at Hinckiey $800,000, BAIX THE OXLY WEAFON, The heavily-timbered country over relontle i the tracted droughts in the history o try. With the exception of a slight bere and there early last month there has no shov been a drop of rain in that region for the four months, and only a heavy ean save many more towns and the val tion, with downpour abe pine lands from destruc probable additional Josa of life, It is feared that many well-known residents of 8t. Paul have perished in the forest fires t Hinckley and vicinity, Large pumbers of ten days to hunt prairie chickens near Hinch- v, Mora, Sandstone and other po that vicinity. President George Fieeman, of the Minnesota Shoe Company, and Lumberman resident ol! Stiliwater, Lear ints in went hunting in the forests Hinckley and nothing bas been beard of them since, There is little probability of Hinckley ever being rebuilt to its fortrer proportions. The Brennan Lumber Company is not expected to rebuild its plant. The timber in the vicinity is well cut and burned off and there is no chance of any other company coming in Without an enterprise of this kind there is no future for Hinckley exoept as a junction point, Words cannot teil the siory of death and destruction that is revealed to the traveler on the St. Paul & Duluth from Mission Creek two miles above the little town of Miller, or Sandstone Junction. The awlulness of the desolation which strikes upon the eye of the observer as be reazhes the camp which was onee the town of Hinckley, Is more strongly impressed on his vision as he journeys north- ward, The smoke has lifted, revealing a landsenpe bare and black, the few standing trees being charred to a beight of forty feet, while the grass has been burned to the roots, Here and there, in the bleak and dreary streteh of country in what is now a great lone land, was seen the body of a deer, whose fleet foot had not been able to outrun the flames, or of a human being who had been absolutely powerless agin the grim destroyer. The correspondent, actompanttd Judge Nethaway, of Stillwater, and members of a relief party which started from Pine City on a band-ear loaded with provisions to relieve the people of Sandstone, who weto reported in great distress. Two miles above Hinekley | they found lying by the trank of a tree the | body o! un man which was evidently that of a { lumbermun, The relief party proceeded as far as Skunk Lake, where the Duluth limited train was burned, Here they found En. ve gineer Williams in charge of a gang of men, rebuilding the burned bridges. From them it was learned that the living at Bahdstone had been taken to Duluth on special trains Sunday night and their pressing necessities relieved so that help from Fine City was not needed. The party, therefore, resolved it- self into one of searchers for bodies, The house of John Robinson was near RBkunk Lake, in the woods, and his family had sought refuge in the cellar, There was no escape from the fire and the party found the bodies of John Robinson and his wife, Mary Robinson, their eldest daughter, and two smaller children, All the clothing was burned from the bodies, but the victims had been suffocated before the flumes reached them. The hands of the oldest daughter were upraised io an attitude of prayer, Within of the spot in train was & little body of yards ih six hundred long trench, running from the passengers on the limited to a swamp on the inke, came upon the partially-clothed body of a Following along this trench the party men, who, in ponded to the description of General Passen- Otic of the Ralirond, Other of a bad evidently fled and the bodies af to have beep pusmengess on the burned train, 3 b,* Minn. Repo ithward, personal appearance corres ger and Freight Agent Rowley, Duluth and Winnipeg bodies found by the man and a wi who ise nearby, party were those man, from a farm hot two men, who.ure supposed reporting fresh fires t was reported from the ral tion and saw mill town of Carlton, . that fire menaced miles south wre 1 , but later, ater Brief nding (owas 10 the #trenuon beaten back. messages from sur- United Press corres are us follows The smoke is tO Bb © font leary twenty +O. are indistingulshable across the The smoke is so den A bridge at Kan Yer & ravine is i passenger named Faui koer wer : in Hammopd A. IL Abbott 101k Sssembi e ft na street oar Qiang of the New citizen of Glens Valls, ¢ hima! while cieaning a gun, Frederick Partons, a 7-3 in Hamilton, Ohi | sing stra the head bottle thrown from a tral An in-bound Chicago u passenger train ran into was falnily by an empty beer and Eastern a light Hiincis r dense fog in Chicago, fireman, was fatally injured Maud Capron, aged 14, of New York, ‘eidentally by the fall Schenectady, Was ae ¥ shot cousin, a boy about her own age, An east-bound passenger train on the Kansas City, Springfield and Memphis Jail. Missouri, tracks, by obstroctions placed on the Three workmen were seriously injured by an explosion which occurred in the «Bi department of the Union Metallic Cart’ ridge Company's faciory at Bridgeport, Con- necticut, The steamer Connecticut, of the Providence shot Her passengers were boats and the A break iu the Erie Canal near Brighton, the adjacent farms and did great damage, The family of Adrian Courtney, who live hall a mile from the canal, had a narrow, escape from drowning. An electric car in Harlem, a suburb of Chicago, ran ifto a Northern Paeille train and was smashed, John Briggs, the motor. man, was killed, and James Key, colored, a passenger, was probably fatally injured A Lake Shore freight train was wrecked near Erie, Pennsylvania, A young man of respectable appearance, well-dressed and wearing a jockey cap, was found eorushed to death between two large stones on a flat CRY. A despatch from Roecklord, Illinois, says, that William Seaworth, a young farmer, liv. ing near Chana, made a wager with his sis er that he could eat more watermelon than she could. The offer wns taken up. “The boy is dead, and the girl, It is thought, can not recover,’ A despateh from Tiffin, Olio, says that the continued drought has reduced the water in the Sandusky river to such a low stage that the fish are dying by the thousands, and are rotting upon the rocks of the river bed right in the heart of the city, & menace to the health of she publie,” OI 5.53, 055350 Tue police of Milan, Iialy, have arrested an snarchist, in whose possession were papers detailing the plane of a conspiracy to stab the Tux Cenr is sald to be suffering from albu. minuria and his health is seriously affected, Trovicar heat prevalls throughout the Austrian empire and there is much suffer ing. Fianrina has taken place at Shisdma near the Tensift river, Moroeco, The rebel loss is over 100 men, Tar protective duties in New South Wales are to be repealed and replaced by income and land tax, Tar iiiness of the Comte of Paris is belleved to be critical, His family has been sume moned to the bedside, Harv -sronms have done great damage throughout Austria, At Kowno, Poland, three children were killed by hailstones, Heavy fighting took place between the Kaflirs and the Doers, inthe North Transvaal, The Kaflirs were defeated and are now suing for peace, Presipext C. P, Huxrixarox, of the Mex. ean International Builroad, has ordered that the line be extended from Moneclovia to Blerra Majado mining camp, A letter written by an published in London charging serious poach- ing upon the part of American sealers in river, King of Greeos, » - Tue defeat of the Duteh troops sent to pun- unhok was overwhelming, Three columns were involved, killed, wounded and nearly 500, Wa Covrrs Krvrewr, seventh Earl of Albe- marie, is dead, and the loss in missing is sald nied sixty-ihree years, iate Earl was at one time civil Canada and held times, 17 is reported that the Timbu« other French too has met with a disastrous deleat, though the accuracy of the dispatch is credited, The re port that the furces with Mabdi is col. sect of recently lecting bis a5 Allack upon the of Kassals, Uy the Italians is, he wever confirmed, RECOGNITION OF HAWAIL Full Text of the Correspondence Between Presidents Cleveland and Dele. Cleveland Mr. Minister: It is with sincere ceived information ion that | in X resident of the United Sinles red by wail, the recognition so prom your excelleney to the Republ the 1 friendly Permit Hawali, tc me, In reciproe by you towardt 10 assure you behalf of ate the ntiment expressed and iations of fis government of our desire that the re commity and of commercial inter urse which shall be mutually sdvantageous may ever exist between the two ¢ uniries TWENTY PEOPLE DROWNED. Only Bever of a Tarty of Pleasure Seckers Survives Copaine, A party of twenty-seven pleasure seckers | from Burnley were overturned into of Morecomb Bay, near London, by the cap of a boat they had hired. this were Four bodies have been recovered, - EE —— the waler | gimang of number only seven saved, | WORK AND WORKERS. Tue Tremont and Saffolk Mille, the Mid. dlesex Woolen Mills, at Lowell, Mass, start. ed up, giving employment to about 3.600 hands, Tue Ohio Palls Car Werks, at Jefferson. ville, Ind. , will resume operations during the present week, after an idleness of more than a year. The cotpauy employs from 1,200 to 2.000 men, Tux Bennett and Columbia Mills, at New Bedford, Massachdsetts, resamed in part, giving employment to about 1,000 men, The resumption is at the old scale, Tue Tinsmiths' Assembly, of Ottawo, On tario, has decided to withdraw from the Knights of Laber, feeling “that no adequate return has been given for the thousands of dollars that have been sent across the line by way of per capita tax.” Surr was begun in Columbia, O,, against the Steutenvilie Pottery Company under the inw forbidding the transportation of alien workmen under contract, It ischarged that a skilled potter to manage the works was brought over from England, AT a mass meeting of the Pullman strikers in Chicago, called to consider the question of ealiing off the strike, the Jocal unions were instructed to eall a special meeting at once and vote for a delegate from each union to meet with the central committee and decide tha matter, Tun Cocheco Mills, at Dover, Now Hamp. shire, after a shut-down since July Slat started up, A week ago it was announce that there would be aten per cont, sut«down, All but the mule spinners returned to work, they refusing to accept the cut, It is shown, however, that the cut averages but six per cent, throughout the works, There fa but little filing on hand, aud the mills, it fs thought, ennnot run long. A thousand hands are employed. IMPROVEMENT IN BUSINESS. Kany Encouraging Features Noted In Bradatrect's Weekly Review, Brodstreet’s Review says: “At all but few of the cities from which special telegrams are received favorable influences ars shown to have been at work, resulting in still fur. ther improvement in the business situation since the settlement of the tariff question, New England woolen mills sre now report. ng re-orders for heavy woolens, Prints and 1ress woolens are selling freely, and there hus been and Is an inereased funds at larger Eastern centers not only for withdrawals of goods from bond, but to mee! nerensed offerings of commercial papers, “It is noteworthy that the floancial condi. don of Texas merchauts is said to be bettey shan for years, One of the most jpteresting rade features consequent on the new tarifl 8s reported from Galveston, that an ex- port order to the West Indies of 10,000 bar- rels of flour bas been canceled by the Spanish retalintory duty, reason of “At Boston a fair fall business is doing in iry goods, firmness charsolerizing cottop inbrics prices, owing lo the New Pelord aud Fall River strikes, At Philadelphia sugar is and it is canny heavier stocks, obaeeoo manufacturers are busier on im- since the settlement of the General trade at Baltimore owing to the somewhat inex pectedly large number of buyers in all West, whose p have resulted nantiover last week — HOUSES SINK INTO THE EARTH. Remarkable Cave ln ata Fervsyivenia Col Miners liery~ Bese sed. The litle mini in Lackawannn « the mos ever known in this regi The sex ng town of Scoteh Valley was swaliowed up in one of ete mine caAve-ins ne of the disaster is on tho eastern slope of Mount Lookout CO pH the stall The the score of houses wing the hamlet ing st the n of the wildest » region and it is known, however, 1 on either slide Lamietl are ug sink-hole ther } ir gi ap Ki SEVEN SHOT IN HAITL An Abortive Attrmpt Wo Murder EK ppoiyte’s Favorite Taughter, In Halt seven per wiih the al der Mrs daughter, ihis Las ca Gauller, used a tremend cit ement, The censorshi trolling the press, Times ient than GRE, have i ever in toe pubije has sho must soon se Hippolyte of the , the aged wn signs paysical ood result from his extreme the uneasy existence that perpetual dang and eternal eonspiracies against the Government have made for him, The d of his d¢ preted and the politicn] ambitions that grow ut of this By « wnfall is hope bave been stirred to white Ite plot to kill his daug is believed among Haltiess to bea sign of approaching disorder. This woman is ported to be an active politician and the President's wise hier, Mrs. Gauth re. one of counsellors, She is detested as well feared by the Mulatio or Crecle of Port au Prince, who the nies of Hippoiyte, the jeader are bitter ene- of the pure- blooded negroes, The intest news of Hippolyte's tain Rockwell, which arrived from Azua and other porte, When she satled Rippolyte was mortaily Hil. WEATHER CROP BULLETIN. in the Cotton Belt and Dreuth in the West The Weather Durean, in its report of weather and crop conditions for the week says: In the western portion of the cotton re gion there has been 100 much rain for cotton and the staple bas sustained considerable injury from rust, shed ding and boll worms, While wet weather has renuced the grade of cotton in Texas, the crop is reported as doing well, and with favorable weather con. ditions, a large crop will be gathered. South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana report more or less damage from rotting, rust or shedding, but more favorable reports are received from Arkansas and Tennessee, Corn is maturing rapidly in North Dakota and Wisconsin, and cutting has begun in Missouri, Iowa and Minnesota, and in In. diana corn is maturing slowly. The crop bas improved in Tennessee and in portions of Illinois, and lowland corn ds doing fairly well in Obio, Drouth conditions generally prevail ihroughout the northern districts east of the Rocky Mouutains, and, owing to the dry and baked condition of the soll, but little (lowing tor fall seeding bas yet been done, William Cullen Bryant's mother kept a diary for 08 years without missing » day, This is the entry for November 8, 1784: “Storming, wind N. BE. chureed; 7 in the evening son born,” It would seem that Mr. Eseessive Rain BeFARE 44 uot inher bis postion prediie. PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS Epitome of Wows Oleaned From Various Farts of the Biate A wreck on the Lehigh Valley Rallrong near Wilkes-Barre resulted in the death of Frank Gorman, of Wilkes-Barre, and serious njury of Fireman Miley Reade, The Middletown Natiopal Haak, by Simon Cameron, founded closed fs doors after paying out the last penwy of eash on band, John RK Geringer, of Danville, a of the Legislature, { ounty Court nember was arrnigued in the Derke charged with defrauding the The Pennsylvania Steel Associa ie Ballway adjourned, Noel Mulson was hanged at Pittsburg, Coke after securing their old but no trouble is feared, Forest fires are menacing lives and proper- strikers Northwestern counties Harrity the wal of ex-Judge Bucher, of Becretary received formal Lewis. Congressman Beranton was renominated ie Lackawanna Republicans, Dela Green i, former cashier of the g@func National Bank, of Muncy, wap place a trial in the United Btates Co at Wil. Lamsport The Seventeenth Distriet Congressional Demoeratie conference at Bunbury Is in & GiocK over the . candidate, The Civil Bervice Commission's investiga- om 4 Hoe close iho simmissioners reported that ¢ nfl feting nn Pr ony made IR impossibie to Thomas J, Hart of Pike county the Democrat i bd 14 nagressional Distriet at Milo 3 inated for Congress Ly Eighth Cx feating Cs Polish Catholl i organized a new chureh, Mutchler, nEressman os at Ha > sal A ston held a meets ing an yy T; mmiiwed to prison Harry E Beltnawr was wn, charged with money on forged the ex-strikers in the coke region stated ABOUT T NOTED PEOPLE Gx, kers $0 friends pe Hanne pointment { nierence at Soon ’ is feared r Olive Schreiner's ma t 1 African Farm, i b.} Her publ # $s ue acl ther od Crenses, wilh an ing the 75th § Brox he was 4. At the age fore the King of Italy. peared in all earned us mu Mu. Pency Basxprasox Bir William Lane Do General at New York, past mania, and xiso Danube, He British army in Iodia, the consular service Mz H Wroio-Brorxveiy has just returned from a complete round of the Libyan desert, including thai of Siwah, where the temple of Jupiter Am. Alexandria the Great visited. The complete tour had previously oaly been made by the German traveler, Rohils Mr, Weld-Blundell traveled over 12,000 miles cn parts of the world, and bas has §500 a performance, eed w ho, will sue ker as Dritish Consul has been Conspl Gen eral lor the few year: at Galatz, Rou- the Lower lieutenatd in the but left in 1870, mmissioner of was f« rmeriy a the army for the oases of which Oxx of the most inveterate novel readery in the House is Lepresentative Gear, of lowa, ex-Governor of that State and Senator-wet, He is regarded as one of the strongest men in of povers- but does not allow public problems to absorb bis whole time and When. ever be bas an hour's leisure he is sure to pick up a standard novel and bury himself in is pages, Tne Emperor of China. is imitating his Majesty of Germany in the lisclizess wis infroducing into the Chinese public se A mandarin named Tsul had rendered him. interest, to degrade him. He therefore ondered the peccant mandarin to pass a literary exami- nation, and as the caiprit bad not kept up his classics, and the examiners were hot par~ ticularly instructed to make things easy for him, he failed miserably, He was, therefore, degraded and reduced from a Red Button to a White Dutton. VIKING SHIP SUNK. The Famous Craft Goes to the Dot. tom of the River. After safling thousands of miise over the Atlantic Ooean, up the St. Lawrense aad through the lakes to Ohleago without a mis” hap, the Viking ship was suak in the Chi. engo River during the inte storm, Tale famous vessel was ona of the notasle ex- hibits at the World's Fale, Viking ship, which was bulit on the mons of an old Viking rover found fourtesn azo In the crouad deep nader the vile ye of Gogstad, near Randeljord, salisd Christiania oa April 9, 1988. Hoar cone fam was the famous Captain Magans Anderson, who, with a ploked crew, i slong the coast for a tims and early in May commenced the trip across the Atlantis, which ented Jum iy. Captain Anisre son's i was given our, Was to show hat the Norsemen might have discovarad Amorion willie on soma of their ventureso us trips on boats such as the Viking, Wien the strange veait reaohod Now York, | it remainsd in North River ot soma time and wae of -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers