mill MEM Disabled Passenger Steamer Was Towed to the Azores. PROPELLER AND RUDDER BROKEN ■ihe Will Await the Arrival of the Elbe to Carry Passengers to Eng land —They Were Not Alarmed at Accident. Horta. Azores, March 10.— The Ktruria anchored here at 6 o'clock last evening. All on board are well. She had a comparatively uneventful pas sage except for the breakdown, which occurred during the dinner hour of February 26. When this occurred the Ktruria had only just finished speak ing by wireless telegraphy with the Canard line steamship Umbria. After the accident was discovered the Etruria called the Umbria wirelessly for one hour, but without success. I'pon examination it was found that (lie ship's propeller had broken off outside the tube, and that the rudder had been carried away by the pro peller. The Etruria then sent up rock ets. which were seen by the British steamer William Cliff. The latter bore down and was alongside in 50 minutes after the accident. She stood by until daylight, when, after several attempts, she succeeded in passing a hawser aboard the Etruria. The tank steamer Ottawa arrived on the scene at this time. The William Cliff then attempted to tow the Etruria, while the Ottawa attempted to steer her. The hawser, however, snapped. The Ottawa stood by for two days and then left for Faval, bearing the sec ond officer of the Etruria, to report the disaster and obtain assistance. In the meanwhile the crew of the Etruria had made every effort to rig a jury rudder. The first, such rudder was carried away immediately an at tempt was made to use it. After further efforts lasting for two days & second rudder was successfully ad justed and is still in position. The passengers of the Etruria were satisfied that they were in no danger, and they praise the conduct of the captain and crew of the vessel. After the accident the passengers amused themselves with the usual deck sports, and concerts were held In the first und second cabins. Only those who were anxious concerning business mat ters chafed at the unavoidable delay. The Etruria will wait here for the arrival of the Royal Mail steamer Elbe, which left Southampton for Horta Saturday. The Elbe will carry the Etruria's passengers to England. The Etruria will then be towed home by tiie tugs which are now on their way out from Liverpool for this pur pose. AFTER TRENTON'S EX-MAYOR Police Chiefs Between Philadelphia and Canada Watching For Him. Philadelphia. March 8. —All police chiefs along the railroads between Philadelphia and the Canadian border were requested yesterday by Chief of Detectives Miller to recapture Frank A. Magowan. the former mayor of Trenton, N. J., who managed to ob tain his release at Trenton Thursday anil escape after he had been arrested and held to await requisition papers from this city. If Magowan reaches the other side of the border he is safe, as the Do minion's authorities already have re fused to send him back on the charges madu against him. He bad been ar rested at Trenton on an indictment against him here based on the accusa tion of three citizens that Magowan had defrauded tbem to the extent of $14,000, White Caps Warn Pastor. Tamaqua, Pa.. March 10. —When the Rev. Laros. pastor of Emanuel Church, at l.ansford. opened his front door yesterday morning he found a folded piece of paper lying on the sill. Upon opening it le saw sketched upon the top of the sheet a skull and cross bones. while on the sides were these words: "Beware. Brother Laros, your time will come next. White Cap Com mittee." Below these words were sketches of a revolver, a dagger, a blackjack and a bottle marked gin. The Rev. Mr. Laros. who has been lo cated at Laros for more than two years, is a leader of all crusades against vice. He was the instigator of the movement which succeeded in suppressing boxing contests in that town, and is now the leader of the movement against the selling of liquors at Summit Hill and Lansford on Sunday, and personally delivered notices to the dealers. Exciting Blaze In Boarding House. Chicago, March 10.—Dazed and half suffocated by smoke, which filled his room, Rudolph Engelcke. a jeweler, rushed through a sheet of flame yes terday and threw himself from a three story window of a boarding house. On the pavement below a number of fire men were holding a net. The man, his clothes ablaze, whirled in the air as he shot toward the ground, thon struck on one side of the net and bounded to the stone walk. He sus tained internal injuries, a fractured ' wrist and was severely burned about the head and body. Twelve other oc cupants of the building had narrow es capes from death. Advice On Marriage. York, Pa., March 7. —At yesterday's session of the Pennsylvania Confer ence of the United Brethren Church Bishop Mills cautioned the ministry not to officiate at weddings where either party had been divorced, except where Infidelity was the cause of sep aration. All marital differences, the bishop advised, should be settled without the aid of the civil courts. Fifteen dead in texas wreck Train On Southern Pacific Was De railed and Burned. San Antonio, Tex., March 7. —A broken rail caused a frightful wreck on the Southern Pacific Railroad, near | Maxon station, 25 mileß went of San-; derson. yesterday morning. From the ' latest accounts received here 15 peo-1 pie were killed outright and 28 were more or less injured. Among the in jured is Mrs. Mitchell, of Philadelphia, who is hurt internally. The ill-fated train left San Antonio at noon Thursday, and at the time of the accident was running at a high rate of speed in order to make up time. The road at the point where the wreck occurred is in a rough country, the curves being sharp and the grades heavy. It was when rounding a curve that the train left the track, it is said, on account of a broken rail. All the passengers were asleep, and the shock that followed waa the first intimation ! they had of the danger. The train was going at such a rate of speed that the i tender and engine landed 75 feet from where they left the rails. The cars behind piled up against the engine, causing a fire, and all were consumed except the sleepers. A private car owned by Thomas Ryan, of New York city, whose family was aboard, was attached to the rear of the train, but it was pulled away before the fire reached it, and no one in it waa injured. All the killed in the coaches Just behind the express and baggage cars were cremated. The people in the sleepers were saved with tho assistance of the uninjured passen gers. As soon as it was possible? to get in communication with the division headquarters, relief trains with sur geons and physicians were started from El Paso, Del Rio and Sandersou, picking up along the line all the sur geons that could be found. All the in jured who were in a condition to be moved were sent to El Paso, where they are receiving oareful attention. BURIED BY STRANGERS Woman Who Had Bank Account Died Without Telling of Friends. Trenton, N. J., March 10.—Sarah Curran, who left a bank account in a Philadelphia bank, was buried here today at the expense of comparative strangers, because her folks cannot be located and it is not definitely known in which bank the money is deposited. She was employed at the Hotel Hanover, and from the time of becoming ill she was unconscious and unable to tell anything about herself. All that is known about her is that she has a friend somewhere im Phila delphia who hat her bank book. She was ft middle-aged woman. Her fel low employes and her employer ar ranged for her burial in Greenwood Cemetery. SENATOR FLINN OUT OF POLITICS Hm Resigned From State Senate and Will Devote Time, to Business. Pittsburg. Pa., MaH-h B.—Senator William Flinn in a statement given to the newspapers last night announces that he has retired from politics, giv ing as his reason the growth of his private business, which demands all of his time. To make it positive that his retirement is beyond recall, he furnishes copies of letters forwarded to Lieutenant Governor J. P. S. Gobin, president of the state senate; J. O. Brown, chairman of the Pittsburg city Republican committee, and A. C. Rob ertson. chairman of the Republican county committee, in which he resigns his seat in each of these organiza tions. Paid $600,000 For Rare Porcelain. New York. March 10. —At a price said to have been $500,000, J. Pier pont Morgan has purchased the great Garland collection of porcelains, and they are to remain in this country. For years the Garland collection has been one of tho most notable art treasures in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. By connoisseurs it is regarded as possibly the finest in the world. There are many single pieces which would easily bring $50,000 as a first bid. One in particular is the "red hawthorn" vase. It is jet black, with enameled peach blossoms scattered upon it. There is nothing else like it In the world, connoisseurs say. Young Men Licensed to Preach. Lock Haven, Pa., March 8. —At yes terday'a session of the United Evan gelical conference the following young men were licensed to preach: Clifford B. Armstringer, of Hagerstown. Md.; Chester Walker, of New Berlin, Md.; Ward Kell Schultz, of Centre Hall, Pa.; Harry R. Wilkeß, of Baltimore. Md., and J. K. Taylor, of York, Pa. The conference adopted a resolution re joicing at the prospect of the bill abolishing the liquor traffic in the New Hebrides as passed by the na tional house recently becoming a law. The Mine Workers' Convention. Shamokin, Pa., March 10 —'The Mer chants' Protective Association re solved to defray the expenses of the United Mine Workers' convention, which begins here on March 18. Ac commodations for SOO delegates have already been procured. The commit tee on entertainment expects that in several days lodging for from 30u to 400 additional miners' representatives will have been obtained. Baptized In River Jordan. Middletown, N. Y., March 10. —Word has reached here that Cornelius Van Ness, the octogenarian millionaire of Port Jervis, formerly of New York, has been baptized in the river Jordan by the Rev. William K. Hall, of New burgh, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Van Ness aailed on the steamer Celtic for a trip to the Orient, hla desire being to gratify an ambition of years to be bap tized is the river Jordan. I WINCHESTER I •CARTRIDGES IN ALL CALIBERS| A from .22 to .50 loaded with either Black or Smokeless Powder M always give entire satisfaction. They are made and loaded in a modern manner, by exact machinery operated by skilled experts. M THF.Y SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD ♦ ALWAYS ASK FOR THEM J A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED. Tues-Jay, March 4. The census of New Fonndland, Which has just been completed, gives the population as 220,249. In a fit of jealousy, Anthony Berry, Of Detroit, shot and killed Mrs. Sarah A. Thillman and then killed himself. Professor Frederick James Wood bridge has been appointed lo the chair of philosophy of Columbia University. New York. Adjutant General Stewart, of Penn sylvania, who was injured In a run away accident last August, resumed his duties yesterday. The five-story building of the Aste Press Printing Co., in New York, was wrecked by an explosion. A woman who jumped from a window was killed. Wednesday, March 5. Australia produced *,333.t>81 ounces of gold last year. The Crescent Democratic Club, of Baltimore, Md., celebrated its 30th an niversary last evening. The Maryland senate passed a bill to authorize the admission of women as practicing lawyers in the state court. The United States senate yesterday confirmed the nomination of Benja min B. Brown to be collector of cus toms at Erie. Pa. The United States cruiser Philadel phia sailed from Panama for Guaya quil. Ecuador, where she will show the American Rag for the first time in several years. Thursday, March 6. There are more desertions from German merchant vessels at New- York than at any other port. The navy department sold the old monitor Manhattan to Henry Hltner's Sons, of Philadelphia, for $ 15.2 IS. Hear Admiral J. A. Howell will be retired on the 10th inst. Next to Ad miral Dewey he is the ranking officer of the navy. George Hettrlck, of Trenton. N. J., who killed John Krans on Thanksgiv ing day.was sentenced to be hanged on April 14. Negotiations are being made for op tions on candy factories in St. Louis, Mo., with a view to forming a trust, with $5,000,000 capital. Friday, March 7. The Babcock building and two other structures at Plainfield, N. J., were de stroyed by fire yesterday, l.oss, $250,- 000." The New York chamber of com merce adopted a resolution urging the maintenance .if silver dojlsis or* parity with gold. The Republican convention of Sus quehanna county. Pa., nominated Hon. Charles P. Wright for congress for the Fifteenth district. President Roosevelt has been invited to deliver the principal address at the G. A. R. Memorial day exercises at Arlington cemetery. Washington, on May 30. A telegram received at the navy de partment at Washington from London announced the death of B. F. Stevens, for 25 years United States dispatch agent there. Saturday, March 8. President Roosevelt yesterday signed the permanent census bureau bill. The United States cruiser Olympia is off Yorktown, Va., where she will have target practice. K man said to be Heber L. Bull, of Philadelphia, committed suicide in a Boston lodging house yesterday. Camden, N. J., is nearly free of small-pox. having but IT cases, all of whom are in the isolation hospital. General Julius J. Kstev, aged 57, president of the Estey Organ com pany. died at his home at Brattleboro. Vt., yesterday. The labor dispute between the New York Sun and Typographical Union. No. t». has been settled, and the office hereafter will be a union office. Monday, March 10. President Roosevelt on Saturday signed the Philippine tariff bill. William Gosden, one of the most prominent young men of Richmond, Va., committed suicide by taking mor phine. Secretary Wilson, ot the agricul tural department, denied that he in tends resigning from President Roose velt's cabinet. Charles Foster Kent. Ph. D., profes sor of Biblical literature at Yale Uni versity. surprised his class by strongly favoring hazing. The Philadelphia Base Ball club of the American League will play its first exhibition game on April 3 with a picked team. Creditors of the late Archbishop Purcell. of Cincinnati, have appealed to Rome for special collections in the United States to wipe out his Sti.dOo,- Oflu indebtedness. "Dry" Sunday In New York. New York, March 10. —Despite the alleged promises of the saloonkeepers that yesterday should be the very dry eat Sunday on record so far as New York was concerned, the pi an or wom an who wished bad little or no trou ble in purchasing drinks. About the only noticeable difference in getting one was that the thirsty man was not allowed to stand at the bar and in many Instances he was forced to sit down to the "property"' sandwich, left over from earlier days of the Raines law reign. ||5S. BONDS For Sale, by the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Phil adelphia, are as good an invtstment as you will be likely to find anywhere, and you may feel certain from the start that you are dealing with a company that is fair and equitable in all respects, and has abundant assets to fulfill all promises. They may be bought in yearly payments to suit the purchaser, ma turing at such time as may be selected. The Pen Mutual issues such a Bond at a much lower rate than other legal reserve life insurance companies. I I would be glad to give a J i information pertaining to this i contract, as well as any form jot Life Insurance written by ; the company. M. A. SCUREMAN, Special Agent, DUSHORE PENN'A. Big Frices to Sec Coronation Parade. London, March 10.—This city is al ready flooded with illustrated litera ture pointing out the advantageous j view points from which the coronation j parade may be witnessed. Many sin i gle windows, opening on balconies at | such points as Hill, have al | ready been let for S2OO each. Single I seats in the Strand have been sold for sls and Single windows, with exceptional approaches, on the Sur ry side, have fetched $375. Collieries Resume Operations. Shanioldn, Pa.. March 10.—The local collieries of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company and of the T T nion Coal company, which were closed down last week by the floods, resumed operations today, aloni; with a number ol mines operated by individual companies. Tli • re sumption of operations will give wrk to 8.000 men and boys, who have been out of employment since the recent storms. Reformed Mission School Eurned. Lebanon. Pa.. March Jo. —Rev. Dr. .Joseph I-emberger. treasurer of the I board of commissioners for foreign ! missions of the Reformed Church in | the United States, was informed by I table yesterday that the school for girls at Zondia, Japan, which is main tained by the church, has been to tally destroyed by tire. The school took care of 75 girls, all of whom wen saved The school was established : about 15 yeatfc ago. and enjoyed the favor of the Japanese government, which was at first opposed to it. Everybody Snya So. Coscarets Candy Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of the age, pleas ant ami refreshing to the taste,-act gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, lever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, A">, r>o cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. DYSPEPTICIDE The greatest aid to DIGESTION. Foley*s Honey and Tar 1 heals lu ftqs and stops tbc coxqh. BANNER SALVE. i the rnont hoPiltiß salve In the world. SEND NO MONEY! Free to any one this month, our new No. 99 Catalogue, every copy of which costs JI.U3 to print and 23 cts. to mall. This mammoth book contains 480 pages, size inches,contains over 13,000 illustrations and quotes wholesale prices to consumers on over 150,000 different articles. It saves you from 25 to 75 per cant, on Everything you Eat, Uta and Wear. It's Free To All Who Write For It. H Everything excepting Locomotives and steam boats are quoted In this catalogue — w a even sell Live Animals —everything a man, woman or child wears, all kinds of food, everything needed or used in a home, for the offlce, for a Hotel, for use on a Farm, in a barn or for every known purpose can be found in this catalogue. With tills book in your possession jou buy cheaper than the average Dealer. Lithographed Carpet, Rug and Drapery Catalogue, Our Men's Clothing Catalogue with Samples attached and our Dress Uoods Catalogue with Samples are all Pre* to intending purchasers. Freight paid on Carpets, Bx prassage said on Made te-Order Clothing. Why pay big Retail Prices when yon can buy direct from the Mill? Which Catalogue do you want 7 Address this way: I JULIUS HINES A, SON, BALTIMORE. JID.. Department 909. t lUIMt * O 11 nil Sllioku 1.1.C To quit tobacco easily :in<l forever, bo mue neilc. lull of life, nerve am! rigor, take No-To | Mac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All drußgists, SOe or 11. CuroKuarun , I Doublet anil sample free. Address Sterling Keuiedy CO , Chicago or New York. ISMTaIHs On Advertising 1 By Charles Austin Bates. ~j> ~~ 1 No. 36. The man who starts out to advertise with a set of cast iron rules has not much chance for success. If he says at the beginning of the year; " I am going to spend just SI,OOO this year for advertising and not a cent /?<! more," he is making a great mistake. IJ> > It is all right to fix in your mind in jX Vuiß. a general way the amount you expect to spend, but to have a fixed advertising \ appropriation and to decline good adver ■ jA %w|P'V lisin s w ' lcn you need it, simply because ' "the appropriation is exhausted," is a "''The man who starts out to advertise pOOI blisi- |. j livnnr s «»ith a st'* of cast iron rules." • DOCTORS I ness policy. am | The amount of advertising necessary &3.9S \.J$ depends on the amount of business that it is necessary for you to do. It depends JgfWrT on the conditions of trade, and, to a cer- SXKM Rife]! tain extent, on the weather. I 1 - ~4 Sometimes $lO worth of advertising will sell SI,OOO worth of goods, and (rtlJljßir!ifl (IK sometimes it will take SSO or £IOO worth of advertising to do it. ®L-- ? Advertising is business medicine, and should be taken in such quantities p " y {iZto7s"%ih» and at such times as it is needed. A man doesn't decide at the be * are just like the man and his " Hevituldviakr ufi some morning and find -> himself dead.'' metllC 111 C. Copyright, Charles .-/»..•//» Rales, Xnv York. ARE fSi Mffiß MIT yoo N'Sfijfi??;. Iso DEAF? . m ■ NOISES? ALL CASES OF DEAFNESS OR HARD HEAR6R2C ARE KOW CURABLE by our new invention. Onlv those born <k:af are hienrcHc. HEAD NOISES CEASE MmiWm, " P. A. WEWNIAN, OF BALTIMORE, CAYS: BAI.VTMORE, Md., Vnr-h 30, (Ttvflrmtn : Tleinc* entirely cured of drnfnesr*. thanks lo your treatment, Iw: now voy.-.i a full history of :ny ca;-f, to be u.-etl at yon.r discretion. About live yeKfji ajjo my right ear began to king, and this fcey.t cn ; Itim* V.vm\«V\ unfit ? i 1 my hearing iu this car entirely. I undei went a treatment t'"w catarrh, for three months, without c.r.v <v/.-n?tc/.T a tun •- her of pliy avians, anion ; others, the mo>t einuient car special*.-lof t'li < ity. x 1 •»t« »l«i . <-v t only an rifM-ration could help inc, and even that only te:nt>oi arily, that, the ;ut iuk• • v.» l tiien ceasv but the he:«rinj£ in t'.ie a fleet*. I ear would be u»revc: I then saw your ;uh*crtisvmcnt ik .leu ally in a New York piper, r.nd ordered * enrtrrr'- inent Alter I had used it only a K-*.v d. ys n 'ordinp: t«> your diwci.i •'>. the noises ct\o ed. M.II to-day, afti r five week -. my hearing the d w;»m d car be< 11 entirely relieved. 1 thank y 1 heartily and bej; to remaiti Veiy truly vours. i . A. WKRMAX, : of-. Erondway, Baltimore, Ml. Our treatment doer, not interfere with your oee/t/mtion. YOU m CURE YOURSELF AT WAz at INTERNATIONAL AUfiAL GUNIG, iiSS lt\ SALLE AVE., CtIiGACO, ILL, TTONIC LAXATIVE ' If you have sour stomach, indigestion, biliousness, constipation, breath, dizziness, inactive liver, heartburn, kidney troubles, bacl:nclie, 10-i: of appetite, insomnia, lack of energy, bad blood, blotched or muddy ult-r or any symptoms and disorders which tell the story cf bad bovve'u cr>J impaired digestive system, Will Cure \Tou. It will clean out the bowels, stimulate the liver and kidneys, the mucous membranes of the stomach, purify your blood anc? ;>ut you "on your feet" again. Ycur appetite will return, your bowel;; move regu larly, your liver and kidneys cease to trouble you, your skir. will cler.r ami freshen and you will feel the old time energy and buoyancy. Mothers Recking the prnpcr medicine to pivo tli<'ir little ones fur eo:iatip."('on, Iliarrllc.it, colic and Himilar troubles, will liud Laxakola 1111 ideal lncillcion for elnl'.lri ii. It kcc;w llicir IIOWOIH williout |iaiu or act J (Id a trciiorul t a i nature, aids digestion, relieves r. stleamicss, clears Die coated tonirue, reduces li ver, i ansc i refreshlnr, restful : lee;> an 1 make i t!:e:.i well, happy and hearty. ["»■ vhiliirc.i lilce it unil link J'or it. I i Far Safe by l.axakt'l.i i.i nt on!-, tlu in ist fflii unt «»i family ivme«!ior.. I t t!u- n'.c.st rrnmimir.-il, bncau- t" it ct u\ bines Iv>'«» liicdu lit. \ u laxative and tonic, a:iU .it »'iu- |iri< c, 'Z-V • «.>r '(lt At vtrll t ;f7!st•■ -nd fort'> • sample to THE I.ANAKOI.A CO . IX2 Nassau Street, N \ , and mention the nai'K- t.f y,,i . •'ru ff" We \lll expic-.s to any addrr*. . • -t* rereipt ct 6"r. ii stamp-' • r note, all tfuriji- ja«:puiJ a 4 i an..l)' buw bulllc cf uulfitiviii tu la-t for a l->nj time. 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers