SCORES KILLED WRECK Frightlully Fatal Collision on Tb ; Southern Forway ORDERS WERE DISOBEYED. MANY WERE FATALLY One Engineer Fails to Take the .. Siding Assigned to His Train Regularly. Sixty-two people are dead and over 100 injured, some of them fatally, as the result of a head-on collision be- tween two passenger trains Southern railroad near Tenn., last Saturday. Disobeying of orders caused the disaster. The collision was between east: bound passenger train No. 12 and westbound passenger train No. 15 from Bristol. No. 12 was a heavy train, carrying two Pullmans, two day coaches and a mail and baggage car. No. 15 was a light local train. The greatdst loss of life occurred in the eastbound train, while in the westbound train only the engine crew were killed. Relief trains were Knoxville within an hour. | This appalling loss of life resulted | apparently from the disregarding of orders given to the two trains to meet at a station which has for a long time been their regular meet- ing point. The claim of failure to see either the station or signals can- not he set up by the engineer of the westbound train were he alive to enter a plea of defense, as the acci-| dent happened in broad daylight, and according to the best information ob- tainable, he had order in a little frame in front of him as his engine rushed by the station. A mile a half further on ‘it came full an eastbound passenger train mak- ing for Hodges, in compliance with instructions to meet the westhound | train, which carried the sleepers from the east of Knoxville, Chat tanooga and other southern cities. The possibility exists that the ill fated engineer may have been asleep, but nothing is known save that the orders Were not obeyed. The trains were on time, and were not making | over 35 miles an hour, yet the im- pact as they rounded a curve and | came suddenly upon each other was frightful. | Both engines and the major por- tions of both trains were demol- ished. The engineers of the two] trains were crushed, their bodies re- maining for hours under the wreck- age of the locomotives, “Both engines and coaches of No. 15 were literally molished, the smoker and car completely so. The sleepers re- mained on the track undamaged. 3oth engines lay to the north of the on the Hodges, dispatched from | the and upon | the de- baggage all of track, jammed together into one mass of indescribable ruins. The cars which were demolished were piled on the wrecked engines.” JUDGE PARKER'S LETTER. Democratic Candidate Issues Formal Acceptance. Judge Alton B. Parker’s formal let- ter of acceptance of the Democratic nomination [or the Presidency was given out for publication. In stat- ing his position upon the issues for- mulated in the platform of his party the nominee definitely accdpts the challenge of President Roosevelt in relation to executive pension order No. 178. Judge Parker declares if he shall be elected he will revoke that order and endeavor to com- pass the end desired through legis- lation by congress. Touching upon imperialism at some lengzth the letter declares the power of the President is almost as great as that of some European monarchs, and makes an appeal for the return to that constitutionalism that existed in the time of our fath- ers. Tariff reform is demanded by the people and is imperative. He declares he favors further leg- $slation lcoking to the curbing of the trusts. He favors reciprocity, which would benefit both manufacturer and con- sumer, and cites President McKin- ley’s last public speech as showing that he appreciated the value of re- SR The Philippines should} be independent, he says, as soon as their people are reason 1b y prepared for freedom, in justice to them, and to preserve our own rights. NEW RUS N ARMY. New Commander and Reorganization. Czar Chooses pone The Czar anno tion of a Roan to consist and to b= comma penberz, who will take eque al with Gen. Kuro rin, of the firs! Manchurian. The Czar’s rescript, while praising the valor and energy of the Japanese, makes it plain that Russia intends to spare neither money nor men in bringing victory to her arms as speedily as possible. It is reported that Grand Duke Nich- olas will probably be made com- mander-in-chief of the two Manchur- jan armies Engineer Burn A passenger tr and Western rcad was Lockburn by engine, tender derailed, but mained on the ed to ain on Death. the Norfolk wrecked at spreading rails. The and baggage car were the passenger cars re- track. None of the passengers was injured. Engineer | william D. Simonton of this city, | was burned to death under his ngine | Fireman Frederi W. Kyle, o umbus, was,fatally alded. Col- | INJURED. | | mines of ACTURES Farm Products Fail Manufactures, MANUF IN LEAD. Exports of Be- tow rease in exports of aud mana- exports of decrease in products are ted to reach the correspondents. Ap- is not great several days are ed to elapse before there ensues a battle with the forces under eral Kuropatkin. Improvement in the weather conditions is regarded as advantageous to the Japanese. | There is no news from the direction of Port Arthur, though it seems probable that fighting is in progress there. There is no confirmation of the report that the Russian cruiser Gromocboi has left Vlodivostok in pursuit of a Japanese transport. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Thomas H. Tibbles, Vice-Presiden- tial candidate of the People’s party, has issued his letter of acceptance. he buildings of the Canada Hard- ware Company, in Montreal, were burned. The loss is $530,000, msur- ance, $383,000. President Walmsley, of the Manu- facturers’ Asscciation, declared in a speech that New England would hold her cotton-mill industry. Fire in the sixth fioor of the Chri tian Peper Tobacco Company's fac tory, in St. Louis, struction of practically all the stock The loss is $90,000. Fire at the plant of the J. A. Fay and Egan Company, of wood working machinery, situated at Front and Jolin streets, Cincinna- ti, caused a loss of $200,000. Four Killed by Train. While retureing from the christen- ing of a baby at the Sacred Heart Polish Roman Catholic Church on Talbot avenue, Braddock, Pa., four perscns, two men and a woman and the baby that had just been chris- tened, were killed, by being struck by a fast train on the Pennsylvania railroad. RAN INTO SLEEPERS. One Killed and Twenty-six Hurt in Railroad Wreck. he Wester: express from New York to Chicago on the New York Iroad was wrecked at l.ock Y. Mrs. Newman Erb 1 and 26 others injured. The of the , while running at d, struck a broken sleeping cars The engine ned on the stopped the tracks Nos. \ av) rain. from the west, h rate of speed, sw curve and yefor r en could get a flag he of freight struck the yg and cut off about one- car for the 16 entire length. it plunged into the rear sleep- the front steps with a burning fuse attached. he bottle contained dvnamite enough to wreck the build- ing. told the police that he saw a white man run away from the step. A strike of union miners is on at the the company. discussed parently four Japanese armies are converging upon Mukden, but al- i though the distance to be covered! expect-| Gen- | PUPILS PLUNGE TO DEATH, Floor of Vauit Gives Way and Many Fall Into Excavation. onsiderable length in a report of Fr—— the chief of the Bureau of Statistics NINE BODIES TAKEN OUT. f the Department of Commergz and a Lat For the first time in the his- t the export ' trade of the Accident Happens During Recess— United States manufactures exceeded Parents Charge School Officials 3450,000,900, and agricultural pro- | With ! in Affair. ! for the first time fell below 30 per cent. of the total domestic ex-| - port The to:al exports of domestic seven ~ mil | ms actures were $452,445,629 vossibly 10, ft 3407.526.169 in 1903, and : Ye $433,851,756 in 1900, the highest rec- school gir were suffacated In a ord mm earlier years. The total valws| vault during the forenoo: recess, of agricultural products exported and a score of ¢cthers narrowly es- was 53.685.367, against $873,322.-| caped the same horribl e death. 832 in 1903, and $943,811, 020° in 1901,! During the of the day this when the highest totai of agr jcultural | suburb was wild with mingled ex- exports was recorded. citement, sorrow and indignation, he gain in manufactures over | and those openly charging the ca- agricultural products in the export] lamity to official negligence are mak- trade of the country is shown in the | ing serious threats, among them be- fact that in 1874 manufactures ex-| ing many women. ported amounted to but about one-| The large building i3 used for a fifth as much in value as agricultural | high school, as well as for all lower products exported; in 1884 their val-| departments. All of the victims ue was about one-fourth as much; in were from primary grades. On op- 1894 nearly one-third as much, and in | posite sides of the spacious ground 1904 more than one-half as much as| in the rear of the school building that of ‘the products of agriculture, are {two outhouses. When recess in the closing months of the | given about 30 of the smaller r, May and June, manufactures were in the outhouse assigned the first time in the history of to them, when suddenly the floor commerce actually exceeded agri-| gave way, precipitating them into the ural products in value of SenoTes. | vault below. This decrease in the value of agri-! This vault is 12 feet deep and ral products exported is the| walled up with stone like a well striking when it 1s considered | There was in it 4 feet of water that the export price of cotton] would have been over the heads of ane higher during the year than the children falling in it singly, but in any prior year for more than a these falling first filled up the vault quarter of a century, and that the partially, so that a were not value of raw cotton exported was entirely submerged. greater than in.any preceding year, The girls fell t from the floor- and formed nearly one-half of the jpg and the s of those who total vaiue of agricultural products were on top kept at least nine under- exported. { neath until they were dead. The I frame sheds of these vaults were REAL WAR NEWS SCARCE. about 20 feet square without win- . — dows, and only one marrow door- information About Japanese Move. | way, so that only one girl escaped ments Kept Secret. | from the door. She ran into the Secrecy veils the movements of school building and told the teach- the Japanese armies in Manchuria, | ors swhai hod happened. 1% ot fiat 1s indicative of devel The principal and other teachers anu ifs b 2 Jet > rushed to the rescue. The screams opments in the situation is permit- of the girls were dimly heard within the vault, The teachers were soon reinforced by the entire population of the town, the police and fire de- partment rendering effective service. | IRON TRADE PROSPECTS. Reduction of Prices on Billets Has Smali Effect on Sales. The Iron Age says: The action of the billet association has attracted a good deal of attention, but not very important, since the tonnage of steel] billets sold in the open mar- ket is insignificant when compared with the days before the consolida- tions. Then, too, the great bulk of what crude steel is sold, is delivered on old sliding scales based on the price of Bessemer pig iron. There- fore, the open reductions in prices of billets and sheet cars does not ma- terially change the does not justify the evidently indulged in by some con- sumers, that prices in certain finish- ed lines must be correspondingly re- duced. Business in structural expectations, terial does not appear to have been | stimulated to any extent by the re- | cent lowering in association prices resulted in the de- | manufacturers | ers, der molishing them. The freight destruction of C. Norman, twice State and one of the best-known poli in Kentucky, died from | heart trouble. Effort to Wreck Home. A neighbor passing the residence | £ J. C. Maben, president of the | Sloss-Sheffield Steel and Iron Co., at | Birmingham, Ala. found a bottle on | The man who found the bottle | {| on shapes. In fact, some sellers note that the market is rather quieter. In plate and shape trades, the prin- cipal effect of the concessions has been to bring out specifications on old contracts, but for new business, consumers ‘seem to cling to the con- is really | ! na, | and in India. situation. It | | quest, ma- | viction that the end of readjustments | of prices has not yet come. trade in merchant pipe is quieter, and there are again reports of slight shading. There is not much that is encouraging from the sheet and tin- plate trades. ‘ Timber Destroyed by Fire. Timbermen who have visited umbia county, Oregon, report that cent forest fires in that section have destroyed timber to the valine of $8,000,000. Most of it was owned by eastern capitalists. WOULD SUPPLANT DOGMA. Prof. Haeckel Active ers’ Congress At Rome. Col- in Free Think- Prof ssor Ernest Ha University, who brought the greet- ings of Germans to the Congress of Free Thinkers Which assembled at Rome, caused of his y be ci ays the £ offers a occasion to expound the lesi reor- of The | | Indiana, re- | | officers of Jena | ! of state adding | that in the middle of October there will be held Louis an inter- national conf for the concep- | tion of a progressist world, organized by the Federation of American Free Thin! having the same program and object as the present congress at Rome. Professor Haeckel regrets that he is unable to gratify his de- sire to join in the St. Louis congress, but being requested to contribute his views to these congresses be presents his principles in writing. ers, 3jornstjerne Bjernson has been ap- pointed honorary president for Scandinavia. urn. Indianapolis, Ind. ected as the meeting place of next year’s convention of the supreme council, Ancient and Accepted o:tish Rite Free Masons at the closing session of the annual meeting at Boston. The report of the trustees, presented by Gen. S. C. Lawrence, showed in- vested funds of $292,000. The New Hampshire nominated John McLane, of for Governor. Republicans Milford, { and NEW YORK DEMOCRATS State Convention at Saratoga Nom- inates Candidates. The New York State Demoeratic convention was held at Saratoga and unanimously noniinated the follow- ing ticket: For Governor, D. Cady Herrick, of Albany, at present justice of the State Supreme Court. For l.deutenant ‘Governor, Ir: Burton Harrison, New York, now a repres Sonar in Congress from the Thirteenth district For Secretary of State, John P lace, Jr.. of Monroe, mber of the Assembly. now a me For Attorney General, John ebn, of Erie, the incumbent. For Comuvptroller, George Hall, of St. Lawrence, now Mayor of tne city Ogdensburg. For State Muench, of For Slate Engineer Thomas H. Stryker, da county. For Chief Appeals, Edgar G. Cullen, of (Democrat), now an Associate of that bench and the nonunee. For Associate Judge of of Appeals, William E. Werner, of Monroe (Republican), now of that bench by designation of Governor Odell and the Republican nominee. BIG STEEL PLANT BOUGHT. Foundries Company Will Control St. Louis Works. President Charles Miller, of the American Steel Foundries Company, announced that the concern had pur- Treasurer, William Onondaga. of Rone, Kings Judge the Court American Steel chased 2a controlling interest in the plant of the Commonwealth Steel Company, of St. Louis, which will be devoted to the manufacture of railway castings. The price paid was about $2,000,- 000. The sale was practically com- pleted several weeks ago, though no announcement concerning it was made until now. Cun- FLECTAIC CAR BLOWN UP oo Struck Box of Dynamite which Had Dropped from Wagon. BODIES TERRIBLY MANGLED. Every Window Within the Radius of a Quarter of a Mile Was Shattered. An electric car per- sons was blown Mel- rose, Mass, by ound box of dynaniite len off {an express wagon. Six persons | were killed and Surveyor, | Onei- | Justice of the Court. of | ~7: | fering Republican | } th outright and ree more | their | Nineteen taken to the died of hour. hers on the car two hospitals sut- from severe injuries. At least a score of persons in the im- mediate vicinity of t explosion were | were hurt by flying glass and splint- 1 ers. | So great was the force of the ex- plosion that all but ten feet of the rear portion of the car was blown into smal] pieces, while every wine a mile was within a radius of a quarter of shattered. The immediate dow Sjeinity of the acci- dent presente 1 spectacle when those in the neighborhood | reached the scene. The ground was President Miller states that a great | railway castings, hag 4s many or The company is its capacity various con- than a exists for company can fill. demand the ders as it constantly increasing and the output of the cerns is 33 per cent larger month ago. AGITATING HOLY WAR. Spreading Discontent Among Follow- ers of Budda in Asia. With the success of the British ex pedition to Thibet and the protest of Russia against the British-Thibet- an treaty some of the Russian papers For more tha three hours there | was the greatest confusion, and it was difficult to obtain the names of any of the dead or injured or to as- certain the cause of t accider Thousands of people rushed about trying to find relatives and friends, {and the hospitals were besieged. |. The- ear rantained mostly men on the way to their homes in this city, the accident taking place only a quarter of a mile from Meirose Cen- ter, but among the dead was a woman {and her have hecome disturbed over the im-! portance of to Mouran in According to information Mongolia the agitation for war noted at the time of the pil grimage to Ourga, in July last, con- tinues. Wandering Ilamas are spreading the agitation mot only among the Buddhists in Mongolia, but among the followers of Buddha in the Altai regions of Central Chi- among the Russian beyond the Siberian February. from even borders \ Boston Wool Market. While all grades have been in re- there has been an especially good movement in scoured Wools, speculation tendency having ca them to change hands frecly. market for pulled wools is ' ri, moderate offerings. demand for territory grades. For- eign wools are steady. Leading quotations follow: Ohio and Penn- sylvania double extra and above, 34 @35c; extra, 30@3lc; No. 1, 33@ 34c; No. 2, 33@34c; fine unwashed delaine, 26@27c; fine washed de- laine, 36@36l%c; Michigan, extra and above, 26@27c; No. 1, 30@3lc; No. 9, 29@30c¢; fine unwashed, 21@22¢c 1, 3% and 13 blood, unwashed, 97@ 29¢: unwashed delaine, 25@26¢ washed delaine, 32@33c; Kentucky, etc.,, 3% and 14 blood, 29@ The with 2914. Many Officers Killed. Official returns i the casualties among the Russia officers at the the Buddhist pilgrimage | Buriate and | There is a good | legs, arms and other the bodies of those who while shrieks and -omt the writhing strewn with portions of had been killed, groans came forms of the i The express wagon the dynamite fell was d Roy Fenton, who 3 Seay that the box had dropped off and back to find it, but hore “he hin 100 vards of the t struck it and was blown up. Fer ar- rested. from which en by vd rushed got box the car 1ton was babe. CLAIM TIBET WAS COERCED. Official Organ Says England Has No Right to Assume Protector ate Over Country. Russia officially maintains that Great Britain has broken faith in the matter of the Thibetan treaty and Ambassador Benkendorff has at the British foreign office. Ac- cording to the Russian view, Great Britain's pledges to Russia only con- templated the regulation of trade be- | tween Indian and Tibet and she dis- claimed any purpose to meddle with the internal or political affairs pf | the country. Instead of so doing, Russia claims that a treaty was forced upon the Tibetans which | created a virtual protectorate over the country. Moreover it is con- tended the treaty is a restriction | upon the sovereignty of China, com- elling Tibet to consult Great Bri- tain in its dealing with other pow- fine | 4 | that | States ers. This is considered to be aimed dirzctly at Russia. The protest lodged in London doubtless wiil be followed up by one at Pekin, against | the ratification of the treaty. Little hope is entertained in official circles that the Russian protests will be heeded either by Great Britain or China, as Russia is not in a position to make an issue, but may be in the future. The Russian press is bit- ter in its comments. The British foreign office reiterates the assurances given the United that there will be no perma- | nent occupation of any portion of Ti- battle of Ss show them to be | wounded, including six 39 field officers. killed, 372 were wound- are missing. MORMONS EXPELLED. American Missionaries Leave Hungary. Tisza, the Hungarian minis the interior, has prohibiting Mormon propa- Hungary upon the such a movement is un- from the standpoints policy and religion. The immediate occasion of the decision was the expulsion of two Mormon missionaries, Franklin Pingree and William Wetzel, who came from Salt Lake City to Temesvar 18 months 465 killed or Generals and were ed, and 13 Two Must Count ter of decision ganda within ground that desirable both ago, and attempted to organize a Mormon community among Hungar- iangs who had formerly resided in Utah. The two missionaries were prompt- ly expelled, whereupon their Hungar- ian friends appealed to the minister of the interior, Se result being the present decision. Eighty | rendered a | | the | left the | They secured all | the Former State Senator Edward C. Stokes was unanimously nominated for Governor by the Republican | State Convention of New Jersey in session at Trenton. Two Trainmen Killed. Fast freight No. 94 on the Balti- more and Ohio Railroad struck a wagon loaded with 750 pounds of dy- {ant forts on either side of Sueis namite at the crossing, at North Branch, W. Va., four miles from Cumberland, Md. Two persons | were killed and eight were injured, three of them seriously. The dead are: C. Walter Whitehair, brakeman, runswick; Nelson Pike, Martinsburg, veteran engineer, scalded all over and internally; lived two hours. front | betan territory, will be observed. The State of Tennessee is suing the Standard Oil Company for alleg- ed violation cf the Anti-Trust law. BANDITS KILL Two. Overpower Gang of Men, Two tion house at south of pied by The Italians up what money of complying the Italians and tried to them. In the fight that two of the Italians were another was severely Seeing worse pants Italian Section Rob Them and Escape. broke into the Riverside, 15 go, which was Italian railroad ordered robbers several men. to give Instead were they had. robbers overpower injured. of the fight, the other the section house fled rcbhbers in full possession. the money which men had secreted about place and escaped. occu- and Q = © 09 Japs Take Two Forts, The general attack on Port which began on the 19th which the Japanese fleet ating, was resumed next The Japanese captured two Arthur, and in is coc-oper- morning. import- ey- north of Port Arthur Cuba’s Imports Show Increase. ing, The State Department has received | from Minister Squires, table showing Cuba’s for the first quarter of 1904 and for the same quarter of 1903. These figures are of special interest in that they cover the first quarter after De- cember 26, 1903, when the reciproc- ity treaty took effect There was an increase of $2,038,200 in the im- ports of Cuba for the first quarter of 1904, over those for the same period of 1903. at Havana, a import trade been |! . | instructed to lodge a general protest | | sec- ! | miles | OCCu- | rushed on | followed | killed and | the | GROWTH ; OF CORN RETARDED. ather Favorable in Some Dis- tricts, but Too Cool at Night. The bureau's weekly sum- mary Of conditions is as fol weather crop lows: While the week weather conditions of S$ a. m., Septem- were generally favorable for crops in neariy all dis. night temperatures in the portions have delay- the ending at ber 19, gathering icte, low noriherly more od the maturity of late crops and some trering from drought is re- trom the Ohio and lower Mis- por .ourl valleys and portions Of the Southern States. Frosts occurred 4s iar south as Oklahoma and Ten- nescee, but little or no damage re- sulted except to tender vegetation in the central valleys and to unmatured crops in Wisconsin, Minnesota, the Dakotas and Montana. An unusu- ally severe rain and windstorm caused considerable damage on the 14th and 15th in portions of New England and the Middle Atlantic States. The conditions were gener- | ally favorable in California, but drought was injurious in Oregon and no rain fell in Washington. Late corn is maturing rapidly in the Western portion of the belt, but the crop is ripening slowly in the Rastern and central sections and needs 10 to 20 days of favorable con- ditions to be safe from frost. While damaging frosts occurred in por- tions of the upper Mississippi valley, and a considerable portion of the crop was damaged in Wisconsin and some on lowlands in parts of Minne- sota and Iowa, the aggregate frost damage in the last named State was not serious. Cutting is now general in all sections. Spring wheat harvest is practically completed except in the northern portion of North Dakota, and threshing is well advanced in Minne- sota and South Dakota, half done in Washington and nearing completion in Nebraska, but delayed by rain in stern North Dakota. | NEWS IN BRIEF. Ghouls robbed a grave tury old in Wilmington, The plant of the Pacific Starch Company at Jackson City, Mich., was destroyed by fire. l.oss about $75, VOU. Henry H. is reported half a cen- Del. Rodgers, of New York, quite ill. It is announced that Mr. Rodger’'s illness is not ser- ious. | Five hundred delegates of the | United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners met in biennial conven- | tion in Milwaukee. | Seven persons were severely hurt lin a street car accident in St. Jo- | seph, Mo. Mrs. J. E. Pierpont, of | Skidmore, may die. | The United States South Atlantic | squadron, Rdgar Admiral ‘Chadwick | commanding, sailed from St. Helena | for Santos, ‘Brazil. The earnings of the Hocking Val- ley for the second week of Septem- ber were $120,825.09, against $131,- 284.12 the same week last year, a decrease of $10,459.03. The first break in the ocean steam- | ship rate war occurred in London { when the North German Lloyd Com- pany raised its steerage rate to New York to $15. The Hamburg-Ameri | can line, it was announced later, has | also raised its steerage rates to $15. | Two hundred miners struck at Gin- ther, O., because the Pittsburg Block Coal Company did not pay and be- cause a checkweighman was dis- charged. Ex-Mayor J. Samuel McCue, at Charloitesville, Va., was indicted by the grand jury on a charge of killing his wife on September 4. | The earnings of the Toledo and Ohio Central division of the Ohio Central lines for the second week in September were $86,196, an increase of $508 compared with the same week last year. The earnings for the two weeks were $154,337, a decrease of $6,564. Sir William McDonald, philanthropist of Montreal, and | James W. Robertson, of Ottawa, | Canada, commissioner of agriculture, | are making a tour of the Northern | States with a view to adding im- | provements to the system of rural | educa ition in the Canadian prov- inces. Three miners were crushed to | death at the old Apdover iron mills at Hibernia, N. J., another was so badly ‘injured that he will probably die, and two others were seriously hurt. The wage committee of the Amalg- amated Glass Manufacturers’ Asso- ciation reached an agreement as to the wage scale for the coming year, | after a three-days’ session in Erie, { Pa, educational Wabash Has Ocean Outlet. | The Western Maryland | tldewater extension from the main line at Walbrook to the terminal at that they were getting the:| Port Covington was opened to freight | traffic on the 20th. This line gives | an ocean outlet to the Wabash sys- | tem, of which the Western Mary- | land Railroad is now a part. | Peace Arranged in Uruguay. | The peace terms arranged between | the government of Uruguay and the | Uruguayan revolutionary forces are that the revolutionists shall surren- der their arms and that the govern- ment shall agree not to interfere | with the property of the revolution- | ists and that complete electoral free- | dom be granted. 1 New Russian Cruiser Completed. A dispatch from St. Petersburg says the Russian cruiser Izumrud, sister ship to the famous Novik, has completed successfully her trials at Cronstadt, and will join the second Pacific squadron at Reval. letter of United States Sena- Charles W. Fairbanks, accepting The tor | the Republican nomination for the | Vice Presidency, was made public on {the 21st. Railroad - A “ peri ommn any orat No such nown Perur Je sen to p On quan cost the 1 giver to 5, Th on P] a la porti sing! grate Th pose €escaj wives inste Besto Lie 3 Ch “ILS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers