SOUTHERN HAS Two Killed and Four injured at Danville. FLAGMAN BLAMED FOR ACCIDENT. Similar to the Disaster at Lawyers Which Resulted in the Death of Presi- dent Spencer and Six Others—En- gineer Kinney and Brakeman King Met Instant Death. Danville, Va. (Special).—Follow- ing close upon the disaster of Law- yer, 57 miles from here, on Thanks- giving Day, which resulted in the death of President Samuel Spencer, of the Southern Railway, and six others, another wreck horror on the Southern occurred in the railway vards here early Saturday morning. Two persons met instant death, an- other was fatally wounded and three others were injured, The accident happened about 4 o'clock, when northbound train No. 34, a mixed passenger and Pullman train of about 10 coaches, crashed fnto No. 82, a freight train of 30 cars, which was standing on the main line. All of the passengers es- caped injury of any consequence, though all were shaken up. The list of the dead comprises En- gineer George C. Kinney, of Thomas- ville, N. C., and Brakeman W. B. King, of Danville, Va. Robert Ford, the negro fireman, sustained injuries which will no doubt result in his | death. The following is a list of the ser- | fously injured, who were taken to the General Hospital here: O. P. Mull, of Columbia, 8. C., flagman; | H. M. Patterson, of Chatham, Va. | brakeman; Robert Ford, colored, | fireman, and O. O. Mailer, of Wash- | ington, postal clerk. i Both of the trains were running | behind time, and the freight train, after passing the biock station, three | mileg south of here, was detained | in the yards on account of other | trains. The freight had been stand- | ing on the main line for nearly an hour when No. 34 came around the curve at a rate of about 25 miles an hour. The engine plowed through | the caboose of the freight, and like | & giant bull hurled it over its head. | Engineer Kinney stuck to his post | and was instantly killed. Fifty vards above the scene of the accident the! negro fireman, realizing what was | going to happen, jumped from the locomotive and landed on the ground, unconscious. As soon as the collision occurred fire followed. Four cars were burn- | ed up and other damaged by the flames. The fire department was) called out, and after several hours had the flames under control. i Next to the engine on No. 34 was the postal car, which was demolished, and a number of clerks in it were | injured. The injured clerks left on a northbound train, and their injuries are not regarded as serious. All of the passengers in the Pull- | man and day coaches escaped. The body of Engineer Kinney was found pinned under the wrecked en- | gine. It was not mangled, and indi- | cations showed that he had been scalded to death by the steam es- caping from the boiler. The death of W. B. King, who was on the caboose of the wrecked | freight train, was frightful. King! was learning the business of rail- road brakeman, and his body was burned to a crisp. Only the body | from the legs to the neck was ex- tricated from the wreckage, and this was merely a pile of ashes and co- agulated blood. The head, arms and legs were missing, and the ashes was placed in a mail bag and carried to an undertaker’s shop. KILLED BY AN AUTO. An Aged Italian Woman Dies As She Predicted. New York (8pecial).—In the par- lor of her little four-room flat, two flights up In the tenement house at 328 W. Twenty-sixth Street, “Grand- ma’ Serafina Macalsko was laid out Sunday afternoon to begin her long sleep. “Grandma,” as everybody in the neighborhood called her, was one year less than 980. Until two days ago she went up and down stairs and about the neighborhood as gpry as a woman one-third her age. She had ome dread. ‘Some day I will try to cross the street and an automobile will kill me,” she said often. “In Italy we had no such things when | was young and happy, but just before I came over three years ago, they had them there, too. Why should men and women rush like mad, most of them with nothing much to do when they get there?” Friday afternoon she put her daughter's baby to sleep and started out for a short visit to a son nearby. Just as she got in front of the house, and about half way across the street, an electric brougham, running fast, pulled around the corner ang bore down upon her. She stood stif in her terror. The heavy car hit her and threw her 15 feet right into the doorway of the house where she had lived. B8he never regained conscious- ness, and died at 10 o'clock Sunday morning. “S8he was never iil a day, and yet she was killed, as she said, by an automobile,” said the daughter, Francesca, A ——————— ST A AA, Captain And Crew Rescued. Nassau, N. P. (Special) Captain Fredericksen, of the Norwegian bark Wellington, his wife and 15 mem- bers of the crew of the vessel, were rescued December 3, in an exhaust ed condition, by the Elder-Dempster steamer Bokoto, in latitude 35 north, longitude 656 west. The Wellington which sailed from Gulfport, Miss. November 12, with a cargo of lum- ber for Rosario, Argentina, was water-logged when deserted. The Bokoto will take the rescued per- THE NEWS OF THE WEEK . Domestic. The Brotherhood of Trainmen will confer with General Manager Peck, of Pennsylvania lines west, about the 23 articles refused them by the gen- eral superintendents, The revenue cutters Mohawk and Gresham pulled the barkentine Bon- ny Doon off Great Round Shoal, near Vineyard Haven, and landed the crew, The strike of 806 men of the Read- ing Iron Company, which began five months ago, has ended by the men getting an advance of 12 per cent. In the Shea trial, Chicago, William Kelly, former secretary of the Coal Teamsters’ Union, who entered a plea of gulity, was a witness. An explosion of gas in the Kidney vein of the Buttonwood Colliery at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., killed two and seriously injured several others. Mrs. Leslie Carter, the actress, ae- cured a writ of attachment in New York against the property of Miss Norma IL. Munroe for $42,000. John Harsen Rhodes, president of the Greenwich Savings Bank and a prominent financier of New York, is dead at the age of 67. Herbert Gregerson, exchange tel- Jer of the Milwaukee Avenue Btate Bank in Chicago, pleaded guilty to embezzlement. Banker Jacob Schiff calls the high interest charged in Wall Street on call loans barbarous and destructive to finance. Sir Harry Eugene Robinson, of a noble English family, has entered the United States Navy as a mess attead- ant. Lawyer Patrick, convicted of mur- plied for a commutation of sentence, Former Governor George W. Hen- age of 66. The operators block on which the train in charge of the Southern occurred Thanksgiving contradict each other in their ments as to the cause of the smash- state Fearing that Chester E. Gillette, Brown, plans to end his life, the gas stove has been cell, and an extra guard will accom- pany him to Aanburn prison. Counsel for Harry K. Thaw taken action which abolishes the proposition to appoint a commission to go outside of New York State for evidence in the case, road career as a stenographer, has ern Rallway succeed Samuel Spencer. A man supposed to be Kimmel, missing cashier of kansas Bank, has been found asylum at White Plains, N. Y. The Cincinnati - Chicago Limited on the Monon Rallroad was of Frank- fort, Ind., and 18 persons injured. Andrew Carnegie formally to A George in an Un- Eight young wimen were burned an explosion of thousands of matches in a factory at Indianapolis Allotments of land will every ¥ oy worth $50,000, Two women were arrested score Chi- more in or flat burglaries. Elias Asiel, a New York broker, his home. considering raises employes. in wages Foreign. M. Jaures, the French Socialist leader in the Chamber of Deputies, warned the government that in the proceedings toward Morocco it was embarking on a dangerous adventure, but the Chamber, by 457 to 58, voted confidence. When Count Castellane rose to make a speech, half the depu- ties left the chamber. The British Foreign Secretary in- formed Parliament that he had no information that any arrangement had been made under which German merchant vessels would be trans- ferred to the American flag in the event of a war involving Germany. A census of the German Empire to December 31, 1505, shows the pulation to have heen 60,641,278, compared with 56,367,178 in 1900, an increase of 7.6 per cent. The Agricultural Chamber of West Prussia adopted resolutions em- powering its executive committee to import Chinese as farm laborers, London financiers believe that the report of Secretary Shaw means that something will be done to relieve the financial situation, A dozen insurgent leaders of San Domingo were attacked by the gov- ernment forces and Perico la Balle killed. The Yudin collection of §6,000 vol- umes on Russia has been bought for the Congressional Library at Wash- ington. A widespread conspiracy against the Ecuadoran government has been discovered in Guayaquil. Japanese newspapers eulogize Pres- ident Roosevelt's attitude toward them in his message. English newspapers announce that some of the Lloyds are insuring against war between Russia and Ja- pan in 1907 at five guineas per cent. it is reported that Count Boni de Castellane will marry Madame Le- tellier, twice married and twice di- voreed and worth $15,000,000. Gerald Lowther is mentioned as a possible successor to Sh Mortimer Durand as British ambassador to the United States, Cottonseed and cottonseed oll, largely imported from America, are threatened with almost prohibitory duties in France, The American minister, Mr. Gum- mere, arrived at Tangier from Fez, by way of El Aralsh, on the steamer Salda. . French newspapers comment fav- sons to Havana, White as ambassador to TERRIBLE FATE OF FOUR CORNELL MEN Athletes Risk Lives To Save Their Comrades. SEVERAL ARE SEVERELY BURNED. One of Finest Fraternity Houses in the World Destroyed — The Uni- versity and Town of Ithaca in Mourning Fire Breaks Out Early in the Morning. Ithaca, N. Y. (Special).—Cornell University and the city of Ithaca are paralyzed by the worst catastrophe which has ever occurred in this com- munity. By the burning of the Chi Psi Fraternity lodge at an early hour in the morning, seven lives were lost, $200,000 worth of property was de- stroved and the finest fraternity house in the world was practically demolished. Seven men are killed. died almost immediately; Six of them the other AT THE NATION'S CAPITAL Soma Interesiing Happenings Briefly Told, The Ship Subsidy. General Grosvenor, chairman of the House Committee of Merchant Marine and Fisheries and most ar- dent of ship subsidy advocates, took the first step to compromise with the opposition, which has hitherto been successful in holding up the Senate measure in the committee, General Grosvenor announced to the committee that he had prepared important amendments to the Benate Subsidy Bill. It makes clear that the subsidies are to be applied only to lines from the South Atlantic Coast to South American republics, and from the Pacific Coast to the Orient. The subsidy for the South African line is eliminated, also the one for the short line on the Northern Pacl- fic to the Canadian Coast, The committee will meet again Thursday to consider the Grosvenor amendments. These propositions in Speaker Cannon and Representative lingered until evening. of Cornell University, and a son of a wealthy commission merchant in Chi- cago, He was a member of many clubs and societies and an editor of { the Cornellian, which is the college lannual. A charred body has been found in the ruins, but it is not yet | known whether it is his or that of | Frederick W. Greele, of East Orange, | N. J., who also perished in the flames. Oliver LeRoy Schmuck, of Han- | over, Pa., a senior in Cornell Univer- sity, a member of many clubs anil | very popular among his classmates. He dled in the Cornell Infirmary within a few hours after the death of his roommate, Nichols. Frederick W. Greele, of East Or- | ange, N. J., a member of the fresh- | man class His body has not yet | been recovered. James McCutcheon, of Pittsburg, | {Pa., a member of the sophomore | { class, substitute halfback on the Cor- | nell football team and very popular among his classmates The city of Ithaca has lost three gallant firemen— Alfred C. Robinson, | an attorney and g member of the vol- unteer fire department; John Rum- sey, son of prominent hardware merchant and a member of the vol- | unteer fire company, and Estey J { Landon, foreman of the Empire State | Furnishing Company and a member {of the volunteer fire department. All| | of these men were killed by the fall- | {ing of the north wall of the building { while they were engaged in the act | of stretching a hose on that side Just how the fire started will pro- bably remain a mystery, but at 3.30 | IA. M., B Decamp, of New York i City, a sophomore of Cornell and a { member the Chi Psl Fraternity, was awakened by the amell of smoke. { He rushed tothe door of his room, but found his escape cut off. Running! to the window, he slid down the | | vines and reached the ground in safe- ty He ran to the nearby fraternity | houses and sent out the alarm. It was 30 minutes after the fire | | had started before the department reached scene The campus fire facilities utterly inadequate, jand it remained for city ecom- | panies to make an attempt to check | i the flames, but it was tbo late. i in 8 of fully the Were the DEATH WIPES OUT FAMILY. | Demise Of Father And Four Children Followed By Mother, Chicago Mrs. | Vral, of 1563 West One Hundred and { Fifty-eighth Street committed | cide because, it believed, of ru-| } { mors circulated regarding the num- | lerous deaths in her immediate fami- | [1y within the last ten months. Her | { husband, Martin Vrzal, died, and | { then, within nine months, her four { children died, the cause of each {death being given by the attending physician as “stomach trouble.” An anonymous telephone message was sent to the police department saying it was advisable that an in- vestigation be made, as all the mem- bers of the family were insured a short time before death. An investi- gation was commenced, but it de veloped nothing definite It is be- lieved by the police that either de- spondency over the deaths of her family or dread of the investigation caused Mrs. Vrzal to take her life. Late on the strength of statements made by Mrs. Emma Niemann, daugh- ter of Mr. Vrzal, the police arregiod Hermann Billeck, said to be a fortune teller and hypnotist LOWER JAW KNOCKED OFF. i (Special) Rose | sul is Man, Unable To Write, Cannot Tell How He Was Mutilated. Johnstown, Pa. (8pecial).—Caspar Schoflon, 30 years old, was brought to a hospital here from Bakerton, a suburb, where he was found lying on the street. Part of the man's lower jaw was missing, the upper jaw bad- ly splintered and the base of his tongue lacerated. Schofon is very weak from loss of blood, and how ne was wounded is a mystery. The hospital physicians say his injuries are such that he will never be able to talk, and all efforts to have the man write have been futile. The po- lice authorities say Schofon, who is a foreigner, never learned to write, and will be unable to explain his in- juries until ke is taught to write, if he should recover. Strike Of Sailors. Genoa (8pecial).——The greatest alarm is being felt here over the de- cision of the shipowners to suspend the Transatlantic service, owing to the strike of the seamen. Over 4,000 smigrants who had bosked passage are being boarded and lodged at the oxpense of the city officials, who de- sire to prevent bloodshed, The gen- aral public is demanding that the government intervene in the strike situation. Watson, of Indiana. The latter pre- vented action on the matter in the session. Now he declares that he will favor a bill providing subsl- for South American lines and he be- This is Such a proposition, leves, will pass the House, Transport Reserve Fleet, With view to securing an ade- reserve fleet for the Army, General Hum- annual report, states a phrey, in his tion, to take options for the charter of American vessels suitable for able yearly rate, fixing the charter of such vessels when needed. looking For A Lumber Trust. Senator Kittredge wants an inquiry the operation of the manufac- In a resolution which he asks that the Secretary merce and Labor be an exhaustive he presented 4 dire investigation and particularly a trust exists Meat Bill Amendment, Senator Beveridge introduced a bill to amend the meat inspection act by requiring that the cost of inspec- tion shall be pald by the packers Another amendment requires that the date of inspection and packing or canning shall be placed upon each package. New Child Labor Law Bill. Senator Lodge introduced designed to prevent the employment of child labor by pro glate in any which h BELT article in the of a child under 14 years of age been employed and the prohibition extends to chil- commerce The violation made misdemeanor, fine $600 and im- one ye ar introduced provisions not read and write of the law punishable by prisonment for Senator Beveridge bill very similar in its is of Appeals In Criminal Cases. Chairman Clark, of the thorized by Senate last session which gives government on questions of law in criminal cases. dent urges as being very necessary ernment in the gati-trust cases. States was in the shipping business under the sea flag of a dummy cor- poration. The report of the Paymaster Gen- eral of the Navy shows that it cost $19.8604,749 to keep the warships in commission during the past year. Mrs. Helen L. Sewell, widow of the former New Jersey senator, died suddenly of heart disease. The House defeated the Pllotage Bill by a vote of 110 to 164. President Roosevelt commuted to life imprisonment the sentence of death passed upon Arthur Adams and Robert SBawyer, negroes, who mutinied and killed the officers and vart of the crew of the schooner Harry Berwind. The bill permitting national bank- ing associations to make loans on real estate as security and limiting the amount of such loans passed the House, The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations made a report favoring the ratification of the Algeciras Treaty regarding Morocco. The House Committee on Banking and Currency held a meeting prepar- atory to framing a bill for a more elastic currency. Consideration of the Fortifications Appropriation Bill was begun by a subcommittee of the House Com- mittee on Appropriations. The President nominated W. Mor- gan Shuster, of the District of Col- umbia, to be secretary of Instruction in the Philippines. The Secretary of the Treasury has given notice that he will anticipate interest without rebate amounting to $12,000,000. Cotton Mills Raise Wages, Providence, R. 1. (Special). —An advance in wages varying from § to 10 per cent. will be made in the cotton mills of Rhode Island this week. About 20,000 operatives will be affected, and in addition, it is un- derstood, the pay of about 5,000 mill hands in Massachusetts and Connec- ticut factories controlled by Provi dence officers will be raised to cor- tespond with the schedules In this ————— - EXPLOSION IN A _ FACTORY TOWN Eleven Persons Hurt, Fourteen Build- ings Burned. LOSSES OVER HALF A MILLION. Boiler Bursts, Shattering the Four. story Factory of the 1. J. Harvey Shoe Company, Lynn, Mass Stair ways and Fire Escapes Hold Until Most of the Employes Escape. Lynn, Mass. (Bpecial).—The plogion of a boller in the four-story factory building of the P. J. Harney Bhoe Manufacturing Company, on Alley Street, and the fire which im- mediately followed destroyed 14 buildings in the West Lynn manufac- turing district, causing a total 1088 | estimated at about $520,000, | Eleven persons were injured, one, { Misg Celia Tradenburg, an operative {in one of the burned factories, being ex LIVES LOST IN RAGING FLOOE Half of Arizona Town is Swept Away, Phoenix, Ariz. (Bpecial).—Frivate railroad dispatches received here say that 60 lives were lost at Clifton in the great flood that through the camp, destroying many business bulldings, wrecking the smelting plant of the Arizona Copper Com- pany and tearing ont miles of track of the Arizona and Mexico Rallroad. Clifton, which has about 2.500 people, lies in a narrow valley near the eastern line of Arizona. The less prosperous of the inhabit g live ip Chase Creek Canon, a peculiarly dan gerous situation in times of high water, Two vears ago 12 lives were lost in the canon and immense dam- age was done by the rise of the Bar Francisco River The principal the town was ruined The gEwept business almost name of only tim, however, has been obtained Mrs. Joseph Thorm, who, with husband and children, was cag a falling building and kil section of completely one vic hes ir The ght | in a critical condition at a hospital. In addition to the direct loss the | shoe manufacturers will suffer se- verely from the interruption to their | Christmas business. The properties destroyed and dam- aged are: i P. J. Harpey 8hoe Company. ! Tufts & Friedman 8koe Company. | H. P. Hood Creamery. Boston and Maine West Lynn Rall- | road Station, Jacobs leather Stock Company. { M. J. Worthley SBhoe Company. Eight dwellings. i The explosion occurred just before | o'clock, when the employes were | assembling at thelr benches. There | iwas a roar and the building, a five- | story wooden structure, was torn apart { heavy machinery dropping from floor {to Almost immediately the | ruins took fire. Fortunately for those in the build- {ing, or a majority of them, the stair- { ways held for the most part, as did | the fire-escapes, and to this fact the { absence of a large loss s is due, i In the other fect - i xr floor. factories of the explosion dows being smashed and torn in the walls. The Boston Maine station, immediately across the rail road tracks, was wrecked Debris | {from the Harney bullding plied on {the track 10 high and blocked {all traffic over the Eastern division. The of disaster in West i Lynn bordering on Charles and Alley Streets was well fitted for a big fire, and the weather a high | i routhwest wind solpg were also against firemen The | district is the newer {actory section {of the town, and back to the | great fire of November 26, 1888, when, because of the passage of the {fire limit law, cheaper factories than i brick were sought 1« as | cheaper land The factories were | built close together, and a great inflammable ma- | filled holes ana feet scene conditions d hard an the dates ir. well as to i extent terial with ! | FIGHT AT BEAUTY OONTEST. i - { Free-For-All Fight In Pennsylvania District School. Pa 10 city is in a turmoil over a free-for-all | fight the district during a | beauty contest and East from this Washington, { Special) | Finley township, miles in school as a result many residnets of the township are earry- ling bruises The trouble was started {when Samuel Teegarden John | Sampson, who were buying votes for ithe leading contestants in the beauty were informed that they | | were $3 in arrears in the payment of | the votes, and all cast after | their money had become exhausted | i would be thrown out, Teegarden and i Sampson are sald have resented this action and endeavored to destroy | the ballot box A general firpt fol | lowed. in which the lights in the | gchoolhouse were put out. Many girls | land women were trampled upon, but none were seriously injured War- rants have been issued for the arrest of all involved in the fight. and | contest, yoles to ENTOMBED MINERS RESCUED, Carclessness Had Caused Explosion Of A Lot Of Dynamite, Houghton, Mich. (8pecial).—Four- teen boxes of dynamite exploded in the Quincy Mine, cutting off from escape over 40 miners who had gone down the shaft before the explosion occurred. Rescuing parties believed them dead until they were found in a sheltering level, where they had fled after the explosion. One man, William Gogin, was blown to pieces, and three others were wounded. Over a score of miners were half-suffocated from smoke and were resuscitated with much difficulty. A careless miner let fall some burning grease in a powder box and the explosion followed. Will Sue The World, San Francisco (Special).—~The Su- preme Court decided that the Mec- Enery Act, passed at the last session of the legislature, is constitutional, and that propertyowners can estab- lish title to their lands, the records of which were destroyed by the great fire, by suing the world at large. If no claimant appears within a certain period, title to the property Is re established. Gillette Is Guilty, Herkimer, N. Y. (Special) —Ches- ter Gillette, charged with the killing of Grace Brown, was found gulity of murder in the first degree Tuesday night by the jury, which had the cage under deliberation for five hours. The verdict was rendered shortly after 11 o'clock. Gillette took the verdict stoleally. He will be sentenced on Thursday morning to death in the electric chair at Au- burn. members of the CRCapes Coronado hat narrow The to Clif It yusines The at ey Railway Longfellow {8 dest weeks bie f« vO resumed over the financial cannot be The Gila River bridge cutting off communica the by that om ton vod peveral can be ad i logs estim went firs ion cut with ute. Al in lines way of Ig inter isolated occurred f all ection # 5 Clifton WIireeE are down the one on n 14 ie exception of by which is worki: Owing the ring exact difficult iki Lordsbus mittingly to the which of floods the work Seen details o 44 sat GIBas The of way, ator dam which gave flood en Car res ult 2 4 the of upon ected tirely ried of ber of per The Francisco with a i hardly Was not The great North COC and Pattison’'s ed 3 greatly on cart as away iwc the swollen num AONS wats San Creel There which extent ione {a stores residence down wip- « Tram red » 4 3 4 1 inflicted * Addition East C wa out t ton the concentrat 2 . caused by the for sndden heavy two week flood last ihe “1404 cams § 8 wr Clifton iE B town County, So: 1900 the po located at 1h Arizona ar and h fice the the a a8 a4 It Rio Salt ITALY TO ADMIT U. 8S. MEATS. Will Accept Government Stamp As Sufficient. { Special) Washington tions a ni ipon the en removed Heretofor some other has insisted upon microscopical examinat can pork ucts sent 3 he expense of the examination bad to be the American ex- ment placed y» packers in the position of having to pay twice for the ination, once here and agaln in Secretary Wilson took uj tion with State Departn has induced the Jtaliar ronment to accept the certificate of inspection placed on meats by the Agricultural Department Lives Lost In Flood, El! Paso, Tex From in- formation received it is be- lieved that the town of Clifton, Ariz, has been practically washed away The Copper Queen Hotel is said to have been swept away by the flood and at least 50 persons lost their lives. Phoenix, Ariz.—It is reported that 50 people have been drowned in the floods at Clifton, Ariz yO) + ‘ 3 nord ora porte: the eXan T4+« it: n the nt and (sOve { Special) herc Prominent Man Assassinated. Macon, Ga. (Special) Charles Brooks, prominent citizen of Chipley, was assassinated while sitting in & chair at his home. The shot was fired through a window. There is no clue. Blood hounds will be put on the trial at once. FINAN AL WUKLL Union Pacific's net profits in Oc- tober increased $165,395. Bank of England directors con- tinue the 6 per cent. discount rate, Reading directors are now ex- pected to take dividend action on December 17. Call money in New York ranged from 20 to 28 per cent. The con- tinued high rate discourages specula- tion. The American Car & Foundry Company's new plant at Madizon, 1l., is making forty cars a day. Samuel M. Newberger, of Phila- delphia, has been elected a member of the New York Stock Exchange. A New York Stock Exchange seat was sold Thursday for $82.500, a drop of $2500 from the last previous sale, In three months wire products have risen $4 the ton. Commercial failures in the United States during the month of Novem- ber were S85 in number and $11. 980,782 In amount of Habilities. In the corresponding month inst year thore were £17 defaults with a total indebtedness of $8,866,798, While the $12,000,000 to be dis- tributed by Secretary Bhaw on De cember 15, in the shape of antici- pated interest on Government bonds will help a little, the sum is too, amall to make much impression om the money market Ga., i"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers