NRT PRCT DA 81 GREAT WASTE OF AMMUNITION. WUT GAGE UN THIAL a | Many Shells From Fieet Failed 1 Burst and Shoré Bctteries Escaped. Af tH TS to Ld Head of Mormon Church Before | Investigating Committee. A fleet of five Japanese battleships | and two cruisers appeared off Vladi- vostok at 1:25 o'clock Saturday after- | noon and bombarded the town and shore batteries for 55 minutes. President Smith Says Principle of | The fleet approached from the ai- Plural Marriages Is Sacred With ‘rection of Askold island, at the east entrance to Ussuri bay and about 32 the Church. | miles southeast of Vladivostok. Enter- | ing Ussuri bay, the enemy formed in { line of battle, but did not approach to Reed Smooth, Mormon apostle of a closer range than five and one-third Utah, was placed on trial on Wed- | miles. They directed their fire against nesday for his Senatorial life. For the shore batteries and the town, but four hours the court and jury—the DO damage resulted, as most of their Senate Committee on Privileges and 2U0 Lyddite shells failed to burst. Elections—heard evidence in his case. The Russian batteries, commanded REVELATION BEFORE THE LAW. During that time his patron and bY Gens. Veronetz and Artamonoff, did best friend, President Joseph F.| not reply, awaiting a closer approach Smith of the Mormon Church, a man Of the enemy. of varied and large business interests,| The Japanese fire ceased at :20 p. self-confessed adherent to the doc-|Mm., and the enemy retired in the di- trines of polygamy and accused by At- | rection of Askold island. Simultane- torney Tayler of having five wives | ously two torpedo boat destroyers ap- and 45 children, occupied the stand. beared near Askold island and two Counsel for the protestants plied him nore near Cape Maidel. The Japanese with close, searching questions, direct- | ships were covered with ice. ed at questionable aspects and prac- The attack resulted in no loss to the tices of the Mormon religion and its | Russians, but cost tke enemy 200,000 votaries. | roubles ($100,000) in ammunition. Attorneys for the protestants in the Most of the projectiles were six and 12- Smoot investigation said to-day they inch shells. intended“to prove that the defendant The population of Vladivostok was is associated with a hierarchy which warned of the presence on the horizon practices polygamy and connives at of a hostile fleet and of the prospect violations of the law, and that Smoot’s | of an attack during the day, but it re- very vote as a Senator of the United mained tranquil. States is subject to the wish and com- The Russians have been obliged to mand of the Mormon church. Presi- abandon the muddock at Port Arthur dent Joseph F. Smith confessed- that in which they hoped to repair their he himself had continued to cohabit | damaged warships. Another attempt with his plural family since the mani- to raise the Retvizan has resulted in festo of 1890, and he realized fully failure. that he was violating State laws. A party of 12 Japanese disguised as President Smith also testified that Tartars have been arrested at a bridge Reed Smoot had to get the consent of Of the Siberian railroad crossing the his associate apostles in the church Volga, 36 hours of railroad travel before he could become a candidate from Moscow. They had dynamite in for Senator. their possession. : The confession of President Smith was the sensation of the proceedings’ to-day before the Senate Committee on Privileges. and Elections. : Mr. Smith said that the manifesto. of 1890: had. left him and. others with plural house Blown Up. Teraiiies nS uma See The big dynamite storehouse of the of being compelled to dety the law or 7s 7 ; 0% ? desert their families: For hiniseif:he IL S. Kerbatizy Company, In § yaeant had, preferred. te ‘take chances with the law” rather than to disgrace him- self and degrade his family by aband- oning his wives’ and the chlldreh they had borne him. ~~ He admitted that he had had children by all of his five 2 ONE KILLED; 50 HURT. Railroad Contractor's Dynamite Store- field east of Bradenville, Pa., blew up, killing Patrick Quinlan, injuring other persons, demolishing entire | houses and breaking.thousands of dol- lars’ worth of glass in the windows of many of the buildings within a radius wives since the, manifesto and. said of four miles of the scene. The dam- he had acknowledged them openly | 38€ caused by the explosion will (without interference or disturbance | amount to $40,000. from the people of Utah, whom he] Quinlan was the watchman stationed characterized as liberal and broad-| at the powder house. Not a single minded. trace of his body or any of his clothes has been found. The force of the ex- President Smith was on the stand | . . i \ the third day, but the testimony was | plosion was so great that not a stick of timber larger than a man’s arm i not as sensational as that of the sec-| ond day until near the close. Then by | to be found. In the powder house was | stored a car load of dynamite and a 50 | S| mencing April 1. Engines Plunge Into Stream from Weakened Bridge. WAS RESULT OF RECENT FLOOD Abutments, Lcoosened by the Rushing Torrent of Yellow Creek, Crum- ble and Fall into the Stream, Six men were drowned and four oth- ers injured as a result of the collapse of . a bridge spanning Yellow creek near Hammondsville on the Cleveland & Pittsburg railrcad. The men were on two locomotives that attempted to cross the bridge close together, The dead are: Engineer Jacob Maas aged 42 years, married, leaves family at Wellsville; Fireman John Hender- son, aged 30 years, single and lived in South High .street, Steubenville; Thomas E. Powell, who hired as Thomas Kerr, an extra fireman, lived at East Liverpool; J. J. Kountz, brake- man of Wellsville; A. J. King, flag- man, aged 24 years and single, lived at Deer Park, Md.; George H. Phillips, conductor of relief train aged 28 years and single, home at Wellsville, The injured are: Emmett Ralston, engineer of the second engine, rib broken and bruised and badly hurt by jumping; Thomas Grafton, fireman of the second engine, scalp wound, bruis- ed by jumping, injuries are not seri ous; Edward Dooly, conductor, cut about the body and head and bruised; G. P. M’Dermott, bruised about the body and head. " The wreck occurred at No. 55 bridge, which spans Yellow creek, one and | one-half miles east of Hammondsville. The train reached the bridge about 9 o'clock this morning. Just as the pilot of the first engine reached the east bank, the abutment on that side of the bridge swung and crashed down below, into the swollen stream. . There wele six men in the cabooses and five men on the engines. Of the 11, only three escaped serious injury, or death. The men were drowned like { rats in a trap and those asleep in ue | cabooses were drowned before they | could make an attempt to escape. The entire bridge and train went down into the river, the east side being one mass | of -wreckage. | The"bodies of the dead and injured were recovered and sent back” to Wellsville. Engineer Maas was taken | from his engine, where his hand still | grasped the throttle. | Failed to Agree on Miners Scale. The joint conference between the | coal miners and operators of the cen | tral competitive district adjourned | without reaching an agreement: as to | the, scale of wages for the year com- 1 This is the second | time there has been a failure to agree. IK MEN FILLED IN WRECK] Chinese PROGRESS OF THE WAR. | Brigands Terrcrizing Some | Districts—China Buying Arms. | A copy of the “Daily Vostik,” which | has just arrived at St. Petersburg, | contains a significant argument in fa- vor of Russia ‘abandoning South Man- | churia, and retaining the northern por-| tion of the province, which, the ra- | per contends, naturally belongs to the Amur region. . Mail advices from Vladivostok say | that 500 Chinese brigands are terror- izing the district of Ninguta. Their | leader, Yavanten, proclaims himself invulnerable to bullets. A Japanese barber at Vladivostok, deeming himself insulted by a Rus- sian officer, shot him dead and then dramatically announced that he was a captain on the Japanese general staff and was not used to taking insuits. A Russian correspondent of the As- sociated Press at Shanghai telegraphs that it is reported at Tien Tsin that’’ 4,000 additional Chinese soldiers have been posted in Northern China, and that the Chinese government has re- cently placed large orders for guns and ammunition. A cable from Nagasaki, reports that Russan spies are overrunning Japan, | especially the ports, and a large num- ber have been captured. As the Gem- bu Maru was about to sail yesterday a spy was ciscovered aboard disguis- ed as a coolie. The transport was loaded witn troops bound to Korea. | Before the spy was caught he sprang overboard. The soldiers were order- ed to fire. A volley crashed and the spy was shot dead as he was swim- ming. Rumors of fighting between the Japanese and Russians in Korea ap- pear to be disproved by the dispatch received at St. Petersburg from the Russian chief of staff describing a brush between Russian videttes and a | Japanese patrol of seven near Ping Yang. If such a trifling encounter as this finds a place in official dispatch: | es, it is evident that there can have been no real engagements hetween the opposing forces. So far as authentic news can be ob- tained the reports indicate that the Japanese armies are now concentrat- | ing at selected positions and not until | disposition of force and material al-| ready planned are complete, will any | forward movement by land begin.| While the operations about Port at thur and on the line of the Yalu river hold the place of prominence in the] news dispatches there are indications | of important operations in the north. | _It was reported more than a week ago | that a force of Japanese had been | landed at Possiet bay, and Tokyo ad- | vices now report that the railway be-| tween Vladivostok and Harbin has] been cut near Nickolskie, over a mile and a quarter of track being destroyed. Nickolskoie is 70 miles north of Vladi- vostok. It is reported 80,000 Japanese have landed at Gensan, their objective be-| STEEL FINE COLLISES Many Lives Crushed Out and :. Several Severely. Injured. OTHER HOUSES ARE WRECKED. Horror Said to Be the Result of Gross Carelessness on Part of Builders. By the collapse of the steel frame- work of the 11-story apartment house, | Nos. 55 to 59 West Forty-sixth street, | New York at least 14 persons lost their lives and 25 were injured, some perhaps fatally. dent of the sort which: has occurred in New York since the fall of the John B. Ireland building, at West Broad- way and Third street, in 1895, when 14 men were killed and many more were maimed. It is the worst acci- | | One of the peculiar features of the | tragedy was Frank Storrs, now in Europe. the killing of Mrs. wife of a miilionaire, She was crushed by a girder which crashed through the Paterson apartment hotel, in West Forty-seventh street, the rear of whieh adjoined that of the new build- ing which was to have been known ag the Darlington. Frank J. Allison, a member of the Allison Realty Company, builders of the: hotel, was said to bave been on the: first floor of the building, at the time of the collapse. He has not been seen since the accident. There were about 40 men engaged on the building, which was nearly completed, when it began to totter. Hardly one of them escaped unscath- ed. It is said the collapse was caused by faulty workmanship and the over- loading of one of the upper floors. Huge iron girders and pieces of stone were hurled for hundreds of feet. Other pieces of debris were scattered over the adjoining streets, pelting pedestrians and causing a general panic in the neighborhood. The suff- ering of the men imprisoned in the ruing was frightful. cries were heard for blocks as soon as the noise of‘'the collapse had died out, VLADIVOSTOK CUT OFF, Japs Tearing up Railroad and Cutting Telegraph Lines. Vladivostok is :now apparently cut off by sea and land. Tokio has a re- port that over a mile of the railway léading to the port from Harbin, the Russian base, has been destroyed. An American furrier, who got out of Vladivostok some days ago, declares that the Russian squadron is practical- ly bottled up there. He says the ap- pearance of four warships off the northern coast of Japan was not for Their agonized | EF TO PREVENT FIRE LOSSES. President Will Be Asked to Urge Gov- ernment Inspection. Alarmed at the steady increase of loss of life and property by fire in all parts of the country during the last 10 years, the Illinois Manufacturers’ As- sociation, the Civic Federation and the Chicago Credit Men’s Association have decided to send a memorial to President Roosevelt urging that the National Government make a thorough investigation of ‘existing conditions so that municipal and state authori ties may be guided in their efforts at prevention. The appended table was compiled before the fires in Baltimore and Rochester: . National losses, 1894 to 1898, im- clusive, $600,600,000; 1899 to 1902, im- clusive $770,,000,000; total ten years, $1,370,000,C00; ‘increase, 25 per cent. Since the compilation of the forego- ing figures the fires in Baltimore, Rochester and Madison, Wis., have in4 creased the losses in the past five years $73,800000. y These later losses will bring the figures up to $1,443,800,000 and, off course, do not include hundreds of fires which have not been called to the attention of the nation at large. CANAL TITLE SATISFACTORY. Attorney General Advises the Presl- dent to Close the Deal. A conclusion of the negotiations for the title to the Panama Canal Com- pany is in signt. Within 30 days, per- haps in a shorter time, the United States will be in full possession of thé property and the money consider- ation will have been paid to both the republic of Panama and to the new Panama Canal Company. Attorney General Knex had a con- ference with the President, at which | the whole subject, so far as the legal phases of it are concerned, was con- sidered and decided. At the conclu- sion of the conference the attorney general authorized the following state- ment: " “] have advised the President that he is authorized to pay at once to the republic of Panama, the $10,000,000 | stipulated for by the treaty, the rati- | | | | fications of which have just been ex- changed. Also, that he is authorized to pay to the new Panama Canal Com- pany the $40,000,000 which under the agreement between the United States and that company we are ready to close the transaction. * GERMAN STEEL COMBINE. Twenty-Eight Concerns Finally Reach an Agreement, After long and tedious negotiations the German steel syndicate has finally been organized. The original plan was for a syndicate of the entire German steel industry and was first set in mo- tion at Frankfort-on-the-Main in the “uly I le .2 series of questions the signficant| Joad of powder. which had Yoon] 11 en ing Manchuria. Gen. Mistchenko has| the purpose of bombarding coast| Summer of 1902, but, after long hag- and important fact was brought out a > a wach had be | NEGROES PAID THE: PENALTY. | entered Mioun Han, near Ering Yang, towns, but was a futile attempt to gling, this project was found to be im- th. that the standing of Mormons in the) PULYSCTAUS YOROPSE 0 oe state] — with cavalry. | join the fleet at Port Arthur. Japan’s possible. : . Cl church or in the Mormon community | the a ey i Oiicia sia ol South Carolinian on Deathbed Confess. An intrigue on the part of the | northern squadron spoiled the plan. | Negotiations were then begun, and & was not in the least impaired by the iy aaa Ma on 4 piigndad ec to Murder of His Wife, opposition at Seoul against the con- | Russian official reports are that the | now have been concluded. The small- | st: knowledge of their co-religionists | the se will Hover ba Tier opi) er i clusion of the Japanese-Korean proto- | Japanese fleet has not been seen at | er manufacturers, whose output ranges tic that they continued in polygamous re-f > HY : Section ;Foreman Jones, who died a | ;4; culminated in the’ throwing of | Port Arthur since last Saturday. from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 tons an- ed. | lation with their plural wives after the | issuance of the Mormon manifesto NEW JAP SCHEME. few days ago at his home in Colleton county, S. C. confessed ‘to being his bombs at the residences of the foreign | minister and his secretary early | Movements of the troops in Korea still point’ to an early clash there, nually, were excluded. aFAMBLPOIygRnIy. | i atisila wife's murderer. The woman Was | pp,rsqay morning. They escaped un: | though Tokio believes nothing more Boston Wool Market. In a way this admifsion by Presi-|° © m . | 4uilied at hor home: in Ravenel,-S: on injured. {than a skirmishing will occur south | prices are firm in the wool market, dent Smith is of more vital importance | Rafts Sent to Port Arthur to Make iI May, 1902. It was thought at the ar of the Yalu river. : : 3 ? J hu to. the establishment of the case Foris Waste A it | time the .deed was committed by ne Sa domestics quiet in the wool market i against Smoet and the Mormon church | i Fone Waste Ammunition: | groes, and Jim Black, James Ford and CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. SWEPT BY PRAIRIE FIRE. and the market as a whole only mod- S] i than Smith's sr x yesterday | Wednesday midnight the forts at| Thomas Pryor were caught and lynch: : : odoin In erately active. The demand is for me- i D i that he had continued to Hold relatfons | DOrt Arthur sighted many lights ap-| ed. hori i ish for| One Town Destroyed, Thre Perechs | dium and low.wools, with a fair de- f vi i res si y | proaching the entrance, followed by | i i The gross earning of Wabdsh for eprroyesy e | mand for fine grades. Territory i Cl¢ with his five wives since 1890 and had + oi x i: | One morning during the early part the fourth week in February increas-| Burned to Death Sry had 11 children by them since that] firing. The forts immediately retaliat-| of. May, 1902, Mrs. Jones was found in : y urhed to Death, | wools tend to be active. Pulled and J tu i : ! 9%! ed, but after an hour found that the] 2 : : 5 ed $19,000 The increase for the month | Reports from Oklahoma say that | foreign wools are both firm and’'steady. : date. It tends strongly to demonstrate | the rear of her premises with her | o 6.000 | : : sc 3 ye i “| lights were merely lamps attached to | was $6,000. | three persors perished in Wednesday | The leading quotatipng are: Ohio that the whole Mormon community | | throat cut from ear to ear and her : a 3 oe, > ay | Li the masts of lumber rafts. | head crushed in from cruel blows with Dowie meetings in Melbourne, Aus-| night's prairie fire and the financial | and Pennsylvania, X. X. and above, ze bt and organization is in a silent con- - , 1 14 s } 2 ! 1 | and IY, 1X t Z spiracy against the laws of the United Reports come from Japanese Sources | 3 heavy instrument. The discovery tralia, were disturbed and broken up | loss by the fire and gale is estimated | 34@34%c; X, 30@31c; No. 1, 33¢c; No. ; ir : : x "| that the rafts were dispatched from | was mad the murdered woman's |DpY Troughs, or larrikius as they are | at hali a million dollars. | 2. 32@33¢: fine unwashed, 23@24c; ; p ary of making the forts:waste ammunition.| The child hurried down the railroad | The Czar has approved a gigantic burns and broken limbs. The area | three-eighths blood unwashed, 25% @ th agreement made. with the Government | by which the admission of Utah to statehood was secured. It was brought out that all of Mr. Smith’s predecessors, as presidents of the Mormon church, had been polygam- | ists and that the man chosen to suc- ceed him has more than one wife. Mr. Smith was asked which he would obey, the law of the land or revelations) from God, if the two were in confiict. | He said he might obey the revelation, | though it was not compulsory. He added: “I should not like to be put in a position where I would have to de- sert my childten—I could not do that.” | The firing was from two passing tor- | pedo boats which towed the rafts to attract the attention of the ‘enemy. SHAW CALLS FOR FUNDS. Twenty Per Cent, of Canal Purchase Money to be Paid. Secretary Shaw has notified all special National bank depositories, in- cluding those of New York City, that they will be i count of the 20 per cent. of their holdings of gov- ernment funds on or before March 25. required to pay on-ac-| Panama canal purchase | track and reported the matter to her father. News of the tragedy spread over Colleton county and men armed to the teeth flashed from all direc- tions. It was stated that the deed had been committed by Black, Pryor and Ford, and searching paries were or- | ganized and | After days of searching the negroes were arrested, taken to the scene of Jones was present it is said and wast given the chance of firing the first shots into bodies as they dangled from the swamps the crime and lynched. their the limbs of trees. scoured. project for a canal to connect the | Black sea with the Baltic. The course would be 1,200 miles long and the cost is estimated at $40,000,000. The postoffice at Humphrey, Ark, | was dynamited this morning, but whether by robbers or by enemies of Postmaster J. B. Greer, who is a ne- gro is unknown. The arbitration treaty between | Areat Britain and Spain, which it was announced February 20 the two coun- tries were on the verge of concluding was signed on the 27th. | district are meager. from which reports of damage by wind come covers a hundred miles square, | and means of communication over the This difficulty is increased by the fact that poles are little town of Francis, west of Man- gum, was destroyed by fire, but no | particulars are obtainable. The Maryland state legislature has passed a law requiring railway and steamboat companies to furnish sep- arate accommodaticns for white and negro passengers. it prea @ burned and wires blown down. The | 26c; quarter blood washed, 251% @26¢C; fine washed delaine, 35@36c; Michi- gan X and above normal; No. 1, 29@ | 30c; No. 2, 28@29c; fine unwashed, 25@25%:¢. Ohio's New Senator. » Lieut. Gov. W. G. Harding, of Ohio, | formally declared General Charles Dick | elected to the United States Senate for the short and long terms, succeed- ipg the late Senator Hanna. At the joint “session of the Legislature the vote stood: Dick 174; John H. Clarke, £0. i f ay he = i i i i President Smith declared that con- The 20 per cent. aggregates about overal weeks ago Jones was taken The general committee having in | Ca oo i res am d 2at eOn- | ga 000,000, leaving about $20,000,000 | gick Before death he confessed | tharge the coming reunion of the | s fv with ! gress-had no right to interfere in his| Po" "0 Ce "rom the Treasury. In| murdering his wif : : United Confederate Veterans decid- HE LIVED FOR 132 YEARS. Monument to Fremont. fora i SP doato nifairs and could not call him | 0 be supplied from the Treasury. In| murdering his wife. He said he could | RISC 5 ra Senator Penrose introduced a bill = D S t top Lis marriag relations view of news received from Paris to| not die until he had told all, and re- »d to change the dates originally set | = I anpropilating 350.000 Tor the oroction 1 i a i tie ge relations, | 4 °" er Ct that the French company cited the story of the crime, going | {or September 13, 14 and 15 next. For Forty Years He Had Been an In- ir Washifzton fiw of naa io [ Eo v wv he bey ye. i <iirarls A ate Tai : : V s : 2 . % i asihington City a u I : Catt ‘sto the we os Troan that T om | 2% oreo yo call a Meany of its through all of the details in a firm, The amount of money in circulation mate of a Poor House. the memory 3 Genel Join a hr | 35.( # y AT 4 directors and carry he formalities | roice i i ‘i ited 5 st ins . : : : i iil % aa } nswerable” said he. “It is the law lirectors and carry out the formalities | clear voice. He said he and his wife in the United States on the 1st inst.| Noah Raby, died in the Piscataway, | mont. The bill is that drafted yi answerabl 1 ; ; 4 . = = 1 > y of my state that has the right to pun- necessary to the transfer of the title hag quarreled and that he killed her | was $2,503,481,897, an increase of $15. | nr 7 or house of which ke had t Major R. H. Long of Pittsburg, Sec- 3 Cay ish Ye The suTty of Utah are of | 0 the property to the United States in a moment of passion. Immediately | £00,000 as compared with April 1, and | =~ 4 POOY onset ® 2% ho ang von retary of the Fremont A Clan Compalont Taisdietion Congres has (it Yas though best fo make the two, after making the confession he ex- [ihe largest in the history of the coun- 3% inmate for the last 40 years. If he | ~~ a Foray : urisdiction. gress has ta ae aad te i: i b E : : : ad — Ye right es and has no right payments to the cana company and to pired. try. had lived until April 1 next according American Boat Cantured T 0 I 1 ang 88 ne miki t1 r i ) a 1 urrently i ns 7 : Apu ito to pry Into my marriage relations.” the Topublie of Panama concurrently i The 33 members of the graduating to his own statement Raby would have | ynpiteq States inister "Powell has Gre J EE about April 1. JAPS LANDING TROOPS. slass of the collegiate and engineer-| been 132 years old. He retained his |jeen informed that the insurgents at i : —_— a : Tonto Ino I y ould all many inci- | gay : a In _ ng departments of the Western Uni- | memory and could recall many inci-| gan pedro de Marcorls have seized the Peace Vonymant, t TELEGRAPMIS SiEvinas Warships Guarding Operations at! corsity of Pennsylvania were suspend- dents of his long career until very re-| tyon0at Borrow pelonging “to the ry : Q > Mart ronumen ontractors c Hh - z of 11d. 4 . > : Yh : 5 20 i » onging On Sunday, March 13, 8 FORUM fa the work 2 bing Fusan and Chemulpo. od. The seniors are charged with cently. Raby is said to have been | ciyge line of New York and armed i lege representing the Savious, will be un- ne gy oe oe Yan ts of Wost According to information received | playing poker and “seven-up” in the born in Eatontown, Gates county, N.| per, Edward C. Reed, United States 5 3 EE Vie tl Atop about Grafton and other parts of West; “~~ “> ase m and defacing th calls Wi C., on" April 1, 1772. He enlisted Ini . ns a Sy the j in) ern Gli Liab Virgiria announce that they have been | In Vindivosiok, 10 Japanese trans ene Bolas He wel Me navy in 1865 and served on the] i — a i a 4 [3 bh } L ve e ge By El, as iy Loa 2 3 3 y . = ~ y ? = PLY 20T'1S, 1S sald De x iste 3 4 Sf tl tit id ag ee Toorting notified by the Wabash people to re-| ports, escorted by the entire naval : : ship Constitution and the frigate 2 > Sh t boll 2 ga ge o Minister 5 the i token © ie gratitude of Argentinal oY. Cl iione on April d 2 : > At the Republican convention of : 2 2 “vo ~~ | Powell has taken steps to secure the L evel i Sai% Chile at the maintenance of peace | HILO CPETALIONS of APH: J. fleet, have been energetically landing ; : O' | Brandywine, on the latter of which | protection o1 all interests 1 ee Ey Soi Era h celebrated Dreyfus case i . Z ; the Eleventh Ohio Congressional dis-| parragut was a lieutenant | ¥ hee o By 5 t i between the two countries. The civil] The celebrated Dreyius case is UD- | troops in Korea at Fusan and Chemul- | ; 10 gen. Charles H. Grosvenor was g S a Licuienant. | — ( and military officials and clergy will der consideration in the court of cassa-| po It is estimated that fully 100,000 orainatod Tor ic tenth Lorre fu on . aT | Awarded $11,000 Damages. bey Ly be present at the ceremony and a sa- tion in Paris. | men have disembarked, and it is sup- gress Arthur Q. Vorve of Lancaster, | Whitney Estate Worth $11,000,000. | The jury in the case of Mrs. Clara B. 2 $e A i lute of 101 guns will be fired. ¥illiam J. O’Brien, alias William | posed that an immediate advance in ad 1 P Bradbury of Pomeroy wore Harry Payne Whitney, executor of | Patterson against the Panhandle Rail- “1 _— — Duffy, an ‘insane di charged soldier, | Northern Korea is contemplated. From made delegates Ti tte National con. | the late william C. Whitney, has filed road Company for the death of her = “ It i 5 ablegrs from Admir ntere » war department and, go-| th e the | nese fleet is : Ra oo 7 Ci) : g g d, returne rerdict for $11 gon 5 A cablegram from Rear Admiral] entered the r department and, g the fact that the fons ese fleet is thus | i705 at Chicago, and E. D. Ricketts, | with the surrogate of Nassau county, husband, Teturded 2 Yordict for $11,000 30s Ha Parker, at Guantanamo, informs the ing to room in the mail and re-| employed it is felt that no immediate | Logan and John T. Ogler, of Mec- oo : 7» | in her behalf at Washington, Pa. She : Aly A $i vo Yoicin bert J. Man- | : 1 au Vladivostok Part Ar-q 2 -0san, . . ger, Mc- | N. Y., a provisicnal estimate of the! gcked $25.000. S ia Lit i 2 navy department that the Missouri's division, t Robert J. Man-| attack upon adivostok or Port Ar- |. 500 “arternates Walter Sears ; : : asked $25,000. She is but 18 years old. b:! steam steering gear became disabled messenger, and Arthur | thur will be made. The reported land- was nominated for elector. President | Falug of Ji fupers oy Janie bo The Senate passed the Frye bill | LR - oe i Ay wha : ir : “+ © E00 Ao Q “hi I e - axation in this state, fixing the value rervidl 1 al] S14 - ’ : 1i:ded. with the t1oahi s Emma Saxton, ing of 2,500 Japanese at Song Chin, a : 5 | ey aE providing that all supplies for th b ; . and she collided with the battleship ae on, Ev) Ne ee 3 t Kor Roosevelt and Senator Foraker were | of real estate at $1,000,000 and that of DEE Jody g tant an 1pp = or e of 1 : jamacing the port propeller missed being | Plaksin bay, on the east coast a 0-1. i i army in the Philippines shall be car- Binais, damaging the port propelie 165. has been confirmed indorsed. | the personal estate at $10,000,000. | fled only 1%. Ameblean votsals. | T of the atter. . » N wip 8 J . Lia ia > ali i = 41C 1) De ne ad | re Ly | rier Om — enor Quesada, British Vessels Released. Cub lect: Sr | Under Antl-d i PA f g Died of Strange Malady. | the Cubs S a new Earthquake in Peru. The British coal-laden steamers Et- uban Election Returns. naer Anti-wug Law, BH i . ox her 1 “ title : 3 . > Taley q n i i + ihe 1 1 2 Jars Charles Quelle Denunzie, an Italian treaty eoniint 1 n the title to A tremendous earthquake, which did trickdale (from Barry February 3) for | Returns indicate that the Liberal The Supreme court of North Caro- ine : re. 5. 1... the Isle of Pines, ; Sal \ -ankby (fron TY - | Nati i lec r CONTTessSme ina ha lown « cisic hi patient died at the Oil City, Pa. hos- 2 Sie 0 pin Lovers 77 much damage, occurred at Lima, Peru, | 52bang and Frankby (from Barry Feb- | Nationalists elected 15 congressmen, lina handed down a de n which hi : . en apanese laborers from ] he iia ; ruary 3) for Hongkong and the Norwe- | conservative Republicans 11 and the puts all the liquor prohibi s terri pital. The case had attracted ction of Santa Clara | on the 4th inst. Nothin compared cian steamer Matilda (from Penarth epub a I puts & he liqu prohibitive territory 2s A A: ined : ” Sn : 2 : : 5 N : : Fri evss Tat alic ariv napnli iy ToT Pali r a Hp radl tention of the medical prof od in a body to San! ith it had been experienced during| January 30) for Sasebo, also laden Moderate Nationalists, a par ty peculiar | in North Carolina under the “anti-jug” Via of t this section. Denunzie was ing Japanese and Amerl-| ty, ja5t 30 years. with coal, captured by the squadron | to Santiago, 5. While 20 of the 31 law. This prohibits the shipment of 3 from echinococcus, which causes tu- > dhe Ro0s 2 Se in ips fed sea, have been released by | congressmen elected are so-called Lib- | liquor from points within the State to : s oF mors in the liver and lungs, a disease ; on say i Riyal Prifie Coming From Jagan, order o the czar. | erals, half of the number are yoints where the prohibiti os ; : fi i : r rot 5 7 co -1 Tos rinciples declar ary law is i ff fg peculiar to 1 rtment to-d KX Prince of the blood will probab- By a vote of 15 to 17 common coun ro ed to the p ple Ss dec 1 ary law is in eff N i en submitted for they.” oh kB : xd cil of Detroit, Mich., rejected Andrew | Havana Nationalists, and about 50 cour Bas huew o Se = .000 Dar | Ir bo dispatched 2 the Miwdo's Spe | (iarpegie’s offer of $790,000 for a con- of the election is general ed was unders I \ De the cial order to attend the opening of | tral and branch pul library build- | as a victory for the moder : oY r counties. but 3 iar ya $x e St. Louis Exposit { tnzs. | in politics. construed to apply to th A tha ciety.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers