EAs CHECK JAPANESE ADIANCE Movement to Capture Passes is | situation in New Orleans by Successfully Resisted. THIRTY RIOTERS KILLED Russain Troops Shoot Down Striking | Railway Workmen Who Try to Stop Trains. Dispatches received from Korea re- | port that the Japanese have begun a simultaneous advance from Kuachod- eri against the Musariet and Piatsa- bang pass, but that both columns were | checked under pressure of the Rus-| sian advance detachments. The Rus-| sian losses, the dispatches say, were insignificant. : | Japanese warships are said to be cruising off the mouth of Peter the Great bay, on which Vladivostok is situated, their lights often being vis- ible from Russian island. An official account received at St. | Petersburg of the strike on the] Novorossisk-Vladi-Kavkaz railway describes a sanguinary encounter be- tween the troops and workmen who | were attempting to prevent the de- | parture of a mail train. | After one Cossack had been killed | the strikers advanced menacingly, | whereupon the infantry fired, killing 30 of the strikers and wounding 22. JAPAN PLACES ORDERS. and Railroad Equipment Wanted for Manchuria. Japan has apparently a fixed and firm determination not to relinquish her held on Manchuria. At least this is the construction put on the hasty and secret preparations for the exten- sion of the railroad which now runs from Fusan, on the southeast coast of Korea, to Seoul and across the Yalu river for 150 miles into Manchuria, joining the Chinese Eastern railway, probably at Liao-Yang. Rush orders have been placed with &mericaf corporations for the ma- e rial, including 350 steel bridges, 150 acomotives and 2,000 cars. The United States Steel Corpora- fon, according to the New York Times, has been given the contract Yor the 350 bridges, mostly small structures, the cost totaling $500,000, | while the Baldwin Locomotive Works thas the contract for 150 locomotives of the narrow gauge type at a cost of | Bridges $2.225000. The cars are to be of} &teel, there being two contracts | swarded, each for 1,000 cars, the tal cost being $2,000,000. ! TRAIN ROLLS DOWN BANK. wo Passengers Fatally and Several Slightly Injured. A broken rail caused a disastrous | wreck on the Somerset and Cambria | branch of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, 10 miles from Johnstown, | ¥a. Two persons, it is thought, are fatally injured, and at least 10 other= are badly cut and bruised. The train was late and had just] crossed a bridge over Stoney Creek, near Kauffman’s Run, when a broken | rail was encountered. The drawhead | pulled from the coach next the tender | on the engine, and the baggage coach | and two passenger coaches went over | a 30foot embankment into the river. | The engine and tender were left standing on the tracks. Two ties removed from tne tracks ty workmen who were repairing the track. are thought to have been re-| sponsible for the broken rail When the engine reached the point where the ties were removed, Active control of the yellow fever the United States Public Health and Ma- rine Hospital service will begin im- mediately. Orders to that effect were wired to Surgeon J. H. White, the Marine Hospital officer now on duty | in that city. These orders followed the receipt from Dr. White during | the day of several telegrams which | leans had promised their | bility. | it had burned itself out had consumed | tired of these { sunk without | Japa | churia in front of the Rus | 430,000 | known. | roads are drying up. the | engineer said he noticed a snapping | of the rails at about the time the lo-| comotive was wackened spof. Graft in Alaska. Advices received from Nome by the about half over the | shot steamer Ohio, say that the people of ! Nome are up in arms against the Gov- ernment officers and their alleged ac- tions ip: filling on valuable mining elaims. The Nome Nugget charges the officers with using illegal methods and taking advantage of their position fo possess themselves of many valu- able claims. DEATH ENDS DEADLY WORK. After Killing Two and Shooting Two Others, Negro is Laid Low. After killing two persons, seriously shooting two others, one a woman, and slightly wounding two more, Ike Kinney, a negro, was killed in a river bottom at Doella, Ark. after a fight with citizens who had surrounded him. Kinney killed a negro at Stamps on Wednesday, fled, and while being pursued, shot and killed BE. RR. PFerzo- son. Next morning the negro met Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, of Greensburg, and seriously wounded both, believing them toc be members of a posse. Later, 25 men with dogs closed in on the negro. and he opened fire. C. ¥. Nash lost a finger and Alvin Bar- ham was shot through the neck. Then W. C. Nash sent a fatal bullet into the negro. Banker Gets Five Yeaars. B. ioutzenheiser the abscond- iler of the First National bank . Minn., pleaded guilty in the Federal Courf, and was sentenced by Judge Page Morris to serve five years in the penitentiary LIGHTNING STRIKES IN MINE. &iner is Nendered Unconscious 60 Fcet Below the Surface. Frank Moats, a digger in the Whar- §n mines. near Connellsville, Pa., aearly lost his life in a peculiar man- Maer. on a the «pinder” at the roof and other on his pick, which rested on the | round. Lightning struck a maple erde directly over his head. Ther current passed through 60 feet of zround and knocled Moats sense- ess. He was revived with difficulty. TO WRESTLE WITH FEVER United States Officers Will Begin Fight at Once. of New Or- hearty and operation in the work aken by the Federal Government and would raise $250,000 a financial consideration imposed by the Marine Hospital service as a pre- liminary to assuming the responsi- showed that the citizens unrestricted to be under The city will be divided into wards and each ward will be placed in charge of a responsible and experi- | enced surgeon of the Marine Hospit- al Service, who will have absolute control of the locality. Already Sur- geon General Wyman has given di- rections to a number of marine hos- pital surgeons to proceed to New Or- | leans for assignment to work under | Dr. White. These are all o s who have had experience in dealing with yellow fever epidemics. 16 BUILDINGS BURN Entire Block Destroyed at Night, | With $50,000 Loss. Fire which origniated about 2 | o'clock in the morning in the ware-| | house of the general store of Cohn Brothers at Orbisonia, Pa., spread | with remarkable rapidity and before destroyed al whole block, included in which were | the Ashland Hotel. Lack of fire] fighting apparatus gave the flames | full sweep, the townspeople, who were | aroused by the fire, looking on help-| less. 16 buildings. The fire The loss in each instance is com-| plete, not a thing being saved. The | aggregate loss amounts to $50,000, | partly covered by insurance. EAST AFRICA REBELS | Gevernor of the German Colony There Reports a Native Uprising. The governor of German East Afri- ca telegraphed to thes colonial bureau of the foreign office at Berlin that the natives in the Maturbi mountains, | north of Kilwo, have risen, also that | there has been an outhreak on the] coast at Samanga, during which sev- eral warehouses were burned. While rebellions are in progress in other German African colonies, East| | Africa hitherto has been quiet. The] outbreak, therefore causes some con-| The government is thoroughly | colonial wars, in which ms of money have been | nging either profit or considerable glory. | ARMY OF HALF MILLION | a cme | Has 430,000 Infantry 1,600 Guns at the Front. | The Japanese concentrated in Man-| ian armies | infantry with 1,600 cannon.! This is exclusive of the detachment | of Gen. Hazkawa, commander of the | forces in Korea, and a special detach- | ment, the destination of which is not | The weather is good and the | | | | | A dispatch from Godzyadani, the { Russian headquarters in Manchuria, | says that the Japanese who landed re- cently at Castries bay, have returr ed in their warships. All the buildings | along the shore the bay burned. of TELEGRAPHIC BRIE ZFS. Mountaineer preachers in Virginia each other in a feud. The National Civic Federation pointed a committee to gather data on municipal ownership in Europe. Glass bottle blowers and their em- ployers failed to agree upon a wage scale. . Archbishop Chapelle is with yellos fever in New The situation is admittedly S and the government has taken charge. Kiiied in Chinese Theater. During the performance in the Chinese theater in Doyer street, New York highbinders in the audien opened a fusillade of revolver she against their enemies~ Three me bers of a rival society are dead a one is mort wounded. Many. ot Chinamen ar ess dangerously Boat Rocker Kill 250 and Raze Fortifi- of Town. T the rebe in the Sunda flicted i tives, > The f ations of Badjoewa, one of the chief towns, were razed. He was standing with one hand | N MILLS ON DOLLAR. Creditors of Mrs. Cassie L. Chadwick Will Get This Amount. Credit of Mrs. Cass L.. Chad- wick will reive a dividend of about 7 mi on the when the matter is finally tled, according to Referee in Ba uptcy Reming- ton. | The assets will amount to $25,000, {it is expec against which are | claims for attorneys’ fees and court costs amounting to $10,300, leaving about $14,000 with which to meet $2.000.000 of indebtedness. | another together and there were speeches, | more handshaking and more conver- sation. | ese, | Russians on board, accompanied by | i has | cannot propagate in this altitude. were | | vellow fever points, but invited refu- | gees from infected places to come to ENVOYS MET AT OYSTER BAY Russian and Japanese Repre- atives Exchange Greetings. INTRODUCED BY THE PRESIDENT Speeches, Handshaking and Conversa- tion and All Partake of a Lunch on the Vessel. The booming of 59 great guns in the shadow of Sagamore Hill Saturday, August 5, gave notice that the peace plenipotentiaries of Russia and Japan had been brought together by Presi- dent Roosevelt. Twenty-one of these cannon notes were for the President of the United States and 19 each were given the envoys and their suites as they climbed over the white sides of the Mayflower, where they met in token of their resolve to end the strug- gle in Asia. The Japanese plenipotentiaries, ac- cording to the State Department pro- gram, were the first to arrive reach- ing Oyster Bay half an hour or so ahead of the Sylph, which brought Assistant Secretary of State Peirce, who introduced the envoys to the President in the Mayflower’s cabin. The 21 guns fired in honor of the President had, scarcely died away be- fore the salute of 19 guns for the Japanese plenipotentiaries was be-| gun. President Roosevelt was waiting for the envoys in the pretty cabin of the ship, and Assistant Secretary Peirce, who had arrived in advance] of the plenipotentiaries, made the | formal introduction. The President laughingly said that he did not need an introduction to Baron Komura or Minister Takahira, for he had met them before. He shook hands, how-| ever, with them both and then greet- ed the other membres of the party. | After the introductions there was a| pleasant chat in the cabin, and then the Japanese gentlemen retired to cabin to make room for the party. Witte, Russian Count Ambassador Rosen | and their suite had in the meantime | | arrived on board the Chattamooga. | their turn they left their ship, rode] In | to the Mayflower and were given a galute of 19 guns by the President’s y were introduced to the Presi- whom they pleasant cabin, dent, had a knew, and about subjects already talk | unlikely to cause future international complications. Then the two parties were brought ” All then partook of a ‘standup dent's ciever way of avoiding any questions of precedence which might have arisen had the President joine his guests at table. The Dolphin, conveying the Japan- and the Mayflower with the the Galveston, took the parties to Portsmouth, N. H. REFUGE FROM FEVER. Two Towns Will Not Quarantine Against the Plague. By official action of the City Board of Health Knoxville, Tenn., has de- clared itself open to the world and invited all fever refugees, suspects or not, to come within its gates. It been proved that yellow. fever The City Council of Mena, Ark., not only refused to quarantine against ena, which is in the Ozark moun- ains, 1,350 feet above sea level, where ve vellow fever germs cannot exist, Four Fatally Injured. Twenty-two people were buried in the debris of two buildings which were wrecked by an explosion of gas at : donia, Ont. The wreckage did not catch fire and the work of rescue was done by lantern light. Twenty of the people buried were in the employ of the Bell telephone agency. Four were fatally injured. JAPS FEAR PANAMA. Conditions on Isthmus Too Deadly for Mikado’s Subjects. The emigration companies at Tokyo chject to sending laborers to Panama to work on the canal, on the ground that the conditions there are unsatis- tory They assert that there are no ar- rangements to care for the sick, no ions for returning home the es of deceased laborers, and no owance of passage money. They aiso assert that the drinking water and sanitary conditions are bad. The government placed the question before ihe emigration com- who fernc as above stated. Taft Lands at Manila. rotary of War Taft and party at Manila on the steamship August 5 Their arrival wade the occasion of a gorgeous pageant. Governor-General ight, Maj.-Gen. Corbin and Rear Adaniral Train, with their staffs and official reception committee met the party when the Manchuria anchor- ed. tha tiie | Raised Window Glass 20 Per Cent. At a meeting August 1 of the Pitts- Window Gle ition prices were Jobbers’ vanced gh g 20 per cent. the Louisville | had already taken The rise is due to the y of window glass and ength of the demand. and Cleveland jobbers similar action. decided scar- shows the Tennessee negroes have inaugurat- ed a movement throughout the State to have the “Jim Crow” law repealed | by the next Legislature. | lation, and advocates | campaign was at once elected. | | vacht; in their turn they entered the | | { | buffet lunch, which was the Presi- | ton plant. asso- | The advance was expected, as | OHIO PROHIBITIONIST State Convention Meets in Columbue and Names Ticket. The Prohibition convention of Ohio nominated the following ticket: Governor, Aaron S. Watkins, Hardin county. Lieutenant Governor, W. E. Foltz, Summit county. Judge of Supreme court, James Sterling, Stark county. Attorney General, W. L. Lister, Cuyahoga county. State Treasurer, Hiram L. Baker, Athens county. Member board of public works, George W. Mac, Dark county. All the nominations were made by acclamation excep? those for State Treasurer and for member of board of public works. Delegates who fav- ored the indorsement of John M. Pat- tison, Democratic nominee for Gov- ernor, did not mention the subject when the call for nominations was made. Mr. Watkins is professor of English literature in the Ohio Northern university at Ada. The platform adopted declares une- quivocally for the prohibition of the liquor traffic, commends the National administration for the construction of the interoceanic canal, demands the exclusion of the saloon within the canal zone, stigmatizes the Dow law as unconstitional, favors the election of United States Senators by popular vote, pledges the party to give equal rights of suffrage without respect to sex, recommends the inspection of private and State banks, calls for a uniform divorce law and labor legis. the initiative and referendum in granting franchises and in municipal and county affairs. The new State Central committee or ganized by electing J. W. McLain, of Hiram, chairman, and J. C. Holiday, of Cincinnati, secretary. The new executive committee to conduct the Frank McCartney of Columbus is chairman; Walter L. McDowell, of Columbus, secretary, and John F. Gregg, of Columbus, treasurer. STEEL AND IRON TRADE Demand Continues Good and Mills Full of Work. The Iron Age says: The iron trade generally continues in a very sound and satisfactory condition. The de mand for billets and sheet bars has continued good and prices are high er. The rail mills are full of work For some small lots for September de livery some of the large systems have indicated a readiness to pay a mod erate premium. : The condition . of the structural trade is well illustrated by the fact that the United States Steel Corpora tion has started to build a mill for rolling structural shapes at the Clair This mill, which will have | a capacity of 10,000 tons of shapes | ranging from 4 to 8-inch, is to be | completed in the extraordinary time of | 13 weeks. : The strong position of steel is hav ing its reflection upon sheets, in which concessions are not being made as | freely as some time since. The gen- | eral demand for pipe shows little im- provement, the oil country require ments are fair, and the buying of boiler tubes is good. The eastern scrap trade shows prices firm and | advancing. a Rai! CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. | Robbers blew the bank | at Royal I1l., by the use of nitroglycerine and | escaped with $4,000 in cash. | Dr. D. E. Salmon, chief of the bu reau of animal industry, admits hav | ing had an interest in a patented meat label while in office. Two inmates of the House of Cor rection at Milwaukee are dead and four are dangerously ill as a result | of drinking wood alcohol. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson said that congress is responsible for | the non-inspection of meat at the smaller packing houses. i A discovery of graft is from Manila, where the stores department is alleged been looted of a large sum. New Orleans called on the federa. government to take charge of the yel low fever situation there, and the president granted the appeal. The Milwaukee grand jury has in dicted Charles F. Fisher, a leading citizen of the city, for stealing $14, 000 given to him to arrange for a gar bage contract with the city. Fire burned out the plant of the Baldwin Steel Company at Cold Spring, N. Y., which was recently moved there from Pittsburg. Sixty men are thrown out of work. reporte} medica to have Mrs. Fred Schneider, the 18-year old wife of a merchant tailor, of St Joseph, Mich., committed suicide about midnight by jumping into the St. Joseph river before the eyes of several hundred persons. The Madrid correspondent London Daily Mail says decided to hold the national conference at beginning of November. of the it has been Moroccan inter Madrid the Near Spring Creek, in Leslie county, Ky., Nicholas Garrison, a wealthy lumberman, shot and killed Felix Hoskins, his cousin, also a lumber merchant, during a quarrel over business matters. Nearly 10,000 harvest hands are needed in the Northwest, according to a circular issued by the Northern | Pacific railroad. Wages range from $1.75 to $2.50 a day. Cotton Crop Conditions. The following report on the condi tion of the cotton crop was issued by | the statistical board of the Depart | ment of Agriculture Aug. 3: “The | crop estimating board of the Bureau | of Statistics of the Department of Agriculture finds from the reports of | the correspondents and agents of the | bureau that the average condition of | cotton on July 25 was 74.9 as com | pared with 77 on June 25, 1905; 91.6 | on July 25, 1904; 79.7 on July 25, | 1903; and a 10-year average of 82.6 «Mississippi MANY DEATHS FROM FEVER Disease Appears at Many Places Outside New Orleans. ITALIANS HIDE THEIR SICK The State of Arkansas Shotgun Quarantine Militia. Establishes a by State The yellow fever situation in New Orleans and the south, to August 2, 1s as follows: At New Orleans—Total cases, 378; total in other towns—16 cases but only one death. No apprehension exists of any ser- ious results from the trouble that has arisen on the Mississippi and Louisi- ana border over the enforcement of the quarantint. Reports of Captain Bostick, of the Naval Re- serve, and of Colonel Arsene Poril- lint, of Governor Blanchard’s staff, confirgmed "tie ¢harges that Louisiana fishermen, boatmen and citizens have been interfered with and that has| been some obstruction to traffic in| Lake Borgne canal, and that the | revenue cutter Winona, which is doing service under the direction of Sur- geon Wasdin, has interfered with | Louisiana boats. | These reports led Governor | Blanchard to order Captain Bostick | and the mosquito fleet of the oyster commission to the scene. With Gov- srnor Vardaman anxious to avoid any conflict with the Louisiana authorities, | it is thought that the Miss sippi soldiers, who have, it is said, been coming across the Louisiana line. will hereafter be required to keep on their side of the border and thus all| further possibility of clashes will be over. In spite of all that has been done] to reassure them, many Italians try to conceal their cases. They are stricken with panic, and they turn fear from doctors and health officers. Details of the State militia were assigned to guard the gateways to the State of Arkansas. Rigid shotgun quarantine will be enforced. 1,027,421 IMMIGRANTS Record Shows Increase of 26 Cent During Past Year. The total number of immigrants | Per | during the year ending last June was | 1,027,421. These figures are given in| Commissioner General Sargent’s re-| »ort and show an increase of 26 per rent in foreign immigration. The deportation of foreigners in- rreased in greater proportion during ‘he last fiscal year than did the num- ber of immigrants admitted. This was a 45 per cent increase over 1904 Altogether 11,566 foreigners were sent back. Russians added the largt part of the increase in immigration rontributed by any one nation with 1 total for the year of 184,897 persons an increase of 27 per cent. Rojestvensky Much Improved. Admiral Rojestvensky’s condition has made satisfactory progress since the operation was performed on his forehead at Tokyo. He is able to leave his bed and sit in a chair. Pains in one foot, however, prevent his walking freely, but no cause for un- easiness exists. The admiral has ex- pressed his sincere satisfaction at the treatment accorded him. Cashier Spear is Pursued. George T. Cutts, receiver of the Citizens’ National bank, of berlin, has brought an action against A. B. Spear, now in the penitentiary, and the United States Fidelity Company, | which carried Spear’s bond while he | was cashier of the bank. The plain-| tiff’s say the bank suifered the .loss | of $150,000 through Spear’s dealing with Mrs. Cassie 1. Chadwick. The action is brought to recover the value of Spear’s bond, $15,000. Operators Are Qut. A genera] strike of the telegraphers | of the Great Northern and Northern | Pacific railways was ordered hy Pres dent Pelham of the Order of Railway Telegraphers. : COAL FLEET DETAINED. Crews Refuse to Go South Till Yellow Fever Abates. | The Pittsburg coal fleet, with $,000.- | 000, bushels of fuel, destined for points south, will be harbored in Cin- cinnati and Louisville until the yel- low fever has been stamped out in ‘the South. Advices from Gallipolis, which point the fleet, with the Frank Gil more as flagship, passed, are that the | crews have ‘used to go farther | south than Louisville until the plague [s stamped out. : The captains have been with an ultimatum to this effect ang | wired ahead that preparations to har- bor the greater part of the fleet in Cincinnati be made. | served | a Claim Mrs. Rogers is Insane. The record in the case of Mrs. Mary | M. Rogers, under sentence of death at Bennington, Vt., on the ch; of murdering her husband, was receiy- ed by the clerk of the Supreme Court of the United States. T is brought to this court on the plea that the woman is insane. : Hyde Will Return. James Wilson, secretary of agri- culture, has persuaded John Hyde former chief statistician of the depart. ment of agriculture, to return to the United States and lend his aid to the investigation of the leakages and manipulation of figures of the reports. Mr. Hyde went to E and on the Etruria, after he had gned ander a hot fire of criticism from the Southern Cotton association. son sent to Mr. Hyde a telling him that he was wanted in Washington and had batter ret cotton a rest | estate. {this s | come of $50,600 a year. | stated authori | court | ure Mr. Wil- | cablegram | RUSSIAN COURAGE KEEPS UP General Linevitch Denies the Report That His Army was Surrounded. An official report from Japanese the island of Sak- Japanese army July Russians south of occupied Palero The Russians re- headquarters on halin says the 238 defeated the Rykoff, and later after hard fighting. tired southward. Gen. Saraguchi, comman of the Sakhalin forces, ord the establishment of a civil administra tion July 30. Gen. Linevitch has telegraphed to the Russian emperor under. date of July 25 denying the frequently pub- lished reports that his army was com- pletely surrounded. He says the army has never been in a dangerous position. The flanks have never been turned, although the Japanese sought to do so. A dispatch to the IL.ondon “Times” from St. Petersburg says that another imperial telegram, even more warlike than the emperor's reply to the Rins- burg clergy, appears in the “Official Messenger.” The emperor, replying to an address from Khabarovsk, heartily approves the recommendation to continue the war until the enemy is crushed and above all not to think of the cession of territory or the pay- ment of an indemnity. TORTURED BY SLUGGERS | —— Man May Die of Abuse of Thugs in Chicago. * Apparent evidence that labor slug- Chicago a place torture is meted out to who incur the displeas- ure of the sluggers, has just come to case of William gers maintain in where . systematic those light in the H. Wilder. strange Wilder was formerly an army | officer and at the time of the recent teamsters’ strike was claim agent for a Chicago package express company. He disappeared ly 6, was held captive for three we and was then liberty, half starved and so that he has not been able to account of his eap- friend was found by a about near the 1 aimle wandering Union station, at Canal and Adams streets, and was taken to his: hems at Downer’s Grove. physical that he pronounce his and mental condition such may not recover. Much he raves wildly and, as though still under torture gs for mercy. Marks all over his body show that he had been bound with heavy cords, Physicians | Over $100 he is known to have had oni his pers is gone. Vilder an Englishman, who saw service in the American army in Cuba and the Ph pines and held a commission as a second lieutenant in 1e regular army. He is a bold, out yoken fellow of 37, who gloried in his physical ability to take care of nimself and defied pickets and slug gers to ‘intimidate him. WIDOW GETS $2,500,000. Contest of the Will of William Zieg- ler is Settied. By a payment of $2,500,000 to the widow of the late William Ziegler, tha Ziegler will contest was settled. Justice Giegrich in the Supreme Court of New York signed an order uthorizing Justice Gaynor, executor of the estate, to pay Matilda Zieg- ler $1,200,000 in cash and 5,000 shares of Royal Baking Powder Company stock, valued at $1,300,000. William Ziegler, the 14-year-old adopted son of the testator, consent- ed to the settlement, which is a re- lease of all of Mrs. Ziegler's dower ights and other claims against the The will, the validity of which it was a test, left to Mrs. Ziegler the use of the city and coun- try houses of her husband and an in- The remain- der of the estate, valued at $18,000,000 was given to the adopted son. Four Drowned. capsizing of a small skiff By the on Swan river, Vera, Casca Tichenor, Edith Everett county, Goidie Minn., Tichenor, | Tichenor and Mrs. J. M. Pogue were i drowned. BOAT HITS SUNKEN MINE Seven Sailors Killed by Explosion During Morning Practice. Seven sailors were killed and eight severely injured by the explosion of a submarine mine during mining practice in the Sandham roads near Stockholm, Sweden. A boat contain- | ing the victims struck the mine and | was blown into the air. Weak Boiler Caused Disaster. . From an official source, it may be ively that the naval of inqui will find that boiler B. of the Bennington, exploded, not because of unusually high pressure, but because of a weak place and fail to renew it. The court will not censure the officers of the Bennington, but will pass up the matter and the sponsibi to higher authority. hop Joyce. ce of the Meth- urch, ‘died at Min a result of a hem as paralysis suffered’ on react at a camp Must Clean Up First. ion. shall have nts look ry conditions and nployes upon the ca- 1 in the cities of Colon and Panama, the actual digging of the canal will be of secondary considera tion. Mr. Ser envoy of America, s Witte, the leading peace > emperor of Russia, is in prepared to enter on peace the Japanese ~om- of the time five miles north of’ 8 «ff - v “od of - a. apprel ists h By th tograyg with | these timing ‘end © would accurs autom GRA For Ir and “) 1 “hat helpec my fa terrib Funnii many when applic 1 hac and t was ¢ lie Vi “3 said Japar no m Patri since defee piece the 1 light them Tigo’ jor al 0. 1 Lai £.0W Mrs teeth tion, Bo 1828. Sr & troul thelr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers