INGE CHING BS THE REGEN continues to imp STRONGLY PRO-FOREIGN. It is Said He Would Return to Pekin if His Safety Was Assured by Foreign Ministers. It is rumored at Shanghai that the Japanese gained a great victory over the Boxers and Chinese troops from Pei Tsang and Ho Si Wu last Thursday at Teh Chou. The story says that 1,500 Chinese were killed, including Prince Tuan, and that all the Chinese were driven back into Chi Li. ‘he Reform party, under Kang Yu Wet, is said to be actively preparing for rebellion. It is reported from Hankow that 25 reformers have been executed, their hearts being exposed. I The Taku correspondent says that the country around 1 and Pekin is ge- | vastated, with the result that the Bo ers are most unpop 3 Bos. | g north from Shan | returning hastily to | attacked by the ers, who were mo Tung, are now their ning , Governor of the provir Si, is reported to have invited the eigners in the province to come to pe e of Shan | He protection. Fifty accepted the invita tion, and all were massacred. Fie powers have agreed sition to withdraw Pp a and two have announced « tion to its adoption. Four pow POSI- he finally declared that Li-Hung acceptable to them as peace envoy for China, two questicns not only Li-Hung Chang’s credentials, but the power of the Imperial Government to approve his acts, and one wishes to know more about the credentials he holds before it is willing to treat thro him. This sums up the s n. It could hardly be more satisfactc viewad from the American standpoint. An ac- tive interchange of views took place Thursday between the capit Eu rope and Japan 1 Washi and as a result it is likely that pre will be applied to the two powers anxious to remain in Pekin to induce them to withdraw simultaneously with the evac- uation by the other : S. ‘he powers who object to the Russian proposition are Germany and Ttaly. Those favoring it are the United States, Great Britain, en an and Rus- sia. The powers wh stion Li- Hung-Chang’s credentials and the abil- ity of the Imperial Government to en- force the terms he mz nake are Ger- many and Italy, whi 3 ce would like to know more about the credentials ions be ain. | g n the Russian minister | an unconfirmed | or 1 at Pe 5d say: There rumor that Prince ( g has been ap- pointed regent, but afraid to return to Pekin unless the fc n envoys will guarantee his liberty. Ten dignitaries remaining in Pekin have consequently, C situa- return resolved to petition the diplomats, in t interest of an amelioration of the tion, invite Prince Ching to to Pekin and to give explanations. It has been learned that the em press Is going from Tyan-Fu, in the province of Shan-Si, to which place she had fled after her escape from Pekin, to Hsinan Fu. Tyan-Fu i farther west than Hsinan-Fu, indicating that she is mov- ing still further away from the Chinese capital. It is stated that Prince Tuan’s Tsut Sing, will be declared emperor un- der the protection « Russia. to is son, BRITISH PRISONERS FREED. The Boers Release Their Captives—Kruger | Nearing Portuguese Territory. The British prisoners at Noortge dacht have been released by the Boers and are marching to join Lord Roberts’ forces at Watervalhoven, near Machado- dorp. President Kruger and his chief officials are at Nelspruit, about 60 miles from the Portuguese border and on the railroad between Pretoria and Delagoa ay. that cvening cyclone A visited Mafeking Thursday did more damage than the seven months’ bombardment. It blew down or unroofed nume buildings and leveled the hospital, c ing much suffering among the sick a wounded. One person was killed and two were injured. ly General Buller's column arrived | at Helvetia, where Gen. French and General Pole-Carew are also encamped. Both Waterfallboven and Watervalon- der were found deserted, the Boers hav- ing retreated with their guns in the di- rection of Barberton. Commandant General Botha has ordered burghers to return their Mausers to the government military commission until the latter is able to issue: ammunition. BATTLE WITH CANADIANS. {ed his | his LATEST NEWS NOTES, i> The health of Secretary of State Hay A new DO, am stabbed ef. was poc Joseph Johns electric will be 3ryant, of Sunday "vler county, Saturday. Maj. ington, Pa., tonviction. a resu nd Twelve 8 0 Thursday, 100,000 1n Haz lett, bui W. Va, far plant, to cost Vindber, Pa. 5 Pa, pick- a female mer of Inka, hanged himself the ex-banker of Wash is prostrated by his second 1 it now ansvaal war. men were ~d with being e riot there. mer Topeka, brought of the w experts arr 1 150 Id dust. It is reported that the an S successes, early end to ested at Akron, mplicated in the Alaska, and from passengers ar has order- 1 roops minister at Pekin to eave at once for Tien Tsin. General Uribe, chief of the insurgent forces in Colom! has surrendered to at Churchuri. Internal $29,421 Two CS warden's Jackson, ; at The proved the revenue 301, an incr er the same month last pe Cheneyvill confessed Ww Nicaraguan aped convicts 1d a Oi aes in posse at Whit e; La, T the mur lynche plant of the Sheiby rood Ci ted after being idle for sever receipts Congress commercial reciprocity tre for July of $1,400,- AT. were killed a fight with a le, Tenn. homas J. Amos, ler of Elamson d by a mob. Steel Tube P: to be al years. has ap- ease esi ty, ty between Nicaragua and the United States. The estate of Collis P. Huntington, who died ty at his summer home in the Adirondacks, is valued at $69,- 650.000. The Youngstown, O., Gas and Elec- tric New £500,000. Light Company has been sold to York and Chicago capitalists for A tornado which passed over the vil- o 1d his s wife. two of Wapella, Man, children and badly killed a farmer hurt In both houses of the Kentucky Leg- islature many biils have been introduced both to kill or tion law, The Fairbanks Sc ing and Kiefer Bros. amend the Goebel elec- ale £ompany build- factory in New Orleans were burned out, causing a loss of $300,000. The 000 in gold. The warpath the nu in yamas. At T Jowlin cating toadstools for and John die. Thomas iged 22, probably 1 preacher, persons, in the General accept the to tl A Yaqui river, 1 1¢ steamer Moana, which sailed from Sydney, N. S. V Francisco, has on lexico, ar within Green, mt Hart nurde er « was hanged at Raleigh, county jail. nominati 0. Jone S, a er ey for i Captain board Yaqui Indians, who are on the re reported a few miles of , as a result of Flora, will 1shrooms er, aged 14, f a family of six NC, Maximo Gomez has declined on offered him by the National party to the constitu- tional convention. Agents representing one-third of the | Fall River, M: mills ass., have signed an agreement for 11 1-9 per cent reduction in wages on September 17. Lymz 4 Hi I of klin, tn by Harry Ross, on | THRTY KILLED AND MANY HURT. RAILROAD HORROR. An Atlantic City Special Dashes Into a Wild Train—Scenes of Horror in the Eight Wrecked Cars. Thirteen persons killed and over 50 others injured is the appalling record of a rear end collision between an ex- cursion train milk train on the Bethlehem branch the Philadelphia & Reading railroad Sunday morning at Hatfield, Pa., Phila- delpl The wrecked train consisted of 10 day coaches and was the first section of a large excursion made up of people from Bethichem, Allentown and surrounding towns to Atlantic City. This section Union depot in Bethlehem at m., exactly 35 minutes behind k train. / the milk train drew up at the milk platform af Hatfield, and in less than two minutes the special excursion and a of of 27 miles north ieft the 6:05 a. train, running at the rate of 33 miles an hour, crashed into the rear of the milk train. The locomotive ploughed through the two passenger coq ches and crushed them as if they were egg shells. The excursion train was a picture of indescribable horror. The locomotive 1s a mass of bent and broken iron and mly held the bodics of its engineer and fireman beneath its great weight. Jehind the engine six of the ten cars were also a mass of wreckage. The first car was broken in twain, and the other five cars were thrown on their sides, completely demolished. Nine persons were killed in the first two cars and the others in the coaches were badly maimed. As soon as the crash came a terrible cry arose from the smashed cars. Those who had not been injured crawled or jumped from the cars and went to the assistance of the injur- ed. Many were pinned down by wreck- age and had to be freed by the liberal use of ax : With three or four exceptions the dead were killed instantly, the others dying on their way to the hospitals. All the injured were first taken to a shed at the Hatfield station. The dead were removed to a barn. Messengers were nt to the ne st villag for physi- ins, and a relief train was telegraphed for from Bethlehem. The coroner of Montgomery county visited the wreck early and spent the entire day at the scene. He at once di- rected the removal of the dead to Lans- dale, a short distance south of Hatfield. He promises a rigorous investigation into the horror. RESCUE FOR STARVING MINERS. | The Government Will Send a Transport fo Cape Nome. At the Cabinet meeting Friday it was decided that the War Department should send a transport to Cape Nome to bring back such of the miners who are penniless and liable to endanger the public welfare there this winter by rea- son of their destitute condition. Provi- sions and clothing will be sent to the Indians, who are said to be: destitute. The transportation companies, it is claimed, refuse to aid the unfortunates at Cape Nome. The transport in order to effect relief, must go at once. Gen- eral Randle estimates that there are 1,000 persons at Cape Nome in danger of starvation. tchcock, ex-chief of police Information received from several of- Pa., had an eye cut out|ficial and unofficial sources shows that aged 16 years, | the Alaskan Indians along the coast who struck him with a hoe. At St, Joseph, Mich.. over $5,000 in cash, stamps and postal cards was stolen from the cracksmen. Pe stoffice by professional There is no clew. Negroes claiming to have been in- jured in the have filed the city Postmaste dered that recent riots in claims damages amounting r all for to General messages employes not of interest to the depart- New against $260,000. Smith has or- by postoffice ment be guaranteed with a deposit. Col. er of 1 skirts of Thomas J. Powers, Banking killed by falling from a train in the out- Philadelphia Pe in Commission- nnsylvania, Thursday night. The woolen mill of McElhoes > Find- ley, near Indiana, fire Saturday. 000, on which there is $7,000 insurance. Secretary of State John Hay, improving in health, recently overtaxed and has suffered a which has gr strength relapse, friends. At Belvider Pa, The . N. 1, was des 3 loss will reach $16,- atly who was severe alarmed his Father Dynin has had 50 of his ‘paris shioners arrested for tearing church, place. American Traders in Province on Mackenzie Had a Bloody Encounter. Telegrams from Winnipeg, Man., teil of serious troubles in the Great Slave Lake district, between American and Canadian traders. Fifteen Americans, it was charged, smuggled large quantities of supplies in and were thus enabled to undersell the Canadians. They also fur- nished whisky to the Indians. | Edmonton . traders, angry at losing | their trade, sent a committee to notify the Americans to retire. The latter de- | clined and shooting followed. August | Briese, of Seattle, was fatally wounds ed | and several of his companions were hurt. | tcans. Finally the latter fled to the tim ber. Mounted police have been sent to | the | scene. Volunteers to be Recalled. The war department is prep bring home the aring 21,000 volunteers from | the Philippines whose terms of service | will expire baween next November and June, 1001. The homeward movement will begin about the middle of Novem- ber. No orders have yet been iss subject, but it will take practically all of | the transport service at the command of the department to omplish the re- turn of the volunteer It is the inten tion of the department to return the or- ganizations in the same relative order as they w the island, thu equaliz y as possible terms service | A Union Pacific held up by passen four men 60 n Rawlins, Utah, at y o'clock Thurs- | day night. The Pac express car was | totally wrecked by 'namite. The | company offic s is only | $154, but they hay re $1,000 each for the ro bbers. An unconfirmed report Denver that the Wyoming 1» reward of | j over The Indians joined in with the Ames- Br { 10:1” ted on the | dow which they erected at another n and carr ying away his In August the excess of expenditures can coin. Patrick Lally and employed at the mine at Chiefton, fell asleep on the | nongalia, train and of the 1 ward the ns 1s me YW11 county never conve ns. President United M thinks th Pennsyl Phill he anthracite region of Penn- ¢ having great weight, ers being only lukewarm to- movement. receipts by the Government $s 143, due to the cost of the census king and the redemption P railroa killed. 30,000,000 Ie eff ips’ any other th len, Thornhill, nong the t was of Puerto atrick Hughey, Md, 1d track at Mo- W. Va., and.were run over by rts to avert a} many 1e mining properties of the General | ociation of London have to Nova Scotia Steel Tr 00,000, the coal areas 1 extent. ting from the storm of ght in Manitoba, will run up | White Wood, Wis Yambe rmen P: Penfield, owned i ace a re, which { Tu mber. reck Lumber Company's ton, W. Va., burned ut 10,000,000 or - k lumber. 1 ly insured. Company and con- io. Capital, history, the Although the ars old, it has an Democr n robb a have been captured by a posse under | that S10.000 United State al Tadsell, 10 miles | brought out. from the scene of the I sl ve ne > EC ee ny ar Ashland, O., two masked men led 1 y ) we ed down the door to the home of woundec Mary Leidigh and her daughter = Arvilla, bound the women and robbed Cuban Trade Increasing. house. The women attempted t> A steady and material increase in the i sist and Mrs. Leidigh was knocked : mn. trade of Cuba is evidenced in a com- | ¢°W™ parative statement just made public The Cuban Libre, th the division of a ms every ything Americ: in in fairs, war department, wh onslaught ag customs receipts at Cuban Wood and thr first seven mon f le “until no with the same p in Cuba to statement shows for the first seven m ent year % 815 for an increase of $1, Ru in duties to raise and some American goods are taxed 50 per cent higher. the fi 1th rst ainst n he e 207 nent of ade Cuba, has main- an bayo- in his fac- mi / post of Nome river York was Elkhorn la be dotted with ill-used Christian Endea- from Cape Nome are in a serious situa- tion. The miners, it is reported, have gathered for their own use nearly ul the driftwood which the Indians have this winter fuel, and in some the cabins of the Indians have been torn by them. In addition to said that the grip, in a most form, has broken out among the In- dians and that altogether their case i one which calls for immediate succor. TWENTY | MILES OF CARS. Santa Fe Railroad | Blockaded by Long Trains Laden With Wheat. The extensive yards of the Sante Fe Railway Company in Argentine, Kan. occupied with cars of wheat, which it is impossible to move. It was estimated that there were 20 miles of wheat cars there this morn- ing 3. The trouble is said to be due to the inability of the Chicago division of the road to handle the great inflow of wheat from the various branch lines in Kansas. The difficulty is not so much from a car famine as it is due to the lack of mo- tive power to keep the lines cleared. All other roads in Kansas are unable to handle the wheat offered. All the elevators are full, and farmers are dump- ing wheat in big piles on the ground near the railroad stations. are almost exclusively Transport Sails for Manila. The transport Logan sailed from San Francisco Saturday afternoon for Ma- via Nagasaki, with 1,638 enlisted | nila, een accustomed to depend upon for stances down by the miners and the wood used these afflictions it is virulent 15 [oie and 04 cabin passengers, including officers. The Logan carries the head- quarters band, First and Second bat- ; talions of the First regiment, Colonel A. Harbach commanding, and the IT wdquart band and Third battalion of the Second infantry, under command [oF Licutenant Colonel Augustus W. 1¢ | Corliss. Among the passengers on the Logan Major Koehker of the Thirty- | seventh infantry and Major Bolton of {the Twenty-fourth infantry. There are 1lso 11 acting assistant surgeons and female nurses. are fare Clever Capture of Olivier. A Queenstown dispatch, dated Friday, describes the dramatic capture of Gen: eral Oliver during the Boer attack on Winburg. Eight Queenstown volun- teers sortied from the town and took up a position in a donga through which the road passed and behind the Boer position. As the Boers retired through the don- ga in single file they were struck up one by one and put under charge of a couple of men out of Sight until the Colonials had captured 28, including General Oli- vier and his three sons. Await Money From Home. 20 g hristian Endeavors ached York port from Eu- on the North German Lloyd r Aller are unable to proceed to r homes by reason of lack of funds. ither had any of the 420 any baggage of the 4 they arrived, lacking even a of linen. They tell harrowing s of their experiences abroad. report the continent of Europe to vor tourists. Akron Officials Threatened. The Akron. O., city and county offi- ci are deluged with anonymous let- te threatening them with death if they gitemps to m rots. ns have appealed to Judge J. A. Kohler to call a special session of the grand jury to inv igate the matter. A of twelve has been placed to prevent any Sheriff Kelly or the ke arrests for Wednesday men Fierce Storm in Manitoba. Western M have been sw anitoba and the territories by a storm which has 1 heavily damag d crops and 2 operty. A nor of the late} child was killed Way YN. T, is, colonel of |and many were injur tone and y. €¢ com-{Virden. Crops are rally imaged. ever stationed | Te phic communication has been acut AN APPEAL ISSUED. Senor Salvador Cisneros y Betancourt Wants the Present Military Government With- drawn—Tyranny Alleged. Speaking for and with the authority of the people of Cuba, Senor Salvador Cisneros y Batancourt, twice President of the island republic, has issued in New York an “appeal to the American people” for immediate freedom for the Cubans. The appeal is also prepared in Spanish and is now on its way to Cuba, where it will figure powerfully. Senor Cisneros believes in the approaching election of delegates to the constitution- al convention. The appeal in part says: “The people of the United States must be informed that the military authorities in Cuba have been arbitrary in their proceed- ings; that they have disregarded the rights of the people of Cuba; that they only too often act and have acted as conquerors in a conquered land, rather than representatives of a free people helping those who had struggled for freedom. “The independence of the island and the welfare—nay, the very existence of its people—are gravely threatened to- day, all of which has produced such gen- eral alarm and just discontent. that it has taken the constant effort of the more sober minded and temperate lead- ing Cubans to prevent an outbreak which would repeat in Cuba the disas- trous scenes we have witnessed in the Philippine Islands.” Senor Cisneros then goes on to give some of the alleged facts on which the charges are based. He claims misman- agement in the custom house depart- ment and favoritism shown Americans. He says the military government has made many errors in the management of legal questions, and mentions blun- Sir made at the last municipal election. He says that greater frauds than the postoffice frauds will be unearthed. COAL FAMINE THREATENS. New Foundland and Germany Confronted With a Serious Problem. A coal famine now threatens the colony of New Foundland. The estab- lishment of a large smelting enterprise at Sydney absorbs the greater part of the Cape Breton output; and the failure of Reid's mines leaves the colony with- out any local product. Sydney coal has advanced 30 per cent, and there is probably not enough to supply the winter's demand. Mr. Reid, the railway contractor, is likely to be most affected, his trains and steamers absorbing fully a third of the entire co- lonial coal import. The coal famine in Germany has be- come very serious and a number of chambers of commerce have petitioned the government for relief. The Prus- sian Cabinet has resolved to grant a modified railroad tariff for foreign coal in order to facilitate the importation of coal from England and the United States. The Prussian Minister of Rail- ways has laid an embargo on all the coal mined in the State mines. MASON-DIXON LINE. Resurvey of that Historic Bounday Has Be- gun—Granite Posts to Mark the Line. The resurvey of the Mason and Dix- on boundary line between Pennsylvania and Maryland has begun under the di- rection of a commission consisting of of the survey; Dr. William _ Bullock ty and State geologist of Maryland, Major Brown, of Harrisburg. Hudgins, lake, is also identified with the work. It is probable that large granite posts, three feet in length, will be used mark the boundary line. inscription on the posts will be an ed in the hard granite. is made, may also be cut in each post. Librarian Buchard, of the United States Coast and Geological Survey, preparing historical data dealing with the Mason and Dixon line, which is to be published by the government. RICH GOLD STRIKES. Late Discoveries Show That Nome Disiric Teems With Wealth. Late mining developments have been of a satisfactory nature. No doubt now remains of the genuineness of the Kougrock strike; Harris and Quartz creeks in that country are rich and the former shows from 25 cents to $1.50 to the pan. Oregon creek and its tribu- tary, Hungry creek, have developed richness. On Hastings creek, cight miles cast of Nome, prospectors have discovered a gravel "bed 15 feet in thickness and gulch way up into the hills. It is_be- ieved that the next season H creek will be the scene of most exten- sive -operations in the country. To Assert Negro Rights. ed tional Rights Association, has employ ex-Attorney General A. B. Hillsbu of Boston, Mass., and W. C. P. Breck- inridge, of Lexington, Ky., as his coun- sel in proceedings which will be insti- tuted for the purpose of bringing be- fore the Supreme Court of the United States the question of the legality of the constitutional amendments and legis- lation of some of the Southern Sates to disfranchise the negroes. The case is likely to be started in a Massachusetts court. Mine Scales Blown Up. The scales of the Potomac Coal Com- pany at their Potomac mine near Bar- ton, Allegany county, Md., were blown up with dynamite at 8 o'clock Tuesday night. The Gorman and Caledonia miners during the day held a meeting and ask- ed for a checkweighman. They waited on the Potomac miners and asked them to join in the movement, but they con- cluded not to ask for a checkweighman. The explosion is regarded as a seque to this incident. None of the Potomac miners are blamed. Bankers Will Form Combine. A great bank ris) formed in New York city. first brought out by the announcement that the controlling interest in the Ninth National bank had been purchased by a syndicate. According to trustworthy reports, overtures ha been made to thé presidents of the tional Citizens bank, People’s bank, Pacific bank, Me- chanics and Traders bank, and the East River National bank, for an amalgama- tion of all these institutions with the Ninth. The combined capital of the banks is $2,622,000 is being quietly The fact we Sweden Wants a Loan. Albert H. Wiggin, vice president of the National Park Bank, New York, says he has been appr oached by repre- sentatives of the Swedish Government regarding the placing of a $10,000,000 loan in this country. The proposed loan is in the form of bonds bearing 4 per cent interest for the first 10 years and 3% per cent for another 10 years. It is ale lly stated that the bonds will be offered at ¢8 and accrued interest. Richard Croker’s Plunge. Richard Croker took the Bryan end of the heaviest election bet that has been recorded so far in this campaign, when he wagered $20,000 Friday against $50,000 with Louis W. Wormser, of Ne York, that the Democratic national aoe et would be elected. Dr. Henry S. Prittchett, superintendent Clarke, of the Johns Hopkins Universi- and Cc of the coast survey steamcr to About the only ‘MY on the Maryland side and a “P” on the Pennsylvania side, which will be chisel- A reference to the authority under which the resurvey is of unknown breadth, extending from the Giles S. Jackson, a negro lawyer of Richmond, Va., acting for the Constitu- a KRUGER MOVES HIS HEADOURRTERS PREPARING FOR FLIGHT. The War Believed to be Nearly Finished. Roberts Said to Have Issue Annex- ation Proclamation. It is reported in London that Lord Roberts has issued a proclamation for- mally annexing the Transvaal to the British dominions. Gen. Christian De Wet is reported to have appeared again along the railway near Winburg road. Pretoria dispatches say: Mr. Kruger and Mr. Steyn have gone to Barberton. It is believed they are preparing for flight. The general opinion is that the war is now very near the end; but, should the Boers construct strongholds in the bush, on the veldt, or elsewhere, and begin a system of raids, the British would require large supplies of horses. Gen. Buller moved 14 miles north- westward along the ydenburg road and crossed the Crocodile river to Bad- fontein. He found the Boers concen- trating in the Crocodile mountains. A force of Boers under Comm: andant Theron broke through the British lit and captured and burned a supply train at Kilp River station, taking 35 prison- ers. Brabant's horse proceeded thithe recaptured all the prisoners and dros the Boers into the hills. Col. Plumer dispersed a small commando under Commandant Pretorius, east of Pinaar river, capturing 26 Boers, a number of wagons, and a quantity of cattle and 1i- es, THEIR ULTIMATUM. Unless Anthracite Operators Agree to the Scale a Great Strike is Imminent With'n Ten Days. The United Mine Workers’ Conven- tion at Hazelton, Pa., adjourned Tues- day evening. The miners will strike in the anthracite region if concessions are not granted within 10 days. iat a strike of the anthracite miners may have a disastrous effect on the bitu- minous coal fields, is indicated in offi- cial advices that the State representa- tives of the United Mine Workers Union have been conference with the National officers, and that a decision has been reached to strike in every bi- tuminous field where the operators make an effort to send coal into anthra- cite fields in case of trouble. If the an- thracite miners go out it will be the first organized strike on their part and the United Mine Workers’ Union is prepar- ed to exhaust its treasury in support of them. Several hundred thousand dol- lars will be available at once, and the national executive board has power 10 levy a weekly assessment on every member at work. The first support would come from the national head- quarters and when that is exhausted the executive board may call upon the State unions. Illinois has nearly $200,000 in the treasury. ELECT OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR. Veterans Unanimously Elect Major Leo Ras- sieur Commander-in- Chief. The Grand Army elected officers Thursday. They are: Commander-in-Chief, Leo Rassieur, St. Tous. Senior Vice Commander, E. ken, Portland, Me Junior Vice Commander, Frank Se or Knoxville, Tenn. geon General, John Dr Q. Chaplain-in-Chief, San Quentin, Cal. With the selection of the above offi- cers and the choice of Denver for the National Encampment of 1901 the thir- ty- “fourth National Encampment practi- cally C. Milli- Wilkins, Rev. A. Drahms, fame to a close. er was no contest for the honor of entertaining the Years in 1901, Denver being apparently the unanimous choice of the delegates The following officers ‘were elected by the Woman's Relief Corps for the ensu- ing year: National President, Mrs. Mary L. Carr, Longmont, Col.; National Se- pio? r Vice President, Mrs. Belle M. Sat- St. Louis, Mo.; National Junior a Mrs. Abbie R. Flagg, Battle Creek, Mich.; National Treasur- er, Mrs. Sarah E. Phillips, Syracuse, N.-Y The New Chief Justice. A commission was issued Monday by Governor Stone, of Pennsylvania, to Judge J. Brewster McCullom, of Mon¢- rose, designating him as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to fill the vacancy created by the death of Justice Henry Green. Justice McCullom is a Demo- crat, and his commission runs until the first Monday of January, 1910, when Judge Dean, of Hollidaysburg, will he- come Chief Justice. The new Chief Justice was next to Justice Green in seniority and under the constitution the Governor is required to promote him. He will appoint a Su- preme Judge to fill the vacancy created by these changes after his return from the Grand Army encampment at Chi- cago. Where Wealth is Coined. The monthly statement of the Direc- tor of the Mints shows that during Au- gust the total coinage at the United States mints was $7,774.160, as follows: Gold, $5.050,000; silv 7 $2,536,000; min- or coi $188,160. During August 12,706,000 coins of the face value of $1,324,160 were the prod- uct of the mint in Philadelphia, Pa. Of this amount there were 6,104,000 coins in silver of a value of $1,136,000, and 6.512,000 in the base metals, valued at $188,100. Fighting on the Danube. Fighting as a result of the tension bhe- tween the Roumanian and Bulgarian governments, due to the demand of the former for the suppression of the Mace- donian revolutionary committee, a con- flict took place Friday between Rouma- nian and Bulgarian peasants at Vercio- rova on the Rot of the Danube. Two Bulg: were killed nd many of both parties were wounded. Will Receive a Large Fee. One of the handsomest fees ever paid a gener. al pre actitioner for services in a single case will be received by Dr. J. N. McCormack, of Bowling Green, Ky., for his attendance upon William Goebel, | after he was shot at Frankfort. Arthur Goebel, brother of the dead governor, and his deviseee under the will, has placed a claim against the estate 6f Gov- ernor Goebel for $10,000 for Dr. Mc- Cormack’s services.- Fatal Street Car Panic. the result of a panic on an slacriss at Silver Lake, Shon, O., cai an sul urban resort, late Friday night, [iG person was killed and three others in- jured. The panic was caused by burning out and flames burs throtigh the car floor. The pass became terrified and made a rush to get off. A William: ridge, agent found an old $75,000 in governme a Iuse fr Y., real estate box containing bonds. Ten square miles of forest reserve in the San Gabriel reservation, Cal, have already been swept by fire, and still the flames are Sn the timber. Special cable and telegraphic commu- nications show that elevator wheat hold- ings are picking up, but that the avail- able supply till below standard. A negro was lynched at Forrest, N. C., for the murder of a white man nam- ed Flack. Threats were also made to lynch a negro woman who had taken the gun to the murderer and a mob went in search of her. ge > "LIFE IMPRISONMENT. Bressi Tried and Sentenced in One Day—-Pro- | ceedings Brief, With no Mercy Shown. Horrors of the Italian Prison. The trial of Bressi, the Anarchist who, July 29, shot and killed King | Humbert, of Italy, at Monza, while His | Majesty was returning from a gymnas- | tic exhibition, resultc being sentenced to liie imprisonment, the limit of the Italian law. Although Bressi escapes fate will appear to most men far worse than death. His first place of incarcer- ation will be the “secret cell,” a cham- ber about six feet long by three wide, and half lighted. A few ‘inches above the floor is a plank about half a yard wide and slightly inclined, which serves as a bed. The food is bread and water, passed through a little window celica] the ° ‘spy’ by the jailer, the door being | always kept rigorously closed. He will be condemned to absolute si- lence. If he breaks the rule he is sub- ject to other punishments, such as the straight waistcoat, iron and straight bed. If he attempts his life in any way he will be put in the straight waistcoat, and at night in a sort of sack in which he cannot move. When he has suffered the punishment of the “secret cell” for a longer or short- cr time, he will be removed to another cell, where he must remain for 10 years. Its size depends on the construction of the prison. These ceils are lighted from the corridor, and are generally about two yards square. The bed is the usual plank, and bread and water the food. In winter a single blanket is allowed at night. Silence is still enjoined, the only concession is the door being open- ed a few inches. The food is given only once in 24 hours. If the prisoner is sick. the doctor can have him removed to the prison infirmary, where he is kept in a separate cha umber. Prisoners in solitary confinement may neither read, write, smoke nor work. They are condemned to absolute idleness and a solute silence. Very few complete their sentence; they either go mad or die. THIRTY THOUSAND STRONG. A Million People Witnessed the G. A. R. Vet- erans Follow the Tattered, Starry Ban- ners They Fought to Uphold. At Chicago for nearly four hours and a half Tuesday the thinning ranks of the Grand Army of the Republic passed in review before their leaders and before probably 1,000,000 spectators, packed in almost solid masses along the four miles of the line of parade. It marked the climax of the thirty-fourth annual encampment of the association of vet- erans who filled the pages of history with deeds of heroism during the civil war, and was, according to Commander in Chief Shaw, the greatest parade since that day in Washington when the hun- dreds of thousands of veterans, the most powerful army on earth, marched in re- view to their final disbandment. Probably 30.000 veterans took part in the parade. For exactly four hours and twenty minutes, most of the time with ranks almost perfectly aligned, but oc- casionally faltering under the burdens of years, they filed past the reviewing stand on Michigan avenue, saluting as fies marched by General Nelson A. Miles, Commander in Chief Shaw, Gen. Daniel I. Sickles and the Spanish’ Min- ister, Duke d’'Arcos Pythian Lodge Flourishing. Supreme Chancellor Thomas G. Sam- ple presided over the meeting of the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias, at Detroit, Mich., Tuesday. In his address Colonel Sample said the condition of the order, with but few exceptions, is flourishing, and the personnel is better than ever before, because the decree scems to have gone forth from the sub- ordinate lodges that quality, not quan- tity, is what is desired. On December 31, 1808, the reports showed a membership of 470,798. The returns received to December 31, 1899. show a total membership of 401,672 Ve have to-day a membership of 508,- 500, with 15 grand domains yet to hear from, a net gain for the two years of 37,809. Young Boy Suicides. Because his step-mother made him mind the babies from early in the morn- ing till late at night Harry F. Burgess, aged 12, of Winsted, Conn., committed suicide Mand: iy by drowning. He had often threatened to kill himself. Early in the morning young Burgess stole from his home. Not until the babies needed attention did Mrs. Burgess dis- cover his absence. About 7 o'clock the little fellow clothes, neatly folded, were found in a basket on the shore of Still river. The gates at the dam were opened and when the water had gone down 20 feet the missing boy's body was found. CABLE FLASHES. There is a typhoid fever epidemic in : : A p Paris, resulting from impure water. President Loubet will give to all the mayors in France, 000, September 22, a banquet some 15,- Denmark has declared a quarantine against all vessels arriving at Danish ports from Glasgow. The Peruvian President is still with- out a Cabinet. The one appointed Tues- day night resigned next day. A collision occurred on the Caledo- nian Underground Railway at Glasgow, and 24 persons were seriously injured. A group of American financiers, ac- cording to a dispatch from Moscow, has acquired the Moscow-Archangel railway. About 50,000 striking miners have re- sumed work at Cardiff, Wales, the Taff Railway Company having acceded to their demands. The autumn maneuvers of the German army will be attended this year for the first time by a representative of the rench army. Italy has protested against Germa- iny’'s new meat law on the ground that 11it contravenes the Italian-German com- mercial treaty. Owing to the Philippine troubles Ma- nila hemp has risen 50 per cent. German companies will start Manila hemp cul- ture in German East Africa. Another death, supposed to be due to bubonic plague, occurred at Glasgow, Scotland, Sunday. Ninety-three cases of the disease are now under observ tion. Owing to absence of rains, the rice crop in Nanking, China, is a failure and silk weaving is almost at a standstill, 20,000 looms being idle. Maintenance of order is difficult. Giuseppe, Tomazo, a Venetian who is believed to have been an accomplice of Luigi Lucheni in the 1ssination of Empress Elizabeth of Austria, has been arrested at Budapest. as The Prussian academy of science has received from the Smithsonian Institu- tion an elaborate engrossed address of congratulations upon the recent occnr- rence of the academy’s bi-centenary. Th r father, mother and hild, who have been certified to be fi from bubonic plague, have een placed under the care of the medi- cal authorities at Glasgow, Scotland. Germany's Porto Rican imports for 1899 amounted to 12,000,000 marks, an increase of 400,000 marks upon the pre- vious year. The exports totaled rg 000 marks, an increase of 00,000 marks. Political parti held meet- ings Tuesday, at which several members were stoned and a dispatch was drafted making precipitate demands upon the | United States. in the regicide ' death, his, OR. TALMAGES SUNDAY SERKUY | A GOSPEL MESSAGE | Subject: The Garden of the King—Christ the Founder and Gardener—The Flow- ers and Fruits of Religious Devotion «The Beauty of light Living. [Copyright 1%00, 1 WASHINGTON, D. C.—This sermon Dr. Talmage sends "from a halting place in his journey through the valleys of Switz- erland. It seems to have been prepared amid the bloom gal aroma of a garden Filme The te is Song of Solo- #on v, 1, “I am come I my garden.” The "Bible is a great poem. We have in jt faultless rhythm and bold imagery and startling anthithesis and rapturous lyric and sweet pastoral and instructive narra- tive and devotional psalm; thoughts ex- pressed in style more solemn than that | of Montgomery, more bold than that of Milton, more terrible than that of Dante, more natural than that of Words- worth, more impassioned than that of Pollok, more tender than that of Cowper, more weird than that of S penser. 113 great poem brings all the gems of the earth into its coronet, and it weaves the flames of judgment into its garlands and ours eternal harmonies in its rhythm. verything this book touches it makes beautiful, from the plain stones of the summer ‘thrashing floor to the daughters of Nahor filling the troughs for the cam- els; from the fish pools of Ileshbon up to e psalmist praising God with diapason of storm and whirlwind, and Job's im- agery of Orion, Arcturus and the Pleiades. My text leads us into a scene of sum- mer redolence. The world has had a great many beautiful gardens. Charle- magne added to the glory of his reign by decreeing that they be established all through the realm—deciding even the names of the flowers to be planted there. Henry IV., at Montpelier, established gardens of bewitching beauty and luxu- riance, gathering into them Alpine, Py- renean and French plants. One of the sweetest spots on earth was the garden of Shenstone, the poet. His writings have ade but little impression on the world, ut his garden, “The ILeasowes,” will be mmortal. To the natural advantages of that place was brought the perfection of art. rbor and terrace and slope and rustic temple and reservoir and urn and fountain here had their crowning. Oak and yew and hazel put forth their richest foliage. There was no life more diligent, no soul more ingenious than that of Shenstone, and all that diligence and ge- nius he brought to the adornment of that one treasured spot. He gave £300 for it; he sold it for £17,000. And yet I am to to you to-day of a richer garden than an have and It is the garden spoken of in my text, the frden of the urch, which belongs to Christ, for my text says so. He bought it, He panted 54 He owns it, and He shall have it. Walter Scott, in his outlay at Abbots: ford, ruined his fortune, and now, in tha crimson flowers of those gardens, you can almost think or imagine that you see the blood of that old man’s broken hea rt. The payment of the last £100,000 saeri- ficed him. But I have to tell you that Christ’s love and Christ's death were the outlay of thia beautiful garden of the hurch, of which my text speaks. Oh, ow many gps and tears and pangs and agonies! me, ye women who saw Him oil Tell me, ye executioners who lifted Him and let Him down! Tell me, thou sun that didst hide! ye rocks that fell! “Christ loved the church and gave Himself for it.” If the garden of the church belongs to Christ, certainly He has a right to walk in it. Come, then, O blessed Jesus, to-day; walk up and down these aisles, and Pluck what Thou wilt of sweetness for Thyself! The church, in my text, is appronriately compared to a garden, because it is place of choice flowers, of select fruits and of therosn fp, That would a strange garden in which there ar no flowers. If nowhere else, they would be along the borders or at the gateway. The homeliest taste will digtate something, if it be only the old- fashioned hollyhock or dahlia or daffodil, ut if there be larger means, then you will find the Mexican cactus and blazing azalea and clustering oleander. Well, now, Christ comes to His Garden, and Te lants there some of the brightest spirits that ever flowered upon the world. Some of them are violets, inconspicuous, but sweet as heaven. You have to search and find them. You do not see them very of- ten, Qurtony, but you find where they have been bv the brightened face of the invalid and the sprig of geranium on the stand and the new window curtains keep- ing out the glow of the sunlight. They = creeping swiftly along amid the thorns end briers of life, giving kiss for sting, and many a man who has had in his way some great black rock of trouble has found that they have covered it all over with flowery jasmine running in and out amid the crevices These flowers in Christ’ s garden are not like the sunflower, gaudy in the light, but wherever darkness ers over a soul that needs to be comforted, there they. stand, night blooming cereuses. But in Christ's garden there are plants that may be bet- ter compared to the Mexican cactus— thorns without, loveliness within; men with sharp points of character. They wound almost every one that touches them, 1ue, are hard to handle. Pronosnes them nothing but thorns, Yer Christ loves them notwithstanding all their sharpnesses. Many a man has had a very hard ground to cultivate, and it has only been through severe trial Le has raised even the smallest scrap of grace. A very harsh minister was talking to a very placid elder, and the placid elder eaid to the harsh minister: “Doctor, I do avish you would control your temper.” “Ab,” said the minister to the elder, “I control more temper in five minutes than vou do in five years.” It is harder for some men to do right than for other men to do right. The grace that would ele- vate you to the seventh heaven might not keep your brother from knocking a man down. I had a friend who came to me and said, “I dare not join the church.” I said, “Why?” “Oh,” he said, “I Tl such a at temper. Yesterday morn- ing I was crossing very early at the Jersey City ferry, and 1 saw a milkman pour a large quantity of water into the milk can, and I said to him: ‘I think that will do, and he insulted me and I knocked 2% down. Do you think I cught to join the church?’ Nevertheless that very same man, who was so harsh in his behavior, loved Christ, and could not speak of sa- cred things without te of emotion and affection. Thorns without, sweetness within—the best Sy of Mexican cactus I ever saw. There are others planted in C garden who are always radiant, impressive—more like the roses of deep hue that we occasionally find, called “giants of battle;” the Martin Luthers, St. Pauls, Chrysostoms, Wycliffes, Lati. mers and Samuel Rutherfords. What in other men is a spark in them is a confla- gration. When ‘they reat, they sweat great drops of blood. When they their prayer takes fire. When they it is a Pentecost. When they fight, Thermopylac. When they die, a martyrdom. You find a great many roses in the gens, but only a few “giants of battle.” , C more of N= i I “Why don’t you have in the world more Humboldts and Wellingtons?” God gives to some ten‘tilents, to others one. Again, the church may be appropriately compared to a garden, because 1t is a place of friits. That would be a strange garden which had in it no berries, no ums or peaches Or apricots. ‘ihe conrser Fruits are planted in the orchard or the§ are set out on the sunny hillside, but the choicest fruits are kept in the garden. So in the world outside the church Christ has planted a great many beautiful things —patience, charity, generosity, integrity, but He intends the choicest fruits to be in the garden, and if they are not there, then shame on the church. eligion is not a mere flowering senti- mentality. Yt is a practical, life giving, healthful fruit-——not posies, but apples. Oh,” says somebody. “I on’t see what the garden of the church has yielded.” Where did your asylums come from, and your hospitals, and your institutions of mercy? Christ planted everv ome of them. He planted them in His garden. When Christ gave sight to Bartimeus, Ie laid the cornerstone of every blind asy- lum that has ever been built. When Christ soothed the demoniac of Galilee He laid the cornerstone of every lunatic asylum that has ever been established. hen Christ said to the sick man. “Take up thy bed and walk,” He laid the cor- nerstone of every hospital the world has ever seen. When Christ said. “I was in prison, and ye visited Me,” He laid the cornerstone of every prison reform {ation that has ever been organized. he church of Christ is a glorious garden, and it is full of fruit. I know there is ee poor fruit in it. I know there are some weeds that ought to be thrown over the fence. I know there are some crab- apple trees that ought to be cut down. I know there are some wild grapes that ought to be uprooted. But are you going a880- are, perhaps, more like the ranunculus, ry estroy the whole ren because of ff] e stroy th) ou will find wo eaten leaves in Fontainebleau and insec that sting in the fairy groves of the Champs Elysees. You do not tear do and destroy the whole garden becau: there are a few specimens of gnarled fruit, I admit there are men and women the church who ought not to be there, but let us be frank and admit the fact that there are hundreds and thousands of glorious Christian men and women holy} blessed: useful, consecrated and triump! nt. There is no grander collection in all To earth than the collection of Christians, There are Christian men in every church whose religion is not a matter of psalm singing and churchgoing. To-morro morning that religion will keep them st as consistent and consecrated in their worldly occupation as it ever kept thent at the communion table. There are wom- en with us to-day of a higher type of character than Mary of Bethany. They not only sit at the feet of Christ, but they go out into the kitchen to help Martha in her work, that she may sit there too. There is a woman who has a drunken hus band, who has exhibited more faith and patience and courage than Ridley in the fire. He was consumed in twenty mi utes. Hers has been a twenty years martyrdom. Yonder is a man who has been fifteen years on his back, unable to feed himself, yet calm and peaceful ag though he lay on one of the green ban of heaven, watching the oarsmen dip theif paddles in the crystal river! I have not told you of the better tre in this garden and of the better fruit. It was planted just outside Jerusalem a good while ago. When that tree was lanted, it was so split and bruised and arked men said nothing would ever grow upon it, but no sooner had that tree been pla anted than it budded and blossomed and fruited, and the soldiers’ spears were only the clubs that struck down that fruit, and it fell into the lap of the nas tions, and the men Dogd to pick it up and eat it, and they found in it an antidote all thirst, to all poison, to all sin, to al death, the smallest cluster larger than the famous one of Eshcol, which two men carried on a staff between them. If the one apple in Eden killed the race, this one cluster of merty shall restore, Again, the oes in my text is appro priately’ called pricn because it is thoroughly irri Be No fgeded could prosper long without plenty of water. 4 t has seemed as if Jesus Christ tool the best. From many of your househol the best one is gone. You know that she was too good for this world, She was the gentlest in her ways, the deepest in her affection, and when at last the sickness came you had no faith in medicines. You knew that the hour of parting had come, and when, through the rich grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, you surrendered thal treasure you said: “Lord 1 is the best we have. Take it. worthy.” The others in the household may have been of grosser mold. She was of the finest. The heaven of your little ones will not be fairly begun until you get there. All the kindnesses shown them by fmm mor tals will not make them forget you. Therg they are, the radiant throngs that wen out from your homes. I throw a kiss td the sweet darlings. They are all well now in the palace. The crippled child has a sound foot now. A little lame She Te “Ma, will I be lame in heaven? 0, my darlin , you won't be lame in helen” A little sick child says, Ei will I > sick in heaven?” “No, dear, won’t be sick in heaven,” = little b Tod child says, “Ma, will I be blind in heav: 2 No, my ’ dear, you won’t be blin - nea They are all well there. notice that the fine gardens some: times have high fences around them, and I cannot get in. It is so with a king's garden. The only glimpse you ever get of such a garden is when the king Tides out in his splendid carriage. It is not so with this rie, thls King’s garden. I throw wide open the gate and tell you all to come in. 9 monopoly in religion. Whosoever willy may. Choose now Bian a desert and a garden. Many you have tried the garden of this wi Lil delight. You have found it has been a chagrin. So it was with Thzodore Hook. He made all thé world laugh. He makes us laugh now when we read his poems, but he could not make his own heart laugh. While in the midst of his festivities he confronted a ooking glass, and he saw himself and said The ere, that is true, as i am, done up in body, purse.” So it was of Shenstone, of whose garden I told you at the beginning of m; sermon. e sat down amid those Torey and said: “I have lost my road to hap. piness. I am angry and envious and frantic and despise everything around me just as it becomes a madman to O ye weary souls, come into Christ's gar@en to-day and pluck a little hearts. ease! Christ is the only rest and the only pardon for a perturbed spirit. Do you not think your chance has almost come You men and women who have been waits ing vear after year for some good oppor‘ tunity in which to accept Ser but have postponed it five, ten, twenty, thirty yvears—do you not feel as if now your hour of vation had come? man, what grudge hast thou against thy poor soul that thou wilt not let it be saved? Some years ago a vessel struck cn the "hey had only one lifeboat. In lifeboat the passengers and crew were getting ashore. "he vessel had foundered and was sinking deeper and deeper, and that one boat could not take the passengers very swiftly. A little gir} stood on the deck waiting for her turn. to get into the boat. The boat came and went, came and went, but her iurn did not seem to come. After awhile she could wait no longer, and she leaped en the taffrail and then sprang into the sea, cry- ing to the boatman: “Save me next! “Save me nex Oh, how many have gone ashore into God’s mercy, and yet you are clinging to the wreck of sin. Others have accepted the pardon of Christ, but you are in peril. Why not this moment make a rush for your immortal rescue, cryin until Jesus shall hear you and heaven an earth ring with the cry: “Save me next! Save me next!” Now is the day of salvae tion! Now! N PROMINENT PEOPLE. General Paul Gustave Cluserett, a noted French adventurer, died in Paris. Ira D. Sankey sailed from New York city for an evangelistic campaign in England and Ireland. Frederick Wilhelm Nietzsche, the German philosopher, died at Weimar, after 11 years of hopeless insanity. Congressman Charles H. Boutelle, of Maine, is rapidly recovering his health at a sanitarium at Waverly, Mass. Dr. Washington Gladden, preacher, writer and lecturer, refuses to accept pay for his services as an Alderman of Columbus, O. Mr. Balfour recently made a speech at the opening of a Charity bazaar at Dundee, and devoted the whole of his remarks to the praise of golf. Sir George White, of Ladysmith fame, now Governor and Commander- in-Chief of Gibraltar, will be promoted to the rank of General in October next. In receiving some Americans the oth- er day King Oscar of Sweden and Nor- way said: “lI welcome you as Ameri- cans, and, therefore fellow monarchs.” President Eliot, of Harvard, may pay a visit to Havana in the early fall. He has become deeply interested in the question of Cuban education, through the visit of the Cuban teachers Re Har- varc Second Assistant Secretary of State Ader: was born a deaf mute; but learned the use of the organ of speech by arti- ficial methods and mastered the art of lip reading. Later in life his sense of henving was partially restored, Lord Roberts never learned the art of dictating his own dispatches, and always has to write them out with his own hand. His writing is, moreover, so very bad that it can be read only by his aid, to whose lot it consequently falls to “translate” the orders into chare acters more readily decipherable. Where Mosquitoes Are Thick. “We have to fight mosquitoes all night,” said one of the Washington night policemen at the white house. “This is the worst place in town for them. There is no opportunity to take a nap around kere. The big mosquitoes would drive a hole in you before you could get your eyes half closed. The electric light on the front porch is the main attraction that draws them to the building. They swarm around the light and occasionally fly in the front door when it is opened for some one to snter. The residence portion of ths house is thoroughly protected with the best fly screens, but despite these a good many of the pestiferous insects get in to make trouble. Once in, thay hunt places to begin propagating.” Plant Pa on The Re And w Beneatl And Bur Trol- a Soul —Henr Plant. ta a § : The 4 By ( oa ww ‘Wonde; Mangold reached | For days approacl watched. sdn, the plain—it never col Rob, T in line, ers of fy boundary “Want the men push car track. “Cours: soon sat bare bro the men toward t{ That stayed fi gold clai creek blu The boys and push back anc plaything “Wish marked away to pushing.’ There from the boys ric secured. Rob, cheeked haps it c ancestor: native st “I kne up a sai A shot council > edge of “What i can we ; . } definitely ; Rob th whisper and a se pings fi through Father town 20 patiently in the s Cautio little un kept the ing to tl binders | % pile of b and soi sheered packed down by; the sack tossed o one of 1 the thre “Just f ing one had job and stit several “Now 80 scare miles fr of timb a resoul ers, Rol which h be spar to the fl Days sail wa from a1 cord an measure the sea lieve th: sloop ov ‘When apparat There right m ing the “we'll nounced ‘But i “Neve of gran Newfou So the was to The 1} road m: navigat again i track—I rolled t ging th Up ar —to the bluffs w dirt fly: until it haze of “Quic Rob's o land sl difficult patient] all the ings or covered Little Big tes the dir was lo} told hi) at the other | plows ¢ the pil to slee It we known nace b southw and Ww that sl vas th —“The frighte came doors For her sti paled for he + BExte west
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers