MANY FALL AT MOSCOW Troops Fire Upon Crowd After Bombs Are Thrown, BOYS AND WOMEN BEATEN BY COSSACKS Troops Fire Upon the Mobs, and a General Panic Ensucs— Conflict Between the Bakers and the So diers at Moscow —Troops Shoet Down Many People— Numerous Arrests Are Made. bombs Tiflis, were thrown at the Cossac Sunday (By Several evening. WANTS LAWSON ARRESTED. Doe of the Meo He Attacked Applies for a Warrant. MUST PRODUCE THEIR BOOKS. Judge Vacdeventer Decides Case Against the Paper Trust, stay Of pending ) Supreme C the Hennepin | Paper Con Paper L fons seared To Weed Out Czar's Navy. St. sient officers are to be gradually Petersburg (By Cable) out of the Russian Nav y during ii five years and pensicned off ¢ for beiier trained men t reconstructed In a dressed to the Minister of Marine, an peror Nicholas directs him to compl sorily. retire all naval officers who are unable to fulfill the higher requirements which the projected reformer in the service will demand, mrad make or 0 command 44% .g . oo navy rescrips ad Farmers Fire on Acronaut, Augusta, Ga, (Special). — Ascending in an airship at the [air grounds here at 6 o'clock Aeronaut Follette was caught in an air current and carried away, His assistants, seeing his danger, followed in a buggy until stopped by swamps. Near midnight Follette alighted in Milledge- ville, greatly exhausted. Fifteen ritles out he was fired on during the night by farmers, who report seeing the airship and thinking it vas a big bird. Some of the shots struck the iramework of the ship, but the acronaut was not hit, THE LATEST NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD. DOMESTIC National Bank, Of embezzlement, Dime Savings 1 also connected, The Peoria 1 president 1s whose accused its doors, and the with which he posted the 6o-day sign. Two city blocks were burned over on the upper East Side in New York by a fire that threatened to involve the entire lumber district. Wilkens Hobensack, private secretary to C Wanger, committed town, Pa, Burglars dynamited the the Chagrin Fails (Ohio) away Officers d at th if the Daughte of the Con losed 2a wl Bank, 18 who had been ongressman F. P, suicide in Norris stamp box at Postoffice and Congress £ nfederacy Lyreene were New Y 14] da against th in the expansion of farshal FE ommander-in-chief of the Turkish Army in the war with Greece, died in Constantinople Traffic on the Suez Canal, which was blocked by the blowing up of the wreck f a steamer, is being resumed. Major General Corbin and Mrs. Corbin satled from Manila for Australia on a two-month leave of absence. 3 1 EN A five-story building in course of erec- tion in St. Petersburg fell and 100 work- men were buried in the ruins, Robert McLaurin, champion checker player of Canada, died at Windsor, There are rumors of an agreement be- tween Great Britain and Russia, The idea of restoring St. Saviour's Church, Southwark, England, as a me- mortal to John Harvard will probably be carried out within a few months. Of the $10000 required, $9,000 has already been secured by subscriptions from Americans resident in London and vis- iting Americans, GIRL'S AWFUL DEATH Was Locked in a Room With Young Physician. THE DOCTOR SWALLOWS POISON. Evidence That Ten-year-old Irene Kiokow Was Maitreated snd Then Poisoned — Amazing Sight Greeted Neighbor Whe Broke Down the Door of the Room la Which the Dylog Girl and Dr. Hart Were Locked. Pat Crowe Says Me Would Have Kidnapped | This Old Man, ried mil wke hile he | the Cudahy in a partner, to study the hat it would “dead easy” to Id man Rock- from Fe It was planned to hold up the watch man, gag him and then enter the house, time was fixed, but his partner weakened at the last moment and the ad. venture was put off for another day, but in’ the end the partner quit altogether. Crowe then feared that his partner might peach on him and he fled to New York, and from there went to South Africa, where he joined the Boer Army. Her” rest Explosion of Powder Mill, Wilmington, Del. (Special). — Wil. mington and surrounding towns were shaken by an explotion of powder at the Dupont Powder Works, just outside the city limits, The force of the ex- plosion was felt for a distance of 12 miles. No one wae injured, as the work- men had not yet reported for duty. The roof of Mill No. 13, where the explosion occurred, was blown off and one of the walls demolished. Houses in the vicinity of the mill were damaged by the shat. tering of window glass, LIVE WASHINGTON AFFAIRS. military of of Col SAry ge I, Lieutenant Cla Was reprima with court-marti reduced 10 files Bartko! seCretar dea Frank F neral, whicl October GO, the Commi cordance and Preside: from Em heen ] f the Isthmian ADDON appoinie wile THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE PERISH Typhoon's Prightfal Havoc Chinese Islands. Billion and a Quarter Deb’, {3 which n roughly speak- 11 be $72.000.000, #3 . af the country } Years age of taxation before Tuberculosis, May Hope Again MAY TURN CANAL OVER TO ROOT. Taft Thisks Stste Should Handle it. Secretary SAYS FORMER WIFE CUT HIS THROAT. He Was Held Law Charges Downs By Sos . » Ape ¢ Japan's War Losses B. C, (By Cable).-—]apa- tha: offic returns of Army ancse » Ain L000 Ged a total 72,450 dead On October 17, at New York city United Textile Workers of America will meet in convention. — Newcastle, Pa, an “eight-hour town "~-such a condition having been ac- complished without a strike, is A movement is on foot to organize all the sterling silver and #lverplate work- ers of Greater New York. It is probable that the labor party will be doubled in England at the next elec tion. There are fourteen members of the party now in Parliament. At Danville, lil, on October 17, the annual convention of the lilinois State Federation of Labor will be held. Each employee in Great Britain lost in wages less than one shilling (25 cents) because of strikes during the year 1004. One of the oldest of the English trade unions-~the Steam Engine Makers’ So. ciety—has just celebrated its eightieth anniversary. The Citizen's Industrial Association of America is now issuing a monthly maga- zine from its New York headquarters. The journal is entitled “The Square Deal ‘ oman t this Ont 3 now the attack with a knife Green had been seversly in 1 ’ floor and Thomas, then handed and out Lreen wm the raged Fannon, she fort to cut t Bank Officials lodicted, Canton, O The grand jury returned indictments against W. I.. Davis, vice president, and Irwin D. Bachtel, cashier, of the Canton State Bank, now in the hands of receivers Davis 15 held for embezzlement of $is 300 and for grand larceny of the same amount. Bachtel 1s indicted for the same two offenses, and an additional indict. ment is placed against him charging false entries on the bank's books, { Spec 141) Duel to Death in Prison Cell. Frankfort, Ky. (Special).—In a eell at the State penitentiary, from which neither could escape, Albert Herndon. of Louisville, and Cam Shepherd, of Lexington, fought a duel to the death with a knife and iron rod as weapons. Shepherd held the knife, and when both men fell exhausted to the floor it was found that Herndon had 14 knife wounds, any one of four of which would have been fatal. Shepherd is badly bat- tered and his condition is serious » Y New York Cry, N. oseph Hand, B years Newark, Ju i of being full-fedged high- He was captured after he two bovs, both older than robbed i. 1 sireet rCusea he police wav r shber had “held up” himsclf, on Monroe them of the contents of their pockets cluding a purse containing 00 cents Hand was in the of throwing the empty purse away when Policeman Kromelbein nabbed him. The precocious knight of the highway was placed in the custody of the Juvenile Court, with eight other boys ranging in age from g¢ to 11 years, members of a band of youthful thieves, street, and act FINANCIA Conditions are most favorable for sow- winter wheat, Drexel sold 5000 shares of Cambria Steel. E. T. Stotesbury is a director of the latter company. Wasserman and his pool were indie viduals that lifted Reading second pre- ferred, which crossed par for the first time, Robert Bacon's retirement from the United States Steel Board leaves a va- cancy that the Morgan interests will probably fill ny
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers