NEWS IN BRIEF, fhe murder of Louise Frost and the Purning at the stake of her murderer Gave revived the movement in Colo- pado for the reinstatement of capital ‘punishment in that State. Two freight trains were In collirion ok the Baltimore and Ohio, near Ohio- pyle. Engincer Charles Walters was killed and Brakeman Geo. H. Quantz badly injured. No clue has been found to the where- abouts of Miss Anna Elizabeth Lamp- ¥in, who disappeared from her home in Richmond a week ago. Attorneys for Rudyard Kipling sued out an injunction in New York against R. F. Fenno & Co. for Infringement of patent. Ben Higanbotham was acquitted at | | i i i @ulloden. Governor Tyler issued a proclama- Son calling an extraordinary session of the legislature to meel on Janu- ary 23. late John Sherman, living in Des Moines, Ia., was paralyzed Superintendent Prait, of the Carlisle dian School, submitted his report. The British steamer Georgian Prince, ®apiain Filet, arrived at Philadelphia with Captain Anderson and his crew «of thirteen men, of the abandoned Nor wegian bark Highfiyer. The Havana Trades Union seek dag to have incorporated in the Cuban epnstitution a declaration against menopolies, the move being directed | is Mrs. Eliza T. Griswold, of Philadel ghia, who claims that she placed $163, 808 with ex-Mayor Strong for invest ment, aued ou! an injunction against he executors. One of the indictments against Rev. Br Wharton was quashed by Judge Weisley at Freehold, N. J., and the ether two may alse be proven defe Nive. Dr. Christopher T. Ahlstrom and an unknown woman were found dead, Raving been asphyxiated in a room in she Boulevard Hotel in New York. The schooner Mascotte arrived at San Francisco with stories fights with the cannibals on the Admiralty Klands and Solomon Island. The prisoners on trial in Woodstock, ¥a., on the charge of robbing the Mas- sanutten Bank, were acquitted A heavy snow storm raged in New York State about Buffalo, and also in parts of Ohio and Pennsylvania. There was a clash at Tampa between cigarmakers of the American and the Spanish unions. Taree persons were fatally, by a natural gas Pittsburg Henry Ulrich, on of good family, was indicted in Richmond for forgery. Three boys are on trial at Philippi W. Va, on the charge of irain-wreck- Ing. Isaac Burriolo, convie of wife- murder, was hanged in Wellsboro, Pa The murder of Louise Frost by Pres- ton Porter, colored, has stirred up race! feeling such an extent that all negroes of bad character have been warned to leave Elbert and lincoln eountiex, A negro accused of love in Albemarle, N. C., got away from the mob, which bad taken him from jail, and is now free Irwin K. Roby, of Waynesboro, Va and Miss Cordelia M. Potter. of Staun- ton, Va.. eloped to Winchester and were married Thirty-four of the Chicago Irish* Am- bulance Corps, who fought for the Boers, arrived in New York and were welcomed there The four men accused of killing Miss Jennie Bosachieter were arraigned Paterson, N J., and pleaded not guilty The Virginia Conference of the M. E Church South has selected Newport News as its next meeting-place. Miss Carrie Wesler, of St. Thomas. Pa., mentally deranged by ill-health, committed suicide The United States lightship Boush Bluff was badly damaged by a fire in a shipyard in Norfolk. Bamuel Sheppard was convicted in Elizabeth, W. Va., of murdering his wile, B. Eberle, a tailor, of Passaic, N. J, was held up by two female robbers. Virginia College, Roanoke, Va. burned to the ground yesterday morn- | dng. The 150 young lady stadents| saved practically nothing of their of- feets. No lives were lost. The loss is about $75,000, partly covered by In-! furance. The committee of twelve appointed : at the last General Conference of the | Protestant Episcopal Church has! drafted three canon relative to &-| yorce, to be submiited to the next | General Conference for adoption. ; The National Civic Federation is-! sued a call for a national conference | to consider the best means of securing | the settlement of labor disputes by conciliation and arbitration. : In hix annual report Admiral Brad- | ford, chief of the Naval Bureau of | Equipment, recommends the estab] lishment of wireless telegraphy on several naval ships, According to Commissioner of Im- | migration Fitchie, immigrants have! arrived In this country at the rate of 1000 per day from all countries since July last. Miss Loonie, who Is serving a sen- tence in Elmira, N. Y., retracted e confession she made ra Mayor Frank H. Flood geries, The 400 striking miners at the Malt- by colliery of the Lehigh Valley Com- pany returned to work. Autnony Comstock, in behalf of the Bociety of Suppression of Vice, threat- ens a war on places of vice in New York. A masked burglar attempted to rob the residence of Orrin W. Potter, a millionaire. He tried to chlo- roform Mrs. Potter, who awoke. She was knocked The man es- A bill has been introduced into the Georgia Legislature to disfranchise the of injured explosi boy ted » i iO poisoning Dr in i in her for- Woman's Christian Temperance Union will meet in Washington No vesnber 30. “ iy WAS BURNED AT STAKE Vengeance Wreaked Upon a Colored Youth in Wilds of Colorado. HAD CAUSED A WHITE GIRL'S DEATH. Doomed Culprit Taken From a Train by a Vigilance Committee and, Upon Request of bered About 300 Citizens of Lincoln County. his fiendish Preston was familiarly where was committed, or, as he on the exact spot crime Jr. his deed, It was 6.22 o'clock when the around the negro, and 20 minutes later was extinet, ed while the flames shriveled up his flesh could only be guessed from the and the cries he gave from time to time. The executioners, who numbered al $00 citizens of Lincoln county, had not the least semblance of the ordinary Th every was deliberate, and during all the preparations As throughout the sufferings of the negro, hardly an unnecessary word was spoken. Grimly they stood in a circle about the fire until the body was en tirely consumed and then quietly they took their way back to Limon, whence they departed homes shorily afterward. Preston Porter realize the awful was desined to undergo. As exhibited indifference to the of his crime, s0 he seemed to lack understanding of terrible quences. For more than an hour preparations for his in progress he stood mute and sullen among the avengers, When everything was ready he walked to the stake with a firm step, pausing as hs the of broken boards, He was allowed He arose and placed iron stake and half wound chains about limbs Kerosene wood, and after a W. Frost the Frost, whose was found spot, applied a maich For ; Ties flickering Hs mob elr act as well for thelr did not ses to punishment m that he had anormity 11 Case he its while execution » reached kneel ¥ circle prayer. time the in his £9 to take his 1 doze: hody w“ his oil was applied pause of little mutilated brief father cerned fv week tha ree Oe BRED On at a little flame Then the oil blazed up, sparks flew the air and the wood began to « Almost instantly the negro'a caught fire. Even though tl must have been scorched he di fer a The flames or upward on clothing: ths flew up in a cloud of pale s ter turned his head and a sound His With =a he streiched rapidly increasing flames as and uited a cry of pain God! let me go, men! ['ve got thing more to tell you. Pleas: go. O my God. my God! In terrible screeches thease words he first he had uttered aloud. came from the negro A terrible tugging at the chains, a succession of awful groans and screams, the agony was ai Iast breaking sullen composure. Not an caped him, but he begged and plead io be shot Suddenly the burned through shoulders slipped For a ant t the arms were raised in supplication while burning pieces of clothing ped them. The body away the fire, the head than the { «till fasioned to tl This was not and fog pinutes those stolid men were dis certed; they feared that ihe only maining chain would give way If this had occurred the partly burn ed human being would have among them in his blazing garments And not many would have cared to capture him again. But the chain held fast. The body was then in such rons tion that only the legs were in the fire The cries of the wretch were redoubled, and he again begred to be shot. Some wanted to throw him over into the fire, others tried to dash oll upon him. Boards were carried and a large pile made over the prostrate body. soon were ignited, and the terrible heat sudden convulsive his head is far ttawn oath rope heiding his hands Then arms, head through the chs n ins the body siodd ere t drop- frem from ef expected victim fow unconsciotis, bringing death a moments later, This concluded the that «pot, first. secand tragedy the terrible avenging of the Ration Test Satisfactory. Wagldttigion (Special).—Capiain Fos. Who has been in the Indian Terri- Sop er, the United Btates Army, telegraphed Acting Commissary General Weston that he has just returned from making the test of the ration prepared by the board of army officers and has found it highly satisfactory. There are two rations manufactured by supply concerns yet fo be tested, and it prob- ably will be some time before the re- sult isa known. Senator Morgan Renominsied. Mountigomery. Ala. (8pecial). ~The joint caucus of Democrats of both houses of the Alabama Legislature, unanimously nominated John T. Mor- gan for re-election as United States Senator. No other name was present. ed. Benator Morgan was called before the meeting and made an eloquent speech in thanking the members for the honor conferred. The tenopposition members of the Legislature in separate caucus pledge their votes to Morgan. Increase in Exports, Washington (8pecial). ~The month ly statement of the exports of domestic products, issued by the Bureau of Sta- tistics, shows that during October the ex were as wa, comparison $xports made ‘with October, 1 pari n Breadstufts, $21,913,832, $2,128,000; gattle and hogs A ’ . : 1 fi i Tm 8 / 120,079, decrease, $463,000. Total for the month, $105,260,689, net increase, $29,308,994, TRADE NEWS OF THE WEEK. Reviews by Dun & Co. and Rradstreet’s Show a Pronounced Tendency Toward Firmer Quotations, New York (S8pecial).~R. GG. Dun & { Co.'s "Weekly Review of Trade” says: | “Prices of commodities advance al- | most without exception, and all the { changes in manufactured goods are in i the direction of firmer quotations. The goods carried | i8 a feature of our reports from most of the leading centers. Scarcity of labor gives manafacturers in the Mid- | dle Btates great concern. “Activity at iron and steel mills sieadlly increases, and there is an i equally uniform advance in quotations. The gain has been more general this week than at any previous time this | season, pig fron moving up 25 cents a : i i i i smallness of stocks of in bars, billets, plates and structural materials generally. Instead of the re- cent agitation for cheaper steel rails, there Is now talk of an advance to $28, owing to the further in steel bii- lots, “The report of pig iron production on November 1 by the ‘Iron Age’ shows rise PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY (rangers National Organization Hold Ansual Convention. WORMY MASTER JONES’ ADDRESS. He Says Farmers Are Paying Too Much for Articles They Need—Otherwise They Have No Cause for Complaint--He Wants Con- gress to Enact Laws te Regulate Corpora tions and Trusts, Washington (Speeial).—The 34th an- nual session of the National Grange, Patrons of Husbandry, was held here with a good attendance. The chief fea- ture of interest was the annual ad- dress of Worthy Master Aaron Jones, of Indiana, who sald that in most of the States the order had enjoyed great prosperity during the year. In a few States it had not succeeded so well The members of the Grange, while affiliating with each of the political parties in the last campaign, had the smallest the tober 1 since Beptember, 29.000 tons stocks from most en- with the ac rivduction of in furnace couraging. These figures tivity in nll branches of indicates that there reduction in output, gtatement will pr than 200 furnaces A temporary market on Mon above 89 cents i in be no further the December show will but obably in blast. flurry in wheat fay the December It was reported were turn the LOOK i Street operators * attention ain. much discussel advance In at Chicago heavy, bul scarcity of first quality fresh eges has brought very high prices Fallures for the week we the United Btates againgt 219 last and thirty-three in Canada twenty Bradstreet “The tonic « lect of weather is again testified to by from practically lemand fe wear Among 1-4c., advan ii the week, d z frost having terminaled further growth Estimates of the crop it 10 to gr WEE no. re 217 against last year “ Bayne sensonably cold all markets of a brisk ciothing and foot- notable 1¢ ou on sige abo 250.000 “Cold weather |} io the butter market shipments 687 G0) hu inst 5 : the OOr- 6x. b.5 shels bus ok of 1885 HEKT against 3.287.827 4.003.718 bushel in S40 G07 h wn Wi H bushels last FIERCE BATTLE WITH BOXERS. Desperate Fight Near Tsang-chow, i B By ecived the §: cable) by steamship Vie taria concerning the rebellion in South China say that the Triade have broken out in Kwangsi, and Marshal Su, com- n-chief of the imperial forces, WWiorna Yioe® rev wander. the order. Never had the conditions been more favorable for the extension of the order than now. While agricultural somewhat improved were a few vears what they should prices of what farmers he sald, are high what they had to sell, action should be cauge an equitable adjustment prices in all the leading staples conditions over what ago, they are be, sald Mr they not had buy. LOO would the industrial combinations “until the an amendment to the Constitu ciear and express in its ferms empowering Congress with the right and authority to regulate corpora- The interstate commerce law, Grand Master argued, should be that all sections of the country could secure fair and hie freight rates. This being se cured, the hardest blow that at this time could struck monopolies trusts the greatest encour- agements and thrift would The John the he to and fo enlerprise be given report ©! Trimble, of Wa that 152 new gre during tl numbering a half the Pr L483 oe shington anges had the retary been order H Addresses were i who Jubel * to-~aperation Kelley ple dged dian Grange der: by Brigham the Edward Maine; oy i Lhe of the Cana je Or ry J. H. Agricultural Depart- Wiggin and Mrs. Wig- Mrs. George A, Bowen Connecticut: 8 H of Ohio Mrs, Katherine M of 1l- chaplain of the of that the work of the Seer in Assistant of of Eilix tahl, Grange 8 nos, the The British have pfantry and artillery to guard the Kow loon frontier When the tor destroyer Handy was land- encountered a of and threw shells among them idvanced on Sanchuan, rout- ing them and killing forty A strong Kwansi marching to join the Kwansing rebels and ds the imperial r Knangning and captured thirty. attle was fought at Tsang-Chow, ww Shantung-Chili border, on Oc- 17. between imperd Boxers. General troops the Boxers 12.000, wo thousand men were left to guard and General Mel in of the imperial troops, gave battle outside. The battle lasted all day, and resulted loxers with great Their leader, Chen. refused to retreat, and when the fight was lost fought with 300 desper. adoez in a rav until all His head was taken and walls of the city. Six were killed, Consul Goodnow, made a summary despatched vedo-baat ing rebels men she force ag they force of rebels feated nea A on t tosh ¥ i f i WW thee said Yaan's Chins Ev HONK ine thousand rebels of Shanghai, of Baxer missionaries were murdered other missionaries in Shans! and Chil are missing. FIVE HUNDRED STARVING INDIANS. Mre. James Smith Briags Story of Destitution From Cook Inlet. Tacoma, Wash. (Special). Mrs, James Smith, just returned from Cook Inlet, Alaska, says that fully half of the thousand Indians in that section, comprising five tribes, are slowly dy- ing of starvation. The influx of white prospeciors has resulted in the killing off of much game, with the result that the Indians are deprived of flesh for food and furs for clothing. They dried salmon last summer, but not enough to last through the season, and winter finds 400 to 600 of them without enough food to last until December. Mrs. Smith, who ix a wealthy miner's wife, divided her stock of provisions with the destitute Indians, and now appeals for further aid. Most of these Indians belong to the Russian church, tnt it is powerless to help them. Un- leds provisions shall be sent by steam- er at once, she says, hundreds will surely die. While living at Grays Har- bor eight years ago, Mrs. Smith--then Mrs, Martha White—swam into the surf and rescued three shipwrecked sallors from drowning, for which Con- gress voted her a medal. Peoria has 108 unions, Cincinnati tallors won their strike. Bouth Carolina has a State Fodera- tion of Labor, The German Printers’ Union label is given to eight-hour offices only. . The florists in London r in a day on from customers about $20, Tho high price of coal has 10 raised cut flow the price and editors congress, have resolve EIGHTEEN MORE CONGRESSMEN. New Reapportionment. Washington the Census Merriam of the President figures on the Director of called the atten the fact that population of the total of which al- ready has been announced, are in such shape that they will be at the disposal of Congress when it meets for any ac- tion It may desire to take in the direc- tion of a reapportionment hill, The reapportionment following the count of the twelfth census become operative by law in 1803 » prob. ably will considerabl in the ratio and ber of Representatives apportionment Starting with a ratio of one to every 30.000 inhabitants there were sixty-five First Congress This ratio under the tenth census reached 151.911, giving a House of Representatives with 225 members The eleventh census, in 1880, gave a population of 62622250 an increase 12.500000, With this the ratio was to 173.901 people to each Representative, and at this ratio the House numbered 356, an increase of twenty-one members. The ratih un- der the new census probably will reach 200000, With an increase of 13 - ==5,464 shown by the present census, and letting majority fractions of the apportionment count for an additional {Special) tion the io the $ be a or would make an increase of eighteen members in the next House, Reapportionment on this basis would leave but four States that would member each. than 200000, which would save them Cripple Held on Hot Stove. Wilkes-Barre burglars held old and crippled John Kane on a red-hot stove in an effort to extort from him the hiding place of his money. They got nothing, because ribly burned and suffering rightfully. Kane lives alone near Sugar Notch, six miles from here, in a small house, some distance from the nearest neigh. bor. It has long been sald that he had money hidden away. He worked at picking coal from the culm banks and seiling it. Years ago he lost a foot in the mines. Bookkeeper's Alleged Shortage. Neshville, Tenn. (Special). —De- tectives are searching for William 8. Mark, bookkeeper in the grain apd commission house of Neil & Shotner, of this city, who Is charged wiih being short in his accounts to the extent of fourteen or fifteen thousand dollars, Mark's alleged shortage extends back two years, He ia all to have manipulating bills of ing of grain, ete, SRI 0 alain Planning Inaugural Ball, Washington (Special).—~The subject of having a special build for the in- uguration ball is being 13 KILLED IN RAILROAD CRASH. I International Express Plows Inte a Field With Awful Consequences. Paris (By cable) While the Parls- Madrid express train was running at a high rate of speed, near Dax, Depart ment of Landes, the engine was de- rafled and the whole train ran down an embankment and 200 yards across country, when it turned over, It is known that 13 persons who were killed and 20 injured have already beep taken oti! of the wreck. It is believed that others are still buried in the wreckage. Among the killed are Benor J. F. Ca- nevaro, the Peruvian Minister ito France, and Senor Elgher, an attache of the Peruvian ieogation at Madrid. The wife of Benor Canevaro had both legs broken. It is feared that other members of the legation are among the victims, Count Carnera, the Italian Envoy, who was sent to formally notify the Spanish Court of King Humbert's death, 1s also reported to be among the killed, but this has not been confirm- ed. Bo far as known there are no Americans among the victims, unless John McEwen Ames, whose national- ity Is unknown, but who is a resident of Paris, belongs to the United States He was only slightly injured and has at Bordeaux The disaster was at to the excessive speed which Is variously state from 60 to 75 miles an now attributed the track ascribed the train, have been but 11 subsidence ju i 10 of the PRESIDENT WILL RETAIN CABINET. Asks Members to Serve Four Mere Years Disposes of Gossip. Washington (Special). ~—At the meet. ing of the Cabinet Tuesday President McKinley, discussing the recent tions and their results, expressed the hope that every member of the Cabi- net would remain in his official family during the next four years, He regarded the elec. tions as an indorsement only of his own ideas and policies, but also of the Administration of depart- ment of the government With the request on Mr. McKinley's part that present members of Cabinet serve him during the coming four years, all talk of changes in that body ends ‘Cabinet” makers have been busy fig- uring on the future. It has been ru- mored that almost everyone would be retired, Mr. McKinley's action, how. ever, that has in his advisers, and if any of them re- sign it will be because they are swayed by other reasons It is generally thought that will be a few changes Hay's health is such as to probabl duce him to retire, and rent that Mr. Long and At Griges are cago the exceplion the Cabinet members and probable will be any further changes eloe. 1 result of the not YY OTY CYery the his the probable Would-tw confi indicates he nhaen ¥ thers y reporis Are cur Gen- life three farne OTHE) private of these eral for With however, conient, thers seem iL is not that HENRY VILLARD DEAD, A Power in the Raliroad World Until Reverses Crippled His Fortune. New York (Special) the financier, home, Thorwood Park, near Dobbs Ferry. The causes death were apoplexy, from which he had been a sufferer for several weeks, and an af- fection of the throat. A week ago he contracted a severe cold, which hasten ed the end. When death came there were gathered around the bed Mr. Vil- lard’'s wife, hiz sons, Oswald G.. Har- old G., with his wife; Mrs. William Lloyd Garrison, of Boston: his sis- ter-in-law, and Mr. Villard's only daughter, Mrs. James W, Bell, of Dres. den, Germany. In addition to the fam- fly. Mr. Villard leaves a sister, Mrs Emma von Xviander wife of Mr. Rovert von Xylander, of the Bavarian Army. Mr. Villard had resided in Dobbs Ferry during the summer months for the past eighteen vears Villard summer Henry died at his of inventor Paticn Dead. New York (Special). Frank Jar viz Patten, inventor the multiplex telegraph system, which was purchas- ed by the Western Union Telegraph Company. and of the gyroscope used on ocean vessels for giving the posi- tion of the in midocean, died suddenly here, The cause of death learned. Patten was born in Bath, Maine, 48 years ago. He was a gradu- ate of West Point Military Academy and served in the battle of Wounded Knee and in the battle of Forlorn Hope as a lieutenant. He is sald w bave been an intimate friend of ekx- Campbell. of Ohio. Jamaica Ginger Fatal. Centerville, Md. (Special).—Two brothers, Charles and William E. of vessel has not been Kent Island, near the Chester River and oystering, were found dead, one in his shanty and the other in the age. The cause of death is supposed to have been drinking Jamaica ginger FOREIGN AFFAIRS. A serious Boxer movement ls report. od south of Pao Ting Fu. There was a big demonstration of Belgian socialists in Brussels. General Baden-Powell has contract. ed enteric fever in South Africa. Eight persons were Killed and 15 injured in a raliway collision at Choisy Leroi, France, Snakes have al last been found in ireland, two ring snakes having been killed at Bray. in a battle between Chinese imperial troops and Boxers at Tsan Teou 6000 Boxers were killed, A fearful typhoon raged at Hong Kong, and caused much destruction among the shipping. Lord Roberts reported a flerce battle of two with the Boers in the vie Komati River, BANK LOSES $201,000. More Than Double the Amount of Capi tal Is Missing. THE ASSISTANT CASHIER MISSING. A Cinclanati Woman, Angry Because He Did Not Take Her on as Trip to Yellowsione Park, Gives the Bank Directors Informe tion Which Leads to an lavestigation-- Trouble Feared. Cincinnati (Special) United States Bank Examiner Tucker took porases slon of the German National Bank at Newport, Ky., and posted a noties that the bank would remain closed pending an examination. Examiner ‘Tucker charges that Frank M. Brown, the individual book keeper and assistant cashier, ix miss Ing. He says that a partial investiga tion shows a shortage of about $201,800 Brown had been with the bank 312 years and was one of the most trusted nen ever connected with this oid bank It Is stated by the experts that the shortage extended back as far as 10 years. The capital of the bank is only $160,000. The alle shorter count and more ti stock oe 2 . By i# double that Tregerve fate ai fig ing thelr The First National Bank of ™¢ 1 Was w 233 the inclad Ne Wao and now with the German National od, New port has For tw weeks of shortage wnas ang a positors withdrew thelr ae counts. Three bank ex aminers made itement for the only one b § FLOP R weeks ago the a good =i layed port inst Buspicion of this by examin statement Last Wednesday Brown left Was announced that he INE on a vacat { Odin and itd gone how’ get a ticke irned now ie ERR erally of this country Brown was suspended last Tuesday pending an in vestigation and that experts have been at work all while the officers and dir mak ing annou: evervihing was all right ffrers and names CIlY 8 wie an LOT that he did Of 20 there, and it bedi out past week eclors have heen that Hae directors thels cement t he GOWN ¥s Waning isis, men ia th good A is Pari: C. Brown man, who is known New Orleans an th Lal losses OPS missing itteburg two wharf! as w boat supplies the Mong fq } » Takhar from i every river ¢ head of the stores The paving A paying tells io 3 cashier bank is also teller fer wen Brows Tim his dinner t is st did most of his work during the lunch of the cashier Bank Examiner Tu gion on Sunday in Newport that fol publication here The bank exa that the hank =» ing investigation, believed that th prevent a stampede, as the exc in Newport is There are among them being the n lations, which have the many poor peopie uy THO Rea pani thi absene a notice ned pend mit it is generally will iemen canse of the lowed at Brown's miner posted 11 : 4 I nol be ope be onee 0] } 8 proceeding no! nienss a host Sd depositors irs il o building Savings Th ae CE § TWO TRAINS CRASR TOGETHER. A Fatal Collision Near Oil City--Several Per; sons Killed and Others Injured. Oil C Pa iald A ; collision bwtween a freight rain and a passenger train occurred two miles west of Polk Both engines ds all of t passenger coaches tracks, and 40 oll and cosl cars of the freight were The killed were: Thomas Sutton, bhaggageman of Ash tabula; John Kane, head brakeman of the freight train, Newcastle, Engineer Pitzer, of the freight, Newcastle; twn male passengers and the newshoy names unknown, Conductor James Paden hurt in ternally. Engineer Nathan Sonter has both legs and left hip broken, and Wil Ham Marvin, of Andover, O.. has left arm broken and head and face eu! The latter was thrown off the train over a 1i4oot embankment, but walk ed two miles to call help for the rest of the injured. iy, {I were miolished, the Inf the deraiied. ix Prohibition in Maine. Portland, Me. (Special). From nosis ly every section of Maine comes $9 ports of unusual! activity on the part of the antiliquor element, and the opin. lon prevails that the general wave of temperance reform already apparent will sweep over the State. The awak- ening is attributed mainly to the elec tion of a Prohibition sheriff in Cum- berland county last September. Ad though the new sheriff will not enter upon his duties until the beginning of the coming year, evidence that a change is expected is apparent already. in this city It is now almost impossible to purchase lignor of any kind. In Waterville, Augusta, Hallowell, Gardiner, Skowchagen, Rumford Falls, Waldoboro and many other places the city and town governments have in- structed the police to exert every effory to close the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers