i ? - chance to DIED IN BURNING CONVENT One Nun, Nine Children and Four Old Women Perish. SISTERS PROVE THEIR HEROISM One Gives Up Her Life and Two Others Likely to Perish in Rescue Work. In the burning of the St. Ann Con- vent at St. Genevieve, near Montreal, Quebec, gun, nine children and four women lost their lives and two nuns were seriously injured. The village had no fire brigade and an efiort was made to get Montreal by telephone, in order to secure as- sistance, but the effort failed and the big building was soon a mass of smouldering ruins. Scenes of frightful lowed, as the night was and a fierce wind was blowing. There were about 100 inmates and as they were taken from the building in their night clothing the villagers threw open their homes and made a ‘refuge for the young and old. There were about 20 aged women, some of them nearly 100 years old, at the convent, and it is feared that the shock in some cases will prove fatal. Heroism on the part of the sisters marked the occasion. The pupils who perished were in a porticn of the building where the fire had obtained too much headway before the alarm was given to enable those who responded to effect their rescue. The fire started about midnight in the old ladies’ hospice, and the smoke was so thick that the children on the floor above were unable to get down. As soon as the fire was discovered the villagers hastened to the ‘scene. Bucket brigades were hurriedly formed and every possible effort was made to save the building, but tlie fire had gained such headway that it was soon apparent that there was no save it from destruction. The occupants, hurriedly aroused by the smoke, attempted to grope their way out of the building. Not- withstanding all efforts, unfortunate- ly ther was a deplerable loss of life. one suffering. fol- very cold TWENTY-NINE MEN ARE LOST Men Who Objected to Going cn Ship | the Atlantic. steamer Freshfield posted as missing. who left with her Perish in The British been officially the 29 men undoubtedly lost. against sailing in the ship, officials Norfolk, Va. under peril of has are but the g0 The insisted that they imprisonment. men said that the vessel was unsea- | worthy. The Freshfield left Pensacola, Fla. January 29, with a general cargo, for Hamburg and Rotterdam, and February 4 reached Norfolk with her crew in bad humor. The started for sea again on February 5, but was out one day oniy when she came back almost on her beam eads. Some of her cargoc was removed and IS the again sailed, since which time nodiing has been heard of her. The Freshfield was owned by the Nortfield Steamship Co., of Liverpool, and was 13 years old, gros] tonnage of 2,730. MOROS AGAIN IN REVOLT Secretary to Gov. Scott and Killed by Native Band. The walled city of Jolo was attacked by Moros ca April 9 who fired into the ‘officers’ club. On April 10 the secretary of Gov. Scott was ambushed and killed within range of the seh- tries. A datto refugee from Boreno has organized the Moros, who are de- fying the Americans. Gen. Leon ‘Wood has arrived at Jolo from Zam- | beanga and given the Moros 10 days within which to surrender the refu- gee datto. If this is not done he will | concentrate a sufficient force to se- cure a compliance with his demands. PLOT TO KILL THE CZAR Officers, Scldiers, and Nobles Said to Have Been Implicated. A plot. to kill the Czar and his kinsmen has been discovered among the troops of the Imperial guard. Many officers are involved, the very meén upon whom the imperial family depends for personal safety. Gover- nor General Trepoff’s secret unearthed the plot and assert that several of the conspirators of noble birth were in possession of larg quantities of dyamite. The discovery has unnerved the Czar at T Selo. To insure prompt actior case of demand all officers have been directed to remain in their offices dur- ing the aster holid be pre- pared for any emergency. it KILLE Rumor T missi Spe give an to the perial Commi his whole r 18, by Thibetans a Wages are Increase Official made of an adv made by the 6H foundries, shops and br to the Manufar Pittsburg. The 1 sociation advance will tal place June 1. About men V be affected. I.ast June the associ tion reduced the wages of the and the increase to be granted yeir will make the about the same as they were the reduc- tion was made. 6,000 FAMOUS ACTOR DEAD Joseph Jefferson Passes Away After Long Career on Stage. Joseph Jefferson, the eminent act- or, died at his home, “The Reefs,” at Palm Beach, Fla.,, Sunday evening. The end came after a day of uncon- sciousness and after a heroic struggle of days which had exhausted his vi- tality. - At his deathbed were his wife, his sons, Charles B. and Frank Jeff- erson; his nurse, Miss Mabel Bing- ham; Dr. R. B. Potter and his faith- ful old servant, Carl Kettler. Joseph Jefferson was born in Phila- delphia, February 20, 1829; debut as an actor, Washingtcn, 1833; appeared in Chicago, 1838; with Macready and Booth, 1845; stage manager, Balti- more, 1853; in England and France 1856; with Laura Keene, New York, 1857; created Rip Van Winkle, to Australia and England, died April 23, 1905. His famous parts: As Winkle in “Rip Van Winkle”; Acres in "The Rivals’; as Plummer in “The Cricket on ‘the Hearth’; as Mr. Golightly in “Lend Me Five Shillings” as Newman Noggs in “Nicholas Nickleby”; as Dr. Ollapad in “The Poor Gentleman”; as Asa Trenchard in “Our American Cousin’’; as Dr. Pangloss in “The Heir at Law”; as Marral in “A New Way to Pay Old Debts.” 1859; went 1860-65; Rip Van as Bob Caleb NEW BATTLESHIPS FOR RUSSIA Will Name Boats Built After Destroy- ed Ships and Naval Heroes. The commission headed by Grand Duke Alexander Michaelovitch, which has raised $5,000,000 by public con- tributions for the navy, its program. The vessels to be built are as follows: Three cruisers, river ers, one mine transport, 31 torpedo boat destroyers, torpedo boats and submarine boats and 10 coast defense vessels. four gunboats, ten Bayan and Pallada, and a number of the ships will be named after deceased officers, who distinguished themselves by individu- al exploits at Port Arthur, mostly on torpedo boats early One of the cruisers will be named Ad- miral Makaroff. WHEAT CORNER COLLAPSES and | The crew mutinied | of the British consulate at | on | Freshifield She’had a | Adlouaned] d! agents | men | this | Hof Price of May Option Drops Eleven Cents in a Day. witnessed in the Chicago pit, the bot- | tom fell out of the daring deal in | wheat for May delivery undertaken by John W. Gates and his associates. At | one time prices showed a loss of 113; cents a bushel for the day, the price | of the option being driven down in a serics of sensational rushes to 981% cents per bushel. The closing quo- | tation was $1, as against $1.23 a few weeks ago. Hats were smashed, clothing torn, | and bodies bruised in the | struggle among the traders to sell the grain. The frenzied rush began with the sounding of the signal bell and lasted throughout the session. It was estimated that 1,500,000 bushels were sold by one house alone. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. All the memb:rs cf the pension board of review have resigned. The main building of the Vander- | bilt university at Nashville, Tenn., was gutted by fire. Loss $200,000. Four men were killed and two wouses demolished by keg of powder at Mt. Sterling, The action of France in having the squadron cred to leave Kamranh bay pleased the Japanese government. The Doukala, tribes are in full revolution near Mogadoor, Morocco. The kaids of the Chadma and Mtouga tribes have been | killed. 2 a pitched battle. with robbers at San Francisco, Thomas Reilly was | killed, but the outlaws escaped. | The Russian fleet left Kamranh { bay and heavy cannonading was heard | at sea later. Three ships dor island, i Yess mura’s squadren. John Alexander Dowie has appealed | to the State department at Washing- ton to put in motion all the machinery of the government to protect his mis- | sionaries in China, The price of bread has trebled in Moscow as the result of the strike of 15,000 bakers. Only municipal ovens are working. Jt is feared that the struggle will be protracted, although to grant con- Chiadma and Mtouga appeared off Corregi- supposed to be Japanes ssions. of Pensions Vespas- accepted the tenth of members of implicated in the ed pensions to > - ansylvania Home has that contract with a > outcome s of not bonds be of not Turpentine Combine Formed. with stock of $3,- The 1 atien will be as the ral Stores Product Export company. It is understood that tI combine will oontrol s of turpentine out in the 190,- country of 650,000 will be in Sa- vannah. has announced | gunboats, several torpedo cruis- | The names of several ships de-| stroyed at Port Arthur, like the will be repeated | up- | in the war. | Over In one of the wildest sessions ever | fierce | the explosion els awaiting the arrival of Kami- | of a total EXPLOSION KILLS: THREE Bottle of Gasoline Accidentally Broken Near Fireplace. PARENTS WERE NOT AT HOME Returned in Time to See Their Dweiling Destroyed But too Late to Save Children. / The explosion of a bottle of gaso- line in the home of John E. Kunkle, in Maple avenue, Greensburg, Pa., re- sulted in three children of the family | being burned to death and a fourth with Keene and Sothern, 1858; | so fearfully injured that her recovery is a matter of doubt. Five other per- sons also hurt. The dead: Paul Kunkle, 7 years old; Alice Kunkle, 5 years old; Louise Kunkle, 3 years old. The injured are: Catherine Kunkle, 2 years old; George M. Gester, right hand so seriously burned that ampu- tation may be necessary; William McCarthy, overcome by smoke; Jacob Weaver, overcome by smoke; Attorney A. M. Wyant and John S. Murphy severely burned and cut about the hands and arms by glass, while trying to rescue the children. Mr. and Mrs. Kunkle, accompan- ied by two of their seven children, in the early evening attended holy week service in the First Reformed church, leaving their home in charge of Mrs. | Kunkle’s mother, Mrs. Cordelia Rugh, aged 75 years. The children went to bed after the departure of their par- ents and were soon asleep. At: 9 | o'clock, Louise, the next to the young- | est child, awakened and calling her | grandmother to her bedside asked for | a drink of water. In | water to the child the grandmother tripped over a rug and a portion of the water was spilled on the counter | pane. The lights were low in the room and in taking a towel from a mantel- piece, the grandmother overturned a bottle of gasoline. The bottle crashed to the floor just in front of a gas | grate. In an instant the fluid was | | of the room by | folowed. | Mr. and Mrs. Kunkle were on their | way home from church when the | ale sounded. They arrived just as | the fire was at its height. Before the | children had been taken from the | ruins of the house the parents were | both taken in a swooning condition to | the home of a neighbor. { Mr. Kunkle is a member of the | Westmoreland bar, being a law part- | ner of ex-Congressman Edward E. | Robbins. His home, one of the most | pretentious in Greensburg, was gutted and its furnishings either destroyed | by fire or damaged by water. The loss will be at least $18,000. OLD WOMAN WEDS A BOY Declares She { Feels Thirty Years Younger. | Mrs. N. O. Griffin, a gray-haired wo- man of 60, widow of a Philadelphia | carpet merchant, who Ieft an estate valued at $1,000,000, leaning on the arm of her sturdy coachman, John | ‘Wood, appeared at the Episcopal rec- tory in Whitehall, N. Y.,, and told Rev. Mr. Elliott that they wanted to get married. The 42 years’ differemce in their ages was so apparent that the clergyman used every effort to dis- | After the Ceremony bringing the | aflame, being thrown to all portions | the explosion which | ZEMSTVOISTS BARRED Congress Called for Next Month Pro- hibited by Government. A private circular has been ad- dressed to the Governors of the sever- al Russian provinces informing them that the congress of Zemstvoists called for May 7 has been prohibited and instructing them to prevent the departure of delegates to that con- gress. The congress of journalists will recommend wide reaching meas- ures toward the liberation of the press, as well as a political programme along the lines of the programmes adopted by the recent congresses of barristers and doctors. The Juridical Society at Tomsk, Western Siberia, adopted a strong preamble which reads like the Declar- taion of Independence, proclaiming that all citizens of Russia, without re- gard to nationality or religion, are equal before the law and entitled to equal protection from the state, and advocating the abolition of all class privileges. WAGES ARE INCREASED Blast Furnace Workers Will Demand They Be Given Eight-Hour Day. Notices have been posted in the various blast furnaces at Youngstown, O., that beginning May 1, the wages of laborers will be increased 5 per cent, and turn men 10 per cent. President James McMahon of - the Blast Furnace Workers and Smelters’ was but a return of the former wages, received by the men before the in The United States Steel Corporation is mot included. The men will still make demand for an eight-hour day. JAPANESE SEIZE COLLIERS Rojestvensky With Portion of Fleet Passes Hongkong. The Japanese are reported to have captured a large number of colliers off the coast of Cochin-China. Since leaving Europe Admiral Rojestvensky has lost only eight men by diseass out of 18,000 with him. A dispatch from St. Petersburg says that Vice Admiral Rojestvensky, with a portion of his squadron, has been sighted off Hongkong, sailing for the east. : A dispatch from Hongkong says that a portion of the Russian squadron was seen Sunday at Turan bay, about 350 miles north of Kamranh bay. HONORS FOR PAUL JONES American Squadron Will Be Detailed to Bring Body Home. The state department has advised Ambassador Porter that an America squadron will be seat to bring the hody of Paul Jones to the United States probably in June. It is expect- ed that the French government will participate in an imposing funeral pageant when the body leaves Paris. Detailed plans have not yet been made but it probably will occur short- ly before the French national holiday, June 14. Large forces of French soldiers and sailors will form the es- cort. ASK FOR RECEIVER Gross Frauds Charged Against Equit- able Assurance Co. Charging gross frauds and unlaw- Union of America, said the advance | dependents reduced them a year ago. | | 15 cents a ton, suade them from their matrimonial | Equitable = Life Assurance Society, venture. It was all to no avail, how- | Seven Chicago policyholders brought ever, and the only answer the woman | Suit in the United States court would make was: “I don’t care if against the corporatica asking that Johnnie is only 18. I am 60 and I| { the great concern be placed in the | guess I am old enough to whether I love him or not.” The minister performed the cere- mony. The bride, beaming all over are with contentment, as she boarded the rain, said she felt 30 years younger, sud she looked it. too. After a notable eight years in the direction of fore affairs for France, casse informed President of the Coun- cil Roeuvier of to resign. service of nearly PLAN GREAT RAILWAY Scheme is for Line From Lake Su- perior to Gulf of Mexico. in control of the Great Central lines, ign | be Theophile Del- | his desire and intention | | MERGER | The Hollinszimmerman syndicate, | know | | hands of a receiver. | « James W. Alexander, president, and | | James Hazen Hyde, vice president, made the subjects of scathing | accusations of misapropriation of | funds and mismanagement of | business and the sensational contro- | versy now going on among the fac- | tions of the corporation is declared to ruinous. The complainants express the fear that the business of the concern | the tremendous loss of policy holders. WILL NOT ADMIT DEFEAT Russian Bureaucracy Forms Plans for Manchuria and Kwantung. The committee of the far under Admiral Alexieff, oblivious of | is gradually acquiring new lines of what happened last year, is proceeding railway, and wh of mergers is completed it will domi- | en its gigantic scheme | daily with the work of elaborating the administration of Manchuria and the nate a system which will be cane of | Kwantung peninsula. the most important in the world. A school system for Port Arthur 2 | has just been completed, its execution | off and dispersed. The Great Central lines now spread ! | being placed in the hands of out over Ohio, Indiana and Michigan. | minister of educaticn with power to | The Erie and often railway deal, and the Erie will become a member of | of the peace for Port The | the new group of trunk lines. railway adds Pennsylvania and Erie k to the States tapped by the | & Nash- if it is consumated, the Louisville r deal, cheme is worked | out tend 1 vstem will ex- Superier”to the" Gulf and from St. Fouis to the from Taft Will Visit Tokio. » consi ff £8 Or by Secre- the H. Taft legation has concluded long rumored | denied is to be concluded. | reat Central rom the! to the gulf, adding Ken- | Tonesss ce, Coen gia, (Alabama, to visit Tokio it ship, the | Manchuria, on hetwill make his | PhilipSine trip, is coping at Yoko hama. The secretary has'made such a visit on the casion of other like | | detentions at¥Yokohamo and feels that | he could arcely fail to make an | official eall on this occasion. today the appointment of two justices Arthur officially gazetted. To Aid Poor Colieges. to small col®|e ural districts of Tennes- North This announcement Dr. D. K. Pearsons, re- ist and benefactor of many small colleges in the United States. made this year leges in the r see, Kent | West Virg | was made by | tired capitali will be copa a a | Agents ofythe 10 TE [= Bo! strict Attorneys Nemed I. C. Herndon, of¥Weleh, W. H. Alhort Rummel, of Char lest ¢ have. been appointed ert ict ‘attorn of the States. The appointment of Messrs. Herndon and Rummel was the request of Elliott Northcott who took the oath of Jffice as United | States district attorney - of the Southern district of West Virginia. OY verament demestic The Japane e to raise another $50,000,600 loan of 0 United | made at | the | off Sampaloco wculd be destroyed and dissipated to | east, | | making | | | | the | “temporarily suspend” the system, and | Russian army, | pursued. was | are Manchurians, who scatter to their Gifts amounting in all to $250, 00p | turning movements at Carolina and | ed. Equitable passed reso- | | lutions c caliine on Vice President Hyde | | 1 | is about | | earth by | of years ago, ful manipulation of the funds of the! wa DEFIANCE TO STEEL TRUST Five Furnaces in Valley With- wiaw from Genera! Trade. WILL NOT BEG FOR MARKET Youngstown Iron, Sheet & Tube Com- pany Will Use Production in Bessemer Piant. An important move in the iron and steel business of the Mahoning val- ley has just been made in connectioa with the building of the Bessemer plant of the Youngstown Iron, Sheet & Tube Company. Five of the largest independent furnaces of thé valley have gcne into a deal and withdrawn from the general market. The furn- aces include those of the Brier Hill Iron & Coal Company, the Youngs- town Steel Company, the Ohio Iron & Steel Company at Lowellsville, the Stewart furnaces at South Sharon and the Pickands, Mather & Company furnaces at Sharpsville. These furn- aces have a capacity of 15,000 tons a month and in the past this has gone to the general trade, at times the independents begging for market and at other times the United States Cor- poration begging for pig iron. When the Youngstown Iron Sheet & Tube Company organized it was in- tended to build an open hearth steel plant, The ore properties purchased were mot suitable for the Bessemer plant and it was necessary to get raw material somewhere. This, when the Bessemer steel plant proposition was proposed, was a critical point. The necessity of securing raw ma- terial caused the holding back of the steel plant proposition. When the independents of this and the Shenan-- go valley indicated their willingness to enter into this deal it was a vie- tory for the Youngstown Iron, Sheet & Tube Company. With five furnaces at their command the trust could be defied. Besides, the short hauls in the valleys, which amount to nothing more than transfer charges, not more than give the independents and the Sheet & Tube Company a decided advantage. The shipping of pig iron at $2 a ton is quite different from the transfer at 15 cents a ton and this makes the position of the company still stronger. FOUND GOLD IN CABIN . Farmer Accidentally Discovers $1,600 in - Coin on His Premises. Philip Sesler who lives in Georges township, Fayette County, Pa., ripped a board from the end of a log in a cabin on his farm and found secreted behind it $1,600 in gold. It is sup- posed that the money was hid ther many years ago by his grandfather, James Downer. Encouraged by his find Sesler is carefully examining the cabin in the hope of finding more treasure. Sesler is of a retiring disposition and said nothing about his find until a missionary society gathering at his home, when he displayed the gold to his astonished hearers. Most of the money is in $10 and $20 pieces, all of them being dated prior to the six- property. Sesler, who was a favorite, ties. James Downer, who died a number is well remembered by of Uniontown people. He a peculiar disposition and it is said that he never deposited money in banks. At the time of his death he left. a will, disposing of his various was the chief heir, and the cabin where the gold was found is located on a farm which Downer left him. a number Russians Cut Cable Russian agents have cut the cable between Foochow and Formosa. Six- teen Japanese cruisers and many tor- pedo craft have been sighted scouting point. Three strange warships have been sighted at Bantan- in Philippine waters. Minister Griscom has cabled the state depart- ment that Japan has facluded the Pas- cadoes and Tsugaru straits in zones of | defense. TRY TO CUT RAILWAY Russians Have Fight With Natives on Harbin and Vladivostok Line. There was a determined attempt on the night of April 17 to cut the rail road between Harbin and Vladivostok, a formidable body of Chinese bandits an attack near the station of Imyanpo, 100 miles east of Harbin: After a desperate fight which lasted several hours, the bandits were driven Many smaller companies of Chinese bandits are roving in the rear of the but disappear wher It is thought probable they villages when they find themselves in danger. There are various reports of wide- Tsitsihar or eastward of that point, but as these rumo are apparently un The vigor of the sk i ing place on the left flan sian army, however, sec cate the Japanese are thrust northeastw force between Hart The jury sele n is almost rried men. ted to try Nan Patter entirely made Predicts Disaster. Dr. J. MacDonald Binghamton, N. just published, earthqus sec tions | especially {rom | Scotia. New York Wi most He predit 2 4 buildings will be sh loss’ of life will be t says, will be near earthqual tidal wave. wiped and a great | been paid for the statue. 71 up Of of his home. 2 | by sending cr | be the original CORTELYOU CHANGES RULING Postmaster Will Not Be Allowed to Act as County Chairman. An official circular will be issued soon by Postmaster General Corteyou that will circumscribe the political activities of postmasters. ment will set forth that for the good of the service a postmaster should not act as chairman of a county committee. This ruling will be made in re- sponse to a letter from the Pennsyl- vania Republican state committee. It appears that former Postmaster Gen- eral Payne advised the Pennsylvania Republican state committee that there was no objections to postmasters be- ing selected as delegates to the na- tional convention and the purpose of the' present inquiry is to ascertain whether a cowaty chairman will be treated in the same manner by the postoffice department. It is under- stood that while Postmaster General Cortelyou will sustain his precedes- sor’s ruling as far as being delegate is concerned that he will rule it is not advisable for them to act as the head of the county organizaticn. This action will not be based upon the grounds of offensive partisanship, but that the duties of a chairman have become so extensive it is feared they will interfere with the official duties of a postmaster. BANKERS PLEADED GUILTY Cashier, Teller and Bookkeeper Sen- tenced to Penitentiary. E. F. Kaneen, former cashier of the closed Citizens Savings bank of Lo- rain, pleaded guilty to embezzling the funds of the bank and was sentenced to serve seven years in the penitent- iary. H. B. Walker and Dana Walker, teller and bookkeeper, respectively, of tae bank, also pleaded guilty and were each sentenced to two years and six months in the pentitentiary. Of the four indictments against Kaneen, two were nolled. The indict- ments against the Walkers were also nolled. In pleading guilty Kaneen ad- mitted that he was entirely to blame for the Walkers’ dowafall. The pris- oners were taken to the penitentiary immediately after sentence was pass- ed. Beston Wool Market. Heavy sales of foreign wool and the reports from the West as to the urgency in the making of contracts have been the features of the wool market. Quotations on domestic wools are about as follows Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above, 33@ 3c; XX, 30@3%c;:* No." 1, 36@37¢; No. 2,37 @38c; fine unwashed, 24@25c; quarter blood unwashed, 30c; 34 blood, 30@ 31c; half blood, 29@30c; unwashed delaine, 27@28c; unmerchantable, 28 @29c; fine washed delaine, 361, @37cC. Michigan fine unwashed, 22@23c; quarter blood unwashed, 29@30c; 34 blood, 30c; half blood, 28@29%c; un- washed delaine, 25@26c. Charged With Embezzlemsant. Cashier D. W. Tyron of the Spartansburg, (Pa.) bank which fail- ed in March, has been arrested, charged with embezzlement, on com- plaint of W. E. Rice of Chicago. Rice alleges he is a manufacturer of chairs and that he contracted with Tyron for the erection of a chair fac tory at Spartansburg. He claims he paid Tyron $1,500 to be used #n con- ducting the business. He states that Tyron diverted the money to his own use, never building the factory or buying the machinery. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. A fight oce nied between strikers and mill guards at Wheel ng, in which a number were seriously hurt . The commander of the "president's yacht Sylph reported to the navy de- partment that his call for help was ignored by the captain of the steamer Oteri. The Panama canal commission con- tracted with the Americana ILocomo- tive works for 24 engines to be used on the Panama railroad. At Chicago, Johann Hoch, the big- amist and alleged wife murderer, was arrainged under the new indictment recently returned against him. He pleaded not guilty. Agents of the Equitable society, in conference assembled, sustained Pres- ident Alexander and appealed to leg- islature to use its powers in enabling policy holders to sit in the directorate of the society. Increases averaging 9.76 per cent. are shown by the gross earnings re- ports of 37 railrcads for the first week of April. Net earnings of 99 rail- roads for February show an average decrease of 14.07 per cent., but the same roads for eight months show an average increase of 6.87 per cent. TOOK MWMKINLEY STATUE Seulptor Declares He Has Not Yet Been Paid For It. In broad daylight C. D. Biliman, a culptor removed from its pedstal in City park at Logansport, Ind., an heroic statue to William McKinley, Which had been erected by citizens as a memorial to the martyred President. Billman alleges that he has not yet ging ad- vantage of the absence of all city at a municipal league meeting afternoon, Billman backed a gainst the 1 of the monu- » with block 1 tackle, trans- 1 the monument to the bacl ya fer To Harass Japan's A dispatch from the f Admiral tached three of his § : hich formerly belonged to burg-American line to hara shipping and to*raid lief of the Japanese coas: pel Admiral Rojes tv Togo to Wisconsi ¥ woman Mrs. her appearance. This docu- Morga plunge name chell cago, ing York. wheat comp agains prices lion o: marke betray self p ago. | regain classe he bec that © produc disease of bot] are she
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers