" [The News Domestic * Seven men, picked up in a small boat in midocean after eight days of terror In their slight shell of a craft, almost starved and dead of thirst, their limbs swollen and their bodies covered with sores, arrived In New York on the oil tank steamer Hotham Newton and told a story of the wreck of their bark Germanic, the drowging of the captain and the disappearance of another small boat containing the other eight members of the crew. Charles Sander, editor of the Hun- garian Daily News and a former member of the Hungarian Parlia- ment, was killed by falling down the elevator shaft of the Presbyterian Building, New York. One hundred arrests were made in the street car strike riots at Muncie, Ind. Five persons were injured and three cars destroyed by the mob. Sixty theatrical managers, repreé- senting 200 productions, have or- ganized the National Association of Theatrical Producing Managers. Marquis C. Gasper, 85 years old, a tea merchant, formerly a member of the Produce Exchange and prominent in riding and driving circles, was found dead in his bedroom on the second floor of his residende, in New York, with a bullet in the right temple. Curtis Guild, Jr., was Inaugurated for his third term as governor of Massachusetts and made an address to the legislature condemning the service given by the railroads in New England. A tenement-house in New York was wrecked by dynamite. It is believed to have been the work of the Black Hand. Robbers blew open the vault of the McCurtain (Ok.) state bank, se- cured $3,000 in gold and silver and escaped. Dr. Nicholas Senn, a prominent surgeon, formerly of the Army, died in Chicago. Day and night shifts are working at the Pittsburg Glass Works. The explosion of an oil lamp dur- ing the night at the home of George Steger, near Collinsville, Ill, cast the burning oil over a bed In which Mrs. Duwnnski and three children were sleeping, burning the children to death and seriously injuring the mother. Anthony Comstock, the New York Society for the Sup- pression of Vice, will bé a witness for the defense when Harry K. Thaw is again placed on trial next Monday for killing Stanford White. James Treadwell, director of the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, being unable to furnisn $50,000 bail on a charge of embez- zlement, spent New Year's in jail Robert Holmes Page, a banker, of Philadelphia, rescued his two small children at the peril of his life when fire ‘destroyed Mount Alry, his mag- nificent country residence. The National Guard of New York state Is to be put on a war footing at once, if the recommendation of the commission tha: Investigated its affairs Is adopted. Fifteen passengers were injured, some of .them seriously, when the Pennsylvania express from Buffalo for Philadelphia was wrecked near Sunbury, Pa. Pittsburg celebrated New Year's with a $150,000 downtown fire, which for a time threatened to de- stroy an entire eity block. Chief of Police loreph Davidson and Robert Evans, a merchant, shot each other to death at Beattyville, Ky. secretary of Foreign Many Japanese aré being arrested st Vancouver for carrying arms and examples, it is asserted, will be made of all against whom convictions can pe secared for violating the law in this respect. The Countess of Yarmouth, who was Miss Alice Thaw, of Pittsburg, has begun proceediags for the nulli- fication of her marriage with the Earl of Yarmouth, The powers may have to resort to A joint naval demonstration against Tui key to f6Fce her to institute finan- glal reforms in Macedonia. In a wreck on the Canadian Pacific Raflway, near Chaplean, a woman was killed and a score of other per- sons injured. Mrs. Von Schoeubeck, of Allen stein, Prussia, whose husband was killed by Captain Von Goeben, has gone insane. Rioting in the Japanese quarter at Vancouver, with the fatal wounding of one and serious Injury of two other white men, promises to bring Cana- da’s troubles with the Japanese to a ppeedy crisis. The relations between Captain von Goeben and the wife of Major von Schoenbeck, which ended in the kill- ing of the latter by the former, has caused a sensation In German army circles. Count Quadt, who was at one time first secretary of the German Embassy at Washington, and lately consul general at Calcutta, has been appointed German minister to Persia, The Cuban custom receipts for the year 1907 were the largest in the his tory of the island. They amounted to $20,005,048, as against $18.511 296 in 19086. Nineteen persons have been arrest. ed In Bt. Petersburg accused of con- conspiring to murder the Dowager Empress Feodorovna three weeks 0. Fire broke out in the bedroom of Prince Ritel Friedrich in the royal chateau in the Tiergarden, Berlin, and did much damage to the castle, Chief Bobroff, of the provinelal gendarmerie, Samara, Russia, was shot dead on the street by terrorists, Prince Rupprecht, of Bavaria, made an ascension at Berlin, In a new army steerable balloon. The French troops In Morocco Saftared the citadel of the Medjunas natives in. the province of Erivan, Russia, PETTIBONE AND ~~ MOYER-GO FREE Orchards Bloody Story Fai's to Convict a Man, COLLAPSE OF A FAMCUS CASE William D. Haywood Having Been Ac- quitted, the Trio of Officials of the Western Federation of Labor Accused of Complicity in Assassintion of Gov. Steunenberg Are Now at Liberty. HISTORY OF THE CASE. The trouble at the mines in | Colorado began with a strike in | | the Coeur d'Alene region. i The Bunker Hill and Sullivan | mines were blown up. | | The militia was called out and | { a bull pen established. i Frank Steunenberg, who had | | been governor of Idaho, and | | friend of mine owners, was blown | up by a dynamite bomb. i Harry Orchard confessed to the | | murder of Steunenberg and im- | plicated Haywood, Moyer and | Pettibone. i Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone were rushed to Idaho on a special | train without having a chance to | consult attorneys or friends. Steve Adams confessed com- | plicity in the murder of Steunen- | berg, accursing Moyer and Hay- | wood. i Adams repudiated his confes- | | sion, declaring he {implicated Moy- |} er and Haywood under fear of | death. Haywood's acquittal has been Baron Kurino Gives Out Reassuring Statement. EE Paris (By Cable).—Baron Kurl- no, the Japanese amabssador to France, gave out a reassuring state- ment in which he declares that the Japanese government has too much confidence in the pacific policy of President Roosevelt to take any stock in the bellicose intentions attributed to the government at Washington by the sensational press. “We {interpret the American bat- tleship fleet's cruise, which has creat- ed such a stir,” the Baron continues, “more as a manifestation in favor of a larger navy by demonstrating the necessity of reinforcements in Pacific waters.” Nothing, he said, justified the so- called warlike preparations and the pronounced talk that Japan was cov- eting the Philippine Islands was a fable. Continuing, the Ambassador says the question of Japanese pupils in the schools of San Francisco has been practically settled and that he could see no cause for a conflict. He pre- dicts that three months will justify his optimism. The Patrie in its issue of Friday afternoon asks in big headlines “Where is the Japanese fleet?” and publishes an alarming story based on reports that it has been seen cruis- ing off Hawall. GERMANY ON THE WATCH. A Critical Period In America's Re- lations With Japan. Berlin (By Cable) .— The next two | followed by the acquittal of Pet- | tibone and the dropping of the | case against Moyer, Boise, Idaho (Special).—After 14 | hours’ deliberation, a verdict of not guilty was reached by the jury trying | George A. Pettibone, charged with complicity in the murder of ex-Gov. | Frank A. Steunenberg. No demon- stration of any kind marked the! reading of the verdict which made! Pettibone a free man after two years awaiting trial. All night the ballot- ing of the jury stood 10 for acquittal | and 2 for conviction. There was no change until the final ballot was reached, both men who had been! holding out giving way at the same time. The case against Charles H. Mover, president of the Western Federation of Miners, who, with W. D. wood and George A. Pettibone, was charged with complicity in the as- sassination of former Governor Steu- | nenberg, of Idaho, was dismissed. | William Haywood having been ac-| quitted last summer, the attempted | prosecution of the three leaders of the Western Federation of Miners, | based on the confession of Harry | Orchard, has fallen flat. i The defendant, Pettibone, pale and | emaciated because of his long {liness, merely smiled as he heard of his freedom, and a moment later he was | surrounded by his attorneys and friends. His wife, who has been by! his side at every session of the court during the trial, wept for joy. Expressions from members of the Jury after their discharge showed | that, from the start, 10 of them | maintained that the state had failed | to prove the defendant guilty of the | crime charged. The verdict caused | jittle surprise in Boise, in view of! the verdict in the Haywood case. i The defense introduced practically | no evidence and did not argue the! case, simply maintaining that the! state had entirely falled to connect | the defendant with the killing of | Steunenberg. i Attorneys for the state admit that | the prosecution of the Western Feder ation of Miners’ leaders for the Steqy- | nenberg murder is at an end. Hay- | Raised $137,081 In 20 Days, Colorado Springs, Col. (Special) Colorado Springs has within 20 days | raised $137,081 to complete a $500, | 000 endowment fund for Colorado College (non-sectarian), of this city, included in the $370,000 previously subscribed were subscriptions of $50.- 000 each from Andrew Carnegie and the general educational fund, the latter being made conditional updn the completion of the fund by New Year's Day, 1908. Boy Shoots Mother Dead. Stroudsburg, Pa. (Special). Mrs. George Hoénshilt, of SBcranton, was accidentally shot and killed here by her eight-year-old son, Lewis. Mrs. Hoenshilt, who was visiting her father, Bamuel Edinger, was talking to a friend over the telephone when her son, who had previously been shooting at a mark with a flobert rifle, came into the room, and, point. ing the weapon at her, pulled the trigger. Editor Killed By His Wife, Hallettsville, Texas (Special).-—As he was entering his office W. R. Beau- miner, editor of the Hallettsville Her. ald, was shot and killed by his wife. She was arrested and placed under $2,000 bond. Domestic troubles are blamed. Harden Gets Four Months, Beriin (By Cable), — Maximilion Harden, editor of Die Zukunft, was sentenced to four months’ imprison ment on the carge of Mbeling Count Kuno von Moltke. a —— a Found Package Of $12,000, Pottsville, Pa. (Bpecial). ~~ Law- rence Prickett, a draftaman employs ed at the plant of the Eastern Steel Company here, returning from a hol- {day visit to New Jersey, picked up in a Pullman car a package with $7,500 In gold bonds and $4,500 more in negotiable paper. Having communicated with a Philadelphia broker, he ascertained the owner and returned the money by express. He received a $500 United States gold bond from. the owner. i the admiralty as constituting a critical period in the the they pass without fn the relations and Japan. If witnessing a break high government officials are con- vinced that the United States and Japan will then enter upon an easier and safer basis of egreement The development of the American- Japanese situation here day by day, there may issue events which might change the present International equilibrium and deeply affect Europe ag well as America The Marine Rundschau, the principal naval mag- | azine of Germany, says in its January number: “If war and fg because from it! not come between United States the the preponderance its fleet for the maintenance of peace This fleet already is suffl- ciently strong to restrain Japan from does the conclusion, the Marine Rund- gays the threatened conflict! may now be entirely avoided as a result of the transfer of the fleet to another defensive measure in the Pacific In ses p—— pe — | A 19008 NOVELTY. | —— i Women Allowed To Smoke In New York Restaurants, i New York (8pecial).—8So success-| ful was the plan of allowing women | to smoke in the public dining-rooms, | ! Broadway restaurants for the first time in New York New Year's Eve, that another of the famous Broadway ealing places has followed suit. It is expected that several more of them will fall in line immediately, but the big hotels and the Fifth Ave- | nite restaurants will not, so the managers say, follow suit, for the present at least Countess Of Warwick To Lecture. London (By Cable)-—The countess | to start on a ecturing tour of Amer- the proceeds from which, as | WASHINGTON | In a report to the President, Attor- ney General Bonaparte makes a vig- orous reply to the strictures of Presi- dent Ripley, of the Santa Fe, who questioned the motives of the prose- cution of his railroad. it has been decided to retain at Thunder Buttee Station, 8. D,, troop of cavalry which has been operating to maintain peace among the dis- turbing Utes. A report on the situation at Gold- fleld, Nev., was made to President Roosevelt by the members of the special commission which he sent there. Secretary of the Navy Metcalf has signed the order assigning Surgeon Stokes to the command of the hos- pitai ship Relief. President Roosevelt accepted an in. vitation to attend the dinner to be given by the Gridiron Club, January 25. Secrearies Root and Metcalf had a conference with the President con- cerning the Japanese exclusion gques- tion. The President has asked for the resignation of Ernest G. Eagleson, surveyor general at Poise, Idaho. The President ard Mrs. Roosevelt entertained at dinner several debu- tantes of the winter and college friends of Kermit Roosevelt. Second Lieutenant Thompson, of the Marine Corps, has been permit. ted resign for the good of the service. A movement ie on foot looking to closer relations between the National Guard and regular Army in coast de- fense, The appropriation bills will be de- layed owing to the death of the father of Representative Tawney, it was announced at the White House that Capt. J. E. Pllisbury would be appointed chief of the Bureau of Navigation, vice Rear Ad- miral Brownson, DYNAMITED A CROWDED BANK ——————— 250 Persons in Wild Scramble For the Doors. POWDER AND SMOKE FILL AIR. Supposed That Someone Unable to Withdraw Funds Discharged Ex. plosives Within Few Feet of Vault of First National Bank of Kansas—Nine Persons Injured. Kansas City, Mo. (Special). — A bomb was exploded in the basement of the magnificent three-story marble building of the first National Bank, at the corner of Tenth and Balti more Streets, in the business center, a few minutes after the noon hour. The force of the explosion was ter- rific, and caused much damage. John F. Pelletier, superintendent of the Fire Insurance Patrol, who was in the banking rooms at the time of the explosion, and E. F. Bwin- ney, president of ths bank, are au- thority for the statement that the explosion was the result of a bomb set off by some person unknown to them. At first it was supposed to have resulted from leaking natural gas, Neither were shie to give any The bank was crowded with cus- with the employes, numbering, haps, 250 persons. and there was a wild the doors. The First National Bank building scramble tures in the city. 1t was finished last year, and cost close to $1,000. 000. The main floor was occupied by the bank, which is the largest financial institution in Kansas City. The two upper stories are occupied by real estate and law firms. A POSTOFFICE SHAKELUP. Change About In Inspectors’ Division- Promotions, Db. CC. General Washington Postmaster { Bpecial) .— Meyer had by which the chief of the inspectors’ division for Maryland, the District of Columbia, the Virginias installed in his place F. E. McMil- lan, who has been division chief, be- comes chief of the entire force of inspectors at a salary of $4,000 a year. John R. Harrison, the chief in Maryviand division The change {8 due to a desire for more prompt and effective work with the entire inspection force Ww, J. of a division Kansas City The action is a part of Mr. Meyer's program for a reor- ganization of the department, GIVES $2,291,000, Rockefeller's Gifts To Chicago Uni versity $23,800,001. Caleago (Bpecial)-—John D. Rocke- of Chicago has arrived The donation amounts to $2,291,000, making the total of Mr. Rockefellers gifts to the founded $23,809,061. 88. Notice of the donation was receliv- of the board of trustees in a letter The the amount securities to the which will university of 32.000,000, 4 L000 to cover the defl- of $36.000, MENINGITIS CURE FOUND. Dr. Flexsner's Serum Declared To Be An Absolute Success, New York (8pecial). — Cerebro- spinal meningitis, the dread disease which in 1505 took unchecked more than one thousand lives in three months in this city, has apparently been conquered by Dr. Simon Flex- ner, head of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. Dr. Flexner, after almost three years of research and hundreds of experiments, has discovered an anti-toxin serum with which to combat the merciless “spot ted fever.” Recently he has treated more than sixty persons with it. In no case was there a failure, ———— ———————— SA —————— A Jealous Soldier's Crime. Des Moines, Ia. (Special). —A 19-year-old trooper of the Becond Cavalry, U. 8. A., Roy Howard, con- victed of murderl iss Martha Pic ray, was senten to eight years in the Anamosa Penitentiary. Howard attempted to shoot down a jealous rival and shot Miss Ploray instead. He pleaded accident as an excuse. — a Killed Two Policemen, Knoxville, Tenn. (S8pecial).—Pa- trolmen Mike Wrenn and O. L. Jarna- gin was shot and killed while trying to arrest Ernest Wells. Wells sur- rendered to a citizen. tion was that he knew if they arrest ed nim he would go to the work- house, and he would as soon hang. Wells is about 23 years old. A RD BA SO Several Mills Will Start Up. Buffalo, N. Y. (Special) The Lackawsuna Steel Company will re- light the fires of ita open-hearth furnaces this week. With the re opening of the furnaces several mills which have been close four weeks will back in service as a conse quence. Several hundred men will be re-employed The renewed activity follows a series of conferences be- tween President BE. A. 8. Clarke, of New York with the local »n men PO ST A But 1807 Had Fewer Lyrchings (63) Than in Last 20 Years. Chicago (8pecial).~Buicides in the United Btates continue to increase, as they have done for several years past, and also continue in excess of other forms of violent death The number for 1907 was 10,782, accord- ing to reports from all sections of the country. Until 1906 about twice as many men committed suicide as women, but last year there were nearly three times as many men, and this year there are more thas three times as many, the record showing 8,188 men and 2.594 woman suicides Causes were as follows: ency, 4,028; Insanity, mestic infelicity, 2,172; disappoint- ment in love, 1,218; {ll health, 851; liquor, 492; business losses, 123; un- known, 786. In killing themselves 3,017 poison and 3,681 used revolvers. glides these, 1,154 wvsed 'the 974 drowned themselves, 801 thelr throats, 85 threw themselves in front of trains, 40 stabbed them- selves, 81 jumped from windows or roofs, 6 blew themselves up with dynamite, and 2 starved themselves to death. There was a smaller number of Iynehings in 1807 than in the last 20 | years. The total is 63, as compared {with 69 in 1606. The number of Iynchings in the various States and | Territories was as follows: Alabama, 11; Arkansas, 3: Georgia, 9; Towa, {1; Kentucky, 1; Louisiana, 11; i Maryland, 2; Mississippi, 13; Nebras. ika, 1; Bouth Carolina, 2; Tennessee, 12; Texas, 4; Indian Territory, 1, and i Oklahoma, 2. i Deaths by all Despond- 1,019; do- took Be. rope, cut kinds of violence | except suicide and lynching were 8,172, or 638 less than for 1806 The number of legal executions in {1907 was 104, or 19 less than the {number in 15086. Serious automobile accidents were reported in 362 places, ag compared with 192 places last year, showing ithe rapidly increasing use of this i kind of vehicle There were 324 {killed and 1.244 injured, as com- pared with 200 killed and 851 Jured last year EXPLOSION IN STEEL MILL. Two Dead And Thirteen Injured At Edgar Thompson Plant, Tw OO men clthers werg { Special) 13 by of the Edgar Thomp- ‘son plant of the United Steel Com- pany, at North Braddock, about seven miles east of here Six of the injured were ‘and the others Slave. All were re- moved to a hospital in this cojty, where it was said thelr injuries were i not serious. No official statement on the cause of the explosion has been Issued, i but old converter milli men say the | cause could hardly be other than that isome of the molten metal sifted | through the soapstone lining of the {converter and came in contact with {the steel sheathing, which, perhaps, {was damp When the explosion occurred Pittsburg, Pa killed injured were and seT- fously an explosion in converter No. 3 Americans the throwing 15 tons of molten metal ing at the ladles. There was no re- port when the hot mass of steel stead flames of burning gas igent up, which burned the men the pit. in been working unde: gled. The force o” the explosion i blew the sheet iron roof off of the converting mill and caused the walls to collapse, besides break- {ing all of the windows in buildings in the vicinity, and partially de- ‘stroying the engine house and ware- house near the converting mill. Give Life To Save Boy's. Ann Arbor, Mich. (Special).- Frazer, a young sacrificed his life in saving that of a little son of John O'Hara, his em- ployer. The wagon was struck by an Ann Arbor Raliroad train at the Pontiac Street crossing. Frazer saw the train in time to throw his child companion from the wagon. When he jumped he fell under the locomo- tive and was horribly mangled. Gain In Gold And Silver. Washington, D. C. (8pecial).—The semi-annual provisional statement is- sued by the Director of the Mint shows that there has been a gain in the stock of gold and silver colin in the United States since June 30, 1807, of $118,686,508, FINANCIAL Lee The income of the Girard Estate for 1907 was $1,983,000, Canadian Pacific shareholders au- thorized the issue of $28,000,000 un. sold stock. According to a British authority stocks dealt in in London declined during the year $1,700,000,000. It is expected that a general re- sumption of currency payments by the banks will come now at an early date, The report from Washington of pushing the plan to make the Union Pacific give up control of the South- ern Pacific did not alarm the traders. There was an increase of $69,853 in Atchison's November gross earn- ings, but a net decresse of $1,222. 942. The average net decrease for five month in net profits was 25 per cent, American stocks were favorably affected by the reduction of the Bank of England's discount rate from 7 to 4 per cent. It was an indication of improving money conditions ahrosd, A 2 per cent. extra dividend is now talked of for Northern Pacific. was a gain of $14,088 | Gheaspeare & "obo wet’ promis in CISTELLME FIGHTS A PRINCE Mme. Gould, His Former Wife, Probable Cause. THE PRINCE IN LOVE WITH HER. Count Boni and His Brother, on Emerging From Church, Attack Prince de Sagan, Their Cousin, the Count Spitting in His" Face They Clinch and Roll Into a Gutter. Boni de his wife who was Miss Anna Gould, of New York, divorced, and Prince Helle de Sagan, who on sever. al occasions was reported to be en- gaged to Mme. Gould, had a per- isonal encounter at the Church of | Bt. Plerre de Cha’'llot while a service [to the memory of Lady Stanley Er- { rington, a relative of both men, whe died lately in England, was in prog Fess, Beginning inside the church, where Count Boni says, the Prince insulted both him and the sacred edifice, the encounter was resuried at the door- way, where Count Bonf, followed by his brother, Count Jean de Castel lane, overtook the Prince Count Boni spat in his cousin's face Then came the clash of canes, fol- lowed hy a rough-and-tumble fight on the pavement, which ended in the gutter, where the men were finally separated by a butcher. Count Boni at the moment of intervention was holding down the well-nigh insensible Prince, while Jean. eccording to eye- witnesses, was administering to him a severe kicking In The Butcher's Grip. When the police arrived the butch. er wag holding the two principals in the fight, who were covered with mud. The Prince was bleeding pro- fusely from a wound in the right temple, where Lhe had been hit 1 Count Bonl's heavy stick With butcher's hand on his collar was haranguing a which gathered as to why he had spa Prince's face. The jwlice inv two men to go to the sts ar this and Lili, Paris (By Cable).— Count Castellane, from whom was recently vy the Boni crowd after some All spattered with mud police, and, followed by and persons, they marched off t station, where i mage agreed to do. three they tions.” Bot} Count Boni version of the gave their own rel the aggressor lodged a i1 brothers was assanlt A verbal written out, accord law, the three men then were released The will go before the publie who will decide what ishall be taken No Duel Likely. In view of the fact that Prince Helle has elected to pursue the mat- ter in the courts, idea of a duel seems to be precluded Beside Count Boni declared that jt was doubtful whether he would receive {the witnesses of the Prince, if the latter could find anyone to act in that capacity. Prince Helle {laid up in bed with his head swathed in bandages, while Count Boni spent la-part of the evening in visiting the | newspaper offices, telling the story of ithe encounter, When seen by a correspondent he was in high humor. Throwing back ithe lapels of his fur coat in order {to better display one of his famuos white silk waistcoats, he began the | recital with the history of his cousin. each claiming 1 the oth Pr " » 130K complaint charging process having r to the FF; signed it case prosecutc if any ii RADY, the Lh even “os {whom he painted in the blackest col- i ors, declaring that Prince Helle had { been ostracized by his own family ‘not one of whom would permit him to enter the house. Count Doni then | proceeded to explain the episode and ideclared that it had nothing to {with Mme, Anna Gould, but was the i result of an old grudge between hin jand the Prince. He added tbat the { Prince had not been invited to the ceremony at the church A Dangerous Man. {| The gossip at the clubs is that { duel may be the outcome, after all | The Prince is courted a very dan- gerous man both with the sword and pistol. He has accumulated the reputation of being a hair-trigge: brawler and stickier on points of honor who has fought almost » hundred duels and marked his man more than score of times, Count Boni ie reckoned no coward and very handy with the little dueling pistol himself, The underiying motive of the quar rel is evident enough. Bo much ha Prince Helie's name been in the mouths of the gossips linked with Mme. Anna Gould's of late that Count Boni's pose of martrydom, which he succeeded in large measure in impressing upon the popular sym- pathies, had recently suffered great- ly. Bince the Prince is so close a re- lation to Count Boni, the heralding of his possible chances at the Gould fortune had rankied the more deeply in the small chest of the iate hus band. “Living Skeleton” Dead. Providence, R. 1. (Special) — Charles H. Perry, who travelled with several of the larger circuses for 16 years, figuring as “the skeleton man,” was found dead in a hut on the out skirts of this city, where he had 1 led a hormit’s life. Perry was known to the public as Eugene Fer. alto. Although he was 6 feet 1 inch in height, he weighed only 80 pounds. Wharton, Ohio (Special). A doz- en persons were poisoned here by eating cheese. Clarence Bell, wife and three children are dying. The others poisoned are Mr, and Mrs Wheeler Crider and two children, and the family of L. F, Long. Austria-Hungary Gives Aid. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special). -- An- nouncement is made that $6000 has been added to the relief fund for the sufferers of the Naomi, Monon and Jacobs Creek mine disasters the Austria-Hungary Government.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers