ST ES ——— set rr + a CER LN —en WRECKED AND TRAIN WAEG JAY LES 105 | | Seven Express in Collision with Freight. | on Pennsylvania Railroad. Wreck Caught Fire | PASSENGERS HURLED INTO RIVER | Blazing Wreckage hysicians from Rendering Aid for Some Time. While 169 passengers on the second | section of train 19, bound for their homes in Pittsburg and the h and smol in plunged in the day cc gine of the wreck of a frei burg vards, cae mile east of Harris | burg station.' The passenger loco- | motive exploded. a number of explosions of gas tank under the Pullman cars that tore then to pieces, pinioning th passengers into the | roasted to death. The list of dead now numbers 22 and over 100 were injured, some of whom | may not recover. | The combination of circumstances | that produced the disaster is unusual | and almost unprecedented. It appears that the primary cause of the acclds was the movements of a switch en-| gine. Its necessities or convenience | caused a rapidly moving freight to be flagged. The stop was sO sudden that the train buckled, was wrecked, and | the wreck blocked the passenger track. | The express, 12 minutes late and run- | ning 60 miles an hour, arrived almost | at the moment. It was impossible to | check it and the locomotive plowed | thrcugh the wreck, exploding al freightage of dynamite, the boiler of | the locomotive perhaps exploding first | amd its detonation causing the dyna-| mite to explode. The subsequent ex- plosions were of the Pintsch gas | tanks under the Pullman coaches. | Those who escaped saw fellow-| passengers pinioned in the wreckage, | but fear of further explosions and the fierce heat of the fla s prevented | them from rescuing any of the vic-| tims. None of the fortunate ones had | any protection from the night air and became chilled. Those who escaped after the first explosion were almost | naked by the concussion of the sec- | ond. Where the first explosions occurred, | human bodies were thrown clear out of the berths in sleeping cars, many landing down the railroad embank- ment and some even having been | hurled into the Susquehanna river. All the physicians of Harrisburg procurable were summoned to work with the injured. A fire alarm was sounded and the firemen arrived, to find themselves | practically helpless in the work of res- | cue. | It was impossible to go within 300 | yards of the fire, many small explos- | Charges Hungarian Authorities With | fons occurring continuously. PRESIDENT AT CAPITAL. His Western Trio one of the Enjoyable of All President Roosevelt reached home at midnight May 11, from his western trip, which he regards as one of the | most enjoyable journeys he has taken | since he has been President. He trav- | eled 6,006 miles and passed through 12 States and three Territories—Mary- land, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, In- | dian Territory, Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, Nebraska, and Towa. | Every State and Territory in the United States except Florida and Ar- kansas have been visited by Mr. Roosevelt since he became President and it is his intention to accept the hospitality of these States before his term is finished. It is probable he will make a tour of the South before the convening of Congress this year. The demonstrations at every point where the President spoke are said by the official members of the party to have been the heartiest that ever have been accorded him on any trip. Most | BRAZILIANS DEPORTED. Had Crossed Canadian Boundary and Showed Bogus Papers. Fifty Brazilians who were refused admission to this country by immigra- tion inspectors were deported to Can- ada. They have been held here for five weeks, pending a decisi on an appeal they took to Washington. The men in the party claimed citi zenship under naturalization papers purporting to have been issued in West Virginia. The Government held the certificates fraudulent. The party came across the river from Canada at FIFTY Prevented the | West, | were asleep in their berths, or dozing | or, the en-| heen surrounded. ht train in the Harris | warrior when the Americans occupied Following this were | g | Pala, under the wreckage, where they Were |janded with a following and demanded of the British magistrate that he turn | heavy total, but not entirely, as after | cess of about $20,000,000 | the first four night and landed in the country dis- | trict, going overland to Rensselaer Falls, boarding a New York train. They were detained while changing trains at DeKalb. In the party there are 22 children under 12 years. Negro Lynched. NATIVES DRIVEN INTO SWAMP Were Killed and Nineteen Wounded Among United States Troops—Prefer Death to Capture. lo between law Moro chi ala, with 600 ‘med followers Su the personal com- Maj. Gen. Leonar Wood. ses thus far are 300 killed | se of Gen. Wood are seven Pala and his in accordanc prefer death to tua Gen. Wood, with detachments from Fourteen cavalry, the Seven- nh, the Twenty-second and the 1ity-third infantry and constabu- scouts, has driven Pala and his into a swamp, which has Pala was a noted slave trader and Later he escaped with his followe to the island of Pula :ar, near Borneo. One of Pala’s 1 jers deserted and took refuge in the British settlement at Lahad. discovering his whereabouts, the islands. >} the deserter over to him. The de- mand was not complied with, and Pala ordered a massacre. Twenty- five persons, including several Britons, re killed, Pala escaped to the is land of Jolo and organized the present uprising. It is reported that the Borneo au- thorities requested Gen. Wood to ap- prehend Pala, dead or alive, and turn him over to them. Last Year Worse Than That of Chi- cage and Boston Fires. The members of the National Board of, Fire Underwriters, who met in| convention in New York, were told | by President John H. Washburn that | the tremendous losses | | sustained by the insurance ccempanies last year and | in the first four months of the present | vear had brought about a situation | which “may well cause all interested | in fire insurance to stop and consid-| er whst they should do to save them- selves from destruction.” I.ast vear’s losses, President Wash- | burn said, aggregated $229,198,050, and | were greater than in any other year on record, not excepting the years! 1872 and 1873, when the great Chica-| zo and Boston fires added to the to- tal. The Baltimore conflagration was | largely responsible for last year’s deducting the 50,000,000 loss sustain- ed in that fire there was still an ex- over the average for the past five years. In moaths of this year there have been seven conflagrations | with losses in each case running from | $500,000 to $3,000,000. i U. S. OFFICIAL IN TROUBLE —— | Tampering With His Mail. American Immigration Inspector | Marcus Braun has become involved in | serious trouble with the Hungarian | authorities. Mr. Braun alleges that | the authorities tampered with his mail. He was fined $10 in the police court for threatening a police depart- ment detective whom he says he dis- covered in the act of opening his mail. | Tne Hungarian state police depart- ment makes public a communication declaring that Mr. Braun cannot show | credentials proving his relations with the American government. | Mr. Braun is one of three special immigrant inspectors now engaged on special work for the immigration bu- reau in Europe, the exact character of which the officials at Washington decline to say anything about. He is the president of the Hungarian club of New York, which during the spring entertained President Roosevelt in that city. An Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe passenger traim was ditched by train wreckers ii east of Emporia. | Six passengers were injured, and two will probably die. CONCESSION TO POLES Emperor Signs Law Permitting Them to Purchase Land. Following the policy of trying to im- prove the condition of the Poles, Emperor Nicholas has sanctioned an ortant law, permitting them to purchase land in the kingdom of Po- land. Thev were deprived of this right after the insurrection of 1863. the land tenure of Poles being limit- ed to land acquired by direct fnherit- ance. The inability to buy land has Leen ever since one of their chief grievances. Veteran Dies at 105. Hiram Cronk, the last survivor of the war of 1812 died at his home at | Dunnbrook, N. Y., at the age of 105. | away. Tom Witherspoon, a negro, charged | with robbing Hess, by duress, was taken from officers at Belmont, Mo., and lynchec Assemblyman Fred | | 29, 1800. by a mob of several hundred persons, | who hanged the negro in the public | square. J. R. GARFIELD REPORTS Returns From Oil Investigation, but Leaves Capable Men in Field. Secretary Metcalf of the Department of Commerce, who has returned from an investigation in the West regard- ing the production of oil, had a long conference regarding the inquiry. Commi 3 Geld said that in each oil fiel able agents details neces quiry. He die d from old age, simply wasting Hiram Cronk celebrated his cae hundred and fifth anniversary last month. He was born in the town of Frankfort, Herkimer county, April Jessie Bartlett Davis, the well-| known actress, died suddenly in Chi: | cago. Want Wages Increased. The wage committee has completed its report on the entire wage scale for | suing year for plants under the Association of Iron, The scale | the ¢ Amalgamated tee] and Tin Workers. in effect for the last wages the W jumped and demo | Eighth cavalry at Fort Sill, made a | race from Algiers and | Martin Tour and s it now stands is a demand for the | i MANY FATAL DIGATLRS More than One Hundred Killed by Storm in Ckiahoma. ELOWN TO BITS Dynamite Explodes in Mine, Kiiling Workmen—Gas Hoider Collapses and Kills Four. Seven killed and one was injured, probably fatally in an ex; Seven men were on in the Cora mine, one of the Butte, Mon- Heinze properties, near only one injured is Hugh Me- Gillis, concussion of the brain. The cause of the explosion is not known. Nels Wampa was carrying forty sticks of dynamite up a ladder to join companions on the fourteen hundred foot level, when the dynamite exploded, with terriffic force. It is be- lieved that Wampa accidentally touch- ed his candle to the explosive. Wampa was blown to bi Two men working blowa to pieces, the remains when picked up filling seven sacks. Four: others 100 feet distant were instantly killed. Four men were killed, one was fa- tally injured and two score others were more or less seriously burned by the collapse of an immense gas holder at the Point Breeze works of the United Gas Improvement in the south- ern part of the city of Philadelphia. HUNDREDS KILLED Tornado Devastates Town of Snyder, Oklahoma. All estimates of the reimber killed by Wednesday night's tornado in Snyder, Okla., and its vicinity make the total at least 125 persons. Four hundred persons were injured, but most of them only slightly. An ap- peal has been issued through the As- sociated Press to the people of the United States asking aid. A heavy rain drénched some of the injured and filled graves dug for victims with water. Col. Kingsbury, commandant of the nearby were requisition on the war department for orders to send troops to Snyder, with rations for the tornado sufferers. Snyder is a town of 1,000 inhabi-| tants in Kiowa county, Oklahoma, lo- cated on the Frisco railroad, 45 miles north of Vernon. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS President Stickney of the Chicago Great Western railrecad declared him- self in favor of a commission to fix railroad rates. Wallace McCreery, aged 53, and during his time one of the best comic opera tenors, committed suicide by junrping into the Hudson river from a ferry-boat. It is believed he was mentally unbalanced. At Trenton, N. J., the Board of Pardons refused to pardon or parole Libbe Garrabrant, who has been in the State prison for more than 30 years, serving a life sentence for mur- der. John Hemitt, a white man of Adel, Ga., shot and killed. his wife, shot her | sister and brother, wounding both | slightly, and when surrounded by a | posse of citizens shot and killed him- | self. In a crash between three locomo- | tives on the Philadelphia & Erie di-| vision of the Pennsylvania about one | mile east of Warren, Pa., Charles Souers, fireman, was killed and David Sautelle, his engineer, fatally injur- ed. A freight train on the Chautauqua division of the Pennsylvania railroad left the rails near Baum, and the en- gine and 12 cars plunged over the embankment. A reproduction of the Diplodocus Carnegie in the Carnegie museum at Pittsburgh, was formally presented to the British museum in London by An-| drew Carnegie. Dr. William J. Hol- land and party from Pittsburgh were present. The autoboats participating in the ei Toulon were | wrecked by storm and the crews | picked up at sea. Secretary Hay has intimated to this government that both and Japan would welcome the ship of President Roosevelt in the in- terests of peace. A bomb factc has been discove in the sailors’ quarters of Odessa. Six bombs ready for use were found on the premises. Deputy Sheriff Webb was overpow- cred in the county jail at Casper, Wvo., and disarmed by “rd” Lee, William Wardlow, prisoners, who escaped. A dispatch to a Paris newspaper | stated that a nurse tried to scald to | death the heir to the Russian throne but the czarina saved her child’s life. Miss Edith Isabella Gibney, of St. Louis, Mo., was awarded $13,925 in her damage suit for breach of prom- ise against Klaus J. Steiner, the son of Gottlieb Steiner, the wealthy iron manufacturer of Allegheny, Pa. Twenty-two miners were killed by | a premature explosion during blast- | ing operations in the Almasy coal | mine at,Resicza, Hungary. rod Relics Found Near Pompeii. Excavations near Pompeii have re- | sulted in the finding of a human | skeleton, and nearby four solid gold | s . | bracel of beautiful design, set with | | emer s: a pair of large oriental] pearl earings, two golden necklaces, set with pearls and emeralds, and two emerald rings. The articles of jewel- , being of the Roman pompeiian epoch, are of great artistic value. when a yacht | Michigan off Lineoln | | separated by the slavery | New Jersey, {April 1, McKINLEY MAUSOLEUM Trustees Accept Design and Work Will Begin at Once. The trustees of the McKinley Mem: orial association formally approved the design for a mausoleum submitted by H. Van Buren McGonigle, consult: ing architect to the board. It was de cided work should be begun at once. A sub-committees was appointed to exerc.se the functions of a building committee. The body of President McKinley is in a public vault in Westlawn ceme- tery, Canton. The assciation has purchased a tract of land adjoining the cemetery which will be known as Monument hill. The approach to the hill, which is 74 feet high, called ‘The Mall,” which is 600 feet long, will be beautified at an approximate expense of $50,000. Along the middle of this mall, between a walk on either side, will be an ar tificial lake. A broad and massive flight of steps will lead from the foot of the hill up to the mausoleum. From the foot of the hill to the top of the mausoleum the height of the stone structure will be about 175 feet. FIRE BOSS ELECTROCUTED. Gas in Mine Ignites and Explodes Tearing Down on Victim Highly Charged Electric Wires. With his head severed from his body by the burning of a highly-charged electric wire, Solomon Stiffy, a fire boss in the Banning No. 2 mine of the Pittsburg Coal Company, at Con nellsville, Pa., was found. In his hat was an open lamp, which explainec the explosion, which threw Stiffy dowr and brought down upon him the wire which caused his death. Stiffy went into the mine late at night. The superintendent, who had been down before, is said to have warned him not to take an open lamp as gas was escaping from the ribs When the fire boss did not return at his usual time a searching party was instituted and the burned body founa. A safety lamp, unlighted, was found near him. SALVATION ARMY GIRL SLAIN. Man Then Turns Weanon on Himself Taking His Own Life. Because of unrequited love Peter Katheiser, a millwright, shot and in stantly killed Miss Grace Townsley, & lieutenant of the Vounteers of Ameri ca, at Lincoln, Neb. He then killed himself. The tragedy occurred on 2 stairway leading to a rooming house Coke Production. Coke production and shipment de creased during the week. The West ern consignment fell off over 200 cars The furnaces getting coke from the independents are now stocked and are not ready to place orders for fu ture delivery. The Frick Company continues to ship all the coke it can produce and is getting rid of surplus stock. The summary of the week end ing May 6 shows a total of 22,733 ov- ens, of which 21,696 are in blast. One hundred and twenty ovens were blown out during the week. The pro duction amounted to 258,000 tons, a decrease of 1,400 tons from the pre- vious week. The week's shipments aggregated 11,988 cars. Baptists Pian to Unite. Announcement was made in New York City that a general meeting of both the Northern and Southern di- visions of the Baptist church will be held at St. Louis on May 16 and 17, when the question of organizing a general convention of the Baptists of North America, including Canada, will be discussed. The denomination was question many years ago. Mother and Son Victims. At Lancaster O., Mrs. Alexander | Schafer and her six-year-old son were struck and fatally injured by lightn- ing. Mrs. Elizabeth Schafer, who was also in the house, was uninjured. The house was wrecked. Four’ electrical storms broke over the city, doing great damage to trees, isolated barns and telegraph poles. LEGAL OBSTACLE FOUND Church Union May Not Be Sustained by Courts. After two years’ of agitation on the question of union between the Pres: byterian and Cumberland Presbyter- ian churches, and after both bodies | have decided the issue favorably, the point has been suddenly raised on the eve of the meeting of the two gen- eral assemblies whether such a union | will be valid and sustained by the courts. An eminent Presbyterian lay- man, Judge William M. Lanning of the United States district court of declares the united | church would mot have a legal right to the property of the Cumberland bedy. Russians Repulsed. The following telegram from an army headquarters in Manchuria was officially given out at Toyko: “On the morning of May 9, the enemy made | an attack on our garrison at Yinge cheng, which assumed the offensive attacked and dispersed them. The enemy’s losses are estimated at 300. Our casualties were one killed and 50 wounded.” Favors Norway's Demands. The special committee appointed to report on the consular question has unanimously adopted and submitted to the Storthing the draft of a bill for the establishment of a separate con sular service under the Norwegian government, as that country demand ed. The plan is to go into effect on 1906. Nan Patterson was given her free dom, and a cheering crowd greeted her on her release from prison. WARY KILLED BY TORNADO Midnight Storm Cuts a Swath through Kansas Town. QUEER FREAKS OF THE WIND The Property Damage Will Foot Up Many Thousands of Dollars. Victims Were Asleep. When darkness fell upon the town of Marquette, Kan., on the 9th it was xnown that 26 lives had been lost in a tornado that wrecked part of the nlace “early that morning, and did | much damage in this vicinity and that | 14 persons had been injured. Of the injured 35 were seriously hurt and | some of them may die. During the day Carl Warnquist and Mrs. J. A. Carlson died of their injuries. Several of the others are suffering from broken limbs and internal in- juries. The known dead: Tillie Ellison, Mrs. A. V. Anderson, Mrs. Elmer Hultgren, Blanche Switzer, Lena Switzer, Nina Switzer, Anna Coul- son, M. P. Nelson, wife and three chil- dren; A. Siegren, Sr., Olaf Hanson vad wife, Gottfried Nelson, wife and child; Elmer Nelson, Mrs. Postier and child, Nina Roberts; Carl Warnquist, Mrs. J. A. Carlson, Clyde Norris, Gus Anderson. In several cases entire families have | been killed. A man named Switzer, a night watchman at the railroad yards, | lost his three children. N. P. Nelson, | with his wife and three children, were | found dead. Two other children were | | | not at home and escaped injury. The tornado struck the southern end RUSSIAN ASSEMBLY Elections Will Be Held for Council in Czar’s Realm. A report defining the form and character of the new branch of the Russian government to be created in accordance with the imperial rescript of March 3, is current'in official cir- cles at St. Petersburg, according to which the work of the Bouligin cocm- mission has taken the form of a recommendation for the creation of a “zemsky sovyet or council of zemstvos, elected indirectly through the zemst- vos to serve as a connecting link be- tween the emperor and the people. Emperor Nicholas is said to have accepted the report of the commission and the date of its proclamation has been tentatively fixed for May 18. The main features of the reported scheme are an organization comprising from 500 to 550 members elected by the Zemsvos, the Zemstvo system being | extended to all parts of the empire while the autocratic power of the em- peror to remain undiminished, the as- sembly’s privileges being advisory with the right of interpellating the ministers and discussing the budget when formulated, though the minist- ers continue to be responsible only to the emperor, whose will will remain the supreme law. : Elections will be held during the summer in order that the first session of the new assembly may open on November 15. IN RUSSIAN RIOTS Between Jews and Christians at Zhitomir. Grave reports are current in St. Petersburg as to the extent of the massacre of Jews at Zhitomir, the number of killed or wounded being placed as high as 200, but precise in- formation is lacking. According to private advices from Zhitomir, the fruits of the riots there are 16 dead SLAIN Battle C—O. fs AD IR Si, | of the town and cut a clean swath |and over 100 wounded, mostly Jews. 100 yards in width through its entire | Martial law was proclaimed at Zhito- length. Coming as it did at midnight. |‘ mir. The city is filled with troops the people were caught without a mo- | and order generally is restored, ment’s warning. A heavy rainstorm | though individual cases of violence had preceded the wind and after the|are still occurring and a renewal of tornado passed a scene of complete | yipting is feared Saturday evening and desolation followed. Sunday next. The same private ad- Many residences were com- | vices bring news of a further anti- pletely demolished, the wreckage be-| Semitic outbreak in Gostynin, in the ing carried away entirely, while others | province of Warsaw, in which many were picked up bodily, moved a shore distance away and dropped to earth. Many of the victims were killed as | they lay asleep; others maimed and bleeding awoke to find themselves buried in the wreckage of their form- er homes. WARSH!P RACES | | Alabama Falls Behind in Contest | With Six Others. | News of an eight-hour ocean race | in which seven big United States bat- leships participated was brought to New York by the battleship Alabama, which arrived in command of Rear Admiral Charles H. Davis and will 20 | ‘0 the navy yard to be overhauled be- | sause of the poor showing which she | made in the contest. The ships were soming up the coast last Saturday and | were 200 miles south of Cape Henry when the word was given for a speed | ‘est. t | For two hours it was nip and tuck, | ;here being scarcely a change in the | ‘elative positions of the participants: | 3y that time excitement was running 1igh on board the battleships and the | speed contest had developed into a race. . Finally the Massachusetts and the | Alabama began to fall behind, and when the signal ending the race was dashed both these ships were far in ‘he rear. The Alabama, which has the record of being one of the fastest] »attleships in the navy, was fully a nile and a half behind the Massachu- ietts. At the finish the battleship Missouri vhich had drawn away from the sthers, was only 731% miles south of Jape Henry, having covered 126% niles in the eight hours. During the | ast six hours of the race the battle- | ships were under forced draught and | ill suffered more or less from the | strain to which they were subjected. | With the exception of the Alabama | ill the vessels went to Hampton | i | Roads. WHEAT PERCENTAGE BETTER fut Area Is Greatly Reduced and | yield Will Be Less. Returns to the Chief of the Bureau | >f Statistics of the Department of | Agriculture made up to May 1 show ‘he area under winter wheat cultiva- jon on that date to have been about 29,723,000 acres. This is 1,432,000 acres or 10.6 per cent less than the irea sown last fall, and 2,858,080 acres or 10.6 per cent more than the area »f winter wheat harvested last year. Of the area abandoned or ploughed ander, 356,000 acres are reported from Kansas, 205,000 acres (including cut- ting for hay) from California, and 102,000 acres from Missouri. For the 29,723,000 acres remaining under culti- vation the average condition on May 1 was 92.5 against a condition of 91.6 on April 1 for the entire acreage sown; of 76.5 for the area remaining ander cultivation en May 1, 19904, and | massacre of Jews at Zhitomir, e Jews were injured and houses pillag- ed. JEWS FiGHT CHRISTIANS Retaliate When Attacked, 12 Killed and 50 Wounded. The report in circulation in St. Petersburg that there nad been a gov- rnment of Volhynia, Southwestern Russia, is confirmed in a dispatch to the Novosti, which says the rioting began May 7 and continued 48 hours. Orthodox Christians fell upon the Jews in the streets. The Jews were armed and fought their assailants, 12 persons being killed and 50 wounded. Private dispatches from Zhitomir attributed the attack upon the Jews to articles in M. Kroushevaa’s paper. On Sunday the Jews telegraphed to friends in St. Petersburg to ask the authorities to take strong measures for their protection and orders to that effect were sent. A renewal of the fighting was expected. CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. The business section of Flora, Miss., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $200,000. A spow and sleet storm, accom- panied by a strong gale, raged for two hours at St. Cloud Minn. The Amalgamated convention adopt- ed scales providing increases for the puddlers and muck bar rollers. The St. James Protestant Episcopal church at Pittston, Pa., was partially destroyed by fire. The loss will reach 25,000. : Judge Cecil Pence, a former mem- ber of the Kentucky legislature, known all over Kentucky as a lawyer aud politician, committed suicide in Covington by shooting. He was 35 year: of age. The steamer Arans, Capt. Rood, of the Joy line, was sunk in a collision with the barge Glendower, one and a half miles southeast of Pollock Rip htship off the Massachusetts One life was lost. Judge Kiess, of Bucyrus, 0. over- ruled the motion for a new trial in the appropriation proceedings of the Postal Telegraph Company against the Big Four Railway Company for right of way to construct a line of poles from Berea to Union City. The annual commencement of Princeton Theological seminary took place on the 9th. In award of prizes the $50 Scribner prize in New Testa- ment studies went to Charles PF. Reed, Brougeville, Pa. Diplomas were conferred on 49 seniors, and 30 graduate students received the degree of bachelor of divinity. FOR UNION MEN Glassworkers’ Organization to Build Several Factories. According to a statement given out by T. W. Rowe, of Toledo, O., presi- dent of the American Flint Glass Workers’ union, the national organi- of 83.7, the mean of the May averages of the last ten years. Herbert V. Croker, a son of Richard Croker, was found d in a train in Kansas, after being drugged. Strikers Appeal to President. A strongly-worded protest against the sending of Federal troops to Chi- cago was submitted to Presideat Roosevelt, when he was in the city on his way to Washington. The pro- test is signed by C. P. Shea, presi- dent of the Intemnational Brother- hood of Teamsters; harles Dold, resident of the Chicago Federation of Labor, and by other labor leaders. nm firm tones the President replied that nob violence must be suppressed, and | that no Federal aid been asked. | zation will at once begin the erection of three lamp chimney factories, which will give employment to Union men. One of the factories, it is reported, will be built in Marion, another in West Virginia, and a third in Pennsylvania. Delaware River Bill. Gov. Samuel Ww. Pennypacker signed the bill appropriating $375,000 for deepening and improving the Delaware river channel between Phila- delphia and Delaware bay. The work is to be done by the bureau of sur- veyors of the Philadelphia department of public works in accordance with the plans of the War department. This money does not become available ilt city of Philadelphia appro- pr 2s a like amount for the im- provement of the channel
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers