fp— © DEATH OF SIA HENRY IRVING WAS PLAYING FAREWELL TOUR Soon After Returning to His Hotel from the. Theater He Took Suddenly Ili. The English-speaking world has suffered an irreparable loss by the sudden death of Sir Henry. Irving, who was universally regarded as the miost representative English ac- tor of contemporary times. Sir Henry died literally in harness. He was giving a series of farewell performances in the English provin- | principle in American religious life. ces and was playing an engagement at Bradford, appearing in favorite roles. Thursday he present. ed “King Rene’s Daughter” and “The Bells,” and seemed to be in excel- | lent health, taking the exhausting part of Matthias in the latter play with all the vigor of youth. Friday, before an enthusiastic audi- ence, he portrayed one of his most characteristically intellectual the title role in his own stage adaptation of Lord Tennyson’s “Becket,” with marked success. After the performance' Sir Henry returned to his hotel, reaching his rooms at 11:30 o'clock, when it was observed that he was in great pain. Physicians were immediately sum- moned, but before they could arrive Sir Henry was seized with an at- tack of syncope and expired within a few minutes, without having utter- ed a word, in the presence of Bram Stoker, who had been his immediate manager for many years, and a few other intimate friends. The event caused the greatest pain and conster- mation ameng the members of the company. TAGGART GETS DIVORCE Drunkenness Against Is Not Sustained. Judge Eason, of Wooster, O., who heard the divorce case of Major El- Charge of the Major more IF. Taggart against his wife, has rendered his decision. The court grants Major Taggart the di- wvorce and the custody of the two ‘children, Culver, aged 11, and Charles, aged 7. : Although Mrs. Taggart is denied 1 S of the children, will possession be permitted to see them. Major Taggart was in court during the reading of the decision. Mrs. Tag- gart is ill and was not present. The court recom was crowded. Judge Eason before giving his de- cision reviewed the petitions, cross petitions, answers and affidavits. In the course of his statement Judge Fason said the testimony was deep- 1y touching. The charge of Drunken- ness against Major Taggart, the court said, was not sustained. Judge Eascn, in his decision said that he considered that infidelity was proven in the case of Lieutenant Fortescue, at Fort Leavenworth, and with William Taggart, better known as “Billy” Taggart, of Orrville, O. Exereme cruelty was proven, he said, when Mrs. Taggart left him at Fort Leavenworth, when he was critically ill. severe scoring. <I am not sure that he was not im- plicated in this more than it ap- pears on the surface.” LURES FIVE CANCER CASES. Physician Gives Details of Successful Use of Radium. That five persons have been cured | of cancer at the Flower Hospital in New York, by the use of radium coat- | ings on celluloid rods inserted into the diseased parts, was the sub- | stance of a paper read by Dr. Wm. H. Dieffenbach before the Homeo- pathic Medical Society of the county of New York. in only sone of six cases which he | treated, Dr. Dieffenbach said, his ef- fort met with defeat. In the disease was far advanced. EX-CONFEDERATES BURY NEGRO | Famous Southern Soldiers Furnish Funeral Escort of Honor. The funeral of Amos Rucker, an ante-bellum negro, took place at At- lanta, Ga. on the 12th. He was a member of Camp Walker, United Confederate Veterars, which followed | the body to the grave as an honorary escort. General Ciement A. Evans, Division Commander of the United Confederate Veterans, officiated at the funeral, and among the bearers were former Governor Allen | D. Candler, General A. J. West, Judge W. Lowndes Calhoun, ' Dr. Amos Fox and R. S. Osborne. Ccolorade’s Fine Target Practice, Figures w given out by an offi- cer of the v cruiser Colorado to show that t recent target practice of that sh 3s never been equalled any skip 1 1y navy. With the gun 40 shots made 40 hits in a triapgular canvas target at a range of 3,500 yards. Ten shots each were fired from the four 8-inch rifles. and only three misses were recorded. $3,409 Immigrants in August. "The report of the Bureau migration for August, shows that 6: 409 zliens landed as compared with 59,777 for August, 1904. The greatest number arrived | from Russia. From China 215 land- ed, compared with 530 for last Au- ust. The sum of $10,000 has been re- ceived from J. Pierpont Morgan for the benefit of the sufferers from the recent earthquakes in the ie Calabria. Italy. nc of several | of the Unitarian delegation, | felt were in parts, | with , one another to secure efficient] that case! pall- | of Im- | during the month, | UNITARIANS BARRED. Other Churches Say They Are Wanted in Federation. At a meeting of the executive com- mittee of the inter-church conference on federation in New York, the cor- respondence out of ‘which has grown the discussion on the subject of the exclusion of the Unitarian denomina- tion {rom the conference was given out, This includes the original let: ter” of invitation and the text of let- ters exchanged between Dr. Eliot, of the proposed Unitarian delegation, and Dr. E.” B. Sanford, secretary of the National Federation of Churches, who is acting for the inter-church conference. . Dr. Eliot wrote that is was impos- sible for him to believe that the com- ing conference would exclude the re- presentatives of the churches that stand pecnliarly for the unsectarian Not He called attention to the personnel saying that ex-Secretary Long and Dr. Hale were among the most ‘beloved and trusted of Christian leaders. Re- ‘plying to this letter Dr. Roberts wrote in part: “The invitations to the conference were issued to churches which it was ‘sufficient agreement | results in the line of federation. The | | conference represents 18,000,000 | | communicants, and at least 50,000, 1 000 of adherents to the distinetly Protestant and evangelical group of | | Christian churches. Unitarians do |not belong to this group. This is | sufficient reason why they were not | invited.” GERMAN CAMP STORMED. | | Rebs! Chiefs in South Africa Escape | | Without Loss. | Morengo and Morris, chiefs of the | | | rebellious Hottentots of German | | Southwest Africa; have captured | | Jerusalem camp, between Warmbad | and Scuit Drift, after severe fighting, | during which Lieut. Surmand | five men were killed and eight men | | were wounded. The Hottentots sus-| | tained no losses, and captured all | | the stock and stores. | | Several Germans were made pris- | | oners, but after being disarmed | | were allowed to return to return to I'Lieut. Gen. Von Trotha, commander | | of the German forces, with a letter | | from Morengo saving that the Hot- | tentots were now in a position to | take the offensive and would fight] {to the finish. The German garrison | | at Kliplaats, hearing that Morengo | was in their vicinity, burned their | stores, deserted the post and retired | to Descondesdam. The garrison at | Nkaas has been strengthened by 900 men and a battery of artillery. BODY CUT TO PIECES. i | Head Found Long Distance from the Other Parts. ‘he finding of a man’s head on East Eighteenth street, near Avenue lc, New York, resulted in the discov- | ery of an unusually revolting mur- der, the victim of which was Thos. | F. Corcoran. Corcoran was Dprob- | ably killed in the house at 149 Third | railed locomotive pitched down FIVE TRAINMEN ARE KILLED Freight Train Runs Into a Herd of Cattle. ENGINES PLUNGE OVER BANK Mangled Bodies of Trainmen Caught Underneath the Debris—The Wreckage Caught Fire. Five trainmen were killed at Seat- on, Ill, when a heavy double-header freight train on the Iowa Ceatral railroad ran into cattle on the track at a speed of 20 miles an hour. Both locomotives and 11 freight cars loaded with grain and jumber were piled in a heap beside the track.: - . The dead: George A. Caffal, engi- neer; Harry Summers, engineer; Harry Barr, fireman; 1, H. Briley, fireman; P. T. Morgan, brakeman. All the men killed lived in Oska- loosa, la. except Briley, whose home was in Monmouth, 111. The engil- neers . lived several hours after the wreck occurred, but the other three men were killed instantly. A cow was lying on the ties be- tween the rails. She was hidden from view by other cattle standing about her. At the sound of the whistle of the approaching train the standing cattle scampered away, but the for- ward locomotive struck the lying cow. RETIREMENT OF WRIGHT. Governor of the Philippines Will Leave His Post. By reason of what appears to be dissatisfaction with the situation in the Philippines, Luke E. Wright, gov- ernor of the Philippines, and presis|. dent of the Philippine commission, will retire from that position about the first of December. Gov. Wright is expected to arrive in the United States during that month, and is en- titled to six months’ leave of absence prior to the formal ralinquishment of his labor as governor general. It is understood that he expects to re- turn to Memphis, Tenn. to resume his practice of law. Gov. Wright and Mrs. Wright, is is fied. with their environment in the Philippines, although the governor always manifested a deep interest in his duties and in the development of the resources of the island. Greeks and Bulgarians Fight. A Greek band attacked a gang of Bulgarian peasants Oct. 9, between Vodena and Discovitz. Twenty- three of the Bulgarians were killed. The imperial troops then attacked the Greeks and killed their leader. On the following day a band of Bul- garians in revenge attacked a vil- lage near Florina and killed seven Greeks. Charged With Manslaughter. County Detective Harry J. Bentley The animal was crushed under the wheeis of the pilot truck and rolled along the ties for a hundred feet. The blood made the rails slippery, and pieces of bone threw the front locomotive from the track. an embankment, drawing the second lo- comotive into the ditch, where the two machines piled up, crushing the engineers and the firemen. The wreckage caught fire. The conduc- tor and rear brakeman hastily toc’ the mangled bodies of the trainmen | from the burning debris and saved and | the rest of the train from the flames. | CZAR'S PEACE INVITATIONS President Roosevelt Accepts Call of Czar fer Conference at The Hague. The State department at Washing- ton made public the invitations of the Russian government to a second con- ference at The Hague and the Presi- dent's response. These take the shape of two memoranda, one dated September 13, being an unsigaed memorandum, delivered by Baron Rosen to the President, at Oyster Bay, and the other a memorandum dated October 12, also unsigned de- livered by the President to Baron Rosen in Washington. The Presi- dent’s memorandum is a hearty ac- ceptance of the invitation and directs attention to the fact that his previous circulars to the powers appear to be precisely in line with. the Russian papers. CARRIED RED FLAGS ‘Mounted Police Charge Upon Disperse Paraders. For the first time since the advent [ avenue. body in, the other portions of the were | found cut to pieces | avenue house. | After the picking up of the head the | {the arms and legs were hidden in a clothes hamper in a room by Frederick Bauer, aa runner. Bauer was arr A. The | point at which the head was found {is more than a quarter of a mile away from 149 Third avenue. elevator Six Miners Entombed. Six men were entombed, aad believed to have perished, by an plosion of gas in the mine of Clyde Coal! company, Xi Irederick- town, Pa. A few hours later two men working in the fan room at the | mouth of the mine in an endeavor to pump air into the shaft were terribly burned by an explosion of gas. One of them is probably fatally injured. | The fan room was wrecked. FIRST SNOW STORM. Many Shade Trees Crushed—Flurries Reported in Many Places. | Tor five hours on the morning of | the 12th, Greenville, Pa., was in the throes of a snow storm. Hundreds | of shade trees were broken down | under its weight, awnings destroyed | and several barns crushed in. The | snow melted just as fast as it reach- {ed the earth, but that whieh ac- cumulated on trees being still in full leaf, they gathered | such quantities that it finally broke | maayv of them down. Erie. Sharon. Irwin, Connellsville | and Alloena all report snow flurries. { At Piel Va. there was a fall tof two f snow. Cleveland reported a furious gale blowing on ke Erie. with much snow and a ided fall i a been A report has received at Moji that the British steamer Leho | struck a floating mine 90 miles east| of the tember Shan 30. tung lighthouse on Sep- Of the crew and passen- | occupied | caused great | damage to them. for the reason that, | of M. Trepoff as head of the govern- ment of St. Petersburg demonstra- tions on a large scale took place Sun- Third | day, the occasion being the removal | ] € The arms below the|of the body of Prince General Miner did not escape a |elbow and legs below the knees had | to the Nikolai station for Troubetskoy shipment Judge Eason said: | been packed in a suit case, and the | to Moscow. Students, workmen and {torso and remaining portions of the | spectators gathered in thousands in | the streets and demonstrators with red flags paraded boldly through the Nevsky prospect the city’s main ave- nue. The crowds and the processions were several times charged and dis- persed by mounted police, but fortu- | consequences. | reported | are those sustained by two men who ly with no grave most serious injuries na The © were slashed with sabers. Eleven Villages Destroyed. Hostilities have broken out between Tartars and Armenians in the dis- triets about Elizabethpol, Russia, and bands of them are firing on each other in villages. Two Armenian { and nine Tartar villages have already been destroyed. PORTLAND'S FAIR CLOSED Total tion is Given as 2,545,509. When the gates of the Lewis and Clark exposition closed on the 15th, a total attendance of 56,960 for the last day of the fair had been regis- tered, making the grand total attend- | 2.- The attendance for the last day ranks third in point of numbers, Portland day and Fourth ance for the entire fair 545,509 admissions. period of July being the only greater days. Mother and Son Killed. Mrs. Joseph Bonsall, aged 48 years, and her son Wallace, aged 14 years, | were killed by being struck by an ex-| press train on the branch at Fernwood, a phia. West Judge Must Resign. Judge Tucker, Supreme Court of Zona, s been requested to resign. | | Tt was charged that he proposed to | estimate of the average vield per hold sessions of his court in Globe, | acre of spring wheat is 14.7 bushels | Ariz. only oh cor that he be | (8.8 centals), subject to revision furnished wit a ce in that! when the final estimate is made in | town. {| December. | Earl Norway and Sweden at Peace. | TFarl Spe ri with| ~The special committee of the 3 shooting box | Swedish riksdag, appointed to con- \ '] Spen- | sider the Karlstad treaty, unanimous- cer is the in the | ly reported in favor of its ratification. British Hous He was | Orders were issued calling home the | twice lord DI gers 15 are reported missing, among | them two foreign engineers. Man Suffocated The office of the Lonaconing, Md. | | “Star,” J. J. Robinson, editor and publisher, was destroyed by fire of incendiary origin and A. K. Wheel er, the was suffocated, | dying sh - taken from the buil General Greely, of the army, I cless tele f signal officer i to install a between Philippine { been twice lord pr ient of ! | council and was first i of the ad-| miralty. He was born 55 | The barg steamer when 20 and was Noquebay, e Madden, es east of Bayfield, Mich. ned to the water's edge Bry The de- | and | Attendance for Entire Exhibi- | Chester | of the Pennsylvania railroad suburb of Philadel-! of the! Ari- | Ireland, has | the | in tow of the] caught fire of Carlisle, Pa., arrested Trainmaster | George O. Sarvis of the Philadelphia & Reading railway, on a charge of criminal negligence and manslaughter | in connection with the wreck at | Roushs curve, September 21, in which { lost their lives. The | bail was fixed at $3,000 and was | promptly furnished. The hearing will | not take place until Sarvis, who was | injured in the wreck, is able to go to Carlisle. | | | | | { | six trainmen CURRENT NEWS EVENTS. | | | | An increase of $48,000 is shown in the gross earnings of the Wabash for the first week of October. Former Vice President Hyde of the Equitable society demands protec- tion before he will testify before the legislative committee. Datto Ali. with his followers in the province of Mindanao has taken the aggressive and is killing many Moros friendly to the government. Fire that originated from crossed electric wires in the R. G. Koch Furniture company’s establishment at Qi] City, Pa., cansed a loss of $12. 000, covered by insurance. The production of gold in the Rand, South Africa, last month is officially announced to have amounted to 416,- 487 fine ounces, a decrease of 12, 094 ounces as compared with August. M. Ossovsky, the Assistant Chief of Police of Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russia, was assassinated. He was] held to have been largely responsi- ble for the massacre of Jews in 1903 and the more recent anti-Jewish disturbances. John Holliday and his wife, of Ni- | agara Falls, are dead, and their | grandson, Harry Holliday, is expect- led to die from arsenic poisoning. | Mrs. Holliday used arsenic in bis- | cuits, mistaking it for baking pow- | der. | Orders have been cabled to Rear | Admiral Train to detach a ship | from his fleet for a cruise in Aus- | tralian waters this fall. There are many Americans in Australia, and the American flag has not apeared in | those waters for some time. | Colonel von Ritmann, Chief of) | Police at Krasnoyarsk, Eastern Si- | bera, has been murdered. Colonel | von Eitmann was returning from | the theater with his family when he | was attacked. The assassin fired | | six shots, several of which took ef-| | feet. While engaged in painting the ele-| vator shaft of the Washington monu- | ment at a distance of 270 feet from| the bottom, Joseph G. Owings,]| through the collapse of the scaffold- | | | | ing, was precipitated to the ground | and met with instant death. His | body was badly mangled. | To Ratify Treaty by Cable. The treaty of peace between Rus- | sia and Japan will become effective | on its approval, without awaiting the | formal exchange of ratifications at | Washington. This course has been | decided upon that the speediest pos- sible termination of the war may be had. The treaty is now before the | respective Emperors of Japan and! Russia for the royal signatures. As] soon as it has been signed this fact | | wiil be communicated by cable to the | State Department at Washington and | the Washington Government will ap- | prise each Emperor of the act of the ! other. This will end the war. Crop Conditions. The Agricultural department issued | the following crop bulletin: The con- | dition of corn on October 1 was 89.2, | as compared with 89.5 last month, 83.9 on October 1, 1904, 80.8 at the corresponding date in 1903, and a 1¢- year average of 80.2. The preliminary | troops and naval reserve men. This marks the end of the Norwegian- Swedish dispute. The American Association of Bank- ers put itself squarely on record as favoring Government subsidies for Clerk fcr Adams Express Com- Cunliffe Went Home, in the history of the express business was perpetrated in Pittsburg, October said, have not been thoroughly satis-|g in cold hard cash. Edward G. Cun- | vestigation of Cunliffe. | was not the slightest suspieion of S000 AND WAN GONE" Cruelly Shoots Cne of His Shipmates. The murder of Captain Rumill and four of his crew of the four-masted schooner Harry A. Berwind in a mu- tiny, while the vessel was bouad from Mobile’ to Philadelphia, is the story told in a special from Southport, N. C. .pany Takes Big Package. ANOTHER SHORTAGE OF $1,000 Changed His Clothes and Bade His Wife an The schooner Blanche H. King put Affectionate Farewell. into Southport, bringing in irons three negroes, all that remained of the Berwind's crew. The captain, One of the most gigantic robberies mate, cook and an engineer apparent- ly had been killed in the mutiny and their bodies thrown overboard and - the body of "a fourth sailor, a negro, was found lying on deck, where he, too, had been killed. Captain Taylor, whose attention was attracted by the reckless mad- ner in which the ill-fated vessel was being steered, her course threatening to run down his own vessel, boarded urally under suspicion, and his pic-|the Berwind and placed the negroes tures and description have been sent| in irons. to all parts of the United States and| tr developed {rom the stories of Canada and Europe. A warrant has|ihe negro prisoners that the mutiny The Adams Express company was victimized to the extent of $100,000 liffe, a trusted employe of the com- pany, who has been missing ever since the money disappeared, is nat- been issued for his arrest. arose as the result of a quarrel Cunliffe was employed in the|apoardskip about the coffee made for money department of the express|preakfast. The King was signaled by company, and on that day he had a chance to serve in the place of the the Berwind 30 miles east of Frying lightship, and in response to a signal regular money clerk. With ~~ the | Captain Taylor sent his mate, engi- chance came the opportunity to| peer and others on board. handle a package containing the The decks of the schooner were large sum mentioned, $80,000, being | crimson with * blood, giving evidence in $100 bills. of an encounter. The berth of the . Monday afternoon at 4:15 o'clock a! mate was spotted with blood. indicat bank of Pittsburg delivered to the | ing that he was butchered in bed. Adams Express Company, a package| After the boarding party from the containing currency to the amount of | King haandenffed the mutineers one of $100,000, which was consigned to a|the negroes complained the irons bank in Cincinnati. Cunliffe, acting | were too tight and hurt him. The as regular money clerk, made out a|pracelet was loosened, when the cap: receipt for the amount to the bank|tive drew a pistol and shot one of messenger. In the package Were his own crew. The total list of Kil- $80,000 in $100 bills, $10,000 in $50| eq is four whites and one negro, the bills and the remaining $10,000 in de- nominations of $5, $10 and $20 bills. The $100 and $50 bills were new, having been just issued by the Far- mers Deposit National bank, of Pitts- burg, and the Bank of Pittsburg, N. A. The remainder of the money was currency which had been used. Tr company supposed that Cunliffe had Market is Passed. started the money on its journey to| The Iron Review says: The danger Cincinnati, and it was not until the|of a runaway is disappearing and next morning, when Cunliffe did not, .onditions are thoroughly sound report for work that the large sum]... i ia = was missed. Then it became suspect-| The outlooks is that while there will ed that one of the most daring rob- be no special excitement in the near future all plants will continue fully beries in many years had been suc- ay : hey hav to cessfully accomplished. = active as they have been for some ime. Charles H. Heiner, general agent i + of the Adams Express Company in The demand for structural material Pittsburg, immediately started re in continues unabated, and efforts to en- ! it was fonnd thuse life into the strike of struc- that he is short in his accounts $1,000 tural workers seems to have had little in addition to the missing $100,000. effect. Among the recent large orders Detectives were immediately placed for bridge material was one for on the case, and it was found that 18,000 fons from the Atchison, To- the money had never been received | PCK2 & Santa Fe railroad. at the forwarding office in Union sta- HAWLEY UNDER ARREST. names of none of whom can be learn- ed. The King left a prize crew aboard the Berwind. PRICES GROW FIRMER Danger of Runaway Iron and Steel tion. Cunliffe left the office Monday night at the usual time of closing. There One of Uncle Sam's Marines Charged With Murder. Charles Hawley, 23 years old, was arrested at Sanders rifle range, Md., on the charge of having murdered Si- mon Donahue at Masontown, Fayette county, Pa., on October 29, 1904. Hawley escaped from Masontown aft- er the crime and later enlisted in the marine corps. A short time ago the authorities got a line on him and he was apprehended. He is being held by the Washington authorities upoa request of the officials of Fayettte county. anything being amiss. He went to his home and ate quietly the evening meal. He then changed his clothes and affectionately bade his wife and four little children goodby, saying he was going out for the evening. . RAMSEY DEFEATED Forced from Directorate of the Wa- bash System. At the meeting of the Wabash stock- holders in Toledo, Joseph Ramsey, Jr., failed completely in his effort to wrest control of the Wabash system from George Gould. The directors chosen by the bona- The Boston Wool Market. The wool market is quiet and firm. The bulk of the trade is coming from the woolen goods manufacturers. holders of the road were: Thomas H.| gince the close of the London sales Hubbard, E. T. Jeffrey, John T. Terry Te 3 or i »| the market has stiffened on the low Winslow S. Pierce, M. Galloway, Ed-| ,. s. Terrl gar. T. Welles The total i cast grade wools. Territory wools are not- AS 260 250) Tho cote Yor Soc 2 ably strong, with prices practically 207,994: unchanged. The market for pulled the above directors was 228,510. Ram- sey’s vote was 31,840. ; The directors chosen by the stock- holders were: S. C. Reynolds, George J. Gould, Russell Sage, W. B. Sanders, R. C. Clowry, W. H, Blodgett. The total vote cast was 499,509. The vote for each of the above directors was 461,467. Ramsey's vote was 38,042. The director elected by the 12 nam- ed above was F. A. Delano. Not only was Ramsey utterly de- feated in all he undertook, but he was | forced from the directory of the road | and now has nothing whatever to a with its management in aay onl ner. wools is quiet, especially for B supers. Foreign grades are strong. Leading quotations follows: Ohio and Penn- sylvania XX and above, 36@37c; X, 34@35¢c; No. 1, 40@41c; No. 2, 41@ 42c¢; fine unwashed, 28@29c; quarter blood unwashed, 34@35¢; three- eighths blood, 35@36¢; half-blood, 34@35¢; unwashed delaine, 30@3lc; unmerchantable, 31@32c; fine washed delaine, 39@40c. TWO MINERS PERISH in Hazelkirk Shaft Was Followed by Fire. In a mine explesion which occurred Union Pacific Drops Hyde. at shaft No. 2 at Hazelkirk, Pa., near James H. Hyde, of New York, | vVanvoorhis station on the M. & W. former president of the Fuel hand, two lives were lost. The 10 Life Assurance society, was dropped | other men in the mine were over- from the board of directors of the|come by gas, but were rescued, and Union Pacific railroad at a meeting of | have completely recovered rl The ine board I Gli Lake City. PA t dead are: Joseph Kosko, single; John ening, o icago, was elected. | Kosko, married, leaves widow and one With these exceptions, all members | child. The two men killed were for- of the former board were re-elected. | eigners and machine operators. There was no opposition to the Har- The trouble was caused by a broth- riman int sts. i ma erests er workman making a shot at the rr = head of the entry. Dan Griffith, boss Gets $500,000 from Mrs. Hearst, driver, was told of the trouble. He, Several valuable gifts were receiv-| with a party of friends, started into ed by the board of regents for the |the mine, but were very soon driven Explosion California state university at its | back by the heat. monthly meeting. Mrs. Hearst's 40:1 i: — nation alone amounting to nearly | Capture Three German Steamers. $500,000. For the past seven years| The Norwegis : 5 g 1 3d | > Norwegian steamer Arnfrid ar she has been collecting from all parts | the German Ee ers Kowlo WT of the world archaeologieal and | ws: NAS Ste ea : x agner and M. Struve hav > ap- anthropological material, and : = Ave heen sop this ro > TonaANCES ‘ raPirIagE collection che has given to the uni- Ys na their boii: versity. | Viadivostok. y Canal Captain is Drowned. Ebner Thomas, a young captain of Cumberland, Md., who had charge of a boat on the Chesapeake and Ohio canal, was drowned in the canal at Dowesville. He accidentally fell from the deck while the boat was passing through a lock. Football Player Dies. Charles Hagadus, an Austrian, 18] years of age, died at the hospital at | Oil City, Pa., from injuries received | in football practice. Hagadus kicked | at the ball, missing it, and fell on | his breast. He neglected to call a physician at the time. Net earnings of the United States | Steel corporation for the current year, based on orders mow booked, will, it | agreed to raise the list quotations of The Scotch steel makers have the upbuilding of the American mer- chant marine. is estimated, be $140,000,000, or the | manufactured steel $2.50 per ton 1¢ 3 i ia Thig roa 3 - > | largest in the history of the corpor-| This makes an increase of $5 per ton | ation. in the past two weeks. Cr te
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers