/ ~ RUSSIAN SAILORS MUTIAY Fierce Battle Fought in the City of Cronstadt. RIOTING CONTINUED ALL NIGHT. Mutinous Sailors Say Their Chief Grievances Are Poor Food and Clothing and Lack of Liberty. The sailors of the Russian squa- dron at Cronstadt mutined, overpow- ered their officers, landed and at- tacked the shops, public buildings and spirits stores. The troops were called out and fighting ensued, dur- ing which machine guns were used and many persons were killed or wounded. In addition a number of houses were set on fire. The fighting lasted all night long. The outbreak started when the sailors of the “Seventh Fort Equip- age” revolted, and, it is rumored, killed some of their officers. They marched out of the barracks and im- mediately plundered four spirits shops. Crazed with liquor they re- turned and seized their arms and then went on a rampage, firing pro- miscuously upon the troops and the loyal sailors. Later they were joined | by many of their comrades. | The number of mutineers totaled 3,000. It is difficult to ascertain the number of the casualties, but officers place the figures at 200. Many wounded persons are in hospitals. The sailors say their chief griev- aaces are poor food and clothing and an insufficient amount of liberty from’ barracks. Roughs joined in the pillage, but the wor kmen did not par: ticipate. «! The governer of: Grongtods tele- graphed the general staff that the mutiny had been crushed; that there was no likelihopd .of anyj .renewal of the revolt; that reports to the ef- fect that members of the guard had Jjoimed the mutinéers were false and that there was no truth in the re- ports that . the muineers had seized he ‘arsenal and the forts. The gov- ernor in his telegram said that many of the *mutinous sailors tried to es- cape in boats to the mainland, but that. they were captured and. were Heing brought back to.Cronstadt. GEN. TRZPOFF REMOVED. The: Czar ‘Also Removes Obstacles to Count Witte’s Projects. Gen. Trepoff has “been removed « ¥rom the powerfiil position of gover- nor general of St. Petersburg and assistant minister of the interior, and Russia’s premier has agreed to im- mediate universal suffrage. The re- tirement of Gen. Trepoff is hailed with delight. It strongly enhances the chances of the populace giving ‘Count Witte time to carry out his projects, which were in danger, ow- ing to the impatiezce of the revolu- « Lionists. The orthodox - lary have issued a stirring appeal to the provincial priests to aid in the restoration = of weace in the country. INDICTMENTS TO BE -ASKED : ment Takes ‘Hand The. Department of Justice has made in. Enter- prise Bank Case. arrangements for the indictment of men who helped in the demolition of | | beceme useful fhe Enterprise National bank of Alle- zheny. The arrangements were made | by Judge F. F. Oldham, legal adviser of the Comptroller of the Currency, { Jauans, in the large and E. P. Moxey, the bank examiner who has been devoting his time to the | gathering of evidence upon which to base criminal prosecutions. The facts will be laid before the Federal Grand Jury at Pittsburg as soon as the law officers of the govern- ment can collect the evidence and as- sure themselves that they have made no mistakes. If there is no Grand Jury in session when the indictments are prepared, District Attorney W. Dunkle will be expected to:have one summoned. Buys Mountain of Iron, News was received from Mexico that the United States Steel Corpora- tion had purchased the famous solid iron mountain at Durango, said to be &he richest of its kind in the world. S TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. At a meeting held about $2,000 was subscribed for the relief of the Jews in Russia. Com- mittees were appointed to solicit fur- ther subscriptions. in Washington, ‘While removing ar vld telephone cable from a pole on Perrysvilie avenue, near Daisy avenue, Alle- gheny, two linemen employed by the Central District and Printing Tele- phone Co. were killed and a third badly shocked. Th executive committee of the National Educational Association, through its president, Dr. N: C. Schaeffer, superintendent of public | instructicn of Pennsylvania, has ac- | cepted an invitation from California to hold the next annual meeting of the association in San Francisco, | quiy 9 to 13, 1906. : Naval Prize Fighting. The President has called upon See- | { retary Bonaparte for a report on cer- | tain features of the case of Midship- | man Branch who died at the naval | academy at Aunapolis, after a glove | ‘fight with another midshipman. Seec- | retary Bonaparte said that the nrae- tice of fighting at the academy was very objectionable and would 1is- gouraged, but adc would be taken tertnined. The civ 1 aot sought to intervene in this cs John | laeger, W. FATAL HEAD-ON COLLISION Sixteen Hurt, Ten Seriously by Passenger Train Hitting Freight. Five persons were killed, 10 ser- iously injured and a score slightly turt in a head-on collision between a passenger train and a coal train on the Delaware, Lackawanna & Waest- ern railrcad, near Huniock's creek, a short distance from Vilkes Barre, Pa, The dead: Frank Ringsdorf, Scran- ton, fireman on freight train; M. J. Graham, Scranton, express messen- ger; Frank Poole, Scranton, engineer passenger train; H. E. Stickney, Kingston, fireman on passenger train; George Snyder, Scranton, engineer on freight train. Of the injured Christopher Beav- er, Scranton, conductor on passenger train, is expected to die. The injuries to the passengers were caused by the terrific force of the trains coming together, the en- gine vn the passenger train being forced almost through the baggage car. The wreck occurred on the Blooms- burg division. The passenger train, which was running from Northumber- land, Pa. to Wilkes Barre, dashed in- to the freight on a sharp curve at the base of the mountain. The passen- ger train was running about 35 miles an hour. It is said that the freight crew misread the orders, and instead of waiting on a siding for the pass- enger train came out on the main track. Z POLAR EXPLORERS ARE SAFE. Canadian Cruiser Brings Report of .Amundsen’s Expedition. The auxiliary Canadian cruiser Neptune arrived at St. John’s N. F., after ‘a perilous voyage into Hudson :Bay, which the cruiser entered Oct. 3, later in the’season than any other vessel is known to have done. On board the cruiser was Major Moodie, governor of Hudson Bay. Twice the Neptune struck rocks during the voyage, "and was leaking badly on ar: riving at St. John’ Ss. Major .Moqdie reports hore, had a communication from Capt. Ronold Amundsen’s Norwegian expedi tion in search of the nor{h magnetic pole,’as rencently as May 22 of the present year. The ship Gjoads, with: the expedition on board, spent last win- ter in Sympson's strait, King William Land, 400 miles north of Fullerton, Governor Moodie's headquarters, on the northwest side of Hudson Bay. Two’ letters were received, the sec- ond of which reported that the mag- netic - and other scientific observa- tions of the party had been conduct- ed undisturbed since the establish- ment of the magnetic station in Oc- tober, 1903. Half of the party began an explora- tion of Victoria Land in April last, hoping to achieve the northwest pas- sage this summer and come out through Behring strait nexe season. TO AID IMMIGRANTS. Italian Government Sends Agent Here to Assist Countrymen. Bishop Broderick of the Catholic Chureh introduced to . President Roosevelt Adolfo Rossi, a special re- presentative of the Italian govern- ment, who is assisting in the distri- bution’ of Italian immigrants country. Signor Rossi told the Presi- dent that while the Italian Gowvern- ment was net encouraging the immi- tration to the United States of its citizens it was interested in securing for those who came here desirable locations in order that they might American citizens. Signor Rossi deprecated the con- | gestion of foreigners, particularly cities, and ex- { plained that his efforts were being directed toward distributing the Italian immigrants among the agri- cultural communities of the country. Foctball Player Dies Horatio 'T. Knight, a member of the | football team of the class of 1909, at Exeter, N. Knight and be- the was game. Phillips-Exeter Academy, H., died of meningitis. played a game last Saturday came seriously ill soon after contest. It is thought Knight not in good health before the FLAGMAN BLAMED Kiiled in Coliision. collision Three Men Rear-End In a rear-end between freight trains at siding, Va. men lost their several other persons were Hull near three lives while injured. The dead are: Henry D. Fleyd, en- gineer; H. C. Crawiord, fireman; C. H. Patton, brakeman. The injured are: Wiley Tartar, en- gineer; R. E. Winstead, fireman. The collision, it is alleged, was due to the failure of Flagman Robert Ad- i to protect his train which was backing out cf and into which crashed a secoad train, hauled by two locomotive All the men killed were on the second engine. Adkins has not been seen since the wreck occurred. Consulship for Pennsylvanian. William T. Pike, of Pennsylvania, has been appointed American consul at Glauchau, and William R. Estes, of Minnesota, to be consul at Zittau, | Germany. Long Wireless Message. The Navy Department has been in- | formed that the wireless telegraph operator at San Juan, Puerto Rico, read signals which were being sent from a wireless station in the vicin- | ity of New York. The distance is approxi tely 1,400 m 3 H. F. ighbors of New York has | been selected by Secr Root to | be his confidential He was | employed by Mr. his nN office in New tarv and confi in this’ | POLIGE DEL ED SLAUGHTER Militia Stood Ty Wi By While ig and Children Were Burne KNIVES AND AXES WERE USED Procession of School Children Sur- rounded and Some Were Torn to Pieces. As details of what happened throughout European Russia during the upheaval arrive tie story grows more revolting. In the Baltic provia- ces murder, riot and incendiarism prevailed. In Poland even the cler- gy, Catholic and Protestant, participat- ed in the manifestations in favor of autonomy of the ancient kingdom. In Southwestern Russia nardly a city or town escaped Jewish massa- cres. At Tomsk, Siberia, according to the latest reports received here, the whole population of 40,000 and the military stood by while 600 wo- men and children were durned in a theater. The court house at Tomsk and the mayor's residence, where the stu- dents and revolutionists took refuge from the mob, were burned and those who tried to fly were killed in the streets. In Moscow the social revo- lutionists and the “Black Hundred” and the Cossacks and police fought bloody battles. The descent of the butchers of Moscew with their knives and axes upon the students was one of the most shorrible chapters, but net as pitifull, however, as the attack of the Black Hundred on, a procession of scheol children carrying red flags. ‘When the children sought to escape a cordon of police barred the way and the youthful martyrs were beaten in- to insensibility and in some cases were actually torn to pieces. In the Alexander garden at Moscow ' Cos- sacks lay in ambush in the shrubbery and set upon their victims with whips. Many were beaten ‘to: death rand others were hardly able to crawl away. The reports from the Caucasus show there is no immediate prospect of suppressing the present state of anarchy. - Battles between Tartars and ‘Armenians continue and the .de- struction of the railroads and lack of troops make it impossible for the au- thorities to cope with the situation. THREE KILLED Tragedy Caused by Man Hurrahing for Jeff. Davis. A cheer for Jeff Davis uttered by a drunken man on Beaver creek on the Kentucky side of the river near Naugatuck,’ W. Va, resulted in a battle in which three men were kill- ed and three others wounded. There had been much drinking af- ter the election on Tuesday. Con Estep, an old Confederate soldier, was among the crowd. When he yell- ed “Hurray for Jeff’ Davis!?: C. Prater, a young man, told Estep to ‘Shut ‘up or he would kill him.” Enoch Bentley told Estep to “hurr#®h for anyone he pleased.” Prater turn- ed upon Bentley and emptied his pis- tol, five shots taking effect. After he fell Bentley shot and killed Prater, Rube Morgan, a friend of Prater’s, who had shot Bentley after the latter fell fired at’ Tom and John Bowling, friends of Estep, and thea fled, but he was shot and mortally wounded by the Bowlings. Bentley died soon after the shooting and | Morgan died two hours later. During {the fight John Sadler belonging to the Prater gang, was dangerously wounded. The Bowlings were both hit, but not fatally hurt. Sheriff Saves a Negro. The negro who attacked Mrs. Mcore of Atlanta some was caught at Fairburn,’ Ga., and brought to the outskirts of Atlanta, where he was identified by Mocore. A mob was just hang him when the sheriff persuaded days collided head- drawing two bound for Watertown, on with a lecomotive freight ears, near Liverpool, six miles from Syracuse. Four men killed and one seriously hurt. of the freight cars was filled matches, which ignited and to the wreckage. One wit? Trainmaster Halleran of Oswego | | the conductor of the freight train, | who, he said, disregarded his or- { | ders. Find Human Body in Ashes. Ten hours after fire had destroyed two box cars on a siding of the Cleveland and Pittsburg railroad at Smith's Ferry, Pa. the workmen who were clearing away the debris found the charred right half of trunk of a human body. The theory is that the remains are part of the ing in the car. Protecticn for A cablegram received at Department from Minister Rockhill at Pekin, sia received advices from | at Canton saying that he ed the Magistrate at Yingtak to take extraordinary measures to Missionaries. the State the Viceroy protect the missionaries and mission sta- tions. Ten indicts men iolations of the election for as- saults com ordéred by | York City. | { | CH INESE ATROCITIES. iviigsionary Who Escaped Tells a Horrifying Story. Dr. Machie, the American mission- ary who escaped the massacre at Lienchow, confirming the previous accounts of the outbreak, adds horri- fying details of the atrocities com- mitted on the American women. When the disturbances commence: the mob seized Miss Chestnut and Mrs. DMachle and exposed them to public view in the Chinese temple. Amy Machle, the doctors 10-year- old child, was carried off and throwa alive into the river. The rioters stripped Miss Chestnut and threw her into, the river also. While the two were struggling in the water three Chinamen speared them with tridents. Miss Chestnut’s body and Amy Machle’s head were pierced. Mrs. Machle appealed to the rioters, but the mob stened her braias out, strip- ped the body and dropped it into the river. The mob then captured Mr. and Mrs. Peale, stripped them naked exposed them for 15 minutes, club- bing Mr. Peale to death in his wife's presence and subsequently killed Mrs. Peale in the same brutal fash- ion. BRIDE'S DOUBLE CRIME. Kilis Husband and Herself Shortly After Marriage. After being a bride for less than a day, Mrs. Helen Johnston, aged 17, killed her husband, Randolph C. Johnston, then killed herself in Per guimans County, N. Mrs. Johnston was found cn the floor in front of a dresser. She had fired a bullet in her mouth. Before destroying herself she shot her hus band three times. The’ couple were married in the evening. When festivities were fin- ished they droye to the bridegroom’s home and retired shortly after night. ~ Both were found dead. in their nightclothes., The girl left no word of explanation. PREACHER SENT TO PRISON. Callery Junction. John Martin, alias John of Adrain, Mich., a traveling preach: er, charged with horse stealing, was sentenced to one year in the peniten- tiary by Judge B. G. Young at Mar: ion O. During the time Martin has been confined in jail he conducted religious services, converting a num- ber of prisoners, among them being tity by writing a letter to his wife and child in Chicago. The preacher, when sentenced, told the judge he stole the horse and buggy in order to take his wife to the home of her people in Callery Junction, Pa. The judge shed tears in passing sentence. Ballot Box Stolen. Theft of the ballot box in the thirty-third division of the Twenty: sixth ward, of Philadelphia, within a few minutes after the polls closed, and substituting another one fixed for the machine, was the amazing fraud disclosed before the Judges sitting in the election court and resulted in two of the election officers being held in $300 bail for court by Magistrate Kochersperger. John Schweckler, a clerk in the office of City Solicitor Kinsey, for whom a warrant had also been issued, was declared to be a fugi- tive. The men held for court were William J. Wood and Harold PF. Starr. Wood was the judge of elec- tien. / NEBRASKA DEFEATS FUSION Charles B. Letton, Republican, Elect ed Supreme Court Justice. ago | Mrs. | about to | the crowd to surrender him. The prisoner was taken to the county jail. FOUR MEN KILLED IN WRECK Passenger Train Collides Head-On | With Freight. A passenger train on the Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad, were | set fire | placed the blame for the wreck upon | the | body of a tramp who had been sleep- | "ing a had order- | Returns from the elections in Ne- | braska are sufficiently complete to indicate with certainty the election of | Charles B. Letton, Republican, over | William C. Hastings, fusion, as as- sociate justice of the Supreme court by a plurality greater than that given | Judge Barnes for the same office two vears ago, which was 9,127. The | Republican candidates for regents ran | only slightly behind Letton. | ——————— Depositors Get 50 Per Cent. It has been announced that a divi- dend of 50 per cent. would be paid creditors of the defunct Citizens Sav- ings Bank of Lorain. O., which failed March 31. The Probate Court has ordered the payment of the dividend and it is expected that all the claims against the bank will be paid in 18 months. Passengers Are Thrown Overboard. The correspondent of the London { Daily Mail at Bucharest, Roumania, | says that the sailors of the Russian steamer Ismail, bound out from Odessa, November 8 with refugees, | mutinied at sea and threatened the | passengers with death unless they | gave them money and jewelry, and | that those unable to do so were thrown overboard. James Squires, a member of the Alton, (I11.) high school football | team, died from the effects of aa in- jury received October 21 in a game with the East St. Louis high school fteam. He receleved a kick on the knee which resulted in blood poison- ing. Burns Himself to Death. Michael McDermott, who was serv- sentence for drunkenness, { burned himself to death in a padded cell of the county jail at Newark, N. J. Smoke from the fire and the odor of burning flesh created a panic among the hundred prisoners in the jail. Men and women made frantic efforts to tear away the iron bars of their cell doors, and were in such a condition after quiet 1 been re stored that medical att 1 was | pEecessary. mid-. Stole Horse and Buggy to Reach Knowles, James Kane, who revealed his iden- rE DEMOCRATS TRIUMPHANT Pennsylvania and Ohio Carried by Large Majorities. BERRY DEFEATS PLUMMER Unexpected Results in Country Dis- tricts—Philadelphia and Interior Counties Roll Up Tremendous Vote. Complete returns from 61 of the 67 counties in Pennsylvania give W. H. Berry, Democrat, for State Treasurer, a plurality over J. Lee Plummer, Re- publican of 81,026 votes. The coun- ties yet to be heard from are Armstrong, Chester, Crawford, North- ampton, Susquehanna and Perry. Of the missing counties Armstrong and Susquehanna give estimated plurali- ties for Plummer of 1,300, while the estimated pluralities for Berry in Chester, Crawford, Northampton and Perry are 5,525. Basing the com- putation on these estimates, Berry's apparent plurality in the State is 35,251. The vote for Superior court has not yet been computed in many coun- ties, but in nearly every couaty the three Republican judges ran far ahead of Plummer. The vote for State Treasurer in Philadelphia was. Plummer, 98,760; Berry, 134,797, giving the latter a plurality of 36,037. On the county ticket, Brown, City party and Demo- ‘crat, has a majority of 43,333. Nearly complete returns from Alle- gheny county indicate that the eatire Republican county ticket was elected by majorities ranging from 1,500 to 5,- 000 and that J. Lee Plummer, defeat. ed candidate for State Treasurer, carried the county by a majority which may exceed 27,000. Incom- plete returns’ give’ Plummer 67,184 votes, while Berry received, 40,130. In the city of Pittsburg the Citizens ticket won over the Republicans by reduced majorities. OHIO. Pattison Defeats Herrick for Governor by Large Majority. That John M. Pattison, Democrat, of Cincinnati, has been elected Gover. nor of Ohio for three vears by a plur ality running above 40,000 over Gov. Myron T. Herrick, of Cleveland, Re- publican, is “settled, as also is the Democratic working majority in both houses of the State Legislature, but there is still some uncertainty as to the rest of the State ticket. Chairman Harvey Garber, of the Democratic committee, figured plu- ralities for Pattison that aggregated close to 55,000. The Republicans have given. out no later estimates than that of Chairman Charles Dick, conceding the election of Pattison by 25,000 plurality.. Republican estimates give the Democrats:from two to five majority in the net Senate and from 10 to 15 in the House. The Democratic claim is a majotity of five in the Senate and of 27a the House. MASSACHUSETTS Guild Defeats Bartlett for Governor, —Democrats Make Gains in Legislature. Lieutenant Governor Curtis Guild, Jr., of Boston (Rep.), was elected Governor of ' Massachusetts by‘ a plurality of 29485 over General Charles W. Bartlett of Boston, the Democratic nominee, For the second place on the ticket, for which there was an unusually warm contest, Eben 8S. Draper of Hopedale (Rep.) won over Henry M. Whitney of Brookline, his Democratic opponent, and the leading advocate for reciprocity, by a plurality of 3,942. The total vote for the two leading candidates was: Governor: Guild (Rep.), 203834: Bartlett, (Dem.), 174,399; Lieutenant Fovernor: Draper (Rep.), 184,534; Whitney (Dem.), 180,592. The Republicans also elected seven bf the eight members of the Execu- tive Council, and the usual large ma- jority in both branches of the Legis- lature. THREE NEGROES LYNCHED Jail in Henderson, Stormed by a Mob. A mob of 200 men stormed the jail nt Henderson, Ga., overpowered the The Georgia sheriff and taking John Reese, Rob- ert Askew and another negro, hanged them in the public square. The trio was charged with the murder pf Elias Howell, a farmer. The bodies of the victims were cut down shortly after the hanging and turned over to relatives. After the men were hanged the mob quietly @lispersed. None of those who par- ticipated has been identified. PANIC IN PERSIA Failure of Crops Causes Aiarm All Over the Country. General Morteza, the Persian Min- ister, who arrived in Washington, D. C., in an interview spoke of the deplorable condition existing in his country growing out of the cholera epidemic of 1904 the failure of the crops and the increase in the prices of the necessities of life. RHODE ISLAND Republicans Make Gains in Each Branch of Legislature. A heavy poll for the Republican candidate for the executive chair, Gov. George H. Utter, which is ex- pected to give him a plurality of 5,- 000 over the Demoecatic nominee, Lucius F. C. Garvin, was the feature of the State election. Utter’s runaing mates on the ticket seem sure of large pluralities. Republican gains were made in each branch of the Legislature, MARYLAND Suffrage Amendment Voted Down Baltimore Goes: Republican. The election in Maryland was for a State Comptroller, Legislature and county officers, and in Baltimore for a Judge of the Supreme Court, Sher- iff, City Clerk and Surveyor. The is- sue which engrossed popular atten- :ion was a proposed constitutional amendment, the avowed purpose of which was to disfranchise negro vot- ars, but which aroused widespread opposition among many Democrats and foreign voters in both parties. Owing to the extreme length of the pallot the count has been slow and the votes in some of the city pre- cincts and remote county districts have not been counted. The returns 30 far received, however, make cer- tain the defeat of the proposed con- stitutional amendment by a majority of 20,0000 or more and very prebably the election of McCullough (kep.) State Comptroller over Atkinson, (Dem.) and the election of Republi- cans in three out of four of the city legislative districts. The Republican candidate for Sheriff, City Court Clerk and City Surveyor in Baltimore also are elected. Chief Judge Harlan (Dem.) is re-elected by 10,000 major- ity. The Republicans did not nomi- nate a candidate against Judge Har- lan, though there. was an Independent Republican candidate. The political complexion of the: next Legislature is ancertain and will not be known until the official count has been completed. NEW YORK CITY Justice Gaynor Grants Order for Recount of Votes. With the granting of an order by Supreme Court Justice William J. Gaynor in Brooklyn compelling Police Commissioner McAdoo to remove every ballot box from all the precincts in Greater New York to the bureau of elections William R. Hearst, the de- feated Municipal Ownership league candidate, took his first legal step in a fight to secure a recount of the votes cast on election day. ; The complete returns give MecClel- lan a majority of 3,485 votes, the smallest ever recorded for a success- ful mayorality candidate, and a result which might readily be reversed by a recount of ‘the ballots. The next Assembly will stand: Re- publicans, 111; Democrats, 35; Muni- cipal Ownership, 4. Last year it stood: Republican,’ 104; Democrats, 46. . The Senate holds over this year. NEW JERSEY. The election in New Jersey in- creased the Republican hold on the State Legislature and makes it im- possible that a Democrat should suc- ceed United States Senator John P. Dryden in 1907. In the State Sen- ate ithe Republicans made a gain of three, electing Republicans irom Gloucester, Salem and Somerset counties, which for the last three years have had Democratic Senators. Only four of the 21 State Senators will be Democrats. VIRGINIA, Claud A. Swaason. (Dem.), was ‘elected Governor of Virginia by dbout 20,000 plurality over Judge L. I.. Lewis, the Republican candidate. The vote everywhere was exceeding- ly light, but Democratic apathy was offset by unfavorable conditions on the other side. The negroes through- out the State abstained from voting almost entirely. The Republicans gain a few members in the Legisla- ture. Anti-Mormon Ticket Wins. At Salt Lake City, Ut., the Ameri- can party, of which former United 4 States Senator Thomas Kearns is a leader, elected Ezra Thompson mayor after a bitter campaign, in which oppositica to the Mormon Church was the sole issue. Mayor Richard P. Morris, Mormon and Democrat, ran ahead of Chief of Police William J. Lynch, Republican and Gentile, for whom United States Senator Reed Smoot made a personal campaign. Except some aldermen, the whole American ticket probably is elected. CHICAGO With One Exception the Republican Ticket Won. The Republicans made a clean sweep of the election in Chicago and Cook county, electing all of their candidates, with the exception of one man. The sole Democrat to reach the promised land was Webb, a can- didate for trustee of the sanitary district. REBELLION IN BRAZIL Hundreds Alrestly Slain—Buenos Ayres May Be Bombarded. A revolution has just broken out in Rio de Jaaeiro against the Brazil- lan Government. It is both military and naval. The entire garrison of the capital has rebelled and the squadron in the harbor has sided with the revolutionists ‘and threateas to bombard the eity. Hundreds of persons have been killed in encounters in the streets. The cause of the trouble it is said is due to a mutiny of the garrison of the fort of Santa Cruz. President Voted. President Roosevelt made a flying trip home for the purpose of casting his ballot. He spent just 27 min- utes in the village, shaking hands during that time with several score of his old friends and neighbors and casting vote No. 61 at the precinct polling place. King Fdward celebrated his sixty- fourth birthday on the 9th inst, at Sandringham. Congratulatory tele- grams poured in from all parts of the world. J roll Sta are the; whi ford tion land ties thot nea one ture bous boys mor they Lew BOX Cure Sol sent Ma prog steps often reall; alwa earlie and deal sary tion. Ma its e man build thing ence. great map. to es agent thoug “ adver as of Ma are n soil brow: way Worc We most right: has & being sold shall tor or Maj officer financ has J his se which $1,000,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers